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A69617 Two arguments in Parliament the first concerning the cannons, the second concerning the premunire vpon those cannons / by Edward Bagshawe, Esquire. Bagshaw, Edward, d. 1662. 1641 (1641) Wing B401; ESTC R16597 30,559 46

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Lawneston in Cornewall before Roger Loveday and Walter de Wyburne These two were to enquire of Walter Bishop of Exeter for drawing the Kings Subjects into his Court and holding plea de debitis catallis quae non sunt de Testamento Matrimonio and for making them enter into bond and a new Oath quod sibi in omnibus adharebunt per omnia such another new fangled Oath as was in the late Cannons and this is in the Record alledged to be in lasionem Coronae exhaeredationem depauperationem manifestam quae ulterius sustinere nolumus nec debemus and it was adjudged that the Bishop should for this offence make satisfaction to the King 21. Edw. 1. Par. Rolls pl. 17. m. 3. indors Jo Archbishop of Yorke excommunicated two of the Bishops of Durhams servants named William Willicon and John Rowman for keeping possession of some of the lands of the Bishops of Durham to which the Archbishop pretended a title This being a high offence against the Stat. of Circumspecte agatis newly granted to the Clergy but a little before received this Judgement in Parliament First That the Bishop should be imprisoned Secondly Should make a submission to the King and Thirdly Should pay 4000. Marks fine which was a mighty summe whenas in those dayes the price of an Oxe was but 5. sh as appeares in the end of the 25. cap. of the Stat. of Westm ' 2. made 13. Edw. 1. tit assize Fourthly When the Clergy would take warning by none of these examples the Kings of England were forced to make these sharpe Lawes of Premunire that I mentioned before and to say to them in the language of Salomon to rayling Shimei for so was the Cannon Law to the Kings of England * 2 Kin. 2. keepe at home in your owne place if once you passe over the brooke Kidron your blood be upon your owne head So the Kings of England spake by their Lawes to the Clergy Keepe within your owne bounds given you by the Lawes of England if once you passe those bounds and trench upon the prerogative of the Crowne and liberties of the people your blood be upon your owne heads For that was the price of a premunire in those daies for untill 5o. Eliz. it was lawfull for any man to kill one that was attainted in a Premunire as it was to kill a Wolfe or a wild Dog for saith our Law a man attainted in a Premunire did caput gerere lupinum but now by that mercifull Stat. of 5. Eliz. cap. 1. it is unlawfull for any to kill a man attainted in a Premunire and so I conclude the second part of the division I come now to the third which is the maine and principall point of this Case namely to shew the ground and reasons of Law why the Clergy have in this particular case in making Cannons and forcing the execution of them upon the people by the censures of the Church incurred a Premunire which Grounds of Law are three First Ground is this Clergie-men which only by Law have a spirituall Jurisdiction if they shall exercise a Jurisdiction within the Kingdome which only belongs to the Kings temporall Courts and not to their ecclesiasticall Courts they doe an act herein against the Kings Supremacy and Royall Prerogative and so incurre a Premunire The Bookes in our Law to prove this ground are many which for brevity sake I will only quote the authorities of Law without putting the Cases at large because I have much more to say V. N. Br. 152.5 Edw. 4. fob 6.11o. Hen. 7. Bro. pram 12.44o. Ed. 3. fo 36o. 15o. Hen. 7. per Fineux 9. Edw. 4. D. St. lib. 2. cap. 24. cap. 32. The Reasons of this ground are three reason 1 By this meanes an act is done against Royall Majesty that is saith the Booke 5. Edw. 4. fol. 6. against the Common Law wherein is to be noted that there is a mutuall dependance betweene the Kings Prerogative and the Common Law that to violate the Common Law is to doe an act against the Kings prerogative and to violate the Prerogative is to doe an act against the Common Law with this agrees King James in an excellent Parliament speech of his Anno 1609. Wherein he takes an occasion to magnifie the Common Law as most beneficiall to his Prerogative and to despise it saith he is to despise the Crowne 2. Reason is given by D. St. lib. 2. cap. 32 that when debts and trespasses and such other temporall matters are handled in the spirituall Courts the King looseth his fines and amercements and such other duties due to him upon originall writs of Debt Trespass● c. 3. Reason is given by the Stat. of 