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A91309 Truth triumphing over falshood, antiquity over novelty. Or, The first part of a just and seasonable vindication of the undoubted ecclesiasticall iurisdiction, right, legislative, coercive power of Christian emperors, kings, magistrates, parliaments, in all matters of religion, church-government, discipline, ceremonies, manners: summoning of, presiding, moderating in councells, synods; and ratifying their canons, determinations, decrees: as likewise of lay-mens right both to sit and vote in councells; ... In refutation of Mr. Iohn Goodwins Innocencies Triumph: my deare brother Burtons Vindication of churches, commonly called Independent: and of all anti-monarchicall, anti-Parliamentall, anti-synodicall, and anarchicall paradoxes of papists, prelates, Anabaptists, Arminians, Socinians, Brownists, or Independents: whose old and new objections to the contrary, are here fully answered. / By William Prynne, of Lincolnes Inne, Esquire. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1645 (1645) Wing P4115; Thomason E259_1; ESTC R212479 202,789 171

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the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled That all and every the person● hereafter in this present Ordinance named that is to say Algernon Earl of Northumberland William Earle of Bedford Phillip Earle of Pembroke and Montgemery William Earle of Salisbury Henry Earle of Holland Edward Earle of Manchester William Lord Viscount Say and Seale Edward Lord Viscount Conway Phillip Lord Wharton Edward Lord Howard of Estr John Selden Esquite Francis Rows Esquire Edmund Prideaux Esqui●e Sir Henry Vane Knight Senior Iohn Glyn Esquire Recorder of London Iohn White Esquire Bouldstrode Whi●locke Esquire Humphrey Salloway Esquire Master Serjeant Wilde Oliver Saint Iohn Esquire his Majesties Sollicitor Sir Benjamin Rudyard Knight John Pym Esquier Sir Iohn Clotworthy Knight Iohn Maynard Esquire Sir Henry Vane Knight junior William Pierpoint Esquiet William Wheeler Esquier Sir Thomas Barrington Knight Walter-Young Esquier Sir Iohn Euelin Knight Herbert Palmer of Ashwell Batchellor in Divinity Oliver Boles of Sutton Batchellor in Divinity Henry Wilkinson of Waddesdon Batchellor in Divinity Thomas Valentine of Chalsont Giles Batchellor in Divinity D. William Twisse of Newbury with sundry other Divines mentioned in this Ordinance and such other person and persons as shall be nominated and appointed by both Houses of Parliament or so many of them as shall not be lefted by sicknesse or other necessary impediment shall meet and assemble and are hereby required and enjoyned upon summons signed by the Clerkes of both Houses of Parliament left at their severall respective dwellings to meete and assemble themselves at Westminster in the Chapell called King Henry the sevenths Chappell on the first day of July in the yeare of our Lord one thousand six hundred fort●y three and after the first meeting being at least of the number of forty shal from time to time sit be removed from place to place and also that the said Assembly shall be dissolved in such manner as by both Houses of Parliament shall be directed And the said persons or so many of them as shall be so Assembled or sit shall have power and Authority and are hereby likewise enjoyned from time to time during this present Parliament or untill further Order be taken by both the said Houses to con●erre and treat amongst themselves of such matters and things touching and concerning the Liturgy discipline and Government of the Church of England or the vindicating and clearing of the doctrine of the same from all false aspertions and misconstructions AS SHALL BE PROPOSED VNTO THEM BY BOTH OR EITHER OF THE SAID HOVSES OF PARLIAMENT AND NO OTHER and to deliver their opinions and advices of or touching the matters aforesaid as shall be most agreeable to the Word of God TO BOTH OR EITHER OF THE SAID HOVSES FROM TIME TO TIME IN SVCH MANNER AND SORT AS BY BOTH OR EITHER OF THE SAID HOVSES OF PARLIAMENT SHALL BE REQVIRED and the same not to divulge by printing writing or otherwise without the consent of both or either House of Parliament And be it further ordained by the authority aforesaid that William Twisse Doctor in Divinity shall sit in the Chaire as Prolocutor of the said Assembly and if he happen to die or be letted by sickenesse or other necessary impediment then such other person to be appointed in his place as shall be agreed on by both the said Houses of Parliament And in case any difference of Opinion shall happen amongst the said persons so assembled touching any the matters that shall be proposed to them as aforesaid that then they shall represent the same together with the reasons thereof to both or either the said Houses respectively to the end such further direction may be given therein as shall be requisite in that behalfe And be it further Ordained by the authority aforesaid That for the Charges and expences of the said Divines and every of them in attending the said service there shall be allowed unto every of them that shall so attend during the time of their said attendance and for ten dayes before and ten dayes after the summe of foure shillings for every day at the charges of the Common-wealth at such time and in such manner as by both Houses of Parliament shall be appointed