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A47083 Of the heart and its right soveraign, and Rome no mother-church to England, or, An historical account of the title of our British Church, and by what ministry the Gospel was first planted in every country with a remembrance of the rights of Jerusalem above, in the great question, where is the true mother-church of Christians? / by T.J. Jones, Thomas, 1622?-1682. 1678 (1678) Wing J996_VARIANT; ESTC R39317 390,112 653

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blessed Apostles St. Peter and St. Paul and Divine Truths to the contrary reproached as Heresies and all wayes and Arts yea fire and faggot us'd to ●ar them out least their slaves and captives should be undeceived and set free by them and so become unmanageable whereby their Conquest over Souls shall be at peace and the misery and slavery of mens immortal Spirits turn to account and the enriching of their Holy Church A provocation against Heaven of long continuance enough to raise new Goths and V●●●●●s against their Church and State but that the prosperity it enjoyes is a greater plague and desolation than the Sword can bring The Spiritual servitude of the Soul under Idols far exceeding the outward slavery of the body under Conquerors as much as Apoplexy exceeds sleep or the pangs of Conscience the pain of the Teeth To live in the causes of damnation being a greater misery in reason than to endure the execution there being nothing of Gods hand or justice in the one being our own mala culpae as there is in the other being Gods mala penae or the correction which he sends and inflicts and therefore the less tolerable evil of the two if properly evil Further correction therefore can do little good upon them It must be the Infinite mercies of God and the zeal of Christian Princes that must do good upon them against their wills as it is expected by diligent a Divine Dialogues p. 226. searchers into Divine Prophecies that some great Prince will be shortly rais'd by God to cast a Vial of wrath upon their glory And they have a common Tradition in France saith b Review of the Council of Trent by W R. a French Roman-Catholick Writer that some of the Carolingians of the Race of Charlemaigne shall have an Emperour of France Charles by name who shall be Prince and Monarch over Europe and shall reform the Church and State But the Glory of such a Cure and Deliverance being as it were the Redemption a new of those whom Christ redeem'd from Spiritual slavery seems more probably reserv'd for this Isle above any other whatsoever as before And so since our Island is become Great Brittain again and the true Religion is recovered with our Brittish Line and Monarchy which were fallen together it is to be conjectured from foregoing Instances of Providence upon this Monarchy that such of our Princes as will appear favourers of Popery are like to be the most unfortunate and inglorious and unbelov'd acting therein against the grain and fate of this Empire as those of the contrary design and activity as having Providence of their side the most successful and renowned and the darlings of God and men SECTION XVI What the Roman-Catholicks truly mean by the term Heretick they so liberally bestow on others And that none are greater Hereticks in Truth and reality than themselves and of their Title Roman-Catholick which they so well like And Old Rome and Brittain both Heathen and Christian compar'd with the Modern And that the yoak of Rome is not better to us than our present condition BY their condemning Protestants so confidently for Hereticks because they believe not after the manifest errours of their single Church though they profess to believe after Christ and his Scriptures and his true and purest Catholick Church they do but call others such what they make and convict themselves to be thereby It hath been ever the Custom or craft of men when sin or Satan or any vile design hath possess'd the Throne of their heart instead of Christ to imploy his Name and Laws and Power against not the enemies of Christ and the truth but the opposers of that lust or private Interest which succeeds him Upon which score the Soberest and Holiest Protestants though Catholicks with God are Hereticks with the Pope for opposing his Christ that is his Carnal Will and Grandeur which rules his heart instead of its right Soveraign For if Christ and his mind did reign therein such Hereticks as right Protestants are would soon be embrac'd for Christian Brethren And he that judges of Heresie contrary to Christs mind and will finds the first Heretick in himself The right method heretofore to judge of Heresie was the Holy Scriptures for a rule and holy Churche's Authority proceeding by such a rule or Scriptura animatae or Christ himself speaking in men But with some now a dayes one mans absolute will and pleasure and his worldly concerns and acquisitions a Haereticus arguitur qui monitus non restituit bona Ecclesiae Spondan Anno 794. n. 6. whether just or unjust or Libido Sainct fi●ata or a speaking Antichrist is the only rule and touchstone for to run cross to the one out of Allegiance to the other shall more involve in Rebellious Heresie than the other Install in Orthodox Loyalty and this in uniform agreeableness to the Hypothesis touching the right and wrong Soveraign we are upon And the reason in Scripture why a Heretick is to be finally avoided is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3.11 or the condemnation of his own heart in changing his Soveraign which is manifestly discernable in his Conversation by all Christians that hold to their Heart-Loyalty and by the sleepy Intoxicated party it self if of a loyal inclination after two or three admonitions or else belike never The Portuguees General us'd the like Divinity in the Field in a passion as these do in their Schools and Pulpits who when the Auxillary English too tamely suffered as he conceived the advance of the Enemy towards them cry'd out in indignation the English Hereticks have betrayed us But when after a suddain Volley three stories high they clear'd the field with but-end he then confessed and vowed with as great content that the English Hereticks were excellent Christians So that Protestants by dexterous application are not out of hope but that they may retain their Heresies and be Catholicks nevertheless upon an Orthodox Tribute to an indulgent Pope who is not averse to tolerate publick Stews and License Incest c. upon the like terms But in several respects and considerations none are g●eater Hereticks in all desert and reason than our Roman Catholicks who are first at crimina●in●● who in the first place slight the whole Canon of Scripture and forbid it to several as a dangerous book next to Heretical which no Father 〈◊〉 ●he Church o● any Council ever did and the g●eatest Here●icks that ever were have been b●●ded and condemned for no more but clashing against a few certain Texts and parcells thereof Who next renounce the whole Catholick Church which all Christians in their Creed profess to believe saving that degenerate rump and shadow thereof they at Rome have to shew Allowing none to be Metropolitans without their Palls c Concil Lateranens Can. 18. none to be Bishops or Ministers any where without Ordination deriv'd from them c Concil Lateranens Can. 18. none to have Authority to
against himself So that Romes persisting in her Saturday Fast is an Eternal evidence and record against her self that neither her Popes were Successors to St. Peter nor she truly Catholick and Apostolical in her Traditions and that leaving her St. Paul's Bible at last for St. Peter's Keyes which belong'd not to her alone she is fallen to the ground between two Chaires and Titles Now it is well known that to the time of the Council of Nice for about 300 years after Christ the Eastern Churches and such of the Western who were for observing Easter upon a Sunday and not one the precise day of the Jewish Passover continued their difference to that height that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Epiphanius r Lib 3. Haeres Audian they did not communicate with one another The Western or the Roman taking the Resurrection for their rule and the Eastern supported by the Authority of St. John the Evangelist a long Liver and St. Peter as afore and the Bishops of the Circumcision whom they followed whose determination by Apostolical Constitution the whole World was to follow to prevent Schisme and Division in the Church as the same Father Notes They having more to say by this for their r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Title to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the chief Judges of Controversy in the Church than the Bishops of Rome could ever pretend to because James the just the first Bishop of Jerusalem whom they succeeded stil'd the Brother of our Lord ſ Idem lib. 3. Haeres Antidicomarian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was the first who received the Episcopal Chaire and whom the Lord entrusted with his throne upon Earth in the formost place And it is an Argument of greater Superiority to succeed the Master as they did than to succeed St. Peter his Minister which is the utmost that Rome doth or can pretend though with more ambition than antiquity or reason of its side Now of what side the Churches of Brittain were in this early Controversie whether of the East or of the West before the Councils of Arles and Nice determin'd it is gatherable from the answer of Colman the Bishop of Lindisfarn to Wilfrid at the dispute before the King of Northumberland at Streanshall or Whitby so that their conformity to the East as will appear proves the Brittish Church by consequence to have more adher'd to St. Peter and his party than did Rome for in that solemn Synod held upon this particular point in the year 664. they say Pascha hoc quod agere solo a majoribus meis accepi qui me huc Episcopum miserunt quod omnes patres nostri viri deo dilecti eodem modo modo celebrasse noscuntur quod ne cui contemnendum reprobandum esse videatur ipsum est quod beatus Johannes Evangelista Discipulus specialiter Domino dilectus cum omnibus quibus praeerat Ecclesiis celebrasse legitur Bed l. 3. c. 25. This kind of keeping of Easter which I observe I received from my Ancestors which sent me hither a Bishop which all our Fathers belov'd of God are known to have observ'd after the same manner And least any should imagine this way to be depised or disallowed it s the very same which the blessed Evangelist St. John the Disciple specially beloved by our Lord is recorded to have observ'd himself with all the Churches that were under him And Wilfrid on the other side referr'd his way of observing it after the manner of the Roman Church to a tradition derived down from St. Peter being both in the dark about the point now in difference which was not Doctrinal but Astronomical but clearly discovering the extraction and Communion of the Brittish Church and her Daughters in the belief and perswasion of Ancestours to be from and with the East and not from Rome For so Polycrates Bishop of Ephesus in his Synodicall Epistle writ against Pope Victor as it is mentioned by St. Hierome in his Catalogue In Asia lye St. Philip and his three Daughters at Hierapolis St. John who lean'd on our Lords bosom at Ephesus and with them Polycarp Thrascas Sagaris Papyrius Melito who all kept Easter according to Evangelicall tradition and the Canon of the Church on the fourteenth day without inclining to either side And I Polycrates according to the Doctrine of my Immediate predecessors Bishops being 7 in number whereof I am the Eight have alwayes observ'd Easter when the people of the Jews keep their feast of unleavened Bread But after the Councils of Arles and Nice interpos'd and decided this Controversie between the East and West it is as clear the Brittish Church kept Easter no more upon the day of the Passover but on the t Bed l. 3. c. 25. Sunday following according to the mind and decision of the Council wherein they differ'd from the Quartadecimani who are branded for Hereticks for keeping it on the Passover day and not on Sunday and that fasting and so much is also confessed in Wilfrid's reply to Colman Johannes adlegis Mosaicae Nihil de primâ sabbati curabat quod vos non facitis qui non nisi primâ sabbati celebratis that they differ'd from St. John and the East in having so punctual a regard to the Lords-day or the first day of the week which Moses and the Synagogue and those Eastern Christians that went their way never heeded where by the way we may observe that as the Bishops of the Circumcision were of Ancient Right and Custom Superiours to Rome and all our Gentile Churches so Christian Emperours in General Counsels were Superiours to both over ruling both the one and the other to peace and unity against their several traditions and in defect of General Councils who now never meet and the Bishops of the Circumcision who are exstinct the Brittish Church becomes Supreme within it self under its own Governours being no more under Rome than Rome under it and no other left that pretends to such Superiority But if the Church of Brittain left its Eastern traditions to observe the decrees of Councils which Rome alike observ'd where then was the difference between Augustine and the Btittains there was none in Doctrine but only in Almanack Calculation For as u Usher p. 925. the learned Primate proves both Churches followed the same Paschall Cycle from about the year 382. to the time of Dionysius Exiguus who taught the Church of Rome a better about the year 500. convinceing them to be two dayes out in theit account and x Baronius An. 325. N. 30. Baronius confesses that after the Council of Nice the Bishops of Rome received their directions from year to year for the week Easter was to be kept from the Church of Alexandria where they had better Mathematicians When the Roman Church followed the Cycle of 84 yeers which the Brittains also were guided by they would not keep their Easter on the 15 ●h day of the Moon though it fell upon
are more intent for peferments in the Church than for the Kingdom of Heaven or adorning such dignities with life and Doctrine who can hold their peace at the abominable sins of men whereby God is offended and roare to purpose at the least injury done to themselves as if done to Christ such are Gods Enemies and not his Priests the Ringleaders of the wicked and not Popes of the Church traitors not succcessors of the Apostles Rebels not Ministers of Christ And for our Brittish Customs they were and are Primitive and Catholick and Oriental and not Roman We observe with solemn fast the holy week in Lent called Grawys from n Leges Howeli Dha apud Spelman quasi garw-wysg different and rough attire as is conceived then us'd especially therein Dydh Mercher y Bràd and Dydh Gwener y Croglith that is as we term those two days Wednesday wherein he was betrayed and Friday with the lessen of the Cross and from thence all the n Usher 882. Baronius An. 34. n. 47. Wednesdays and Fridays of the year saving Pentecost as Bede confesses of us and the strict practice rhereof with the devouter sort is fresh in memory this and other Brittish Customs having escaped better under Popery than under the pretended Reformation of the late War whereas its well known the Church of Rome stands condemn'd and censur'd in her Clergy and laity the one to be depriv'd the other to be excommunicate by the 6th o Conc. in Trull c. 55. c. Plin. lib. 10. Epist 97. Generall Council for fasting upon the Saturdays 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contrary to the Ancient tradition of the Church and the Apostolical Canon of like severity It 's no wonder therefore if the Church of Rome denies the Authority of this Council 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p Scholiast in loc For it went like a Sword through their heart to find themselves charg'd and impeached of going contrary to the Apostolical Canon And though the Church of Brittain in the West and of Africa in the South and of Millain at her doors agreed with the Eastern and Apostolick followed by this Council yet this Universal consent must not prevail the single Church of Rome Schismatically dissenting from the whole Church in her traditions must be Catholick nevertheless and her Customs to be observed equally with the Scriptures The Asiatic custome of singing a Carol to Christ about Cock-crowing mention'd in Plinie p L. 10. Ep. 97. in his Epistle to Trajan the Emperour in the first Age of the Church is retain'd amonst us to this day in our Plygains or Pulgains as we term them Though we look upon the material Cross as a great rarity which at Rome they Idolize and are beholding to our St. Helena for any naile or part thereof they have to shew and honour that bearing as the Church's Coat of Arms yet our true sense and Religious use thereof appears in our Remembrances and obligations by it to brotherly love and charity having no other word to express welcome which ought to be from the heart but Croeso which is deriv'd from the Cross mae chwi groeso you are welcome in the Cross Though they believe no Purgatory yet at the death of their Friends it is usual with them to wish the party Deceas'd a good Resurrection Duw a Ro iddo Ailgyfodiad da God grant him a good Resurrection an Ancient q Epiphanius in Aerio practice in the Eastern Church much abus'd by them at Rome to their secular profit as usual None have firmer beliefs of the Immortality of the Soul and of the other World than the Ancient Brittains nor greater detestation and Dicipline against lying even in Children which the Roman Church indulges in her Records and Liturgies and chiefest Saints r Cyn gywired a'r Ancor Brittish Proverb as honest and true as an Anchorite Eremitas Anachoretas abstinentioe majoris magisqve spirituales alibi non videas Grald Cambr. Descript Cambr. c. 18. They had likewise besides Eremites and Anchorites of the stictest sort their Nuneries for Christ's Virgins and Abbeyes for Monkes not such as our Western Modern Orders of St. Benedict St. Francis or St. Domnick but far Ancienter and after the Rule in the East and ſ Usher p 110. Aegypt so much extoll'd in in the Ancient Fathers and especially in St. Chrysostom's Homilies all along not begging their Bread or being a burden to others but earning their Livelihood with the work of their hands and spending the rest of their time in Study and mutual Edification renowned in History for their great Sanctity and Learning yet it was not counted unlawful for any of their Clergy to Marry for St. Patrick was the Son of † Idem p. 818. Calphurnius a Deacon who was the Son of † Idem p. 818. Potitus a Presbyter And u Spelm. Concil Arelat Restitutus the Brittish Archbishop at the Council of Arles was a Married man and so was St. Hilarie his friend as well as St. Philip and St. Peter In their Tonsures which is also an x Bed l. 3. c. 25 exception by Augustin's party against them if they had any they followed the manner of the East which shaved the forehead not the Crown as did our Romanists who were as much dissatisfied with Theodorus of Tarsus St. Paul's City who being design'd Archbishop of Canterbury to revive and promote the Roman Interest in Brittain quite lost well nigh was y Bed lib. 4. c. 1. fain to stay four Months at Rome before his setting out into his dignity that his Haire might grow fit to be shaved after the Roman mode being well contented to part with an old lock for a new Throne which proves the Greeks to be as far different from the Romans as our Brittains in this Rite Episcopalem vero Confirmationem prae alia gente ●otus populus magnopere petit x Cambrens Descriptio Cambr. c. 18. no Nation had Episcopal Confirmation more in esteem and so desired by all as the Brittains saith Cambrensis whose Archbishops did Consecrate their Suffragans and were Consecrated by them in their own Province And never sought to Rome for their Pall as did several other Nations as Pope Gregory did a Cambrens Itmerar Cambr. lib 2. c. 1. acquaint his Augustine in answer to his 7● Question directing to take no Superiority over Arles because ab Antiquis praedecessorum meorum temporibus pallium accepit that Archbishop did use to receive his Pall from Rome and therefore was not to be depriv'd of the Authority which once he had obtained a Cambrens Itmerar Cambr. lib 2. c. 1. Britanmarum vero Omnes Episcopes tuae fraternitate committimus But he 'le give leave to his Augustine to bring all the Bishops of Brittain under him who by consequence and in the Popes opinion and diligent search never had any Pall from Rome which by the Principles of the b Bed l. 2. c. 28. 7 ●