25. Edw. 1. cap. 4.34 Ean 1. cap. 6. by which Stat. Magna Charta is appointed to be read in all Cathedrall Churches twice every yeare and excommunications are then solemnly to be denounced against all infringers of the same now there is no such infringment of liberty as to draw the subject into the Spirituall Courts by Cannons made by them contrary to Law and the liberty of the Subject graunted to them by that great Charter But the Rule is longum iter per praecepta breve per exempla I will therefore give you some examples and presidents Three against Bishops and two against Convocations themselves in the point of Praemuniries presi 1 The first is Hill 25. Hen. 8. Rot. 15. Cor. Rege Richard Nix his Case the blind Bishop of Norwich who for citing ex officio Richard Cockerall Major of Thetford into his Court for taking a presentment of a Jury in the Majors Court who found that by an antient custome and usage none ought to be sued out of the Deanary of Thetford for any ecclesiasticall matter and that if any did sue any Citations elsewhere he was to pay a noble For receiving this presentment the Major was sued in the Bishops Court for which Hales then the Kings Atturney did prosecute the Bishop in a premunire of which he was attainted part of whose fine did goe to the glasing of the windowes of the Kings Colledge Chappell in Cambridge 2. President is Trin. 36. Hen. 8. Rot. 9. Cor ' Rege Anthony Buckley Bishop of Bangor was prosecuted in a Premunire by Whorewood the Kings Atturney generall for holding plea of right of Patronage and of the sale of Corne and graine sold to Rice Ween John ap Hugh and Tho. ap Hoell and divers others for 21 lb. upon severall specialties which are matters only triable in the Kings Temporall Courts did likewise incurre a Premunire and was thereupon attainted and his lands and goods forfeited 3. President was likewise in the Case of another Bishop of Norwich called William Bateman who meerely for visiting the Abbey of S. Edmundsbury discharged antiently by divers Charters of Episcopall visitations the Abbot thereof being mitratus Abbas was for this offence fined to the King in 30. talents of gold which amounted to
and pleasure with a proviso contained in the said Commission that the said Cannons should not be repugnant to the Rubricks in the booke of common-Prayer the 39. Articles nor to the Doctrine order and Ceremonies of the Church The like Commission went to the Arch-bishop of Yorke In which Commission of 12. May there was an expresse Revocation and making void of the Commission of 15o. Aprilis So that the Commission of 15. Aprilis being determined in Law by the Parliament to which it referred as likewise by the Commission of 12. May which absolutely revoked it All the Cannons that were made and now printed were made out of Parliament and so consequently out of Convocation and meerly by the Commission of 12. May. The 30. June following comes the Kings Letters Patents of Confirmation of these Canons made by the Commission of 12. Maij in which Letters Patents he doth in expresse words both give his Royall assent to the Cannons and ratifies and confirmes them according to that forme of the said Statute or Act of Parliament of 25. Hen. 8. Now that Statute doth only give power to the King to assent unto and confirm Cannons made in Convocation and therfore there being no Cannons made in Convocation but afterward the assent and confirmation of things not then in being must needs be void for in our Law confirmare is firmum facere which presupposeth an entity or being of the thing that is to be made firme for ex nihilo non fit quid saith the Philosopher And therefore the foundation failing on which the confirmation should worke doth cause it therby to be absolutely void according to that rule of Law Sublato fundamento destruitur opus And so I conclude this second point also that the Authority which should give life and being to these Cannons is void in Law The third and last point is this Point admitting that the Clergy had power and lawfull authority to make these Cannons whether the said Cannons be not void in Law for the matter contained in them and I thinke they are in that they are against the Lawes and Statutes of the Realme and so contrary to the laid proviso in the Statute of 25. Hen. 8. In the debate wherof I will first consider of the Cannons primae Classis 2. Of the Oath contained in the sixt Cannon 3. Of the Benevolence granted by the Clergy and contained in the second booke of Cannons all which I shall hold to be against the Laws and Statutes of the Realme Concerning the first I will only insist upon three Cannons for the rest have bin fully spoken too viz 1 12 and 13. Cannons For the first