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A62025 Reasons of the present judgement of the Vniversity of Oxford concerning The Solemne League and Covenant, The Negative Oath, The Ordinances concerning discipline and vvorship : approved by generall consent in a full convocation, 1, Jun. 1647, and presented to consideration.; Judicium Universitatis Oxoniensis. English Sanderson, Robert, 1587-1663.; Zouch, Richard, 1590-1661.; Langbaine, Gerard, 1609-1658.; University of Oxford. 1647 (1647) Wing S624; ESTC R183228 29,783 44

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drawn from the Analogie of other Courts wherein the Kings Power is alwayes supposed to be virtually present under submission we conceive it is of no consequence 1. The Arguments à minore and à majore are subject to many fallacies and unlesse there be a parity of reason in every requisite respect between the things compared will not hold good A Pety Constable they say may doe something which a Justice of Peace cannot doe And the Steward of a pety Mannour hath power to adminster an Oath which as we are told the House of Commons it self hath no power to doe 2. That the high Court of Parliament is the supream Judicatory we have been told it is by vertue of the Kings right of presiding there he being g the Supream Iudge and the Members of both House his Councell Which being so the reason of difference is plaine between that and other Judicatories in sundry respects 1. The Judges in other Courts are deputed by him and doe all in his name and by his authority and therefore the presence of his power in those Courts of ministeriall Jurisdiction is sufficient his personall presence not necessary neither hath he any personall vote therein at all But in the high Court of Parliament where the King himself is the Supreme Judge judging in his own name and by his own authority his Power cannot be presumed to be really present without either the actuall presence of his person or some virtuall representation thereof signified under his great Seal 2. The Judges in inferiour Courts because they are to act all in his name and by his Authority doe therefore take Oathes of fidelity for the right exercising of Judicature in their severall places sitting there not by any proper interest of their owne but only in right of the King whose Judges they are and therefore they are called the Kings Judges and his Ministers But in the high Court of Parliament the Lords and Commons sit there in Councell with the King as Supreme Judge for the good of the whole Realm and therefore they are not called the Kings Judges but the Kings Councell and they have their severall proper rights and interests peculiar and distinct both between themselves from that of the Kings by reason whereof they become distinct h Orders or as of late times they have been stiled in this sense as we conceive i three distinct Estates Each of which being supposed to be the best Conservators of their own proper interest if the power of any one Estate should be presumed to be virtually present in the other two that Estate must needs be in inevitably liable to suffer in the proper Interests thereof Which might quickly prove destructive to the whole Kingdome The safety and prosperity of the whole consisting in the conservation of the just rights and proper interests of the maine parts viz. The King Lords and Commons inviolate and entire 3. The Judges of other Courts for as much as their power is but ministeriall and meerly Judiciall are bounded by the present Lawes and limited also by their owne Acts so as they may neither swerve from the Laws in giving Judgement nor reverse their owne Judgements after they are given But the High Court of Parliament having by reason of the Kings Supreme Power presiding therein a Power Legislative as well as Judiciall are not so limited by any earthly Power but that they may change and over-rule the Lawes and their own Acts at their pleasure The Kings Personall assent therefore is not needfull in those other Courts which are bounded by those Lawes whereunto the King hath already given his personall assent but unto any Act of Power beside beyond above or against the Lawes already established we have been informed and it seems to us very agreeable to reason that the Kings Personall Assent should be absolutely necessary Forasmuch as every such Act is the exercise of a Legislative rather then of a Judiciall power and no Act of Legislative power in any Community by consent of all Nations can be valid unlesse it be confirmed by such person or persons as the Soveraignty of that Community resideth in Which Soveraignty with us so undoubtedly resideth in the person of the King that his ordinary style runneth Our k Soveraign Lord the King And he is in the Oath of Supremacie expresly acknowledged to be the onely Supreme Governour within his Realmes And we leave it to the wisdome of others to consider what misery and mischief might come to the Kingdome if the power of any of these three Estates should be swallowed up by any one or both the other and if then under the name of a Judiciall there should be yet really exercised a Legislative power 4. Since all Judiciall Power is radically and originally in the King who is for that cause styled by the Lawes l The Fountaine of Iustice