Interrog New Roman Church is Essentially requisite to constitute an Archbishop because it brings a round sum of Money to their Coffers and dependance and Canonical obedience to their See and the disowning the Supremacy of Temporal Soveraigns by Consequence But whether the Archbishops of Brittain so esteem'd for several Primitive Ages by Emperours and the great Councils of the Ancient Church who summon'd and own'd them under that dignity and Charter must lose their Ancient right and priviledge at the pleasure of a younger Church because it never complyed with its new and sordid devices b Innocentius 3 tius de Officio Misse c. 51. for gain and Lucre is justly a question of which more hereafter but their diminution in fact upon the reason that is implyed to occasion it sets it out of question that by the confession of the Popes themselves Brittain never own'd or acknowledged any Superiority that Rome pretended over it But though our Bishops never went to Rome for their Pall or Consecration yet they us'd not to stand upon such terms of distance from the Asiatic Churches nor the Church of Jerusalem though for some Ages by reason of the destruction of that City truckling under Daughter Cities that were of greater note and fame but really and originally the Mother of all Churches and particularly respected by the Church of Brittain upon that score For thither they us'd from hence to flock and resort as is observed by St. Hierome c Tom. 1 Epl. 17. Usher p. 202. thither d Idem ● 177. St. Helena repaired with her Retinue building and enriching Churches Thither Pelagius went and was cleared in their Councils explaining his own sense in e Idem 248. Greek before them against his Errours Whether it was his care and Interest to speak more warily or whether as one defends Calvin against a Jesuite charging him with Atheism that he read Calvin in Bellarmines Works and not in his own but it is rather to be supected that Pelagius was more truly guilty of his dangerous Heresie than that the Synods of his own Countrey should so explode him without cause or St. Augustine his honourer write so well in vain against him But not to digress but to speak more directly for Pelagius had he been Orthodox was but a f Idem p. 210. Layman thither our chiefest Brittish Doctors are recorded to repair St. David Paternus Elius or Teilaw and to be Consecrated Bishops by that Patriarch in order to to their return which the Brittish Church was so far from dis-rellishing that the first of them in full Synod was translated to be Archbishop of Menevia called afterwards by his Name upon the score of that Consecration together with his parts as before was mentioned out of e Usher p. 210. Idem p. 474. Girald vita S. David Giraldus Cambrensis whose aime was as himself declares to be another Gildas in delivering nothing but the Truth f Idem Pre●at Cambriae Descript Many other Rites and Customes there were in use among the Brittains as Bede observes that were contrary to the unity of His Catholick Church g Bed lib. 2. c. 2. plurima alia faciebant unitati Ecclesiasticae contraria which took up a long dispute at the Synod of Streanshall from which the Brittains would by no means recede but preferr'd their own Traditions as well as they might before all that were followed by the Roman Church at that time which Bede calls the whole World whereby it appears that though our Brittish Antiquities are many of them lost and perished through Wars and desolations and the special malignity of the Church of Rome to suppress the memory and honour of so emulous a Church as this of Brittain was in its eyes and Abbot Dunawd's Books of the priviledges of the See of St. David and of the Ancient Rites and Customes of the Brittish Church mentioned in Pitseus were destroyed with many other at Bangor with its Monks and Monastery and h H. Lluid Fragm p. 58. Library and I pray God to preserve our English Libraries from the like rude zeal yet the account of its Customes and Antiquities is sufficiently preserved and contain'd in the first best Councils o● the Primitive Church and the Learned Orthodox Fathers of the East with whom it so entirely and exactly agreed and concurr'd in all sound Traditions as appears by the tast and instances I have already given from which Rome very much departed and stands notoriously censur'd by the Catholick Church as Schismatical for the same which abundantly proves the Brittish Church never was any Daughter of Rome nor could be not only because of Ancienter years and standing than her supposed Mother but because as wholly dislike to her in every line and feature and humour and Ceremony as are the Spaniards to the French though both Christians in their kind I shall add but two or three of their Homilitical Customes and Principles and pass on to the Characters of their Antagonists from Rome such I mean as had more influence upon their Converse with one another whether the respect of the Church to the Prince or the Prince and people to the Church or the people to one another As to their respect and Loyalty to their Prince There are no footsteps in the Primitive Church nor the Ancient Brittish for deposing Kings for Heresies or Scandal Spiritual Dicipline is not to alter or unsetle Civil rights It 's an Antichristian fift Monarchy Principle that offers at it If Rome be a Mother Church in any thing it is in this Whoever us'd it here had it from her forge Mens several rights as they are men and as they are Christians are as different as peace of Conscience and the peace of the Kingdom as the law of the land and the law of God as the Body and the Soul as Outlary and Excommunicat●on which the Church of Rome confounds together But the Brittish Clergy knew how to pay their several rights to God and Caesar to be faithful Servants to Christ and Loyal Subjects to their King they boldly reproved and censur'd the enormous vices of their Princes out of love to God and them and Countrie as appears by a Godwin Catalog Hector Boethius Hist lib. 8. Voadin Archbishop of London reproving King Vortigern for marrying Hengist's Daughter a Pagan when he had a lawfull Queen slain for it by the procurement of her Father not by Vortigern though a very ill man and more happy in such a Martyrdom than in a perfidious connivance in a whole skin and a ragged Conscience and also by Gildas his sharp reproofs remaining to this day against several of their chifest Princes for which not an hair of his head was touch'd by any of them as can be heard or read as likewise by b Bed lib. 3. c. 5. Aidanus his special severity against great offenders They severally reprov'd but never rebell'd against their Princes nor encourag'd any to it and they
to trust then Mahomet shall pass for as good a Prophet as St. Peter and the Alcharon be equal to the Bible for to the blind all colours are the same But regulated Conscience is not a private Spirit wherein God himself speaks who is greater than all the World where it is kept pure from Worldly ends and Idols for nothing is more publick and Catholick than Conscience or reason or right or duty or holiness or justice which are synonymous and carry universality and eternity in their conceptions by reason of the Divine Impression and Authority they partake and answer to And nothing constitutes more a private Spirit than private ends and carnal designs and self advantage and profit and filthy lucre made chief ingredients in duties Doctrines and Religions with which Worldly and sordid mixtures the Roman Faith in all its parts is too well known to abound which unworthy copulations are discernable by the weakest judgments and condemn'd and hated by the most universal suffrages and censures of God and men An Infant can discerne them in his neglectful Nurse an Elephant in his unjust Feeder Clownes in States-men and Politicians and are abhorr'd and declaim'd against by Heathen Philosophers in their Schools and Christian in Pulpits and are those moral wild beasts that all Laws humane and Divine and right Discipline and education and all rules of honour are mainly bent to discover and hunt and chase out of all Societies and converse and hearts Besides a private Conscience proceeding in all its converse according to Christs mind Interest and direction and doing nought that is disallowed by him is Christ himself by fiction personated and acted and defended which is as far from a private Spirit as the East is from the West or the will of God from the ends and lusts of man It being not more natural and congruous in Christ himself to delight in good men and to abhorre the Congregations of the wicked and carnal and scandalous than it is for his faithful Servants and Trustees and Representatives who bear their Masters person and concern and holiness upon them by such a fiction to express and imitate by their own Communion and election of Societies the mind and Inclination of their Lord and soon to discern who are his Friends or Enemies or Traitors and Loyal Subjects in his Kingdom and vigorously and and indispensably to embrace the one and shun the the other for Servants act according to an accountable trust the Master being Lord of his own rights to remit or indulge out of favour as he pleases which is not lawful for the Servant to presume And this skill and instinct and shadows of private judgment to discerne friends from strangers to their Masters is visible in Domestick Creatures emblemes of fidelity who are Courteous to acquaintance but severe and unsociable to such as are not so till by converse and familiarity they prove their unity and friendship and take away private judgment and discretion the distinction and difference between faithful and unfaithful Servants Subjects Christians Churches wholly falls to the ground and Christians and Catholicks are set below the Irrational Creatures And for the Church of Rome to blast good Consciences that find out its faults as private Schismatical Spirits and to extol their own Carnal designes and Trade and Merchandize of godliness as Catholick Religion holy pure and publick and eternal is too visibly one of the uniform symptomes of their Antichristianism whereby they confound Heaven and Earth the Church and the World and reconcile yea change Mammon into Christ and Christ into Mammon Withall equal and coordinate Churches or Christians as we now suppose Rome and Brittain to be are not judges of one another where they separate from one another for Par in parem non habet potestatem is a rule in Law but act severally therein according to their respective duties and allegiance to their own liege and Superiour who is Christ the head and judge of both in the other World and in this also by a free and general Council which both parts ought for peace and unity to submit to which thereby becomes Superiour to both either by Divine Institution and custom Ecclesiastical or by their own consent and agreement as in the Case of Arbitrators And accordingly such general Synods have censur'd and sentenced and Excommunicated persons Churches Provinces Priests Bishops Patriarchs and Popes themselves when they walk'd awry from Christ's Rule As the first General Council at Nice against Arrius Priest of Alexandria The second at Constantinople against Macedonius Arch-Bishop of that See The third at Ephesus against Nestorius another Constantinopolitan Arch-Bishop the fourth at Chalcedon against Eutyches Dioscorus c. Priests and the fift at Constantinople against Diodorus and Theodorus Bishops reviving Origens errours and the sixth Oecumenical or general Council in Trullo at Constantinople against other Bishops and amongst them against the whole Church of Rome its Clergy and Laity for departing from the Catholick tradition of the Church about their Saturday fast wherein the Brittish Church was ever Orthodox with the rest of the Ancient Christian World as was shewed But the Church of Rome will allow of no Council or Canons or Fathers that shall offer to check its errours nor Scripture it self but with its own sence and Interpretation thereof whereby it shall be sure not to cross its Interest Being a manifest and notorious example therein of disobedience and Irregularity to all its Superiours and the most Schismatical Church in the Christian World for Baronius a Spondan An. 692. n. 5. cannot deny that the Greek writers declare their sence that the breach of Communion between the Greeks or Eastern and the Latine or Western Church of Rome was upon the disobedience of the Popes to yield and submit to the Council in Trullo wherein it had all other Churches of the World and the Canons of the Apostles of its side and undoubted Apostolical tradition mentioned in most of the Ancient Fathers as b Idem An. 34. n. 47. Baronius cannot and doth not deny A Church therefore that deserves to be shun'd and disown'd as scandalous for that and its other innumerable corruptions and infamous Usurpations and gross Idolatries and particularly its Blind Obedience and Implicit Faith that allows and directs to put confidence in man the head and fountain of all its damnable errours and superstitions whereof all that communicate with it must be approvers and partakers by the terms and Injunctions of its Communion which requires them to be all receiv'd as Catholick Articles and Doctrines and all contrary Truths to be abjur'd as Heresies whereby it becomes impossible for any understanding sober Christian to be at the same time within her Communion and pale and out of the curse of God Esa 1.5 20. Therefore it were lost and needless labour as to them or our selves to go about to disprove all their imputation and charge of Schism against us or to prove on the
