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A91228 A new discovery of some Romish emissaries, Quakers; as likewise of some popish errors, unadvisedly embraced, pursued by our anticommunion ministers. Discovering the dangerous effects of their discontinuing the frequent publick administration of the Lords Supper; the popish errors whereon it is bottomed; perswading the frequent celebration of it, to all visible church-members, with their free-admission thereunto; and prescribing some legal regal remedies to redress the new sacrilegious detaining of it from the people, where their ministers are obstinate. / By William Prynne of Swainswicke Esquire, a bencher of Lincolns Inne. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1656 (1656) Wing P4017; Thomason E495_2; ESTC R203274 40,067 59

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granted out of the Kings Bench to restore them to the possession of their places as t is resolved in Sir James Baggs case Trin. 13 Jacobi Cooks 11. Report f. 93. c. in Audlyes Case Pas. 2. Caroli B. R. in Bostons case the case of an Alderman of Coventry Mr. Manniptons case Recorder of Launceston in Cornwell and sundry others in King Charles his reign Therefore by like Law Justice Reason a like writ of Restitution will lye for all those Parishioners to restore them to the frequent use and actual enjoyment of the Lords Supper who have been injuriously unchristianly and sacrilegiously without any Legal sentence of Excommunication for any Legal cause kept from it by their imperious Ministers against the Lawes of God and the Realm It being resolved in * Bagges case That the Court of Kings Bench hath authoritie not only to correct judicial Errors in proceedings but other Errors and Misdemeanors e●trajudicial tending to the breach of the Peace or Oppression of the Subjects or to the raising of Faction Controversie Debate or to any manner of Misgovernment so that No wrong or injury whether publike or private may be done but that it shall be there Reformed or punished by due course of Law I find in the d Register of Writs a recital in a Consultation that the Archdeacon of Norwich antiently in his Spiritual Court sued a Parishioner ex Officio for substracting his accustomed Oblations at Easter Christs Nativity and All Saints c. Et viaticum quod a singulis Catholicis semel in Anno recipi debet cessante legitimo impedimento per multos annos recipers recu●abit in perniciosum e●eniplum al●orunr Who procuring a Prohibitien to stay this sute and prevent the corporal punishment to be inflicted on him for these Offences pro salute animae Thereupon the King granted a special consultation to the Archdeacon to proceed in this cause notwithstanding the Prohibition to punish this Notorious delinquent who refused to pay his oblati●ns and to receive the Lords Supper for many years which * ought to be received by all Christians once a year at least to the pernicious example of others Therefore by like Justice now these Ecclesiastical Courts are suppresed ought special Writs to be issued out of our Temporal Courts to correct punish all such Ministers who to the pernicious example of others the scandal of our Church Religion and prejudice of their peoples souls for sundry Months and years together have peremptorily refused to administer the Lords Supper to their Parishioners though importuned by them to do it and likewise to punish all such Parishioners who have obstinately Schismatically or prophanely refused or neglected to receive it in such places where it hath been duly administred And that e by the very Statutes of 1 Ed. 6. c. 1. 1 Eliz. c. 2. 13 Eliz. c. 12. 3 Jac. ch. 3 4 5. Which I trust will henceforth be put in vigorous execution against all such obstinate offenders who shall persevere in the Sacrilegious Non-administration or impious Non-reception of the holy Communion after these my weak and other pious Mens endeavours to convince them of and reclame them from these their Unchristian Practices I shall conclude with that of f S. Hilary Si non sunt tanta peccata ut Excommunicetur quis non se debet à medicina corporis et sanguinis Domini seperare and with g Capitularia Caroli et Ludovici Imperat●r lib. 7. c. 371. Placuit ut omnes qui Ecclesiam Intrant nisi à suo fuerint Excommun●cati Sacerdite communicent Si qui autem hoc facere noluerint tamdiu à Communione et Christianorum consortio habeantur alieni quamdiu per satisfactionem Ecclesiae à proprio mereantur per manus impositionem reconciliari Ep●scopo sanct●ae resti●ui Communioni And that of the whole h Council of Agathen about 441. years after Christ Seculares qui in Natali Domini Pasca Pentecoste non communicaverint and by consequence Clerici qui tunc Eucharistiam Secularibus non administraverint Catholin non credantur nec inter Catholicos habeantur but ought to be reputed as meer Heathens Publicans Excommunicate persons unworthy the name of Christs Ministers or Christians Swainswicke July 25. 