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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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Common State before all controversies of Religion and causes Ecclesiasticall had beene concluded King Canute in his Parliament holden at Winchester upon Christmas day after sundry Lawes and Orders made touching the faith the keeping of holy Dayes publike prayers learning of the Lords Prayer receiving of the Communion thrice in the yeare the manner and forme of Baptisme fasting and other like matters of Religion in the end thereof saith thus Iam sequitur institutum Legum secularium Now followeth an Order for temporall Lawes Thirdly we see that the Godly Catholique Princes in old times thought is their duty before all other offices of the Common weale first to determine matters of Religion and that even BY THE PARLIAMENTS OF THIS REALME In a Parliament holden by King William the Conquerer it is written thus The King for as much as he is the Vicar of the highest King is therefore appointed for this purpose that he should Rule and defend the Kingdome and People of the Lord and above all things the holy Church c. Hereby it appeareth that Kings and Princes are specially and of purpose appointed by God not only to defend but also to Governe and Rule the holy Churh How be it if any imperfection shall appeare in the former Parliaments we give God thankes for the same that is and trust that for his owne names sake he will confirme what he hath begun The hearts of Princes and determinations of Parliaments are in his hands If any thing want the arme of the Lord is not Shorted he is able to supply the same So our incomperable Iewell enough to satisfie and silence all our Opposites Thomas Bilson Warden and afterwards Bish of Winchester bringing in the Prelates and Iesui●s objecting against our reformed Protestant Religion that it was brought in and ratified not by a Councell and Synod of the Clergy but by the Prince Queene Elizabeth and the Parliament who say they had no power to determine or deliberate of those matters returnes this answer May not the Prince command for truth within hee Realme except your consents be first required and had● May not her Highnes serve Christ in making laws for Christ without your likeing Claime you this interest and prerogative that without you nothing shall be done in matters of Religion by the Laws of God or by the liberties of this Realme By the Lawes of the land you have no such priviledges Parliaments have beene kept by the King and his Barons the. Clergy wholy excluded and their Acts and statutes good And when the Bishops were present their votes from the Conquest to this day were never negative By Gods Law you have nothing to do with making Lawes of Kingdoms or Common wealthes You may teach you may not command persuasion is your part compulsion is the Princes If Princes imbrace the truth you must obey them If they pursue truth you must abide them By what authority then claim you this Dominion over Princes that their laws for Religion shall be voyde unles you consent seeing they are the maintainers establishers and upholders of the faith with publique power and positive Lawes which they and their Parliaments may make without a precedent councel of Clergy men to guid them as he there proves at large by sundry presidents If any Concurre not with me in this undoubted Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction of Christian Princes and Parliaments after all these pregnant testimonies I must tell them in plaine english they directly violate their late vow and Covenant and symbol●e herein with Jesuites and Popish Prelates whose doctrines they have abjured by their Nationall Covenant and therefore cannot may not ever hereafter emb●ace without the highest Perjury and plaine Apostacy unto Popery I shall finish this Section of the Authority and power of Parliaments in matters of Religion Church-government Discipline and enacting Lawes in all and every of these particulars with some forraigne presidents in the Parliaments Diers Assemblyes of Estats in other Realme republikes Should I now relate unto you the many ecclesiasticall Laws of all sorts made in them I might swell this Treatise into many folio volumes I shal therefore only give you a brief touch catalogue of some few which the Studious may peruse make use of at their leisure For FRANCE you may survey the Decrees of King Childebert debated and agreed by him and his people in a Parliament de quibuscunque conditionibus una cum Optimatibus nostris c. 2. 4. c. 15. For sanctifying the Lords Day prohibiting the dressing of any but necessary food on it all Bodily labour under pecuniary mulcts The ecclesiasticall laws of Charles the great Ludovicus pius Charles the Bald collected into one volum by Abbot Ansegisus Benedictus Levita Lindebrogus others printed with some pettinent additions Parisijs 1640. stiled Capitula Regum Episcoporum Maximeque OMNIVM NOBILIVM FRANCORVM were made GENERALI CONSENSV PIDPLIVM SKORVM ET GENERALI CONSVLTV ET COMMVNI CONCILIO by generall consent of the King Bishops and especially of the Nobles and states of France in Common Councells Parliaments and Assemblies of the estates Who had so great a power in making rejecting Canons ecclesiasticall Lawes that when in the yeare 846. the Bishops of France and their suffragans had in their Synods compiled certaine Canons by the command of Charles the Bald and tendered them to him as he had commanded in Sparna● a Village of the Church of Rhaemes to peruse and approve the King Dissidentibus regni sui PRIMORIBVS ab eorundem episcoporum admonition● by reason that the Nobles and other men of his Realme differed from the Bishops in opinion in most of those Canons the King and Nobles out of all their Canons or Chapters haec tantum observanda complacenda sibi colligerunt Episcopis scripto tradiderunt dicentes NON AMPLIVS DE FORVM CAPJTVLIS ACCEPTASSE QVAM ISTA ET ISTASE VELLECVM PRINCIPE OBSERVARE which were Stiled Captule Regis CAROLI not the Bishops Canons By which it is evident that no ecclesiasticall lawes or Canons could be made in France to bind either Clergy or Laity but such at the King Nobles Parliament and three estates approved and confirmed I shall add to this that Anno 1307. King Philip the 4. of France assembled a Parliament at Paris wherein the Laity of France exhibited 65. Articles against the Clergy to regulate their jurisdiction and abuses which were there largely handled and debated as you may read at leisure in Masters Fox who records the passages very fully in the French Histories What the Parliament Estates in France have done enacted in matters of Religion Church-Government and discipline of ancient and latter times you may read at large in Liurentius Bochellus his Decreta Ecclesiae Gallicaiae in Carolus Molinaeus Contra parvas Datas c. in William Ranchin his Survay of the Councel of Trent but above all in Antonie Fontanon
Lipsiae 1584. together with the severall Confession of all the Protestant Churches in Germany and elsewhere recorded in the Harmony of Confessions which were made published established by the severall Protestant States to Diets or Parliaments by common consent of the Nobles Magistrates Senates Ministers of those Churches not by the Clergy alone are a sufficient demonstration of their Ecclesiasticall legislative power and jurisdiction in all matters of Faith Discipline and Government In few words I dare averre that there is never a forraigne Christian Empire Kingdome or Republike in the world whether Protestant or Popish but hath in their Parliaments Diers Senates made sundry Lawes concerning matters of Faith Government Discipline Clergiemen and all Ecclesiasticall affaires yea for the establishment of that Religion Church Government and Discipline in present use among them as their severall Laws and Constitutions will abundantly manifest to any who have vacancy to peruse them I shall close up this Section with some presidents of the Parliaments of Ireland and Scotland which have most affinity to the Parliaments of England Among the printed Statutes of Ireland collected by Master Belton I mèet with these ensuing Ecclesiasticall Lawes made in the Parliaments of Ireland 36. H. 6. c. 1. That Beneficed persons shall keep Residence 7. E. 4. c. 2. 3. That none shall purchase Benefices from Rome and that pardons made to such as purchase them thence shall be voyde 10. H. 7. c. 5. Against provisors from Rome 25. H. 8. c. 2. For uniting the Personage of Cantrim to the Priory of Saint Peters 28. H. 8. c. 5. That the King shall be supreame head of the Church of Ireland ch 8. and 26. For payment of first-fruits ch 13. Against the Authority of the Bishops of Rome and chap. 14. 17 18 23. For other Ecclesiasticall matters 33. H. 8. c. 6. Conconcerning Mariages cha 12. For Tithes chap. 14. For erecting of Vicaridges 33. H. 8. Parl. 2. chap. 5. For suppressing religious houses 2. Eliz chap. 1. For restoring to the Crowne the ancient Iurisdiction and the State Ecclesiasticall and abolishing all forraigne power repugnant to the same cha 2. For the uniformity of Common prayer and service in the Church chap. 3. Concerning first fruits and Personages impropriate c. 4. For the conferring and consecrating of Archbishops and Bishops 11. Eliz. c. 6. and 13. Eliz. c. 6. with diverse others since For Scotland I finde many Ecclesiasticall Lawes concerning the Church Church-men and all matters of Religion made in Parliament and intermixed with their temporall Acts. To omit the Ecclesiasticall Lawes of King Keneth mixed with his Temporal enacted about the Yeare of our Lord 844. In the Statutes of K. William of Scotland made about the Yeare of our Lord 1170 chap 32. Is For maintaining the true Religion and the Rights and liberties of haly Kirke chapter 34. Of the honesty of Clarkes King Robert the first in his Parliament holden at Scone with his Bishops Abbots Priors Ea●i●s Barons and other Noblemen of his Realme to the honour of God and haly Kirke with common advise and consent of all the Prelates and Freeholders foresaide and haile community in the 13. Yeare of his Raigne to wit Anno 1319 made a law chapter 〈◊〉 For the freedome of the Kirke and Kirkmen and maintenance of true Religion And the second Parliament of this King chapter 1. Is of Donation of Lands made to Religious persons and chapter 14. Concernes Nunnes Among the Statutes of King David the 2. the 12th chapter is of Pilgranners and chapter 42. For freedome of holy Kirke Not to mention all the statutes made in the Parliaments of Scotland in times of Popery for advancing the Popes Authority Masse Prelacy with sundry Doctrines and Ceremonies abolished by subsequent Acts in times of Reformation I shall only give you a briefe account of some of their Acts of Parliament since beginning of reformation in that Kingdome I finde in Master John Knox his History of the reformation of the Church of Scotland lib. 3 pag 56 57. in the London edition ●644 That in a Parliament held in Scotland Anno 1543. there began question of the abolishing of certaine tyrannicall Acts made before at the devotion of the Prelates for the maintaining of their Kingdome of darknesse to wit That under paine of Haeresy none should read any part of the Scripture in the vulgar Tongue neither yet any Tractate or exposition of any place of Scripture which Act after great debate in Parliament betweene the Nobility Commons and Clergie was wholly repealed and this Act of Parliament enacted That it should be lawfull to every man to use the benefit of the Translations which then they had of the Old and New Testament together with the benefis of other Treatises containing wholsome doctrine untill such time at the Prelates and other Church-men should give and set forth unto them a translation more correct And so by Act of Parliament it was made free to all men and women to reade the Scriptures in their vulgar tongue and all Acts to the contrary abolished This was no small victory of Christ Jesus against the conjured enemies of his Verity In the yeare 155● of the Protestants in Scotland petitioned both the Queene Regent and likewise the Lords Barons Burgesses assembled there in Parliament for repeale of severall Lawes formerly made against Heritickes for prayers in their vulgar Tongue frequent preaching or interpretation of the Scriptures due administration of the Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper Reformation of the Church Prelates and ecclesiasticall estate their lives Courts and proceedings And likewise entered a formall Protestation in the Parliament House After this in the yeare 1560. The Protestant Barrons Gentlemen Burgesses and others of the Realme presented a large supplication to the Nobility 〈◊〉 States of Parliament then assembled wherein they desired the abolition of Idolatry and such false Doctrin as w●e condemned by Gods word by Act of that Parliament and punishment to be appointed for the transgression that the abuses and prosanations of the Sacraments of Jesus Christ and of the true Discipline of the Church might be reformed That the Popes usurped ecclesiasticall Authority might be abolished and the Popish Clergy removed c. Which application being read in the Audience of the whole Assembly the Batons Ministers other Petitioners were thereupon commanded to draw into plaine and severall heads the summe of that Doctrine which they would maintaine and desire the present Parliament to establish as wholsome true and only necessary to be beleived and to be received within the Realme which they willingly accepted and within foure dayes presented a large Confession of the faith professed and beleived by the Protestants within the Realme of Scotland consisting of 25. Articles which were read in face of Parliament and after ratified by the three States of this Realme at Edinburgh the 17. of Iuly 1560. and by the whole body of the Parliament which
TRVTH TRIVMPHING OVER FALSHOOD ANTIQVITY 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 here proved to be anciently and in truth none other but Parliaments especially in England both by Scripture Texts Presidents of all sorts and the constant uninterrupted Practices Examples of the most eminent Emperors Princes Councells Parliaments Churches and Christian States especially of our owne in all ages since their embracing the Gospell In Refutation of M r. 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 Jer. 6. 16. Thus saith the Lord Stand yee in the wayes and see and aske for the OLD PATHES where is the GOOD WAY and walk therein and yee shall find rest for your soules But they said Wee will not walke therein Luk. 5. 39. No man also having drunk OLD WINE straightway desireth NEW for he saith THE OLD IS BETTER Tertul. de Praescrip adver Haeres Ex ipso ordine manifestatur id esse Dominicum Verum quod sit priùs traditum id autem Extraneum Falsum quod sit posterius immissum Decem. 3. 1644. It is Ordered by the Committee of the House of Commons concerning Printing that this Book entituled Truth Triumphing over Falshood Antiquity over Novelty be printed by Mich. Sparke Senior John White London Printed by John Dawson and are to be sold by Michael Sparke Senior 1645. TO THE HIGH COVRT OF PARLIAMENT Right Honourable HAving had the Honour through Gods assistance to be a meane though cordiall Instrument of Vindicating The Soveraigne Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes in all Civill or Military affaires which concerne the State in Foure severall Volumes against all Opposites whatsoeever which they have for the most part satisfied or put to silence I expected a Quietus est from all other Controversies concerning the Iurisdiction of Parliaments especially in Ecclesiasticall matters which most imagined had been put to eternall silence when our Lordly Prelates lost their Votes and Session in Parliament by a publike Law But alas I know not by what evill Genius and Pythagorean Metempsychosis the Anti-Parliamentary Soules formerly dwelling in our defunct Prelates earthly Tabernacles are transmigrated into and revived in a New-Generation of men started up of late among us commonly known by the Name of INDEPENDENTS who though for the most part really cordiall in their Affections Actions to the Parliament and Church of England for which and for their piety they are to bee highly honoured yet some of them are of late become extremely derogatory and destructive unto both in their Anarchicall and Anti-Parliamentary Positions For which and for their late gathering of Independent Churches contrary to Your Parliamentary Injunctions they are to be justly blamed as great disturbers of our publike Peace and Vnity It is the observation of learned Voetius and Vedelius That the Arminians in the Netherlands for the advancing of their owne Faction and more facill accomplishment of their private ill Designes did before the Synod of Dort and in the beginning thereof exceedingly cry up the Power of the Civill Magistrate and States of Holland in Ecclesiasticall matters both by Writing and Preaching ascribing to them the highest Jurisdiction and Power of giving ultimate Judgement in all Controversies of Faith and Ecclesiasticall matters arising in the Church as a Prerogative belonging immediately under Christ to them alone And thereupon they appealed to the States from the Ecclesiasticall Classes as the proper Iudges of the Controversies they had raised in the Belgick Churches But at last after the Synod of Dort had determined against their Arminian Errors and the States established their Determinations prohibiting the Preaching or Printing of any Arminian Tenets with the private Independent Congregations and Conventicles of the Arminian Party they presently altered both their opinions and practice crying downe the Authority of the States and Civill Magistrate as fast as they had cryed it up both in their Apologies and Sermons contracting yea denying them that very power which before they had so liberally measured ●ut unto them affirming that the States had no power at all over their private Congregations that it was not any right or part of their Office to obliege men by their authorities to the Decrees of Synods however agreeable to the word of God and that they ought not to use any coactive Power or Authority in such cases to obliege them to conformity This Practice of the Arminians was by M r Thomas Edwards by way of prediction applied to the Independents in these very tearmes And it may be feared however these Apologists NOW to ingratiate themselves and being let alone in their Church-way say they give more to the Magistrates than the Presbyteriall and that they professe to submit and to be most willing to have recourse to the Magistrates Iudgement and Cognizance and Examination of Ecclesiasticall Causes yet when they shall come once to be crossed and the Parliament by the advice of the Assembly to settle the Government of the Church and by their Authority to bind them to things agreeable to the word wee shall see then what they will say of the Magistrates Power There are too many speeches already since the Assembly out of their feare how they may goe which have fallen from many Independents THAT PROGNOSTICATE THEY WILL DOE BY THE PARLIAMENT AS THE REMONSTRANTS DID AFTER THE SYNOD OF DORT BY THE STATES Which Prognostication hath fallen out accordingly For since that time our Independents having felt the Pulses of the Assembly and Parliament bearing but very gently by way of debate against their Anarchicall and Anomolous New-Way derived from their good friends the German Anabaptists and Separatists and supported only with their Arguments as I am fully able to demonstrate they have not only in Presse and Pulpit cryed up their Way as the Onely Way Kingdome and Scepter of Christ and denyed all opposition in word deed or thought against it as a direct FIGHTING AGAINST GOD and promoted it publikely and privately with all their Industry Policy Power setting up New Independent Congregations in every corner but even with open mouth pen hand contrary to their former Solemne Vowes Covenants Protestations which I feare they have over-much forgotten cryed downe and fought against the very Ecclesiasticall Power and Legislative Authority of the High Court of Parliament it self and Supreme Temporall Magistrates proclaiming