and not in any other Person or Persons but by derivation from him it seemeth to us evident that neither the Judges of inferiour Courts of ministeriall Justice nor the Lords and Commons assembled in the High Court of Parliament may of right exercise any other power over the Subjects of this Realm then such as by their respective Patents and Writs issued from the King or by the known established Laws of the Land formerly assented unto by the Kings of this Realm doth appear to have been from him derived unto them Which Lawes Patents and Writs being the exact boundary of their severall Powers it hath not yet been made appeare to our understandings either from the Lawes of the Realme or from the tenour of those Writs by which the Parliament is called that the two Houses of Parliament have any power without the King to order command or transact but with him m to treat consult and advise concerning the great affairs of the Kingdome In which respect they have sundry times in their Declarations to His Majesty called themselves by the name of His great Councell And those Lawes and Writs are as we conceive the proper Topick from which the just power of the Honourable Houses can be convincingly deduced and not such fraile Colletions as the wits of men may raise from seeming Analogies and Proportions VIII Of the Negative Oath WE are not satisfied how we can submit to the taking of the Negative Oath 1. Without forfeiture of that liberty which we have sworne and are bound to preserve With which liberty we conceive it to be inconsistent that any obligation should be laid upon the Subject by an oath not established by Act of Parliament 2 Without abjuring our a naturall Allegiance and violating the Oathes of Supremacy and Allegiance by us formerly taken By all which being bound to our power to assit the King we are by this Negative Oath required to swear from our heart not to assist him 3. Without diminution of His Majesties just Power and greatnesse contrary to the third Article of the Covenant by
defenditur Iure mente ROM. 14. 22. Happy is he that condemneth not himselfe in that which he alloweth THE END ERRATA Page 23. marg. read Haeretici pag. 24. l. 12. read Ecclesiasticall p. 24. l. 27. r. declared against Episcopacie p. 26. l. ult. marg. r. Hen. 3. p. 28. 1. 24. r. be inevitably a Such an Oath as for Matter Persons and other Circumstances the like hath not been in any Age or Oath we read of in sacred or humane stories M. Nye Covenant with Narrative pag. 12. a Pactum est duorum pluriúmve in idem placitū consensus L. 1. ff. de Pactis b Whereas many of them have had an oath administred unto them not warrantable by the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme They doe humbly pray that no man hereafter be compelled to take such an oath All which they most humbly pray as their rights and liberties according to the Lawes and Statutes of this Realme Petit. of Right 3. c It is declared 16 Ian. 1642. That the King cannot compell men to be sworne without an act of Parliament Exact Collect. pag. 859 860. d Proclam of 9. Octob. 19. Car. a viz. In accounting Bishops Antichristian and indifferent Ceremonies unlawfull b viz. In making their discipline and government a mark of the true Church and the setting up thereof the erecting of the throne of Christ c Let us not be blamed if we call it Parliament Religion Parliament Gospel Parliament Faith Harding confut of Apology part 6. Chap. 2. d Stat. 13. Eliz. 12. e Such jurisdictions privileges superiorities and preheminences spirituall and ecclesiasticall as by any c. for the Visitation of the Ecclesiasticall State and Persons and for reformation order and correction of the same and of all manner errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities shall for ever by authority of this present Parliament be united and annexed to the Imperiall Crown of this Realme An Act restoring to the Crowne the antient Jurisdiction c. 1 Elizab. I. a Art 36. b give advantage to this Malignant party to traduce our Proceedings They infuse into the people that we mean to abolish all Church-Government Remonst 15. Dec. 1641. Exact Collect. pag. 19. The Lords and Commons doe declare That they intend a due and necessary Reformation of the Government and Liturgie of the Church and to take away nothing in the one or in the other but what shall be evill and justly offensive or at least unnecessary and burthensome Declar. 9. Apr. 1642. Exact Coll. p. 135. c Statut. of Carlile 25. E. 1. recited 25. E. 3. d They infuse into the people that we mean to leave every man to his own fancie absolving him of that Obedience which he owes under God unto His Majesty whom we know to be entrusted with the Ecclesiasticall Law as well as with the Temporall Exact Collect. ubi sup p. 19. e That he will grant keep and confirm the Laws Customes and Franchises granted to the Clergie by the glorious King S. Edward And that he will grant and preserve unto the Bishops and to the Churches committed to their charge all Canonicall Privileges and due Law and Iustice and that he will protect and defend them as every good King in his Kingdome ought to be Protector and Defender of the Bishops and the Churches under their Government Vide Exact Coll. p. 290 291. f See Stat. 25. H. 8. 20. 1. E. 6. 2 g See Stat. 39. Eliz. 8. h Stat. 14. E. 3. 