Cannon in making determinations concerning Royall power and property of goods they have done against Law and have medled with things of which they have no Conusans for the exposition of them belongs to the Judges of the Land and they have no more right to expound them then the Judges have to expound Texts of Scripture And therefore it was aptly spoken by the Atturney generall in Harrisons case who was indited in the Kings-Bench Trin. 14. Car. for calling Judge Hutton Traitor who there said that it was his opinion and the opinion of all Orthodox Divines that if the King thought he might with a safe conscience take my goods I was to let him have them and it was high Treason in me to deny him or make resistance To whom the Atturney generall replyed in these words that the Prerogative of the King and liberty of the Subject were given and defended by the Laws of the Realme and that the Judges were the expounders of that Prerogative And though the Clergy of England do seeme in this Cannon to maintaine this absolute power yet wee must know that the Kings of England never made Title to governe by it For though king James in his book of free Monarchies dives further in this point then any before him yet he determines it thus that this absolute power is onely between God and him not in relation to his people in point of their government for the same King saith in another place that a Subject of England may challenge the King in the same language as the poore widdow challenged Philip of Macedon Fac iustitiam aut ne sis Rex Par speech An. 1609. A booke condemned to the fire by both houses of Parliamēt 7 lac and then adds this That those Kings are either Tyrants or perjured that govern not according to their Law and those that perswade them otherwise are vipers and pests both to the King and Common-wealth And I have now in my hand that Kings Proclamation for the suppressing Dr. Cowels booke called The interpreter for advancing his absolute power to the overthrow of all Parliaments Concerning the 12. and 13. Cannons touching the freeing and discharging of Chancellours and Officials from executing any Excommunication in his own person or any censure against the Clergy because they are Lay-men I say that in doing and enacting this Stat 29 H 8. c 17. they have done quite contrary to an Act of Parliament still in force in taking from them this power of exercising the censures of the Church which that Statute gives them which I did looke when some Civilians now in the house should have maintained And although it were to be wished that only Clergy men should have this power of Excommunication and other Censures of the Church yet seeing an Act of Parliament hath given this power to Lay-men It is a high presumption in them to make Cannons against it Concerning the Oath mentioned in the 6 Cannon two things fall into question 1. Whether the Clergy can impose a new Oath I thinke they cannot For I hold it for a ground in Law that no Oath can be imposed upon the Subject but what is warranted either by the custome of the Realme which is no other then the common Law or els by some Act of Parliament to warrant it And herein the Clergy hath done more then the King doth at this day by his Prerogative Royall by which he governes his people and is part of the common Law and differs no more from it then pars à toto called by Bracton privilegium Regis by the Sta. of West 1. Droit du Roy by the Register Jus regium Coronae Now the King doth not by his Prerogative in any of his Commissions or Letters patents which are of greater force then Cannons impose an Oath without some Act of Parliament to warrant it As for example by the Commission of Sewers there is power to give an Oath but that is warranted by the Sta. of 23. Hen. 8. The Commission of Bankrupts gives an Oath but that is backed by the Statutes of 13. Elizab. Cap. 13. and 21. Jaco So the Commission of Charitable uses is warranted to give Oathes by the Stat. of 43. Eliz. many more instances might be given which I omit Nay the Oathes we take to the King