And be it further Ordained that all and every the sayd Divines so as aforesaid required and enjoyned to meet and assemble shall be freed and acquitted of and from every offence forfeiture penalty losse or damage which shall or may arise or grow by reason of any Non-residence or absence of them or any of them from his or their or any of their Church Churches or Cures for or in respect of their sayd attendance upon the sayd Service any Law or Stature enjoyning their attendance upon their respective Ministeries or Charges to the contrary thereof notwithstanding and if any of the persons before named shall happen to die before the sayd Assembly shall be dissolved by Order of both Houses of Parliament then such other person or persons shall be nominated and placed in the roome and stead of such person and persons so dying as by both the sayd Houses shall be thought fit and agreed upon And every such person or persons so to bee named shall have the like Power and Authority Freedome and acquittall to all intents and purposes and also all such wages and allowances for the said service during the time of his or their attendance as to any other of the sayd persons in this Ordinance is by this Ordinance limited and appointed Provided alwayes that this Ordinance or any thing therein contained shall not give unto the persons aforesaid or any of them nor shall they in this Assembly assume to exercise any Iurisdiction Power or Authority Ecclesiasticall whatsoever or any other Power then is herein particularly expressed Some generall Rules for the Assembly directed by the Lords and Commons in Parliament Assembled 1. THat two Assessors be joyned to the Prolocutor to supply his place in case of absence or infirmity 2. Two Scribes to be appointed to set down all proceedings and these to be Divenes who are not Members of the Assembly viz. Master Henry Rowberry and Master Adoniran Byfeild 3. Every Member at his first entrance into the Assembly shall make a serious and solemne Protestation not to maintain any thing but what he believes to be the truth and to embrace Truth in sincerity when discovered to him 4. No resolution to be given upon any question on the same day wherein it is first p●rpounded 5. What any man undertakes to prove as necessary he shall make good out of the Scriptures 6. No man to proceed in any dispute after the Prolocuter hath enjoyned him silence unlesse the Assembly desire he may go on 7. No man to bee denied to enter his dissent from the Assembl● and his 〈◊〉 for it in any point after it hath beene first Debated in the Assembly And thence if the dissenting party desire it to be sent to the Houses of Parliament by
it as he thought meet as the beginning and end of every action of that Councell manifests Praesidente eodem piissimo Christo dilecto magno Imperatore Constantino Constantinus piissimus Imperator dixit sufficit c. being frequent in it and many of his temporall Lords and Officers sate there as Iudges with him The seventh generall Idolatrous Councell of Nice was likewise regulated directed by the Letters of Constantine and Irene by Petronius the Proconsul Theophilus an Earle of the Emperours retinue and by Iohn his royall Porter and treasurer of his Army with other Senators who sate as chiefe Moderators in that Councell The eighth generall Councell was prescribed and directed how to proceed and what to treat of by the Emperour Basilius who caused his Princes Nobles to sit in that Councell as principall directors whose judgement the Popes Legates themselves in that Councell demanded himselfe sitting sometimes in person therein as chiefe President As all these generall Councels were thus regulated and directed by those Emperours that summoned them and debated concluded nothing but by their speciall license and direction so all other forecited Nationall and Provinciall Councels were likewise limited and directed by those Emperours and Kings that called them as the fore-alleaged quotations evidence at large to such as will peruse them many of these Emperours or their temporall deputies sitting personally in them as chiefe Presidents and Moderators The Bishops in the first Councell of Orleance Anno 500 write thus to King Clodoveus who summoned them Al the Priests which ye have summoned to the Councell and commanded to meet together to treat of necessary things secundum vestrae voluntatis consultationem ET TITULOS QVOS DEDISTIS according to the consultation of your pleasure and the Titles You have given us to consult of we have deferred those things which seeme meet to us so as if those things which we have concluded may likewise be approved to be right by your judgment the consent of so great a King and of a greater Lord may by his sentence and authority confirme the sentence of so many Clergy-men to be observed Lo here the King prescribes this Councell particularly in writing what Articles they should treat of In the severall Councell of Basil Florence Lateran Constans Sennes and Trent summoned by the Popes usurped authority the Emperours Kings Dukes and Princes who sent any Bishops to those Councels had their Embassadours and Agents though Lay-men present at them swaying and directing them as they thought meet though in some of them the Popes faction bare the greatest stroke as the severall Acts of these Councels testifie some of which made choice of those Princes for their