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A54576 A compendious history of the Catholick church from the year 600 untill the year 1600 shewing her deformation and reformation : together with the rise, reign, rage, and begin-fall of the Roman AntiChrist : with many other profitable instructions gathered out of divers writers of the several times, and other histories / by Alexander Petrie ... Petrie, Alexander, 1594?-1662.; Church of Scotland. General Assembly. 1657 (1657) Wing P1879; ESTC R4555 1,586,559 1,238

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all men to be saved understand thou all which are saved and to come unto the knowledge of the Trinity which is the highest and substantial truth On Cap. 3. he saith The Church is called both the ground and Pillar of truth which is but one thing for the firmness of saith and because the Church is established by heavenly doctrines and Divine miracles In this observe that the faith or truth depends not on the testimony of the Church but the Church is a ground or Pillar because it hath firm faith and is established by Divine doctrines On 2 Tim. 1. at these words I thank my God whom I do serve from my fore-fathers he saith This he saith that he may shew that the ancient Fathers which were before the coming of the Lord had the same faith which he and the other Apostles had and did descend from those Fathers unto the Apostles and from them unto us as also it descendeth from us unto them which shall come after us In this one testimony many things may be observed against the present Tenets of the Romish Church if I would stay but one thing though but a negative I cannot omit that in all these descendings is no mention of any dependance on the Roman Bishop or faith so that if we have the faith which the fore-fathers and Apostles had and they which had the same from them whether the Church of Rome now have the same or not have it we have the true faith On Cap. 2. at these words The Lord knows who are his This is the impression of the Seal He knows that is the Lord hath chosen them which belong unto his inheritance and this is the seal of faith because when others depart from the faith they which are Elect can in no way be seduced Many such other testimonies may be observed in that Exegesis which Villapand calleth a rich treasure a rich treasure it is which so clearly sheweth the faith of the Church of that time and that the Church of Rome now having forsaken that faith in so many particulars hath departed from the truth And therefore Bellarmin was more wary then his brother and though he did bring that testimony concerning the change of the bread yet no where else would name that book nor the Authour of it in his book De Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis although he forgot not others of less note 18. Haymo was Bishop of Halberstad about this time but it seems he was younger then Remigius He writ sundry volumns especially two books of Homilies In the first called Pars hyemalis he hath these sentences In Feria 4. quatuor tempor at these words Ave gratta plena he saith She is well said to be full of grace because she had attained what no other woman had attained to wit she did conceive and bear the Authour of grace Behold he expoundeth these words otherwise then the Papists do now And here his words are Gratiam quam nulla alia meruer at assequitur and I have translated the word meruer at after this manner because as I have marked before the Ancients do use it in this signification and as follows Haymo was far from the opinion of man's merit Ibid. at the words That Holy thing which shall be born of thee he saith For distinction of our holiness Jesus is affirmed singularly to be born holy for although we be made holy yet we are not born holy because we are bound with the condition of corruptible nature that every one of us may with the Prophet sigh and say Behold I was conceived in iniquities and in sins hath my mother brought me forth but he only was truly holy which that he might overcome the condition of corruptible nature was not conceived by the commixtion of carnal copulation The Papists do hold that the Virgin Mary was free of original sin to the end that they may the more plausibly commend her to be worshipped as the Queen of Heaven But behold here Haymo saith more then Remigius said for he saith not only that it was the singular priviledge of Christ to be born holy but more he saith That he might overcom the condition of corruptible nature he was not conceived by commixtion Certainly the condition which he overcom was singularly the condition of Maries corruptible nature seeing she was conceived by commixtion Dominic 4. post Epiphan There was a great storm on the Sea because the Persecution of Pagans the Divel stirring them up did arise against the Church so that the ship was covered with the waves that is the persecution waxing the Church did scarcely lurk in a few Beleevers neither durst any man confess the name of Christ publickly who was not prepared to die presently for Christ which to have been in the daies of Dioclesian and others the Histories do declare This testimony confutes the Papists holding that the Church doth flourish at all times and witnesseth with us that the Church hath been forced to lurk at some times In Dominic in Septuages on the Parable Matth. 20. he saith This Vine-yard is the holy Church which hath been from the beginning of the World untill the end thereof so many godly as it bringeth forth it begetteth so many branches This Vine-yard was planted amongst the people of the Jews but after the incarnation of our Lord it is inlarged unto the ends of the earth c. In the same Homily he saith Because eternal life is rendred to no man by way of debt but is given through the gracious mercy of God therefore .... And nearer the end he saith Seeing it is given to none by debt but only of gracious mercy unto whom he willeth none can grumble at the righteousness of God because he sheweth mercy on whom he willeth and whom he willeth he hardneth he shews mercy of his own goodness and he hardneth without iniquity because although his judgments are sometimes hid yet they are not unjust In Feria 4 post Iudica on Ioh. 10 he saith on these words And I give unto them eternal life These are the Pastures which he did before promise unto his Sheep wherein no herb withereth but all is green all waxeth all abideth whole and whatsoever is once taken in is possessed for ever And they shall not perish for ever here understand as ye shall perish which are not of my sheep And none shall pluck them out of my hand that is from my power Here he affirmeth the perseverance of the Elect and the damnation of them which are not elected In Feria 6 post Iudica on Ioh. 6. on these words My flesh is meat indeed he saith Seeing all men do desire by meat and drink that they may not hunger nor thirst nothing can do this truly but this meat and drink which maketh them who receive it to be immortal and incorruptible and that is the society of the godly wherein shall be full and perfect peace and unity ..... Then he expoundeth how this may be which he hath said
no satisfaction for Pennance onely they shew themselves to the Priests who anoint them with oyl in token of the remission of their sins 15. Onely on Maundy Thursday they do consecrate for the sick and keep it the whole year after and think it more holy that day then any other neither do they fast on any Saturday save onely on Easter-even 16. They have but five Orders as Clerks Deacons Sub-Deacons Priests and Bishops whereas the Romish Church hath nine Orders according to the nine Orders of Angels 17. In their Orders they make no vow of single life alledging the Canon J. N. Priest or Deacon shall not put away my wife as it were for honesties sake 18. Every year on certain days they excommunicate the Church of Rome and all the Latins as Heretiques 19. They excommunicate him who striketh a Priest 20. Their Emperor doth name Patriarchs Bishops and others of the Clergy and deposeth them at his pleasure also he giveth Benefices to whom he listeth and retaineth the Fruits of the same Benefices as it pleaseth him 21. They blame the Latins because they eat not flesh eggs nor cheese on Friday 22. They hold against the Latins for celebrating without consecrated Churches and fasting on the Sabbath days and for permitting menstruous women to enter into Churches before their purifying also for suffering dogs or other beasts to enter into Churches 23. They use not to kneel at their devotion yea not to the body of Christ but one day in the year affirming that the Latins like goats or beasts prostrate themselves on the ground in their prayers 24. They permit not the Latins to celebrate on their Altars and if it chance a Latin Priest celebrate on their Altar by and by they wash it in token of abomination and false sacrifice 25. They condemn the worship of Images as idolatry These are the Articles contained in the said Register But there are many more in the Book of Catholique Traditions published in the French tongue by Th. A. I. C. and translated into English and printed at London ann 1610. out of which I have drawn these Articles 1. All the Apostles were equally universal Pastors and no primacy given to Peter who was never at Rome but when he was martyred 2. To say that the Church is grounded on the stone of Rome is hard and grievous and not far from the Jewish baseness to include the Church within a Town 3. St. John ending his life after Peter had the first place among all Evangelists and Bishops and he never taught that Rome by divine right ought to be the Lady of other Churches 4. But after St. John the Bishop of Rome obtained the first place among the Bishops within the Roman Empire for seeing the Citizens of Rome reigned above other Cities he had been proud and audacious who would have preferred himself before their Bishop especially without Ordinance of a Council 5. The Churches of Italy and others their neighbors by lapse of time gave to the Church of Rome not onely the first place but also superintendence over the Bishops near them in particular to give his advice in matters that happened until a Synod might be held yet never any presidency or power was given to the Church of Rome above other Churches 6. As all the Apostles were equal in Authority so they left behinde them every one diverse Successors of equal Authority 7. He who accuseth the Scriptures accuseth God the Author thereof but God is void of blame and the Scriptures contain the whole matter of faith 8. Those onely are Canonical Books which were contained in the Ark and written in Hebrew before or in Greek after the coming of the Lord. 9. They hold they were the first Nations converted unto Christ and in that regard they are the men who truly and purely maintain the Traditions of the Primitive Church as it was taught them by the Apostles 10. Faith is an assurance of the love of God and he who doubteth cannot approach unto God with confidence 11. The saying of Paul It is not in him who runneth nor in him who willeth prevents two mischiefs One that no man exalt himself for grant that thou runnest or endeavorest yet think not what thou doest well is thine for if thou be not inspired from above all is vain Another that no man deem that he shall be crowned without service 12. Faith is imputed to justification faith sufficeth for all faith absolveth justifieth and maketh partaker of eternal glory for God requireth no other thing but compunction and mourning 13. When we praise good Works we mean not to exalt our selves by them or to put our trust in them but we desire men would give themselves thereunto as to things necessary unto salvation and which every one is bound to exercise according to his power following the commandment of God 14 They communicate under Both elements and they have one fashion for the Communicants in the Church and another for the Sick the Priests with little or no reverence eat the remanent elements which are not eaten by the faithful but for the sick it is kept all the year being consecrate the week before Easter 15. They celebrate the Liturgy in their own Language that the people may understand 16. The Bishop of Rome cannot by his Indulgences deliver any from these temporal punishments which God inflicteth neither ought he to dispense with the fulfilling of all these works of repentance which are possible c. The most part of these last differences are fallen twixt the east and western Churches since the 11. Century and in them all we finde that the differences are either calumnies articulated by the Church of Rome or matters of Discipline or Ceremony or then our Reformed Church agreeth with them 8. The Bishop of Millan had the next place in Italy unto the Bishop of How Millan became subject unto Rome Rome he had eighteen Suffragan Bishops under him twenty two Ordinary Cardinals and divers other Offices of mark he was always named by the King of Lombardie neither he nor any of his Clergy trotted at any time to Rome This was a great moat in the Priests eyes and therefore the Popes ofttimes sought to bring Millan into subjection unto their See but the Millanoyes still kept their liberty At last ann 1059. Ariald Clericus Decumanus conspired with Landulfus Cotta praefatus populi against the Arch-Bishop Wido and made a pretext that married Priests ought to be exautorate Wido assembled all his Bishops and Clergy at Fontanetum with common consent it was denied that Priests should have liberty of marriage Then was great strife in the Town the Nobility defended Wido and the People were for Landulf who sent Ariald to Pope Nicolaus II. accusing the Clergy of Millan and requiring him to send some Judges to try the matter He was glad of the occasion and sent Peter Damian Bishop of Ostia and Anselm Bishop of Luca. So soon as Damian began to talk
above-named Branas made an insurrection aiming at the Empire but was killed And after him others did usurp the Title so unfortunate and worthless was Isaacius And one Isaacius Comnenus usurped the Kingdom of Cyprus nor was the Greek Emperor able to expel him until Edward King of England intending for Jerusalem came and took him and gave him as a Captive to one of his Subjects he possessed all the Island and at his returning home he gave it as his proper gift unto the King of Jerusalem Nicet li. 2. de Isaac Isaacius was dethroned by his Brother Alexius ann 1190. 4. HENRY VI. the second Son of Frederick hearing that his Father Base ambiton bringeth under was dead and fearing that his elder Brother would return unto the Crown sought the Empire miserably First He restoreth unto Henry Duke of Saxony and others which had rebelled against his Father all that his Father had taken from them Then he sent unto the Pope Clemens and Cardinals promising in all things to confirm the Laws and Liberties of the Church if they would grant him their consent Clemens with advice assigneth him the time of Easter in the next year to his Coronation but Clemens died sooner When Henry came at the appointed time with his new Empress Constantia the Romans receive him with a few persons but would not admit his Army Then Pope Celestin standing on the steps before the door of St. Peter's took an oath of Henry that he shall defend the See of St. Peter he shall repair whatsoever hath been diminished from it especially he shall surrender unto the Church of Rome the Cities Tusculo c. and expel Tancred the base Son of Roger out of both Sicilies which Kingdom appertained unto his Wife the onely Daughter of King William reserving the pension that belongeth unto the Pope in the name of few These Articles being so granted they go into the Church and Henry was Crowned in this maner The Pope sitting in his Chair held the Crown betwixt his feet the Emperor boweth down his head unto the Pope's feet the Pope setteth on the Crown with his feet and by and by struck it off again with his foot to the ground thereby declaring that he had power to take it from him if he shall so deserve Then the Cardinals took up the Crown and set it on the Emperors head And thenceforth the Emperor is but the image of the old Emperors as Cumm The image of the Beast Ventura in Thesor Polit. at that Title Quomodo Imperium à Pontifice dependeat saith They do stray very far who distinguish not the now Empire from the old Roman Empire for the old received no beginning from the high Priests but the Pope was reverenced as the Vicar or rather Minister of Christ and head of the Church and they do erre saith he who discern not the present Empire from the Empire of Charles the Great c. When the Coronation was ended the Pope sent immediately unto Tusculum and made it level to the ground to be example unto others that they presume not against the Chair of St. Peter Platin. Henry undertook wars against Tancred but soon left off because the plague had entered into his Army After two years Tancred dieth and Henry got the Kingdom after some skirmishes and severity