places cannot be heard or scarcely seene whereupon I conclude this second ground of Law that because the Clergy have done so directly against their Commission from the King they have thereby incurred a Premunire The third Ground of Law wherewith I will conclude the third part of my division is this 3 Ground The Common Law of England which as King James saith is in its own principalls the justest Law in the world should not in our case be just the Clergy themselvs being Judges if they of the Convocation should not incurre a Premunire As it is a rule in Art Contrariorum contrariaest ratio in respect of the Subject so there is another rule in Art Contrariorum eadem est ratio in respect of the Analogy and proportion for doe but observe what they doe against us in the Provinc Constitut cap. de sententia excom which is good Law with the Clergy you shall find these words Excommunicantur omnes illi qui literas impetrant à quacunque curia laicali ad impediend processum Ecclesiast Judicum in causis qua per sacros Canones ad forum Eccles pertinent Nay so high they go in their advancement of their Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction that in the said Constitutions capite de panis it doth appeare that if the King do by writ or other command call a Bishop to answer in his temporall Court and the Sheriff● execute those writs by distresse or attachment c. The King indeed is in point of good manners admonished by them 1 2 3. according to forme but if he will not then desist but in sua duritia perseverare for such rebellious words they have the King his Officers and Ministers his Mannors Castles Cities Burrows c. are hereby exposed to excommunication and interdiction which how terrible it was to the Kingdome of England may appeare in the example of King Iohn who was excommunicated and his Kingdome interdicted by his owne Bishops all the Church doores in the Realme locked up and marriages christnings and burialls denied to all his people To apply this to our case If the King and his people are thus used by the Clergy for the maintenance of their own Lawes as to exclude them from Heaven from the Church and from Salvation for so are excommunicated persons tanquam Ethnici publicani it is then most just for the King to exclude the Clergy from the protection and benefit of his Laws when they so incroach and intrench upon them according to that ancient rule of Law Frustra legis auxilium invocat qui in legem committit And so Mr. SPEAKER I have done with the third and maine part of my Diuision and come to the fourth and last which is the answer of Objections mooved principally by three learned Civilians for so I must account them Doct. Cowell in his Interpreter verbo praemunire a booke suppressed by Parliament and King Iames Proclamation but of late reprinted Doct. Cosins Deane of the Arches in the time of Queene Elizabeth in his Apology for Ecclesiasticall proceedings and Doct. Ridley vicar generall in the time of King Iames in his view of the Civill and Cannon Laws The Objections are six Fourth part ob 1 The first Objection is this the Law of England sayth Civilians doth not impute Premunire to any spirituall Judge dealing in a temporall matter but onely prohibition answ To this I answer that it is a fallacy ex ignoratione Elenchi as Logitians call it that is a meere mistake of the Question for the difference in our Law is this where the spirituall Court hath jurisdiction and where not as for example The spirituall Court hath jurisdiction of Tithes and yet if it hold plea de grossis arboribus that is of Timber-trees above 20. yeares growth contrary to the Stat. of silva caedua 45. Edw. 3. cap. 3. there a prohibition onely doth lye because the Court hath jurisdiction of Tythes but when the spirituall Court hath no jurisdiction at all as in debt trespasse c. there a premunire doth lye So is Dr. and St. which I quoted before and 24. Hen. 8. B. Prem 16. and divers other authorities in Law ob 2 It is said by the Civilians that Curia Romana aut alibi mentioned in the Statutes of Premunires which I cited before must not be meant of any Courts here in England but of the Popes Courts which he kept sometimes at Rome sometimes at Avignion in France and sometimes at Bonony in Italy and therefore must be ment of those Courts which the Pope kept beyond Sea and not at Rome answ It is a vain Objection for alibi doth not referre to the place but to the Court for whersoever the Pope is let him be at Rome at Avignion at Bonony or in England c. There is Curia Romana whersoever he is and therfore alibi must needs be ment of some other Ecclesiasticall Court then the Popes Court and so is it expounded in old N. B. fol. 152. 