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A47788 The alliance of divine offices, exhibiting all the liturgies of the Church of England since the Reformation as also the late Scotch service-book, with all their respective variations : and upon them all annotations, vindictating the Book of common-prayer from the main objections of its adversaries, explicating many parcels thereof hithereto not clearly understood, shewing the conformity it beareth with the primitive practice, and giving a faire prospect into the usages of the ancient church : to these is added at the end, The order of the communion set forth 2 Edward 6 / by Hamon L'Estrange ... L'Estrange, Hamon, 1605-1660. 1659 (1659) Wing L1183; ESTC R39012 366,345 360

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execution hereof the Queens most excellent Majesty the Lords Temporal and all the Commons in this present Parliament assembled doth in Gods name earnestly require and charge all the Arch-Bishops Bishops and other Ordinaries that they shall ende about themselves to the uttermost of their knowledges that the due and true execution hereof may be had throughout their Diocesse and charges as they will answere before God for such evils and plagues wherewith Almighty God may justly punish his people for neglecting his good and wholsome Law And for their authority in this behalf be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid that all and singular the same Arch-Bishops Bishops and all other their officers exercising Ecclestastical iurisdiction as well in place exepmt as not exempt within their Diocesse shall have full power and authority by this act to reform correct and punish by Censures of the Church all and singular persons which shall offend within any their jurisdictions or Diocesse after the said feast of the Nativity of saint John Baptist next comming against this act and statute Any other law statute priviledge liberty or provision heretofore made had or suffered to the contrary notwithstanding And it is ordeined and enacted by the authority aforsaid that all and every Justices of Oyer and Determiner or Justices of Assise shall have full power and authority in every of their open and general Sessions to enquire heare and determine all and all manner of offences that shall be committed or done contrary to any article conteined in this present act within the limits of the Commission to them directed and to make processe for the execution of the same as they may do against any person being indited before them of trespasse or lawfully convicted thereof Provided alwayes and be it enacted by the authority aforesaid that all and every Arch-Bishop and Bishop shall or may at all time and times at his liberty and pleasure joyn and associate himself by vertue of this act to the said Justices of Oyer and Determiner or to the said Justices of Assise at every of the said open and said general Sessions to be holden in any place within his Diocesse for and to the inquiry hearing and determining of the offences aforsaid Provided also and be it enacted by the authority aforesaid that the books concerning the said services shall at the costs and charges of the Parishioners of every Parish and Cathedral Church be attained and gotten before the said feast of the Nativty of saint John Baptist next following and that all such Parishes and Cathedral Churches or other places where the said books shall be attained and gotten before the said feast of the Nativity of saint John Baptist shall within three weekes next after the said books so atteined and gotten use the said service and put the same in ure according to this act And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid that no person or persons shall be at any time hereafter impeached or otherwise molested of or for any of the offences above-mentioned hereafter to be committed or done contrary to this Act unlesse he or they so offending be thereof indited at the next general Sessions to be holden before any such Justices of Oyer and Determiner or Justices of assise next after any offence committed or done contrary to the tenour of this act Provided alwayes and be it ordeined and enacted by the authority aforesaid that all and singular Lords of the Parliament for the third offence above-mentioned shall be tried by their Peeres Provided also that and be it ordeined and enacted by the authority aforesaid that the Major of London and all other Majors Bayliffes and other head officers of all and singular cities boroughs and towns corporate within this Relam Wales and the Matches of the same to the which Justices of Assise do not commonly repaire shall have full power and authority by vertue of this act to enquire heare and determine the offences bobe-said and every of them yeerly within xv dayes ofter the feasts of Easter and saint Michael the archangel in like manuer and form as Justices of Assise and Dyer and Determiner may do Provided alwayes and be it ordeined and enacted by the authority aforesaid that all and singular