4. 5. 17. E. 3. 14 i Stat. 26. H. 8. 3. 1. Eliz. 4. k Supremam potestatem merū imperium apud nos habet Rex Cambd. Whereas by sundry divers old authentique Histories Chronicles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this Realm of England is an Empire and so hath been accepted in the world governed by one Supream Head and King having the dignity and royall estate of the Imperiall Crown of the same Stat. 24. H. 8. 12. See also 1 Elizab. 3. a The Lords Commons doe declare That they intend a due and necessary Reformation of the Liturgie of the Church and to take away nothing therein but what shall be evill and justly offensive or at least unnecessary and burthensome Declarat 9. Apr. 1642. Exact Coll. pag. 135. c From whence it is most evident that the Rights and Privileges of the Parliaments and Liberties of the Kingdom are in the first place to be preserved Answ. to Scotish Papers 18. Nov. 1646. page 21. d We observe you mention the defence of the King twice from the Covenant yet in both places leave out In the preservation and c. pag. 39. 46. a maine clause without which the other part ought never to be mentioned pag. 56. a Haeretici nec Deo nec hominibus servant fidem Speciatim hec addo Calvinistas in hac re deteriores esse quàm Lutheranos Nam Calvinistae nullam servant fi●em Iura perjura Lutherani moderatiores sunt Becan 5. Manual Controv. 14. 2. 4. c. b Invent Oathes and Covenants for the Kingdome dispence with them when he pleaseth sweare and forsweare as the wind turneth like a godly Presbyter Arraig of Perfec in Epist. Ded. c By the Covenant both Houses of Parliament many thousands of other His Majesties Subjects of England and Ireland stand bound as well as we to hinder the setting up of the Church-Government by Bishops in the Kingdome of Scotland And that we as well as they stand bound to endeavour the extirpation thereof in England and Ireland Scots Declar. to the States of the United Provinces 5. Aug. 1645. recited in Answer to the Scots Papers pag. 23. d The old formes of Acts of Parliam were The King willeth provideth ordaineth establisheth granteth c. by the assent of Parliament c. See Statutes till 1 H. 4. After that The King of the assent of the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and at the speciall instance and request of the Commons of this Realm hath ordained c. See Statutes 1 H. 4. till 1 H. 7. A forme of such Petition of the Commons see 1 R. 3. 6. Prayen the Commons in this present Parliament assembled that where c. Please it therefore your Highnesse by the advice and assent of the Lords Spirituall and Temporall in this your present Parliament assembled and by the authori●y of the same to ordaince c. No Bill is an Act of Parliament Ordinance or Edict of Law although both the Houses agree unanimously in it till it hath the Royall Assent Ancient Customes pag. 54. Assemblee de ceux troys Estats est appellee un Act de Parliament car sans touts troys nest ascun Act de Parl. Finch Nomotech fol. 21. We admit that no Acts of Parliament are complete or formally binding without the Kings assent H. P. Answer to David Ienkins pag. 6. e Which if your Majesty shall be pleased to adorne with your Majesties Royall assent without which it can neither be complete and perfect nor Stat. 1. Jac. 1. f Stat. 33. H. 1. 21. g Dominus Rex habet ordinariam jurisdictionem dignitatem potestatem super omnes qui in regno suo sunt Ea quae jurisdictionis sunt pacis ad nullum pertinent nisi and coronam dignitatem Regiam nec à coronâ separari possunt Bracton cited by Stamford lib. 2. cap. 2. h For in our Lawes the Clergie Nobility Communalty are the 3. Estates We your said most loving faithfull and obedient Subjects viz. the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and the Commons representing your Three Estates of your Realme of England 1 Eliz. 3. the State of the Clergie being one of the greatest States of this Realme 8 Eliz. 1. i See Fin●h supra ad lit. d k The Crown of England hath been so free at all times that it hath been in no earthly subjection but immediately to God in all things touching the Regality of the said Crowne 16 R. 2. 5. Omnis sub eo est ipse sub nullo nisi tantùm sub Deo Parem autem non habet Rex in regno suo quia Item nec multò fortiùs superiorem aut potentiorem habere debet quia sic esset inferior suis subjectis Bracton conten 1. Rubr. 36. Cui {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} legibus ipsis legum vim imponendi potestatem Deus dedit Finch Nomotech in Epist. Dedic. to K. Iames l Fons Iustitiae Bracton By War to intend the alteration of the Lawes in any part of them is to levy War against the King and consequently Treason by the Statute of 25 E. 3. because they are the Kings Lawes He is the fountaine from whence in their severall channels they are derived to the Subject Master Saint John's Speech concerning the Earle of Strafford page 12. m Et ibidem vobiscum colloquium habere tractare super dictis negotiis tract vestrumque consilium impensur Writ to the Lords a Every Subject by the duty of his Allegiance is bounden to serve and assist his Prince and Soveraigne Lord at all seasons when need shall require 11 H. 7. 18. Stat. 1. El. 1. 1 Cor. 5. 1. c. 1 Cor. 11. 28. c. * Stat. 23. Eliz. 1. 29. Eliz. 6. 35 El. 1. 2. 3 Iac. 4. 5.