used against some rebellious At that time the truce of five years which Richard King of England had made with Saladin were expired wherefore Pope Coelestin did solicite the Princes especially the Emperor that they would not forget the Conquess of Jerusalem seeing so fit an occasion of peace at home was offered and Saladin was lately dead The Emperor pretendeth infirmity and sent a great Army with the Dukes of Saxony and Austria and some Bishops At this time Almarik King of Cyprus married Isobel the Widow-Queen of Jerusalem and he was called King of Cyprus and Jerusalem He had no minde to the wars and therefore the Title King of Jerusalem was given to John de Bregna a man of great valor and Son in Law unto the same Isobel The Germans joyning with him were Masters of the field for a space they took Berito and re-edified Japha or Joppe In the mean time Henry made greater Conquess in Italy then the Pope desired taking some Lands and Cities which the Pope did alledge to appertain unto his See Then he became sick at Messina and caused his Son Frederick as yet lying in the cradle to be elected King of the Romans and of both Sicilies and recommended him unto his Brother Duke of Suevia and unto Pope Innocentius and he died ann 1198. Alexius reigned at Constantinople with great misfortune CHAP. II. Of POPES 1. PASCHALIS II. was chosen ann 1099. at his Election the people A new pomp of the Pope cried St. Peter hath chosen good Rainer that was his name then he put on a purple vesture and a tiare on his head and riding on a white palfrey was led unto the Lateran Palace by the people and Clergy there a Scepter was given him and a girdle put about him with seven keys and seven seals in token of his seven-fold power to wit of binding loosing shutting opening sealing resigning and judging He had open field of his Anti-Pope Clemens III. and put him to flight Not long after Clemens died when he had sat 21. years Then Richard Earl of Campania caused Albert to be installed for Clemens but he saw no appearance of quietness and forsook his Papacy within four moneths At Preveste another was set up whom they called Silvester III. he despairing of so great honor would be an Anachorite within 105. days A fourth Roman was set up but he was also forsaken So Paschalis being alone set his heart to enlarge Peter's patrimony he besiedgeth some Cities belonging unto the Emperor and raised the Son of Henry V. against the Father The Popes were wont to date all their Writs from the year of the Emperor but now Paschalis beginneth with the year of his Papacy He sate eighteen years and six moneths in continual sedition 2. GLASIUS II. had his neck thrown and was trampled under foot before he was Crowned for Cincius Patricius Romanus would have had another elected and the Emperor set up Gregory VIII and went to dethrown Gelasius who fled from place to place till he came to Cluniak where he died within a year 3. CALLISTUS II. was set up by the Cardinals at Cluniak but would not accept till he knew the consent of the Cardinals at Rome Before he entered the City he sent a Nuntio to excommunicate the Emperor in Germany He had many bouts with Gregory VIII and at last thrust him into a Monastery Then began the controversie betwixt the Imperialists and Contention whether the Emperor or Pope should have the precedenc● Papalines whether the Emperor or Pope did excel in dignity Reasons were alledged on both sides but for brevity I omit the one and that the pride of the man of
the Greek Emperor and the Pope embraced him for his homage albeit neither he nor his people were conformable in Religion Naucler saith Lucius ordained That a Priest having a concubine might say Mass and others might receive a Sacrament from him if his Bishop did tolerate him He sate four years and died An. 1185. 14. URBAN III. had peace at home but in his time Saladin conquered Jerusalem by dissension of the Christian Princes there He sate one year and ten moneths 15. GREGORY IX called the VIII by Letters exhorted the Princes to send aid unto the distressed Christians in Asia and died on the 57. day 16. CLEMENS III. condescended unto the Romans concerning their Magistrates that strife had continued fifty years In his time was the greatest expedition into Asia then went the Emperor Frederick Philip King of France Richard King of England Otho Duke of Burgundy with many Bishops from Italy Flanders Denmark c. but all in vain for after the death of Frederick when they should have been supplied with victuals Clemens was busie in conquering Sicily from Tancred who had furnished them Platina He spoiled sundry Cities and when he despairing of victory turned to Church affairs he ordained That onely a Pope hath power of transporting a Bishop from one seat to another that Bishops should be in honor above Princes He sent Peter Cardinal of Capua into Poland to reform the Clergy to wit to discharge all married Priests for until that time that liberty was not taken from them The same Cardinal attempted to do the like in Bohemia but they had almost killed him An. 1196. Spalat de Rep. Eccles lib. 2. cap. 10. § 47. He went also into Denmark but the Clergy would not obey him so he did excommunicate them all Clemens sate five years 17. CELESTIN IV. gave the Romans liberty to raze Tusculo because that City in a kinde of emulation had been offensive unto Rome yet gave he the people license to abide in the suburbs Now with Tancred and then with Henry VI. he had continual wars and died An. 1198. In that Century the strange pride of the Popes was apparent and it was strongly opposed by the Emperors and manifestly manifested unto the world even by themselves one condemning another in open Councels and ye shall anon see it contradicted and bewailed by some Bishops Abbots and others CHAP. III. Of divers Countreys 1. MAny and fearful signs were seen in the beginning of this Century bloody Armies appeared in the air two Suns were seen in heaven the Stars seemed to fall as thick as rain many Comets were seen one of them was marvellous in bigness continuing in the evening the space of eighteen days and with great light A marvellous earthquake is reported to have been in the year 1117. so that Churches and Towns fell to the ground in Italy and other Nations the sea in some places overflowed 1000. paces Platin. 2. Fluentius Bishop of Florence preached that these signs did portend great miseries and that Antichrist was then reigning in the world Platina saith Paschalis was not fearful and said All these things have natural causes but he would not let Fluentius pass without a censure he conveened a Councel of 340. Bishops at Florence and made a shew of dispising him as a broacher of new opinions and enjoyned him silence Bellarmin de Ro. Pont. lib. 3. cap. 3. 3. Arnulph a singular preacher of Christian Religion in a Sermon at Rome reproved the dissolute wantonness incontinency avarice negligence and immoderate pride of the Clergy he said they should follow Christ and his Apostles in purity of life Many Nobles did reverence him as a true disciple of Christ saith Platina in Honor. II. Others write no less of him Naucler calleth him Bishop of Lions In the second Tome of Councels is a Book under his name where he complaineth of the multitude of holy days as the occasions of many vices namely incontinency he complaineth of curious singing in learning whereof much precious time was spent which might be better employed of the multitude of idle Monks and Nuns of the corrupt promotion and negligence of Prelats of the lascivious apparel in the families of Bishops of their non-residence at their Churches of the negligence of the Clergy in not perusing and observing the Acts of ancient Councels of the unchaste lives of Priests c. P. Mornay in Myster ex Chro. Hirsaug sheweth that this Arnulph said He was sent by an Angel to preach at Rome and the Angel told him that he was to glorifie God in suffering for his cause and therefore he said publikely I know that ye will kill me but wherefore because I tell you the truth and rebuke your pride covetousness and luxury I call heaven and earth to record that I have told ye what God hath commanded me but ye contemn me or rather your Creator Neither is it a marvel that ye will kill me a sinner for telling you the truth seeing if Peter would rise again and tell you of your faults ye would not spare him I am ready to die for the truth and I tell you in the name of the Lord that the Almighty God shall not spare your filthiness ye shall go into hell God is a revenger of such wickedness c. The people loved him dearly but the Clergy laid wait for him and murthered him in the night All the Clergy was defamed for his death The Pope took it ill but he revenged it not Platin. 4. Paschalis II. sent a Palle unto the Bishop of Panormitan in Sicily and craved of him an oath of fidelity both the Bishop and the King Roger was offended and said It is a new usurpation for it was never decreed in any Synod that Bishops should be tied unto the Pope by an oath Catal. test ver lib. 15. 5. Moses a Jew was baptized on the feast of Peter and Paul from that feast he would be called Peter and because Alfonso King of Spain answered for him at his baptism he was called Petrus Alfonsus in the 44. year of his age In a book against the Jews he saith All the sacrifices of the Law are fulfilled in the sacrifice of Christ once offered on the Cross after his death the Church useth no sacrifice but one of thanksgiving in bread and wine as David had prophesied when he sang Will I eat the flesh of bulls or drink the blood of goats offer unto God the sacrifice of praise where he intimateth that all sacrifices should be abolished and onely this of thanksgiving should continue There also he saith Christians have no images for adoration and as no account was made of the stones whereof the altar had been made so we make no reckoning what become of the reliques of the cross or of any image that had been set upon it Catal. test lib. 14. 6. Hildebert Bishop of Towers about the same time wrote many Epistles in one unto an Earl going a pilgrimage he condemneth pilgrimages for visiting
In what subject do the accidents of the bread and wine remain 5. Whether the transubstantiation be done in a moment of time 6. Whether the dimentions of Christ be wholly in this Sacrament 7. Whether the body of Christ be in this Sacrament locally 8. Whether the body of Christ doth move according to the motion of the hostie 9. Whether any eye even a glorified one can see Christ's body in the Sacrament 10. Concerning the truth of the words Hoc est enim copus meum are innumerable controversies as Whether hoc signifie bread or whether it importeth demonstrationem ut conceptam non ut exercitatam or ad intellectum non ad sensum that is This that is the thing signified by this is my body Or whether it demonstrateth to the sense but is to be understood according to the instant or moment not of pronouncing it but of pronouncing the last syllable as when one saith Now I will be silent Thomas Aquinas first did write those and innumerable more such questions and after him many have debated them and many other questions of that subject and nature 2. Before it was voluntary excepting the case of scandal to confess their sins and no Laws were against them which did not confess yea Lombard Lib. 4. Dist 17. B. saith It may be said that without confession of the mouth or payment of outward punishment sins are blotted away by contrition and humility of the heart for after that one doth with a grieved minde propound to confess his sins God forgiveth because there is confession of the heart albeit not of the mouth and by this confession the soul is inwardly cleansed from the spot and contagion of committed sin and the debt of everlasting death is forgiven and therefore saith he these sentences of the Fathers which he hath quoted before concerning repentance and confession are to be understood of the confession of the heart or of inward punishment But after that Decree of Innocentius the III. the School-men held that he is not to be accounted a Christian who confesseth not all his sins particularly As for the circumstances the Canon biddeth the Priest be discreet in searching the circumstances of the sinner and of the sin But the School-men press every man to confess particularly every circumstance of his sin so far as possibly he can Concerning the person who should hear confessions Lombard lot cit D. teacheth that a man should diligently seek a Priest because God hath given the power of binding and loosing unto Priests but if a Priest cannot be had The Confessors one may make his confession unto his neighbor or companion and he speaketh no where of a Monk or Frier But afterwards the Dominicans got power from the Popes and the Priests were neglected 3. Gratian in his Decrees and 3. Pardons and Indulgences Lombard in his Sentences have no word of pardons or Papal indulgences But when avarice had possessed the Clergy and the people were blinded with ignorance and superstition and both were contented with an outward formality then publick declarations were redeemed with sums of money which they called alms for the use of the poor or for building Hospitals or Churches or Bridges and the discharge of the publick declarations was called indulgence or pardon The School-men finding this practise to be so gainful unto Bishops and the pardons so acceptable unto the people did commend them in their preachings yet so that among themselves some made question of the truth of them for some as Tho. Aquin. Supplem qu. 25. ar 2. said These pardons were but a kinde of pious deceit whereby the Church draweth men into some sort of devout actions as a mother allureth her childe unto some steps by shewing him a golden peny which she giveth him not Some said they were available in the Court not of God but of the Church others held they were useful in both Courts And they made the ground of this power to be the treasures of Christ's and the Saints sufferings which they had suffered more then was needful for the propitiating their sin and everlasting punishment all which their sufferings of supererrogation make up the treasure of the Church and the Bishops or Priests may bestow a part of that treasure on them which have not merits of their own And truly any man might perceive as the Germans did in their grievances which they sent unto Pope Hadrian the VI. that these were cunning frauds to purchase money unto the Pope and the Friers and others their partners We read that in the primitive Church when discipline was strict they would remit somewhat of their severity as they saw the persons affected but in that Century not so much the punishment already enjoyned but to be enjoyned was dispensed with for money in former time the dispensation was granted lest the penitents did faint under the burthen and that they might the sooner be received into the communion again nor were they granted for money But at that time and in times following they were pardoned from all satisfaction both for sin committed and to be committed if they would give moneys which trick was coloured with pretext to say Masses for them or for use of the holy wars And these pardons were at most thought to avail onely unto the living until Boniface the VIII did extend their vertue unto the souls in Purgatory Co. Agrip. de vanit scien cap. 61. Unto the more clearing of this point hear what John Roffen saith contra assert Luthe art 18. seeing Pol. Virg. de inven rer lib. 8. cap. 1. and others do cite the same as truth Possibly many saith he do not value indulgences because the use of them is known to have come but lately among Christians unto them I answer It is not certain who gave them first nevertheless there hath been some use of them very ancient as they say among the Romans which may be gathered by the Stations None who is Orthodox here he would say Popish or a follower of the Pope doubteth whether there be a Purgatory of which there is no or very little mention among the ancients yea and mong the Greeks it is not believed until this day and neither did the Latins conceive the verity thereof at one time but by little and little nor without dispensation of the holy Ghost that after so many years both the faith of Purgatory and use of indulgences was generally received by the Romish Church so long as there was not fear of Purgatory no man sought pardons for upon it doth all the account of pardons depend if ye take away Purgatory what use have pardons therefore pardons began after that people stood in aw of Purgatory So far he saith Polydore which thou perhaps seeing they are of so great moment didst expect as more certain from the mouth of God But Roffensis saith further If there be no Purgatory we shall not have need of pardons considering therefore how long time