' inchoat ' 1. Decem. 1384. contin ' ad diem Lunae prox ' post festum corp ' Christi Convocat ' inchoat ' 6. Novem. 1385. contin ' ad 7. diem Decem. An. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 5. Novem. 1386. contin ' ad 3. diem Decem. An. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 26. Febr. 1387. contin ' ad 4. diem Martii sequent Convocat ' inchoat ' 17. Octob. 1388. contin ' ad 22. diem Octob. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 17. Apr. 1391. contin ' ad 21. diem Apr. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 5. die Febr. 1394. contin ' ad 18. diem ejusdem mensis Convocat ' inchoat ' 6. Maii An. Dom. 1460. contin ' ad 15. diem Julii An. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 6. Julii An. Dom. 1463. contin ' ad 18. diem Julii praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 21. Martii 1480. contin ' ad 15. diem Novem. 1481. Convocat ' inchoat ' 13. Febr. 1486. contin ' ad 27. diem Febr. praedict Convocat ' inchoat ' 14. Ia●●ar 1487. contin ' ad 27. diem Febr. praedict The Presidents since these being more obvious and infinite I pretermit Indeed I finde some Convocations and Synods summoned without any speciall Writs yet extant which perchance are lost however though they were summoned without speciall Writs yet it was alwayes by the Kings licence privi●● and assistance first obtained or by former adjournments and not by virtue of any summons from the Pope Arch-bishop of Canterbury or any other Prelates without or against the Kings command as some of the ensuing Presidents manifest in direct termes Convocatio inchoata absque brevi mense Julii An. Dom. 1295. Convocatio inchoata absque brevi die alia dominica qua cantabatur officium laetare eodem Anno. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi die S. Hillarii An. Dom. 1297. Alia absque brevi pro defensione Ecclesiae cont ' Scotos die S. Edmundi Regis eodem Anno. Convocat ' inchoat ' ad instantiam Regis regressi à Flandriae inchoat ' festo Nativ ' S. Johannis Baptistae An. Dom. 1298. Convocat ' Concilii provincialis absque brevi inchoat ' 16. Maii An. Dom. 1356. Convocat ' Cleri Provinciae Cant ' ad supplicationem dom Reg. inchoat ' die Mercurii proxim ' post dominicam qua cantatur officium misericordia Domini in Ecclesia S. Brigittae Londin An. Dom. 1356. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi die Jovis prox post festum S. Georgii Martyris 24. April An. Dom. 1371. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi 1. die Decemb. An. Dom. 1373. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi 8. Febr. An. 1576. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi 5. Novemb. An. Dom. 1377. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi 9. Maii. 1379. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi die Sabbat proxim ' post festum Purificationis S. Mariae Virginis An. Dom. 1379. Convocat ' inchoat ' absque brevi 1. Decemb. An. Dom. 1380. Since this time I finde no Synod Councell or Convocation ever summoned or assembled but by the Kings speciall Writs yet extant among our Records the particularizing whereof being superfluous I shall here omit Secondly our Acts of Parliament expresly resolve that our Convocations Synods Councels ought to be summoned onely by the Kings Writ Hence the Statute of 8. H. 6. c. 1. recites That all the Clergie are to be called to the Convocation by the Kings Writ and thereupon enacts That they and their servants shall for ever hereafter fully use and enjoy such liberties and defence in comming going and tarrying as the great men and Commonalty of England called to the Kings Parliament doe enjoy Hence the whole Clergie of England in their submission in Parliament 25. H. 8. c. 19. 27. H. 8. c. 15. made this acknowledgment Whereas the Kings humble and obedient subjects the Clergie of the Realme of England have acknowledged according to truth THAT THE CONVOCATION OF THE SAME CLERGY IS ALWAYES HATH BEEN AND OUGHT TO BE ASSEMBLED ONLY BY THE KINGS WRIT c. And thereupon these Statutes among other things enact according to this submission and Petition of the said Clergie that they ne any of them from henceforth should make promulge or execute any new Canons c. in their Convocations in times comming which ALWAYES SHALL BE ASSEMBLED BY AUTHORITY OF THE KINGS WRIT c. A cleare confession and resolution that Councels Synods and Convocations here in England alwaies have been are and for ever hereafter ought to be called and summoned not by the Popes or Prelates authority and citations but by the Kings royall authoritie and Writ Hence the English Clergie in most Bills of their Subsidies since as in 27. Eliz. c. 28. 29. Eliz. The Act of one Subsidie granted by the Clergie 31. Eliz. c. 14. 35. Eliz. c. 12. 39. Eliz. c. 26. 43. Eliz. c. 17. 3. Jacobi c. 25. 7. Jacobi c. 22. 21. Jacobi c. 32. 1. Caroli c. 1. 3. Caroli c. 6. have inserted this clause in the prologue of their Subsidies Vestrae serenissimae regiae Majestati or sublimitati per praesens publicum instrumentum sive has literas nostras testimoniales significamus notum facimus quod Praelati Clerus nostrae Cantuariensis Provinciae IN SACRA SYNODO PROVINCIALI SIVE CONVOCATIONE VIGORE ET AVTORITATE BREVIS REGII VESTRI IN EA PARTE NOBIS DIRECTI in domo capitulari ECCLESIAE VESTRAE CATHEDRALIS divi Pauli London vicesimo quarto die mensis Novembris Anno Dom. c. inchoata celebrata to testifie that their Synods Convocations are and ought to be summoned and held only by virtue and authoritie of the Kings Royall Writ and why not then their Visitations being in truth Convocations and Synods Thirdly the whole Church of England in the 39. Articles of Religion ratified by Parliament and all Clergy-mens subscriptions to them as also by our present Soveraigns Declaration prefixt before them Anno 1628. Artic. 21. and the whole Church of Ireland in their Articles of Religion Anno 1615. Artic. 76. unanimously resolve as an Article of Religion not to be questioned That generall Councels and by the selfe-same reason Nationall and Provinciall may not be gathered together by Popes Prelates or any other persons without the Commandement or will of Princes Therefore the sole right of summoning them belongs not to Popes or Prelates but to Princes and other supreme temporall Magistrates And as these Articles so the learned Writers of our Church as incomparable Bishop Jewell in the defence of the Apologie of the Church of England part 1. c. 9. Divis 1. p 52 54. part 6. c. 12. Divis 2. p. 58● to 592. Reply to Master Hardings answer Artic. 4. Divis 19. and 26. p. 193. 212 213 214. Bishop Alley in his poore mans Library Tom. 2. Miscellanea Praelect 1. f. 18 19 20. Bishop Bilson in his true difference between Christian subjection unchristian rebellion passim Doctor William Whittakers
Greeks on the left hand the Latine Clergy on the right and himselfe would have sate in the midst but the Emperor withstood it saying Locum ipsum sibi potiùs quàm summo Pontifici convenire That that place did rather belong to him than to the Pope But after many contestations they all accorded at last that the Pope and his Clergy should sit on the right side the Emperor and his Greeks on the left of the Church one right over against the other and neither Pope nor Emperor in the midst In the Councell of Lateran under Leo the tenth there were divers Ambassadors Princes Nobles and Lay-men present in every Session Sigismond King of Poland had his Ambassadors and Orators there chosen by himselfe his Princes Lords Spirituall and Temporall Nobles and Commons in full Parliament who gave them full Power and Commission for them and every of them Pro Nobis ac Regnis Dominiis Principibus Spiritualibus Secularibus Proceribus Populis ditioni Nostrae Subjectis saith their Commission under the Kings Seale 10. Aprilis Anno 1515. to treat of handle conclude agree and determine of all things in their names and steads that should bee propounded or handled in that Councell concerning Religion or the Church Etiamsi talia forent quae mandatum exigerent magis speciale quàm praesentibus est insertum Promising that they would ratifie grant confirme and establish whatever should be there done and acted by their Orators Maximilian Duke of Millain Francis Marquesse of Mantua Stanislaus and John Dukes of Mazovia and Russia sent Orators and Ambassadors to this Councell with like Commissions under their Seales to ratifie all things therin concluded in their steads recorded at large by Surius in the third Session of that Councell And the like Commissions had the Ambassadors of Lewes King of France Joachim Marquesse of Brandenburge William Marquesse of Montferrat Emanuel King of Portugall Charles Duke of Savoy and Maximilian the Emperor the Constitutions of Councells wherein the Pope sate President being not obligaotory unlesse the Emperor with other Christian Kings and Princes ratified them by their Ambassadors Orators and Proctors if absent from or by their Subscriptions and Seals if present in them In the Councell of Lyons Anno 1245. foure Noble-men chosen and sent by the King and Parliament of England were present as Ambassadors And the Bishops sent by the Church of England to the generall Councell of Pisa Anno 1409. were elected and chosen by the whole Clergy of England in their Convocation In the Councell of Basil King Henry the Sixth of England had fourteene Ambassadors Orators Proctors to whom and to the major part of them hee gave as well a generall as speciall power and Mandate in his name and stead to bee present in that Councell and therein to treat conferre and conclude as well of those things which might concerne the Reformation of the Universall Church in the Head and in the Members as of those things which concerned the Supportation of the Orthodox Faith and the Pacification of Kings and Princes as also of and concerning a perpetuall Peace from Warre between him and Charles of France his Adversary and also to treat commune and appoint and moreover to assent and if need were to disassent to those things which should there happen to bee decreed and ordained according to the determination of the said Councell Promising that hee would bona fide ratifie approve and confirme all and every thing that should bee done acted or effected in the premises or any of them by his said Ambassadors Orators and Proctors or the greatest part of them and that when hee should bee certified thereof hee would see them duly executed as farre as belonged to him and to a Christian Prince The Letters Patents themselves dated the tenth of July are recorded verbatim by Master Selden out of the Tables of France 12. H. 6. memb 2. A sufficient Testimony that it belongs to Christian Princes by themselves their Ambassadors Orators or Proctors to ratifie the Decrees of all Councells and Synods and to disapprove and damne them if they see cause Whence King Henry of France and the Parliament and Synod of Paris Anno 1593. damned and disavowed divers of the Canons of the Councell of Trent as prejudiciall to the Crown Royall Justice and liberty of the Church of France as Bochellus relates at full To conclude with Forraigne Presidents The Conclusions Constitutions and Determinations of that late famous Synod of Dort were ratified by the generall approbations and Edict of the Estates of the Low-Countries under their hands and Seale Visis cognitis maturè examinatis atque expensis praedicto judicio sententia Synodi say they in their Charter of Approbation ista plenè in omnibus approbavimus confirmavimus rata habuimus approbamus confirmamus rata habemus per praesentes Volentes statuentes ut nulla alia Doctrina de quinque praedictis Doctrinae capitibus Ecclesiis horum regionum doceatur aut propagetur praeter hanc quae praedicto judicio sit conformis consentanea c. Actum sub nostro Sigillo Signatione Praesidis Subscriptione nostri Graphiarij Hagae Comitis 2. Julij Anno 1619. All these with sundry other Forragine Testimonies abundantly demonstrate That the Constitutions Canons and Decrees of Councells are of no binding force and power at all unlesse confirmed by Emperors Kings Princes Nobles Subscriptions Edicts Patents Proclamations and Acts of Parliament and that most ancient Councells in forraigne parts were in truth but Parliaments To passe from these to our owne domesticke Presidents It is most apparent by numerous punctuall Examples that the Clergy of England alone had never any lawfull Jurisdiction vested in them to make binding Ecclesiasticall Lawes or Canons in our Synods and Convocations in any age without our Kings Nobles and Parliaments assents and approbations That all or most of our ancient Councells Synods Convocations were nought else but Parliaments wherein our Kings Nobles Senators and Commons were personally present as well as Bishops or Clergy-men And that all matters concerning Religion Church-Government Ceremonies with all binding Lawes Canons Articles relating thereunto have since the first planting of Religion in this our Island till this present time beene alwayes setled resolved confirmed in and by Parliaments or such Councells and Synods wherein our Kings Nobles Commons were present and had decisive Votes It is the received opinion of all our Antiquaries and Historians that King Lucius was the first Christian King of this Island and the first Prince in the world that embraced the Christian Faith That about the yeare of our Lord 185. hee writing to Pope Elutherius to send him the Romane and Imperiall Lawes whereby to governe his people then newly converted to Christ the modest Pope returned him this answer You have requested the Romane and Caesarean Lawes to bee transmitted to you from Vs which you would use
that in a Parliament or Councell wherein the King Nobels Senators and Elders of the people were present as well as Bishops and Clergy men Witnesse this preface to those Lawes of his Ego Inas Dei beneficio Occiduorum Saxonum Rex suasu et instituto Conredi Patris mei Heddae et Erkenvaldi Episcoporum meorum omnium Senatorum meorum et natu majorum sapientum populi mei in magna servorum Dei frequentia religiesè studebam tum animarum nostrarum saluti tum communi Regni nostri conservationi ut legittima nuptiarum faedera justaque judicia per omnem ditionem nostram fundata stabilitaque sint atque ut nulli liceat imposterum Senatori sive alteri cuivis in ditione nostra degenti haec nostra antiquare judicia Anno 694. there was a great Councell held at Becanceld wherein Withred King of Kent sate President and Bertuald Archbishop of Britain with Toby Bishop of Rochester the Abbats Abbesses Presbiters Deacons DVKES EARLES all assembled together deliberating about the state of the Churches in England The King subscribed the Lawes there made for the liberties of the Church in this manner Ego Withredus auxilio Christi his Legibus constitutis Rex pro Mo et Werburga Regina itemque pro filio nostro Arico subscripsi Anno 697. there was a Councell held at Berghamsted in the 5th yeare of the Reigne of Withred King of Kent under Birtuald the high Priest of Britanny Gybmund Bishop of Rochester and all the Ecclesiasticall Orders qui cum viris utique militaribus humanissimè et communi omnium assensu has l●ges decrevre Cantuariorumque Iuribus et consuetudinibus prout sequitur addendas edixere The Lawes are 28. in number all concerning Ecclesiasticall matters and are stiled in the Saxon Copy Juditia Withredi made in a Councel at Berghamsted praesentibus omnibus Ordinibus illius gentis cum viris quibusdam militaribus So that this was no other but a Parliament wherein the King Nobles Commons and Souldiers were present as well as the Bishops promulging and con●enting to these Lawes About the yeare 712 ●ae King of Westsex assembled a great Councell of all his Bishops PRINCES NOBLES EARLES AND OF ALL THE WISEMEN ALDERMEN AND COMMONS OF THE WHOL REALM wherein he made certain Ecclesiasticall Lawes concerning mariages to suppresse all fornication and uncleanesse Exhortatione doctrina per COMMVNE CONCILIVM ASSENSVM OMNIVM Episcoporum OMNIVM ALDERMANNORVM PRINCIPVM PRO●ERVM COMITVM OMNIVM SAPIENTVM SENIORVM POPVLORVM TOTIVS REGNI or MVLTAQVE CONGREGATIONE SERVORVM DEI as some others render it About the yeare 714 Naitan King of Picts received a letter from Abbot Celfred concerning the time of celebrating Easter and Priests tonsure which he desired the King to cause to be observed throughout the Nation over which God had made him Kings the King hereupon assembled a Councell of learned men and of his Nobles and reading the said letter before them Rex surgens DEMEDIQ OPTIMATVM SUORUM CONSESSV kneled downe upon his knees giving thanks to God that he had deserved to receive such a gift from the Land of England and professed that he would have this forme of keeping Easter and tonsure to be perpetually observed throughout his Realme which was presently commanded by a royall Edict to be put in publique execution and was accordingly performed Anno 724. There was a Synod held in Northumberland by the Authority and favour of King Osred wherein wilfrid by the Kings favour got the superiority of his enemie About foure yeares after there was another Councell held at Worcester under Archbishop Bertuald by Pope Constantines advise not only of Religious persons Sed etiam regni Procerum But likewise of the Nobles of the Realme The Councell of Clovesho or Cliffe Anno 747. Cui Concilio interfuerunt Ethelbaldus M●rciorum Rex CVMOMNIBVS REGNI SVI PRINCIPIBVS ET DVCIBVS as well as the Bishops and Clergy made sundry Ecclesiasticall Constitutions consented to and approved by the King all the Princes Dukes Nobles of his Kingdom not made or promulged by the Bishops only At this Councell were present 33. Princes and Dukes The Ecclesiasticall Canons in the Councell of Calchyth Anno 787. were made and confirmed by Offa King of Mercians and the secular Princes and Senators of the Land therein assembled as well as by the Ecclesiasticall Persons Convenerunt Omnes Principes regionis ●tam Ecclesiastici quam Seculares c. Tam REX QVAM PRINCIPESSVI CVMSENATORIBVS TERRAE DECRETA SIGNO CRVCIS FIRM AVERVNT Anno 7●9 Pope Alrians Legates held a Councell at Chalchyth where Jambert Archbishop of Canterbury resigned part of his Archbishoprick to the Bishop of Litchfield and Offa King of Mercians who sate chiefe in it caused his Sonne Egfride to be crowned King it being in truth a Parliament as well as a Synod antiently and yet stiled a COVNCELL Anno 793 King Offa held a Councell at Verolam with Archbishop Humbert and his suffragans ET PRINCIPIBVS SVIS VNIVERSIS and all his Princes where they consulted about and resolved to build an Abbey to Saint A●ban and to endow it with great priviledges and that the King should goe to Rome about it which he did Iuxta sententiam praedicti Concilii Anno 794. at the great Councell of Celichyth there were present 9. Kings 15. Bishops and 20. Dukes wherein the Reliques of Saint Alban were elevated adorned and a Monastery sounded to enshrine his bones And the same yeare King Offa having assembled another Councell of his Bishops and Nobles at Verolam REX VNANIMI OMNIVM CONSENSV et benevola voluntate beate Albano amplas contulit terras et possessiones innumeras Monachorum quoque conventum ad tumbam congregavit c. Cyneulf King of Westsex about the yeare 796. writ a letter to Lullus Bishop of Mentz una cum Episcopis meis neenon CVM CATERVA SATRAPARVM to settle matters of Religion In the Councell of Clovesho under Kenulf King of Mercians An. 800. who summoned to that Synod Episcopos DVCES Abbates CVJVSCVNQVE ORDINISVIROS there were severall Canons made concerning matters of faith and the lands and revenue of the Church At the Synod of Celichyth held on the sixth of August An. 816. under Kenulf King of Mercians there were not onely Bishops Abbots Priests and Deacons present in it but the King himselfe cum suis Principibus Ducibus Optimatibus with his Princes Dukes Nobles who made and published 11. Canons concerning matters of saith and Church affaires Anno 822. there was a Synodall Councell held at Clovesho under king Beornulfe wherein this king sate President Archbishop Wilfred with the rest of the Bishops and Abbots OMNIVMQVE DIGNITATVM OPTIMATIBVS Ecclesiasticarum scil SAECVLARIVM PERSONARVM being present in it debated such things as concerned the profit and necessity of Churches the rule and observance of a Monasticall life and likewise