REASONS Of the present judgement of the Vniversity of OXFORD CONCERNING The Solemne League and Covenant The Negative Oath The Ordinances concerning Discipline and VVorship Approved by generall consent in a full Convocation 1. Iun. 1647. AND Presented to Consideration Printed in the Yeare 1647. A Solemn League and Covenant for Reformation and defence of Religion the honour and happinesse of the King and the Peace and Safety of the three Kingdomes England Scotland and Ireland WE Noblemen Barons Knights Gentlemen Citizens Burgesses Ministers of the Gospell and Commons of all sorts in the Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland by the Providence of God living under one King and being of one Reformed Religion having before our eyes the glory of God and the advancement of the Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ the honour and happinesse of the Kings Majestie and His Posterity and the true publick Lybertie Safetie and Peace of the Kingdoms wherein every ones private condition is included and calling to mind the treacherous and bloudy plots Conspiracies Attempts and practices of the Enemies of God against the true Religion and Professors thereof in all places especially in these three Kingdomes ever since the Reformation of Religion and how much their rage power and presumption are of late and at this time increased and exercised whereof the deplorable estate of the Church and Kingdom of Ireland the distressed estate of the Church and Kingdome of England and the dangerous estate of the Church and Kingdome of Scotland are present and publick Testimonies We have now at last after other meanes of supplication Remonstrance Protestations and Sufferings for the preservation of our selves and our Religion from utter ruine and destruction according to the commendable practice of these Kingdomes in former times and the Example of Gods People in other Nations after mature deliberation resolved and determined to enter into a mutuall and solemne League and Covenant wherein we all subscribe and each one of us for himselfe with our hands lifted up to the most High God do swear I. THat we shall sincerely really and constantly through the Grace of God endeavour in our severall places and callings the preservation of the Reformed Religion in the Church of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government against our common Enemies The Reformation of Religion in the Kingdoms of England and Ireland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government according to the Word of God and the example of the best reformed Churches And shall endeavour to bring the Churches of God in the three Kingdomes to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in Religion Confession of Faith Form of Church Government Directory for Worship and Catechizing That we and our posterity after us may as Brethren live in Faith and Love and the Lord may delight to dwell in the midst of us II. That we shall in like manner without respect of persons endeavour the extirpation of Popery Prelacy that is Church Government by Archbishops Bishops their Chancellours and Commissaries Deans Deans and Chapters Archdeacons and all other Ecclesiasticall Officers depending on that Hierarchy Superstition Heresie Schisme Profanenesse and whatsoever shall be found to be contrary to sound Doctrine and the power of Godlinesse lest we partake in other mens sinnes and thereby be in danger to receive of their plagues and that the Lord may be one and his Name one in the three Kingdomes III. We shall with the same sincerity reallity and constancy in our severall Vocations endeavour with our estates and lives mutually to preserve the Rights and Privileges of the Parliaments and the Liberties of the Kingdomes and to preserve and defend the Kings Majesties person and authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion and Liberties of the Kingdomes that the world may bear witnesse with our consciences of our Loyaltie and that we have no thoughts or intentions to diminish His Majesties just power and greatness IIII. We shall also with all faithfullnesse endeavour the discovery of all such as have been or shall be Incendiaries Malignants or evill Instruments by hindring the Reformation of Religion dividing the King from his people or one of the Kingdomes from another or making any faction or parties amongst the people contrary to this League and Covenant that they may be brought to publick triall and receive condigne punishment as the degree of their offences shall require or deserve or the supream Judicatories of both Kingdomes respectively or others having power from them for that effect shall judge convenient V. And whereas the happinesse of a blessed Peace between these Kingdomes denied in former times to our progenitours is by the good providence of God granted unto us and hath been lately concluded and setled by both Parliaments we shall each one of us according to our place and interest endeavour that they may remain conjoyned in a firm Peace and Union to all posterity And that Justice may be done upon the wilfull opposers thereof in manner expressed in the precedent Articles VI We shall also according to our places and callings in this common cause of Religion Liberty and Peace of the Kingdomes assist and defend all those that enter into this League and Covenant in the maintaining and pursuing thereof and shall not suffer our selves directly or indirectly by whatsoever combination perswasion or terrour to be divided and withdrawn from this bles●ed Union and Conjunction whether to make defection to the contrary part or to give our selves to a detestable indifferencie or neutrality in this cause which so much concerneth the glory of God the good of the Kingdoms and the honour of the King but shall all the dayes of our lives zealously and constantly continue therein against all opposition promote the same according to our power against all lets and impediments whatsoever and what we are not able our selves to suppress or overcome we shall reveal make known that it may be timely prevented or removed All which we shall do as in the sight of God And because these Kingdoms are guilty of many sinnes and provocations against God and his Son Iesus Christ as is too manifest by our present distresses and dangers the fruits thereof We professe and declare before God and the world our unfained desire to be humbled for our owne sins and for the sins of these Kingdoms especially that we have not as we ought valued the inestimable benefit of the Gospel that we have not laboured for the puritie and power thereof and that we have not endeavoured to receive Christ in our hearts nor to walke worthy of him in our lives which are the causes of other sinnes and transgressions so much abounding amongst us And our true and unfained purpose desire and endeavour for our selves and all others under our power and charge both in publick and in private in all duties we owe to God and man to amend our lives and each one to goe before another in the example of a reall