of your affairs he hath given unto our holy Mother his godly and acceptable confession and hath received the Doctrine of the true Faith from her wherein all men should agree who desire to be saved which also we will declare unto your charity Wherefore beloved Brethren and Sons if it be so as we believe and trust hasten the unity together with us for where can ye be more zealous against tempters then in the bosom of the true Church and under the shield of true salvation and where can ye better refresh your selves then where the fountain of the water of life is open All therefore who are thirsty come unto the waters come buy the wine of sober joy without money and receive milk from the teats of her comfort we trust then that in all things ye agree with us wherefore from henceforth with singular care and love we will provide unto you spiritual Pastors which shall have care of your souls and feed you with the word of truth and example of life and shall not afflict you Moreover concerning the Rites of the Church we will graciously yield unto you with the Apostle in these whatsoever have a good ground and a pure intention the granting of which may tend to your edification and shall not be contrary to the honor of this our holy and true Mother and her communion and obedience for verily we intend to dispense and deal with good will and discretion in the difference of Customs and Rites The Almighty God grant that we may hear as we have heard that many others have likewise received the spirit of true life to the increase and multiplying of the beloved Children of the true Mother and cause you together with us to rejoice in the house of the Church with the same Professions and Rites yea that we may praise him with heart and mouth for ever and ever Amen Given at Constantinople Ianuary 18. An. 1451. Rer. Bohem. autiqui Scriptor pag. 235. Edit Hannoviae An. 1602. 26. George Pogiobratz King of Bohemia was a good Warriour and did not fear the threats of the Pope and Emperour and he restored the ruined estate of the Kingdom Vratislavia and Silesia refused to obey him because he was an Heretick as Cochlaeus speaks Hist Huss lib. 12. But Pius the II. then intending Wars against the Turk did by all means perswade them to yeeld obedience and the King did require the Pope to keep the Compacts of Basil in favours of the Bohemians The Pope refused to grant so much Wherefore the King called the Estates together and protested before that he would live and die in that faith which they did profess and so did the Nobles An. 1462. Cochl ibid. Pope Paul gave that Kingdom unto Matthias King of Hungary and when he was busie against the Turks and had recovered several Towns and had entred into Thracia with good success Rodulph the Pope's Legate drew him back from the Turks to invade the Christians in Bohemia but God protected them against him although he had the aid of the Pope and the Vratislavians and some Cities did accept him yea God defended that Kingdom so that when George died An 1471. and the Pope had stiled Matthias King of Hungary and Bohemia the Estates of Bohemia would not accept him even howbeit he had married the daughter of George before the Wars but hated him for his unnatural usurpation and did chuse Ladislaus the son of Casimire King of Poland And the two sons of Pogiobratz prevailed in Wars against Matthias and the Emperour made them both Dukes This was so offensive unto Matthias that he proclaimed Wars against the Emperour but he was taken away by death Pet. Mexia 27. Stephen Brulifer a Doctor of Sorbone and a Franciscan taught in his lessons and maintained in disputes that neither the Pope nor Councel nor Church can make any Article or Statute to bind the conscience of a Christian that all their authority consists in the urging of obedience unto God's word in preaching it and administring the Sacraments which he hath instituted so that they bring nothing without his command he called justification by merits a Divellish doctrine since the Lamb of God was sacrificed and hath satisfied God's justice for us The Doctours of Sorbone would not suffer him amongst them But he went to Diether Bishop of Mentz which had been deposed for speaking against the avarice of Rome and was restored Fascic rer expet fol. 164. 28. John de Wesalia a Preacher of Worms was delated by the Thomists unto the same Diether he gathered his books and sent them unto the Universities of Colein and Heidleburg to be examined They convened this John before them at Mentz in February An. 1479. After they had viewed his books they found these Articles which they called errours 1. All men are saved freely by the meer grace of Christ through faith 2. We should beleeve the Word of God only and not the glosses of any man 3. God hath from all eternity written in a book all his Elect whosoever is not written there shall never be written in it and whosoever is written in it shall never be blotted out 4. Our Doctours do expound the Scriptures wickedly and falsly 5. Christ never appointed a Fasting nor Festival day neither forbad to eat any meat upon any day 6. When Peter did celebrate the Eucharist he said the Lord's Prayer and the consecration and then did communicate with others but now the Priest must stand an hour and more when he saith Mass 7. They are fools who go in Pilgrimage to Rome for they may find as much good elsewhere 8. The Word of God should be expounded by conferring one Text with another 9. Prelates have no authority to expound Scriptures by any peculiar right given unto one more than to another 10. Mens traditions as Fasts Feasts Pardons set Praiers Pilgrimages and such other things are to be rejected 11. Extream unction confirmation auricular confession and satisfaction are to be contemned They demanded of him several questions as Whether Christ was present bodily in the Sacrament or spiritually He answered Christ's body was there present and the substance of Bread and Wine remain also 2. What he thought of the Procession of the Holy Ghost Ans He beleeved not that he proceeds from the Father and the Son as from one principium because the Scripture speaks not so 3. What he thought of the Vicar of Christ Ans He beleeved not that Christ hath a Vicar for he said Behold I am with you unto the end of the World 4. What he thought of pardons Ans He had written a book wherein he had shewed that the Treasure of the Church cannot be distributed by Popes because it is written Revel 14. Their works follow them After these interrogatories and others of that sort three Doctors were appointed to deal with him privately He said unto them As ye deal with me if Christ were here you would condemn him as an Heretick but he
licence nor enact constitutions without his consent Item that all cases that were before reserved from the power of the bb unto the Pope were declared to appertain unto the King and his commissioners as to dispense with Canons to divide or unite bishopricks Item all annats or first year's fruits and tyths of Benefices were forbidden to be carried out of the Country and An. 26 c. 3. they were ordained to be payd unto the King as before unto the Pope Item no appellation should be made to Rome Item Peter-pence pensions all such exactions shall cease With express provision that the King nor his subjects shall not intend to vary from the articles of the Catholick faith of Christendom Item the degrees of consanguinity affinity that are prohibited by the law of God were explained published The Kings marriage with Catherin was declared unlawfull and his marriage with Anna daughter to the Earle of Wiltshire was approved The excommunication of the King was affixed on the church-doors of Dunkirk because the Nuntio durst not come into England But the King proceeds in parliament An. 26. c. 1. renouncing and causing the subjects to renounce the Pope and establishing the Papal authority in his own person The oath of the clergy unto the Pope is made void and they are ordained to give their oath unto the king The bb and Doctours of Divinity and of both lawes do both by word write and in their Convocations confirme all that the king had done in Parliament Jo Fisher Bishop of Rochester and Thomas Moore refuse to subscribe therefore they were committed Pope Paul hearing of Fisher's constancy as they called it there creates him a Cardinall for he said The King will not put hands in a Cardinal but ere the Bull came the king had intelligence of it and caused to execute the Bishop and Thomas Moore An. 1535. It was the just judgement of God on them for they had incensed the king against many Martyrs namely Fisher caused his Dean Do. Parker to take up and burn the body of William Tracy an Esquire in Rochester-shire after it had lyen in the grave three years because he said in his latter Will he would have no pompe at his buriall and he trusted in Christ only hoping to be saved by Him and by no Saint Tho cooper at An. 1532. Likewise lest the Pope did provoke other Princes against king Henry he sent Ambassadors with Letters and informations unto the Emperour the kk of France .... entreating them to keep amity The summe of his Letter unto James V. king of Scotland was Forasmuch as the Pope without the knowledge of the Emperour or French king or Germane Princes hath excommunicated King Henri●● Letter u●●o king Iam●● V. against the Pope and Card. mee and now the Popes N●ntio the Cardinal of Scotland is arrived with commission as I hear it brooted but have no intelligence to pract●ze some anoisance by his pretended censures against mee thy uncle Therefore I premonish and require thy Grace and most heartily pray thee to consider 1. the Supremacy of Princes granted by the holy Scriptures unto mee and other Princes in their Churches 2. to weigh what Gods word calleth a Church 3. what superstitions idolatries and blind abuses have crept into all realmes to the high displeasure of God 4. what is to be understood by the censure excommunication of the Church and how no such censure can be in the power of the Bishop of Rome or of any other man against mee or any other Prince having so just ground to avoide from the root and to abolish so execrable authority which the Bishop of Rome hath vsurped and vsurpes upon all Princes to their great dammage My request therefore to my nephew is to consider of what moment it should bee unto yourself having your subiects evill instructed in the premisses if you agree unto such censures and by such example give upper-hand over yourself and other Princes unto that vsurper of Rome as is like to happen in other places of Christendom where the true declaration of the word of God shall have free course to scourge them unless they will adore and ki●●e the foot of that corrupt holiness which desireth nothing but pride and the vniversall thrall of Christendom under Rome's yoke I a●so premonish your Grace that you would not receive the Popes Cardinal into your Countrie for he will not be content to be next unto you but assuredly he will be equall yea and usurp over you and be a heavie burden unto your conntrie as experience teaches in England c. After this Henry enioyeth peace notwitstanding all that the Pope wrought against him Jo. Fox Act. moni But upon this occasion the King of France was persuaded by the Pope not to pay as he was wont yearly 95000 Crowns and other 10000. crowns as a Treatie of peace betwixt the kingdoms did specifie In the year 1536. Q. Catherin died Q. Anna and her brother were beheaded with Henry Norreys and Francis Weston and other two gentle men of the bedchamber for what cause it is not known ●aith Jo. Foxe but within three Dayes the king married Lady Jane Seimer First by a Convocation and then by Parlament An. 32. Henry VIII his marriage with Lady Anna was declared unlawfull no reason is alledged in the Act and he excludes his daughters Mary and Elisabet from succession and declareth the Crown to appertain u●to the heirs to be begotten In the next year prince Edward was borne and within 12. dayes his mother died Then by determination of Synods and Sentence of both Universities it was acknowledged that unto the king did belong the title The Supream head of the Church that is as they expounded it under Christ the Supream member of the Church within his own dominions to commande for trueth and not against trueth Fran. Mason lib. 3. c. 3. According to this title he began Steps of Reformation to consider the estate of the Church by advice and prudence of the godly Lord Cromwell and others of his Counsell he understood that the corrupt estate of the Church had need of Reformation in many things yet because so many superstitious persons were to be turned from their olde customs he procures an Act of Parlament An. 32. of his reigne that whatsoever article of faith and declaration of other expedient points the Archbb. Bishops and a great number of the learned Doctors with consent of the King shall think needfull expedient together with their determination of other points and ceremonies in Divine Service shall have the strength of an Act of pa●liament Then he would not Reforme all at once but purposing to lead them softly he intendeth to proceed by degrees First he publisheth a litle book bearing the inscription Articles deuised by his Highness to estable Christian quietnes vnity In this were 1. the articles of the Creed necessary to be believed by all men 2. the doctrine of
to his words This is my body This is my blood So now sitting in the glory of Majesty he reaches by the hands of Ministers Such is his Divine virtue and power unto communicants his body and blood Therefore the Latine Church was wont to pray before the communion Let us lift up our hearts unto the Lord For as in the first institution of the Supper the Disciples had their eies fixed on the Lord who sitting at table reached unto them the Holy Supper So we should lift up our hearts unto the heavens unto him who sitting in the glory of Majesty reaches in the Supper by the hands of Ministers unto communicants his true body and blood that it may be the meat drink of the inward man who thereby is fed nurished and groweth unto everlasting life Whence Bernard speaking of the Supper saith This is the food not of the belly but of the soul for it is not given to repair the ruin of this life which is a vapor for a litle time but to confer eternal life unto the soul And as the water being sprinkled in Baptism hath done it's part so the bread eaten and the wine being drunken in the H. Supper have done their part but the spirituall virtue is possessed by faith and the verity of Christs body and blood is also maintained So Heming About the year 1571. this controversy waxed hote for in Witteberg Cas Cruciger the later Chr. Pezelius Fr. Widebram Henry Moller and others were against the Vbiquity and for it were these of Iena chiefly and with them were sundry other towns as Brunswic Luneburg c. In the same year Augustus the Elector of Saxony conveeneth the Divines of Witteberg and Leipsich into Dresda there they declared that they held no other doctrin but what was in the Confession of Ausburgh and agreeth with Luther and Melanthon's writings and they published their consent Against this consent Lucas Osiander and Selneccer and Jacob Andreiae did publish other books The Wittebergers wrote their Apology This contention waxeth hoter and hoter untill the year 1577. when George Count of Henneberg in a private conference said unto the Elector The Divines of Witteberg do foster some errors which can not be dissembled nor approved by the sincere Ministers of the Church neither is there hope of true peace among the followers of the Augustan Confession until these errours be noted and condemned The Elector answered I wish an harmony and that the corruptions were marked and that there were some beginning of so necessary and profitable a work I for my part will further it according to my power George undertook it At that time the Papists did upbraid them with their divisions and said There be so many parties among them of the Augustan Confession that if any would leave Papistry they know not unto what sect they shall cleave Osiandet histo Lib. 4. c. 2. shewes another ground of their variance that since the time of that unhappy Interim the corruptions and errors which began at that time could not be amended And it may be added that in all the periods of attempting reconciliations some did hold the points where-in they did agree at those several times and others would not accept them And Melanthon whose authority was much respected did for peace smooth his Common places in the year 1546. and again in the year 1558. for which cause the rigider sort called him a temporizer as also in the year 1552. he wrote a Confession of faith to have bin presented unto the the Councel at Trent This was and yet is called The Confession of Saxony and was subscribed also by the Ministers of Misnia In the year 1578. the Elector and the Count of Henneberg meet again at the marriage of Lewes Duke of Wurtembergh After the solemnity these three being together the Count shewes the Duke what conference had been before for removing the scandal of division then by common advice Lucas Osiander and Balthasar