HERETIQVES limiting the maner of proceeding against them defining what shal be heresie how it shall be punished and abridging the Authority of the Bishops and Canon Law ch 16. concernes Pluralities ch 19. containes the submission of the Clergy Convocation to the King declares the Kings supremacy in causes Ecclesiasticall the impotency of the Clergy or Convocation to make or promulge any Canons or Ecclesiasticall constituti●ns or to debate any thing in Convocation without his Royall Lycence and approbation The Nullity and invalidity of the Canon Law abolisheth all appeales to Rome and Authorizeth 32. persons whereof halfe to be of the Clergy the other halfe of THE LAITY to survay the Canon Law and to compile a body of the Canon Law to be authorized by the King under his Great Seale by vertue of this Act for to be the only Canon Law to be used within this Realme Chap. 20. takes away the payment of any Annates o● first fruits to the Bishop of Rome nullifies his usurped power and Buls settles the forme of electing and consecrating Archbishops and Bishops within this Realme and plentifully manifests the Kings and Parliaments Jurisdictions in Ecclesiasticall affaires chap. 21. doth the like exonerating the Kings Subjects from all exactions and Impositions heretofore payed to the Sea of Rome and enabling the Archbishop of Canterbury and his Officers to grant all Licences and dispensations within the Realme which were formerly granted at Rome only The Statute is worthy perusall consideration fully demonstrating the power of the Parliament in Church affaires 26. H. 8. c. 1. declares the Kings Highnesse to be supreme head of the Church of England under Christ making it a part of his Royall Title and to have Ecclesiasticall authority to redresse and reforme all Errors Heresies and abuses in the Church punishable by any spirituall or ecclesiasticall Law Chap. 3. enacts The payment of the first fruits of all Dignities Benefices promotions spirituall and tenthes to the King and his Heires abolishing the Popes usurpations and authority herein ch 13. abolisheth sanctuarie in cases of High Treason ch 14. Authorizeth the nomination and consecration of suffragan Bishops in sundry places of this Realme and both creates and limits their authority chap. 15. takes away some exactions of spirituall men within the Archdeaconry of Richmond 27. H. 8. c. 8. limits that the Kings spirituall Subjects shall pay no Tithes whiles they are in their first fruits ch 15. authorizeth the King to nominate 32. persons halfe of the Clergy the other of the Laity for the perusall and making of Ecclesiasticall Lawes and manifests the Convocations invalidity to make such lawes or Canons ch 19. Limiteth and abolisheth Sanctuaries and sanctuary persons ch 20. containes an Order touching the paying of Tithes throughout the Realme ch 21. Limits the maner of payment of Tythes within the City of London ch 27. suppresseth divers Monasteries Priories and Religious Houses vesteth their revenues in the King and erects the Court of Augmentations 28. H. 8. ch 10. extinguisheth thes authority of the Bishop of Rome prescribes an Oath of abjuration of it and Popery together with the Popes usurpations and excellently sets forth the Kings supreamacy the Parliaments authority in matters ecclesiasticall as you may read in the Act worthy perusall ch 11. enacts Restitution of the first fruits in time of vacation to the next incumbent ch 13. compells spirituall persons to residence upon their livings ch 16. Releaseth such as have obtained pretended Licences and dispensations from the Sea of Rome 31. H 8. c. 6. enables such as were Religious persons to purchase lands to sue and be sued in al maner of Actions which they were disabled formerly to do by the Common Canon Law ch 9. Enables the King to make Bishops by his Letters Patents only and to erect new Bishopricks which he did ch 13. disolves all Monasteries and religious Houses and vests them in the King wherein you may behold much of the Kings and Parliaments power in Church businesses ch 14. For abolishing of diversity of opinions in matters of Religion most fully and exactly demonstrates the Kings and Parliaments jurisdictions in matters of Religion as the whole Act sufficiently manifests though the Articles therein defined were erronious and the Act too cruell and bloudy 32. H. 8. cap. 8. provides for the true payment of Tythes and offerings chap. 10. containes the punishment of incontinent Priests and of women offending with them ch 12. concernes Sanctuaries and the priviledges of Churches and Church-Yards ch 15. prescribes the manner of proceeding against Heretickes and impugners of the Act for abolishing of enormious opinions in Christian Religion chap. 23 24. concernes Accounts of Bishops and subsidies granted by the Clergie chap. 25. Dispences the Kings marriage with the Lady Iane chap. 24. Dissolves the Hospitalls of Saint Johns of Ierusalem in England and Ireland for supporting and maintaining the supremacy and jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome contrary to their duty and Allegiance chap. 26. Intitled An act concerning true opinions and Declaration of Christs Religion is most pregnant to our present purpose which you may peruse chap. 38. Concerning precontracts of marriages and degrees of consanguinity is likewise a most punctuall Act for the Kings and Parliaments Ecclesiasticall power and chap 44. 45 47. good evidences of it 33. H. 8. chap. 15. 27 28 29 30 31 32. Enabling Religious persons to sue and bee sued severing the Bishopricks of CHESTER and Isle of MAN from the jurisdiction of CANTERBURY to the See of Yorke making the Church of Whitgate a Popish Church by it selfe and severing it from the Parish of Over which I wish our Independents to observe and to learne from this and other Acts that no new Churches or Parishes can be erected legally but by act of Parliament which none of their Churches are 34. and 35. H. 8. c. 1. intituled An act for The advancement of true Religion and For the abolishing of the contrary is most pertinent to our purpose and c. 15. 17 19 35. H. 8. c. 9. for ratification of the Kings stile and Title of Defender of the Faith and supreame head of the Church of England and Ireland ch 6. Concerning the qualification of the Statute of the 6. Articles c. 16. concerning the examination of the Canon Lawes by 32. persons halfe of the Clergie and halfe of the temporalty to be named by the Kings Majesty during his life to compile a body of the Canon Law to bee used in the Realme 37. H. 8. c. 4. 12. but especially ch 17. That Doctors of civill Law may execute Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction though Laymen and married a Law worthy reading and chap. 21. For the union of Churches not exceeding the value of 5l which could not be done but by Act of Parliament are all most pregnant evidences of the Kings and Parliaments indubitable Ecclesiasticall jurisdictions in matters of Discipline Religion Church-government and all Church affaires whatsoever The Statutes made in King
Articles of Religion and enjoyning subscription thereunto under penalties losse of Benefices and other Ecclesiasticall penalties Limiting likewise the age of such who are to be made Ministers ch 17. Concerning the Leases of Benefices and Ecclesiasticall livings with Cure 18. Eliz. c. 6. Concerning the taking away of Clergy c. 23 Eliz. c. 1. To retain the Queens Majesties subjects in their due obedience made against Jesuits Semenary Priests and others receiving Orders from Rome and the harbourers of them under capitall penalties 27. Eliz. c. 2. Against Jesuits Seminary Priests and such other disobedient persons 29. Eliz. c. 6. Concerning Recusants 31. Eliz. c. 1. Against Symony 35 Eliz. c. 1. Against Seperatists and Schismaticks refusing conformity to our Church Service and Liturgie who are lyable to imprisonment fines and other penalties for it by the Law ch 2. For restraining Popish Recusants to some certaine plate of abode 29 Eliz. c. 8. For confirmation of the Deprivation of divers Bishops and Deanes in the beginning of the Queens Raigne ch 22. Concerning the Bishop of Norwich are plentifull evidences of what I plead for In King James his Raigne I finde many Acts of Parliament asserting the Kings and Parliaments Ecclesiasticall jurisdictions as 1 Jacobi c. 1● Concerning the Kings Title to the Crowne ch 2. Concerning Archbishopricks and Bishopricks ch 5. For the due execution of the Statutes against Jesuites Seminary Priests Recusants ch 12. Against second marriages till former wives or husbands bee dead ch 31. For building a new Church in Melcombe Regis to be the Parish Church of Radepoll and for making the Church of Radepoll a Chappell to it 3 Jacobi c. 3. for a publick thanksgiving to Almighty God every yeare on the fift day of November for the deliverance from the hellish Gunpowder treason ch 4. For the better discovering and suppressing of Popish Recusants which prescribes a new oath of Allegiance ch 5. To prevent and avoyd danger which may grow by Popish Recusants which likewise prohibits the Importations of any Popish Books Agnus Dei Crucifixes c. ch 20. To restraine abuses of Players 21. Jacobi ch 17. Against Usury ch 20. To prevent and reforme prophane swearing and cursing The Statutes in King Charles his Raigne are punctuall evidences of the Soveraign Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction of our Kings Parliaments in all which we find not onely severall Committees appointed concerning Religion frequent in all Queene Elizabeths and King James their Parliaments but also sundry Statutes concerning Religion and Church-matters as namely 1 Carols c. 1. For punishing divers abuses committed on the Lords day 3 Caroli c. 1. For further reformation of divers abuses on the Lords day ch 2. To restraine the passing or sending of any to be Popishly bred beyond the Seas But the severall Acts Ordinances and Proceedings of this present Parliament concerning all matters of Religion Church government and Ecclesiasticall affaires are presidents beyond all exception The Acts already passed For suppressing the High-Commission disabling any Clergy-man to meddle with any temporall offices or to be Justices of Peace The taking away of Bishops Votes and their sitting in the House of Peers The severall Acts Votes Ordinances which have passed both House for abolishing all new Canons Plaralities Non-residence punishing of scandalous Ministers Sanctifying the Lords day Keeping of Monethly and other Fasts Celebrating speciall dayes of thanksgiving for sundry Discoveries Victories Prohibiting the printing of erroneous books Suppressing Antinomians Socinians Anabaptists and other Sectaries Abolishing all Innovations Superstitions Idolatreus pictures Images Altars Copes Tapers Royals c. Payment of Tythes Probate of Wills Ordination of Ministers and above all their nominating and convening an Assembly of conscientious pious reverend learned orthodox Divines to assist them in reforming all errors and corruptions in Doctrine Worship Government Discipline and establishing such a pure Worship and Church-government in our Realme as shal be most agreeable to Gods Word wherein they have made a large progresse already the Directory for Worship being now finished and we expect a full accomplishment of this much desired Worke ere long All these with infinite other particulars are a most satisfactory and unanswerable evidence of the Parliaments jurisdiction and Legislative power in all matters of Religion Worship Government Discipline and other Ecclesiasticall things or proceedings whatsoever none of which have ever been settled among us in any age in a legall and obligatory way but onely in and by Parliaments I shall close up these 〈◊〉 Domestick authorities with the Ordinance of both Houses of Parliament concerning the present Assembly of Divines wherein all may clearly discerne the jurisdiction of our Parliaments in all Church affaires matters of Religion and over the Assembly it selfe together with the Instructions or Ruled prescribed to the Assembly which they have punctually observed and submitted to not yet in print An Ordinance of the Lords and Commons in Parliament for the calling of an Assembly of learned and godly Divines and others to be consulted with by the Parliament for the setling of the Government and Liturgy of the Church of England and for vindicating and clearing of the Doctrine of the said Church from false uspertions and interpretations WHereas amongst the infinite blessings of Almighty God upon this Nation none is or can be more deate unto us then the purity of our Religion and for that as yet many things remaine in the Lyturgy Discipline and Government of the Church which doe necessarily require a further and more perfect reformation then as yet hath been attained And whereas it hath been declared and resolved by the Lords and Commons assmbled in Parliament that the present Church-Government by Archbishops Bishops their Chancellors Commissaries Deanes Deanes and Chapters Archdeacons and other Ecclesiasticall Officers depending upon the Hierarchy is evill and justly offensive and bu●thensome to the Kingdome a great impediment to reformation and growth of Religion and very prejudicial to the state and government of this Kingdome and that therefore they are resolved that the same shall be taken away and that such a Government shall be setled in the Church as may be most agreeable to Gods holy Word and most apt to procure and preserve the peace of the Church at home and neerer agreement with the Church of Scotland and other reformed Churches abroad and for the better effecting hereof and for the vindicating and clearing of the doctrine of the Church of England from all false calumnies and aspersions It is thought fit and necessary to call an Assembly of learned godly and judicious Divines who together with some members of both the Houses of Parliament are to consult and advise of such matters and things touching the premises as shall be proposed unto them by both or either of the Houses of Parliament and to give their advice and counsell therein to both or either of the said Houses when and as often as they shall be thereunto requited Be it therefore ordained by
the Assembly not by any particular man or men in a private way when either House shall require it All things agreed 〈◊〉 and prepared for the Parliament to be openly read and allowed in the Assembly if the major part assent Provided that the opinion of any persons dissenting and the reasons urged for it be annexed thereunto if the Dissenters require it Together with Solutions if any were given in the Assembly to these Reasons Jo Browne Cler. Parliamentorum Having thus sufficiently evidenced the authority and jurisdiction of Parliaments in matters of Religion and Church affaires by these numerous punctuall irrefragable Presidents in all Ages give me leave to add these two considerations to them to demonstrate this their undoubted right and priviledge beyond all contradiction and silence every adverse tongue Pen of all Papists Anabaptists Brownists Separatists or Independents whatsoever First that all our ancient and moderne Writs for summoning a Parliament have ever had this speciall clause in them Pro quibusdam ardnis ungentibus negotiis Nos statum defensionem Regni Angliae ECCLESIAE ANGLICANAE concernentibus qu●ddam Parliamentum c. teneri ordinavaimus From whence it is most apparent That the state and defence of the Church of England and well ordering of the same is one Principall end of summoning Parliaments and one maine part of the subject matters of our Parliaments as Sir Edward Cooke resolves 2ly That all every of the pre●ended opposites to Parliaments Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction hand formely and none especially in the present Parliament addressed severall Petitions to this High and Honorable Court for Reformation of the Church suppression of haeresies Errors Idolatry Popery Superstition Schismes Prela●y and establishing Gods true worship Religion Ordinances Discipline as to the most proper Iudicature Tribunall Lawgiver in our Church which they could resort unto and not to the Convocation or any other Assembly of Clergy-men alone or Independent Congregation To give you some few remarkable instances besides those formerly remembred instead of infinite others which I pretermit for brevity Our famous English Apostle Iohn Wickelesse as he professedly maintained in K. Richard the second his Raigne That any Clergy-man yea the Pope himselfe might lawfully be reprehended accused and corrected by Lay-men That the temporall Lords and Princes might lawfully and meritoriously take the possessions and Revenues from the Church and from Ecclesiasticall persons offending habitually c. to the end they might reforme them And that they were obliged to reforme the Church and Prelates under paine of being traitours to Iesus Christ So likewise in the fifth year of this King he Writ and sent to the Lords and great men assembled at London IN PARLIAMENT seven Propositions tending to the abolishing of the Popes usurped power and exactions to selfe the temporalities of Deli●●●ent Bishops to remove Bishops and Clergy-men from all secular imployments 〈◊〉 reforme the abuses of Excommunications and imprisonments upon them to 〈◊〉 Transubstantiation and reforme the Churches both to 〈…〉 the particulars whereof you may read at large in 〈◊〉 And 〈◊〉 long after his learned Disciple William 〈◊〉 a Marty● being unjustly condemned by the Bishop of Hereford for maintaining Wickliffes opinions appealed to the King and Parliament against it and withall writ a pious Letter to the Parliament recorded by Master Fox which concludes thus Deare worshipfull Sirs in this world Theseech you for Christs love as ye yet 〈◊〉 loven Gods Law and Truth that in these dayes is greatly borne abacke that they wollen vouchsafe these things that I send you written to Gods worship to let them be shewed IN THE PARLIAMENT as your wits can best conceive to most worship to our God and to shewing of the truth AND AMENDING OF HOLY CHVRCH My conc●usions and mine● appeale and other true matters of Gods Law if any can finde in them error falsenesse or default privet by the Law of Christ clearly to christian mens knowledge I shall revoke my wrong conceit by Gods law be amended more ready to hold with Gods law openly and privily with Gods grace and nothing to hold teach or maintain that is contrary to his Law By which he made that very Parliament Iudges of his Doctrine had reformers of the Church though for the most part Papists in those dayes On the contrary side the very Papists Prelates Clergy and Convocation in those times did likewise Petition the King and Parliament for suppression of haereticall opinions Preachers Bookes Schooles Conventi●les and the punishment and restraint of hereticks sectaries haereticall preachers and Schoolmasters as they deemed them and upon their prayer and importunity the Statutes of 5. R. 2 〈…〉 5. ●2 H. 4. c. 15. ● H. 5. c. 7. to which the Commons never consented were made and 〈◊〉 to that purpose as is evident by the very words of the Acts themselves Master Fox his Acts and Monuments vol. 1. Edi● 〈◊〉 p. 773. And it is as evident that the Popish Commons Petition was the cause of the Statute of 25 H. 8. c. 14. For the punishment of heresie and the Popish Clergyes importunity to King Henry the eight his motion to the Parliament the occasion of the bloudy Statue of 31 H. 8. c. 14. 34. H. c. 8. 1. as the words of the Acts and Master Fox demonstrate both King and Clergy Nobles and Commons even in these times of Popery deeming our parliaments the meetest Iudges and only lawgivers for ordering Church affaires and matters of Religion About the 37. yeare of King Henry the 〈◊〉 Roderick Morse once a Grey 〈◊〉 published a book in print 〈◊〉 A complaint to the Parliament house of England directed to the Parliament wherein he demonstrates many abuses and corruptions of the Church and Clergy of England in those dayes both in matter of Doctrine Worship Discipline manners which he earnestly presseth petitioneth the Parliament effectually to reforme by wholsome Lawes and Edicts as a thing most properly belonging to their place and Iurisdiction as the whole booke manifests which had been very absurd had the Parliament been no meer Iudge of Religion and Church affaires and no 〈◊〉 Reformers of these abuses by Lawes and punishments as some now repute them In King Edward the sixt Queene Maries and Queene Elizabeths severall Raignes the Clergie and 〈◊〉 made their Petitions and addresses to the Parliament for setling reforming establishing all matters of Religion Church-government and discipline as the forementioned Statutes with multitudes of Petitions and bookes printed and dedicated to the Parliaments in their severall Raigns demonstrate especially 1. and 2. Phili. and Mary c. 6. 8. 1 Eliz. c. 1. 2. 4. 8. Eliz. c. 1. Two admonitions to the Parliament Anno. 1572. Iohn Penry his supplication to the Parliament and others The Petitions to all the severall Parliaments in King Iames his Raigne and our present Soveraignes but more especially to this present Parliament from all sorts of people in every County of the Realme
from Laity and Clergy Protestants of all sorts as well Presbyterians a● Independents yea from Antinomians Anabaptists Brownists and Schismatickes of all sorts to reforme Religion especially Church-government set up the Ordinances and worship of God in their purity and settle all matters of Doctrine Discipline Government by Act of Parliament as neere as might be to the word by the assistance of a godly learned Assembly of Divines the daily calling of Ministers of all sorts upon the Parliam to pursue this work the prayers of all piously affected to Almighty God both publickly and privately to assist them extraordinarily from Heaven in this great weighty spirituall building together with the Assemblies submission of all their determinations to the Parliaments alteration approbation or rejection and the Independents own addresses Petitions late tender of the reasons of their dissent from the Assembly to them is to my weak approbation a most irrefragable Argument and publicke acknowledgement of their undoubted right and Legislative power in all Ecsiasticall affaires of what nature and quality soever and that all parties ought readily to submit to their just determinations in point of practise and obedience in all these particulars whereof they have thus unanimously and importunately from time to time petitioned them to be Iudges There is no party or Sectary whatsoever which hath formerly petitioned them in this kinde but would preach and write for universall obedience to that forme of Church-government the Parliament should settle and establish provided it suited fully with their particular way which they judge the truest and most consonant to Scripture and if they should once authorize or settle the Independents hitherto concealed way I am confident they would all preach universall obedience submission to it under pain of contumacy haeresie schisme and the severest penalties Ecclesiasticall or civill since they write as much in effect already in their Pamphlets and that this their way may reasonably yea and upon higher terms then of reason be thought in time that it cannot but overthrow all other sorts of Ecclesiasticall Government and stand up it selfe in their stead If then every side be of this minde in case the Parliament determine for their party then why should not all be willingly concluded satisfied with what they shall rightly determine be it for or against their way since they have all appealled to their judgements alike which must either be altogether fruitlesse and un-obliging to any or els indifferently binde all to voluntary or enforced conformity Add to this that all or most of our opposites in this point of Parliaments juri●diction and Legislative power in Ecclesiasticall matters have freely submitted themselves to the Protestation Vow and solemne Nationall Covenant imposed and prescribed by the Parliament which enjoyne them under paine of highest Perjury with their lives and estates to maintain and defend the ancient rights and priviledges of Parliament and this we now debate as well as any other That they have generally acknowledged and obeyed the Parliaments Iurisdiction in prescribing publick monethly Fasts and others upon speciall occasions with publicke dayes of thanksgiving together with their power and Ordinances