Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n authority_n power_n spiritual_a 1,510 5 6.4164 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A17571 The altar of Damascus or the patern of the English hierarchie, and Church policie obtruded upon the Church of Scotland Calderwood, David, 1575-1650. 1621 (1621) STC 4352; ESTC S107401 125,085 228

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE Altar of Damascus OR THE PATERN OF THE ENGLISH HIERARCHIE AND CHVRCH-Policie obtruded upon the Church of SCOTLAND 2. KING 16. 10. 11. And King Ahaz went to Damascus to meet Tiglath Pileser King of Assyria and saw an Altar that was at Damascus and King Ahaz sent to Vrijah the Priest the fashion of the altar and the patern of it according to all the workmanship thereof And Vrijah the Priest built an altar according to all that King Ahaz had sent from Damascus so Vrijah the Priest made it against King Ahaz came from Damascus Anno 1621. TO THE READER I Have drawen this paterne of the English Altar obtruded upon us out of their owne Tables of the Hierarchy and Church policie Muckets book their Canons and Constitutions Ecclesiasticall the statutes of the Realme the admonitions petitions assertions treatises answers and replies of those who sue for reformation the confessions of their opposites in their own defences I have followed the order of the Tables translated out of Latine and printed with a letter different from the rest I intended not a full refutation for I thought to discover it onely was to refute it sufficiently to any man of sound judgement saving that sometime there i● a light touch or poynting at any corruption where I suspected the simpler sort migh● be miscaried CHAP. 1. Of the Kings Supremacie IN the Ecclesiasticall policie of England generally are to be cōsidered 1 Persons 2 possessions 3 constitutions concerning both Persons to bee considered are either such as haue some kinde of administration or such as have none at all The persōs that have some kind of administratiō have it either as supreme or not so ample The supreme or more absolute administration which is called the Kings supremacie is to be considered 1 generally 2 particularly Generally by which authority the Prince as supreme governor under God can set down in all Ecclesiasticall causes within his dominions whatsoever is not repugnant to the word of God By causes Ecclesiastical are meant not onely matrimoniall and testamentary causes and others abusively called Ecclesiasticall but also these which are in a proper sence Ecclesiastical subject to Ecclesiastical cognition and jurisdiction By the title of Supreme Governour is understood the same power which before was expressed by the title of Head of t●e Church of England in the dayes of K. Henrie the 8. and Edward the 6. For howsoever for removing of offence taken at the metaphorical title of Head it was changed in more proper termes of supreme governour under the reigne of Queene Elizabeth yet the sense remaineth still In the first yeare of her reigne it was enacted and ordained That such jurisdictions privileges superiorities and preeminences spirituall or Ecclesiasticall as by any spirituall or Ecclesiasticall power or authority hath heretofore been or may lawfully be exercised or used for the visitation of the Ecclesiasticall state and persons and for reformation order and correction of the same and of all manner of errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities shall for ever be united and annexed to the Imperiall crowne of this Realme And that the Queens highnes her heirs and successors shall have full power authority by vertue of this act by letters patents under the great seale of England to assigne name and authorize when and as often as her highnes her heirs and successors shall think meet and conve●ient and for such and so long time as shall please her highnesse her heirs and successors such persons being naturall born subjects as her Majestie her heirs and successors shall think meet to exercise use occupie and execute under her highnes her heirs and s●ccessors all manner of Iurisdictions priviledges and preeminances in any wise touching or concerning any spirituall or Ecclesiacticall iurisdiction within the Rea●●es of England or Ireland or any other her highnes ●●minions or countries and to visit reforme redresse order correct and amend all such errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities whatsoever which by any manner of spirituall or Ecclesiastical power authority or jurisdiction can or may lawfully be reformed ordered corrected restrained or amended And for the better observation of this act it was further enacted that every Ecclesiasticall person officer and minister all and every temporall judge Iustice Maior and other lay or temporal officer and minister and every other person having her highnes fee or wages within the Realm of England or any of her highnes dominions shall make take receive a corporall oath upon the Evangelist before such person or persons as shall please her highnes her heirs or successors under the great seale of England to assigne and name to accept and take the same according to the renor and effect hereafter following I A. B. doe utterly testifie and declare in my conscience that the Queens highnes is the onely supreme governour of this Realme and of all other her highnes dominions and countries as well in all spirituall or Ecclesiastical things or causes as temporall and that no forreigne Prince person prelate state or Potentate hath or ought to have any iurisdiction power superiority preeminence or authoritie Ecclesiasticall or spirituall within this