Bidembachius two Divines of Wurtembergh were appointed to pen some Overtures for removing those controversies Liber Concordiae This was done so privily that no other knew it but those Princes yea their Secretaries heard not of it When those two had written their judgement were assembled at Maulbron two Divines of Wurtembergh two of Hennebergh and one of Bada They examin and change as they thought expedient Osiand Lib. Cit. Cap. 3. Then their work was sent unto the Elector of Saxony and he cailed for Jacob Andreae Chemnitius and Selneccer and gave them the book they judge it too brief and enlarge it with other arguments and other questions This book was sent then unto sundry Vniversities and towns to be freely censured that if any thing were to be amended added or empaired they should admonish ingenvously Ibid. Cap. 4. The Electors of Saxony and Brandeburgh caused it to be subscribed by 8000. to wit by sundry Princes Imperial Towns and their Ministers and it was printed in the year 1580. with the title Liber Concordiae It was not examined in a publick Synod and was still conceiled from those Churches which did oppose Vbiquity and some within these Princes Dominions were displaced for refusing to subscribe it and without any reasoning So it turned into the Book of discord and made the greatest rent of all The book contained elleven Heads having first layd this ground that the books of the old and new Testament are the only rule whereby the doctrine of faith is to be judged and all other writtings may be vsed as witnesses only The first Head is of original sin where they teach that it is neither the nature nor any part of the nature of man but a corruption of nature leaving in man nothing sound or uncorrupt and can be known by the revealed word of God only II. of the free-will in the first act of regeneration that God worketh the conversion by the means of the word preached and by opening the heart to hearken so that it is the work of God only making man who is ignorant and unwilling to see and will III. Of righteousnes before God they declare it to be the righteousnes of Christ God-man for which God absolves us from our sins without any respect of the merite of our good works either by past present or to come And faith trusting in Christ and working by love is the only instrument whereby we apprehend the same Neither should a true believer doubt of the remission of his sins notwithstanding his sins of infirmity IV. Concerning good works they hold that these are not the cause of justification nor of eternall life but all men especially the regenerat are debters of good works yet so that they condem those positions Good works are necessary to salvation No man was ever saved without good works and it is impossible to be saved without good works And faith in Christ can not be lost and the elect do retain the Holy Ghost even though they fall into
preachers should be placed oppidatim how can it well be thought that three or four preachers may suffice for a shire ...... Some there be that are mislikers of the godly Reformation in Religion once established wishing indeed that there were no preachers at all and so by depriving of Ministers impugne Religion Non aperto Marte sed in cuniculis much like the Bishops in your Fathers time who would have had the English translation of the Bible called-in as evill translated and the new translation to be committed unto them which they never intended to perform A number there is and that exceeding great altogether worldly-minded ...... And because the preaching of Gods Word which to all Christians conscience is sweet and delectable to them having Cauterizatas conscientias is bitter and grievous ..... they wish that there were no preachers at all but they dare not directly condem the office of preaching so expresly commanded by Gods Word for that were open blasphemy they turn themselves altogether and with the same meaning as others do against the persons of them that are admitted to preach But God forbid Madam that you should open your ears unto any of these wicked persuasions Cum defecerit Propheta dissipabitur Populus saith Salomon Prov. 27. Where it is thought that the reading of godly Homilies set forth by publick authority may suffice the reading of these hath it's commodities but it is nothing comparable to the office of preaching ...... These were devised by godly Bishops in your The use of the Book of Homilies brothers dayes only to supply necessite by want of preachers and are by the statute not to be preferred but to give place to Sermons wheresoever they may be had and were never thought in themselves to contain alone sufficient instruction for the Church of England For it was found then as it is now that this Church had been by appropriations not without sacriledge spoiled of the livings which at the first were appointed to the office of preaching or teaching which appropriations were first annexed to Abayes and after came to the crown and now are disposed to privat mens possessions without hope to reduce the same to the original institution ..... Concerning the second point which is of the learned exercises and conferences amongst the Ministers of the Church I have The exercise of Ministers consulted with diverse of my brethren the Bishops who think of the same as I do a thing profitable to the Church And therefore expedient to be continued and I trust your Majesty will think the like when you shall be informed of the matter and order thereof what authority it hath of the Scriptures what commodity it bringeth with it and what discommodities will follow if it be clean taken away The authors of this exercise are the Bishops of the Diocess where it is used who by the law of God and by the canons and constitutions of the Church now in force have authority to appoint exercise to their inferior Ministers for encrease of learning and knowledge of the Scriptures as to them seemes expedient for that pertaines ad disciplinam Clericalem So after he hath spoken of the matter and order of that Exercise and the ground of it from 1. Sam. 10. and 1. Cor. 14. he addeth This gift of interpreting the Scriptures in S. Pauls time was given to many by a special miracle without study ...... but now miracles ceasing men must attain to the Hebrew Greek and Latin tongues ...... by travel and study God gives the increase So must men attain by the like means to the gifts of expounding and interpreting the Scriptures and amongst other helps nothing is so necessary as these above named exercises and conferences amongst the Ministers of the Church which in effect are all one with the exercises of Students in Divinity in the Universities saving that the first is done in a tongue understanded to the more edifying of the unlearned hearers Howsoever report hath been to your Majesty concerning these exercises yet I and others of York whose names are noted as followes 1. Cantuariensis 2. London 3. Winch 4. Bathon 5. Lichfield 6. Glocester 7. Lincoln 8. Chester 9. Exon 10. Meneven aliàs Davids as they have testified unto mee by their Letters have found by experience that these profits and commodities following have ensued of them 1. The Ministers of the Church are more skilfull and more ready in the Scriptures and more Apt to teach their flocks 2. It withdrawes them from idleness wandring gaming c. 3. Some afore suspected in doctrine are brought to the knowledge of the truth 4. Ignorant Ministers are driven to study if not for conscience yet for shame and fear of discipline 5. The opinion of lay men touching the ableness of the Clergy is hereby removed 6. Nothing by experience beats down Popery more then that 7. Ministers as some of my brethren do confess grow to such knowledge by means of those exercises that where a fore were not able Ministers not three now are thretty able and meet to preach at Pauls cross and 40 or 50 besids able to instruct their own Cures so as it is found by experience the best means to increase knowledge in the simple and to continue it in the learned Only backward men in religion and contemners of learning in the countries abroad do fret against it which in truth doth the more commend it The dissolution of it would b●eed triumph in the Adversary and great sorow and grief unto the favorers of Religion contrary to the Counsel of Ezek. 13. 18. Cor justi non est contristandum Although some have abused this good and necessary exercise there is no reason that the malice of a few should prejudice all abuses may be reformed and that which is good may remain Neither is there any just cause of offences to be taken if diverse men make diverse senses of one sentence of Scripture so that all the senses be good and agreable to the analogy and proportion of faith for otherwise we must condemn all the antient Fathers and diverse of the Church who most commonly expound one and the same text of Scripture diversely and yet all to the good of the Church .... Because I am well assured ..... that these exercises for the interpretation of the Scriptures and for exhortation and confort are profitable ......... I am inforced with all humility and yet plainly to profess that I can not with safe conscience and without the offence of the Majesty of God give my assent to the suppressing of these exercises much less can I send out any Injunction for the utter and universal subversion of the same I say with Paul I have no power to destroy but only to edify and I can do nothing against the truth but with the truth If it be your Majesties pleasure or for any other cause to remove me I consider with myself Quod horrendum est incidere in manus Dei viventis
answered that her Ma. thinks it no way reasonable that she should defraud herselfe of so great a part of the patrimony of the Crown as to put the patronage of Benefices forth of her hands for her necessity in bearing her Port common charges will require the retention thereof and that in a good part in her own hands Nevertheless her Majesty is well pleased that consideration being had of her own necessi●y and what may be sufficient for the reasonable sustentation of the Ministry a speciall assignation be made to them in places most commodious With which her Majesty shall not medle but suffer it come to them To the third article it 's answered that her Majesty shall do therein as shall be agreed by the States in Parliament To the fourth Her Majesties liberality to the poore shall always be so far extended as can be reasonably required at her hands To the fifth and sixth articles her Majesty referreth the taking order therein unto the States assembled in Parliament The Nationall assembly conveenes The IX Assembly in Edinburgh Septemb. 25. Jo. Erskin is chosen Moderator The answers of the Queen weregiven unto the Assembly and ordained to be registred And they return this answer First where her Majesty sayth that she is not persuaded in religion nor that she understands any impiety in the Masse ...... It is no small grieff to the Christian hearts of her godly subjects considering that the Trumpet of Christs evangell hath blown so long in this Countrie and his mercy so plainly offered in the same that her Maj. remaines yet unpersuaded of the truth of this our religion for our religion is nothing els but the same Religion which Jesus Christ hath in the last dayes reveeled from the bosom of his Father where of he made his Apostls Messingers and which they have preached established among his faithfull untill his coming again and this differeth from the impiety of the Turks the blaspheny of the Jewes and the vain superstition of the Papists in this that only our Religion hath God the Father his only Sone Jesus Christ our Lord and the Holy Ghost speaking in his Prophets Apostls for the Authours thereof and their doctrine promise for the ground of it The which no other religion upon the earth can justly alledge or plainly proove yea whatsoever assurance Papists have for their religion the same have the Turks for maintaining their Alcoran and the Jewes far greater for the defence of their ceremonies whither it be antiquity of time consent of people authority of promises great number or multitude consenting together or any other the like cloakes that they can pretend And therefore as wee are dolorous that her Majesty in this our religion is not persuaded so most humbly wee require in the name of the Eternall God that her Highness would embrace the means whereby she may be persuaded of the truth which presently wee offer unto her Grace alsweell by preaching his word which is the chief means appointed by God to persvade all his chosen children the infallible truth as by publick disputation against the adversaries of this our religion and the deceivers of her Majesty whensoever it shall be thought expedient unto her Grace As for the impiety of the Masse wee are bold to affirm that in that idoll is great impiety from the beginning to the end it is nothing els but a mass of impiety the author or Father thereof is but man the action itself the opinion thereof the hearets and gazers upon it do avow sacriledge pronounce blasphemy and commit most abominable idolatry as wee have ever offered and now offer ourselves to prove most manifestly And where her Majesty esteems that the change of religion shall dissolve the confederacy and alliance that she hath with the King of France and other Princes assuredly Christs true religion is the undoubted bond to knit up perfect and sure confederacy friendship with Him who is King of all Kings and hath the hearts of all Princes in his hand which should be more precious unto her Majesty than the confoederacy of all the Princes of the earth and without which neither confoederacy love nor kindeness can endure Concerning her Majesties answer unto the second article where she thinks it not reasonable to defraude herfelve of the patronage of Benefices and that She is minded to retain a good part of the Benefices in her hand for support .......... Our mind is not that her Majesty or any other patron should be defrauded of their just patronages but wee mean whensoever her Majesty or any other patron do present any person unto a Benefice that the person presented should be tryed examined by the judgement of learned men of the Church such as are for the present the Superintendents and as the presentation unto the Benefice appertaines to the Patron so the Collation by law and reason belongs unto the Church and the Church should not be defrauded of the Collation no more than the Patrons of their presentation for otherwise if it bee lawfull to the Patrons to present whom they please without tryall or examination what can abide in the Church of God but meer ignorance As for retention of a good part of the Benefices this point abhorreth so far from good conscience of Gods law as from the publick order of all common lawes that wee are loath to open up the ground of the matter by many words but wee most reverently wish that her Majesty would consider the matter with herselfe and her wise Counfell that howbeit the patronage of Benefices may appertain unto herselfe yet the retention thereof in her own hands undisponed to qualified persons is both ungodly and contrary to all publick order and brings finall confusion to the souls of poor people who upon those means should be instructed in their salvation And where her Majesty concludes that she is content a sufficient reasonable sustentation of ministers be provided by assignations to them consideration being had of her necessity as wee are altogether desirous that her Grace's necessity be considered so our duty craves that we should notify to her Majesty the true order that should be observed to her in this behalf which is The tiths are properly to be reputed the patrimony of the Church out of which before all things they that travell in the Ministry and the poor indigent members of Christs body should be sustained the churches repaired and the youth broughtup in good letters which things being done then other reasonable necessity might be supported as her Majesty godly Counsell can think expedient And wee can not but thank her Majesty most reverently for her liberall offer of her assignation to be made unto the Ministers which as yet is so generally conceived that without more speciall condescending upon the particulars no execution can follow and therefore wee most humbly crave of her Majesty that these articles may be reformed ..... Beseeching God that as they