Arch-Bishops and Bishops and every of their Chancellours Commissaries Archdeacons and other Ordinaries having any peculiar Ecclesiastical jurisoiction shall have full power and authority by vertue of this act as well to enquire in their visitation synods and else where within their jurisoiction at any other time and place to take accusations and informations of all and every the things above mentioned done committed or perpetrated within the limits of their iurisdictions and authority and to punish the same by admonition excommunication sequestration or deprivation and other Censures and processe in like form as heretofore hath been used in like cases by the Queens Ecclesiastical laws Provided alwayes and be it enacted that whatsoever person offending in the premisses shall for the offence first receive punishment of the Ordinary having a testimonial thereof under the said Ordinaries seal shall not for the same offence eftsoones be condicted before the Justices And likewise receiving the said first offence punishment by the Justices be shall not for the same offence estsoones ceive punishment of the Ordinary any thing contained in this act to the contrary notwithstanding Provided alwayes and be it enacted that such ornaments of the Church and of the Ministers thereof shall be reteined and be in use as was in this Church of England by the authority of Parliament in the second year of the raign of King Edward the sixt until other order shall be therein taken by authority of the Queens Majesty with the advise of her Commissioners appointed and authorised under the great seal of England for causes Ecclesiastical or of the Metropolitans of this realnt And also that if there shall happen any contempt or irreverence to be used in the Ceremonies or Rites of the Church by the misusing of the orders appointed in this book the Queens majesty may by the like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitans ordein and publish such farther Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for the advancement of Gods glory the edifying of his Church and the due reverence of Christs holy mysteries and Sacraments And ve it further enacted by the authority aforsaid that all laws statutes and ordinances wherein or whereby any other service administration of Sacraments or Common prayer is limited established or set forth to be used within this Realm or any other the Queens domiuions and contreyes shall from henceforth be utterly void and of noue effect By the King A proclamation for the authorizing an uniformity of the Book of Common Prayer to be used throughout the Realm ALthough it cannot be unknown to our Subjects by the former Declarations we have published what Our purposes and proceedings have been in matters of Religion since our coming to this Crown Yet
body or in soul that the Almighty would send them the thing that is most profitable as well bodily as ghostly Also ye shall pray for all Pilgrims and Palmers that have taken the way to Rome to saint James of Jerusalem or to any other place that Almighty God may give them grace to go safe and to come safe and give us grace to have part of their prayers and they part of ours Also ye shall pray for the holy Crosse that is in possession and hands of unrightful people that God Almighty may send it into the hands of Christian people when it pleaseth him Furthermore I commit unto your devout prayers all women that be in our Ladies bonds that Almighty God may send them grace the child to receive the Sacrament of Baptisme and the mother purification Also ye shall pray for the good man and woman that this day giveth bread to make the holy-loaf and for all those that first began it and them that longest continue For these and for all true Christian people every man and woman say a Pater Noster and an Ave c. After this followeth a Prayer for all Christian Souls reckoning first Arch-Bishops and Bishops and especially Bishops of the Diocess then for all Curates c. then for all Kings and Queens c. then for all Benefactors to the Church then for the Souls in Purgatory especially for the Soul of N. whose Anniversary then is kept This was the form preceding the Reformation of it made by King Henry the eighth This King having once ejected the Popes usurped Authority used all possible Artifice to keep possession of his new-gained Power That by the whole ●lergy in Convocation that by Act of Parliament he was recognized Supream Head of the Church of England he thought it not enough But further ordered the Popes name to be utterly rased out so are the words of the Proclamation of all Prayers Orisons Rubrioks Canons of Mass Books and all other Books in the Churches and his memory never more to be remembred except to his contumely and reproach Accordingly also he caused this Form to be amended by omitting the Popes name with all his Relations by annexing the title of Supream head to himself and by contracting it into a narrower model But though this King corrected so much as served his own turn yet all the Popery of this form he did