to suppresse all prophanations of the Lords day with many other abuses Sects Errors in Church affaires which hath for ever estopped them to quarrell or deny the Parliaments Legislative Iurisdiction in any other particulars of Church-government Discipline or Religion which suite not with their humors or opinions I shall conclude this point concerning Our own Parliaments Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction with the determination of our incomparable Jewell which hath more reall worth and value in it then the contrary opinion of thousands of opposites being alwayes hitherto reputed the received Doctrine of the Church of England and with Bishop Bilson a very solid Writer This reverend learned Jewell in his Apologie hath this passage concerning the establishment of the Protestant Religion among us That the matter hath been treated in open PARLIAMENT with long consultation and before a notable SYNOD and CONVOCATION Master ●●●ding his Antagonist An●●gonist answering thereunto just as some Independen●● and others who protest they have abjured all Popery though they follow it herein to an haires breadth do now The Parliaments of these later dayes did make most of you and yet how open was it for you had ye any pla●e at all in it were ye admitted within the doores or had ye any thing to do in that assembly Did they tarry many moneths about it had they Bishops had they Divines and the most learned to reason too and fro with all Liberty c. How many of the spirituall Lords a great part of the Parliament and without all doubt the part which must be chiefly and only regarded when the questiones of Religion gave their voyce to your Gospell yea which of them did not resist it save 〈◊〉 alone c If they will needs have their matters to depend of THEIR PARLIAMENT let us not be blamed if we call it PARLIAMENT RELIGION PARLIAMENT GOSPEL PARLIAMENT FAITH This learned Bishop returnes the ensuing reply to him That the Parliament war summoned by royall Authority confirmed and concluded in Order as heretofore hath been used That a Parliament might be held and Acts passed without the consent and agreement of Lords Spirituall for which he produceth sundry examples Farther whereas ye call the Doctrine of Christ that now by Gods great mercy and to your great griefe is universally and freely preached a PARLIAMENT RELIGION and a PARLIAMENT GOSPEL for such sobriety becometh you well and may stand you instead when learning fayleth ye might have remembred that Christ himselfe at the begining was universally received and honoured through this Realme BY ASSENT OF PARLIAMENT and further that WITHOUT PARLIAMENT your POPE himselfe was never received no not in the late time of Queen Mary yea and even then his Holinesse was clogged with PARLIAMENT CONDITIONS that whatsoever had beene determined in Parliament and was not repealed were it never so contrary to 〈…〉 and Canons should remain still inviolable and stand in force 〈…〉 Holinesse had gone home again Such Master Harding is the Authority of a Parliament Verily it Parliaments of Realmes be no Parliaments then will your Pope be no Pope Therefore as you now call the truth of God we professe a Parliament Religion and a Parliament Gospel even so with 〈…〉 and gravity of speech you might have sayd our Fathers in old times had a Parliament Christ And your late Father● and Brethren had of late in the time of Queene Mary a Parliament Faith a Parliament 〈◊〉 a Parliament Pope Neither is it so strange a matter to see Ecclesiasticall causes debated in Parliament read the Lawes of King Inas King El●●ede King Edward King Ethelstan King Edmond King 〈◊〉 King Canute and ye shall finde that our Godly Forefathers the Princes and Peers of this Realme never vouchsafed to entreat of matters of Peace of Warre or otherwise touching the
his Les Edicts et Ordonnances dos Royes de France A Paris 1585. Tom. 4. throughout wherein you may see an whole Folio volume of Ecclesiasticall Lawes and Edicts made by the Kings and Parliaments of France to which for brevity I shall remit the Reader For Spain the forecited Councels of Toledo which were but Parliament and assemblies of the Estates The lawes of the Wisigothis especially lib. 1● De removendis OMNIVM HAERETICORVM SECTIS exterms DE OMNIVM HAERETICORVM ATQVE IVDAEORVM ERRORIBVS AMPVTANDIS which you may read at large in the third some of Hisp●● Illustrata p. 992. to 1014. and in Fredericus Lindebrogus his Codex Legum Antiquarum France-furtii 1613. p. 210 to 238. together with the Generall history of Spain Joannes de Laet. Hispaniae Descriptio Hieronimus Blanca Rerum Arragenensium Commentarius will furnish us with sufficient Presidents of their Parliaments Iurisdiction in matters of Religion and making Ecclesiasticall Lawes in all Church matters For Bohemia Georgius Bartholdus Pontanus his Bohaemia pia l. 7. De Rebus Gestis sub Ludovico Rege lib. 1. c. 8 9 10 12 24 25 21 29 30 31. lib. 2. c. 3 to 24. l. 3. c. 2 6. l. 4. c 1 711 18 33 34. Pauli Geschinii Majestas Carolina sine Constitutiones Caroli 4 Romani Imperatoris quibus illo Regni●● Bohemiae firmandum ornandumque censuit Handviae 1607 Rubr. 1. De fide Catholica Rub. 2 4 5. De hareticis c. Aeneas Sylvius his Historia 〈◊〉 Pauli Stranhii Respub Bohemiae Master Fox his Acts and Monuments 〈…〉 Grimstons Imperiall History will furnish us with sundry Presidents where their Kings and Parliaments have determined and settled matters of Religion and Church-government in that Kingdome not Synods of their Clergy For Denmarke Hungary Poland and Sueden the Lawes and Historians of these Kingdomes abundantly testifie that their Parliaments and generall Assemblies of State have alwayee settled matters of religion and Church-government See Guagninus Chromerus Saxogrammaticus Pontanus Chy●●● Rer um Ungarirarum Scriptores For Italy I find that Theodoricus King of Italy among his temporall Laws intiteled Edictum Theodorici Regis hath many Ecclesiasticall constitutions intermixed as cap. 26. 70. 71 168 125 143. and 174. De die Dominico prohibiting arrests or citations thereon The like I finde among the Lawes of the b Burgundians made by Gundebald their K. by the advise and consent of his Nobles Coram positis Optimatibus nostris universa pensavimus iam nostra quam eorum sententia mansuris in aeuum legibus sumpsimus statuta praescribi cap. 28. 44 45. 51. ● Additamenti primi cap. 18. Additamentum 2. cap. 12. Among the Lawes of the Almains made in the time of King Chlotair una cum Principibus suis id sunt 33. Episcopis 33. Ducibus 72. Concitibus vel cetero populo consti●●ta est writes my Author I finde sundry Ecclesiasticall Lawes intermixed with temporall as cap. 1. 24. and cap. 38. De eo qui die DOMINICO opera servilia fecerit Which first enacts Die dominico nemo opera servilia prasumat facere quia hoc Lex prohibet sacra Scriptura in omnibus contradicit And then prescribes bast inadoing to a servant that shall worke on the Lords day and to a freeman after three admonitions the forfeiture of the third part of his inheritance and for the 4th offence perpetuall villainage Quia noluit Deo vacare in sempiernum servus perman●●● In the Lawes of the Bavarians first compiled by King Theodoricus by the advise of Wisemen skilfull in the Lawes afterwards proceeded in by King Childebert and Clothaire and renued by King Dagobert by advise of his Parliament as this Preface to them attests Hoc DECRETUM est apud Regem Principes ejus ● apud CUNCTUM POPULUM CHRITIANUM qui intra Regnu●● 〈◊〉 consistunt I finde the first Title to bee DE ECCLESIASTIC IS REBVS De libris legum justitutionum qua ad CLERVM pertinent Concerning whom there were many very good Lawes enacted I meet with sundry Lawes made by Tassilo Duke of Bavaria Anno Do. 772. Et per PRIMATES Imperij unmerso CONSENTENTE MVLTITVDINE c. Est ab universis uno ore confirmatum c. Many of which Lawes are meerely Ecclesiasticall As the first for the honour and sanctifying of the LORDS DAY Sicut in Lege Scriptum est in decretis Canonum and cap. 2 3 4 6. De Popularibus legibus cap. 10. 11 12 20. So also in the Aditions of Charles the Emperour to the Bavarian Lawes Addit 1. c. 1. 8. and Addit 2. cap. 7. 8 10. Among the Lawes of the Saxons cap 2. sect 8 9. There are some Lawes relating to the Church In the Prisons Laws chap. 18. There is this Law concerning the LORDS DAY Qui opus servile die Dominico fecerit ultra Laubachi sol 12. in caeteris locis Prisiae 4. Sol. culpabilis indictum Siseruus hoc fecerit vapuletur aut Dominus ejus 4. Solidos pro illo componet Additio Sapientum to these Laws Tit. 1. and 12. Concerne the Church Among the Lawes of the Lombards l. 1. tit 2. chap. 2. lib. 2. tit 8 38 39. lib. 3. tit 1. De Episcopis Clericis tit 3. De decimis tit 10. De Rect●●ibus Ecclesiarum tit 11. De Pontificibus tit 26. De excommunicatione and tit 30. 32 40 are wholly Ecclestasticall In the Lawes and Constitutions of those of Naple● and Sicily made in the yeare 1221. lib. r. tit 1. 2. D● Haereticis 〈◊〉 eorum Receptoribus Fauctoribus c. tit 3. De Apostatis tit 5. De Crimine sacrilegij tit 7. De Decimis and Tit. 29. 65 68. lib. 3. tit 1. 2 3. 20 25 26 28 43 51 58 59. are meerely Ecclesiasticall concerning Religion the Church and Clergie Not to mention the many Ecclesiasticall Lawers and edicts made by some of the Roman and Greeke Emperors with the consent of their Senators recorded in Iustinian in Codice Theodosij lib. 16. throughout and many of them inserted by Gratian himselfe into his Decrees and body of the Canon Law and reduced under severall heads by Paulus Windeck in his Theologia Iuriscon●●●torum Canonum Legum Consensus Not to rehearse the many Lawes and edicts of the German Emperors Princes Diets touching Religion and Church affaires of all sorts mentioned scatteringly in Abbas Us●eigensis Sabellicus Rerum Germanicarum Scriptures Ioannes Aventinus Au●alium Boyorum Master Fox Fasciculus Rerum expetendarum Hermaennus 〈◊〉 Grimstons Imperiall History Constitutiones Imperat Parisijs 1606. 〈◊〉 Comment Chytraus Chron Saxoniae and Augustana Confessto fidei Dictrina Electorum Principum Ordinum Imperij atque corundem Theologorum qui Augustanam Confessionem amplectuntu● subscribed by all the Protestant Princes Dukes Earles Barons Councels Senates Senators of Germany presented to the Emperor and printed yea reprinted by all their speciall Commands
confession was againe ratified Anno 1567. in the first Parliament of James the 6. After which there was an Act made against the Masse and the sayers and heares thereof and another Act for the abolishing of the Pope and his usurped Authority in Scotland After this a forme of Church Government and discipline was presented to the Nobility to peruse but not then fully agreed on and setled The like Petitions and proceedings in ecclesiasticall affaires I finde in the yeares 1561. 1562. 1563. to 1580. 1581 1582. and that the Generall Assemblies of Scotland in nature of a Councell or Synod wherein they debated matters of Religion and Church-government consisted not only of Ministers but of Nobles Gentlemen with other Laikes and that their resolutions and Acts were not thought obligatory unlesse ratified by special Acts of Parliament by which they still petitioned they might be confirmed Not to trouble the Reader over long I finde these ensuing ecclesiasticall Acts of Parliament in Scotland against provisions from Rome Iam. 3. parl 6. c. 43. Iam. 4. parl 1. c. 4. parl 5. c. 53. Iam. 5. paul 〈◊〉 c. 119. Against Working Gaming playing haunting of Taverines A●ch●uses and using any sorvile worke on the SABOTH-DAY Iam. 4. parl 6. c. 83. Iam 6. parl 6 c. 70● parl ●4 c. 148 against Apostacy Idolatry Masse the Pope Semeniary Priests Iesuites uncommunicants Popery as Iam. 8. parl 1. c. ● 3 5. parl 3. c. 1. 45 46. 55. parl 4. c. 7 8. 35 parl● 7. c. 106. parl 10. c. 24 27. parl 12. c. 1 20. parl 13. c. 60. parl 14. c. 193. parl 16. c. 17 18. parl 19. c. 1. Against Adultery Mat parl 5 c. 10. parl 9. c. 74. Iam. 6. parl 2. c. 14. parl 7. c. 105 with sundry others which you may finde mentioned and recired in the 5 and 6 Acts of the second Parliament of King Charles at the Sessions holden at Edinburgh the eleventh day of Iune 1640 Regiam Majestat●● to which for brevity 〈◊〉 referre the Reader I shall conclude with the Ecclesiasticall Acts made in the severall Sessions of the second Parliament of King Charles held at Edinburgh in the yeare 1640 and 1642 where in the presens government of the Church of Scotland together with their profession of Faith nationall Covenant and all Ecclesiasticall matters whatsoever were fully settled and ratified In the first Session of this Parliament I finde these ensuing Ecclesiasticall 〈◊〉 enacted Act. 4. 〈◊〉 the Ratification of the ACTS OF THE ASSEMBLY which are recited in and ratified approved perpetually confirmed by this law Act. 5. Anent the Ratification of the Covenant and of the Assemblies Supplication Act of Councels and Act of Assymbly concerning the Covinant and confession of Faith formerly made and subscribed sundry times here in recited and confirmed In which Act sundry lawes formerly made against Popish Idolatry superstitious Doctrine Papists Seminary priests Iesuits Papisticall Ceremonies Masse the Popes iurisdiction the reformation of the Church and maintenace of Gods true religion are recapitulated confirmed Acts 6. Rescissory repealing divers former Acts concerning Archbishops Bishops with other Prelates their unjust jurisdiction and authority Acts 7. For planting of Kirks unprovided with Ministers through the Patrons default Acts 8. Anent admission of Ministers to Kirkes which belong to Bishopricks Acts 9. discharging the going of Salt-pans and Milnes upon the Sabbath day Acts 10. discharging Salmon fishing upon the Sabbath day Acts 11. Against Papists Acts 12. discharging the Zule vacancy or Christmas Act 13. discharging Monday market in Edinburgh and elsewhere as occasioning great prophanation of the Sunday and distracting men from Gods publike worship and Service Acts 14. For taking order with the abuse committed on the Sabbath day c. Acts 15. Directing Letters of horning against excommunicated persons to which I might adde Acts 16. 29 30. 32. 37 38 having relation to the Church and defence of Religion And Session second of this Parliament 1641. Acts 8. 9 10 11 for abolishing the Monuments of Idolatry 12. Anent Non-communicants and excommunicate persons all printed besides sundry other Acts unprinted are an abundant Evidence both of the Scottish English Parliaments undoubted right jurisdiction and authority in all matter of Religion Discipline and Church-government maugre all inconsiderable late privateopinions to the contrary by whomsoever broached Section 4. Containing certain Corollaries from the premised Sections against the Inpugners of Parliaments and Princes Legislative Power and Authority in matters of Church-government Discipline Religion Together with a compleat Answer to Master Iohn Goodwins pretended Authorities my deare Brother Burtons and others Arguments to the contrary in Iustificaetion of their Independent way in some late Publications the substance whereof is here clearely refuted and this point among others cleared That just humane Civill or Ecclesiasticall Lawes binde the conscience in point of obedience And that there is no exact set forme of Church government universally prescribed in Scripture to all Churches IN the precedent Sections I have according to my solemne Covenant and Protestation abundantly cleared the ancient unquestionable Iurisdiction and Legislative Authority of our Kings and Parliaments in all matters of Religion Church-government Discipline by multitudes of expresse Presidents in all Ages and Authorities of all kindes I shall in the next place Dissipate all those empty clouds of objections which endeavour to obscure this clear-shining Verity by deducing some Corollaries from the premises and then refuting the principle late objections against the same The first Corollary is this That Bishop Laudes desperate Positions in his Anti-Parliamentary paper of Hopes and Feares about calling a Parliament An. 1627. That Church-businesse is not fit for Parliaments That the Parliament House one or both can be no competent Iudge in any point of Doctrine That the Papists insult over us by this meanes and call it Parliamentary Religion That the King suffers by this as much or more than the Church For in the Statute of submission of the Clergie the King and the Convocation are Judges of all Ecclesiasticall Causes An. 25 H. 8. c. 19. And why should the Parliament take this from either That he should have little hope of good successe in Parliament till they leave medling with the Church Are all dangerous false Positions exceeding derogatory and destructive to the indubitable ancient Rights priviledges and power of our Parliaments constantly exercised and enjoyed without dispute even in the darkest times of Popery and highest Ruffe of Pope of Prelates and ever since the Reformation admitted without any opposition but by Popish Priests and Iesuits as the forequoted passages of Bishop Jewell and Bishop Bilson withall the premises manifest Secondly That Master John Goodwins late printed passages against the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Parliaments seconded in substance by some other Independents viz. That the generality and promiscuous multitude of the world who have a right of nominating persons to Parliamentary trust and power are but a SECVLAR ROOT
not onely in their Pulpits but likewise in sundry late Pamphlets wherewith they have filled the World That every particular Congregation of visible Saints and Independent Church is under the Government of Christ alone as the ONELY Head King Governour Law-giver of it and subject TO NO OTHER IVRISDICTION then that of Christ his word and Spirit That NO POWER ON EARTH NOR EARTHLY LAW-GIVERS MAY CAN OR OVGHT TO GIVE LAWES FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THIS REPVBLIKE nor claime nor exercise an Headship or undertake the Government of this Body That neither KINGS NOR PARLIAMENTS NOR SYNODS have any Authority to prescribe Lawes or Rules for the Churches Government to order the affaires of Christs Kingdome or institute the Government of his Churches or to make coactive Lawes in any Ecclesiasticall matters to bind the conscience of any Church or Christian to outward conformity or inflict any mulcts or penalties for contempt or disobedience Christ onely being the Lord of mens consciences which ought to be left at liberty That the Members of the Parliament are chosen but by a secular Root by the Generality and Riffe Raffe of the world Papists Atheists Drunkards Swearers Men voyd of the knowledge feare and grace of Christ And therefore the Independent Brethren conceive as great AN IMPOSSIBILITY that a Legitimate Ecclesiastick Power should according to the mind of Christ bee by them conferred upon any men or that they should have any Power or Authority from Christ to nominate or appoint who shall bee the men by vertue of such nomination or election to enact Lawes and Statutes in matters of Religion and to order under mulcts and penalties how men shall worship and serve God as it is in Jobs expression to bring a cleane thing out of an uncleane That the Parliaments claiming or exercising any such Ecclesiasticall Power or others attributing of it to them is a meanes to awaken the eye of Jealousie upon them and seven times more destructive and under-mining of not onely their Power but Honour Peace nd Safety also than any thing that is found in the Independent Way so ill entreated That it is a claiming of the sacred and incommunicable Royalties of Heaven an accounting it no Robbery to make themselves equall with God and such an high provocation in the eyes of the Most High as IF CONTINVED IN by the Parliament will kindle a fire in the brest of him whose name is Jealous which will consume and devoure Yea one of them puts this Question If the whole Kingdome may deny obedience unto Popish Acts and Canons or upon any other like just occasion and they themselves bee Judges whether the occasion bee just or no Whether MAY NOT INDEPENDENTS a part of the Kingdome onely doe the like in all respects Or Whether ought they because a Lesser part of the Kingdome yeeld obedience to Popish Acts and Canons because a Major part approve of and agree with a Parliament and Synod in approving them What if they should be for Popery again Judaisme or Turcisme t is no offence to make a Quere nor impossible to come to passe the greatest part of those that chose our Parliament men being thought to be Popishly or Malignantly affected c. Putting divers such like Queries destructive to the very fundamentall Power and Being of Parliaments and as bad or worse than the Popish Gun-powder Plot to blow up the Soveraign Ecclesiastick and Civill Authority of this High Court in all succeeding Ages These with infinite other Anti-Parliamentall Anti-Synodicall and Anti-Monarchicall Paradoxes at which I professe I stand amazed have not onely dropped from the Lips but Pens of sundry Independents who have avowed them publikely in Print with their Names affixed to their Bookes even before the face of Your Right Honourable Parliamentary Assembly and Supreme Tribunall in such open affront and high contempt of Your undoubted Rights Power Priviledges which Your Honours and wee all are obliged by Late Solemne Oathes Covenants Protestations to defend maintaine with our very Lives and Estates and to discover oppose all others who shall invade them to our uttermost power as I am confident no Age nor History can ever parallel in the least measure the very Malignant Prelates and Anti-Parliamentary Cavaliers having not proceeded in this kind so farre as they which I speake with deepest griefe of heart and spirit out of Conscience of that common Vow and Covenant which bindes mee to discover oppugne reveale abhorre it and detestation of their most pernicious Assertions not out of the least malice or hatred to any of their Persons What the Independents end of publishing these desperate Anti-Parliamentary Paradoxes should be unlesse to prepare their party and all others as much as in them lies utterly to reject whatever publike forme of Church-Government Discipline Reformation and Directory of Worship Your Honours by the advice of the Reverend Assembly shall establish in our Church for the future after all your serious consultations debates paines Prayers and Fastings about it and to set up their owne Anomolous Platforme which they averre is Christs Kingdome and Government and which may upon probable and higher grounds than of reason bee thought in time to overthrow and put downe all other Governments whatsoever and to stand up alone in their stead since Christs Kingdome shall stand up when all opposite earthly Kingdomes like earthen vessells shall with an Iron Rod bee dashed in peeces Which they close up with a Faxit Deus festinet in despight of Your Authority and all humane Power whatsoever I cannot conjecture And their owne late printed Passages with Mr. Iohn Goodwins Sermon that it would be more easie for him and hee should rather yeeld to bee torne in pieces by wild horses than submit to such a Government which proceeded from a Parliament chosen by the Riffe-raffe of the world c. intimate and expresse as much Which what an high contempt it is against Your undoubted Power and pious Ecclesiasticall proceedings in Reforming setling the Doctrine Discipline and Government of our Church the grand desire and prayer of all wel-affected spirits I most humbly submit to Your saddest thoughts and deepest wisedomes who have both Power and Authority in Your hands to suppresse incomparable Prudence and Providence to prevent these growing dangerous Insolencies before they become Masterlesse or Epidemicall past Your cure Farre be it from my thoughts to exasperate Your Power or Iustice against any Delinquents of this kind some whereof are so neare and deare unto mee that it is my heaviest affliction to mention their extravagancies in this kind of which I trust they and all their followers will be now ashamed and a Brotherly Admonition to their Persons though their Writings undergoe the sharper Censure will I hope induce them upon second thoughts both to discerne lament recant their fore-mentioned Paradoxes and abhorre themselves for them even in dust and ashes as one of them professeth hee will doe in case hee be convinced And