Church and their own rules and principles first it is several wayes against the Canons in respect of their Invasions of the rights of other Metropolitans which was adjudg'd a Photii Nomoc. Tit. 1. p. 20. infamous and mulctable before that in the Council of Chalcedon and in Trullo power was yielded to the Emperours to erect or to translate Metropolitical Chaires and also against the Canons in respect of many Illegal Ordinations which made the Romish Church null in Law in England several wayes besides those nullities in fact and event we have before instanc'd Many are the Canons of the best and Ancientest Councils and the most general and Oecumenical that the Church of Christ ever had which condemn the first Entrance of Augustine and his Pope Gregory and the Re-entrance of Archbishop Theodore and his Successors upon our Brittish Church and Provinces under no less penalties than deposition or degradation of their Clergy from their several States and Dignities and Excommunication of their Laity from Christian Fellowship besides the making all their Ecclesiastical Acts and Ordinations to be utterly void and null to all intents If this were of any value or moment with them of the Church of Rome who boast and crack of a great respect they have above others for Fathers and Councils and Ancient Traditions but experience too much discovers it is all with Reservations and Provisoes that they offer not to touch or reflect upon their Church in any of its grossest errours or most enormous misdemeanours for if they do it in the lest the Canons of the Universal Church shall have no more respect at their hands than the Canonical Scriptures which are not allowed to have any sound or sense where they cross and disagree from the private interpretation of their Church I say private and suspicious because notoriously savouring of private ends and carnal designes and Worldly ambition and self-love above any Church or Haeresie whatsoever in all their Commentaries and Expositions and every point and Article of their Faith and Government wherein they differ from us Or they shall be openly disown'd and rejected for no lawful Councils either in whole or in part according to their liking or disliking of particulars who yet call for implicit obedience to their own petty Authorities and decrees how contrary soever to Common sense or reason while themselves dispute and contradict the power and jurisdiction of far greater Superiours acting and decreeing with the special assistance of the Spirit of God So that as to such Roman-Catholicks who are wedded and guided by their wills and Idols more than Truth or Conscience the Testimonies and Canons I shall produce will prove but Pearls ill cast yet with this advantage and satisfaction that they shall drive and force them either to submission or to rebellion either to confess and acknowledge themselves to be convict Schismaticks and Sacrilegious Robbers and Oppressors and their Popes and Missionaries depos'd and condemn'd in all their Titles Holy Orders and pretences by the Holy solemn Laws and Canons of the Universal and undoubtedly Catholick Church of Christ or manifestly detect themselves to be Antichrist in this as in their other practices and the Invaders of Gods Regiment and power in all its formes and varieties of of appearance as of God the Creator in disposing the Kingdoms of the World of God Redeemer in Lording over Souls and Consciences so of God the Holy Spirit and Sanctifier in slighting Scriptures and General Councils Which last part it is to be fear'd they 'l chuse to take as being thereto too much inclin'd by their Principles being one main cause if not perrhaps the principal that the spirit of truth and concord hath withdrawn it self in lamentable manner from Christian Churches and Councils these several last hundreds of years in whose Assemblies it cannot well appear with liberty and without diminution of its Divine Honour and Glory when its promis'd assistance to Gods Church gathered together in his name must be eftsoons check'd and controll'd by the Negative will and lust of one man that sets up himself above Both and the Interest of Rome made the mark to steer by instead of Truth and Holiness and Gods holy spirit thereby necessitated either to countenance Errour and Tyranny by its presence or to stand out whereby is left but a Carcass of a Church and not a Church for a Church without Gods spirit is but as the body without the Soul the one as ready moulders into errour and corruption as the other into stench and rottenness as is the condition of the Modern Roman Church too visibly The first Canon I shall instance in shall be the third General Council held at Ephesus than which hardly any president can be more apposite to the Case of Rome and Brittain and that Councill's determination upon the complaint of Cyprus against Antioch where three points may be observ'd 1. The state of their case and grievance 2. The sense and resentment of the Council 3. The decree and redress 1. Their complaint to the Council by Declaration and the Affirmation of their Bishops then and there present was that the Bishop or Patriarch of Antioch did send and Consecrate Bishops for the Isle of Cyprus in violation of their Ancient Rights and Customes The occasion of this encroachment was as is noted by Balsamon and Zonaras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Upon a pretence and imitation of the Duke of Antioch under the Romans sending thence a Deputy Governour for this Isle The plea of the Cypriots was as is imply'd in the Canon an Ancient immemorial right of chusing and consecrating their own Bishops among themselves On the other hand the Bishop of Antioch had his Patriarchal dignity and the Supremacy of St. Peters Chair to insist on from whom he deriv'd by undoubted Lineal Succession Now if this Controversy had come before the Pope of Rome and his Conclave or Lateran or Tridentine Council it is easie to coniecture who had gone by the worst but not so easie to know whom the prey should have been adjudg'd to whether to Antioch or rather to Rome her self although the other were the acknowledg'd Chaire of St. Peter establish'd for 7 years at Antioch at the lest before ever he arriv'd at Rome 2. But the sense and resentment of their wrong by this great Council is very remarkable who took this matter into their cognizance and Judicature though no les● than the Patriarch of the East and as great as the Pope takes himself to be was one of the parties to a●ide their censure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And thus they represent the mischief and consequence of this encroachment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A new kind of Schismatical attempt in defiance of the Apostolical Laws of the Church and Canons of the Holy Fathers and striking at the common Liberty of Christendom yea the Spiritual Spiritual Liberty of men Souls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Christ himself by his bloud hath purchas'd for us
either in Scripture or Ancient Fathers or Councils is it express'd that the Pope of Rome is this Chief that all Churches and Provinces are Bound to know and own for such for then this controversy of Supremacy were decided past all further dispute But what Metropolitan or Patriarch then is recommended to us in Scripture or Tradition to know and obey for such My Text and the 34 Canon of the Apostles answers this Question and resolves us whom we are to look upon as our chief both in Heaven and Earth For Christ is that Invisible Chief in Heaven we are to know and serve in all we do from the heart And on Earth the Primate of every Province and not the Pope over all was Him that all Christians in the Ancient and truly Catholick Church were bound to Know and own and obey as their head before Magistrates became Christians And the Pope of Rome is there quite forgot and not mention'd in the lest and at such a time as his Authority and Supremacy had been by all means to be salv'd or heeded if it had been then but a point of any right or order in the belief of the Apostolical Church which is now so great a point of Faith in the Roman 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The Bishops of every particular Nation ought to Know Him who is Chief amongst themselves and to count Him as their Head And to do nothing beyond their particular concern and duty without Him nor he either to do any thing without the advice of them all for so peace and concord shall be attain'd and preserv'd and God shall be glorified Whereby is evident that the Primitive Ecclesiastical state of Christendom was as its present civil is Aristocratical and not Monarchical where several Provinces had their several Bishops or Primates for their Ecclesiastical Princes As now-a-dayes several Kingdoms are under their own several Kings and States and no one Prince Supream or as a civil Imperial Pope over all the rest But in comparison of one another all were equals and unsubordinate to one another as to power and subjection though not to order and precedency And in their own Territories Monarchical or supream within themselves And if the State of the Church was so and so to be preserv'd by this Canon although the state civil was different and Monarchical all Christian Kingdoms and Provinces being then under one Emperour as he that hath read St. Cyprian or St. Hierome can make but little doubt what reason is there that the State Civil and Sacred being now equally Aristocratical the harmony should be dissolv'd and all should become slaves against right and Laws and Canons to please the Pride and sin of one He that drives at an Universal Monarchy is and ought to be taken by every Prince and State as a publick enemy The reason is the same in Church as well as State Yea there is president for Universal Monarchy in States but none in the external Church but only Prophecyes and warnings of Antichrist that should be such Now for Rome to be Soveraign as she pretends and every Metropolitan Church to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Chief and unsubordinate within its own Province according to right and Ancient customes is a manifest contradiction and inconsistency Both cannot be true together but the last was proved to be most true by as great a testimony and suffrage as Earth can afford the consent of several General Councils the greatest that ever met and in the best and purest times And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Per omnia autem manifestum est This is universally manifest is the manner of wording of this point in this Canon as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Manifestum namque est quod per singulas quasque Provincias in the other like unto it both in the Originals and their own Roman Translations Therefore if the one be so manifestly true the other of Rome's Supremacy is as manifestly false Let them shift off the consequence of Antichristianism as they can Yet Baronius a Spondanus An. 325. n. 32. would prove the Supremacy of Rome out of this very Canon as what will they not venter before they 'l part with their chiefest Idol but his offers are meer Cavil and Petitio Principii or begging of the Question contrary to the context and the design of this great Council and contrary also to the text in whole and in part The design being to strengthen the Authority of the Bishop of Alexandria against Meletius and Arrius who ordain'd Bishops for themselves within his Province against his will and consent which Consecrations were as Schismatical being done against his License in Egypt as the like were if done at Rome or Italy against the Authority of the Pope Both of Ancient custom having the like Authority within their proper Province and the Foundation of the Decree being the equality of Alexandria with Rome as likewise with Antioch in this respect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where equality is suppos'd its absurd to imagine the same in the same respect to be subject and supream for that were inequality and contradiction Besides the union and strength of the Churches Government and Discipline that whosoever is excommunicate in one Province should stand so with all the rest is not grounded upon the necessary Dominion of One over all the rest which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Popery and one of its Master errours against the mind of our Saviour and the known state of the Primitive Church and the union and the peace of all Christendom but upon the Brotherly love and communion suppos'd amongst all Christian Churches in the 5th Canon of Nice wherein appears the difference between Ecclesiastical and Civil Polities of those times and this The Laws and Sentences of these being of force only within their own Territories by right of Empire but of those every where without through the bond and union of love And they at Rome bound to observe the decrees of their neighbouring Churches as well as these of It which imports mutual subjection to one another by mutual humility and excludes the proud conceit of Soveraignty in any one over the whole The whole Church in this respect being as one Province by the fiction of love and unity which in other respects was several and distinct by local limits as before One not by the dominion and supremacy of any one over all the rest which is the Carnal aime and Antichristian Tyranny of Rome but by the submission of all the parts to the Interest of the whole which is right Christian liberty and the harmonious Communion of Saints The act and deed of one being as the act and deed of all where the publick weal of the Church of Christ was concern'd And the ambitious swelling Supremacy of Rome is as much contrary to the Text of this Canon both in whole and in its parts as it was to the connexion and
move and have our being The first and last part of the Discourse are Unison and both practical and of more general use the midle Historical and Polemical and of no less use to several in these unsetled times to have the evidences of their Faith and Church as their Writings for their Lands to lye by them and their Children against any question that shall arise about the title Where known passages of History were necessarily to be rehears'd all possible conciseness is us'd which makes that part of the stile more obscure without a deliberate reading which yet is remedied by the Citations in the bottome of the Page referring to the Authors themselves And sometimes indignation against inclination rais'd the stile where the adverse objections or practice seem'd highly unreasonable or greatly pernicious having no enmity or disrespect to any person or party high or low but to their sin or ill example for their Recollection to prevent God's wrath and out of fidelity to the common Lord and judge of both The word Protestant is us'd as now it notes the Scriptural Apostolical Faith in opposition to Rome's corrupt Innovations and humane Inventions and in the sense explain'd page 488. Else it were very improper to stile our Brittish Faith Protestant which flourished here 1500 years before Luther was born The great and memorable Archbishop Vs●er whose memory ought ever to be especially dear to Brittains is often cited in His Book de Britannicarum Ecclesiarum Primordiis which after once naming is not repeated Which he writ at the command of King James as a Collection on purpose for such an use with great pains and judgment and truth and helpes several wayes and partilarly from the late chief Antiquary of Wales Mr. Rob. Vaughan of H●●-gw●● with whom he corresponded It is not to be said that all is new or old either which is here deliver'd and intended for a compact systeme of satisfactions on this point under one view which before lay more dispers'd and undiscern'd and as some account also of innocence and patience in their defence which have not escap'd the censure of Improvidence and harder speeches and passages there being a Scaffold Priviledge ever due to Sufferers but this may be safely said that though the Notes were old and standing and ought so to be yet the Tune and management is wholly new and sincerely endeavour'd and design'd for the peace and concord of our Church and the stength and glory of our Nation and in all humility submitted to the candid eare and judgment of all Right Fathers and Sons of our Brittish Church of England Farewel A General Table of the Contents PART I. A Sermon touching Christs immediate Soveraignty over the heart and the usefulness of the Christian Doctrine to Societies being the occasion and foundation of the ensuing Argument SECT I. p. 43. The Controversie reduc'd to one single point in General of obedience to the right Soveraign of the heart and Protestancy found Loyal and Popery the contrary in its Principles and Practice SECT II. p. 68. Of the true Mother-Church to all Christians in respest of their In-side and of Rome'sVsurpations SECT III. p. 78. Of the true Mother Church to every Christian in respect of the Out-side and Rome'sVsurpations SECT IV. p. 123 Rome no Mother-Church to Brittain in respect of extraction or first Plantation of the Christian Faith but much Junior to it and more probably its Daughter SECT V. p. 134. The faith never fail'd in Brittain from the Resurrection to this present SECT VI. p. 143. Brittain had not the faith from Pope Eleutherius SECT VII p. 151. The description of the Old Brittish Church in its Doctrine and Discipline and Government and Traditions when Augustine the Monk made his Impression here SECT VIII p. 194. The face of the Roman Church about the same time and of Augustine's qualification and method for his pretended Propagation of the Gospel amongst the English And that the Nation are under no obligation to Rome for his work here but bound by their Christianity to abhor and detest it SECT IX p. 231. That the Gospel was planted among the English throughout their Counties by Brittish Ministry And that Augustine's Roman Plantation here came to nothing and no Bishop left in all this Land of Rome's Ordination but one and he a Simonaick and that the body of the Nation are old Brittains and our Princes especially and therefore by honour and nature bound to maintain the Rights of our Brittish Church against Forreign Enchroachments SECT X. p. 295. That all or most of the Kingdoms and Churches in this part of Europe received their first faith from Brittain yet Brittain pretends to no Supremacy over them upon that account and the Romanists ●loes de se in that kind of Plea SECT XI p. 346. Of the indirect methods of Rome in subjugating this and other Churches under it SECT XII p. 363. The change in Henry 8th rather a Restoration than Reformation and how commencing in Henry 7th and of the Inauspiciousntss of Popery to the Brittish Crown and the success and blessing of Protestant Counsels to this Nation SECT XIII p. 392. That the Primacy of the See of Canterbury as it is settled by our own Kings and Laws is Canonicall and Regular SECT XIV p. 436. That the Primacy of Canterbury as by the Pope and Monk Augustine is Schismatical and against the Canons of the Vniversal Church And of the several Nullities of the Church of Rome in England And how all their Clergy intruding ●here stand depriv'd of their Orders by the Canons of all the Ancient General Councils and their Laity that abet them of their Christian Communion by the same Authority SECT XV. p. 475. A short disquisition into the Cause and Character of the Roman Apostacy in its Leaders and Followers from History and Prophecy and Practice SECT XVI p 503. What the Roman Catholicks truly mean by the term Heretick they so liberally bestow on others and that none are greater Hereticks in Truth and reality than themselves and of their title Roman-Catholick which they so well like And old Rome and Brittain both Heathen and Christians compar'd with the Modern and that the yoak of Rome is not better to us than our present condition SECT XVII p. 562. Where the place of the undoubted true Church is out of whose Pale there is no Salvation And how to be of the Church in Heaven while we are on Earth Page 23. l. 24. read outside p. 177. l. 18 dele as p. 184. ult r. source of p. 204. l. 18. ● the p. 21 ●… l. 29. r. out of p. 237. l. 18. r. after a●lin 1● d. a p. 29● l. 10. r. of his p. ●08 l. 5. d. say p. 315. l. 18. r. at p. 319 l. 30 r. of Bede p. 358. l. 13. r. of a God p. 379 l. 21. r. soon began p. 392 l. ● r. like to p. 420. l. 10. r. and from p. 468. l. 2. r. where p. 482.