not reform but left the Prayer of the Dead remaining As for King Edward the sixth the form enjoyned by him was the same precisely with that of Henry the eighth That of Queen Elizabeth varieth for the better from both these Praying for being changed into Praysing God for the dead and with her form agreeth that in the 55 Canon of our Church almost to a syllable Before all Sermons Lectures and Homilies Preachers and Ministers shall move the People to joyn with them in Prayer in this form or to this effect as briefly as conveniently they may Ye shall pray for Christs holy Catholick Church that is for the whole Congregation of Christian People dispersed throughout the whole world and especially for the Churches of England Scotland and Ireland And herein I require you most especially to pray for the Kings most excellent Majesty our Soveraign Lord James King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defendor of the Faith and Supreme Governour in these his Realms and all other his Dominions and Countries over all persons in all causes aswell Ecclesiastical as Temporal Ye shall also pray for our gracious Queen Anne the Noble Prince Charles Frederick Prince Elector Palatine and the Lady Elizabeth his wife Ye shall also pray for the Ministers of Gods holy word and Sacraments aswel Arch-Bishops and Bishops as other Pastours and Curates Ye shall also pray for the Kings most honourable Councel and for all the Nobility and Magistrates of this Realm that all and every of these in their several Callings may serve truely and painfully to the glory of God and the edifying and well governing of his people remembring the account that they must make Also ye shall pray for the whole Commons of this Realm that they may live in true Faith and Fear of God in humble obedience to the King and brotherly charity one to another Finally let us praise God for all those which are departed out of this life in the Faith of Christ and pray unto God that we may have grace to direct our lives after their good example that this life ended We may be made partakers with them of the glorious Resurrection in the life Everlasting Alwayes concluding with the Lords prayer Having beheld the Reformation of the form it will not be amisse to look into the practise This upon my best inquiry all along the dayes of Edward the 6. and Queen Elizabeth is exhibited by onely six Authors Two Arch-Bishops Parker and Sands Four Bishops Gardner Latimer Jewel and Andrews In all these I observe it interveneth betwixt the Text delivered and the Sermon Arch-Bishop Parker onely excepted who concludeth his Sermon with it I observe also in them all that it is terminated in the Lords Prayer or Pater Noster for which reason it was stiled Bidding of Beades Beads and Pater Nosters being then relatives Lastly I observe in every of them some variation more or lesse as occasion is administred not onely from the precise words but even contents of this form And from hence I infer that the Injunctions both of Edw. the 6. and Queen Elizabeth being framed before any reformed Liturgie was by Law established did not bind Preachers so strictly to the precise words of that form when the service was rendred in English as when in Latin for it is not presumable those eminent men would have assumed such a liberty to vary the expression and enlarge in some other matters had not they understood the Churches dispensation therein But there were afterward some overforward to abuse this Liberty and minding the interest of their owne Principles took the boldnesse to omit the main who could be content to pray for James King of England France and Ireland defender of the faith but as for supreme Governor in all causes and over all Persons as well Ecclesiastcal as Civil they passed that over in silence as that very King hath it who thereupon re-inforced the form by the Canon afore specified As for the late practical change of Exhortation Let us pray into Invocation we pray In my weak apprehension it is but the very same in effect and operation and neither to be justly quarrelled at especially when the Lords Prayer which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 summarily comprehendeth all we can ask is the close to both Having discoursed the practise of our own Church it will not be amisse to examine that of the Primitive Church and the rather because many have been of that opinion that no prayer before the Sermon was used in those times Counter to which several Authorities may be opposed