entertainment of their Ministers and the ●uperplus thereof if any shall by to bee distribute unto the poore and hospitalls within the burgh as the almes of Minister and elders thereof 1566. The XI Assembly IV. In Marth An. 1566. arose more strife twixt the King and Queen for killing David Rizio her Secretary and Juny 19. she was deliver of a sone Juny 25. the Nationall assembly conveenes in Edinburg by plurality of voices J. Erskine is continued Moderator A supplication was sent unto the Lords of Counsell and Session that no excommunicate person have process before them untill they be reconciled unto the Church especially when excommunication is notorious and objected against them II. Paul Meffan came and openly with great expression of grieff for his adultery craves to be absolved from the sentence of excommunication he is conforted and ordained to declare his repentance in some churches and the next assembly shall decerne III. In respect of the dangers where The later Confession of Helvetia is approved with this Church is assaulted by mighty enemies the Assembly ordaines a publick fast in all the Churches Some mo particulares were handled The Churches of Helvetia Geneva and other Reformed Churches in France and Germany sent unto the Church of Scotland the sum or Confession of faith desiring to know if wee agree in uniformity of Doctrin Wherefore the Superintendents together with many other most qualified Ministers conveen in September at Santandrews and having read the Letters and Confession sent answer that wee agree in all points with these Churches and differ in nothing from them except that wee assent not in keeping festival days seing the Sabbothday only is keeped in Scotland Decemb. 17. Prince James was baptized in Sterlin in time of the solemnity the Queen subscribe a writing for mantenance of the Ministers by assignation of a part of the thirds of Benefices The Nationall assembly conveened Decemb. 25. at Edinburgh John Erskin is continued Moderator 1. The assignation The XII Assembly granted by the Queen is delivered by Alexander called Bishop of of Galloway and at that time Lord of the privy Counsell The answer of the assembly is They having just title to crave their bodily sustentation at the hands of the people which heare the doctrine of salvation from them they are content with what it will please them to give for their sustentation thogh it were but bread and water nor will refuse nor desist from their vocation but to take from others against their will whom they serve not they judge it not their duty nor reasonable And the assembly protests that the acceptation of that assignation shall not prejudge the liberty of the Church to suit the patrimony thereof in time and place convenient Then it was demanded Whither the tiths appertaine properly unto the Church and should only be employd to the sustentation of the Ministers of the poore mantaining of schools repairing of churches and other godly uses at the discretion of the Church Answered affirmativè without contradiction Then it was demanded Whither Ministers may with safe conscience keep silence when the patrimony of the Church is most unjustly taken up and wasted on vain things by these that have no office in the Church and in the mean time the ministry failing for necessity the poor perishing for hunger and churches falling to the ground Answered they should not be silent but earnestly admonish every man of his duty Thirdly Whither the Church men may require all possessors to pay tiths unto the Church only and inhibite all others to intromet therewith Answered After due admonitions used and no obedience following they should use the censure of the Church 2. Albeit the Church wanted not their own troubls yet they were not unmindfull of the affliction of Jacob elswhere and especially their afflicted Brethren in England as witnesseth this Letter sent by this Assembly with Jo. Knox The Superintendents with other Ministers and Commissioners of the Churches of God in the Kingdom of Scotland unto their brethren the Bishops Pastors of Gods Church who have renounced the Roman Antichrist and do professe with them the Lord Jesus Christ in syncerity desire the perpetuall increase of the Holy Spirit By word and writ it is come to our knowledge Reverend Pastors that diverse of our deare Brethren of whom some are the best learned within that realm are deprived from ecclesiasticall function and forbidden to preach and so are hindred by you to promote the kingdom of Jesus Christ because their conscience will not suffer them to take upon them at command of authority such garments as idolaters in time of blindenss have vsed in their idolatry which bruit can not but be dolorous unto our hearts mindefull of that sentence of the Apostle If yee bite and devour one another take heed lest yee be consumed one of another Wee intend not at this time to enter into the ground of that question which wee hear is agitated with greater vehemency by either partie than well lyketh us to be accounted among things tha are simply indefferent But in the bowells of Christ Jesus wee crave that Christian charity may prevail in you wee say the Pastors and leaders of Christ's flock in that realm that yee do not to others what yee would not have others do unto you yee can not be ignorant how tender a thing the conscience of men is all that have knowledge are not alike persuaded your conscience reclaimes not at the wearing of such garments but many thousands both godly learned are otherwise persuaded whose consciences are continually strucken with these sentences What hath Christ to do with Belial what fellowship hathlight with darknes If Surplice cornercape and tippet have been badges of idolaters in the very act of idolatry what hath the preacher of Christian liberty and the rebuker of all superstition to do with these dregs of that Romish beast yea who should not fear either to take in his hands or forehead the print and marke of that odious beast Our brethren that of conscience refuse that unprofitable apparel do neither condem nor molest you that use such vaine triffls If yee shall do the like to them wee doubt not but yee shall please God and confort the hearts of many who are wounded by the extremities used against these godly welbeloved brethren Colour of rhetorick or humane persuasion wee will use none but charitably wee desire you to call that sentence of Peter to minde Feed the flock of God which is committed to your charge caring for it not by constraint but willingly not as if yee were Lords over Gods heritage but that yee may be exempls unto the flock And moreover wee desire you to meditate on that saying of the Apostle Give no offence neither to the Jewes nor Greeks nor to the Church of God In what condition of time yee and wee both travell in the promoting of Christs Kingdom wee suppose yee are not ignorant
J. Christ correction of manners and administration of the holy Sacraments and declares that there is no other face of Church nor other face of religion than is presently by the favor of God established within this realm and that there be no jurisdiction ecclesiasticall acknowledged than which is and shall be within the famin Church or which flowes there from concerning the premisses 3. All markets and faires were forbidden to be keept on the Sabboth-day or in any Church or churchyaird so all handy-work on the Sabboth-day all gaming playing passing to taverns and aile-houses and wilfull remaining from their parish-church in time of Sermon or prayers and a pecuniall mulct layd upon the transgressours respective to be payd for the use of the poor of the parish 4. An Act was made concerning these who send their children out of country 5. Every housholder having lands or goods worth 500. pounds was obliged to have a Bible which at that time was printed in folio and a Psalme book in his house for the better instruction of themselves and their families in the knowledge of God 6. In the table of Acts not printed is mention of a Commssion anent the Jurisdiction of the Kirk the last part thereof Observe 1. The Parliament in the year 1560. is acknowledged to have been a lawfull Parliament 2. We may see that the disciplin at that time in the Church was authorised and ordained to continue Moreover what was the estate of the Church at that time wee may learn from an Epistle of Andrew meluin unto The. Beza dated Nouember 13. An. 1579. Wee have not ceased these fyue years to fight against pseudepiscopacy many of the Nobility resisting us and to presse the severity of discipline wee have presented unto his Roiall Majesty and three Estates of the realm both before and now in this Parliament the form of discipline to be insert among the Acts and to be confirmed by pulick authority wee have the Kings minde bended toward us but many of the Peers against us for they alledge if pseudepiscopacy be taken away one of the Estates is pulled down if presbyteries be erected the Rojall Majesty is diminished if Church-goods be restored unto the lawfull use the Kings treasury is emptied Seing the B. with Abbots and Priors make up the third Estate and all jurisdiction both ecclesiasticall and politicall belongeth unto the King and his Counsell and things ecclesticall should by their Sentence be adjudged unto the Kings treasure That they do speak or think so the cause in many is ignorance in others a wicked life and evill manners and in many a desire to catch the goods of the Church which yet remain or fear of losing what they have taken and what shall I say of that they hold that the Sentence of excommunication is not lawfull untill the cause be known by the Kings Counsell for they knowing their own guiltiness are feared for the Sentence of the Presbytery not so much for fear of Gods judgement as for terror of the civill punishments which by our lawes and practise do follow lastly whill they have regard unto the wisdom of the flesh more than unto the reveeled word of God they wish that all things should be carried in the name and at the beck of a Bishop or one perpetuall overseer and would have nothing administred by the common sentence of the Presbytery The Lord in mercy sweep away these evills from his Church This epistle is in Vindic. Philadelph Pag. 41. Immediatly before this Parliament the Duke d'Obigny afterwards styled Earle of Lennox came into Scotland towit in the last week of Septemb. as Spotswood shewes in Histor Pag. 308. Now if we conferre that time with what is written in that page his splene may appeare against the truth for he makes the Duke's coming to be a cause of variance betwixt the King and the Church at the Assembly preceeding where no difference was appearing but afterwards some what followes Jelousies and emulations were in the winter following among the Noble men as the Earle of Athol Chancelor was envied and died and others fled out of the Country but no variance did as yet appeare betwixt the King and the Church-men XVII In Aprile 1580. a Proclamation was made in the Kings name 1580. ex deliberatione Dominorum Consilii charging all Superintendents and Comnissioners and Ministers serving at Kirks to note the names of all the subjects alsweel men as women suspected to be Papists or ...... And to admonish them ...... To give confession of their faith according to the Form approved by the Parliament and to submit unto the disciplin of the true Church within a reasonable space ...... And if they faile ...... That the Superintendent or Commissioners present a catalogue of their names unto the King and Lords of the Secret Counsell where they shall bee for the time between and the 15. day of July next to come to the end that the Acts of Parliament made against such persons may be executed The Assembly conveens at Dundy July 12. here was the Laird of Lundy Commissioner The 38. Assembly from the King Commissioners c. James Lowson is chosen Moderator 1. Some spake against the Privy Conference as if tyranny and usurpation might creep-in by it and liberty were taken from other members nevertheless after reasoning it was judged expedient to continue 2. John Craig one of the Kings Ministers delivereth this Letter from the King Trusty and welbeloved friends Wee greet you well Wee have directed toward you our trusty friend the Prior of Pettinweem and the Laird of Lundy instructed with Our power for assisting with their power and counsell in all things that they may tending to the glory of God and preservation of Vs and Our Estates desiring you heartily to accept them and Our good will committed to them for the present in good part so wee commend you to Gods blest protection From our palace of Falkland July 11. 1580. 3. Forsomuch as the Office of a Bishop as it is now used and commonly taken in this realm hath no sure warrant authority nor good ground out of the Scriptures of God but is brought in by folly and corruption of mens inventions to the great overthrow of the Church of God The wholl assembly in one voice after liberty given to ail men to reason in the matter and none opponing himselfe to defend the said pretended Office Finds and declares the same pretended Office used and termed as is above said Unlawfull in itselfe as having neither ground nor warrand within the Word of God And ordaines all such persons as use or shall use hereafter the said Office shal be charged to dimit simpliciter quite and leave-off the same as an Office whereunto they are not called by God And to desist and cease from all preaching ministration of the sacraments or using any way the office of Pastors untill they receive de novo admission from the Generall assembly Under the pain of
not expedient to trouble your Majesty untill wee see what order shall be taken with these grievous complaints Beseeching your Majesty most humbly for the love of God who hath placed your Gr. in this Royall throne and hitherto hath wondrously maintained and defended your authority carefully to look upon these matters as becomes the Lieutenant of God and a Christian King And with advice of them that fear God and do tender your Gr. estate quietnes of this Common well so to redress the premisses that Christ be acknowledged above all and his messingers without fear or stop be suffered to execute their office the course of the gospell advanced and by the exemple of the worthy punishment on them who so licentiously and contemptuously have wronged and injured Ministers and Professors of Gods word that others hereafter be afrayd to enterprice the like The next Assembly is appointed to be at Edinburgh October 24. next It is objected against this Assembly that they did allow the Sentence of excommunication against Ro. Mongomery whereas it was pronounced summarily by one man in a private congregation to wit by John Davidson in the church of Libbertoun and upon this ground it was declared null by the Counsell It is ansuered 1. That he who hath often objected this testifieth that before the Assembly it was allowed and intimated in all the Churches of the country 2. In the Assembly of October year 1581. was a Generall Act ordaining summary excommunication against these who through ambition or covetousness did by such violent means intrude themselves into any function of the Church or who did obtend or use any Letters of charge to impede the disciplin See before at the VIII particulare 3. When this was objected many years since the author of Vindici Philadelph Pag. 29. answered for this instance that the Assembly in October knowing the mans inconstancy did advertise the Presbytery of Glasgow that they should diligently take heed that he usurp not the power of a Bishop and if he shall do so they were ordered to ●ondem him of contemptuousness and perfidiousness and to advertise the Presbytery of Edinburgh unto whom the Assembly at that time gave power to excommunicate Robert Mongomery in this case and so the presbytery of Glasgow notwithstanding the opposition made by Minto went on and decerned against him and the presbytery of Edinb pronounced the Sentence of excommunication and it was intimated in all the pulpits So for there In the same place wee find what was the successe at Perth When the Supplication was presented James Stuart a brother of Ochiltry who had been Tutor of the Earle of Arran and thereafter was made Earle of Arran and at rhat time was Chancelor and ●omenter of all these mischiefes did menacingly ask Who dar subscribe that Supplication Andrew Melvin answered Wee all will subscribe it and so he did subscribe it and after him John Erskin of Dun Th. Smeton Ro. Pont Da. Lindsay An. Hay Pe. Blackburn Tho. Buchanan and Pa. Galloway English men which were there did admire their boldness and thought that they had some privy attendents for their guard but they were dismissed without answers Bishop Spotswood omitting this passage saith To their grievances they received Generall answers and for the brethren of Glasgow their tryall was continued to the tenth of September next before which time the surprise of the Kings person at Ruthven fell out which altered the state of all affaires some of the nobility combining A Change of the Kings Court at Ruthven An 1582. themselves for defence of Religion and the liberty of the Kingdom as they pretended sayth he upon notice of the Duke of Arrans I conceive an error in the print for the Duke and Arran's absence from the Court placed themselves about the King and detained him some dajes at the house of Ruthven The principalls were John Earle of Marre William Earle of Goury Patrick Lord Lindsay Robert Lord Boid the Mast s of Glams Oliphant the Abbots of Dumfernlin Paisley Driburgh Camsbuskenneth the Lairds of Lochlevin easter Weemes Cliesh and the Constable of Dundy At this time the Earle of Arran was taken and keep prisoner and the Duke of Lennox being advised by the Kings letters went to France and died at Paris in the beginning of the year following These particulars are at length loc cit After the departure of the Duke the town of Edinburgh brought back their Minister John Dury with great joy singing as they went up the striet the 124. Psalme Now Israel may say c and as I heard some credible persons which were there as that time say they added after the Psalme Now hath God delivered us from the Devill the Duke and all his men The King went to Edinburgh in the beginning of October and there The 43. Assembly conveenes the Assembly in afrequent number of Noble men many Barons and Ministers Commissioners David Lindsay is chosen Moderator In Sess 2. The Ministers of Edinburgh were sent unto the K. to petition that he would send his Commissioners unto the Assembly The Commissioners that were sent by the former Assembly unto the King with the grievances report the answers in write these were read and judged not to answer the Articles therefore it is appointed that they shall be further insisted on with other things that are to be craved and four are appointed to form them in write In Sess 3 James haliburton Provest of Dundy and Colonell Will. Stuart come and deliver their Commission from the King in this tenor Wee by tenor hereof with the advice of the Lords of our Secret Counsell give and grant authority full power and commission to our right trusty and welbeloved friends James haliburton ...... And Col. Wi. Stuart coniunctly and severally for us in our name To pass unto the Generall assembly of the Church of our realm and there to hear and consider the matters propounded tending to the advancement of Gods glory and his true religion the correction of manners and retaining the ecclesiasticall matters in decent comely order as the word of God allowes and to report the matters propounded and treated unto us for our allowance and ratification of the same as appertaines and generally all and sundry other things to do that to the furtherance and assistance of all godly good matters is necessarily required firm stable ........ Subscribed with our hand at Halirudhouse October 10. 1582. and of our reigne the 16. year IV. The places where the Provinciall synods shall conveen should be changed as the brethren thereof shall judge that no ambition growe by continuing in one place V. Seing great scandall ariseth by the impunity of Bishops being altogether out of rule the Church thinks expedient that the Kings Commissioners the Lord Boyd the Laird Caprinton with the Moderator and his assessors conveen and solidly advise upon some substantious order VI. The Lord of Paisley in name of some Noblemen gives the Church
to understand the grounds moving them to that late action at Ruthven to wit the danger they perceived of the Church and religion the evident perill of the Kings Majesty and his estate and the confusion and mis-order of the Common-wealth whereof as they feell good testimony in their own consciences So they crave the Assembly would shew their good liking of the same and give ordinance to each Minister at his church to declare their good ground and action unto their flocks exhorting all Noble men others whatsoever faithfully to concurr with them in this good cause to the full prosecution thereof Then it was enquired by particular voting Whither these perills and every one of them whereof the information was made was seen or perceived by the brethren It was voted universally affumativè And to the end the Kings mind may be also known in this particulare Ja. Lowson David Lindsay and the Kings Ministers were directed to wait on the King to morrow after noon to conferre of these dangers and to report his answers Their report was that his Maj. said There was perill to religion and indirect courses were taken to the hurt thereof whereunto his own perill was joyned for he esteemes his standing to be joyned with the standing of religion As also he acknowledges sundry abuses in the realm and that all good men should concurr of duty to take away danger from the Church from his person estate and to the reformation of the Common well As for these things the Noble men craved three were appointed to frame an Act concerning them and shew it in the next Session That form was sent unto the Commissioners of the town of Edinburgh to be advised by them apart and then was voted and agreed-unto by the Assembly VII The Assembly considering the scandall by the impunity of Bishops to the grief of good men gives commission to the particulare presbyteries after specified to summon and call before them the Bishops in manner following that is the presbytery of Perth shall summon the Bishop of Murray the presbytery of Edinb the Bishop of Aberdien the presbytery of Merns the Bishop of Brechin the presbytery of Dundy the Bishop of Dunkell the presbtery of Glasgow the Bishop of Santandrews the presbytery of Sterlin the Bb. of Dunblain and Isles and to accuse them and every one of them in all or part as they are guilty to wit of non-preaching and Ministration of the Sacraments of negligence in doctrin disciplin haunting or frequenting the company of excommunicat persons wasting the patrimony of the Church setting tacks against the Acts of the Church giving Collation of Benefices against the said Acts and finally for giving scandall any way in life conversation And after due tryall process conviction to put order unto every one of them according to the quality of their offense and Acts of the Assembly Before the next meeting of the Assembly As they will answer c. VIII It is judged most expedient that Colledges and Univesities be visited and commission is given to certain Noble men and Ministers to concurr with such as the King and Counsell shall direct with them in visitation of all the Colledges And to consider how the rents and livings of every one of them are bestowd how the doctrin is used by the Masters and Regents whether it be correspondent to the Act of Parliament how order in disciplin is keept among the students And as they find disorder or defection to take order there with according to the Act of Parliament IX In Sess 11. the Sumner or Officer of the Church declares that whereas he was directed to summon the Kings Advocat to compear before the Assembly he could not find him for he is in Hermestoun A citation is directed to summon him to compear on wednesday next and answer whither he was the Former of the slanderous proclamation in July against the Ministry and for opposing the lawfull proceedings of the Church Certifying him if he compear not the Assembly will proceed as appertaineth In Sess 17. the Kings Advocat compeareth and adviseth the Assembly to consider whither they will allow their form of proceeding against him being a servant of his Majesty that he only is called upon the alledged forming of a Proclamation given out in the Ks name under the title of A declaration and concluded by authority of His Counsell and as they shall find by their wisdom he will not contemptuously refuse to answer After consideration it was judged that in respect of the slander arisen by his person he may and should give his declara●ion for removing the slander He is content and openly takes God to witness that he neither invented nor formed nor penned that proclamation but at the desire of the Duke he translated out of French into Scots the last part of it and did nothing more in all that proclamation Here with the Assembly was satisfied for his part X. The Earle Both-well declares that as he professed the true religion now preached within the realm before his departure so he hath continually lived and mindeth to live and die with it by Gods grace X. Some burgesses of Glasgow were summoned to compeare The Laird of Minto compeares and confesses his fault The disciplin and otder to be used against him for the offense is rem●tted to the judgement and discretion of the presbytery of Glasgow and so of John Graham elder and the presbytery should report what shall be done unto the next Assembly Archbald Hegget John Graham younger Hector Stuart John Sprew●ll elder Wil. Hegget and Robert Stuart are called and compear not They are condemned of contumacy that being at severall times summoned to answer for haunting or using the company of Ro. Mongomery after his excommunication was intimated unto them and for other enormities done against the Church they have despised the voice thereof they are ordained to make their publick repentance in the Church of Glascow after the form to be prescribed by the presbytery unto whom the execution of this sentence is committed Colin Campbell Malc Stuart Hect. Stuart Jo. Graham elder Gawin Graham and Archb. Hegget were summoned to answer for the violence done to Jo. Howeson in the presbytery they are called none of them compeares excep John Graham of whom before and Gawin Graham The Assembly ordaines the others for their violence and disobedience to be excommunicat in the church of Glasgow by D. Weemes with advice of the Presbytery XII Articles were read and allowd as meet to be propounded Seing the Jurisdiction of the Church is granted by God the Father throgh our Mediator Jesus Christ and given to these only who by preaching and overseeing bear office within the same To be exercised not by the injunctions of men but by the only rule of Gods word That an Act of Parliament concerning the liberty and jurisdiction of the Church be so plainly declared that hereafter none other under whatsoever pretense have any color to
of these propositions not with that addition Physicè probabiliter or the like Under the pain of the censure foresaid XI In Sess 16. His Ma s answers were returned from Sterlin 1. Understanding the first point to be meant of granting the benefit of pacification unto David Chalmers his Master and knowing that man to have been fotfeited only for that common action of his being at the field of Langside for which pardon was granted to so many he thought it no new or strange thing at the request of such as moved him to grant unto him the same benefit which many others had obtained yet no way intending to spare the due punishment of him or any other that may be charged or found guilty of the murder of his dearest Father or that are or shall be adversaries to the religion or impugners thereof against the lawes the execution of which he hath been is and will be willing to further 2. The second head being particularly mean'd of Fintry his M. wisheth the assembly to remember how he hath dealt in that matter and what testimoniall the Church of Edinb gave him nor hath his Majesty hindered the proceedings of the Church against him nor any other but mindeth to hold hand thereunto according to the lawes The third being meant of Wi. Holt an English man escaping out of the castle of Edinburgh his Majesty hath answered the Queen's late Ambassador and it is no strange thing to hear of a mans escaping but what they understand by indirect means of letting him depart his Majesty being specially informed thereof will after due tryall see the offenders punished according to their deservings The fourth head being very Generall his Majesty thinks the assembly will not judge it pertinent unto them to have vote in chusing his servants or to be too curious of the occasions of placing or removing them nor of the intelligence twixt him and other Countries for entertaining Civill peace from which no Princes or Common wealths abstain though being diverse in religion The 5. Head containing a generall complaint upon some specialls appearingly expressed in the matters following his Majesty wisheth the Assembly as they would be specially directly answered so to form their petitions forbearing particular exampls to ground their generall propositions and to remember that since he took the Government in his own person moe good lawes have been made for advancement of the Church and true religion then were before and the defect of the execution hath not been his default The sixth concerning the tack set to Seagy of certain victualls out of the superplus of the thirds which he had before in pension that is no new thing nor any way prohibited he could alswell content him with the pension as he had before free of all paiment of duty the necessary considerations moving to grant it are well enough known to many he is employd in publick service wanting the living whereunto he is provided in title during his father's life and his service is and may be necessary both to his Hi. and the Church For any thing that may be thought omitted in the provision of Ministers serving at the Churches annexed to Abbeys in the late disposition of them that is well supplied by the Act of Parliament The execution whereof is stayed these two years in their own default rather then any other way whill they have been craving their assignations continued as before and as yet have not answered his message sent by his Master of requests unto the Assembly at Santandrews Nevertheless his Ma. made choise of certain Barons and others of good qualification known to be zealous to the furtherance of that good work hoping to have had the assignations formed before the Assembly but being uncertain of the time appointed thereunto this year is doubtfull if they come to Edinburgh But if they come his Maj. shall sent them direction to proceed and also other things most needfull shall be resolved without delay Concerning the giving of church-livings to children and translating them to temporall Lordships his Majesty considereth his own losse and hinderance of his service there-in Whatsoever abuse hath entred before he accepted the government time and the approbations of these provisions by decriets of the Session have brought the matter unto that estate as it can be helped no other way but by the Parliament unto which when it shall be propounded his Majesty shall hold hand to have all possible reformation thereof The default of punishing vices mentioned in the. 9. head and of the provision of the poor and punishing vagabonds can not justly be imputed unto his Ma. who was ever willing to give commission unto such as the Ministers thought meetest to execute the same The. 10. head being generall his Majesty would be glad not only to have it explained but to hear all good advices that shal be offered for reformation of that which may be found amiss and how his lawes may have place and justice administred to the confort common benefit of all his good subjects The 10. head is also very generall as for that one exemple the removing of the Principall of Aberdien to be Minister of Santandrews his Majesty trusteth the assembly will not think that matter the substance being well considered to be either so proper to the Church or so improper unto the Civill estate but that his Hi. and Counsell had good ground and reason to direct his Letters as he did upon the generall respect of the north country wherein none was prejudged seing there was no charge containing power to denounce at the first but rather to do the thing required or compeare and show a cause in the contraty What is said before briefly of a process against Pa. Adamson is cleared by The Historicall Narration that he had a long and filthy sicknes and for curing it he had sought help of a witch and recovering health in some measure he in a preaching before the King declared against the Lords which lately had guarded the King and against the Ministry for which he was warned by the Presbytery of Santandrews and the witch with whom he had consulted and from the Presbyrery the cause was brought before the Synod of Fife In the Assembly the processe was found orderly deduced and he had been warned by the Synod apud acta to compear before the Generall assembly in October for contumacy in not compearing by the assembly he was suspended from the office of the Ministry and it was appointed that farther tryall should be taken of his life and corrupt doctrine But he pretending that he was going to the well of Spae for his health purchased from the K. security that during his absence the church should not proceed against him yet it was his purpose to stay in England and there to seek the advice of the most corrupt sort for the overthrow of disciplin in the Church of Scotland for he thoughr that the surest course to keep his Benefice At