negligent Therefore the inspired King recommends it as their wisdom to all Earthly Kings To kiss● the Son lest he be Angry and so they persh from the right way Psal 2.10 12. This Son is the Messia the Lord Christ in my Text whom to kiss is to submit to his Laws to love his nature and to imitate his way and example to win the hearts of the World And to chuse rather to die as he did for the liberties of their people than devour their Birth-rights or Sacrifice their Lives in whole ●hecatombs and Myriads to their pleasure and ambition Full Dominion and full Liberty which both covet Governours and Governed are both obtain'd when both observe this Rule in my Text Governed obey from their hearts as unto Christ and Governours rule from their hearts according to Christs mind and will for the same Gospel which binds the one to submit binds the other to protect and to be compassionate tender Fathers as well as the other dutiful and mild Children That the Prerogative of the Prince should be preserv'd by the people as their own Interest and Glory and the liberty of the people preserved by the Prince as his chief trust and honour Even as the Church loves Christ above its own life and Christ his Church in like manner and that they preserve not each themselves apart which would tend to coldness and alienation and trespass and removal of bounds in the party unreasonable but that they mutually transplant and place their own preservation and Interest in the maintenance of each others right as it were forgetting their own and this begets endearment and firm trust and union and peace between both parts and the contrary tends to separation and to divide the Nation and Kingdom against it self especially when the one or the other part shall plead themselves free from their duty jure divino and the other bound which suggestion cannot be from the God of peace and order but from Satan and Antichrist the contrivers of Confusion But when both are as they should be that is both discharge their duty from the heart as unto Christ which is all that the Church meddles to direct in state matters then both should have their wills and great peace and blessing from God besides the soul best directs the body and the body best obeys the soul when both are as they should be and enjoy their several healths natural and moral being free from all Disease and Vice but let the one be Sottish or the other Hydropical and be enclined to neglect or over-reach the one the other they shall observe no bounds but covet on Insatiably against one another to the burden and ruine at last of both The happiness and bliss of a Nation consists in this when the Prince who is the soul and the people who are as the body enjoy both their several healths Mens sana in corpore sano which all good Subjects ought and will ever pray and wish for and is only attainable when both observe and follow the directions and Prescriptions of this Text. Thirdly this Text is of use to discover and confute false Doctrines that creep in among us some more covertly others more openly and with a high hand threatning the utter Subversion of the Church It serves first to convince Socinians or Modern Arrians and Anabaptists who labour to suppress and overthrow and deny the Divinity of our Saviour God blessed for ever For if the Lord in my Text who is in the following verse expressly affirm'd to be the Lord Christ be not the High and true God then to do all from the heart as unto him were flat Idolatry in us Christians which yet our Inspired Apostle prescribes and binds upon us all as our indispensiable duty and that in contradistinction to men do it saith he to the Lord and not to men manifestly owning thereby his God-head besides there are two Attributes implied in this and another parallel Paragraph Eph. 6 5.-8 belonging to this Lord. 1. First that he is the searcher of the heart 2. That he is the Judge of of the world according to the secrets of the heart which are not communicable either of them to any Creature in Heaven or Earth neither to Angels nor Archangels but to him alone who is the true God Christs Divinity which these dangerous Hereticks would overthrow is the main Pillar and Foundation of all our Christian comfort For because he was truly God that was it gave price and Infinite value to his death for our Redemption whereby he became 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Soveraign Lord of Christians as our Creeds acknowledge And because he was the eternal Son of God that also was it that gave beauty and exstasie to his unparallel'd astonishing humility and love in condescending to take our nature upon him to die in it for us when we were his enemies whereby he became Lord of Hearts and all knees in Heaven and Earth and under the Earth bound to bow unto him and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Phil. 2 6-11 Rom. 5.10 This merit and humility of his death is that which is recommended in Sacraments to our remembrance and in Brotherly Charity towards one another to the Worlds end And the impudent imitation of Antichrist is not the least proof amongst many of Christs Divinity as St. Chrysostom well observes who would not have acted his part so forgetfully as falsely to assume to be God 2 Thes 2.4 if Christ had not been truly so SECTION I. The Controversie reduced to one single point in General of Obedience to the Right Soveraign of the heart and Protestancy found Loyal and Popery the contrary in its principles and Practice BUt in the Second place I shall chuse to enlarge and insist upon a more necessary Exhortation because the danger of seduction grows daily greater that you and all other Christians here in Britain would be carefull to preserve your selves true and stedfast members in the day of tryal of an higher Society into which you were early enrolled for more Holy and Eternal purposes and to be obedient to your own good Laws and the Governours that are over you by Providence and by consequence to God himself in them and not to fall off as many false hearts are like to do like leaves in Autumn upon a cold nip or trial into forraign Dirt and Captivity and imposture from which the Wisdom and zeal of your Progenitors have set you free for Originally as the learned on both sides know our Brittish Church never was a Daughter of Rome nor Subject to its See being Ancienter in Christ and Seniour to the Church and Chair of Rome it self or the first arrival of St. Peter there were the Tradition or Legend true But what availeth it to have been unless we still be a true Church agreeing with the mind of Christ which some will by no means allow Take therefore for some instance the
Fathers and Governours within their several Families depending on them for Education life and maintenance Invict Christian Princes and Holy Bishops in their several distinct Provinces and Kingdoms in matters of peace and order and external Ceremony being publick Consciences in their several Dominions which are so many larger Bodies or Families yet none of these are absolute or infallible any further than they agree with a Superiour Soveraign will which alone being such is their Rule and guide communicating its Infallibity to them that follow it which all are bound to do Now who this Infallible Soveraign guide and judge is whether the Pope in his Chair and Bulls or Christ and his Scriptures written in the Bible and mens hearts and Consciences seems to be the Question between Rome and us The Roman Church affirms it belongs to the Pope being near and visible on Earth The Reformed will have it to belong to Christ who is far nearer to mens Souls though in Heaven With Protestants the Invisible Soul is correlate with God its Invisible Lord where is its rest and satisfaction With Papists it must be correlate to the Pope a visible judge and guide else it wanders in uncertainties like a lost sheep Or though both agree perhaps that Gods mind and will is the Law and Rule of the Soul yet they vastly disagree about its promulgation That is Gods will say the Papists what the Pope defines to be his will that his Scripture and sense thereof what he allows and nothing but the sense of the Pope must be the sense of God though never so sensual and Carnal or contrary to truth and to common sense But Protestants hold Gods mind and will to be and to have been knowable by men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at several times and several wayes Heb. 1.1 Not only in the time of the Old Testament and before by the light of nature and the Law and the Prophets and Angelical Revelations and Vrim and Thummim and Visions and Dreams But also in the last dayes by his Son in his Holy Gospel and other inspired Writs delivered to his Church and sufficiently attested to the sense and Conscience by Miracles and right Catholick Tradition And that it is the first and proper work and duty of all mankind as soon as they come out of their Infancy and Non-age as on the one hand to know the difference between God and the Creature and the right and wrong Soveraigns and Legislators of their Souls and to follow truth and vertue which are ever the Laws of the one and to shun vice and lyes which are the dictates and Impostures of the other so also carefully to discern between the Authority of the Master and the Servant or the Prince and his Officer between the Canonical Scripture which is the Divine will and Testament of Christ and humane Tradition which is the Testimony of his Ministers subject to and controllable by and by no means Superiour to the other for next to the confounding of God and Idols in our values who are so infinitely contrary The levelling of all distance and degrees between Master and Servant though subordinate and friendly is most absurd and abominable with all sober Christians saving them at Rome with whom the Authority of their Church or the Pope which with them is equivalent is usually exalted above the authority of the Holy Scriptures though the will and mind of Christ the undoubted and confessed Lord and Master And we also hold that truth in the General which is ever Gods will and mind may be well known by men divers wayes without the Pope As matters of fact and Tradition by the Testimony of honest men of good lives and clean hands and Holy minds and Inclinations free from all worldly ends and designes in their report For where God alone doth rule and possess the heart there we may be sure of truth and sincerity where any Carnal interest or Idol prevails instead there we are to expect lyes Legends and Impostures which are the Dialect of false Gods as truth is of the true God dwelling in the heart And in like manner by the Oaths of Credible Neighbours wherein God is called present to the heart and mouth and by the decrees and sentences of Magistrates and just Judges who in Scripture are called Gods and the General consent of Nations vox populi vox dei and by every mans diligence and search after Truth as after hid Treasure which God rewards and prospers Prov. 2.4 5. and his pains and study in History Languages Customs Criticism c. As in the use of means without which God is tempted But instead of all these methods with Papists the sole report and decision of a Pope though unlearn'd or swayed perhaps by Interest or Avarice or Ambition or Fear which mislead the heart and tongue from God and Truth shall nevertheless be relyed on as an Oracle Infallible more conclusive than the famous Delphick and the heart and Conscience in every man which were made to indent with God and truth be totally excluded and silenc'd in that Church under the notion and bear-skin of private Judgment and opinion which endangers all Yet Protestants resolve to follow the former methods in whole or in part let the Pope contradict or Curse as much as he please So Papists are led by Authority Forraign and often false Protestants by Truth Domestick and more sure They follow the Doctrines of men as did the Scribes and Pharisees heretofore we the voice of Christ and the Commandments of God as all Christs sheep ought to do Herein I say lyes the main difference between us and not so much in those other many points and and Articles wherein we are divided As Image-Worship Invocation of Saints Transubstantiation Purgatory Indulgences c. Which are and will be Learnedly and voluminously defended on each side to the Worlds end while each party resolves firmly to adhere to the God or Idol that either have chosen for their guide to the last gasp with stedfast zeal and constancy For if Protestants as well as Papists could believe the Pope or the Papists as well as Protestants did once believe Christ to be this Infallible Judge and guide all Controversie between us would soon cease and be laid asleep The whole Controversy lyes therefore in the choice or rejection in obedience or disobedience to the right guide or immediate Soveraign of the heart whether Christ or the Pope And exact obedience to the wrong becomes perfect disobedience to the right Superiour And that the Issue will lye here may further appear from each ones case stated by himself and their charge and imputation each against the other and from the state of the question naturally arising hereupon For the Protestants say they take Christ and Scripture and Conscience and what agrees thereto for the guide and rule of their hearts and judgments And that the Papists take the Pope and hold opinions and practices upon his Authority against
Impostures are less tolerable than the open Treason of a Cromwell or the Tyranny of the Turk because men may easier endure to be robbed than to be cheated and deprived of their purses or Estates against their will than of their Honour and understanding with consent And as it hath been largely proved that Popery consists in evident disobedience and Rebellion against the Right Heir and Soveraign of the heart And Papists in a greater concern to jump exactly with the old Sexton whose Clock went truer than the Sun so positively also further to clear and evince the Truth to be on the Protestant side in this main point and Issue which is the hinge of the Controversie between us I shall also instance how we Protestants Loyally adhere to our Right guide and Judge and how the heart in all our principles relies on God and none else and on Christ who is the sole foundation of the Church 1 Cor. 3 3 11. and the Rock whereon it is built against which the gates of Hell can never prevail Math. 16.18 We build our Faith upon the Holy Scriptures which are Gods word for hearts to rest on whose Divine Authority themselves dare not deny without being the most convicted Hereticks that ever disturbed Gods Church in any age however they Blaspheme and traduce them before the Vulgar We come to know the Scriptures to be Gods word being not present our selves at passages by the Testimony and tradition of others such a Testimony as is also Divine or nearest to Divine to be relied on by the heart Not upon the Testimony of the Church of Rome by any means who hath so much cracked her credit by legending forgeing expurgating c. for it were a great fault as well as folly in us who profess our Devotion to God and the Truth to confide in the Father of lies or such his followers but upon our own honest Christian Ancestors with other Churches especially the Primitive when most pure and Holy and therefore likest to God and to be believed by consequence from the heart and the rather when seconded with the Testimony of the Holy Spirit to Holy Livers who is God We believe our sences in their own Sphere in many points against the whole world because we believe God in them with our hearts who made our sences and speaks through them Prov. 20.12 We believe beyond sence and can see things absent as if they were present to us when we have Gods word to assure the same to our Faith and consequently to our hearts and can discern Christ present in the blessed Sacrament and the Bread to be present nevertheless in different respects and be assured of both in our hearts through the evidence and strength of God in whom our Faith and sences act and move But in a Religion without the heart as is the Roman It is hard if not impossible to conceive or imagine how any Sacrament of Bread can be at all amongst them without Transubstantiation in the