Realme and therefore I doe utterly renounce forsake all forraigne iurisdictions powers superiorities and authorities and doe promise that from henceforth I shall beare faith and true allegeance to the Queenes highnes her heirs and lawfull successors and to my power shall assist and defend all iurisdictions privileges preeminences and authorities granted or belonging to the Queenes highnes her heirs and successors or united and annexed to the Imperiall crown of the Realme So helpe me God and by the contents of this book The title then of Supreme Governour in the oath is explained by the preceeding words of the statute to which and for observation of the which the oath is subjoyned viz. that the Prince hath all manner of spirituall or Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and all manner of privileges and preeminences any way touching or belonging to the same which was before or may be lawfully exercised for visitation of the Ecclesiasticall state reformation order and correction of the same and of all manner of errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities and that he may commit the exercise of the same to any of his naturall born subjects whom it shall please his highness to constitute commissioners in causes Ecclesiastical to judge discern and correct in matters of Idolatry simonie errour and heresie and all other causes Ecclesiasticall whatsoever This oath of supremacie is different from the oath of fidelity or allegeance devised of late That requireth no further thē to acknowledge the king to be lawful righteous king and to sweare obedience and fidelitie to him notwithstanding he be excommunicated by the Pope to acknowledge that the Pope notwithstanding of his excommunications cannot depose kings and dispose of kingdomes at his pleasure The Papist is straitned with this oath of
perfidious Prelats haue resumed the same again without any law reviving it But let us proceed and heare what is recorded in the worthy proceedings of the Parliament above mentioned The Act is found to be inconvenient and of dangerous extent in divers respects 4. for that every pettie offence pertaining to spirituall jurisdiction is by the colour of the said words and letters patents grounded therupon made snbject to excommunications and punishment by that strange and exorhitant power and commission whereby the least offenders not committing any thing of any enormous or high nature may be drawn from the most remote places of the kingdome to London or yorke which is very grievous and inconvenient These three Commissioners being armed with double vengeance and power of both swords temporall and spirituall may strike a man at one strike in one sentence for one and the selfe same fault both with temporall and Ecclesiasticall censures and punishments They may depose and imprison a minister at one time for one offence they may fine and excommunicate at one time c. Againe they may punish the same offence in one person with a fine in another with imprisonment in the third with excommunication in the fourth with deprivation For their owne pleasures and discretions and not the lawes ar the rules of their censures and punishments Let us see what is recorded in the grievances Therein to wit in the Commission grounded upon the statute is grievance apprehended thus First for that therby the same men have both spirituall and temporall i●risdiction and may both force the partie by oath to accuse himselfe of an offence and also inquire thereof by a jurie and l●stly may inflict for the same offence at the same time and by one and the same sentence both spirituall and temporall punishments 2. wheras upon sentences of deprivation or other spirituall censures given by force of ordinarie jurisdiction any appeale lyeth for the party grieved that is heere excluded by expresse words of the commission Also heere is to be a tryall by Iurie yet no remedie by traverse not attaint Neither can a man have any writ of errour though a judgement or sentence be given against him ●●●●unting to the taking away of all his goods and imprisoning him during life yea to the adjudging him in the case of premumire whereby his lan●s are forfeited and he out of the protection of the Law 3. That wheras penall lawes and offences against the same cannot be determined in other Courts or by other persons then by those trusted by Parliament with the execution therof yet the execution of many such Statutes divers whereof were made since 1. Eliz. are commended and committed to these Commissioners Ecclesiasticall who are either to inflict the punishments contained in the Statutes being Premunire and other high nature and so to inforce a man upon his owne oath to accuse and expose himselfe to these punishments or else to inflict other temporall punishment at their pleasure And yet besides and after that done the parties shall bee subiect in Courts mentioned in the acts to punishment by the same acts appointed and inflicted which we thinke were unreasonable The three Commissioners may not onely enquire and try but also judge in all causes Ecclesiasticall in causes of heresie simonie idolatry c. It is I grant provided in the statute 1. Elizabeth that they shall not in any wise have authoritie or power to order determine or adiudge any matter or cause to he heresie but onely such as heretofore have been determined ordered or adiuged to be heresie by the authoritie of the Canonicall Scripture or by the first 4. generall Councels or any of them or by any other generall Councell wherein the same was declared heresie by the expresse and plaine words of the said Canonicall Scriptures or such as heereafter shall be