Reformation that the Lord may turn away his wrath and heavy indignation and establish these Churches and Kingdoms in truth and peace And this Covenant we make in the presence of Almighty God the searcher of all hearts with a true intention to perform the same as we shall answer at that great day when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed Most humbly beseeching the Lord to strengthen us by his holy Spirit for this end and to blesse our desires and proceedings with such successe as may be deliverance and safety to his people and encouragement to other Christian Churches groaning under or in danger of the yoke of Antichristian tyrannie to joyn in the same or like Association and Covenant to the glory of God the enlargement of the Kingdome of Iesus Christ and the peace and tranquility of Christian Kingdoms and Common-wealths The Negative Oath I A. B. Doe sweare from my heart that I will not directly nor indirectly adhere unto or willingly assist the King in this War or in this Cause against the Parliament nor any Forces raised without the consent of the two Houses of Parliament in this Cause or Warre And I doe likewise sweare that my comming and submitting my selfe under the Power and Protection of the Parliament is without any manner of Designe whatsoever to the prejudice of the proceedings of this present Parliament and without the direction privity or advice of the King or any of his Councell or Officers other then what I have now made knowne So helpe me God and the contents of this Booke Reasons why the Vniversity of Oxford cannot submit to the Covenant the Negative Oath the Ordinance concerning Discipline and Directory mentioned in the late Ordinance of Parliament for the Visitation of that place WHereas by an Ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for the Visitation and Reformation of the University of Oxford lately published power is given to certain persons therein named as Visitors to enquire concerning those of the said University that neglect to take the Solemne League and Covenant and the Negative Oath being tendred unto them and likewise concerning those that oppose the execution of the Ordinances of Parliament concerning the Discipline and Directory or shall not promote or cause the same to be put in execution according to their severall places and callings We the Masters Scholars and other Officers and Members of the said University not to judge the Consciences of others but to cleare our selves before God and the world from all suspicion of Obstinacie whilst we discharge our own present to consideration the true reasons of our present judgment concerning the said Covenant Oath and Ordinances Expecting so much Justice and hoping for so much Charity as either not to be pressed to conforme to what is required in any the premisses further then our present judgements will warrant us or not condemned for the refusing so to doe without cleare and reall satisfaction given to our just scruples §. I. Of the Preface to the Covenant THe Exceptions against the Introductory Preface to the Covenant although we insist not much upon because it may be said to be no part of the Covenant yet among the things therein contained the acknowledgment whereof is implicitely required of every Covenanter 1. We are not able to say that the rage power and presumption of the enemies of God in the sense there intended is at this time increased 2. Nor can truly affirme that we had used or given consent to any Supplication or Remonstrance to the purposes therein expressed 3. Nor doe conceive the entring into such a mutuall League and Covenant to be a lawfull proper and probable meanes to preserve our selves and our Religion from ruine and destruction 4. Nor can believe the same to be according to the commendable practice of these Kingdomes or the example of Gods people in other Nations When we find not the least foot-step in our Histories of a sworne Covenant ever entred into by the people of this Kingdome upon any occasion whatsoever nor can readily remember any commendable example of the like done in any other Nation but are rather told by the defenders of this Covenant that a the world never saw the like before §. II. Of the Covenant in grosse FIrst we are not satisfied how we can submit to the taking thereof as it is now imposed under a penalty 1. Such imposition to our seeming being repugnant to the nature of a Covenant which being a Contract implyeth a a voluntary mutuall consent of the Contractors whereunto men are to be induced by perswasions not compelled by power In so much that the very words of this Covenant in the Preface conclusion and whole frame thereof runne in such a forme throughout as import a consent rather grounded upon prudentiall motives then extorted by Rigour 2. Without betraying the Liberty which by our protestation we are bound and in the third Article of this Covenant must sweare with our lives and fortunes to preserve To which Liberty the imposition of a new Oath other then is established by Act of Parliament is expressed in the b Petition of Right and by the Lords and Commons in their c Declarations acknowledged to be contrary 3. Without acknowledging in the Imposers a greater Power then for ought that appeareth to us hath been in former time challenged Or can consist with our former Protestation if we rightly understand it in sundry the most materiall branches thereof Neither secondly are we satisfied although the Covenant should not be imposed upon us at all but only recommended to us and then left to our choice 1. How we should in wisedome and duty being Subjects of our own accord and free will enter into a Covenant wherein He whose Subjects we are is in any wise concerned without his consent either expressed or reasonably presumed It being in his power as we conceive by the equity of the Law Numb. 30. to annull and make void the same at his pleasure 2. How we can now that His Majesty hath by His publique d Interdict sufficiently made known His pleasure in that behalfe enter into a Covenant the taking whereof he hath expresly forbidden without forfeiting that Obedience which as we are perswaded by our naturall Allegiance and former Oathes we owe unto all such His Majesties Commands as are not in our apprehensions repugnant to the will of God or the positive Laws of this Kingdome III. Of the first Article of the Covenant WHerein first we are not satisfied how we can with judgement sweare to endeavour to preserve the Religion of another Kingdome 1. Whereof as it doth not concerne us to have very much so we professe to have very little understanding 2. Which so far as the occurrents of these unhappy times have brought it to our knowledge and we are able to judge is in three of the foure specified particulars viz. Worship Discipline and Government much worse and in