Protectors against the Popes Tyrannie and usurpations which they limited decreeing a Councell to be above the Pope and he to be bound by its determinations as well as others some Popes being accused convented and deprived by them though they summoned them or rather were enforced to call them by the Emperours and other Princes against their wills To conclude with forraigne presidents the late famous Synod of Dort Anno 1618. was summoned by the Estates of the Netherlands who enacted certaine Lawes and prescribed Articles to the Synod according to which they should proceed appointing likewise divers Lay-men to sit in that Councel as their Delegates commanding and enjoining them and every of them in their name and in their authority to open the Synod and in all and singular Sessions and Actions to be present in their name so to compose and order all things with their prudence counsell and moderation which belonged to their inspection and care according to those speciall instructions they had given them and the Articles they had framed for the ordering and holding of that Synod which had power to treat of order or determine nothing but what they had commission and licence from the States In few words the famous Lawyer William Ranchin though a Papist resolves and proves at large in his Review of the Councell of Trent l. 3. c. 10. That it belongs to Emperours and Kings to prescribe not onely the place time beginning and ending but the very forme of Councels proceedings both in respect of persons matters to be debated and all other circumstances As for Lay-mens presence presidencie and Votes in Councels to give a little satisfaction herein in this Section it is evident by the fore-cited Texts in the old Testament and by Presidents in the New as Acts 6. 1. to 8. c. 15. 4. 9. 22. to 30. c. 16 4. c. 21. 22. That Lay-men were not onely present but had Votes and consents in the first Apostolicall Councels In the Councell of Ephesus Candidianus a Noble-man was appointed by the Emperour to hold the Fathers there assembled to the points proposed and to keepe every man in order giving the chief directions therein In the French Synod under Childerick and Charleman Anno 742. In the Synod of Soissons Anno 744. of Wormes Anno 787. of Meaux Anno 845. of Pistis Anno 863. of Tribur under King Arnulph of Paris under Philip Augustus An. 1179 and 1184. of Vezelay under Lawes the young of Paris under Philip the faire called against Boniface the 8. of Bourges under Charles the seventh which made the pragmatick sanction of Toledo 6. 8. 12. of Rome under Otho the first of Wormes under Henry the third in the Councell held in the South part of England An. 903. under King Edward and Raymond in the Councell of London under King Stephen An. 1150. these severall Kings together with their Barons Nobles and other Lay-men were present in all these Synods Councells as well as Clergie-men or Prelates and gave consenting confirming Votes to things debated concluded in them these Synods being in truth meere Parliaments as I shall hereafter manifest In the Councell of Constance there were present not onely the Emperour but divers Embassadours Nobles and Lay-men of great quality and condition to wit 24 Dukes 140 Earles divers Delegates of Cities and Corporations divers learned Lawyers and Burgesses of Vniversities who were not debarred from voices and power of deliberating therein In the first Councell of pisa there were present to the number of 400 Lay-men of note delegates of Cities Vniversities States Princes and Doctors of Law who not only deposed two Anti-popes and elected a third true Pope but likewise treated of points of Divinity and made many good ordinances for the Church of God In the second Councell of Pisa there were many such Delegates Doctors of Law and Lay-men well skilled in divine and humane matters In the first Councell of Nice there were present writes Socrates many very learned Lay-men and well skilled in disputation who puzzled great Philosophers in matters of dispute In the generall Councell at Reimes holden by Pope Eugenius the third there were a great company of Nobles as well as Bishops
the stability of the Realme A cleare evidence it was both a Parliament and Synod too Anno 824. There was another Synodall Assembly held at Clovesho under the same king Beornulfe and Wulfred Archbishop of Canterbury assidentibus Episcopis Abbatibus PRINCIPIBVS MERCIORVM VNIVERSIS MVLTI SAPIENTISSIMI VIRI CONGREGATI to determine certaine Controversies and settle the lands of the Church which they did accordingly the Acts of this Councell were subscribed by the king his Dukes Nobles as well as by the Bishops as you may see in the close of it Anno 833. there was a Councell held at London the 26 of May which is intiuled Concilium Pan-Anglicum a Cauncell of all England wherein were present Egbert King of West-Saxons and Withlasius King of Mercians both the Archbishops of England with the Bishops and Nobles In which they con●●ted not onely of Church affaires but also about hindering the incursions of the Danes and confirmed divers Priviledges to the Abby of Crowland by a Charter granted by this King in this Councel subscribed by the King Dukes and other Laymen as well as by Bishops and Abbots Anno 838. I finde Concilium Pan-Anglicum held at Kingston wherein King Egbert and Ethelwolfe his Sonne sate Presidents together with