ordered iudged or determined to be heresie by the high Court of Parliament of this Realme with the assent of the Clergie in their Convocation This provision is no limitation unlesse wee will say that without the limits of the Canonicall Scripture there are some heresies determined which are not determined within the bounds of the Canonicall Scripture Seeing then they may determine in all he resies determined in the Scripture they may determine in all herefies whatsoever and may affirme that to bee determined for heresie in the Scripture which is orthodoxall If the commissioners the Princes delegates may be judges in all causes of herefie farre more is the Prince himselfe by their lawes and that without the provision foresayd wherwith the delegate commissioners are circumscribed These three Commissioners have power to receive appellations from other inferiour courts Ecclesiasticall like as the five with us have power by the Kings letters patents to receive and disusse all appellations made to them from any inferiour Ecclesiasticall Judges and to inhibite the said Ecclesiasticall judges to proceed iu any matter which they shall hold to be improper for them wherin they shall perceiue the said Iudges to have behaved themselves partially advocating the said matters is their own judgment See the commission renewed Anno 1618. So they may draw to themselves any cause whatsoever agitated in inferiour courts not onely at the appellation of any notorious villaine pretending grievance but also by advocation when they shall construe the cause to be unproper or the proceedings of the infe●iour Court to be partiall In the narrative of the proclamation it was pretended that this high commission is erected to stay advocation of causes granted by the Lords of Councell and Session That forasmuch as it hath bene compleaened by the Archbishops Bishops and other Ministers of that his Maiesties Kingdome that advocations and suspensions are frequently granted by the Lords of Councell and Session unto such as bee in processe before them and their Ecclesiasticall Courts for offences committed whereby offenders are imboldned continuing in their wickednesse and ●ing the said advocations and suspensions or meanes to delay their tryall and punishment Therfore c. Complaint hath been made sometime by ministers and suit to stay advocations that the ordinarie indicatures Ecclesiasticall might proceed to their censures without stop but not to change advocations Are the Archbishops and Bishops with their associates honester and more conscientions men then the Lord of Councel and Session An ambitious and covetous Clergie-man is of all men the most vile and prophane Did the Bishops complaine why do they then advocate causes from inferiour Courts Ecclesiasticall seeing they have usurped the sway of proceedings in Courts Ecclesiasticall to themselves Doe they accuse themselves of partialitiall proceeding in inferiour courts or handling improper causes and will these same men bee lesse partiall and more conscientious in the high Commission If no censure can take effect without their approbation and appellations should ascend from inferiour courts to superiour courts and Synods wherefore will they rather advocate causes to this extraordinary court of high
or else infamie arising upon the crime and make petent the ports of Ecclesiastical dignities to infamous men against the rule of the Law Infamibus portae ne pateant dignitatum The Prince granteth also dispensations either primarily by his Chancellour if the Archbishop refuse or secundarily confirming the faculties and dispensations granted by the Archbishop and so by dispensations may dissipate and wound at pleasure the Canons of the Church Now the Prince may dispense by their lawes in all causes wherin the Pope of Rome was wont to dispense of old The third sort of rights restored as due to the crowne which were not in use but since the Popes authority was driven forth concerne Benefices Ecclesiasticall and Dioceses in that the Prince may 1. enjoyne the Archbishop to confirme the election as also to consecrate the elected into the Bishopricke 2. to unite and consolidate or to divide lesser Benefices or Bishopricks which were before united 3. to grant a vacant Bishopricke or lesser Benefice in title of trust which they call a Commendam 4. to translate Bishops from one Bishopricke to another 5. of two which are nominated to choose one to be a Suffragane Bishop 6. to enlarge or contract the bounds and marches of any Diocie Election confirmation and consecration of Bishops were performed of old all at one time and that in a Synode of Bishops If the Prince may unite and enlarge Diocies and Parishes without the consent of those who have interest hee may make parishes Diocies and Diocies great Provinces The competent flockes for Pastors should bee measured by the Church who calleth them and knoweth best what burthen is most proportionable to their strength Bishops should not be translated at Popes or Princes pleasures as it often commeth to passe in our times The old Canons condemne this leaping from See to See Ambitious and covetous men cannot content themselves till they get either a fatter or more glorious Bishopricke Some are not content of one Bishopricke except they also get the commendam and custody of another They must not have two Bishopricks at once by the Canons yet heir a tricke one they may have in title of a Bishopricke another by way of trust and custody till it bee planted A man may not have two wives yet hee may have two women one as a wife another as a Lemman Some of them have keeped another Bishopricke in commendam sixteene or twentie