Elements who will not and cannot admit of any other change by the heart and Faith which are not much in use in that Church in this or any other part of worship which shews the root and occasion of that monstrous errour in that carnal Catholick Church which cannot distinguish between the objects of sence and Faith and is observ'd to Apostatize herein from their own Antient Mass which doth We believe plain and manifest Truths of Scripture without need of guides against the Glosses or Sophistry or Authority of the whole world to the contrary for we believe God himself in them with our hearts who requires and deserves to be so believed because God himself leads us by the hand as it were yea with both hands in plain Texts of Holy writ on the one side and his manifest Instincts of good and evil on the other in such manifest duties And when God himself doth speak all the world must hold the tongue while the Sun is above the Horizon Stars and Candles which answer to guides and supplies abscond and give way Hawks and all other Birds quit the Air where the Eagle Towres what Stupidity were it in a man of years and knowledge of the City to ask the way from Charing-Cross to Temple-bar out of Reverence to his guide and distrust of himself in things obscure and Controversiall wherein neither we nor others can clearly and assuredly discern Gods mind and will for the heart to acquiesce in here we make use of Candles and guides and especially our lawful Superiours who are Gods deputies to direct us and all others that resemble God in their gifts or years or places or Major vote For the next to God is as God unto us when God himself cannot be heard and our hearts can rest on them but not with equal assurance as on plain and manifest duties as their importance also is not equal for there is a greater respect of the two due to the Principal than to his deputy In like manner in all Indifferent matters which are the proper Province of the Magistrate for where Scriptures end there humane Laws begin where God withdraws there his Deputies step in we submit to the determinations and publick orders of our lawful Governours as to Gods voice and Authority out of the obedience of our hearts to Christ present in our Superiours to our Faith and regard to the Churches peace which is his image and darling And they that refuse to submit and conform do it in adherence to their conscience as they pretend now conscience without a Rule is an Atheist as is the heart without the Lord and of no use like a Sun-diall in the dark It is not conscience but the Quakers dark-light within and the Rule is Christs Will or to come nearest to his Will which is the utmost satisfaction of the heart now whether we keep nearest to Christ in adhearing stiffly to private fancy or submitting modestly to publick Authority and Major vote is the Question which St. Paul puts of question 1 Cor. 14.33 For Christ is where peace and humility and order is and not where pride and strife and division are and are ever like to be while each prefer themselves not only before their equals which is pride but their Superiours likewise which is disobedience and contempt of Christ in his Magistrates added to it which all true Christian hearts will avoid more than death as being not from God as Papists truly object And so we Protestants hold no Principle or Opinion but what agrees with the mind of God and Christ which was the Rule and measure that was to be agreed upon by both to arrive at Truth and endeavour always to approve our hearts to Christ who alone is their Judge and Soveraign and no mortal man whatsoever believing and considering that as there can be no sin or vertue where there is no Law so a Law were to no effect or purpose without a Judge to reward and punish the observers
well as Apostatical from its right Guide and Rule as hath been shewed And the Elder and the Healthy hath some pretence to Govern the Younger but the Younger and Sickly no manner of colour to Govern his Sound and Elder Brother which brings me to the Third and Last Point to prove That the Church of Rome hath no Superiority or Mother-hood over our British Church in respect of its Extraction or first Plantation of the Gospel SECTION IV. Rome no mother Church to Brittain in respect of Extraction or Plantation of the Christian Faith but much Junior to it WHich it never had from Rome nor by its means but without it altogether and for a good space of time before it had any Chair to boast of Our Brittish Islands by remarkable Providence being exempt and distinct from all the world as to subjection though not to Communion (a) Ms. Bernesii Doctoris Pontificii apud Spelman Concil p. 28. not only in respect of its seperate scituation and the Supremacy of its Crown but the Antiquity and Independancy of its Sees But rather than to be dumb and confess and yield the cause the Romish Advocates will stand up and pretend some out of Simeon Metaphrastes that St. Peter himself made a long abode in Brittain and converted many and ordained Bishops Priests and Deacons amongst us and at the founding of Westminster his apparition and Ghost appeared to direct the Builders which Legend is not worth an answer not only for its suspected Author but for its ill conduct against its own Interest and forgetting its cause making Brittain no more Inferiour but equall and co-ordinate to Rome and Sisters from the same Spirituall Father St. Peter But others with more colour will object did not Augustine the Monk sent from Rome about the year 600 convert this land and especially the English to the Christian Faith Had they not quiet possession of their plantation for about a thousand years till they were wrongfully justled out by King Henry the Eighth in a Rebellious manner Is not the Chair of Canterbury which derives its descent from Rome and Austine Superiour by publick allowance to all the Chairs of Brittain besides to ascend higher to stop the mouths of the Ancient Brittains that plead more Antiquity in this Island than the English or Saxon can or do whose first landing here was not till about the year 449 Did not the Pope Eleutherius through Faganus and Dwywanus he sent hither with others Christen their King Lucius about the year 170 and convert and Baptize the rest of the Nation and settle Bishops and Arch-Bishops amongst them where Flamins and Arch Flamins were before as appears by their own Histories And is not this a sufficient Title that is 1500 years standing to prove the Church of Rome the fountain and Mother Church to Brittain and if a Mother where is the honour and Obedience that is due unto her But if it shall more fairly and truly appear 1 That the Church of Brittain was planted by the Immediate followers of our Saviour either Apostles or Apostolical men shortly after his Resurrection and before St. Peters Arrival at Rome whether that tradition be true or false and the same seed though sometimes in some parts of the Nation mixt with tars in other parts more purified from them continued among us without failer especially in the Northern and Western Parts of this Island from that day to this 2 If the whole passage by consequence between Eleutherius and King Lucius cannot be allowed for true which Savours of the latter Arts of Rome to compass Sveraignty contrary to the express words and tenor of Eleutherius his Epistle and answer to the King and the subsequent Practice of the Bishops of Rome for some hundreds of years after him while they continued good 3 If Augustine the Monks arrival here was a manifest Intrusion upon anothers Province without Invitation or consent of the Christians of the place to Invade and subjugate and destroy the Brittish Church by the help and means of Pagan Enemies then making War upon them as Jackcals and Vulturs follow Camps for Prey whereby he and all his Clergy stood depos'd and degraded of their Orders and all his party of Christian communion by the concurrent suffrages and Canons of all the Generall Counsels of the whole Catholick Church that went before him 4 If the Controversie between the Church of Brittain and Rome in those Early times was the same that is now maintained against it by the Protestant Church of England at this day touching its Superstitions and Arrogated Supemacy with this difference that there was no roome nor place then for those Sophismes now us'd where was your Church before Luther or Henry the Eighth but both still agreeing in their manner and temper of Proceeding now as then and then as it is now on the one side great learning and Truth and piety on the other as great Ignorance and Arrogance with lying wonders and Massacres 5 If the Gospel was Providentially planted amongst the English or Saxons by Brittish Ministry and not by Romish and the Church of Rome by its bewitching Power and Grandeur in degenerare times over all this part of the world did but invade and disturb both the English and Brittish Church and ravish their Sees and disorder their Consecrations and successions and Vnchurch it self thereby and attempt to enslave our Crown as well as Mitre 6 if Henry the Eights relief of both Crown and Church was just and Providentiall and also Brittish and not the unsettling of a Right Possessor but the lawful ejection of an old Intruder And the peace and Interest and Glory of this Nation is fairly pointed out by Providence to consist in pursuing this design 7 If the Primacy of the See of Canterbury be from the Grace and pleasure of our Kings and Laws who can alter it as they think fit and not from any Ecclesiastical Right of the Pope according to the Laws and Canons of the Universal Church but rather in contrariety unto them And Christian Subjects ought to submit to the supreme Magistrates Right and pleasure in ordering such external matters about the Church as clash not with Salvation If these seven points shall appear as clear from proof and evidence as they are in the model and supposition will it not inevitably follow that no English much less Brittish Christian subject of what perswasion soever can with any conscience or thankfulness to God renounce his Mother of Brittain to own a Forraign Church for his Mother or desert his Colours to list himself under the Conduct and Supremacy of Rome to Act against his own Church and Country without being apparently convict before God and the world as well as his conscience of being a Renegade to his Church and false unnatural to his Country and as our wise Laws upon good grounds declare and define a Perfidious Traitor against his Soveraign First then it may be affirmed what cannot and is not
one of St. Pauls Disciples one of his own bloud and extraction being the Son of Claudia Ruffina f Martial Fpigr lib. 11. Ep. 53. lib. 4. Ep. 13. a Brittish Lady admired by f Martial Fpigr lib. 11. Ep. 53. lib. 4. Ep. 13. Roman Writers for her Accomplishments not short of any then in Rome or Athens e Usher cap. 3. p. 31. seq the Wife of Pudens and Mother of Linus in whose house at Rome Baronius saith g Anno Christi 44. the Tradition goes St. Peter had his abode in Converted afterwards into a Temple but which is more certain and generally agreed on by their Writers and ours and the exceptions of one e Usher cap. 3. p. 31. seq Dissenter sufficiently answered by the most Learned Vsher they both were the same persons who are mention'd e Usher cap. 3. p. 31. seq in St. Paul's 2 Epistle to another Timothy 4.21 Pudens and Linus and Claudia greet thee and all the Brethren Who after acquaintance with St. Paul in all Probability was more instrumental to conveigh and promote more and more the Gospel into her Countrey than before pieces of Roman Wit as she was wont as is rightly inferred by the Polite and Reverend Author of Antiquitates Ecclesiasticae who yet is more industrious than need in the derivation and Roman forming of both her names Claudia from Claudius Caesar and Ruffina from Pudens Rufus a Roman Knight her Husband when her own h Hist Britt l. 2. c. 2. Brittish name might easily and without such streining be formed after the Latine Mode common with it to other Tongues to make some alterations in Forreign names which they are to pronounce in their own who being Young and newly Married with Pudens Martialls Patron stil'd Sanctus by the Poet in his Epithalamium for his Modesty and Vertue might well be the Mother of a Son that might be fit for time as well as mutual affection to Baptize our Brittish King coming over to be a Christian and probably by his means and influence for K. Lucius or Lhês lived not at that distance of time but that this might be well Effected in Anno 156. saith Geoffry h Hist Britt l. 2. c. 2. of Monmouth and sooner say Ninius and P. Jovius as before Withall there was but his Father King Coillus and Marius or Meirig his Grandfather between Lucius and Aruiragus mention'd in Roman Writers who was Contemporary with Joseph of Arimathaea and g Gwladys Ruffydh or Gryffith whence Ruffinus Ruffina Griffin The old Brittains retain'd their Maiden surnames though Married and do still amonst the communalty and pronoun●e u as y and melt away g. bountiful to him at Glastonbury say our Histories and Lucius might be called Arviragus or Apviragus for his name in Brittish form was Lhês Coel ap Meirig i Usher p 18 And were it true that Lucius of a King became a Preacher before his end and Converted to the Faith Bavaria k Usher p 31. and Switzerland as several Authors report out of the Annals of those places as our English k Ubbo Emmius Re● Frisicarum Willibrord and Suidbert and Wilfrid did Holland and Frizland and Boniface or Winfrid did the Thurmgi Suevi Franci l Munster Cosm l. 3. p. 323. doth it follow they must owe an Eternal Subjection to the Church of Brittain upon that score Or did the Ancient Brittains ever pretend to a Supremacy or Jurisdiction over Ireland upon the pretence of its Conversion by their St. Patrick as is the way at Rome to insist Or were it lawful for them and in their own power to pav us or another that should upon such a score expect it such their subjection and obedience against their due Loyalty and Allegiance to their own Soveraign whose right it is but though we pretend to no rule over them nor expect any more but their love and kindness which is mutually due we may justly take it ill and unkind at their hands that they chuse rather to be guided in their Faith by Forreign Deceivers to their Misery than continue their Communion with their Ancient Christian Friends and Brethren Branach to their great felicity in Soul and Body and the happy peace of both Nations Where Christian Religion is wholly imployed and adapted to compass Worldly ends and Temporal Superiority its dignity is embased and its nature really chang'd into another kind or species and ought not by consequence to be call'd Religion For the end is better than the means and the Master than the Servant and the Building than the Scaffold And this present World Satans Kingdom is more excellent than such a Church which is wholly designed and dedicated to serve and gain it with all the end gives name and being and definition unto the means as a sum of Money imployed to relieve the poor is Charity to pay Debts Justice to Bribe an Evidence Perjury to hire an Assasinate Murder or a Building made to dwell in is a House to Grind Corn a Mill to keep off Enemies a Fort to serve God in a Church to buy and sell in a Shop and by consequence that Religion that hath Earthly Rule and advantage for its chief end and professes Earth thereby to be better than Heaven and Gospel good for nothing more than to fill Coffers cannot be call'd Christian or true Catholick Religion for the chief aime of such is the World to come but rather an Antichristian trade or craft which sets Conscience and Truth and Sacraments all at sale to make sure of this And so much may suffice touching the second point to shew that Rome is no Mother Church to Brittain neither by Conception or Education for she was neither conceived in her womb nor nourished on her breast but was a Virgin of full Age when her pretended Mother was but in her Swadling Clouts and Cradle SECTION VII The Description of the Old Brittish Church in its Doctrine Discipline and Goverment and Traditions when Augustine the Monk made his Impression here IN the third place to come to Augustine the Monkes Impression upon our Brittish Church we are to examine whether being free born she forfeited that liberty by any foul Heresie or Schisme Or the Church of Rome at that time merited Superiority over her by being a more Excellent and purer Church Or by any Act of redemption or unrequitable Courtesie which swallows liberty hath won or oblig'd it in justice and equity to be subject to her Or wherein her Title to this Supremacy lay in its first advance and setting out before any pretence or colour from prescription or possession The Face therefore and Physiognomy of both Churches at that time is to be viewed and examined in its lines and features which of the two for Doctrine and Discipline and Traditions was most Catholick and Apostolick and Primitive and Merited supposing their years and standing equal to Rule and give Law to the other Where it is to be premised