over them both in and out of Synods After this in the very height of Popery and the revivall of it in England in the first year of Queen Mary a Parliament and Convocation being summoned to re-establish Popery the Queen her selfe appointed and commanded a publike Disputation to be held at Pauls Church in London in the Convocation house about the matter of the Sacrament which was accordingly held and continued six whole dayes many Earles Lords knights Gentlemen and divers of the Parliament Court and City being present at it to the end that they might constitute Laws of the matters of Religion debated which the Queen and Parliament might ratifie The Disputation being ended The Queen sent a Writ to Bonner Bishop of London to dissolve the Convocation which was done accordingly So that this Convocation did nothing in matter of doctrine or discipline even in these times of Popery but what the Queen did first direct and limit them Queen Mary deceasing and Queen Elizabeth a Protestant Princesse succeeding her called a Parliament and Convocation to suppresse Popery and re-establish the Protestant true Religion To effect which with more facility this pious Queen having heard of the diversity of opinions in maters of Religion among sundry of her loving Subjects and being very desirous to have the same reduced to some godly and christian concord by the advice of the Lords and others of the Privy Councell as well for the satisfaction of persons doubtfull as also for the knowledge of the very truth in certain matters of difference commanded a convenient chosen number of the best learned of either part to conferre together their opinions and reasons concerning three particular points that should be prescribed to them thereby to come to some good and charitable agreement with all convenient speed Hereupon nine of the learnedst Papists were chosen on the one side and nine of the ablest Protestants on the other to debate these three Propositions prescribed to them in writing 1. It is against the word of God and the custome of the ancient Church to use a tongue unknown to the people in common Prayer and the administration of the Sacraments 2. Every Church hath authority to appoint take away and change Ceremonies and Ecclesiasticall Rites so the same be to edification 3. It cannot be proved by the word of God that there is in the Masse offered up a sacrifice propitiatory for the quick and the dead It was further resolved by the Queens Majesty that the conference on both parties should be in writing for avoiding much altercation of words that both sides should declare their minds opinions and reasons in writing and at the same day deliver them mutually one to the other to be considered and to return their answers thereto in writing by a certaine day Immediately herupon divers Nobles and States of the Realme understanding that such a meeting and conference should be in certain matters whereupon In the Court of Parliament consequently following some Lawes might be grounded they made earnest request to her Majesty that the parties of this conference might be ordered to put and read their Assertions in the English tongue and that in the presence of them of the Nobility and of The Parliament House for the better satisfaction and ordering of their owne judgements to treat and conclude of such Lawes as might depend hereupon This also being thought very reasonable was signified to both parties and so fully agreed upon and the day appointed for the first meeting to bee the Friday in the afternoone being the last of March at Westminster Church At which day and place both for good order and for honor of the Conference By the Queens Maiesties Commandement the Lords and others of the privie Councell were present and a great part of the Nobility also The Lord Keeper and the rest of the Lords bearing chiefe sway in ordering this conference as you may read at large in Master Fox in the second dayes discourse In this Conference I shall onely observe two passages of the Protestant party The first is the begining of their Prologue to their written Conference in these words For as much as it is thought good to the Queens most Excellent Majesty unto whom in the Lord all obedience is due that we should declare our Iudgement in writing upon certain Propositians We as becometh us to do herein most gladly obey The next is their third observation from the law of Justinian the Emperor commanding all Bishops and Priests to celebrate the holy oblation and prayers in Baptisme with an audible voyce c. And let them know this that if they neglect any of these things the dreadfull judgement of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ shall fall upon you neither will wee when wee know it rest and leave it unrevenged viz. That this Emperour being a christian did not only make Constitutions of Ecclesiasticall matters but also threatneth revenge and sharp punishment to the violaters of the same Therefore they held he had an obliging power over his Subjects and a coersiveauthority vested in him to enforce obedience to his Lawes of which more hereafter As this was the practise of this blessed pious Queen in the begining of her Raigne to prescribe to her Clergy in Convocation what they should treat off and how So it continued in use and was punctually submitted to by all Convocations during her Raigne and that not onely as a matter of complement but of conscience religion and the established doctrine of the Church of England as you may read at large in Bishop Jewels Apology of the Church of England and in the Defence of his Apologie against Harding part 6. c. 9. to 16. p. 689. to 766. a learned full discourse to this purpose and in Bishop Bilsons true Difference between Christian Subjection unchristian Rebellion the second part to omit all others who have handled this subject in her Raigne It seemes therefore strange to me that this which was reputed the true doctrine of the emmine●test learnedest writers Reformers of this Church and of the Church of England it selfe from the begining to the end of her happy Raign and ever since should bee deemed meere Antichristian Diabolicall theomacall and meer Popish doctrine now when as the contrary opinion is really such Our late Soveraigne King James in his Letters Patents before the Ecclesiasticall Canons and Constitutions made in Convocation A● 1603. recites that he called that Convocation by his Writ and that ●e did By severall Letters Patents under his Great Seale of England the one dated the 11. of April the other the 25. of Iune in the first year of his Raigne Give and grant full free and lawfull liberty power and Authority unto the sayd Clergy in their Convocation who without such a Patent and License could debate and conclude nothing else it had been vaine and superfluours To conferre Treat Debate Consider Consult and agree of and upon
Edicts and to ratifie their Canons against them sending their Legates to the Emperor for that purpose The Bishops in the third generall Councell of Ephesus write to Gallimar King of Persia supplicating and beseeching his Majesty to ayd Religion which was impugned and speedily to correct their madnesse and tyranny that inclined to heresie Yea they beseeched Theodosius the Emperor that by his godly Letters hee would ratifie and confirme the Decree of the Councell and Theodosius of blessed memory CONFIRMED ALL THINGS BY A GENERALL LAW that were determined in that generall Councell saith the first Action of the Councell of Chalcedon Martianus the Emperor in the fourth generall Councell of Chalcedon speaks thus Wee after the example of Constantine have thought good to bee present in this Synod TO CONFIRME THE FAITH not to shew our power Yea this Emperor in the close of that Councell saith SACRO NOSTRAE SERENITATIS EDICTO VENERANDAM Synodum CONFIRMAMVS By the holy Edict of our Majesty Wee confirme that Reverend Synod Which hee ratified with this Edict Let no Clergy-man Souldier or any of any other condition endeavour to treat of the Christian faith henceforth publikely in assemblies met together and hearing them seeking from hence an occasion of tumult or perfidiousnesse For hee doth injury to the judgement of the most reverend Synod if any shall strive to debate againe things once judged and rightly ordered when as those things concerning the Christian faith which are now controverted are known to be defined by the Priests which met together at Chalcedon by Our Precepts and decreed according to the Apostolicall Expositions and Institutions of 318. holy Fathers and of 150. more in this Royall City For punishment shall not bee wanting to the contemners of this holy Law because they not onely goe against the Faith truly expounded but also prophane the holy mysteries to Jewes and Pagans by this contention Therefore if hee be a Clerke who shall publikely adventure to treat of Religion let him be removed from the fellowship of Clergy-men but if a Souldier let him be spoyled of his Girdle likewise others who are guilty of this crime if they be Free-men let them be banished out of this Royall City and also by the Judiciary Power subjugated to competent punishments but if they be Servants let them be corrected with most severe chastisements The Emperors Gratian Valentinian and Theodosius by this Imperiall Edict confirmed the Decrees of the first generall Councell of Nice long after they were made as Constantine the great had done at their enacting Vnius Summi Dei Nomen ubique celebretur Niceneae Fidei dudum à majoribus traditae divinae Religionis testimonio atque affertione firmatae OBSERVANTIA SEMPER MANSVRA TENEAT c. Yea Pope Leo himselfe in sundry Epistles exhorts Theodosius Leo Martianus the Emperors and Pulcheria the Emperesse to defend the Catholike Faith concluded and defined in the Councells of Nice Ephesus and Chalcedon against the Heretiques that opposed them to ratifie and maintaine the Decrees of these Councells by their Imperiall authority to represse the Heretiques and disanull the Constitutions of the 2. Councell of Ephesus contrary to them and not to suffer those things to be redebated which their Fathers according to the Apostles Doctrine had confirmed nor yet to suffer those Heresies to spring up again which they had condemned A cleare Evidence that the Canons and Determinations of generall Councells are no wayes obligatory and altogether invalid unlesse ratified by Imperiall Edicts In the Councell of Chalcedon Action 1. when some would have added an Explanation to the Canon of the Councell of Nice the Egyptians Orientalls and the Bishops that consented with them cryed out Nemo suscepit adjectionem nemo diminutionem Quae in Nicca constituta sunt teneant Catholicus IMPERATOR HOC JVSSIT After this upon another occasion the whole Synod saith Quod Impertalis praecepit autoritas omnibus modis observandum est Justum est quae à piissimo Principe praecepta sunt effectus mancipari Et necesse nobis erit in omnibus Imperatoris Christi amici cedere jussioni Omnia referantur ad cognitionem clementiae Imperialis Postulamus ejus referri clementiae Et si jusserit criminali causa alterum pro altero decertare hoc suscipimus praecipuè quia universalem praecepit fieri Synodum Et necesse est majores causas in eum reservare Concilium The first generall Councell of Constantinople with the Decrees and proceedings thereof were ratified by the Imperiall Edicts of Justinian the Emperor who summoned it yea swayed and directed it what to doe and how to proceed causing Pope Vigilius to give an account of his Faith therein and ratifying the Faith and Canons of the foure first generall Councells In the third Councell of Toledo King Reccaredus who summoned it sate President therein making two Orations to the Bishops assembled in it exhibiting to them a Confession of the Christian Faith subscribed by himselfe and his Queene Badda with their owne hands in these words Ego Reccaredus Rex fidem hanc sanctam veram Confessionem quam unà per totum orbem Catholica confitetur Ecclesia corde retinens ore affirmans mea dextra Deo protegente subscripsi Ego Badda gloriosa Regina hanc fidem quam credidi suscepi manu mea de toto corde subscripsi This Confession of the Faith to which was annexed the Creeds of the Councells of Nice Constantinople and Chalcedon the King commanded to be publikely read in the Councell to the end that it might be examined and confirmed therein which was done accordingly all the Bishops in that Councell subscribing it and not onely they but likewise the Presbyters and Deacons yea all the Nobles Senators and Elders of the whole Gothish Nation among whom were Gussinus Fonsa Afrila Achila Flavius with other Noble-men ET OMNES SENIORES GOTHORVM ET TOTIVS GENTIS GOTHICAE who were present and had voyces in that Councell subscripserunt After which Subscription of this Profession of the Faith the King made another Oration to the Councell commanding them to make certaine Canons for the Government of the Church and Reformation of Manners De caetero autem prohibendis insolentium moribus ME A VOBIS CONSENTIENTE CLEMENTIA sententiis terminate districtioribus firmiore disciplina quae facienda non sunt prohibete ea quae fieri debent immobili constitutione firmate Whereupon they compiled 23. Canons the second of them for the reciting of the Creed in all Churches every Lords day hath this clause in it CONSVLTV piissimi gloriosissimi Reccardi Regis constituit Synodus The eighth this Jubente autem consentiente Domino Reccaredo Rege id praecepit Sacerdotale Concilium The tenth this Annuente gloriosissimo Domino nostro Reccaredo hoc sanctum affirmat Concilium The fourteenth this Suggerente Concilio id gloriosissimus Dominus noster Canonibus
caeteri quique tam Ecclesiastici quam EX LAICALI ORDINE QVI ADFVERVNT VIRI MANV PROPRIA FIRMAVERVNT That not long before in the Synod of Meaux divers Canons there recited were decreed by the King the Clergy and Nobles Nuper ab eodem devotissimo Principe unà cum sacro Ecclesiastico Ordine ET ILLVSTRIVM VIRORVM NOBILITATE DECRETA SVNT These two Councells were in nature of Parliaments the King and his Nobles being present having voyces in them and subscribing them as well as the Prelates In the 2 5 12 26 to 44. 76 to 83 88 89. Canons of the Synod of Melden wee find nothing but Supplications and Petitions to the King to decree and ratifie the things comprised in them Petimus suggerendum est ut Regia magnificentia liberiorem libertatem Episcopis ad suum peragendum in corum parochiis ministerium quàm hactenus habuissent tribuat Vt Principes juxta decreta Canonum per singulas provincias saltem bis aut semel in anno à Metropolitanis Dioeoesanis Episcopis SYNODICE CONVENIRI CONCEDANT Therefore they cannot doe it without their license Vt Regia Majestas observare praecipiat c. Vt jus Ecclesiasticum legem Canonicam nobis ita conservetis sicut Antecessores vestri Vt Praecepta quae Avus Pater vester Ecclesiis nobis commissis fecerunt firmaverunt stabilia conservaverunt ETIAM VOS CONFIRMASTIS ET de caetero RATA CONSERVETIS And they thus submit their Constitutions to the King cap. 80. Haec vestrae Christianae Devotioni verbis scriptis protulimus Vt autem Capitula quae Domino Mediatore communiter decrevistis ET MANV PROPRIA CONFIRMASTIS nunc observatores VOS VERBIS PROMISISTIS ut opere plentièr conservetis adimpleatis nunc etiam admonemus Et Capitula Patris vestri fine rèfragatione de caetero conserventur ac Capitulis vestrae Religioni ab exiguitatis nostrae ministerio oblatis HOC DIPLOMA SI COMPLACET ADNECTATVR All which are so many Synodall resolutions that Canons made in Councells without Princes speciall ratifications by their Subscriptions and Charters are no wayes obligatory In the Synod of Medardum under Charles the sonne of Lodovick who summoned and sate President in it this King humbly and prudently propounded many things to bee defined and discussed therein himselfe sitting there in person among the Bishops there being Lay-men likewise present in it The Canons in this Synod were made by this Kings direction and assent and confirmed by his and the others voyces and Subscriptions All which these Passages of that Synod evidence Ipse quoque Rex adesse dignatus est ut non solùm devotione Ecclesiae se filium esse ostenderet verum etiam sicubi opus esset protectorem Regia potestate monstraret Cum itaque Praesules diversarum Ecclesiarum PIO REGE MVLTA humiliter prudenter PROPONENTE tractassent potiùs quaedam quàm diffinivissent c. Parte Cleri quae praesens erat AC LAICORVM bonum ei testimonium perhibente c. Statuit sancta Synodus ANNVENTE PIO PRINCIPE ut idonei Legati dirigerentur qui singulorum locorum statum solertissimè perscrutarentur quae ipsi per se non valerent corrigere judicio proximè futuri Concilij ET POTESTATI REGIAE REVELARENT Obtentum est etiam à devotissimo Principe ut incesti quilibet alij perditi examen Episcoporum refugientes per Judices publicos ad corum praesentiam deducantur nè alterius illicebram peccandi nutriat impunitas vitiorum Postremo praefixum est ab omnibus generaliter custodiendum NE VILLAE RES ECCLESIASTICAE ABSQVE REGIS COHIBENTIA COMMVTENTVR A strong Canon in the behalfe of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction Et sic cunctis secundum regulam Ecclesiasticam canonicè diligentèr patratis decretum judicatum est à sancta venerabili Synodo ASSENTIENTE ET FAVENTE Christianissimo gloriosissimo REGE DOMINO CAROLO haec omnia GESTIS INSERI in conspectu Synodali relegi ET RATA OMNIA JVDICATA CVNCTORVM MANIBVS ET SVBSCRIPTIONI CANONICA PERPETVO inconvulsae inviolabiliter permansura FIRMARI The Councell of Valens Anno 855. summoned by the Mandate of Lotharius the Emperor cap. 23. thus prayes his confirmation of the Canons therein compiled Quod judicium nostrum tàm necessarium publicae disciplinae Ecclesiasticae defensioni omnino suppliciter postulamus EJVSDEM PII PRINCIPIS AVTORITATE MVNIRI Under which they annex the Edict of Constantine for the confirmation of the Judgements and Constitutions of Bishops In the Synod of Ticinum or Pauy under Lodovick the second this King sent both by word of mouth and writing an Exhortation and Monition to the Synod that was publikely related and read in it which the Synod drawing up into Canons humbly desired him to ratifie and to correct sundry abuses which they complained of Which the King PRAESENTIBVS OPTIMATIBVS SVIS in the presence of his Nobles ratified both by word of mouth and Royall Sanctions beginning with a Statuimus Sancimus and concluding thus Haec olim saepe inculcata ET AVGVSTALI SANCTIONE NOSTRA PROMVLGATA quia ex parte in aliquibus videntur neglecta hactenus acriori ulcisci debuerant examine c. This Synod being in truth a Parliament as the relation of it manifests The Councell of Pistis Anno 863. under King Charles the Bald is thus prefaced Carolus gratia Dei Rex Episcopi Abbates quoque COMITES ac caeteri in Christo renati FIDELES ex diversis Provinciis c. convenimus Which proves that Nobles and other Lay-men were present at it Besides it makes mention that the Constitutions of the Councell of Valens were made with the consent of that Councell by the Kings Precept and by him commanded to bee proclaimed and kept by his Subjects and to bee read and ratified in this Councell the Constitutions whereof are made in the Kings and published in the Kings and Councells names who both subscribed and ratified them as this close of the Acts of that Councell witnesseth Vt autem haec quae observanda supra scripsimus ac praenominavimus nunc de caetero certiùs expressiùs à Nobis atque à Successoribus inconvulsa serventum PROPRIIS MANIBVS HIS SVBSCRIBERE COMMVNI CONSENSV DECREVIMVS ea conditione servatà ut omnis in cunctis Ordinibus Lex Juris debiti honor ab omnibus obedienter fideliter cooperante Domino conservetur Post haec omnia relicta collaudata COMMVNI CONSENSV DECREVIMVS c. The Councell of Wormes Anno 868. assembled by the command of King Lodovick applaudes this Princes great devotion and care for Religion in these termes Cujus tanta erga Deum devotio extat ut non solùm in rebus humanis VERVM ETIAM IN CAVSIS DIVINIS MAXIMAM SEMPER SOLLICITVDINEM GERAT The Acts of which Councell were approved by him The eighth