Church it will be proper and pertinent to inquire into the Original inducement to this Cermony These I observe to be three First an ancient Rite it was for servants or captives to be stygmatized or branded with the names of their Masters on their foreheads as it was for their souldiers enrolled with the names of their Emperours or Generalissimo's on the hands declaring thereby to whom they did belong To this custome the Prophet Ezechiel is thought to allude chap. 9. vers 4. Set a mark upon the forehead of them that mourn and cry for all the abominations that are done in the midst of Jerusalem To this custome the Angel in the Revelation is thought to regard chap. 7. vers 3. Hurt ye not the earth c. until we have sealed the Servants of God on the forehead and chap. 14. vers 1. where the retinue of the Lamb are said to have his Fathers name written on their foreheads And as Christ's Flock carried their cognizance on their foreheads so did his great adversary the Beast sign his servants there also Revel 14. 9. If any man shall receive the mark of the Beast on his forehead or on his hand Now that the Christian Church might hold some Analogy with those sacred applications she conceived it a most significant ceremony for Baptism it being our first admission into Christian Profession that all her children should be signed with the Cross on their forehead at their reception of it signifying thereby their consignment up to Christ whence it is so often called by the Fathers Signaculum Dominicum the Lords Signet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ's broad Seal or by words of the same import and hence Tertullian signat illic in fronte milites suos he marketh on the forehead his own soldiers Secondly The real miracles which were in those times daily wrought by the use thereof both in expelling and driving out of the Devil and by healing of corporal diseases whereof I lately produced one Testimony out of St. Augustin who from that very place can furnish you with many more So that woman in Epiphanius was preserved from Poyson 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 She was helped by the sign of the Cross and faith in Cirist Not by either separated but by both together Many other instances might be produced Now in case any shall object that many of those anciently recorded miracles were impostures and meer fables were it possible to be proved it would be of no force unless they could also prove al were so which is a thing impossible considering that so many of the Primitive Fathers witnesse the contrary nor is there any Protestant of remarque who doth not acknowledg as much Confest it is this gift of working miracles lasted not many Centuries after Christ and that for two reasons one least the familiarity of them should breed contempt for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith elegant Philo real miracles loose their estimation when they grow common Again the work was done for which they were wrought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when the knowledg of the Christian faith was not far diffused miracles were wrought as necessary for the conversion of Proselites but when the Gospel began to be spread abroad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there was no further need of that way of teaching Therefore St. Paul saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wonders were exhibited more for the unbelievers than for the faithful which is the cause that Timothy and Epaphroditus being sick 1 Tim. 5. 73. Phil 2. 30. No miracle was applied to recover them they being faithfull and confirmed believers Lastly The Heathens were wont to deride the Christians and to speak disdainfully of them as worshippers of a Malefactor crucified To encounter which reproach and to shew that they gloried in the Cross of Christ Galath 6. 14. Taking it to be an honour not an ignominy they assumed this Ceremony of signing themselves with the Cross both in Baptism and at several other times Cor quidem habemus non tamen tale quale vos habet is nec nos pudet crucifixi sed in parte ubi pudoris signum est signum ejus crucis habemus We have an heart saith Austen to the Pagans but of a better mould than yours nor are we at all ashamed of Christ crucified but bear his cognizance in our foreheads the seat of shamefacenesse Now as to the establishment of this Ceremony by our Church though we have slender expectation that it should operate as formerly yet why may it not be retained as an honorable memorial of its miraculous effects of old But the Church is so exceedingly expresse and perspicuous in her explanation of the use thereof as nothing can be disired more which explication being the product of the Conference at Hampton Court was so abundantly satisfactory to the Foreman of those Opponents Dr. Reinolds as haveing once perused it he ingenuously profest he would never gain-say that Ceremony any more In that Explication not a sillable appears of any operation ascribed to this sign therefore they who have adhered to any such opinion cannot plead the Church of England for their guide Eminent and most remarkable was the great prudence of King James in this concernment All along King Edward the sixt'h and Queen Elizabeth her Reign when the Strumosi such as had the King 's evil came to be touched the manner was then for her to apply the sign of the Cross to the tumour which raising cause of jealousies as if some mysterious operation were imputed to it That wise and learned King not onely with his son the late King practically discontinued it but ordered it to be