the strictest sense that is to say expressely commanded by God in his Word yet of Apostolicall institution that is to say was established in the Churches by the Apostles according to the mind and after the example of their Master Iesus Christ and that by virtue of their ordinary power and authority derived from him as deputed by him Governors of his Church 2. Or at least that Episcopall Aristocracy hath a fairer pretension and may lay a juster title and claime to a Divine institution then any of the other formes of Church-Government can doe all which yet do pretend thereunto viz. that of the Papall Monarchy that of the Presbyterian Democracy and that of the Independents by Particular Congregations or Gathered Churches 2. But we are assured by the undoubted testimony of Antient Records and later Histories that this forme of Government hath beene continued with such an universall uninterrupted unquestioned succession in all the Churches of God and in all Kingdomes that have beene called Christian throughout the whole world for fifteen hundred yeers together that there never was in all that time any considerable opposition made there against That of Aërius was the greatest wherein yet there was little of consideration beside these two things that it grew at the first but out of discontent and gained him at the last but the reputation of an Heretique From which antiquity and continuance we have just cause to fear that to endeavour the extirpation thereof 1. Would give such advantage to the Papists who usually object against us and our Religion the contempt of antiquity and the love of novelty that we should not be able to wipe off the aspersion 2. Would so diminish the just authority due to the consentient judgement and practice of the universall Church the best interpreter of Scripture in things not clearly exprest for Lex currit cum praxi that without it we should be at a losse in sundry points both of Faith and Manners at this day firmely believed and securely practiced by us when by the Socinians Anabaptists and other Sectaries we should be called upon for our proofes As namely sundry Orthodoxall explications concerning the Trinity and Co-equality of the Persons in the God-head against the Arians and other Heretiques the number use and efficacy of Sacraments the Baptising of Infants Nationall Churches the observation of the Lords-Day and even the Canon of Scripture it self Thirdly in respect of our selves we are not satisfied how it can stand with the principles of Iustice Ingenuity and Humanity to require the extirpation of Episcopall Government unlesse it had been first cleerly demonstrated to be unlawful to be sincerely and really endeavoured by us 1. Who have all of us who have taken any Degree by subscribing the 39. Articles testified our approbation of that Government one of those a Articles affirming the very Book containing the form of their Consecration to contain in it nothing contrary to the Word of God 2. Who have most of us viz. as many as have entred into the Ministery received Orders from their hands whom we should very ill requite for laying their hands upon us if we should now lay to our hands to root them up and cannot tell for what 3. Who have sundry of us since the beginning of this Parliament subscribed our names to Petitions exhibited or intended to be exhibited to that High Court for the continuance of that Government Which as we then did sincerely and really so we should with like sincerity and reality still not having met with any thing since to shew us our errour be ready to doe the same again if we had the same hopes we then had of the reception of such Petitions 4. Who hold some of us our livelyhood either in whole or in part by those titles of Deanes Deanes and Chapters c. mentioned in the Articles being members of some Collegiate or Cathedrall Churches And our memories will not readily serve us with any example in this kind since the world began wherein any state or profession of men though convicted as we are not of a crime that might deserve deprivation were required to bind themselves by oath sincerely and really to endeavour the rooting out of that in it selfe not unlawfull together wherewith they must also root out themselves their estates and livelyhoods 5. Especially it being usuall in most of the said Churches that such persons as are admitted members thereof have a personall Oath administred unto them to maintain the honour Immunities Libertyes and profits of the same and whilst they live to seeke the good and not to doe any thing to the hurt hindrance or prejudice thereof or in other words to the like effect Fourthly in respect of the Church of England we are not satisfied how we can swear to endeavour the extirpation of the established Government no necessity or just Cause for so doing either offering it selfe or being offered to our understandings 1. Since all change of Government unavoidably bringeth with it besides those that are present and evident sundry other inconveniences which no wit of man can possibly fore-see to provide against till late experience discover them We cannot be sure that the evils which may ensue upon the change of this Government which hath been of so long continuance in this Kingdome is so deeply rooted in the Lawes thereof and hath so neere a conjunction with and so strong an influence upon the Civill State and Government as that the change thereof must infer the necessity of a great alteration to be made in the other also may not be greater then the supposed evils whatsoever they are which by this change are sought to be remedied For there are not yet any come to our knowledge of that desperate nature as not to be capable of other remedy then the utter extirpation of the whole Government it selfe 2. Whereas the House of Commons have b remonstrated that it was far from their purpose or desire to abolish the Church-Government but rather that all the members of the Church of England should be regulated by such Rules of Order and Discipline as are established by Parliament and that it was Malignancie to infuse into the people that they had any other meaning We are loth by consenting to the second Article to become guilty of such Infusion as may bring us within the compasse and danger of the fourth Article of this Covenant 3. Since it hath been declared by sundry c Acts of Parliament That the holy Church of England was founded in the state of Prelacy within the Realm of England We dare not by endeavouring the extirpation of Prelacy strike at the very foundation and thereby as much as in us lyeth cooperate towards the ruine of this famous Church which in all conscience and duty we are bound with our utmost lawfull power to uphold Lastly in respect of our Obligations to His Majesty by our Duty and oathes we are not satisfied how we can swear