Ceolueth Archbishop and the rest of the Bishops optimatibus Angliae and the chiefe men and Nobles at England wherein certain Charters of Lands given to the Church formerly accorded to by the Nobles were confirmed vnder pain of excommunication and curses to the infringers of them About which time Keneth king of Scots compiled and published certain Ecclesiasticall Lawes intermixed with temporall made in a Parliamentary Councell not an Episcopall Synod Anno 851. there was a Councell held at Kingsbury under Bertulph King of Mercia praesentibus Ceolnotho Dorobernensi Archiepiscopo caeterisque Regni Merciae Episcopis Magnatibus and another Councell at Benningdon under this King about the same year â Praelatis Proceribus Regni sub Bertolpho Rege In both these ample possessions and priviledges were granted to the Abbots and Monks of England Vnanimi consensu totius praesentis Cancilii pro Regni negotiis Congregati the Charters being subscribed by Dukes Lords and temporall Officers present in these Councels as well as by Bishops or Abbots An. 855. There was a generall Councel of all England held at Winchester Concilium V●ntoniae Pan-anglicum 5. Nov Judic 4. celebratum praesentibus Aethelwulfo Rege Westsaxoniae Beorredo Rege Merciae Edmundo Rege East-Anglorum una cum Archiepiscopis Cantuariae Eborum caeterisque totius Angliae Episcopis Magnatibus in which King Aethelwulph by his royall Charter granted the tenth part of his lands and goods to the Church cum coxsilio Episcoporum ac Principum meorum Praesentibus subscribentibus Archiepiscopis Episcopis Angliae Vniversis re●non Beorredo Rege Merciae Edmundo Eastanglorum Rege Abbatum Abbatissarum Ducum Comitium Procerumquetotius terrae aliorumque fidelium infintia multitudine qui omnes Regium Chirographum landaverunt Dignitates vero sua nomina subscripserunt These Councels therefore were no other but Parliaments The Ecclesiasticall Lawes of king Alured Anno 887. were made in Parliament and not in a Synod of Bishops Ex Consulto Sapientum Atque in ipsis discernendis ego Alredus Occiden alium Saxonum Rex prudent●ssimeram è nostris confilio usus sum atque eis omnibus placuit edici eorum observationem saith the Praeface to his Lawes The Ecclesiasticall Lawes of Alured or Alfred and Guthurne were accorded in a Councell wherein these Kings and their people made a League King Edward the elder upon the letter of Pope Formosus congregavit Synodum SENATORVM PROCERVM POPVLORVM ET NOBILIVM Gent's Anglae in quae prasedebat Plegmundus Archiepiscopus Tum sibi Rex cum suis Plegmundus Archiepiscopus salubre consilium iniverunt and constituted and elected five Bishops in the Province of the Gevisi where there were but two Bishopricks formerly dividing those two Bishopricks into five by a Parliament not Synod The Ecclesiasticall Lawes of King Edward the elder and Guthurne An. 905. were made in Parliaments of the Lords and Commons not Synods of the Clergie as appeares by this Proeme Haec ea sunt SENATVS-CONSVLTA ac instituta quae primo Aluredus Guthurnus Reges deinde Edovardus Guthurnus Reges illis ipsis temporibus tulere cum Pacis foedus Daci Angli ferierunt ac sese mutuo an●plexi sunt quae postea a SAPIENTIBVS recitata saepius atque ad communem Regni utilitatem aucta atque amplificata sunt The Ecclesiasticall Lawes of King Aethelstan An. 928. were made in Parliament not in a Convocation as is evident by the temporall lawes mixed with them made at the same time and by chap. 9. Decreta cictaque sunt haec in celebri Gratanleano Concilio cui Wulfhelmus interfuit Archiepiscopus cum eo Optimates Sapientes ab Aethelstano evocati frequentissimi The Ecclesiasticall lawes of Hoel Dha the good King of all Wales about the yeare 940. were made not by the Ecclesiasticall persons onely but by the Laiety too hee summoning sex Laicos viros auctoritate scientia pollentes six Laymen potent in authority and Learning out of every County and then selecting out of them twelve Laicos doctissimos unum Clericum doctissimum qui vocabatur Blanguindus ad instituendas sibi leges usus c. 12. most learned Laymen and but one learned Clerke to compile Ecclesiasticall Lawes for him and his people The Ecclesiasticall Lawes of King Edmund Anno 944. were made in a Parliament at London as appeares by the temporall lawes joyned with them and by the Proocme Edmundus Rex ipso solenni Paschatis festo frequentem Londini tam Ecclesiasticorum quam LAICORVM caetum celebravit c. A sci entissimis Regni mei in celebri tam Ecclesiasticorum quam LAICORVM frequentia studiose requisivisse quo tandem pacto Christiana proveheretur fides Atque NOBIS OMNIBVS commodissimum visum est Edmundus Rex congregavit magnam Synodum Dei ordinis SECVLI apud London c. Ego Edmundus Rex mando praecipio omni populo seniorum ac juvenum qui in regione mea sunt ea quae investigans investigovi cum sapientibus Clericis LAICIS Anno 948. There was a Councell as well of Lords and great men as Bishops and Abbots held in London In festo Nativitatis beatae Mariae cum universi Magnates Regni per regium edictum summoniti tam Archiepiscopi Episcopi ac Abbate quam caeteri totius Regni Proceres Optimates Londoniis convenissent ad tractandum de negotiis publicis totius regni consummatis Omnibus the K. in this Parlia granted a large Charter of lands priviledges to the Abbey of Croyland this Councell therefore was certainly no other but a Parliament An. 952.