expunged out of the prayers relating to that Cure which hath proceeded as effectually that omission notwithstanding as it did before The sign of the Cross being then significant onely and not operative and significant of a duty to be elicited by future practice good reason hath our Church to continue it in which sence non est reprobanda with Zanchy it is not to be disallowed Adhiberi nec indecens nec inutile esse existimo saith Bucer p. 479. in my opinion the use of it is neither unseemly nor unprofitable Of them that be baptized in private houses if the custome of the Ancient Fathers yea if the practice of the very Apostles themselves be allowed us as directory sufficient in all sacred relations Private Baptisme that is baptizing out of and apart from the publique Congregation in case of necessity can draw its extraction as high as almost any other part of our Divine Service When Philip converted and baptized so many in Samaria Acts 8. We do not read any thing implying much less expressing that he did it in the place of publique worship or in the face of the Congregation So when he baptized the Eunuch ibid. 38. He did it not in the place of publi●k worship nor in the face of the Congregation When Ananias baptized Saul Acts
sunt quos dirigit amor i. e. they are the best natured whom love perswades so plures sunt quos corrigit timor they are more numerous whom awe constrains upon which very score necessary it was to call in aid of the civil power which was done here by act of Parliament So that no one order had reason to except against this established form the Clergy were imployed as contrivers of the model The laity from the highest to the lowest all Kings Lords and Commons were interested in the ratification wherby a coercive power in order to conformity was constituted And that the said book with the order of service c. This act is not introductory of a now Liturgy but a reviver of the old that of the fift and sixth of Edward the 6 the remains of which structure are so considerable notwithstanding it hath gone twice to the mending as may worthily give it the denomination of Edward the 6 his Liturgy With one alteration c. It must not be imagined that either the Queen or the Parliament made those alterations for the review of the Liturgy was commited by the Queen to certain Commissioners viz to Mr. Whitehead Doctor Parker after Arch-Byshop of Canterbury Doctor Grindal after Bishop of London Doctor Cox after Bishop of Ely Doctor Pilkinton after Bishop of Durham Doctor May Dean of St. Pauls Doctor Bill Provost of Eaton and Sr. Thomas Smith These adding and expunging where they thought meet presented it to the Parliament who onely established what they had concluded upon As for the several changes Alterations and differences betwixt this Liturgy of ours and that of the 2 of Edward 6. this statute takes not notice of them all but what is defective herein Smectymnu●s hath supplyed as shall be observed at their several occurrences To inquire in their visitation c. Diocesan visitations were alwayes of very eminent use in the Ecclesiastical Polity and peculiar of the Episcopal function Indeed none ●o fit to make the scrutiny and lustration as he who is to pronounce the censure upon this account Primitive Bishops held themselves obliged as no disparagement to their Grandure to perform the office in their own persons St. Augustine plead it in bar to Celer's action of unkindnesse against him for not writing sooner Qu●niam visitandarum Ecclesiarum ad meam Curam pertinentium necessitate profectus sum i. e. Because saith he I was gone a broad upon abusinesse of necessity the visiting of such Churches as were within my cure So the Mareotick Clergy in the defence of Athanasius Bishop of Alexandria against a calumny of his adversaries make mention of his visitation in person and not onely so but also that they themselves were of his train when he went upon that service In after times their work encreasing so as they could not well attend it themselves they had their Periodeutae and Itinerary Vicars to go the circuit for them these acting still agreeable to a series of Articles enjoyned by their Bishops In the beginning of the Reformation when it much concerned the Civil power to act as we say of natural agents ad extremum Potentiae to the utmost of its politick hability King Henry the eighth and Edward the sixt and Queen Elizabeth though I presume upon consultation had with the Clergy assumed and exercised the Authority of framing and imposing a body of Articles for Episcopal visitations which had certainly this very commendable property that they preserved uniformity whereas the leaving them to every arbitrary fancy and the exercise of that liberty by some Bishops of later memoray was in my opinion a probable way of erecting Altar against Altar and creating Schisme in the Church The Queens Majesty may by the like advice c. There was in the Act premised a prohibition with a penalty annext to it that no Parson Vicar or other whatsoever Minister shall use any other rite