5. Edw. 4. fol. 6. and divers other books of Law and therefore in some of the Records which I cited before the word alibi is thus interpreted In Curia Romana aut aliqua alia Curia Christianitatis and that is certainly the meaning of the word alibi as may appeare by the pleading in the old booke of Entries 430. Praedict I. R. machinans Dominum Regem nunc coronam dignitatem suam exhaeredare cognitionem quae ad curiam Domini Regis pertinet ad aliud examen trahere for that indeed was the only mischief to draw the Kings Subjects for temporall matters to a tryall in the Ecclesiasticall Courts of which they had no cognizance ob 3 The spirituall Courts should in this case say they bee worse then an inferiour Court Baron for there no Premunire doth lye if the Lord doth hold plea of actions above 40s. answ This is another fallacy which Logicians call petitio principij a begging of the question for old Nat. B. fo 153. is to the contrary 2. Besides if the Law were otherwise yet a Court Baron is a Court of Common Law and antient and the spirituall Court is a Court of the Cannon Law and not antient ob 4 The Ecclesiasticall Courts say they are now become the Kings Courts by the Statute of 1o. Eliz. Cap. 1. as other Courts in Westminster Hall and therfore the King cannot have a Premunire against himselfe answ I deny this For they are the Kings Courts now no more then they were before for the Stat. of 1o. Eliz. did not give the King any new power but only restored the old which hee had before and this answer did Chancellour Audley give to Stephen Gardiner Bishop of Winchester who made this objection telling him withall that the Premunire was a Rod that the Common Law had to keepe the Bishops in awe and to reduce them to good order otherwise men would have no quiet for them They cannot now make this Objection because they keepe
Chart. and the many liberties which he granted to his people by the Statutes of 25. Edw. 1.33 Edw. 1. and 34. Edw. 1. as likewise by the sharpe Laws which he made against the Popes exactions by the Statute of Carliel 35. of his Raigne he was for all these rightly stiled vindex Anglicanae libertatis in doing thus he strengthened mightily his Prerogative for Prerogative and liberty are inseperable 3. Caroli Petition of Right as King CHARLES truly observes in his answer to the Petition of Right that the Prerogative is to maintain the peoples liberty and their liberty strengtheneth the Prerogative In his Parliament speech 1607. And King James his father declaring that Kings were given for the welfare of their people hath this passage If you be rich I can never be poore and if you be happy I cannot choose but he fortunate c. And these observations proved true and were fulfilled in this King For never any Prince either before or after him was more victorious and successefull then himselfe through the riches and wellfare of his people who upon all occasions aided him in his warres with their purses and fought his battels in their persons Till the 13th yeare of this King the Clergy had no jurisdiction in Ecclesiasticall causes properly allowed to them but in causes of Matrimony and Testament as may appeare by Fitz. Nat. Bre. Fo. 41. and by divers Records which I have seen about the beginning of this Kings time But in the 13th year of this King came the statute of Circumspectè agatis wherin they had Conusans of many more things as may appeare by that Law and though before this time they did attempt to put in ure their owne Constitutions yet the Judges being at that time stout and resolute alwaies sent out Prohibitions as may appeare by the Preamble of the Statute Rex talibus Judicibus salutem circumspectè agatis de negotijs tangent Episcopum Norwici eius Clerum non puniendo eos si placitum tenuerint in Curia Christianitatis de his quae sunt merè spiritualia vix c. and there reckons the particular things they shall hold plea of and of no more and although it mentioneth only the Bishop of Norwich who was in those dayes the most pragmaticall Bishop for the power of the Church yet doth that Statute extend to all the Bishops of the land and is so resolved in Plats case Plo. Com. fol. 36. b. And although this be set downe in Lindwoods Provincials to be onely an ordinance of the Church which was the cause that the Gentleman under the Gallery said it was only an ordinance of the Church yet the truth is it was an Act of Parliament as may appeare by the Statute of 2. Edw. 6. Cap. 13. Where it is expressely called a Statute and so it is likewise resolved in the 4. rep Palmers case and in the 5. report Jefferies case In Edw. 2. time the Clergy by petition to the King but not otherwise got jurisdiction in many other Causes not specified in the Statute of Circumspectè agatis as you may see in the Statute of Articuli Cleri made 9● Edw. 2. too long to remember These two Statutes were so pretious with the Clergy that they are inserted verbatim in the Provinciall Constitutions of Lindwood as the maine part of the Church law as in truth it is In King Edward 3. time the Clergy got further Jurisdiction in 9. particular points not formerly graunted to them as may appeare by the Parliament of 25. Edw. 3. called Statutum pro Clero a Statute which I have some cause to remember It appeares in the Parliament roll of that Statute upon what ground they demanded those priviledges which the King then graunted to them