and taken for granted out of Bede that the Scottish and Pictish and Irish Churches were then one and the same exactly in Principles and Customes with their Mother the Brittish Church and what is delivered of the one belongs to the other yea the Daughters were more hot and zealous in the Cause of their Mother against Rome's Invasion than the Mother it self For the Brittish Bishops agree to give Augustine a fair meeting to dispute their Rights and Pretensions a Bed lib. 2. c. 4. but Daganus and Columbanus though Courted and respected would neither eate nor drink with those of Augustines party nor lye in the same house To give therefore a brief Character of both Churches as to their Principles its worth observing what Bede delivers of both b Usher 129. though no great favourer of the Brittains as the Learned have observed And first of the Brittains next of Augustine and his Religion The Brittish is represented to be a Church Scriptural for for its Doctrine Episcopal for its Government Primitive and Oriental for its Customes and Traditions And Augustine himself to have nothing to object against it for his quarrel but these three pretences 1. c That she observed not Easter after the way of Rome 2. Nor Baptism with Roman Ceremonies 3. And refus'd to preach the Gospel to the Saxons And the great sore of all at the bottom because they would not owne Augustine himself to be an Archbishop denying by consequence the Popes Supremacy who sent him Bede out of his moderation conjectures the cause of their Errour about Easter to be this d ut pote quibus longe ultra orbem positis c being situated out of the rest of the World the decrees of Councils about the observation of Easter had not reach'd them only what works of Piety and Purity were to be learnt out of the Writings of the Prophets and Evangelists and the Apostles they made it their chief care and diligence to observe and practice And we are not to this day in Brittain out of love with this Errour as were none of the Ancient Fathers or Councils who took Scripture for their only Rule and Gildas after their manner hath scarce one Paragraph in his Epistle unstor'd therewith and one of his chief lamentations in Diocletian's Persecution is for their Bibles being burnt in the publick Markets which kind of sight our Apostate Modern Roman-catholicks would have been content to behold in larger manner with dry eyes And that they were not in any Errour or ignorance of the Decrees of Synods about this point appears from Constantine the great his Epistle and Certificate in their behalf before mention'd and the presence of the Brittish Bishops in the great Council of Arles determining this particular Controversy about Easter e Concil Arelat can 1. The next Doctrine of our Ancient Brittains included in the former was the example of our blessed Saviours meekness and humility as the rule of imitation and Communion Mat. 11.29 so the famous Abbot Dunawd f Bed lib. 2. c. 2. or Dionothus resolved his Countrey-men upon their question whether they should give Augustine another meeting or hearken to him for in a former he had staggerd them as Bede believed not so much with Argument as with a Miracle by restoring a Blind man one of his own Company to his sight before them all but the Brittish Doctors for all this would not f Bed lib. 2. c. 2. Priscis abdicare moribus relinquish their Ancient Customes as then above a thousand years past they stil'd them without further advising with their Brethren g Ibid. Here the Brittains term their own Faith and Customes Hên ffydh counting Popery then at its first entrance here but an Innovation which is a note for our Brittains to consider who vulgarly call Popery Hên ffydh or the Old Faith whereupon Dunawd being consulted with at Bangor advised them to be guided by Christs example more then deceitful miracles give him the meeting saith he and regard his messages if he be a man of God But how may that be known say they do not you read what our Saviour saith take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart If he be meek and lowly it is very likely he bears that yoke himself and would have you to bear the same but if he be rigorous and proud it 's manifest he is not of God and you need not care for his message But how shall this also be known let him come first to the place and if when you arrive who exceed in number and other respects he arise to meet and honour you as his Christian Brethren it 's some sign he belongs to Christ you are to hear him with all respect and deference but if not but with State and distance he think to reduce and over-aw you and your People you are to defend the Liberties of your Church and disappoint him of his carnal expectation which last took place in a high degree on both sides eum notantes superbiae cunctis que dicebat contradicere laborabant neque illum pro Archiepiscopo habituros respondebant they own'd him for no Arch-Bishop but taxed him for his pride who might have had their honour by humility and contradicted and baffled him in all he had to say for they were 7. Bishops plures viri Doctissimi many very learn'd men as Bede there observes where upon he Prophesied their destruction which shortly fell out in Barbarous manner more by Instigation than prescience to the ruine of that Kings Kingdom who did execute his Prophecy and providentiall planting of the Gospel among the Saxon or English by Brittish Ministry without the help of the Romish as will further appear To these two Catholicks principles and Doctrines touching the word of God written and Incarnate best leading them to Holiness and the life of the other world they added a third that brought them peace in this obedience to Superiours or theit Gods on Earth and their Temporal and Spiritual Governours in their several districts and submission to the Synods and Councils of the Church about doubts and Controversies hapning in Religion upon this score the above said Dunawd saith the Brittish History g Histor Brittan lib. 11. c. 12 Miro modo liberalibus artibus Eruditus Augustino petenti ab Episcopis Britonibus subjectionem diversis monstravit Argumentationibus ipsos ei nulla● subjectionem debere cum suum Archipraesulem haberent being wonderfully learned clear'd by diverse Arguments the Brittish Bishops owed him no subjection as he and his Pope expected and particularly by this because they had an Arch-Bishop of their own and were not to disobey their lawful Superiour to please an Usurper for it is the chiefest part of obedience to know ones right Superiour and to own none besides wherein lyes the first perversion of every English Subject that followes Rome and its Forreign Father against the inward
the Lords-day least good-friday should thereby be observ'd of necessity before the 14th day against the Law of Moses but differ'd it to the following Sunday being the 22th but if the following Sunday was on the 16th day after the full Moon or 14th the former Inconvenience was prevented So the Latines before they were rectified from Alexandria observed their Easter on such Sundayes as fell out between the 16th and 22th never went so far as 23 nor began at 14 or 15. y Usher p. 321. Sulpitius Severus of France about the year 410 to amend the errour and overplus of about two dayes which he observ'd invents another new way of observing Easter between the 14 th and 20th which the Brittains are taxed in Bede for observing likewise whereby when Easter is kept the 14th the Evening of the 13th preceeding is taken into it against the limits of the Law which confines the beginning of the Passover ever to the Evening of the 14th and not before or latter So the Roman Church having for about 100 years laid aside her wonted Cycle and rule of 84 and from 16 to 22 to follow the exacter tables of Dionysius and the Church of Brittain for about the same space of time following the Gallican method of Sulpitius from 14 to 20 being more intent upon the sincerity of their duty than exactness in hours and scruples and seconds this gave occasion to Augustine the Monk and his followers to espy a mistake to raise a quarrel upon to disturb z Bed l. 2. c. 2. our Churches for they confidently affirm'd that their Alexandrine Calandar was a tradition deriv'd from St. Peter who kept the keyes of Heaven upon which a Bed l. 3. c. 25. Oswi King of Northumberland was deterr'd from his Brittish institution to follow the Roman Church for fear of being shut out Colman being discredited quitted his Bishoprick and went back into Seotland and the spotless Church of Brittain had a fowle imputation fastened upon it of being no less than Heretical for want of better skill or heed in Almanacks and Accounts and trusting too much her Neighbours of France to tell the Clock whilst she was busie With the like Ignorance though not with the same mischief and scandal a gifted Preacher preferring the Illumination of the spirit before all human learning whatsoever being ask'd by a grave Divine to expound the meaning of Arcturus Orion and the Pleiades Job 28.31 comparing them with Leviathan thereabouts that was as hard a word in his phancy answers presently they were Sea-Monsters and earnest he was the learned Minister should veyle and submit to his Ignorant inspirations Consent and Harmony among Churches were to be wish'd in every rite and truth however to be followed in points that are least considerable but of the two it is easy to believe God is better pleased with Sincerity than Punctillioes and that a clean heart stylo veteri is far more acceptable with its searcher than an old heart puffed with pride and malice stylo novo the Virgins saith St. Chrysostom were shut out for want of Oyle Math. 25.11 another for not having his wedding garment Math. 12.12 13. but we read of none that were arraign'd or punished for mistaking the Month of the Passover The Church of Rome therefore its Adversary largely proves our Brittish to be Orthodox in Doctrine in that she had no more but this Easter difference to lay to her charge or to justifie her self above her And as her Doctrine throughout was sound and Scriptural so was her Government Ancient and Primitive by Bishops who were chosen by their b Usher p. 81. Godw. Catalogue in Bernard St David Clergy and People as their Arch-Bishops c Convocato clero populo Pyramo Archiepiscopatûs Eborac sedem concessit M. Westm de Arthuro An. 522. Spelman Conc p. 60. Hist Brit. l. 8. c. 12. l. 9. c. 8. by their Kings and Synods and Parliaments to Rule at home and to appear a broad in General Councils Nice Sardyca Ariminum as there be Instances That there were here 28 Bishops and three Arch-Bishops erected over the rest by King Lucius and the d Usher p. 125. Revenues of the Druides tranferr'd from Idolatry to endow the Church and so kept still sacred fot the use of Religion in general as Geoffrey of Monmouth and e in Eleutherio Platina intimate and is prov'd as to London by the early Simony of Wini Bishop of Winchester buying the same of King Wolfer is not the less improbable because some learned men are offended with the newness of the word Arch-slamins us'd by the Interpreter who writ in an ignorant Monkish age when the thing meant thereby and that there was subordination and one set over the rest is expressly affirmed by Caesar in his Account of their Discipline and Order yet others are inclin'd with Baleus and and Powel and Sir H. Spelman to believe that the Church of Brittain took her pattern from the East and from Scripture rather than Idolatry in the founding of her Bishopricks And that f Usher p. 90 the 7 Bishops of Wales under the Arch-Bishop of St. David who are recorded to meet Monk Augustine were founded and erected after the g Idem p. 800. Spelm. Conc. p. 107. number and example of the 7 Churches of Asia and their Angels Revel capp 1.2 3. as those Churches likewise after the like remarkeable number in the Angelical Hirarchy Zach. 4.10 Rev. 1.4 5. which opinion Arch-Bishop Vsher recites without any censure or dislike Accordingly h Usher p. 73. we meet with 7 Bishops in the North under the Arch-Bishop of York in like manner And twice 7 under the Arch-Bishop of London being twice as large as the two other Provinces or 7 only perhaps but each of those of larger extent than now they are as was i Heylin help to History p. 115. Lincolne before Eli Peterburgh and Oxford were taken from it or Lichfeild Sidnacester Dorchester Legecester and Worcester when all made but k Monast Angl. part 1.137 Spel. Concil p. 27. one Bishoprick and whereas Rome had 10 suburbicarian Provinces under it l Praesat Monast Angl. Millain which was more Oriental in her Customs had but 7. But one discord note we may find in the Brittish Doctrine touching persons Ecclesiastical which yet well agrees with St. Paul disallowing any to be fit guides that did not follow his example in living as he followed Christ Phil. 3.17 though not so well with Roman practice or profession where Bishops may be holy maugre all their scandals and impieties and Infallible in their monstrous errours because they sit in the Chair of St. Peter whereas in the sence of m Epist Gildas and consequently of our Brittish Church all holy Ministers are the successors of Peter in his Chair and they that are otherwise are Judas his successors being not Ministers of Christ but of the Devil and their bellies who