should be printed and published in all the Parish-Churches and Chappells of the Kindome there to stand and remaine as a testimony of the clearnesse of their intentions whether the subjecting of our selves and brethren by Oath unto such punishments as shall be inflicted upon us without Law or Merit at the sole pleasure of such uncertaine Judges as shall be upon any particular occasion deputed for that effect of what mean quality or abilities soever they be even to the taking away of our lives if they shall think it convenient so to doe though the degree of our offences shall not require or deserve the same be not the betraying of our Liberty in the lowest and the setting up of an Arbitrary Power in the highest degree that can be imagined The substance of the fift Article being the settling and continuance of a firm peace and union between the three Kingdomes since it is our bounden duty to desire and according to our severall places and interests by all lawfull meanes to endeavour the same we should make no scruple at all to enter into a Covenant to that purpose were it not 1. That we doe not see nor therefore can acknowledge the happinesse of such a blessed Peace between the three Kingdomes for we hope Ireland is not forgotten as in the Article is mentioned So long as Ireland is at War within it self and both the other Kingdomes engaged in that War 2. That since no peace can be firme and well-grounded that is not bottom'd upon Justice the most proper and adequate act whereof is Ius suum cuique to let every one have that which of right belongeth unto him we cannot conceive how a firm and lasting Peace can be established in these Kingdomes unlesse the respective Authority Power and Liberty of King Parliament and Subject as well every one as other be preserved full and entire according to the known Lawes and continued unquestioned customes of the severall Kingdomes in former times and before the beginning of these sad distractions In the sixth Article we are altogether unsatisfied 1. The whole Article being grounded upon a supposition which hath not yet been evidenced to us viz. that this Cause meaning thereby or else we understand it not the joyning in this Covenant of mutuall defence for the prosecuon of the late War was the cause of Religion Liberty and Peace of the Kingdomes and that it so much concerned the Glory of God and the good of the Kingdomes and the Honour of the King 2. If all the Premisses were so cleare that we durst yeeld our free assent thereunto yet were they not sufficient to warrant to our consciences what in this Article is required to be sworn of us unlesse we were as clearly satisfied concerning the lawfulnesse of the means to be used for the supporting of such a Cause For since evill may not be done that good may come thereof we cannot yet be perswaded that the Cause of Religion Liberty and Peace may be supported or the Glory of God the Good of the Kingdomes and the Honour of the King sought to be advanced by such means as to our best understandings are both improper for those Ends and destitute of all warrant from the Lawes either of God or of this Realm Lastly in the conclusion our hearts tremble to think that we should be required to pray that other Christian Churches might be encouraged by our example to joyn in the like Association and Covenant to free themselves from the Antichristian yoke c. Wherein 1. To omit that we doe not know any Antichristian yoke under which we were held in these Kingdomes and from which we owe to this either War or Covenant our freedome unlesse by the Antichristian yoke be meant Episcopall Government which we hope no man that pretendeth to Truth and Charity will affirm 2. We doe not yet see in the fruits of this Association or Covenant among our selves any thing so lovely as to invite us to desire much lesse to pray that other Christian Churches should follow our example herein 3. To pray to the purpose in the conclusion of the Covenant expressed seemeth to us all one in effect as to beseech Almighty God the God of Love and Peace 1. To take all Love and Peace out of the hearts of Christians and to set the whole Christian world in a combustion 2. To render the Reformed Religion and all Protestants odious to all the world 3. To provoke the Princes of Europe to use more severity towards those of the Reformed Religion if not for their own security to root them quite out of their severall Dominions 4. The tyrannie and yoke of Antichrist if laid upon the necks of Subjects by their lawfull Soveraigns is to be thrown off by Christian boldnes in confessing the Truth and Patient suffering for it not by taking up Arms or violent resistance of the Higher Powers §. VI Some Considerations concerning the meaning of the Covenant OUr aforesaid scruples are much strengthned by these ensuing Considerations First that whereas no Oath which is contradictory to it selfe can be taken without Perjury because the one part of every contradiction must needs be false this Covenant either indeed containeth or at leastwise which to the point of conscience is not much lesse effectuall seemeth to us to contain sundry Contradictions as namely amongst others these 1. To preserve as it is without change and yet to reforme and alter and not to preserve one and the same Reformed Religion 2. Absolutely and without exception to preserve and yet upon supposition to extirpate the self-same thing viz. the present Religion of the Church of Scotland 3. To reform Church-Government established in England and Ireland according to the Word of God and yet to extirpate that Government which we are perswaded to be according thereunto for the introducing of another whereof we are not so perswaded 4. To endeavour really the extirpation of Heresies Schismes and Profanenesse and yet withall to extirpate that Government in the Church the want of the due exercise whereof we conceive to have been one chief cause of the growth of the said evils and doe beleeve the restoring and continuance thereof would be the most proper and effectuall remedy 5. To preserve with our estates and lives the liberties of the Kingdome that is as in the Protestation is explained of the Subject and yet contrary to these liberties to submit to the imposition of this Covenant and of the Negative Oath not yet established by Law and to put our lives and estates under the arbitrary power of such as may take away both from us when they please not onely without but even against Law if they shall judge it convenient so to doe Secondly we find in the Covenant sundry expressions of dark or doubtfull construction Whereunto we cannot sweare in judgement till their sense be cleared and agreed upon As Who are the Common Enemies and which be the best Reformed Churches mentioned in the first