not out of right but by an humble supplication to the King in these words mentioned in the Roll being in French That pur breverence de dien de St. Esglis de sa benignity he would graunt them all those liberties they petitioned for In Henry 4th time the Clergy got some power with that King and made a Constitution called constitutio Tho. Arundel contra Hereticos but this Constitution they never durst put in ure till they had coloured it with that bloody Statute of 2. H. 4. Cap. 15. called Statutum ex officio which in truth was no Statute as may appeare by the Parliament Roll which I have 2. Hen. 4. tit 48. being stiled petitio Cleri contra Hereticos And where it is said in the Act praelati clerus supradicti ac etiam comunitates dicti regni supplicarunt these words ac etiam comunitutes dicti regni are not in the Parliament Roll and so was the truth that the Commons did never assent to that Act as may appeare likewise by the Latine Act printed in Linwood For whereas the Act runnes in this forme of words Qui quidem dominus Rex ex assensu Magnatum aliorum Procerum ejusdem regni c. concessit statuis c. there is no mention at all of the Commons and therefore to helpe this the words of aliorum procerum are thus rendred in the English Statute now in print and other discreet men of the kingdome whereby are implyed the Commons and whereby hundreds of Martyrs were cruelly put to death by mistaken law Vide N. Br. de Heret Comburend fo 170. of which greevance the Commons from time to time complained in sundry Parliaments and never rested till that bloody Statute was hereupon quite revoked by the Stat. of 25. Hen. 8. cap. 14. and the oath ex officio which had his originall from that cruell Statute quite taken away In the daies of Hen. 8. in that famous case of Dr. Horsey and George Hunne mentioned in 7. Hen. 8. Kelwayes rep 182. It was resolved by a kind of Committee of both houses of Parliament at Black-Friers at which the King and all his spirituall and temporall Councell were present as it seemes by that booke where it was resolved that no Ecclesiasticall lawes did bind the people but what they assented unto And now I come to the 5 th and last stage or tract of time viz. 25. Hen. 8. untill this very time The Stat. of 25. Hen. 8. cap. 19. I hold to be nothing els but a declaration of what the Common law was before and not introductive of a new law which is the reason as I conceive that the Statute is penned in negative words that they shall not make Constitutions and Cannons without the Kings assent which may be interpreted his assent in Parliament as well as his assent and confirmation by his letters Pattents 2. That they shall not make Cannons contrary to the Kings Prerogative the Lawes Customes and Statutes of the land now what can they tell what is the Kings Prerogative the Laws and Customes of the Realme unlesse the Laity who have more skill then they to judge of those things do give their assent And that
in exhaeredationis Coronae nostrae periculum manifestum which is in sence and meaning though not so strong and significant as praemonere facias For the expounders of the Civill and Cannon Lawes confound both words according to the Proverbe premoniti sunt premuniti But this Writ of praemu is better understood by the Statutes on which the same is founded viz. 25. Edw. 3. c. 22. 27. Edw. 3. cap. 1. de provisoribus 16 Rich. 2. cap. 5. which Statutes were made for the correction of the incroachment of the Pope and his Clergy upon the Crown and Laws of England Upon all which Statutes and bookes of Law I thus define a praemu A praemu Definition is a defence of the Crown and Laws of the Land from the tyrrany and oppression of spirituall Jurisdiction either forraine in the Pope taken away by the Stat. of 1. Eliz. or at home by the Clergy in the Ecclesiasticall Courts wherby is incurred this penalty of being put out of the Kings Protection losse of lands and goods and perpetuall imprisonment This may seeme a sharpe and severe punishment to be inflicted on Clergy men but when the reasons and grounds of Law are considered and how the Kings of England were necessitated to it the sharpnes of the punishment will not seem strange to any which is the second head of my division and which I now come unto 2. Concerning the originall cause and ground of the praemu it ariseth from the opposition and Antipathy betwixt the Common and the Cannon Law or the Law of God and the Law of the Pope the Common Law being derived from the one and the Cannon Law from the other which makes the opposition as great as betwixt CHRIST and Antichrist which hath in all ages as I could shew you caused a hatred of our Law and of the professours therof from the Clergy