all we desire two Prebends to be given us by all Cathedrall Churches and out of Abbies where the Monkes and Abbots have divers portions of each one Monkes intire allowance one from the Covent another from the Abbott which demand Otho urged the Bishops and Prelates to grant on the foresaid grounds Who consulting together hereupon returned this their common Answere by Iohn Archdeacon of Bedford That those things he had propounded to them did specially concerne the King of England and generally all the Patrons of Churches Archbishops Suffragans and Prelates of England since therefore the King was then absent by reason of his infirmitie and some Archbishops Bishops and other Prelates were absent likewise that in their absence they neither could nor ought to give any Answer And upon these words uttered came Iohn Lord Marshall of England and other Messengers from the King strictly commanding all what held Baronies of the King in Capite that that they should not obliege their lay Fee to the Church of Rome whereby he might be deprived of the services due unto him And so all returned to their owne home The same yeare there was another Councell assembled at Westminster under Stephen Langhton Archbishop of Canterbury about the same matter To which the King conferring a part with some of the Nobles and Bishops gave this Answer that these things concern all Christendom because we are placed in the remotest parts of the world when we shall see what other Kingdomes will say to these exactions and shall have an example from them the Pope shall finde us more ready to obey him And so this Councell brake up By both which presidents it is evident that Councells in those dayes were no other but Parliaments the King Nobles and Commons being present in them and that the Clergy alone could treat or conclude of nothing but by their concurring assents Anno 1231. There was a great Synod of Abbotts Priors Archdeacons with almost the whole Nobility Masters and Clerks of the Realme assembled at Saint Albans by the Popes Command to celebrate a divorse betweene the Countesse of Essex and her Husband if there were cause This divorse was but an Ecclesiasticall matte● as the Canonists deemed it yet both King Nobles and Commons as well as Abbots and Clergy-men were present at it and called to it by the Popes command In the yeare of our Lord 1236. there was a Councell of all the great men Prelates and Clergie of the Realme summoned to meet at London by King Henry the third under Othe the Popes Legate which being assembled together at Paules the second day thereof the King sent John Earle of Lincolne Iohn the son of Jeffery and William de Reele a Canon of Paules to inhibit the Legate in the behalfe of the King and Kingdome that he should not there Attempt or decree any thing against his Royall Crowne and dignity William Reele remained there to see this inhibition observed the others departed The next day folowing the Legate supported with divine assistance astantis concilij Suffragits et consensu and by the suffrages and consent of the Councel there present to conserve and reforme the State Ecclesiasticall in the parts of England besides other Canonicall institutions promulged certaine Canons digested into Chapters and Articles which Edmond Archbishop of Canterbury with divers others who departed from the Councell with little joy resolved to nullifie and revoke as not confirmed by the King the Lords and Commons for ought appeares which Otho understanding writ to the Pope to ratifie them who accordingly did it by his decretall Epistle Anno 1288. John Peckam Archbishop of Canterbury held a Provinciall Councell at Redding in which he made five Constitutions purposing to draw the conusance of Patronages of Churches anciently belonging to the Kings Court to the Ecclesiasticall to rescinde all Royall Prohibitions in suites depending in the Ecclesiasticall Court for goods and Chattels and to inhibitu that Ecclesiasticall Judges should be thenceforth prohibited to proceed in them But the King hearing of this designe sent certain selected messengers both to the Archbishop and the whole Councell commanding them with threats to resist whence it came to passe that the Archbishop wholy receeded from his presumption and the Councell being dissolved all the Prelates returned frustrate of their hope 31. An. 1296. Robert Winchelsee Archbishop of Canterbury held a Provinciall Councell at London where the Clergy to disapoint the King of his Subsidies and Tenths decreed among other things Ne quid inconsulto Papa Regibus a Clero solveretur That nothing should be payed to Kings without the Popes privity and consent A right loyall Constitution worthy Prelates The King having then called a Parliament to re-inburse his monyes spent in the Scottish Wars had a large Subsidie granted him by the Commons and Burgesses But the Clergy neither offered nor granted him any thing by reason of this their Constitution for confirmation whereof the Archbishop had gotten the Popes Bull The King being moved therewith proroged the