yeares as the Bishop of Glocester was commendatare of Bristow Yea they may keepe this Lemman all their life time if it please the Prince to bestow a perpetuall commendam For commendams are not onely temporarie but also perpetuall whereas of old they endured onely for sixe moneths or some like short space They enrich themselves not onely with Commendams of other Bishoprickes but also when that cannot be had with the commendams of fat parsonages and lesser benefices The Diocesan Bishop hath a greater taske then hee can commodiously expede or else because hee is a loytering Lord he must have a suffragane Bishop to exercise some pontifical parts of his office in some part of the Diocie and disburthen him that farre This Suffragane Bishop is to be chosen by the Prince out of the Leits of the two presented by the Diocesan Bishop according to the statute made 26. Henr. 8. cap. 14. Translating of Bishops erecting and changing of Bishops Sees union of Bishoprickes enlarging of Diocies were in time of Poperie Papall cases reserved for the Pope of Rome We say then that the Prince as supreme head and governour of the Church of England is supreme judge in matters of heresie simonie idolatry and all causes whatsoever hath all maner of spirituall jurisdiction united to the crowne may commit the exercise and execution of the same to others also so that they bee naturall borne subjects may conferre benefices and consequently give Pastors to flockes may choose Bishops without Dean and Chapter receive appellations abbrogate canons abolish infamie and restore the infamous to dignities grant dispensations in all causes where the Pope was wont to dispense give Bishoprickes and lesser benefices in commendams enlarge contract unite divide Diocies c. And this hee may whether he be a Christian or not so that he be righteous possessour of the Crowne for all the particulars above rehearsed are sayd to be due of right to the crowne so that true or false Christian or infidell male or female man or child have all alike right What is due to the Christian Magistrate is due indeed to him not because he is a Christian but because he is a Magistrate A Christian Prince doth understand better how to use his righteous power then the infidel but hee can claime no further authority then the infidell and his power is onely cumulative as I have sayd not privative Now whether the particulars above rehearsed belong to any Prince whatsoever be he true or false Christian or infidell I think him too simple that cannot judge CHAP. 2. Of the High Commission THE High Commission is called commission of jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiastical it is called the high commission by the favourers of it to strike a greater terrour in the hearts of subjects The commissioners are partly civil partly Ecclesiasticall persons as the Archbishops certaine other Bishops Deanes Archdeacons Chancellours some of the secret counsell and of the chief Iudges Courtiers Aldermen sometime the Lieutenant of the Tower the Post-master and others making up a great number But it is not requisite that all these whose names are set down in the kings letters patents should be present at every Session to make up a full judicature but power is given to any three of the number the Archbishop being alwayes one As with us are nominated and appoynted by the Kings letters patents to the number of fortie or fiftie persons Bishops Counsellors Noble men Barons Commissaries Ministers yet power is given to any five of them to make up the full judicature the Archbishops of Saintandros and Glasgow or any one of them being of the number of the five alwayes And as with us so there also graue Counsellours and Iudges and other of honorable respect may well be desired to be present when an incestuous person or some other ma●efactor is brought before them that their countenance at one time or other may bring credit to their great authority But when a minister or any other godly professour is to bee troubled for nonconformity or writing against crossing and kneeling or having or spreading of bookes touching reformation of abuses and corruptions in the Church then are they not desired lest being present they should perceive the mysteries of their iniquitie by which they uphold their pompe and Lordly Domination If there be a courtier or new upstart that favoureth them or dare not controll them hee may well be advertised to be present The Archbishop hath power to associate unto himselfe any two nominated in the Kings letters parents whether they bee
commission In England if a man stand wilfully fourty daies together excommunicate and be accordingly certified by the Bishop into the Chancerie that then he is to be committed to prison by vertue of a Writ directed to the Shriefe as it is sayd in the Apologie of certaine proceedings in courts Ecclesiasticall And in a wr●● de excommunicato capiendo it is sayd quod potestas regia sacrosanctae Ecclesiae in querelis suis deess● non debet The ordinarie lawfull courts Ecclesiasticall farre more then should be aided and assisted by the secular power and not molested or stopped The truth is that this high commission is erected to suppresse the libertie of the Kirk to maintain the usurped power and tyrannous domination of our perfidious Prelates over Synods generall Provinciall Presbyteries sessions to effectuate the intended conformity which they know they will never get done in Synods and Presbyteries unlesse the terrour of this high commission were standing above their heads And therfore when they urge conformity they haue their recourse to this weapon or in Synods and Presbyteries men are terrified