nevertheless not only did the Ass approve it but the K. also in his fifth article calleth them the excommunicate Lords and albeit the L. Hume was at the same time excommunicated yet when he came into the Ass he named not that exception whereupon he might have had such benefite as the Earle of Anguse had found in the Assembly of the year 1590 he was guilty of the objected crime and yet the Sentence was declared to be null because of informality But an enemy is ever objecting whither true or false What he hath of the Assembly slighting the business of John Ross and An. Hunter is clear by what is above In the Parliament following in Iuny the excommunicated Lords were forfeited and Lawes were made against all willing hearers of Masse against all that are or shal be excommunicated by the Church After the Parliament because Both well had failed of his attempts by himself he joyned with the Lords in the North whereupon followed more troubles yet so that the rebells were fain to leave the Country before February XXXII The Assembly conveened at Montros Juny 24. James 1595. The 57. Assembly Nicolson was chosen Moderator I. The Assembly declares themselves Judges of marriages what are lawfull and what are unlawfull in so far as concerneth the spirituall part thereof In Sess 9. they declare two sorts unlawfull 1. When a person marryeth another whom he had before polluted by adultery 2. If the innocent person is content to remain with the nocent and the guilty or adulterer will take another Likewise marriages made by priests or by them who had served in the Ministry and are deposed from the function or by a private person such marriages are unlawfull II. All presbyteries are ordained to proceed against Papists within their bounds and against all their receipters or entertainers Under pain of deposition of the Minister in whose default the disciplin of the Church shall not be executed And the same disciplin to be used against all that have intercommoning intelligence or familarity with excommunicates III. Because many professing the truth of the Gospell do abstain for many years from participation of the Lords table under pretence of ●eud thereby declaring how litle they esteem that great benefite and in very deed cut off themselves from the communion of the Church Therefore ordinance is given unto all presbyteries to charge all such persons within their boundes to do as it becomes the members of Christ And if any person throgh infirmity or weakness of conscience shall refuse the Presbytery shall by information bring them into duty granting them some competent time to resolve themselves and if they continue obstinat to proceed against them to the sentence of excommunication IV. Sundry Sessions were taken up wi●h advising upon a way and meanes of a constant Plat for setling of Ministers stipends or assignations which were wont to be changed yearly V. Sir Iames Chissholm in humility confesses his offences namely his apostasy from the religion for which he was excommunicated he craves mercy from God he declares that now he renounceth Antichrist with all his errors and resolves by the grace of God to continue in the true religion and he craves to be received into the bosom of the Church again The Assembly appointes some to deal with him by conference and others to draw up the form of his satisfaction In Sess 9. he was received and the Sentence of his absolution was pronounced by the Moderator VI. Some articles of inquisition concerning the dilapidation of Benefices are prescribed unto Presbyteries VII The Kings Commissioners give the articles following to be read and answered 1. His Ma. craves that an Act be made ordaining that whosoever shall practize any treasonable enterprice or conspiracy against his Ma s person or estate being found and declared culpable by the Law shall also for that incurre the Sentence of excommunication That thereby an inseparable union may be betwixt the two swords 2. that an order be taken in excommunication specially in three points first that it be not at the appetite of two or three persons but by a convenient number of the Church gravely assembled secondly that it be not for civill causes or small faults specially for any Minister's particular interest lest it be thought they imitate the Pope's curse and so incurr the like contempt thirdly the form of summary excommunication without any citation to be abolished 3. Because Mr Craig is waiting in sicknes what hour it shall please God to call him and is altogether unable to serve any more and his Maj. intends to place J. Duncanson with the Prince and so hath no Minister but Pa. Galloway therefore craves an ordinance granting two Ministers whom he shall chuse The humble answers 1. The Assembly grantes the first Legitima cognittone Ecclesiastica praeeunte 2. Concerning the first particular of the second the Assembly agrees and the other two importing great weight and requiring deliberation the Assembly thinks meet to conclude nothing therein untill the next Assemb when by Gods grace these shall be determined and in the mean while ordaineth that none in the Ministry proceed to excommunicate without citation nisi periclitetur Ecclesia 3. It is agreed that his Maj. shall have his choise of godly and learned Ministers and to this effect ten Ministers or any sixe of them are directed to advise with his Maj. in his choise VIII In favor of the exequitours of Ministers it is ordained If a Minister dy after September 29. quia fruges sunt separa●ae à solo his exequitors shall have all that years stipend or rent and the half of the next IX Because there is great cause of humiliation before God whose anger is visible on this Land and is litle regarded by the most part therefore the Assembly indictes a generall fast and humiliation to be observed universally in all churches upon the first two sundayes of August next and the causes thereof to be gravely declared according to the grounds they see and conceive X. It is ordained that Presbyteries take order within their own boundes for visitation of Grammer Schools and reformation of them as occasion shall require And certain brethren are ordained to visite Colledges to examine the life and doctrine of the Masters the discipline and order there and where they find any abuse to reform it so far as they can and to report both what they shall do and what abuse they can not reform That year was quietness in the countrey excepting great troubles betwixt the Maxwells and Johnstons in the South and the like in the Hielands and by windy harvest followed great scarcety and dearth XXXIII The King knowing that the Gen. Assembly was to conveen 1596. in March sent for Robert Bruce one of the Ministers of Edinburgh and as B. Spotsword hath it hoping that by the sway he carried in these meetings some proposition that tended to the reclaiming of the exiled Lords should be made by the
when they shall arrive As appeares their intention is by their preparation force and armour and leagues of friendship which they are dayly binding up 2. Many Jesuites and excommunicat Papists are keept within the Country detaining such as they have perverted in their errors and seducing others into the same corruption and holding them in hope of the Papist Lords with assistance of strangers such are Robert Abercromy Alex. Macquhirry the Abbot of New-abbay John Gordon of Newton Pat. Con Alexander Lesly of Piell young Bonitoun Alexander Ramsay and many others 3. In many places people are altogether ignorant of their salvation and that for want of Pastors and maintenance nor know they their duty unto God or their King and so the Land is overflowed with atheism and all kind of vice There be 400 Paris-churches destitute of the Ministry of the word besids the Churches of Argile and the Isles 4. It is universally lamented by his Majesties subjects that by delaying perverting and eluding of justice murders oppression incests adulteries and all kind of hainous crimes abound 5. It is heavily lamented that the Ministers who have obtained some small provision by assignation in An. 1595. are frustrated by the Lords of Session refusing to decide the suspensions according to the Act of February 1587 year The overtures for remedy were adioyned as they are related before in Sess 5. IX In Sess 10. John Preston and Edward Bruce Commendator of Kinloss Commissioners from his Ma. do give-in these articles or instructions 1. Yee shall shew unto the Assembly our good will to have al the Churches of Scotland planted with Ministers and sufficient livings to the great hurt of our own revenue and that portion of the thirds which was assigned to our house and our Counptrollars in possession thereof but finding that all the thirds is not sufficient to plant all the Churches nor is it commodious for Ministers to serve in one place and have their livings in another far distant from their cure Therefore we have thought good to set forward an order for locall stipends founded on this ground that all the churches of Scotland shall have Ministers and all Ministers shall have stipends within their own parishon of such value as by our authority on the one part and by concurrance and procurement of the Church on the other may be obtained from the tacks-men of tyths and present possessors of them for which effect wee have caused an Act of Parliament to be made in the year 1592. granting Commission to certain Noble men Counsellers Officers and Ministers on the one and other parts To treat of and prosecute this matter and also have given command particularly to certain of our Lords of Checker to help by their advice and labors to bring this matter unto some perfection wherein as wee understand some thing is done as part of the brethren can testify As wee continuing in our good mind to have in our time the Church setled with livings and not entangled yearly with process and to have all our churches planted within the realm By these presents offer and promitt unto the Assembly to cause our Commissioners Counsellers and Officers to conveen presently before the expiring of this Assembly with the saids Commissioners from the Church to begin this good purpose and to lay the ground and to set down the order time and place of conveening to prosecute the same unto the end conform to the Act of Parliament So that if any stay shall bee it shall be on the Church's part as oft before and not on our part 2. Yee shall shew them that it is a stay of this good work that by some of their preachings the people are made to understand that wee and our Counsell would stay the planting of churches and take away the livings possessed by Ministers albeit the contrary is true that wee and our Counsell are most willing that the churches be wholly planted and the provision of Ministers be augmented so far as lawfully may be obtained with consent of our Nobility and other tacks-men of tyths whose rights without order of law wee can not empare and therefore this form of preaching discourageth our good Counsellers most willing of the work and is an heavy slander upon the Ministers wherein yee shall crave order be taken and the like be not done in time coming 3. Yee shall desire those your instructioes in our name to be registred in the books of the Assembly as a perpetuall testimony of our good will and also that answers be given particularly by a generall vote of the wholl Ass and no way to be referred to a privat Conference and the answers so voted to each particulare head to be registred in like manner and the extract of all these articles and the answers to be delivered unto you and to be reported unto us Sic subscribitur James R. In Sess 13. with the above named overtures these petitions were sent unto the King 1. That his Maj. would prosecute his good purpose and intention declared concerning the planting of all the churches with qualified Ministers and sufficient provisions for their entertainment And for that effect that he would give commission to the Visitors named by the Asse●bly to take inquisition of all churches within the boundes of their visitation and to deal in his Majesties name with the tacks-men possessors of the tiths for sufficient provision unto the Ministers out of the every parish and to report their diligence unto his Majesties Commissioners appointed for the work of the Plat and to provide for the charges of the Visitors in that journy 2. That his Majesty would be pleased to take order substantiously by advice of his Counsell and Estates how the Principall Judgement-seats and other inferior Judicatories may be purged of unqualified and corrupt persons and filled with others meet to discharge that Calling faithfully for the comfort of his Majesties peaceable and well disposed subjects 3. That his Majesty would command and ordain the Lords of Session to administrat justice unto the Ministers who have obtained a small augmentation of their stipends or new provision by the Modefiers in the year 1595. and according to the Act of Febru in the year 1587. as they are bound by their solem oath and promise Seing the extraordinary dearth urgeth them with so great necessity that unless his Maj. have consideration of their estate they and their families are driven to extream poverty and want X. Articles propounded by the Commissioners of the constant Plat to be advised by the Assembly and passed in Acts 1. It is thought requisit that the Assembly would ordain that the Moderators of each Presbytery should give presentations jure devoluto of all Benefices of cure belonging to Laick patrons that have not presented qualified persons within sixe months after the decease of the last possessor and also of these Benefices which heerafter shall vaik if these patrons neglect to present within sixe months Under the pain
his kingdom you are a subject unto Christ and a member of his Church and neither Head nor King the spirituall office-bearers to whom He hath committed the Goverment of his church have power and warrant to conveen which you ought not to controll nor discharge but rath to assist Sir when you were in your swadling cloaths Christ reigned freely in this Land in despite of the enemies the office-bearers had their meetings and their meetings have been steadeable unto your Maj. when the enemies were seeking your destruction and now when such necessity urgeth them you will find fault with their conveening The wisdom of your Counsell which is pernicious is this Because Ministers and Protestants in Scotland are too strong and controle the King they must be weakned and brought low by stirring a party against them and when the King is indifferent to both both shall fly to him and so he shall be served grow in grandure and attain his purpose But this wisdom may prove foly and in serving both you shall lose the hearts of both The King setleth a litle and dimits them pleasantly promising that albeit the Convention had licenced them to make their offers they shall not be licensed untill they be out of the Countrey again and whatsoever they offer they shall find no favor at his hand till they have satisfied the Church Nevertheless they were permitted to remain and travell by their friends for reconciliation The Commissioners of the Generall Assembly and Commissioners from sundry Synodes meet at Edinb Octob. 