Parliament to London commanding the Clergy to be there on the first day of Saint Hilary to give him a better answer The King in the mean time commanded all the Clergy mens Barnes which were full of corne to be sealed up with publike Seales which whiles his Officers were executing the Archbishop commanded the Popes decree to be published in Cathedrall Churches inhibiting under pain of Excommunication that no Tribute or ayd should be payd to the King or to any secular Prince out of Ecclesiasticall livings or revenues an high straine of Papall usurpation and presumption and when he and his Suffragans met in Pauls they resolved to stand to their former Constitution and to grant the King nothing Such dutifull good Subjects were these lordly Prelates Whereupon the King sending messengers to them to demand a supply from them they all returne him this answer It is sufficiently known that under God the Lord of all we have two Lords a spirituall the Pope our Lord and a temporall the King our Soveraigne and though we are bound to obey both yet we ought to obey our spirituall Lord more than our temporall And therefore we intend to send a Legate to the Pope that his leave first obtained wee may give the King what he desires of us The King receiving this answer tooke it very disdainfully that he should be thus mocked in his own Kingdome by the Pope and his Clergie and thereupon thrust the Clergie out of the Parliament and held a Councell with his Barons and Commons alone and presently put all the Clergie out of his protection that none of them should have power to sue any man in any of his Courts but might be sued there by any of his subjects upon which all the Clergie but the Archbishop were content to offer the King the fith part of their Ecclesiasticall goods and the Archbishop persisting in his obstinacy had all
have else-where manifested In King Henry the 3. his Raign I finde these severall printed Acts of Parliament made concerning the Church Bishops Abbots Clergymen and Ecclesiasticall affaires which you may peruse at pleasure 9. H. 3. c. 1. 5. 18. 31. 33. 36 37. The Charter of the Forrest 9. H. 3. c. 4. 11. 16. 20. H. 3. c. 9. 51. H. 3. c. 10. 12. 28. besides those Recorded by Matthew Paris In King Edward the first his Raigne there were these Acts to like purpose 3 E. 1. which begins with this Prologue Because our Soveragine Lord the King had given power to redresse the State of the Realme c. for the common profit of holy Church and of the Realme And because the State of holy Church hath ever been kept c. c. 1 2. 46. 4 E. 1. c. 6. 7 E. 1. the Statute of Mor●main 13. E. 1. c. 5. 19. 29. 31 32 33. 41 42 43. 48. Circumspecte agatis 13 E. 1. commonly called a Statute though 19 E. 3. Fitz. Iurisdiction 28. it be adjudged none The Statute upon the Writ of Consultation 24 Ed. 1. The confirmation of the Charters of the Liberties of England 25 E. 3. c. 4. 6. The Statute concerning certain Liberties granted to the Commons The Statute of Carlisle 25. E. 1. See Cookes 5. Report of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Law f. 13. 34. E. 1. c. 6. In King Edward the seconds dayes I meet with the Statute of A●ticuli Cleri 19 E. 2. which wholly concernes the Clergy their Courts Tythes Rights The Statute de Prerogativa Regis c. 1. 8. 10. 14 15. and Articles against the Kings Prohibition In King Edward the third his Regency I finde very many Statutes concerning the Clergie and all kinde of Church affaires as namely 1 E. 3. Stat 2. c. 10 11. 4 E. 3. c. 6. 5 E. 3. c. 2. 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 1. 14 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. 17. and stat 3 made for the Clergy the Prologue and c. 1 2 3 4 5. 15 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. 6. Parl. 3. c. 6. 18 E. 3. stat 3. for the Clergie c. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. 23 E. 3. c. 8. 25 E. 3. stat 3 for the Clergie c. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. 25 E. 3. stat 6. of Provisions 27 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. of Provisions 28 E. 3. c. 14. 31 E. 3. stat 1. c. 4. 11. 13 14. 36 E. 3. c. 8 concerning Priests Salaries c. 38 E. 3. stat 2. against provisors and Appeales to Rome c. 1 2 3 4 5. 45 E. 3. c. 3. 50 E. 3. c. 1. 4 5. To which I shall adde only this observation That the prologues to the statutes of 1 E. 3. stat 2. 2 E. 3 stat 3. 28 E. 3. 38 E. 3. stat 1. and 50 E. 3. with others begin thus To the honour of God and of HOLY CHVRCH and redresse of the oppressions of the people c. these ensuing Acts were made granted to testifie that even in those dayes our Parliaments first began with matters of God and the Church and settled them by Lawes as there was occasion and then proceeded to temporall matters and grievances the very Statute of Magna Charta having the same prologue wherein you may discerne this method pursued and in most subsequent Parliaments I shall adde to these printed Acts 6 E. 3. num 5. prohibiting Bishops to meddle in matters of the peace 45 E. 3. num 15. removing Bishops from all temporall Offices 50 E. 3. num 99. 