to endeavour the extirpation of the Church-Government by Law established without forfeiture of those Obligations 1. Having in the Oath of Supremacie acknowledged the King to be the onely Supreme Governour in all Ecclesiasticall Causes and over all Ecclesiasticall Persons and having bound our selves both in that Oath and by our Protestation To maintain the Kings Honour Estate Iurisdictions and all manner of Rights it is cleare to our understandings that we cannot without disloyalty and injury to Him and double Perjury to our selves take upon us without his consent to make any alteration in the Ecclesiasticall Lawes or Government much lesse to endeavour the extirpation thereof Unlesse the imposers of this Covenant had a power and meaning which they have openly d disclaimed to absolve us of that Obedience which under God we owe unto His Majesty whom they know to be intrusted with the Ecclesiasticall Law 2. We cannot sincerely and really endeavour the extirpation of this Government without a sincere desire and reall endeavour that His Majesty would grant His Royall Assent to such extirpation Which we are so far from desiring and endeavouring that we hold it our bounden duty by our daily prayers to beg at the hands of Almighty God that he would not for our sins suffer the King to doe an act so prejudiciall to his honour and conscience as to consent to the rooting out of that estate which by so many branches of his e Coronation Oath he hath in such a solemne manner sworn by the assistance of God to his power to maintain and preserve 3. By the Lawes of this Land f the Collation of Bishopricks and g Deanries the h fruits and profits of their Lands and Revenues during their vacancies the i first fruits and yearly tenths out of all Ecclesiasticall Promotions and sundry other Privileges Profits and Emoluments arising out of the State Ecclesiasticall are established in the Crown and are a considerable part of the Revenues thereof which by the extirpation of Prelacy as it is in the Article expounded or by subsequent practice evidenced will be severed and cut off from the Crown to the great prejudice and damage thereof Whereunto as we ought not in common reason and in order to our Allegiance as Subjects yeeld our consent so having sworn expresly to maintain the Kings honour and estate and to our power to assist and defend all Jurisdictions c. belonging to His Highnesse or united and annexed to the Imperiall Crown of the Realm we cannot without manifest Perjury as we conceive consent thereunto 4. The Government of this Realm being confessedly an Empire or k Monarchy and that of a most excellent temper and constitution we understand not how it can become us to desire or endeavour the extirpation of that Government in the Church which we conceive to be incomparably of all other the most agreeable and no way prejudiciall to the state of so well a constituted Monarchy In so much as King JAMES would often say what his long experience had taught him No Bishop no King Which Aphorisme though we find in sundry Pamphlets of late yeares to have been exploded with much confidence and scorn yet we must professe to have met with very little in the proceedings of the late times to weaken our belief of it And we hope we shall be the lesse blamed for our unwillingnesse to have any actuall concurrence in the extirpating of Episcopall Government seeing of such extirpation there is no other use imaginable but either the alienation of their Revenues and Inheritances which how it can be severed from Sacrilege and Injustice we leave others to find out or to make way for the introducing of some other form of Church-Government which whatsoever it shall be will as we think prove either destructive of and inconsistent with Monarchicall Government or at least-wise more prejudiciall to the peaceable orderly and effectuall exercise thereof then a well-regulated Episcopacy can possibly be §. V. Of the other parts of the Covenant HAving insisted the more upon the two first Articles that concern Religion and the Church and wherein our selves have a more proper concernment We shall need to insist the lesse upon those that follow contenting our selves with a few the most obvious of those many great and as we conceive just exceptions that lye there against In the third Article we are not satisfied that our endeavour to preserve and defend the Kings Majesties Person and Authority is so limited as there it is by that addition In the Preservation and defence of the true Religion and Libertyes of the Kingdome Forasmuch as 1. No such limitation of our duty in that behalf is to be found either in the Oathes of Supremacy and Alleagiance which no Papist would refuse to take with such a limitation nor in the Protestation nor in the Word of God 2. Our endeavour to preserve the Rights and Privileges of Parliaments and the Libertyes of the Kingdome is required to be sworn of us in the same Article without the like or any other limitation added thereunto 3. Such limitation leaveth the duty of the Subject at so much loosenesse and the safety of the King at so great uncertainty that whensoever the People shall have a mind to withdraw their obedience they cannot want a pretence from the same for so doing 4. After we should by the very last thing we did viz. swearing with such a limitation have made our selves guilty of an actuall and reall diminution as we conceive of His Majesties just power and greatnesse the obtestation would seem very unseasonable at the least with the same breath to call the world to bear witnesse with our Consciences that we had no thoughts or intentions to diminish the same 5. The swearing with such a limitation is a Testimony of the Subjects Loyaltie to our seeming of a very strange nature which the Principles of their severall Religions salved the Conscience of a most resolure Papist or Sectary may securely swallow and the Conscience of a good Protestant cannot but strein at In the fourth Article 1. We desire it may be considered whether the imposing of the Covenant in this Article do not lay a necessity upon the Son of accusing his own Father and pursuing him to destruction in case he should be an Incendiary Malignant or other evill Instrument such as in the Article is described A course which we conceive to be contrary to Religion Nature and Humanity 2. Whether the swearing according to this Article doth not rather open a ready way to Children that are sick of the Father Husbands that are weary of their Wives c. by appealing such as stand between them and their desires of Malignancy the better to effectuate their unlawfull intentions and designes 3. Our selves having solemnly protested to maintain the Liberty of the Subject and the House of Commons having publiquely declared against the exercise of an Arbitrary Power with Order that their said Declaration