in the Kingdome of Britaine The Romane and Caesarean Lawes Wee may at all times reject but the Law of God by no meanes You have lately by Gods mercy received the Law and Faith of Christ in the Kingdom of Britaine You have with you in the Realme both Testaments out of them by Gods grace PER CONSILIVM REGNI VESTRI SVME LEGEM By the Councell of Your Realme not of your Clergy or Prelates take a Law and by it through Gods power You may governe Your Realm of Britain For You are Gods Vicar as Bracton likewise stiles our Kings in Your Realme c. Lo here the Pope himselfe resolves the King and great Councell of this Realme the Parliament not Clergy or Convocation to bee the only proper makers of Lawes to govern the Church and Kingdom by Anno 446. Germanus and Lupus two learned Bishops being sent hither out of France to suppresse the spreading dangerous Pelagian Heresie there was upon this occasion a Synod assembled at Verolam whereunto a numerous multitude of men together with their wives and children repaired ADERAT POPVLVS EXPECTABATVR FVTVRVS IVDEX The People were present expected to be the future Judge Adstabant partes dispari conditione consimiles Indè divina fides hinc humana praesumptio indè Christus hinc Pelagius autor perversae pravitatis c. After a long dispute Vanity is convinced confounded perfidiousnesse refuted being unable to answer the objections POPVLVS ARBITER vix manus continet JVDICIVM CVM CLAMORE CONTESTANDO c. The People being Arbitrator scarce hold their hands GIVING IVDGEMENT with a shout These things thus acted an innumerable company of both Sexes were converted to the Lord. In this first Synod that wee read of held within our Island the People were present as well as the Clergy and that not only as Auditors but Judges giving the finall Sentence in this great controversie concerning Religion Anno 449. There was another British Councell held by the said Germanus and Severus MAGNOQVE Clericorum ET LAICORVM NVMERO and a great number of Clergy-men and LAY-MEN against the reviving Errors of Pelagius and King Vortigerne 's incestuous marriage with his daughter OMNIVMQVE SENTENTIA pravitatum perversitas cum suis Autoribus condemnatur So that the Laity as well as the Clergy gave Sentence in this Synod against this Heresie and the Authors of it Nennius cap. 37. addes of this Councell concerning Vortigerne Dum conventa esset magna Synodus Clericorum ET LAICORVM in uno Concilio c. Ipse Rex maledictus est damnatur à beato Germano OMNI CONCILIO BRITONVM So that Lay-men were present and gave sentence together with the Clergy in this second Synod held in this our Isle About the yeare 612. King Ethelbert Genti suae Decreta Judiciorum as well in Ecclesiasticall as Temporall causes juxta exempla Romanorum CVM CONCILIO SAPENTVM INSTITVIT c. as Beda witnesseth About the yeare 627. Edwin King of Northumberland being perswaded to become a Christian returned this answer That he was about to conferre with his friends and COVNSELLORS concerning this thing and that if they would agree in opinion with him they would all be consecrated to Christ together in the Fountaine of life Hee did as hee had said Habito enim CVM SAPIENTIBVS CONCILIO For holding a Councell with his wise-men hee demanded severally of them all What this Doctrine which they had not hitherto heard of and the new worship of the Deity which was preached seemed to them And after some debate Coifi declaring his opinion that their former Religion had no vertue in it and that the Christian was farre better and to bee imbraced the rest of the Elders and Kings Counsellors concurred in opinion with him Whereupon they resolved forthwith to anathematize and burne with fire the Altars and Temples they had consecrated without fruit with the Idols in them Which done King Edwin with all the Nobles of his Nation and very many of the common people imbraced the Christian Faith and were Baptized Leo here a Pagan King and his Parliament determine the Christian Religion to be truest and thereupon renounce their former Idolatry and resolve to embrace the Christian Faith In the yeare 663. there was a great Councell held at Strenaeshale to decide the controversie concerning the due time of keeping Easter in which Councell King Oswey and his sonne Alfred with MANY NOBLES Bishops Clerks and LAY-MEN were present Colman and his Scottish Clergy maintained that it ought to bee kept after the Jewish computation Agilbert and his party held the contrary that it ought to bee observed at the time the Westerne Church solemnized it The Councell being sate King Oswey who presided in it before any debate of the Controversie made a solemne Speech unto them to this effect necessary for our times That it behoved those who served one God to hold one rule of living and serving him and not to differ in the celebration of heavenly Sacraments since they all expected one Kingdome in heaven Therefore they should rather inquire which was the truer tradition and that this should bee commonly followed by all Which said hee commanded Bishop Colman to relate what Rite it was which hee observed and whence it derived its originall Which Colman doing the King then commanded Bishop Wilfrid who was of the contrary party to declare his opinion and the grounds of it which hee did After long debate on either side the King gave sentence for VVilfreds opinion against Colman and his party because St. Peter who had the custody of Heaven Gates did by Colmans owne confession keep Easter as VVilfred held they ought to doe The King giving this resolution with his hands lifted up to heaven faverunt assidentes quique sive astantes majores unà cum mediocribus et abdicata minus perfecta institutione ad ea quae meliora cognoverant sese transferre festinabant all the great and meane Persons sitting and standing by concuring with the King gave sentence against Coleman for VVilfred and observed Easter accordingly ever after in their practice Here we finde the Clergy men only the debaters but the King Nobles and Commons the sole Judges and Resolvers of this Controversie and that in a most eminent generall Nationall Councell Anno 673. there was a Councell held at Hertford under Theodor Archbishop of Canterbury praesentibus Episcopis Angliae ET REGIBVS ET MAGNATIBVS VNIVERSIS writes Mathew Westminster at which all the Bishops Kings and great men of England were present All these sitting together Theodor propounded some Chapters or Canons concerning Church affaires before Them all which were afterwards assented to and subscribed Anno 684. There was a Councell held neare the River of Alne sub praesentia Regis Egfridi in the presence of King Egfrid who sate president in it Anno 692. King Ina made and published sundry notable ecclesiasticall laws concerning Religion Church government and
his temporalities goods Chattels seised into the Kings hands Who yet would not yeeld but pronounced them all excommunicate who disobeyed the former constitution which being made onely by the Clergy and not ratified by King and Parliament was held but a meere idle nullity and audacious disobedient attempt obliging neither King nor subject Anno 1418. A Provinciall Synod was held at London under Henry Chichely Archbishop of Canterbury Where upon the motion of Robert Guilbert President of Merton Colledge in Oxford and of Thomas Kington it was decreed That the Patrons of Ecclesiasticall benefices when they fell voyd should conferre them upon such who were Graduates in the Universities having a respect of their degree and profession according to the value of the living This Constitution being propounded in the Congregation in the University to be there ratified the Masters of Arts Monks and Professors who exceeded the Regents of the University in multitude rejected and refused it but K. Henry the fifth being addicted to learning An. 1420. writ to the Synod then assembled at London wherein the Chancellors both of Oxford and Cambridge petitioned that it might be received though the Maisters of Art had refused to receive it to passe the Decree which some Friars there opposed Judge in Parliamento postea confirmavit and he afterwards confirmed the same in Parliament Loe here a Constitution first made in a Synod or Convocation rejected in both Vniversities because not then confirmed by the King in Parliament to make it binding and efficatious for future times a most pregnant evidence for proofe of that I now contend for To cite more presidents of this nature in former ages would be more tedious than necessary in so plaine a case I shall therefore passe from Councels and Synods to direct Acts of Parliament touching Religion and Church affaires As high as we have any Acts of Parliament since the Conquest remaining on Record We finde all Ecclesiasticall matters and Church affaires setled and ratified by speciall Acts of Parliament only not by the Clergies Canons The great Charter of England first granted by King Henry the first ratified afterwards at Runing-Mead by King John revived by King Henry the third in the ninth yeare of his Raigne confirmed frequently by him afterwards by King Edward the first in the 28th yeare of his Raigne yea by all or most of his successors in speciall Acts of Parliament by the Petition of Right 3. Caroli begins thus Know yee that we to the honour of Almighty God and for the salvation of the Soules of our Progenitors and Successors Kings of England to the advancement of holy Church c. First We have granted to God and by this our present Charter have confirmed for Vs and our Heires for ever more that the Church of England shall be free and have all her rights and liberties inviolable And that all her elections shall bee free c. An. 1164. In February there was a Parliament held at Clarindon by King Henry the 2d his command who was there present where all the Archbishops Bishops Abbotts Priors Earles Barons Nobles and great men of the Realm made a Recognition or Recerd of part of the Customes and Liberties of the Kings Ancestors to wit of King Henry the first and others which ought to be observed and kept by all men in the Realm by reason of the dissention and discords frequently emerging betweene the Clergy and the Kings Iustices and great men of the Realme the substance whereof was conteined in these 16. Chapters recorded by Matthew Paris 1. That if any controversie concerning the advowson and presentation of Churches should arise betweene Laymen or betweene Laymen and Clergie men it should bee heard and determined in the Court of our Lord the King 2. That the Churches of the Fee of our Lord the King could not bee given in perpetuity or appropiated without his grant or concession 3. That Clergiemen accused of any thing being summoned by the Kings Iustice should come into the Kings Court to answer the same there that so the Kings Court might determine what was to bee answered there and what fit to be answered in the Ecclesiasticall Court that so the Iustice might send into the Court of holy Church to see how the matter shall there be handled And if the Clarke shall be convict or confesse the crime that the Church from thenceforth ought not to protect him 4. That it shall not be lawfull to the Archbishops Bishops and persons of the Realme to goe out of the Realme without the Licence of our Lord the King and if they shall goe thence if it shall please the King they shall give him security that neither in going nor in returning nor in staying they shall procure hurt or dammage to our Lord the King or the Realme 5. That excommunicate persons ought not to give a pledge to remaine vadium ad remanentiam nor to take an Oath but onely to give a surety or pledge of standing to the judgment of the Church where they are absolved 6. That Laymen ought not to be accused but by lawfull accusers witnesses in the presence of the Bishop that the Arch-Deacon may not lose his right nor any thing that he ought to have from thence And if those who are accused shall be such that no man will or dares to accuse the Sheriffe being required by the Bishop shall sweare twelve lawfull men of the Vicenage or Town before the Bishop that they shall manifest the truth concerning such according to their Consciences 7. No man who holds of the King in Capite nor any of his Dominicall Ministers or house-hold servants shall be excommunicated nor the Lands of any one of them put under interdict unlesse our Lord the King if he bee within the Realme be first acquainted therewith or his Iustice if he shall be forth of the Realme the reason then rendred was lest the King should at unawares Kisse or admit to his Councell such an excommunicate person resorting to him that so he may doe right concerning him and see that what appertaineth to the Kings Court shall be there determined and that what belongeth to the Ecclesiasticall Court may bee sent unto it that it may bethere descided 8. Concerning appeales if they shall happen they ought to proceed from the Arch-Deacon to the Bishop from the Bishop to the Archbishop and if the Archbishop shall faile in exhibiting Iustice they may appeale to our Lord the K. in the last place and that by his precept the controversie may be ended in the Arch-Bishops Court so that there ought to bee no further proceeding without the assent of our Lord the King 10. If any be cited by the Arch-Deacon or Bishop for any offence for which he ought to answer to them and will not appeare upon their citations it shall bee lawfull for them to put him under interdict but they ought not to excommunicate him till he be convented before the
Edward the 6. his Reigne are most punctuall and pegnant evidences hereof as namely 1. Edw. 6. ch 11. For administring the Sacrament in both kindes therein proved necessary by sundry Texts of Scripture and punishing such persons as shall unreverently speake against the Sacrament with Temporall and Ecclesiasticall censures ch 2. concerning the election and creation of Bishops by the Kings Letters Patents and what Processe and Seales they shall use declaring that they have no Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction but meerely from the King ch 9. For uniting certaine Churches within the City of Yorke ch 12. which abolisheth Sanctuaries and Clergy in some cases 2. and 3. E. 6. ch 1. For the Vniformity of service and the administration of the Sacraments throughout the Realme ch 13. For the true payment of Tythes ch 19. For abstinence from flesh ch 20. Concerning Recusants ch 23. For positive Lawes made against the Mariage of Priests ch 23. The repeale of a Statute touching Precontracts of Mariage 3. and 4. E. 6. ch 10. For the abolishing and putting away of diverse superstitious Popish Books and Images chap. 11. That the Kings Majesty may nominate and appoint 32. persons halfe Clergy-men and halfe Laymen to peruse and make Ecclesiasticall Lawes ch 12. For the manner of Ordaining Ecclesiasticall Ministers and Consecrating Bishops ch 15. Against fond and phantasticall Prophecies 5. and 6. E. 6. ch 1. For the uniformity of Common Prayer and administration of the Sacraments ch 3. For the keeping of Holy-dayes and Fasting dayes ch 4. Against fighting and quarelling in Churches and Church-Yards ch 12. For the lawfulnesse of Priests Mariage and legitimation of their children chap. 13. Touching Religious persons and c. 23. Against Vsurie All these are clearely Ecclesiasticall Acts yet made by Parliament The Statutes in Queene Maries Reigne though of a different Religion from her brother and a zealous Pontifician sufficiently evidence the jurisdiction of our Princes and Parliaments in matters of the Church and Religion witnesse 1. Mar. Parl. 1. Ses 2. Chap. 2. Repealing diverse acts-made touching Religion in King Edward the 6. his Raigne and setting up Masse and the old Lyturgies againe chap. 2. Against Offendors of Preachers and other Ministers in the Church or Church-Yard or interrupting them in their Sermons or saying Masse under paine of imprisonment fines and Ecclesiasticall censures chap. 15. For re-edifying the parish Church of Saint Ellins in Stangate 1. Mariae Par. 2. c. 1. Declaring That the Regall power of this Realme is in the Queenes Majesty as fully and absolutely as ever it was in any of her most Noble Progenitors Kings of this Realme chap. 3. Being an Act of Repeale of two severall acts in the 7. yeare of King Edward the 6. touching the dissolution of the Bishoprick of Durham Chap. 9. Touching Ordinances Rules c. in Cathedrall Churches and Schooles c. 10. Repealing a statute for the uniting of the parish Churches of Onger and Greensted in the County of Essex 1. and 2. Phil. and Mary chap. 6. For the reviving of three Statutes made for the punishment Of Heresies and that with forseiture of Lands imprisonment and death in some cases chap. 8. Intituled an Act repealing all Statutes Articles and provisions made against the See Apostolike of Rome since the 20. yeare of King H. 8. and restoring the Bishops with their Courts offices the Pope himselfe to their former usurped jurisdictions in England ratifying this Popes very Bulles and dispensations to make them valid and setling the whole affaires of the Church of England chap. 9. 20. For the punishing of traiterous Sermons and Prayers against the Queene chap. 17. Concerning leases of some spirituall persons and 2. and 3. Phil. and Mary chap. 4. For the extinguishment of first fruits c. All Ecclesiasticall Statutes In Queen Elizabeths happy Raigne there are sundry Statutes abundantly manifesting her own and the Parliaments supreame Iurisdictions and Legislative power in matters of Religion Church-government Discipline c. as namely 1 Eliz. c. 1. An Act restoring to the Crowne the ancient Jurisdiction OVER THE STATE ECCLESIASTICALL SPIRITVALL and abolishing all fortaigne power repugnant to the same which gives the Queen her heires and successors all manner of Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction in and over all Ecclesiasticall persons and causes and power to correct redresse and reform all manner of HERESIE SCHISME ERRORS ABVSES OFFENCES ECCLESIASTICALL prescribes the oath of Supremacy which all are to take and most Independents have formerly taken wherein they do utterly testifie and declare in their consciences that the Queen and her Successours are the onely supreame Governours of this Realme and other their Dommions as well IN ALL SPIRITVALL OR ECCLESIASTICALL THINGS OR CAVSES as temporall c. which jurisdiction of theirs they sweare to their power to assist and defend Which oath if any refuse to take hee shall forseit all his Ecclesiasticall promotions and temporall offices This Act likewise abolisheth the Popes jurisdiction under pain of a praemunire and other mulcts against the maintainers of it It determines what shall be adjudged HERESIE and what not namely Only such matter and cause as heretofore hath been determined ordered and adjudged to be heresie by the authority of the Canonicall Scriptures o● by the first foure generall-Councels or any of them or by any other generall Councell wherein the same was declared heresie by the expresse and plain words of the Canonicall Scripture or such as hereafter shall be ordered IVDGED OR DETERMINED TO BE HERESIE BY THE HIGH COVRT OF PARLIAMENT OF THIS REALME with the assent of the Clergy in their Convocation to wit by way of assistance and advice cumulatively not negatively as if their assent were simply necessary So as by this Act the Parliament is made the sole proper Iudge what is or shal be reputed punished as heresie what not how it shal be punished the highest point of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction Ch. 2. For the uniformity of Common prayer and service in the Church and administration of the Sacraments enjoyning conformity under temporall and Ecclesiasticall punishments is an irrefragable proofe of the Parliaments Ecclesiasticall power in all Church matters and 1 Eliz. c. 3. 4. 6. 5 Eliz. c. 1. For the assurance of the Queens royall power over all States and Subjects within her Highnesse Dominions ch 23. For the due executing of Writs de Excommunicato capiendo ch 28. For translating of the Bible and divine Service into the Welch tongue 8 Eliz. c. 1. Declaring the manner of making and Corsecrating the Archbishops Bishops and Ministers of this Realm to be good lawfull and perfect ratifying the Booke of common Prayer and of Ordination together with the Queens Soveraigne Ecclesiasticall Authority 13 Eliz. c. 2. Against the bringing in and putting in execution of Bulls and other instruments of the See of Rome chap. 8. Against Usury ch 19. concerning Dilapidations c. 12. To reforme certain disorders touching Ministers of the Church ratifying the 39.