ceremony order form c. then is mentioned in the Book of Common prayer against this constitution a caveat is entred here whereby the Queen may by the advice of her Commissioners or metropolitan ordain and publish such farther Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for the advancement of Gods glory c. So that upon the entertainment of this exception the rule is corroborated as to all particulars not so exempted and consequently that none might innovate any Rite not expressly enjoyned in the book of Common Prayer then established or Book of Canons legally to be framed afterwards Which clause of reserve was no impowring nor enabling the Queen with any new and upstart authority but onely a declaration of what was resident in her before as inseparably incident to the supream Dominion vested in the Crown Agreeable to which She Anno. 1597. authorised the Clergy then met in Convocation to make and publish certain Canons which she after confirmed under the great Seal of England Other Canons there were made Anno 1571. But being not ratified with royal Authority I suppose they were not obligatory enough to constrain obedience and as concerning these of 1597. the formal words of her heires and successors being omitted in those Ratifications they were supposed onely obligatory during her Reign and that they together with her self breathed their last Whereupon King James in the first year of his reign issued forth a new Commission by his letters Patents to the Convocation then assembled therein giving them full power and Authority to consult and agree upon such Canons c. as they should think necessary which being concluded upon by the Clergy and presented to his Majesty He did for himself his heires and lawful successors confirm them with his royal assent as may be seen more at large in that Ratification Indeed the supremacy of the Civil Magistrate as to confirmation and a cogency of external obedience in Religious and Ecclesiastical affaires is no usurpation upon the Churches right as the Romish party contend against us but hath been approved of in the purest times and therefore whereas they seem to presse us with the objection That our Religion is Parliamentary because some concernments thereof have been Ratified by Act of Parliament Our answer is that Parliaments Enact not without the Royal assent This is onely this that vital spirit which regularly animates those establishments and from such assent the two first general Councels not to insist upon Nationals received their confirmation Eminent is that of Socrates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. I therefore so often mention the Emperours in the series of my History though Ecclesiastical because that from the very first of their becoming Christians all Church matters depended upon their pleasure so as the greatest and Oecumenical Councels were then and are still convented by their order and summons As concerning these Canons of our Church Regal assent it was alone which firmed them the Parliament though then sitting not being resorted to nor interposing their Authority an unhappy disjunctive
for through default of their concurrent Ratification many of their Canons became insignificant ciphers and where custome and Canon chanced to justle and enterfere the people if their either inclination or interest might be gainers by it alwayes fled to prescription And prescription was sure to carry the cause where no Act of Parliament interposed to the contrary Now at our first entry into the Realm c. The complaint implyed in this Proclamation is a Libel miscalled The humble petition of the Ministers of the Church of England desiring Reformation of certain Ceremones and abuses in the Church that they might the better fore-speak impunity for so strange boldnesse they exhibit their muster-roll thus formidable To the number of more then a thousand This Petition they presented in April 1603. Formed it was into four heads comprehending a summary of all their pitiful grievances concerning first the Church service Secondly Church ministers Thirdly Church livings Fourthly concerning Church discipline To encounter these schismaticks both the Vniversities presently endeavour what they can Oxford models out a very brief but solid answer to all their objections not suffering one to escape Cambridge passeth a grace in their publick Congregation June 9. in the same year That whosoever shall openly oppose the Doctrine or Discipline of the Church of England or any part thereof either in words or writing shall be forthwith suspended of all degrees already taken and made uncapable of taking any hereafter This notwithstanding they held private conventicles the usual forerunners of sedition so as the King was compelled in October next to restrain them by Proclamation but promising withal that he intended a conference should shortly be had for the sopiting and quieting of those disputes This was the great occasion of that Conference of Hampton Court. According to the form which the Laws of this Realm c. The