1656. WILL PRYNNE FINIS ERRATA IN the Title page line 16. regal read real p. 1. l. 5. r. Reformers p. 21. l. 33. or r. of p. 23. l. 3. Roman●● p. 25. l. 31. two r. ten p. 39. l. 11. form r. from p. 4● l. 4. r. 82. p. 47. l. 3. singing r. fingering l. 32. satagant Margin p. 21. l. 8. injured r. maried p. 35. l. 17. Independency p. 39. l. 39. Opmerus a Athanasius epist. ad solitariam vitam agentes See Dr. Bilson his True Difference between Christian subjection and unchristian rebellion part 2. p. 182 183. b Hilarius ad Constantium l. 3. c Hilarius l. 1 Contra Constantium d Variae Historiae l. 5. c. 13. e ●am. 1. 8. f Iude 12 13 16 19. S g 1 John 4. 6. h Isay 19. 13 14. * Non Doctores sed seductores non Pastores sed Impostores Bernard i 1 Iacobi c. 1 2. 3. Iac. c. 1. k Mat. 12. 25. 26. Gal. 5. 15. l In my Cozens his Cozening Devotions Q●enchcole The Popish●Royal Favorite Romes Master-piece Hidden works of Darkness brought to publike Light Canterburies Doom Speech in Parliament M●mento● A Gospel plea Ius Patronatus Epistle to a Seasonable Legal Vindication c. A New Discovery of Free-State Tyranny The Quakers unmasked m See Dr. Iohn White his way to the True Church and Preface before it My Quakers unmarked n See Lambert f. 195. 333. 416. Da●●on p. 124 115. Comple●t Justice p. 223. o Heveden Annalium pars post●rio● p. 601 602. Lambardi Archaion Spelmanni Concil. p. 619 620. See 8 H. 6. c. 1. Rastall Parl. 12. p See Daltons Iustice of Peace c. 38. q See My Royal Popish Favorite Romes Master-piece Hidden Works of Darkness brought to publike Light Canterburies D●om r My Speech in Parl. Memento Epistle to my ●us Patronatus And Historical Legal Vindication s See a New Discovery of Free-State Tyranny t See the Beacous ●●red u A Collection of all Publike Ordinances p. 424 425. * Fratri * Frater x My Q●a●ersunm s●●ked Edit. 2. y The Newcastle Ministers Mr. Farmer Mr. Baxter and others * Hidden works of darknesse brought to publike light p. 93. 100 101 to 214. 218 to 252. * Fratri z See Declaration de Pere Basil A Sedane 1639. p. 116 * Let those who use these Ceremonies still observe it * That is Frater Daniel à Sancto Johanne St. John Minorum Provincialis a See Gratian de Consecrat distinct 1 2. Summa Angelica Rosell● Tit. Absolutio Confessio Missa c. Bochellus Decreta Eccles. Gall l. 1. Tit. 6 7. l. 2. Ti● 7. b See Summa Angelica Rosella Tit. Ordo Bochellus Decret. Eccles. Gall l. 3. Tit.
of desolation in which they run on headlong without deliberation discretion fear or wit 1. It is worth our special observation that in m Lancashire and those other Northern parts where Popish Priests Friers Recusants formerly most abounded there our last newest up-start Sect of Quakers first sprung up and now most of all abound sending out their Popish Romish Emissaries thence into all other parts of the Realm to seduce the people and openly to revile traduce affront disturb our Ministers in their Churches Pulpits Houses in going to returning from their Churches and in the open streets in a more insolent manner and with greater impunity than ever the Popish Priests Friers or Papists in those parts affronted reviled disturbed them heretofore when they were most countenanced or connived at by our late Kings or their Officers being encouraged thereunto by many in greatest Authority in those parts of which I have seen lat● sad complaints in Letters of Ministers thus insufferably abused disturbed daily by them to their great vexation not only against n the late Statute of 1 Mariae c. 3. but the antient Fundamental Laws of England before the Conquest o presented to William the Conqueror himself upon Oath by the famous Grand E●quest of 12 of the principal men chosen out of every County and ratified by him i● Parliament in the 4th year of his reign providing for the peace and quiet of the Ministers and people too against all affronts and disturbances both in their going to continuance in and returning from their Churches or Synods as well as to our Parliaments and other Courts of Justice still in full Legal vigour by which all such disturbers may and ought to be fined imprisoned upon conviction according to the quality of their offences as well as p other disturbers infringers of the publike Peace and bound both to the Peace and good behaviour for the future ere released with sufficient sureties 2ly It is remarkable that these New Quakers were sent from those Northern Counties into other quarters of the Kingdom two by two at first no doubt by the