103. complaining against popish Cardinals 40 E. 3. num 7 8. a notable Record against the Popes claime to the Kingdome of England by vertue of K. Johns grant 17 E. 3. num 59 60. 18 E. 3. num 59 60. 38 E. 3. num 7. 50 E. 3. num 85. 87 88. complaining against yea restraining the Popes exactions and usurpations as the cause of all plagues 50 E. 3. num 46 47. complaining against the Canons of the Clergy and 47 E. 3. num 24. against Ordinaries incroaching upon the civill Iurisdiction To proceed to King Richard the second the Statutes in the first yeare of his Raigne have this Preface Richard by the Grace of God c. Know that to the honour of God and reverence of holy Church for to nourish peace unity and concord in all the parts of the Realme c. We have ordained and established certain Statutes c. First it is agreed and established that holy Church shall haue and enjoy all her rights liberties and franchises wholly and without blemish c. The confirmation of Magna Charta with other temporall Laws next follow then c. 13 14 15. three Lawes for paying of Tythes and freeing Clergymen from arrests during their exercising of divine Service The second Parliament in ● Rich. 2. hath the like prologue To the honour of God and holy Church cap. 1 confirmes the franchises liberties of the Church 3. R. 2. C. 1 doth the like c. 3. is a Statute against Provisions from Rome to avoyd Nonresidency to provide for instruction of the people by preaching and reforme many abuses in the Church occasioned by provisions made at the complaints clamors and divers Petitions of the Kings Leige people delivered in divers Parliaments to reforme these abuses 5. R. 2. cap. 1. hath the like preface c. 1. confirmes the Churches liberties 5. R. 32. Parl. 2. c. 5. Is a Statute made at the Clergies motion to suppresse haresies and Errors contrary to the Christian faith and to imprison haeretickes and erronious Preachers till they justifie themselves according to the Law and reason of holy Church 6 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. hath the like prologue and c. 1. Ordaines and accords that our holy Mother the Church of England have all her Liberties whole and unhurt and the same fully enjoy and use 7 Rich. 2. hath the same prologue c. 8. the like confirmation of the Churches priviledges and c. 12. prohibits Provisions from Rome 8 Rich. 2. hath the like preface and enacts in the first chapter That holy Church have all her liberties 9. R. 2. c 4. 5. concerns Ordinaries Priors dative and perpetuall and Preists 10. R. 2. c. 1. saves pontificall dignity and priviledge of holy Church and cleares all in all things aforesaid 11. R. 2. c. 3. declares that Bishops ought not to be present or voting in Parliament in matters of blood 1. 2. R. 2. c. 1. confirmes the Churches liberties Chap. 7. exempts pilgrimes from the punishments of Vagrants and c. 15. prohibits Provisions from any forraign power 13. R. 2. recites That the acts therein passed were to the honour of God and holy Church c. and c. 13. prohibits hunting on holy-dayes and Priests to keepe Dogs who have not livings to a certaine value c. 18 concernes the Bishop and Deane of Lincolne and c. 29. Pilgrimes 13. R. 2. Parl. 2. c. 23. provides for the election of Bishops and all other ecclesiasticall
and of absolute authority within it self subject to no other Jurisdiction then that of Christ his Word and Spirit and not to any other particular Congregation Synod or Nationall Church or humane power whatsoever Therefore the Parliament and Assembly can make no Canons nor Rules to binde it nor presc●ibe any Church-government or Discipline to it Brother this is the summe of your whole Book and it grieves me to see so many strange Parodoxes piled up together to support an Independent Fabrick by one of your yeares and Iudgement Give me leave therefore to discover your manifold over-sights in this particular by such demonstrations as you shall not be able to gain say First then I say that the whole Church of Christ is but one intire Mysticall Body whereof Christ is the supreame Spirituall Head and Governour and all particular Churches only members of this intire Body as the head hand feet are members of the Naturall Body not absolute bodies of themselves as every house or Parish in a City is a member of the whol City Every Company or Regiment in an Army a member of that Realme not absolute bodies Cities Armies Kingdomes of themselves That this is truth we have sundry expresse Resolutions of Scripture in positive tearms as the 1 Cor. 12. 12 13 14. 26. 27. and in truth the whole Chapter Ephes ● 22 23. c. 2. 14. 15. to the end c. 4. 11. to 17. c. 5. 23. to 33. Col. 1. 18. 24. c. 2. 17. 19. which you may peruse at leisure Ephes 4. 3. to 7. Endeavouring to keepe the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace For there is ONE BODY one Spirit one Lord one Faith one Baptisme One God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in all And John 17. 20. 21. 