Kings of this Realm are by the statute 26. H. c. 1. declared justly and rightfully to be the supream Governours of the Church of England to have full power and Authority from time to time to visit represse redresse reform order correct restrain and amend all such errours c. which by any manner spiritual Authority or jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed repressed ordered redressed corrected restrained or amended Agreeable to this power Henry the 8. Edw. the 6. Queen Mary her self Queen Elizabeth severally in their respective reignes did act But the laws referred to by this Proclamation is first that Act of Parliament 1. Eliz. wherein it is ordained that the Kings and Queens of this Realm shall have have full power and authority by letters Patents under the great Seal of England to assigne name and Authorize when and as often as their Heires and Successors shall think meet and convenient such person or persons as they shall think meet c. to visit reform redresse c. Secondly the latter end of the Act for uniformity where the Queen and consequently her Successors are authorized by the Advice of their Commissioners or the metropolitan to ordain and publish further Rites and Ceremonies And this helps us with an answer to an objection of Smecttymnuus who from the several Alterations made in our Liturgy both by Queen Elizabeth and King James from that of the second establishment by Edw. 6. infer that the Liturgie now in use is not the Liturgie that was established by Act of Parliament and therefore that Act bindeth not to the use of this Liturgie To this we reply that those Alterations can excuse from that act onely in part and for what is altered as to what remaineth the same it bindeth undoubtedly still in tanto though not in ●oto And for the Alterations themselves the first being made by Act of Parliament expresse that of 1 Elis. and the second by Act of Parliament reductive and implied those afore-mentioned what gain Smecttymnuus by their illation that those alterations are not established by the first Act And whereas it may be supposed that that Proclamation may lose its vigor by that Kings death and consequently the Service book may be conceived to be thereby in statu quo prius yet considering his late Majesty did not null it by any expresse edict that several Parliaments sitting after did not disallow it that all subscriptions have been unanimous in reference to those changes that the Emendations were made to satisfie the Litigant party I conceive the Proclamation valid notwithstanding the death of that King The first original and ground whereof c. Here our Church is explicite expresse enough to confute the vulgar errour of her seduced children who fill the world with more noise then truth that our service hath its original from the Masse-Book her resort is to the Antient Fathers to their godly and decent orders she conforms her self leaving the Romanists to the yesterday devised innovations of their Church The Pye Pica or in English the Pye I observe used by three several sorts of men First by the quondam Popish Clergy here in England before the Reformation who called their ordinal or Directory ad usum Sarum devised for the more speedy finding out the order of Reading their several services appointed for several occasions at several times the Pye Secondly by Printers which call the letters wherewith they Print books and treatises in party colours the Pica letters Thirdly by Officers of civil Courts who call their Kalendars or Alphabetical Catalogues directing to the names and things contained in the Rolls and Records of their Courts the Pyes Whence it gained this denomination is difficult to determine whether from the Bird Pica variegated with divers colours or whether from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contracted into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which denoteth a Table the Pye in the Directory being nothing else but a Table of rules directing to the proper service for every day I cannot say from one of these probably derived it was and no great matter which Wherein the reading of the Scriptures is so set forth c. The Lessons appointed in the Kalendar are onely ordered for the week dayes or such festivals as happen upon them not for the Sundayes for which resort must be had to a future order Nothing but the pure word of God or that which is evidently grounded upon the same Here the Church declareth that over and besides the Canonical Scripture what is evidently grounded upon the same vi● Some part of the Apocrypha she approveth and appointeth to be read in Churches to which end some Lessons in the Kalendar are selected thence but neither considered by her in a party of honour with the Canon nor so strictly enjoyned but that she in some cases tolerateth yea commendeth a swerving from her prescriptions For where it may so chance some one or other Chapter of the Old Testament to fall in order to be read upon the Sundayes or holy-dayes which were better to be changed with some other of the New