out of which the Independent Brethren CONCEIVE AN IMPOSSIBILITY that a spirituall extraction should be made That a man may as well bring a cleane thing out of an uncleane in Iobs expression as make A SPIRITVALL EXTRACTION out of this SECVLAR ROOT who have NO Authority nor power from Christ to nominate or appoint who shall be the men that shall order the affaires of Christs Kingdom or institute the government of his Church That therefore there is AN IMPOSSIBILITY that a legitimate Ecclesiasticall power should according to the minde of Christ or any precept or prefident of Scripture be by them conferred VPON ANY MAN OR THAT THE PERSONS SO ELECTED SHOVLD HAVE A POWER by vertue of such nomination or election TO ENACT LAWES OR STATVTES IN MATTERS OF RELIGION and TO ORDER VNDER MVLCTS PAENATIES HOW MEN SHALL WORSHIP and SERVE GOD c. Are diametrally opposite to the ancient priviledges and undoubted Ecclesiagicall Authority of Parliaments which they pluck up by the very roots and altogether as bad as if not far worse than Bishop Laudes with whom he symbolizeth in this particular which I have elswhere answered fully resuted These Passages of his were first unseasonably vented by him in a Sermon in Colemanstreet 25 February 1643. to what other end unlesse to prepare his Auditors to slight or reject what ever forme of Church-government the Parliament should prescribe or settle I cannot discerne for which with other particulars being questioned before the Committee for plundered Ministers even pending the complaint there he presumed to justifie them againe very unseasonably in the Pulpit on a solemne Fast day and likewise in two printed Books to one wherof he prefixed his name in high affront of that Committee which suspended him and contempt of the Parliaments Authority not to be paralleld in any age by any person for ought I finde Which audaciousnesse of his who pretended so much respect and honour to the Parliament heretofore engaged me according to my Covenant and Protestation to give a publicke answer in print to these scandalous passages in vindication of the Parliaments indubitable Right and Priviledge to intermeddle in and make Lawes for all Church matters as I have manifested by a cloud of witnesses in all ages in the foregoing Section and so farre incensed the Committee against him that they sequestred him from his living in Colemanstreet for the very things I mentioned in my Full Reply c. and ordered the passages in his Sermon and Theomachia to be specially reported to the House with all expedition as an unsufferable affront and presumptnons under mining of their Priviledges which they could neither in honour nor justice connive at without exemplary punishment and censure And yet this Gentleman since this censure hath had the boldnesse in another Pamphlet of his to which hee hath prefixed his name Intituled INNOCENCIES TRIVMPH an unfitting Title for a sequestred Nocent to deny those very matters of fact which he voluntarily confessed in my hearing before the Committee for which he was sequestred and to justifie his forementioned scandalous passages in such a daring way as cannot bee paralleld For first he professeth p. 2. That he hath not denyed the least dram or scruple of that power belike he hath weighed it exactly in the scales which is truly Parliamentary and consistent with the Word of the great and glorious God of which misdemeanour he is not in the least measure conscious to himselfe as yet This manifestes him incorrigible impenitent after censure proclaims him that which this whole Pamphlet vainly endeavours to acquit him from One who hath presumptuously undermined the undoubted Priviledges of Parliaments and here trebles in his former offences Secondly he averreth that what he formerly preached and writ was out of a loving tender affectionate jealousie over the Parliament lest possibly they might dash their foot against that stone by which all Rule all Authority and power will one day be broken in pieces So that if his tongue or pen have in the least miscarried in this point it was Error Amoris not Amor erroris he being extreamly jealous over the Parliament lest they should touch with any Title or claime the most sacred and incommunicable Royalties and privilledges of Heaven and so count it no robbery to make themselves equall to God knowing most assuredly that this is a most high provocation to the eyes of the most High and IF CONTINUED IN will kindle a fire in the breast of him whose name is Iehovah which will consume and devoure c. But good Sir first can any rationall man thinke though you should protest it ten thousand times over that such Anti-Parliamentary passages as yours are should proceed from your love to Parliaments The blindest charity I feare will hardly credit it that a friend to Parliaments should thus successively Preach and Print against their jurisdiction more desperatly than the worst Malignant Royalist Cavalier or the Arch-Prelate himselfe as you have apparently done Secondly If this proceeded from such affectionate jealousie over the Parliament I pray what made you so strangely if not ma●gnantly jealous over them as to feare and presume they might dash their feet against that stone by which all power shall bee broken in peeces claime the most sacred and incommunicable priviledges and royalties of Heaven to themselves and count it no robbery to make themselves equall with God Did the Parliament ever give you the least colour or occasion of any such uncharitable unchristian that I say not detestable jealousie could you have harder or more jealous thoughts than these of the very Pope or Turke himselfe or of that great Antichrist who exalts himselfe above all that is called God Can such jealousies as these issued from any but a rancorous or disaffected heart against Parliaments or did ever such execrable jealousies as these proceed from the heart tongue much lesse the pen of any Oxford Aulicus or most venemous Malignant to our Parliament Doe their calling of an Assembly of most pious and conscientious Divines of all sorts to reforme our Church and conforme its Government Discipline in all things as neere as possible to the Word of God with all their religious proceedings in this kinde infuse any such jealousie into you If not then for shame retract these your groundlesse fanaticke jealousies of and uncharitable hard thoughts against the Parliament else the world will censure you an Arch-Malignant and the greatest Enemie to our Parliament that ever yet appeared openly in Presse or Pulpit within the lines of Communication if not without them to Thirdly had you had any just cause of such a jealousie yet it had bin your duty to have privately informed your friends in Parliament with it in a brotherly Christian way but to publish these your brain-sick jealousies and suspitions of them behind their backs in open Pulpit and then to the whole world in print of purpose to make your Auditors Readers jealous of
civill Magistrates as you have plentifully done even with some colour of reason as well as insanire cum ratione which is all I shall answer to your reasons Fourthly Hee writes Let Master Prynne Or any other evict mee of any wilfull or unwilfull violation of the priviledges of Parliament and I shall bee as willing as willingnesse it selfe can make me to further such a conviction and no man shall be more ready then I to crave their pardon or undergoe their Justice nay I shall repent my selfe and abhor my errour in dust and ashes Certainely this your promised late Repentance which is yet contingent and improbable after so many publike offronts and oppositions against the power and proceedings of Parliament will bee a very poore recompence and satisfaction for all your former misdemeanors and scandalls to the Parliament yet late repentance being better then none at all I shall now challenge you to make good this your promise since your owne Conscience and judgment cannot but informe you I have written enough in the former Sections to evict and convince you and all the world besides that you have not only violated but denyed oppugned those priviledges of Parliament in Ecclesiasticall affaires which our owne Parliaments in all ages and Parliamentary Assemblies in all other Kingdomes have unquestionably exercised enjoyed without any such publique opposition as you have made against them And if you now make not good your promise few or none will ever credit you hereafter 5ly For the Authors you cite to justifie yourselfe they are miserably wrested and mistaken for the most part The first you quote is Master Edwards who maintaines point blancke against you throughout his Treatise a Legislative and coerceive power in Parliaments and civil Majestrates even in Church-affaires and matters of Religion in the very pages you quote and else where Therefore you palpably abuse the Author and Reader in quoting him to the contrary who is so point-blancke against you For the passage you quote out of his Page 256. The Parliament interposeth no Authority to determine what government shall be whence you inferre p. 7. Therefore his opinion appeares to be either that the Parliament hath No authority or at least intends not to make use of it in determining a government It was written only with reference to that present time the Parliament having at that time when he writ during the Assemblies debate and consultation interposed no Authority to determine what government shall be yet before that it had declared the old prelaticall Lordly government to be abolished and called an Assembly to advise with about a New But to inferre from thence as you doe Therefore his opinion is either that the Parliament hath no Authority or at least intends not to make use of it in determining a Government Is an inference quite contrary to the next ensuing words and pages to the whole scope of the Authors Booke Humbly submitted to the Honourable houses of Parliament contrary to his expresse words p. 138. 281. to all his reasons against Toleration of your Way and to the Parliaments intent in calling the Assembly to assist them in determining and setling a Church-government agreable to Gods word Be ashamed therefore of this grosse perversion of your first Authors passages diametrally contrary to this meaning Your Passages out of Master Hayward Bishop Iewell Master Fox Mr. Calvin Iacobus Acontius Junius Peter Martyr and Gulielmus Appolonius make nothing at all against the Legislative Authority of Parliaments in matters of Religion and Church government and have no a●●inity with your Passages words most of them Bishop Iewel especially as I have already proved vindicating propugning the very ecclesiastical power of Parliaments which you oppugne Indeed some of their words seeme to diminish the Coercive power of Majestrat●s enforcing of mens consciences in matters of Religion which I shal answer in due place and manifest how you abuse the Authors herein as well as Mr. Edwards not hitherto answered by any of your party but how they militat against the jurisdiction of Parliaments in making Lawes touching Religion discipline and Church-government I am yet to seeke For the Passages he aleageth out of the Divines of Scotland That the Prince or Majestrate may not make or publish any Ecclesiasticall Law without the free assent of the Clergy c. That he may not by HIMSELFE define or direct such matters nor make any Lawes therein That the King hath not a Nomotheticke Legislative Power in matters ecclesiasticall in a constitute Church That the ordinary power of the King is not to make Ecclesiasticall Lawes c. I Answer 1. That their only meaning if I mistake not in these passages is that the Prince or chiefe civill Majestrate of HIMSELFE without a Parliament or without the assistance and consent of his Nobles Commons Clergy cannot legally make any ecclesiasticall Lawes to obliege his people upon which reason our Brethren of Scotl. rejected the late New service booke and Canons and our selves the late Canons c Oath which Canterbury wold have obtruded on us because they were made and prescribed only by the Kings Authority and the Prelates or Convocations not the Parliaments upon which very reason the Parliaments of both Kingdomes have respectively adjudged both one and other illegall But that the King or supreame temporall Majestrates assisted by a Parliament and Orthdox Divines may not make binding ecclesiasticall Lawes or that their or our Parliaments have not a reall Legislative power in any matters ecclesiastike the only point controversed is directly contrary both to the constant Doctrine and Practise of our Brethren and their Church used ever since the Reformation to the proceedings of their last Parliaments and generall Assemblies as I have formerly manifested You may therefore blush at this your perverting of their meaning as if they held that the Parliaments of England or Scotland had no power to make Ecclesiasticall Lawes for Religion or Church gouernment when as their Bookes Actions addresses to our present Parliament their presence assistance in our Assembly proclaimes the contrary And the very publique Confession of faith professed and subscribed in their Church Anno 1560 Chap. 14 since confirmed by severall Acts of Parliament doth the like But admit all those Authors really as not one of them is in verity opposite to the Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction and Legislative power of Parliaments yet the unanimous practise and resolution of all Christian Realmes Synods Parliaments in all ages contrary to their private novell opinions is sufficient infinitly to overbalance them in the Judgements of all prudent men And thus much for Mr. Goodwins Innocencies tryumph as to the present point I shall next apply my selfe to Answer such Objections as my deare Brother Master Henry Burton hath lately made against the premises in his Vindication to my 12. Queeres touching Church-Government my Independency examined His first and principall Objection is this
ends of the World shall turne unto the Lord and all the kindreds of the Nations shall worship before him for THE KINGDOME is the Lords and he is the Governour among the NATIONS That ALL NATIONS shall serve and worship before him That he shall have DOMINION from sea to sea and from the Rivers to the ends of the earth That all DOMINIONS shall serve and obey him That the KINGDOMES of the earth shall sing unto the Lord c. All pregnant proofs of Nationall Churches which should serve and obey Christ But that Independent particular Congregations of visible Saints and they only should be Christs Kingdom Republick and Governed immediately by him rests yet on my Brothers part to make proofe of when he is able Thirdly I shall request my Brothers to satisfie me others by that Texts he can make good these Paradoxes of his That those who will not submit to his Independent Church-government Covenant become members of such Churches have no interest in the Covenant Sacraments or Seal of the Covenant or right to any Church-Communion That they are not within the Covenant visibly and therefore their Children not visibly to bee baptized That they professe not Christ to be their King and are afraid or ashamed to be in Covenant with Christ as their King c. Do not these uncharitable Paradoxes good Brother un-Church un-Saint all Christians and reformed Churches whatsoever which submit not to your new way excluding both them and their Children from the Covenant and Seales of Grace and all Church-communion at least in and among your Congregations as professed enemies to the Kingdome and Soveraignty of Christ Is not this the very language Doctrine of the Antichristian Church of Rome who vaunts herself the onely true Church of Christ out of which there is no salvation un-Churching all Churches and un-Saincting all Christians but their owne professed members as haeretickes Schismaticks and enemies to Christ yea is it not an higher strain of spirituall pride and uncharitable Behaviour against your brethren then ever the Donatists or Nouatians broached I beseech you deare Brother in the bowels of Christ to consider and recant these harsh passages which you can never justifie before God or men and have given great offence to many who cordially affect you These generall questions being demanded I shall next addresse my selfe to a more particular answer of the premised Objection by reducing it into these Logical arguments which wil best detect the fallacies imbecillities of it The first is this Christ is the only immediate supreame King Head Ruler and Governour of every particular Church Ergo no Kings Parliaments Councels Synode or any human Power can make any Lawes Rules Canons for the setling of Religion or reforming Governing well ordering of any particular Churches of Christ This is the summe of all my Brothers Passages I answer that this is a meere Independent Argument which will introduce a world of absurdities if admitted as I shall cleare by these following Instances 1. The Scripture is expresse That God himselfe is King yea a great King over all the earth That Christ is the ONLY Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords yea a great King over all Gods That all the Kingdomes and Nations of the earth are the Lords and that he giveth them to whomsoever he will● That his kingdome ruleth over all That his is the greatnes the Kingdom the power and the glory and the Majesty that all that is in the Heaven and in the Earth are his that he is exalted as head over all and raigneth over all That he is Lord and King of all as well of their bodies estates as soules and consciences Ergo By my Brothers forme of Arguing No Kings Parliaments Potentates Rulers Kingdoms Republikes ought to make any Lawes for the government of their Realmes publikes Nations Corporations or the ordering of mens persons or temporall estates but God and Christ alone and all particular Kingdomes Societies States Corporations Families are and ought to be immediatly subject to no King Majestrat Parliament or human power whatsoever even in temporall things but only to God and Christ 2ly God is more frequently stiled in Scripture The Lord of HOSTS and God of BATTLE then he is called the only King of his Church a Title you can hardly show me in direct termes in sacred writ Yea his power and providence principally appeares in mannnaging and disposing all occurrences and particulars concerning Hosts Armies Battles as your Brother Burroughs in his Glorious name of the Lord of Hosts hath largely manifested Ergo by this Logicke No King Parliament Generall Captaine or Councell of Warre may or ought to make or prescribe any Martiall Lawes for the regulating governing mustering Marshaling or disciplyning of their Hosts but God alone 3ly Christ is our only Soveraigne Lord Master Father Ergo no Landlord Master Father ought to prescribe any Lawes Rules orders for the better Government of their Tenants servants families Children but Christ alone by your argumentation 4ly Christ is the chiefe Shepherd Bishop Prophet Teacher and Instructor of his Church Ergo none ought by your reasoning to seed teach or instruct the Church and people of God but Christ alone We must have no Ministers teaching Elders Pastors Teachers to instruct Vs henceforth who are but men and not Christ himselfe 5ly Christ is the only Mediator Advocate Intercessor for his Church and people Ergo none ought by their Prayers and intercessions to soltcite the throne of Grace for the peace prosperity reformation and deliverance of Christs Churches and people but Christ alone Ministers must not pray for their people nor Saints one for another noreither of them for the whole Church of God if your Argumentation be solid 6ly If this argument stand firme then marke the inevitable consequences of it Independent Subjects will argue with their Princes Majestrates Superiors thus Christ is our only King Head Lord. Therefore we must not be subject to any Lawes and commands what soever but only to the lawes and precepts of Christ Wives Children servants will reason thus Christ is our onely Head Husband King Lord Father Master Therefore we will not we ought not to be subject to any of the Lawes Orders precepts of our Husbands Parents Ministers but only to the immediate Rules Laws edicts of Christ himselfe Mutinous or Independent Souldiers will thus argue with their Generalls and Commanders Christ is our only Captaine Generall and our Lord of Hosts Ergo we will be commanded conducted ordered by none but Christ not by any other Captain or Generall whatsoever Nay people and every member of your Independent Congregations upon any discontent wil thus dispute with their Ministers Ruling Elders Congregations Christ is our only head King lawgiver Judg. Therefore neither Councels Synods nor any Independent Ministers or Congregations may prescribe any Laws covenants Orders or directions to us or exercise any jurisdiction