23. as was appointed at Couper It was thought expedient that some commissioners be appointed for every quarter of the country and one of every quarter shall abide at Edinburgh monethly by turns to communicate the advertisements that shall be directed from diverse parts and to consult upon the most expedients in every case Robert Bruce Robert Pont David Lindsay Jac. Balfour Pat. Galloway and Wal. Balcanquell Ministers within the Presbytery of Edinbugh were appointed to conveen always with them From this conveention were sent unto the Presbyteries informations of the dangers arising from the forfeited Earles and for remedy the Ministers were desired to make professors sensible of the danger to keep a publick humiliation the first sunday of December to urge an universall amendement in all estates beginning at themselves to intimate solemly in all the churches the excommunication of the Apostate Earles to proceed with the censure of the Church against them who entertain any society with them or take any dealing for them quia periditatur salus Ecclesiae Reipublicae November 9. these who conveen sent Da. Lindsay Pa. Gallowav Ja. Nicolson and Ia. Melvin The third debate unto the King to crave in all humility that he would shew what moved him take so hardly with the Ministry to offer all satisfaction and to propound their grievances November 11. they report to the brethren the Kings answers There can be no agriement betwixt him and the Ministry till the marches of their Iurisdiction wer rid they should not speak in pulpit of the affaires of State and Counsell the Generall assembly should not conveen but by his authority and speciall command Synods presbyries and particular Sessions should not medle with causes whereupon his lawes strick but fornication and the like scandalls and he will be satisfied in these and such other heads As for their grievances his answer was he had granted nothing to the excommunicate Earls but what his Counsell and Estates thought needfull for the peace of the realm and upon condition that they satisfy the Church The Lady Huntly who was come to the baptisme of his Daughter is a good discreet Lady as Papists may be honest folks and his Mother was a Papist and yet an honest Woman The Lady Livinston shall satisfy the Church or els she shall not come neer his Daughter but he could not refuse to concredite her unto the Lord Livinston And they reported that they had replied The free rebuke of sin without respect of persons was warranted by Gods Word Ministers speak alway with reverence of his Majesty but can not spare the enemies of truth nor comport with any favorable dealing shewd towards them The discipline of the Church was established after many conferences upon evident grounds of Gods Word by his Majesties lawes and Acts of Parliament and use and practise following His Majesty had not done well in granting any favor to the forfeited Earls till they had been out of the Countrey and all that the favor shewd unto Papists moveth good men to suspect his Majesty especially if the Lady Huntly come to the baptism pulpits would sound against it and the committing of his Daughter unto the Lady Livinston's custody will be thought a speciall pledge of his favor unto Papists When the brethren heard this report they perceived clearly that the ruine of the liberty of Christs Kingdom was intended and seing the King had uttered his mind so plainly they thought meet to advertise the Presbyteries and exhort the brethren to study diligently the grounds of disciplin and that they argue not upon articles which are to be sent unto them from the King till their Commissioners be advised For they feared to call into question the determined and undoubted disciplin of Christs Church Here yee may see the alteration of discipline was intended before December and I have heard saith David Black he there that the King had a role of Ministers whom he purposed to preferre unto Bishopricks before December 17. The same elleventh day of November they were enformed certanly that David Black Minister at Santand was to be charged to compear before the King and his Counsell for some words spoken in a Sermon in October The next day the foresaid Ministers were sent again unto the King to understand what were his doutbs A fourth debate questions he had to propound concerning the marches and calling of the Ministry and to advertise his Majesty how it is taken hardly that Ministers of Gods word be vexed and charged for calumnies and triffling delations when the enemies of Gods truth are favored and over seen They reported on November 15. that they had received no good answer because his own Minister Pa. Galloway had said unto him in a private conference The Church gote fair words and promises without effect but the enemies gote the good deeds Nevertheless the same brethren excepting Patrick were directed again to insist earnestly upon this point that order be taken with the common enemy ere any controversie be intended against the Church or any Minister otherwise to let him understand that all the world will say Nothing was intended but benefite to the enemies and trouble unto the Church The King answered He had thought much of that matter only let David Black compear and if he be innocent purge himself in judgement but take heed that he decline not my judicatury For if he do so it will be worse The brethren
A Declinature from the Counsell conveennig on the 17 day perceive that the Kings and the Counsell's aim was by this preparative to draw Ministers doctrine under their censure controlment And remembring that some decllnatures of this nature given-in by some brethren before were forgoten or denied because they were only verball do resolve upon a declinature in write and fortify it by good reasons and to be subscribed by them with David seing the cause is common David compeares upon the 18. day and gives-in the declinature On the 20. day it was thought needfull to send a copy of the declinature unto every Presbytery and be subscribed by all the members together with a missive requesting them to return it being subscribed with all possible diligence with some brother who was able to assist them in so weighty matters and also desiring every one study diligently this question and all the points of the discipline for certanly Satan was making an assault on the hedge of the Lords vineyard that at his pleasure he may destroy and wast the plants thereof Diligence was used in gathering subscriptions so that in short space the hands of about 400. were at it None so diligent as John Spotswood afterwards Bishop of Santandr howbeit even then he reveeled unto the King all their counsels proceedings either by himself or somtimes by a Courtier with whom he was familiar he was the only suspected Judas among the Ministers at that time others were like Hazael who understood not their own hollow hearts till time discovered them On November 24. the Commissioners of the Church being for the most part present and being enformed that they were to be charged to go off the town did resolve that seing they were conveened by warrant by Christ and his Church in so dangerous a time to see that the Church receive no detriment they wold continue notwithstanding any charge so long as it shall be found expedient and in the mean time they sent Ministers Da. Lindsay Ro. Rollock and Ja. Melvin unto the K. to shew him what inconvenients may ensue if he enter into hard dealing with the church and discharge the Commissioners of the Gen. assembly to beseech him to desist from pursute of D. Black and all controversies arising thereby till order were taken with the common enemy and a Gen. assembly be convocated fordeciding all controversies and answering all his questions And to move him to consider the danger wherein the Countrey lieth by Papists binding themselfs together associating to themselves sundry Clanns preparing arms and horses c. The next day they report his answer He was sory that matters have so fallen out betwixt him and the Commissioners yet if they will passe from the deelinature at least make a declaration that it was not Generall but used particularly in that cause of David Black being a case of slander and pertaining by right unto the church he will passe from the summons and all pursute of David Black By the way here we may understand that the words wherefore he was charged were not so odious as some have reported them Then diverse formes of a declaration were advised but they could not find one which in their judgement would please the king In end they condes●ended to make this offer that if his Majesty would passe from that summons and cease from all charging of Ministers for their preaching till a lawfull Generall assembly were convocated they will on the other side take up the declinature and cease to make any use of it untill the said assembly The brether that were directed report on the 27. day how they had spent much time in reasoning with his Majesty but could not agree unless the Commissioners would passe from the declinature and cause David Black answer and acknowledge the Judicatory But they would not undertake it Upon the same 27. day David Black was summoned again by proclamation and sound of trumpet at the cross for speaches uttered by him in his Sermons these three years last by past And because somtimes Barons and others sare with the Ministers all the Leedges were discharged by proclamation to assemble at the desire of Ministers Presbyteries or other ecclesiasticall judgements Under pretense of assisting them in their defense being accused of any cause crime or offense or when they repaire to any judgement seat or otherwise Without his Majesties licence Letters also were given forth upon Act of Counsell charging the Commissioners of the Generall assembly to depart out of rhe town within 24. houts after the charge and discharging them to conveen any where els Immediatly the Commissioners conveen and lay the proclamation open before the Lord the Judge of so odious imputations as they were burdened-with in these proclamations and usurpation of Supreme authority over the Church they advised them who were to occupy the pulpits to deale mightily by the word against these proclamations and charges and to use such arguments as may flow from good grounds which were then layd befored them November 29. they resolve to give-in some articles unto the King and Counsell the day following which was the day of Mr Blacks compearance wherein they do clear themselves of these odious imputations and they crave to slay that action till a Gen. assembly be convocated they thought it also expedient in respect of the new libelled summons that another declinature be formed and used by David in his own name and of the rest of the Ministry On the 29. day the hour approaching the Commissioners appoint Robert Bruce Robert Pont Robert Rolock David Lindsay Pa. Galloway to present their articles and to assist David in his action the rest were exercised in the mean time in praying and confessing their sins which had procured such trouble The brethren returning about half an hour after twelve reported that some had entred into commoning with them and condescended upon some grounds of agreement that the commoners on the Ks part were to travell with his Majesty against afternoon and themselves were to deal with the Commissioners One ground whereupon they had condescended was that they would take up their declinature and the Counsell their summons and use a form of protestation After noon when there was no appearance of agriement and the Counsell were sitting the second declinature was given in wherein David adhereth unto the first and fortifieth it with moe reasons and the above-named articles were presented David was wonderfully assisteth with courage and wisdom and the brether also who were appointed to assist him especially Rob. Bruce Nevertheless the King and Counsell do passe to the Interloquiture and declare themselves Judges competent to all the points of the libell except one which concerned the Religion of England So scrupulous were they to medle with matters spirituall or ecclesiasticall The brether returning unto the rest who were exercized as before noone report what was past It was thought meet that the doctrine be directed against the Interloquiture as
the presbytery alledging that they had not power to take away any action from them which was in process and not decided They made also a Visitation of the Colledges and made new canones concerning the election of the Rector and his continuance to be but for a year and the exemption Anothe● step was the vote in Perliament of all the Masters from the Church Session Concerning the next stepp unto Prelacy which was the vote in Parliament The Historicall Narration saith At the Parliament in December 1597. the workmen for Episcopacy the commissioners of the Assembly presented a petition in name of the church that Ministers may have vote in Parliament They had not commission to petition it either for the Church in generall or for Ministers in particulare It is true it was an old complaint of the Generall assemblies that others who had the Benefices of the Prelacies did vote in Parliament in name of the Church and therefore they petitioned that none do vote in name of the Church but they who shall have commission from the Church if there were any necessity that some must vote in name of the Church but that Ministers in particula●e should vote in Parliament was not petitioned The Assembly in October 1581. being required by the King to give some Overture how he shall not be prejudged seing they have damned the office of Bishops whereunto is annexed a temporall jurisdiction by whom the Prince was served by voting in Parliament assisting in Counsell contributing in taxations and the like Thretty Barons and Commissioners from Burrous and Ministers were appointed to consult apart upon it After consultation they returned to the Assembly with this Overture that for voting in Parliament and assisting in Counsell commissioners from the Generall assembly shall supply the place of Prelates as for exercing criminall and Civill jurisdiction the head Bailives may exerce it The Assembly allowed the Overture but did not determin to send commissioners for that effect When the same question was propounded by the Convention of Estates in Octob. 1582. answer was returned from the assembly that they would not consent any should vote but they who bear office in the Church and were authorized with commission from the Church but they did not determin whither Min. or Barons or Burgesses who were Elders The Assembly in May 1592. enjoined every brother to consider whither Minister may vote in Parliament in place of the old Prelates but no conclusion was resolved-upon So the Assemblies were never earnest for vote in Parliament but complained that the Lords which had the abbacies priories and Bishopricks voted in name of the Church by whom the Church was damnified in sufficient maintenance for the Service of God or answered to the King complaining for the want of the third Estate But the ground is not right that of necessity the Church must be an Estate of Parliament for by the Church is meaned either the Ministry only according to the Popish sense taking the Clergy only for the Church Ot the Ministry together with the commonality of Professors which is the right acceptation of the word Ministers may not lawfully sit as members in Parliament because the Parliament is a Civile Court or great Counsell conveened for making Lawes concerning rights of inheritances weights and measures forfeitures losse of limbs or life and the like whereof Ministers should not make lawes seing they are set apart to preach the gospell c And howbeit Church-affaires or matters of religion be somtime treated in Parliament yet it is a Civile assembly and their proceeding or sanction of such lawes is Civile If yee will comprehend all the p●ofessors or members of the Church under the name of the Church then all the subjects within the kingdom shall make but the third Estate or the wholl Country is but a part of the Parliament Moreover the subjects being considered materially they are the same persons both in the Church and Commonwealth but considered with diverse respects they are distinguished formally as citizens of the Kingdom their body is represented in Parliament as members of the Church they should medle only with things spirituall in their Judicatories and Councells The truth is None voteth in Parliament in name of the Church or as ecclesiasticall persons but only as Barons or in respect of the Baronies annexed to the Bishoprick abbacy or priory So that if prelates were not Barons the Church would have no vote I grant Ministers may be present at Parliaments but with the book of God in their hands if they be required in any doubt nor should the Estates make any Act eoncerning religion without the advice and consent of her representative Body but Ministers should not be members of that Court nor none other in name of the Church The Noble men who possessed the great How it was carried Benefices and so many others as they could move to assist them opposed this vote but by the Kings earnest dealing with sundries it was granted that so many as his Majesty shall provide to the office place title dignity of Bishop abbot or other prelate shall at all times have vote in parliament It was thought no honest man in the Ministry would accept these titles dignities and the Estates were the more liberall in their grant The consideration of the office was remitted to the consultation agreement of the King generall assembly but expressely without prejudice of the Jurisdiction disciplin of the Church in Generall or Provinciall assemblies presbyteries Sessions But what office of Bishop abbot or prior should be and not prejudiciall to the disciplin of the Church is hard to determin The Commissioners as if they had procured a great benefite to the Church sent their Missives to the presbyteries to inform them with what difficulty they had obtained this and what danger was in delay and therefore had anticipate the time of the Assembly and with the Kings consent had appointed it to be holden the seventh of March. Under fair pretenses the diets appointed by ordinary assemblies were altered and either anticipated to surprize men or prorogated till they had prepared persons or dressed purposes till at last the whole liberty of appointing any diet at all was reft out of their hands In the Missives they inform lykewise what order was taken for the Plat and provision of stipends to make the other point the more acceptable XXXVI Nevertheless the judicious and sinceerer sort of the Ministry 1598. discover the Mystery of iniquity lurking in this pretended benefite of Ministers-vote in Parliament at the Synode especially of Lothian and Fife about the end of February In the Synod of Fife David Ferguson the antientest Minister of Scotland had a discourse of the travell and paines taken by the Ministry to purge this Church from the corrupt estate of Bishops But now sayd he I perceive a purpose to erect it again I can compare the manner of bringing it in to