and professours of the Cannon Law And that this may not seeme strange I will very briefly in honour to the Common Law prove and maintaine that it is derived from the Law of GOD and is the nearest unto it of any Law in the world which King James hath largely prooved in a Parliament Speech of his 1607. but yet I will give 2 or 3. instances more It is thus said by Priset chiefe Justice of the Common-pleas 34 H. 6. f. 40. ley denglitre est foundu sur le ley de dieu which being translated out of our Law-French into better English is thus the Law of England is founded upon the Law of God Ley de tre ley de dieu sont 7. H. 8.191 Kell tout un per Fineux chiefe Justice of England that is the Law of God and the Law of the Land are all one Pollard to the same purpose But it will be said 12. H. 8 f. 2 that this was onely the opinion of Lawyers and every one will be ready to commend his own profession and therfore I shall go much higher In the yeare of CHRIST about 169. Lucius a King of England was the first Christian King and the first annointed in all the world and presently after he was converted to the Faith sought how to governe his people by good Lawes and finding that the Romane Lawes were then the most famous in all the world sent by his Letter to Elutherius then Bishop of Rome for a coppy of those Lawes that godly Bishop for so the Bishops of Rome then were and long after wrote an answer of his Letter to this effect Petistis à nobis leges Romanas vobis transmitti c. leges Romanas reprobare possumus legem Dei nequaquam c. Habetis penes vos in regno utramque paginam ex illis sume legem per illam rege vestrum Brittanniae Regnum vicarius enim Dei estis in regno c. as may appeare more at large in the Lawes of St. Ed. cap. 17. compiled by Lambert where the letters are set downe at large and therfore King James had good cause to say That the Lawes of England were framed as neare as could be to the Judiciall Lawes of Moses And this affinity which our Law hath to the Law of GOD hath beene the cause as I conceive of that contention betwixt our Law and the Canon Law which hath beene like to that of Hagar contending with her Mistris and hath received divers times the same doome Cast out the bond-woman and her sonne as I could proove by many presidents which for brevity I omit And as the contention and opposition increased so did the punishment as may appeare in these foure particulars The first punishment upon the Clergy was prohibition onely The second was a prohibition with a pain The third was by fine and imprisonment The fourth and last when none of the rest would do good was by a Premunire and there it ended 1. For the first It is observable that the first newes of the Canon Law here in England was Anno 1150. xvj Steph. Reg. compiled by Gratian and called the Popes Decrees but came to us here in England by a wile under another name called Rogationes and intreated to be received of us under the pretext of Holinesse because of the fasting and Ember-dayes tending to fasting and prayer which those Lawes seemingly contained and hence the Ember before Whit-suntide is called the Rogation weeke from that name But King Stephen finding them pernicious to the native Laws of England gave them this welcome and entertainment for faith Roger Bacon Rex Stephanus allatis legibus Italiae meaning the Cannon Lawes publico edicto prohibuit ne ab aliquo retinerentur 2. When this prohibition would doe no good but other Cannon Lawes were thrust upon us in the time of Hen. 2. as the Decretall Epistles under Pope Gregory the ninth from which that flaming Law of burning Hereticks was first hatched a sharper punishment was devised by Hen. 3.19 of his raigne against the Civill and Cannon Laws prohibiting the use of them here in England under a severe pain as Laws that were derogatory to the supreame Majesty and independancy of the Crowne of England 3. After these Decretals the Extravigants of Boneface the 8th were brought into this Kingdome which were so injurious to the Soveraignty of Kings that whosoever shall but reade one of those Lawes called unam Sanctam will say that either a King of England must lay downe his Crowne or quite abandon those Lawes Whereupon Edw. 1. taking care to preserve the Crowne and the liberties of his people did in the third and sixt yeare of his Raigne issue out divers Inquisitions to enquire of the Jurisdiction of the Clergy Fitz. N. B. 40. which at that time was limited chiefly to matters of Matrimony and Testament untill the Stat. of 13. Edw. 1. called Circumspectè agatis inlarged their power and Jurisdiction in many more particulars One of those Inquisitions Ao. 6. Edw. 1. I will only mention instead of many which was taken at