only is an acknowledg'd duty and an indelible behaviour and Instinct in the Souls and Consciences of Heathens as they may be satisfied at large by Seneca without fear of any Heretical Pravity But seeing it is made evident they did not receive their Religion from the Romanists but from the Brittains or Irish and Scotch of Brittish Institution and extraction and what they did receive was not Corn but Tares not sound food of the Soul but poison rather That they nevertheless against truth and modesty and Breeding are ever minding and upbraiding our English Nation with this no Courtesie of theirs or their Progenitors and calling for everlasting Tribute and perpetual obedience and subjection from us for their endless molestations and corruptions This use however may at lest be made of this their disingenuity and impatience That as on the one hand they through folly and impertinence Cancel their own supposed merits by their minding and dunning and that with such frequency and loudness enough to make men deaf with such depredations and reprisals and plagiums or Soul-stealing and other revengeful attempts and distresses upon us for want of their supposed due Rent enough to make the meekest their enemies out of Indignation being guilty thereby of an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Self-felony against themselves and their Interest overthrowing their title of Supremacy by their own Act through unskilful management so on the other it is matter of much content and gladness and ease of heart unto us that our Ancestors some descents agoe have return'd back unto them all the Errours and Superstitions we ever here received or had them thrust upon us to silence the cause if not the impudence and conscience if not the cry And if I rightly guess at the minds of our Superiours by their designes and the profession of some of our late chiefest a Dr. Hammond of Shism p. 160. Pillars we will give them leave to search every Corner of our Church and where they find any one Doctrine or Rite or Article that hath not a Brittish Apostolical stamp and mark upon it but bears the mark or Armes of the Goods and Chattels of Monk Augustine on them or any of his intruding Successors we are content for quietness sake for who can endure everlasting dunning and upbraiding and that without any cause or colour that they seise and take them to themselves with all our hearts and we shall not think our selves poorer or further from Salvation by it but pray God that they may be nearer Neither is it very advisable in them to keep such a din with the little or noe merits of their Ancestors lest they become thereby responsible in all equity for their great wrongs and mischiefs for reparations of injuries may be demanded where returnes for Courtesies cannot as it is more consonant to nature for Creatures to complain than for God to upbraid or for weak Children to cry upon the least cause than for Parents to complain for the greatest and for their monstrous pride and hypocrisie and scandalls and murthers and Schismatical usurpations and the utter destruction what in them lay which ill became Christians and Catholicks of the Ancient Orthodox Apostolical Faith among the Brittains and of the same afresh after replanted among the English or Saxons by Brittish Ministry and the Corruption of our Rites Customes Ordinations Manners with their Roman-Catholick mixtures and Superstitions The Invasion of our Brittish Sees Dignities Monasteries and Ancient Ecclesiastical endowments b Apud Usher p. 125. by our Brittish Kings though the preheminence and influence of their New See of Canterbury settled and continued here by force and Schism as to them against all Laws and Canons and Civilities and Christian same to the extinction or suppression of our Ancient Archiepiscopal Brittish Sees of London and York and St. Davids at last which kind of attempt upon their Ancient Chaire of Rome would they have brooked with patience And not rather attempted the removal or prevention by any means though indirect and Rebellious and Hellish to the endangering of all Christendom rather then fail as is too well known by experience And which further aggravates their Diabolical Impudence and unconscionable Antichristian encroachments is their pretending at last their unjust usurpations which every day and year they continued were multiplied into new wrongs by time and Age to have changed their Nature and to be become a righteous title Bonae Fidei of unquestionable Supremacy which for the oppress'd to shake off by lawful means and the miraculous assistance of Divine Providence respecting in his own time the groans and cryes of harrass'd Innocence is no less than the great Crime of Schisme and Ecclesiastical Rebellion and Pollution of our Land in departing from the Catholick Faith And that a Thief by smothering his light and holding fast his Stollen Goods against his Conscience becomes an Honest-man at last and the Honest-man a Villain for challenging or recovering his own by just and lawful means That Mahomet by so many years prescription by his Sword and Imposture hath now good right and title to his Domination and Tyranny over the Eastern Churches and that it were an ungodly Schisme in the poor Graecians to accept of any deliverance from their long and miserable slavery either from Cod or man For we do not and cannot deny Romes Intrusion and inroads upon our Brittish Church and the consequent corruption of several of our Traditions and Ancient Rites in publick at lest and for a time when they swayed our Chairs and soil'd and disturb'd our Ordinations and Successions with their Roman mixture for well it was if our Ancestors were able within door then and in their hearts to retain their Ancient Rites and principles by Orall Tradition as they term it from devout Parents to their Sons yet our Ordinations received from them in such times were as good and as valid as any they had or now have amongst themselves but we have reason to count them our ill fate and grievance for otherwise our own had continued pure and regular and Brittish from the Resurrection to this present And yet their violent Imposition of hands in those dayes in the place and right of our Brittish Bishops was their guilt not ours who resisted it while we were able and greatly rejoyce at our deliverance from it and by no means if it be Gods will would return under it any more And God measures all by the heart especially in matters of Church and Religion according to my Text it s the sincerity and untaintedness of the heart makes the best Catholick 1 Tim. 1.5 And what was done unjustly stands undone and what by force and necessity was yielded to against the heart and will was not yielded to in reason For id sit quod jure fit is a Law Maxime and Tyrants are but great Lords of Nullities by the exemption of the will and Soul from and the frown of Heaven upon all bruitish unjustice and
and consequently which none but Antichrist would invade An evil that was like to be the more mischievous because so like to spread and requiring therefore a stronger bar and remedy and watch against it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lest proud affectation of secular Grandeur and Authority creep in under a demure pretence and Cover of Sacred order and Government and we be depriv'd of our pretious Liberty by little and little and unawares unto us This being their sence 2. Their sentence and redress is to be next observ'd in four particulars 1. The Remedy it gives to the Cypriots 2. The security and Protection to all others in the like case 3. The Irreversibleness thereof by any Power 4. The grounds and reasons of it 1. It gives remedy and Restitution to the injur'd Cypriots that they should enjoy their Ancient Metropolical rights and Independancies from Antioch according to Ancient Custom and the Canons of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 safe and unviolable from all Forreign Force and Intrusion whatsoever 2. Securiry and Protection to all other Diocesses and Christian Provinces in what part soever of the World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It seeming good to this holy and great Synod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to preserve inviolable to every Province its rights and priviledges which formerly it had from the beginning according to an Ancient Custom That no Bishop beloved of God whatsoever should offer to invade the Province of another which never was before or from the beginning neither under his nor any of his Predecessor's Jurisdiction But and if any should presume to Seize or Subject the same unto them by force against their will they are hereby to restore the same 3. The perpetuity and Irreversibleness of this decree every Metropolitan being to have a Copy thereof and if any Bull or Patent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from any Prince or Patriarch should be produced by any person in wrong and derogation of this decree the whole Oecumenical and Holy Synod adjudge that Instrument 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be void and of no effect or force 4. And the ground and reason of this Canon is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That the Canons of the Fathers be not violated and made nothing off and the other evils above mentioned effectually prevented whereof all that encroach upon the Provinces of others stand guilty in the sence of this Synod And what can be more manifest to any common understanding but that the three Metropolitical Sees of Brittain are within the ●rotection of this Canon and Rome's Intrusion heer against the wills and rights of our Brittish Bishops within its stroake and censure For the pretences of Rome as Patriarch of the West or successor of St. Peter or aided by Ethelbert and others are the same in all respects with those of Antioch herein condemn'd and barr'd That our Brittish Isles made their own Ordinations amongst themselves of Ancient Custom without recourse to Rome as well as the Isles of Cyprus without recourse to Antioch appears by our Brittish Bishops contests with Augustine Synodically averring their owns rights and Customs and rejecting his Usurpations and by the confession of Pope Gregory compared with the presence of our Brittish Bishops in the Councils of the Church which proves they were Bishops and Archbishops which yet never fetch'd their Palls from Rome as he found which proves they were without dependance on that See and that upon every good reason and probability not only from their Royal Imperiall Priviledges but their undoubted Seniority being a Church in years before Rome was in its Cradle And if a Church then having Bishops and Ordinations Coaevous with it and therefore without the help of Rome Originally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which could not Act or Rule here before it self was in being Therefore the pretences and Usurpations of the Church of Rome over the Chairs of Brittain were absolute violations of the Laws and traditions of the Ancient Church mention'd by this General Council for 900 years together and still are in their hearts and minds could they but bring their designs and purposes to pass which clearly discovers one great flaw in the Art and mystery of obedience whereof they pass in the World for such admired Masters and Patrons being themselves the greatest example and president of disobedience to the undoubted Catholick Church while they press so much for the obedience of others to their Counterfeit Let them but obey the Catholick Church least they be no Church to themselves or others and we in Brittain shall never hear any more of their calls and clamours for obedience and subjection against all Law right and History and modesty The next shall be that known and famous Canon touching the several limits and Perambulations of the Ancient Chayrs of Alexandria Rome and Antioch and Jerusalem and other Metropolitan Sees in the Ancient Church being the Rule and foundation whereon the Council of Ephesus grounded their Decree and president that all might know their own Limits and enjoy their own rights and keep within their own bounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Aristenus on it Every Patriarch ought to rest sufficed with his own Priviledges and none of them to encroach upon anothers Province that was never before under him For this were to be blowen up with a desire of wordly greatness as before A Canon made for the preservation of peace and Order amongst Churches and to prevent strifes and scandalls saith another upon the same Subject But Rome will not endure to hear of any equality or exemption from its sole and Universal Soveraignty and Vice-Gerency under Christ Nor is it enough with Popes to be the first in the same rank and order which once they had while the City was Imperial as there is a Priority or Seniority amongst Dukes and Grandees for peace and order sake but they must have all their Equals to be their Subjects and the whole World but one Province and that Subject to them alone and until all be their own Peace and Order must not be And this high pretence Father'd upon Christ and St. Peter is ei●●●● true or false If true then down go all General Councils that maintain'd distinct and Independant Provinces and down goes the Immunity of our Brittish Church and any other Church whatsoever their liberties are forfeit their Charter is overthrown for if Rome be Soveraign to all then all unavoidably are Subject to Rome for to deny subjection and obedience where Supremacy is acknowleged were absurdity in reason and Rebellion in grain But if this title of Monarchy Ecclesiastical be false and groundless and arising from naught but swelling pride and carnal ambition to be greatest or at best from the Graunt of the Tyrant Phocas is is a certain Key and a manifest discovery where to find and track out Antichrist which exalts it self above every thing that is God or holy and Soveraign as we observ'd Rome before to do above God the Father Son and
Trinity of Dragon and Beast and false Prophet are as one Antichrist sending out 3 unclean spirits out of his mouth alike Revel 16.13 But the Peculiar work and Principal Charasteristical Arms of Pontifical Antichrist as the Sword was of the Turk is fire from Heaven v. 13 wherewith Elias destroyed his Enemies which kind of spirit our Saviour rebuked in his Disciples And who more at using this fire than our Popes and his Incendiaries by this they burn all Holy Christians members of Christ and Temples of the Holy-Ghost for Hereticks as they fall within their Power By this they blow up States and Kingdoms and set great Cities and all Europe from London to Hungary this day on fire if they are not belyed by this they 'l burn the Scriptures especially if Translated into Vulgar Tongues because the Rival word of God which may give them check if made so known Nor shall Christ himself escape better from their fire than his word or Servants whom in remaining Hosts each one perfect Christ to them they 'l yet burn b Innocentius 3 tius de Missa Can. Eadgari apud Lambard leges by the directions of their Rubricks and Missals out of no particular spleen or malice as in the former cases but out of fatall conformity to Prophetical descriptions to be intirely like themselves by this as a lightning or fire from Heaven which hath often dazled weak eyes they Excommunicate the remaining living body of Christ all faithful believers that bear not their v. 16 17. mark or ordination or Pall or License or Abjuration of the true Faith under the name of Heresie deserving fire And damn all Christian men and Churches to Eternal fire that are not qualified by this their mark to buy and sell v. 17. that is to be of their Antichristian factory and Communion to buy false Peace and Pardon for true Coyn and to sell their Pretious souls for a counterfeit Salvation and this Hellish Trinity Satan and the two Beasts his Vice-Roys though both the latter Proceed from the former or the Dragon who was a Murderer and a Lyer can change their properties for variety and Mahomet is as good at deceiving as at killing and the Pope as good at killing v. 15. as at deceiving The third Antichristian quality as inseparable from Satan and his Synagogue as Lying and Murdering and equally wasting and quenching the heart and Conscience Hosea 4.11 is that of Insatiable uncleanness and Carnal Impurity The Holy and the Counterfeit-Catholick-Church do both discover respectively the holiness or the impurity of the Ghost or Spirit that rules them in the chastity or Impurity of their Disciples Neither is Rome out-done by the Turk herein in Satanical compliance nor their Licensed Stews short of his Seraglioes nor their loose and Infamous privacies of the more regular of the two Mahometan Polygamy If all other signs had been wanting the strange and unexemplyfied excess of this filthyness of late in this sober Nation to the Astonishment of all Christians had been a sufficient discovery and Alarm of Popery advancing towards us as the motion of waves of the approach of a Whale And the true cause of this Heathenish degeneracy amongst Christians which Infallibly excludes from Heaven and Salvation 1 Cor. 6.9 though not from the Bosom of the Church of Rome lyes principally and solely in the want of giving our hearts to Christ whereby Christ becomes one with us for They that so put on Christ Crucifie the flesh with its lusts and affections which are so abominably unsuitable to their new Character and person they now sustain as Christians Gal. 5.24.4 27. 