23. Neither pray I for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me through their word THAT THEY ALL MAY BE ONE as thou father art one and I am in thee that they also MAY BE ONE IN US and may be made perfect IN ONE Hence the Scripture usually expresseth the whol Catholike Church of Christ which allages hitherto have believed to be but one so far as to make it an Article of their Creed under singular titles as the Church A WOMAN MY LOVE MY DOVE my Sister my Spouse a Garden a Vineyard a City a Congregation an Assembly Sion Jerusalem an House a Flocke a Body and the like to note it unity that it is but ONE intire spirituall Corporation though distributed into severall particular Congregations scattered ●ver the face of the whole World This being an indubitable verity strikes off the head of your Galiah and subverts the very foundation of Independent Congregations which would be absolute and compleat spirituall Bodies within themselves and no members of a Catholike or Nationall Church Secondly If all the particular Churches in the World bee in reality but one intire Body and Church of Christ then by the self-same reason likewise all the particular Congregations within one Nation Kingdome Republike united in one civill Corporation under one Head and temporall government are but one and the selfe-same Church and members one of another not absolute Independent Congregations of themselves subordinate to no other even as all the particular persons in a House make up but one Family all the particular Houses Parishes in a City but one City all the severall Cities Counties in a Kingdome one Realme and all the Nations on the earth but one world of men These cleare principles of Divinity Policy Nature experience none can or may deny unlesse he hath lost his sences or means to subvert all humane Relations and Societies And my Brother acknowledging the whole Nation of the Jewes to be but one intire Nationall Church though divided into sundry Synagogues and particular Congregations as is evident by Acts 15. 24. FOR MOSES OF OLD TIME hath IN EVERY CITY them that Preach him being read in THE SYNAGOGVES EVERY SABBATH DAY compared with Psa 74. 8. Matth. 6. 2. 5. c. 7. 1. 8. c. 9. 35. c. 23. 34. Mark 1. 21. 23. 29. 39 c. 3. 1. n. 5. 22. Luke 4. 15. to 44. c. 13. 10. c. 21. 12. John 6. 59. c. 9. 22. c. 18. 20. c. 10. 2 Acts 9. 2. 20. c. 13. 5. 14. 42. c. 14. 1. c. 17. 1. 10. c. 18. 4. 7. 13. 26. c. 19. 8. c. 22. 12. must of necessity subscribe to this conclusion issuing naturally from it that all particular Congregations in any one Christian Realm Nation Republike are but one intire Church though divided into severall squadrons for necessity and conveniency as one house is into many Roomes one City into many Streets Parishes companies wards one Kingdome into divers Counties Provinces One Parliament into severall Houses Sub-Committees as there is occasion one Armie into severall Regiments Brigades Companies Troopes Thirdly It is at clear as Noonday That in all Civill or Ecclesiasticall Corporations Congregations or Societies of men united into one common Politique Body the whol body or greater part hath by the Law of God Nature Nations a lawful inherent jurisdiction over every particular member or lesser part to make Laws and common Rules to obliege them for the safety peace benefit of the whol Body In all Parliaments Councels of State or War Cities Corporations Societies Courts of Iustice Chapters Committees yea in all elections of Magistrates Ministers Knights or Burgesses of Parliament Majors of Cities Masters Wardens of Companies heads or fellows of Colledges Church-wardens and the like the whol Body or major voyce bindes the lesser number all the whol body ever over-rules the parts And it must needs be so els there could be no Rule Order Government in any of them if one member only or the lesser part should over-rule and prescribe Lawes unto the whole or greater part not they to them The like rule holds firme and hath ever taken place 〈…〉 ●●mall generall Nation Provinciall Parochiall or Congregation 〈…〉 Synods Convocations Assemblies or meetings in all matters of 〈…〉 Discipline Government Lawes Rules Edicts Censure Descition 〈…〉 Yea in Independent Churches themselves the Votes Orders 〈◊〉 determinations of the whole or major part of the Congregation binde all the other dissenting as well as consenting members neither will any Independent Congregation admit of any into their new society but such who shall first submit to the Covenant Orders Government Rules and Discipline that Congregation or the major part thereof hath elected established Fourthly It is a principle of the Law of Nature and common Reason which all Republikes Churches Societies of men in every age till this present have admitted that the Lawes Ordinances Decrees of the greatest Civill or Ecclesiasticall Assemblies where the whole Realme Republike Church or Nation are personally or representatively present by their deputies or Proxies obliege all inferiour Corporations Societies Churches Congregations Persons within their