Nationall Synod wherein these Churches are all combined hath no juridiction or legislative Authority over them nor any other particular congregation under their precincts A doughty Argument much like this in effect The Burrough of Westminster hath no jurisdiction nor power to make binding Lawes for the Burrough of Southwarke not the county of Kent for the county of Middlesex nor any one City County or Burrough in England power to prescribe Lawes to one another Ergo all these counties cities burroughs assembled in Parliament in their Knights and Burgesses have no power to make Lawes to bind any of them nor the Kingdome And what then becomes of our Parliaments Authority and legislative power if this kind of logick be admitted 4. My Brother other Independents generally grant that every Congregation may and ought to give an account of their actions censures proceedings and opinions to another private Church therefore they are not absolute nor simply Independent in regard of other particuler Churches much lesse then in respect of an whole Nationall Synod Parliament or Presbitery which reason others having largely prosecuted I shall but touch 5. I demand whether every particular Church or Congregation whatsoever be such an absolute compleat independent body in it selfe subject only unto Christ c. or only independent Churches and congregations If Independent only I pray shew your Magna Charta for such a peculier priviledge which no Churches else enjoy or challenge but onely yours If all particuler Churches enjoy this priviledge then marke the consequence Papists Arminians Anabaptists Sociniaas Antinomians Arrians Familists and as one Master Williams an Independent affirmes in Print Mahumetans Iewes and all the severall Sects of Religions in the world mustered up by Master Samuel Purchas in his Pilgrimage and Voyages must be absolute and Independent to nor may any Magistrates Parliament Synod make Lawes to regulate reclaime suppresse or punish them because they are subject to none but to Christ and accountable onely to him and their consciences free then every Sectary Schismaticke Hereticke what soever may gather and set up an Independent Church of three or foure families persons in a corner and neither King Parliament nor Presbiteries may question or suppresse them because they are immediatly subject to none but Christ Then persons questioned excommunicated by their congregations or such members of your Churches who either feare your censure or fall into any pett or humour against your Ministers Elders Government may set up a new Church of their owne and so avoyd both your jurisdiction and censures In one word this absurd Paradox would open a large guppe to all Errours Heresies all Sectaries Schismaticks impious practises and opinions without the least impunity restraint or meanes of reformation 6. This conceit derived onely from the Pope himself who claimes this priviledge that he is subject and accountable to none but Christ himselfe in spirituall things and is an Independent Church within himselfe as the Iesuites with others affirme makes every Independent Church or Minister a meere Pope subject and accomptable to Christ alone I beseech you therefore Deare Brother tell me how you can be said to renounce the Pope Popery Antichrist and abolish them out of our Realme to your utmost power according to your Vow and Covenant when as you banish onely one Pope and set up many in making every Independent Minister and Congregation a meer Antichristian Pope exalting it above all that is called God as immediately subiect to none but Christ My Brothers fifth Objection is That Christ should be very unfaithfull carelesse and leave his Church to six and seven if he had not prescribed as exact a Church Government and Discipline for it under the Law as under the Gospel And we should have a mad world he should say Church if it were left to Christian Princes Civill States or Parliaments to set up such a Church-government and Discipline as they should conceive were most suiteable to Gods Word and the Lawes and customes of the Realm and manners of their people I Answer 1. In generall In generall that this is onely words not proofes matters of fact as this now controverted is must be ever proved by reall visible demonstrations not farre-fetched inferences fancies probabilities suggestions or pretended inconveniences of our owne devising Therefore Brother trouble not the world any more with inferences or illustrations of what is not but produce some down-right Scripture proofes of what really is what Philip spake in one sence to our Saviour Shew us the Father and it sufficeth us I shall say to you shew us your Church-Government deliniated prescribed to all Churches in Scripture in all particulars wherein we differ and it shall suffice us but your Inferences from the Tabernacle Temple Ezechiels vision these objected inconveniences neither will nor can satisfie any man who hath any science conscience or reason to guide his choise 2. I answer That Christ hath not been so extreamly negligent or carelesse as to leave his Church under the Gospel at six and seven though he hath not been so exact in prescribing or establishing a set forme of Church-Government and Discipline under the Gospel as he was in the Old Testament in setting downe the patterne of the Tabernacle Arke Temple under the Law as you object For Brother your selfe acknowledge in your Margent pag. 5. 6. upon second thoughts that he hath not done it though you affirme the contrary in your Text Wil you I pray argue that Christ is more carelesse of his Church under the Gospel then under the Law because the manner and time of Circumcision eating the Passeover consecrating of Priests with all their accoutrements the forme of the Tabernacle Temple with all the Services Sacrifices thereto belonging are more exactly and particularly set downe and prescribed in the Old Testament then the manner time or forme of Baptisme administring and receiving the Lords Supper ordination of Ministers the model or fashion of our Churches and their necessary furniture are in the New or because the use of solemne Vowes and Covenants your great Diana the manner of solemnizing Fasts sanctifying the Sabbath Feastivalls Nationall Assemblies c. are more exactly delineated and prescribed in the Old Testament then the New Or which soares higher was Christ more carelesse of his Church before then under the Law because he gave them not the Law in writing as he did in after times or carelesse of the Church under the Law because he gave them not the Gospel then but Law alone Brother your self acknowledge that Christ hath left his Churches childrens consciences more free under the Gospel then they were under the Law exempting them from the Ceremoniall Law and all humane Ordinances to which they were formerly obliged Is he therefore carelesse or unfaithfull I beseech you Brother take heede how you cast dirt in Christs owne face by such strained inferences or charge your Brother with no lesse
GHOST and Vs to lay upon you no other burthen then these necessary things Now Brother we challenge you to shew us ANY PARLIAMENT COVNCELL SYNOD EVER SINCE THE APOSTLES that could or can say thus It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and Vs to determine controversies of Religion to make and impose Lawes to bind all men c. Shew this to us at this time and we will obey But if you cannot AS YOV NEVER CAN never let any man presse upon us that Scripture that Synod WHICH HATH NO PARALELL in the whole world and so is NO PRESIDENT PATTERNE FOR ANY COVNCELL SYNOD PARLIAMENT Thus my Brother Burton concludes hence with abundance of confidence But sweet Brother let not him who putteth on his harnesse boast as he that puts it off receive your Answer first and then be as vainly confident as you will 〈◊〉 your obtuse Argument afterwards which I shall thus retort upon you First I suppose you will grant That the Apostles Preached as well a writ and determined by an infallible spirit and by the Holy Ghosts Divine inspiration when as neither your self nor any other Independent nor Presbiterial● Minister can infallibly thus Preach write or determine at this day Ergo Brother by your Argument neither you nor any other Minister must henceforth Preach unto nor determine any Controversies of Religion or Church-government at this day being not guided by any infallible Spirit and because you may possibly erre and cannot say as the Apostles did it seemes good to the Holy Ghost and to us and then Brother of what value are all your Sermons Books and confident asseverations of the Divinity of your Independent way your Disciples and congregation may make wast paper of them instead of reading them as the Oracles of God a some ignorants perchance esteem them 2. Christ and his Apostle when they ordained Elders and laid their hands upon them did usually give them the holy Ghost and gift of tongues who fel upon the parties ordained and those to whom they Preached and to those whom they Baptized as the marginall texts assure us which no Ministers nor Elders can do now Ergo no Ministers may or can now ordain any Ministers by imposition of hands nor baptize any children or men nor preach the Gospel to any because they cannot give them the gifts of Tongues nor cause the Holy Ghost to fall upon them as Christ and the Apostles did 3. Moses gave no civill nor judiciall Laws to the Israelites under the Law but such as he received immediately from God by an infallible Spirit Ergo Kings and Parliaments at this day can make no civill temporall Lawes to governe their people by because they receive them not immediately from God by an infallible spirit 4. Christ sent none to Preach the Gospel or administer the Sacraments but such whom himself immediatly called ordained furnished miraculously with gifts of tongues and with the Holy Ghost A priviledge peculier to the Apostles and some few others in their daies not communicable to any ordinary Ministers and made Elders and Bishops by the Holy Ghost Ergo No Ministers but such who are thus immediately enabled endued and ordained by the Holy Ghost may or ought to preach the Gospel And then where are all your Independent Ministers and Lay-preachers I hope Brother by this time you most renounce your Argument as absurd or else your Preaching Church Ministery at least your writings will be little valued which now you see are not infallible 2. A possibility of erring or some actuall errours in Councells Synods Parliaments are no good grounds of rejecting all their determinations Lawes Edicts but only such as are apparently erronious and repugnant to the Scripture Such indeed you may disobey but to all others you must submit even in point of conscience as I have formerly proved If you deny this then marke the consequence of your deniall Ministers may and sometimes actually doe erre both in their preaching and writing and I doubt Brother it is or may be your own case Ergo people must neither obey nor believe any thing they preach or write but contemne all Parliaments Princes Magistrates Elders Parents Masters Tutors of all sorts may and oft-times actually doe swerve from truth and Iustice in some of their Lawes Orders Precepts commands and Iudgements Ergo their subjects wives children husbands schollars pupills must receive no Lawes Orders Commands or instructions from them nor yet obey them in any thing which they shall prescribe Brother you may as rationally argue in many things we offend all Ergo we must not endeavour to doe any thing that is good Or conclude in many things and in making Lawes we erre all Therefore we must obey no humane Ecclesiasticall or civill Laws in which we can discern no apparent error Brother will you drink no wine at all as the Apostle gives Timothy advise to do because some have dranke poyson in it and you perchance may doe so to Or shall none adventure to marry a good wife or husband because so many have met with bad Answer me these questions and then you need no other answer to what you object but your own reply to them 3. Admit Synods Councells Parliaments have sometimes erred out of humane frailty yet this is a most certaine truth that they are not so apt or prone to erre having more helpes meanes assistances to keep them from erring when they are met together in the Name and feare of God as private men or Conventi●les of persons lesse learned lesse experienced they being more able to discover and bolt out truthes by debate then they This is the ground why Solomon concludes That two are better then on● that in the multitude of Councellors there is safety why the greatest points of Religion and State have in all ages been debated resolved not in Conclaves Conventicles Chambers Closets but in generall or nationall Councell● Assemblies Parliaments as the most effectuall meanes to discover suppresse errours heresies and resolve doubts for which we have an unanswerable pregnant president in the Old Testament 2 Chron. 30. 1. to the end where King Hezechiah with all the Princes and Congregation of Israel and Iudah assembled in full Parliament at Ierusalem upon solemn debate resolved AND ESTABLISHED A DECREE to keep the Passeover in the second moneth because they could not keepe it in the first the Priests and people being not sufficiently sanctified And another in the New in the Chapter objected Acts 15. where the Apostles themselves assemble a full Synod to debate and resolve the great contr●versie raised in the Church concerning the necessity of Circumcision This then being an indubitable Verity it is most certaine that Parliaments Generall or Nationall Synods and Councells are the fittest of all others to make Lawes and Canons for all civill and Ecclesiasticall matters in State or Church because they are least subject to errour And therefore there is great
to abate this windy tumour consider with themselves that all their greatnesses piled together in a generall or Nationall Synod though steepled with the Popes owne Chaire and three-forked Miter cannot so much as treat of debate dispute determine any Church-affaires much lesse constitute or promulge any new Ecclesiasticall Lawes Canons Articles Ceremonies Rites c. without the previous licence and permission of those temporall Princes and Powers that summon them nor yet exercise any manner of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction whatsoever more then the poorest Vicar and Curate breathing that is a Minister lawfully ordained without the Kings Letters Patents or Commission authorizing them which erected their Bishopricks Diocesse and Episcopall jurisdiction at the first and must still support them else they will fall to utter ruine and then all their pretended claimes and crackt title of jus divinum with all Independents Anabaptists Brownists Anti-monarchicall Anti-parliamentall fancies concerning the jurisdiction and authority of their Independent Congregations opposite to the premises will vanish into ayre If any deeme the premised power of Christian Princes and Civill Magistrates in limiting Synods and Councels thus to be derogatorie to the lawfull authority of Bishops Ministers Synods or Independent Churches Ianswer that it is not so forthese ensuing reasons First because the chiefe care of preserving the purity of Gods Worship Ordinances Religion the Churches peace prosperity and of suppressing all heresies errours schismes corruptions superstitions contrary thereunto is committed to Christian Princes and supreme temporall Magistrates both by the Lawes of God the constant acknowledgment use practice constitutions lawes canons of all Christian Empires Kingdomes Councels Synods in all ages and the Coronation-Oaths of all Emperours Kings Princes in the Christian World which oblige them to discharge this trust as the subsequent Sections will abundantly manifest Therefore the power of directing Synods Councels in debating matters of controversie making Lawes Canons c. concerning all or any of the premises and the confirming of them ought principally to belong to them Secondly because Christian Emperours Kings Princes are the supreme heads and Governours under Christ in and over all Ecclesiasticall persons Assemblies Synods Councels Churches within their owne Dominions as well as temporall and our Kings of England are declared to be such by severall Acts of Parliament by the Oaths of supremacy and Allegeance which all ought to take within their respective Dominions Therefore they ought of right to direct and order all manner of proceedings in such Ecclesiasticall Assemblies Synods it being the duty and just right of every Naturall and Politicke head to direct the members as of the head of the family to regulate and direct the family wife c. by way of authority or jurisdiction not they the head Thirdly because the Bishops and Clergy of our owne and other Realmes have no Legislative power or other Ecclesiasticall authority vested in them by the Word of God but onely to preach the Word administer the Sacraments and to binde or loose mens sinnes declaratively by preaching or applying the Gospel to them according as they finde them penitent or obstinate in their sinfull courses and no more of other Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction then what is derived to them by our Kings and the Lawes of this our Realme as is resolved in these expresse termes by the Statute of 37. H. 8. c. 17. The Arch-bishops Bishops Arch-deacons and other Ecclesiasticall persons of this Realme have no manner of Iurisdiction Ecclesiasticall but by under and from the Kings royall Majestie the onely and undoubtea supreme head of the Church of England and Ireland to whom by holy Scripture all authority and power is wholly given to heare and determine all manner of causes Ecclesiasticall and to correct all vice and sinne whatsoever and to such persons as his Majestie shall appoint thereunto And by the Statute of 1. Ed. 6. c. 2. in these words That all jurisdiction spirituall is derived and deducted from the Kings Majestie to all Bishops and Ecclesiasticall persons within England and Ireland as supreme head of these Churches and Realmes of England and Ireland and so instly acknowledged by the Clergie of the said Realmes and that all Courts Ecclesiasticall within the said two Realmes be kept by no other power or authority either forraigne or within the Realme but by the authority of his most Excellent Majesty whereupon it enacts That all their Processe shall issue out under the Kings Seale and in his Name and Stile as in Writs originall and judiciall at the common Law with which sundry other Acts of Parliament concurre Now the Kings and Lawes of this our Realme have given the Clergie assembled in Councels Synods and Convocations no other but such a limited power and authority as is expressed in the fore-cited Statutes of 25. H. 3. c. 19. 27. H. 8. c. 15. and mentioned in the premises Therefore they neither can challenge nor pretend to claime any other but such a limited and confined authority the rather because they are assembled to such meetings as our Assembly is now onely as advisers and assistants not as Judges or Law-givers Therefore the keeping of them to the fore-mentioned limits can neither be an infringement or eclipsing of their just priviledges or Christian liberty Fourthly because every particular Christian is to try the spirits doctrines and determinations of Ministers by the Scriptures whether they are of God or not and to beware yea judge of false Teachers doctrines and no wayes to receive them as the Marginall Texts abundantly evidence and all Orthodox Divines assert Much more then are Christian Princes the chief Defenders of the Christian faith to judge and determine of them therefore to give particular directions to and in all Synods Councels how to proceed and what to treat of for suppressing false Teachers Heresies Schisms Errours advancing Religion Truth unity and sincerity of Gods Worship within their territories and Churches Fifthly because every soule as well Bishops Ministers and all other Ecclesiasticall persons as temporall subjects is and ought to be subject to Christian Princes and the highest temporall powers who are to provide for their spirituall as well as their temporall welfare Therefore they ought to be regulated and directed by them when assembled by their Writs in Councels or Synods for their spirituall good SECT 3. Of Confirming Ratifying the Canons Decrees and Resolutions of Councells Synods by Christian Princes Peers Parliaments before they become valid or obligatory Of the Presence and Power of Christian Princes Nobles and other Lay-men in Councells That many or most Councells Synods in ancient and latter times especially in England were in truth meere Parliaments wherein Christian Princes Nobles Senators and Lay-men met and voted as well as Bishops and other Ecclesiasticall persons And that no Canons Lawes Articles concerning Gods Worship Religion Church-Government Ceremonies were ever lawfully prescribed or imposed on any Subjects of our Realme but
by Parliament only THirdly As Bishops and Clergy-men have no power at all to summon Councells Synods or Convocations nor yet to treat or conclude of any Ecclesiasticall Canons or Constitutions in them c. without the speciall licences of Kings under their Great Seals authorizing them so I shall next manifest that when Councells or Synods have by vertue of their license agreed on and composed any such Articles Canons Constitutions Orders Ceremonies c. they cannot print publish promulge impose execute or put them in ure nor are they of any binding force or authority till they are approved ratified confirmed by Kings and Christian Princes Subscriptions Imperiall Edicts Patents Acts of State and Parliament and that most ancient Councells Synods were but Parliaments wherein Kings Nobles and Lay-men were present as well as Clergy-men This I shall manifest by some Presidents both abroad and at home in all ages To begin with Scripture Testimonies When all the whole Congregation of Israel assembled by the summons of Joshua had in their Convocation at Shechem made a Covenant Ordinance and Statute that they would serve the Lord and obey his voyce Joshua being then their chiefe Governour confirmed the same by writing it in the Book of the Law of God and erecting a great stone in the place for a witnesse thereof When the Princes and all the Congregation in Jerusalem assembled by King Hezechiah had took counsell together and concluded to keep the Passeover in the second Moneth because they could not doe it on the first the King established their Decree by his Proclamation and Letters When the Jewes upon Mordecai his Letter to them had in a publike Convocation ordained and took upon them and their seed to keep the feast of Purim throughout every generation family province and city in remembrance of their great deliverance from Hamans conspiracy against them Queene Esther and Mordecai wrote with all authority and confirmed this Feast and Decree by their Letters the Decree of Esther Yea we read that when the Presidents Governours Princes Counsellours and Captains of King Darius to entrap Daniel moved him to establish a royall Statute and make a firme Decree that whosoever should aske a petition of any god or man for thirty dayes save of the King hee should bee cast into the Lyons denne they brought this Decree to Darius to establish and signe that it should not bee changed requesting him to signe it who did it accordingly else it had not been obligatory And wee likewise find in Scripture that when as the King of Nineveh and his great men upon Jonah his preaching had made a Decree for a publike Fast the King confirmed and published it to bee observed by his Proclamation To come to Councells under Christian Princes and Emperours The first famous Synod of Nice with the Constitutions Canons and Decrees therein compiled were confirmed by the Imperiall Edicts of Constantine the Great who sate President in it Edictum quod quidem pondus habebat autoritatem cum hac Epistola Imperator in singulas misit Civitates writes Eusebius Who records further of him That hee confirmed and consigned by his authority the Canons made by Bishops in publike Councells that so it might not bee lawfull for the Princes of other Nations to abrogate the things which were decreed by them Which had been invalid without his Imperiall confirmation The Councell kept at Rome under Pope Sylvester was confirmed by the subscription of Constantine and Helena his mother The second generall Councell of Constantinople after they had finished their Decrees and Canons sent them with this Epistle to Theodosius the Elder desiring him to ratifie them In the beginning verily of our writing to your Piety wee give thanks to God who hath constituted the government of your Majesty for the common peace of the Churches and the CONFIRMATION of the true Faith But giving God due thanks wee likewise referre to your Majesty those necessary things which are acted in the sacred Councell to wit that from the time wee assembled at Constantinople by your Majesties command wee have first of all renued our mutuall concord between us and after this we have prescribed and pronounced as it were certaine Conclusions or Canons in which we have confirmed and approved the faith of the Fathers assembled at Nice and have rejected with extreme execration and detestation the preverse heresies and wicked opinions which have sprung up against it Moreover also for the right setling and ordering of the state and discipline of the Churches wee have enacted and prescribed certaine Canons all which wee have annexed to this our Writing Wee therefore beseech your Clemency VT PER LITERAS TVAE PIET ATIS RATVM ESSE IVBEAS CONFIRMES QVE CONCILII DECRETVM that by your Majesties Letters you would command the Decree of the Councell to bee ratified and confirme the same and as you have honoured the Church with those Letters by which you have called us together so you would likewise CORROBORATE WITH YOVR DECREE AND SEALE THE SVMME AND CONCLVSION OF THOSE THINGS WHICH ARE DECREED And hereupon writes Nicephorus CONSTITVTIONE QVO QVE IMPERATOR SANXIT the Emperour enacted by his Constitution that the authority of the Nicene Creed should bee firme and perpetuall and that all Churches in all places should bee committed to those who professed one Divinity of the Father Son and holy Ghost in the subsistence of three Persons of the same honour and glory And likewise made a Law that those who abhered from the profession of this faith should not keep any Ecclesiasticall assemblies nor should not presume thenceforth to preach concerning the Faith nor have power to elect or consecrate any one that they should bee banished out of the City and Country fined and have no communion with other Citizens c. Which Edicts of his are Registred verbatim by Justinian The Synod of Ancyra sent Legates to Constantius informing him that Eudoxius did study to deprave the Faith requesting him TO CONFIRME THOSE THINGS which were decreed at Sardice Syrnium and in other Synods So the Catholike Bishops in the Councell of Ariminum write to the same Constantius beseeching him to heare their Orators who should declare unto him the Sentence of that their Councell in writing and not to permit any innovation or change but to suffer them to rest in those things which were lawfully defined and decreed by their Ancestors and that nothing might be added to or detracted from their Constitutions but that they all might remaine untouched and intire as they were preserved by the piety of his Father till that time The Councell of Africk Can. 25. to 32 34 42 51 59 60. and the Bishops therein assembled make divers petitions and requests to the Emperor Honorius and the temporall Judges and Magistrates to reforme Idolatry suppresse the Donatists and reform many abuses by them complained of by their Lawes and