direction of their Popish Provincial just as the Franciscan Friers are sent out by their Provincial In the q years 1638 1639 and 1640. there were sundry Franciscans with whole swarms of Jesuits Benedicti●s and other Friers sent from forein parts into England Scotland Ireland Virginia St. Christophers and other English Plantations to reduce the people back to Rome towards which we were then running post The Original Instruments of some of their Missions with sundry of their Letters Papers under their own hands and s●a●s relating their intentions proceedings seised in the Capucins Cell ad●oyning to the late Queens Chappel at Somerset-house and in Mary-land by a Sea-Captain my Client where the Jesuites erected a New Colledge and Society the whole History whereof and of their proceedings in those parts was comprised in their Letters Gods providence brought into my hands when they and their seduced instruments were most busie in reforming new-modelling our Church Religion Parliaments Realms Government after the prescribed patterns of Robert Parsons the Jesuit Thomas Campanella the Frier and Richelieu the French Cardinal as I have r elsewhere demonstrated beyond contradiction The chiefest of these Instruments Letters Papers of great concernment to our Church State Religion I intended long since to have published But s Jo. Bradshaw and his Whitehall Associats out of their transcendent zeal to our Religion and Republike in the end of June 1650 by special warrants directed to Soldiers plundred me of those all my other Papers Letters Writings Records in my Study at Lincolns I●ne and at Swainswicke which they could seise on and then shut me up close Prisoner under strictest armed Guards in 3. remote Castles near 3. whole years without any particular cause then or since expressed or the least hearing or examination of me only to hinder my Discoveries and publications of this Nature whiles these Romish Emissaries in the mean time wandred freely up and down throughout our Dominions without restraint t published many thousands of Popish heretical blasphemous New Books and some of them were Souldiers in pay in their very Guards no doubt to help extirpate Popery Superstition Heresie Schism and for the Preservation Defence and Reformation of the Protestant Religion the preservation of the Rights and Priviledges of Parliament the Liberties of the Kingdom t●e Honour Happinesse Defence and Preservation of the Kings Majesty and his Posterity according to the u Tenor of the Solemn League and Covenant the quite contrary way and promoting their New Engagement diametrically repugnant thereunto Yet notwithstanding all their diligent Searches by Gods providence they left one of those Original Popish Missions in Parchment under Seal undiscovered which I lately found in my Study at L●●colns Inne whereby two Franciscans were sent by their Provincial of Bri●ain in the year 1639. to St. Christophers and other Western Ilands where we had plantations who ended their progresse at Somerset-house where this Instrument was seised which beca●se it may give some light towards the Discovery of our Quakers Missions in like manner two by two I shall here pri●4t verb●●tim out of the Original in my custody seen by many of my Friends Admodum Venerabili Patri * F Hugoni Ancenisiensi Ordinis Fratrum Minorum Sancti Francisci Capucinorum Sacerdoti * F R●phael Nannetensis ejusdem Ordinis et In Provincia Britanni● Provinc●alis licet immeritus Salutem In eo qui est vera Sa●us CUm divino incensus amore et animarum Salutis sollicitudine pulsus ex hac nostra Britanniae Provincia ad Insulas Occidentales per longa maris pericula sis vela facturus ut illius regionis populos in umbra mortis sedentes in ●ucem veritatis Christianae omni cum studio adducere valeas Nobisque ex regulae Seraphyci Patris Francisci praescripto incumbat de mittendorum idonietate judicare et à sancta Sede sit Nobis concessum quos ad tale Apostolicum munus obeundum dignos censuerimus illuc dirigere Te cujus Pietas et fervor animi animarumque Zelus Nobis innotuit ad id munus cum salutaris obedientiae merito et RR. PP. Definitorum applausu ad Insulam Sancti Christopheri Martiniam aut aliam Insulam Occidentalem Ibique commorandi si opus ●nerit Confessiones excipiendi caeteraque tui muneris Apostolici Officia exercendi donec per Nos vel Successorem nostrum tibi aliter innotuerit Vna cum V. P. F. Epiphanio Alenconiensi in nomine Domini mittimus et deputamus Ut autem dignè quantum fierr poterit in tam celebri Missione peragenda te geras omnibus facultatibus per nostra Privilegia concessi●● gaudere atque uti in quantum se extendit nostra authoritas libenter tibi concedimus Monentes ●e●ut cum omni studio vigil●●●ia zelo alacritate ac fidei