1 Cor. 6.15 But they that put on the Pope only by resignation of will and judgement can live in such pollutions nevertheless as not unusuall with Popes by the Confession of their best Historians The last Antichristian Satanical mark so opposite and contrary to all heart and Conscience as I shall chuse to Instance shall be that stile and attribute of The Accuser of the Brethren Revel 12.10 and false approvers of themselves by Consequence The Turks count Christians but as doggs and themselves as holy Musulmans or Royal Priests to God The Papist is as good at calumny against his betters and for the favouring his own party though with greater defiance to Truth and Conscience in all probability than the Turk where is there greater honour and Eulogies bestowed than they do on the chief promotors and supporters of their Carnal Synagogue Holy Fathers Confessors most Reverend Jesuites eminent Cardinalls Holy and Infallible Popes S. R. Ecclesia and the Apostolick See Rex Catholicus Christianissimus c. Commemorations Canonizations into Saints and Intercessors who better at disgraceing and sugmatizing them that cross their Trade and Idols who let them be the most holy the most excellently Learned and Orthodox persons in the World if any way hinderers of their Diana's Worship shall deserve no better Titles than of Hereticks and Schismaticks and Devils and Reprobates and Dunces and Fools and Madmen and Distracted and Possessed and what not worthy to be destroyed by Temporal and Eternal death where they may be reach'd by either Law and Power or else by poinyards and poisons and Massacres c. Can any that have the charity of Christ in their hearts Mat. 5.44 1 Pet. 2.23 be of such a Malignant Spirit or is not this with the rest a convincing Argument that they are not a Church that belongs to Christ who loves and blesses enemies but to Satan rather who hath his name and stile of Devil from Calumny whom they are more Industrious to resemble in all Antichristian practice And these are our Roman-Catholicks which is the title they so much arrogate and fancy to themselves more than of Roman-Christians or Roman-Orthodox which they more forbear and wave But why Catholick and why Roman which looks so like a contradiction If they affect the stile of Catholick in an Ancient sense in use among Christians of old though not the first whereby any Orthodox Church of any petty City or Countrey as well as of the greatest was call'd the Catholick Church of such a particular place as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Epiphan Praefat. Anchorat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For though it were particular as to place as at Suedri or Philippi or Athens or Rome or London yet Catholick and General nevertheless it was for its Doctrine and exact agreement with the Apostolical Christian Church throughout the World as every drop of clear and homogeneous water is equally water with the whole Ocean but so is not water and mud of heterogeneous mixture If this be their meaning we accept of this sense and measure for so they must not expect to be Catholick alone any more and their foolish distinction falls yea such Churches only that are Apostolical and Scriptural in their Doctrines can be call'd Catholick of Right and such as have most of the muddy heterogeneous mixtures of human Tradition and
p 70. Magistrates have no Supremacy here neither Bishops and Curates who are only Ministers and Stewards p. 71 102. The Harmony between Christ in the hearts of Preachers and of Hearers p. 72. The conscience of another is not our Rule but our own p. 72. Every conscience is to judge for it self of truths and guides p. 73. So many Souls so many Kingdoms Ibid. Atheism destroys God 〈…〉 himself but in the soul of the Atheist Ibid. God 〈…〉 … rserces and consciences p. 74. The Apostles app … d to conscience in every man which the Pope would ●eign suppress p. 73. 74. How Rome invades Christ's Soveraignty herein and neglects its own duty p. 74. 75 76 77 78. SECT III. Christian Kings are the Sovereigns of the out-side of the Church though not of its inside p 78.79 And Vicars of Christ in their Territories and Fathers of the Church p. 80. The outside of the Church is secular p. 82. 83. Of the Pope's encroachment upon Kings both in their Temporal are Ecclesiastical Supremacy p. 83. 84. seq Several Roman Catholick Gentlemen disclaim the first p. 85 an address to such p. 86. The Pope hath no Ecclesiastical Supremacy in Brittain but only our Kings and they as Christians p. 87. seq The Pope Originally had no Supremacy over the Church of Millain so near his own doors p. 88. The Original Supremacy of Christian Bishops sets as do the stars in the day when Kings become Christian like the Suns rising p. 88. 89. Yet keep still in the Firmament and shine in the day in case of an Eclipse or Antichristian Apostacy p 89. A soul depriv'd of Superiours is under Christ alone Ibid. Great Loyalty and disloyalty in chusing right or wrong Soveraigns p. 90 and the errour therein greater or lesser Ibid. Instances of Gods mind that men should be under Rulers of their own flesh and bloud rather then under Forreigners p. 91. Mitre Subject to the Crown not the Crown to the Mitre p. 93. And St. Peter no where more abused than at Rome ibid. p. 191 Kings loose no Supremacy or Prerogative in becoming Christians p. 95. Kings Supreme in the Jewish Church p. 95. 96. seq and by consequence in the Christian which is New Israel p. 94. 100. Of the Limits of Temporal and Spiritual Governours and whether Bishops are greater in their chairs or Pulpits p. 102 seq of maintenance due to the Clergy and the difference of t●mes and dispositions when God or the World is in the heart p. 107. seqq How great a b●essing from God Kings are to moderate between the excesses of the Roman Clergy and the defects of Protestant Laity p. 112. In the World there is difference of degrees in the Church all are fellow-servants under Christ their Lord. p. 113. How St. Ambrose and Theodosius did both the parts of Servants in suspending and submitting Ibid. Kings have power to regulate the outside of the Church And the Divine Law commands obedience to their human p. 114. 115. The manifest difference between the Internals where Christ alone is Legislator and the Externals of Religion where Kings have Jurisdiction p. 115 116. Romish Arts to wrest the Ecclesiastical Supremacy from our Kings p. 116. 117. seq Deserters of Romish errours though but in part are not to be discouraged p 118. Israel could not be cursed nor weakned but by dividing them from God How Balaams method hath been used in England p. 119. The true recreation of Princes p. 120. 121. SECT IV. The sum of Rome's pretences and Brittain's defences being the chief heads of the subsequent discourse p. 123. seq The Brittish Church proved to be Ancienter than the Roman from the confession of their own Writers and by better Arguments p. 127. and how many years Senior to it p. 136. The Gospel planted at Rome from Brittain before the Arrival of the Apostles or any other Christians and the tradition of Joseph of Arimathea corroborated p. 312. 313. Of precedence claimed in General Councils by our Embassadors upon this Seniority p. 1●9 SECT V. Scotland a gainer in their Faith by Dioclesian's persecution here p. 136. Ireland and Germany by the Saxon Invasion p. 141 Sect. 10. The Brittains ever kept their Religion amidsts Persecutions and Invasions p. 423. and propagated it a broad amongst their Enemies p. 137. 138. The yoak and errours Rome thrust upon us were restored to it again at the Reformation when we were at the worst we were as Orthodox as Rome which corrupted us p. 142. SECT VI. Eleutherius his Epistle pre-supposes Christian Religion to be in this Isle p. 143. It is not in the least probable the Brittains received any Baptism fro● Rome why p. 144. 145. Rome vainly ambitious of the Honour of Baptizing the first Christian King and Emperour p 146. Of Geoffry of Monmouth and the Welsh M. S. whence he Translated his History both corrupted by the Arts of Rome p. 146. Buchanan's zeal in vindicating the same of King Arthur p. 147. K. Lucius very probably was Baptized by Timotheus the Son of Claudia Ruffina p. 147. and of her Brittish name The Religion of Rome to be suspected why an Intimation to the Irish p. 149. 150. SECT VII The Scottish and Pictish Churches agreed with the Brittish in all Doctrines and traditions and opposition to Rome's Innovations p. 151. The Brittish Church was Scriptural in its Doctrine Episcopal in its Government Oriental in its traditions p. 152. Whether Popery be Hên-Fsydh p. 15● Abbot Dunawd and the Brittish Clergy give a meeting to Monk Augustine p. 153. Christs example and submission to Superiours and General Councils a further Rule with the Brittains p. 153. 155. Of Pelagius or Morgan His heresie spread here not by him but from France Lupus and Germanu● serviceable by ●heir Neutrality to suppress it amongst the Brittains remaining in England under the Saxons p. 157. but fully suppressed in Wales by St. David p. 157. The Easter Controversie consisted of two parts Doctrinal and Astronomical How days and months are and are not to be observed by Christians p. 158. 159. Easter the first Lords day other Sundays 52. Octaves thereof by Christ's Institution p. 160. 161. Wednesdays and Fridays fasts upon the score of the Passion as Easter and Sundays Festivals upon the score of the Resurrection p. 161. The Church or New Israel bound by the decalogue and other reasons to observe these Christian Sabbaths Ibid. Why the Eastern Churches conform'd with the Jews in the observation of Easter p. 162. The stiffness of the Roman to the contrary proves their first Popes to have derived their succession from St. Paul and not from St. Peter p. 162. 163. A conjecture of the true reason of the Roman fast on Saturday contrary to Catholick tradition Ibid. The Bishops of Jerusalem had more to pretend from Antiquity to be Judges of Controversies in the Christian Church than Rome p. 164. Brittain more a follower of St. Peter and the East than Rome p. 165 Constantine in
General Council regulates the Controversie about Easter for Peace and Unity against great traditions p. 16● The Brittains left their Eastern observation of Easter in submission to the Council of Arles and Nice p. 164. 166. The difference between Rome and Brittain about Easter at Augustine's entrance was Astronomical not Doctrinal like our sti●o novo veteri saving that the Monk and his party pretended the Golden Number to have been a tradition of St. Peter p. 167. The like Ignorance Parallel'd in a modern Enthusia●● p. 168. Rome justifies the old Church of Brittain to have been Orthodox throughout because it had no more to except against it in Doctrine but this Easter difference p. 169. The Brittish Church took the 7 Churches of Asia for her Pattern in the first division of her Sees according to some of the Heathen Flamins and Archflamins according to others not so probable p. 170 All holy and good Bishops were Successors of St. Peter and all Carnal and corrupt Successors of Judas in the Brittish estimation p. 171. An account of several Ancient Customes and Traditions of the Brittish Church differing from the Roman and agreeing with the Catholick Church And Rome condemned in her Clergy and Laity in General Councils for not observing some of them 172. Of Wednesday and Friday in the Holy Week and their Brittish names and Grawys or Le●t ibid. Of their Plygains or solemn Carolls on Christs Nativity befor break of day still continued p. 173. What honour they had for the Cross how they Prayed for the dead their great beliefs of the Immortality of the Soul and detestation of lying ibid. Of their Eremites and Nunneries Their Monks followed the Rule of Aegypt and the East p. 173 174. Their Clergy might marry p. 174. Their Bishops were chosen by Clergy and people their Archbishops by their Kings and Synods and Parliaments p. 169 And never sought to Rome for Palls or Ordinations p. 175 They differed from Rome in their Tonsu●es if they had any at all p. 174. Their singular esteem of Episcopal blessing or Confirmation p. 174. 175. Their resort to the East and Jerusalem whith●r St. Helena went and Pelagius and St. David and Te●law and Paternus and the three last ordained Bishops by that Patriarch p. 176 177. The Antient Greek Fathers are Records of our Brittish Ecclesiastical Antiquities why p. 177 178. The Homilitical customes of the Brittish Church p. 178. Their respect and Loyalty to their Princes whom yet they reprov'd for their scandals and of the Brittish Valour for their Countrey and from what Principle and a Passage from K. Henry 2d to the Emperour of Constantinople concerning them p. 178 179 180. The respect of Brittish Princes and Gentry towards their Clergy p. 181 182. Of the Brittish Charity in Commerce with one another with an account of Syberw q. d. ys berw vald● Scaturiens Effluens and ansyberw wherein they plac'd all practical Religion and irreligion to this day and of their Cymortha's prohibited by King Henry 4th what they were with application to some of our Brittish Gentry p. 182 ●83 seqq The present Church of England profesies the same with the Ancient Brittish the people are more the same Nation than Italians are Old Romans p. 186. The Romanists have no colour to impute Schism to the Brittish Church nor to ask where was our Religion before Luther p. 187. The character of the false Apostles agrees with Modern Rome p. 189 190 198. Communion with the Church of Rome when best unsuccessful to Brittain p. 190 191. The Romanists shook off the Greek Exarchs their lawful Governours by unlawful means and blame us for doing the same to unlawful Governours by lawful means 192 193. The Brittains more offended with the Romanists their fellow Christians for Robbing them of their Sees than with the Pagan Saxons who rob'd them of their Countrey p. 193 194. SECT VIII Monk Augustine's Learning and Principles and Elocution for his Work and his Cases of Conscience sent to Rome whether a woman being with Child might be Baptiz'd c. p 195. seq Of his direction to purifie Idol Temples with Holy Water and the consequences of this errour p 197. His Elocution p. 201 His method of Propagation combination with Heathens against Christians false Miracles Massacres p 203 219. seq London averse to him and his followers why p. 205 206. His Miracles and his Companions p. 207 209. His exceptions against the Brittains 209 210. The Calumny rais'd against the Brittains of denying the Gospel to the Saxons confuted p. 210. seq And how the snare was laid p. 225. Of Gavel kind or Gavel Kent the Tenure of Kent p. 217. Of Christ-Church Canterbury an Old Church of the Brittains and Bede's partiality in concealing the Conversion of Kentish Saxons by Brittish Clergy p. 218. Who were permitted after the first storm was over to continue in England till Augustine's Arrival p. 215. Romanists Schismatics here unavoidably p. 220 221. An account of the reason of Augustine's unnatural Combination with Heathens against Christians in a Brittish Proverb p. 221 222. There was no need of Augustine's coming hither p. 223. What had been his duty p. 224. Empire and profit was Rome's design here not Religion p. 225 223. The Monks of Bangor murder'd by Augustine's procurement p. 226. seq The Brittish Princes reveng'd their deaths p. 228. The effects of an Idol set up in the heart in Christ's stead p. 229. The English cannot take Augustine for their Apostle why p 230 203. SECT IX The Gospel from its first planting never fail●d in Wales Cornwall Cumberland Scotland p. 232 423. Conquerours destroy the Nobles and Gentry not the Communalty p. 233 The Trunk and body of the Nation was alwayes Brittish under Roman Saxon and Norman Conquerours Ibid. The Mont●ossian Family of Brittish descent p. 234 How several parts were yielded to the Saxons upon terms p. 235. 236. 237. A Brittish Church in England under the Saxons p. 238. 239 c The Brittish tongue preserved amongst the Communalty in Wales upon the score of the Gospel p. 240 243. A Proposal of charity ●or Brittish Servants in London p. 243 244. The Saxons forward to Unite with the Brittains by Intermarriages p. 244. seqq Why more of Brittish extraction in England than of any other p. 247. more discernible in the nobility and Royal bloud p. 248 249. Invasions compared to inundations and feavers how p. 249. 250 English can succeed in Brittish rights and exemptions as well as Goths and Vandals in St. Peter's Roman Chair p. 251 252. How the English are bound in Honour as well as interest to defend the old Brittish rights p. 252. and especially our Princes p. 253. The precedent discourse summed in the words of an Anonymous writer p. 254. Some Learned men conceived not the English so safe from the pretences of Rome about their faith as the Brittains in Wales but without ground p. 254. 255 A great or most part of the English Nation converted to