with the feare of it This is their strong castell out of which they command and hold in slavery bondage the whole citie Here the Bonifacian Prelats stoutly draw the two swords fine consine suspend deprive imprison c. But the couragious souldier fighting the Lords battell will not bee borne downe with any such outrages and terrours Now as they receive appellations from inferiour courts no appellation can bee made from these three or our five suppose their injustice and tyranny cry never so loud I wonder if the heart of any faithfull Patriot let be conscientious professour can digest this These three Commissioners may appoynt inferiour Commissioners from whom also as subdelegates they may receive appellation I will add out of the record of the grievances of the house of Commons these considerations First out of the statute that the said act is found to be inconvenient and of dangerous extent in divers respects for that it inableth the making of such a commission as well to any one subiect borne as to more Item for that by the sayd Statute the King and his successors may howsoever your Maiestie hath beene pleased out of your gracious disposition otherwise to order make and direct such commission into all the Countries and Diocesses yea into every parish of England and therby all causes may be taken from ordinary jurisdiction of Bishops Chancellers and Arch-deacons and Lay-men solely be inabled to excommunicate and exercise all other spirituall censures For that limit touching causes subiect to this commission being onely with these words viz. such as perteine to spirituall or ecclesiasticall jurisdiction it is very hard to know what matters or offences are included in that number And the rather because it is unknown what ancient Canons or lawes spirituall are in force and what not from whence ariseth great uncertainty and occasion of contention Out of the commission grounded upon the statute That the commisson giveth authoritie to inforce men called into question to enter into recognisance not onely for appearance from time to time but also for performance of whatsoever shall be by the Commissioners ordered And also that it giveth power to enjoyn parties defendant or accused to pay such fees to ministers of the Court as by the Commissioners shall be thought fit As for the execution of the commission it is found grievous these wayes among other 1. For that lay men are by the commissioners punished for speaking otherwise then in iudiciall places and courtes of the simonie and other misdemeanours of spirituall men though the thing spoken be true and the speech tending to the inducing of some condigne punishment 2. In that these commissioners usually appoynt and allot to women discontented at and unwilling to live with their husbands such portions allowances for present maintenance as to them shall seem fit to the great encouragement of wives to be disobedient and contemptuous against their husbands 3 In that their pursevants or other ministers imployed in the apprehension of suspected offenders in any things spirituall and in the searching for any supposed scandalous bookes use to breake open mens houses closets and deskes rifling all corners and secret● custodies as in cases of high treason or suspition therof Their commission is grounded upon a statute and act of Parliament howbeit it agreeth not with the statute Wee have not so much as a shew of a statute for commission of jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiasticall and yet our usurping Prelates tyrannize over loyall subjects faithfull Patriots conscientious professours deserted by these who will be counted fathers of the Common wealth left open and naked to their violent rage without any protection of the law as if they were but the vile off scourings of the land Will not the estate in Parliament redresse this proud usurpation Shall the house of Commons in their Parliament bee grieved not onely at the exorbitant power of this high commission but also at the statute it selfe and shall our nobles and inferiour estates not be grieved at our usurped commission Or will they suffer the like statute and make the countrey mourn and groane for it the next day as our neighbours have done Can Princes or estates give power of spirituall censures either to lay or spiritual men Or may they lawfully put the temporall sword in the hand of Pastors Or may spirituall men as they call them accept it If neither can be done how can the estates erect ratifie or suffer such a commission What is this but the Spanish inquisition Set me up this throne Satan shall set up Papistry or any other religion whatsoever in short processe of time For they sit at the rudder and may turn religion as it pleaseth them and when they see fit occasions and themselves to have able power CHAP. 3. Of the dignitie and power of Archbishops in England THis proud name of Archbishop is not to be found in all the Scripture It was not attributed to any common Metropolitans at the first but to the renow●ed and mightie Giants the Patriarches of Constantinople Antioch Alexandria and Rome who were mounted farre above Metropolitanes when the time was neere that the Antichrist should be mounted on horsebacke But after that he was mounted then Metropolitanes that they might keepe some proportion with their head were lifted up to a degree of power above other Bishops invested into an office that the book of God the Apostolical Church never knew to consecrate Bishops to convocate Synods to receive appellations frō the courts of inferior Bishops to visit the Diocies of other Bishops within the Privince A Diocesan Bishop that is a Bishop over many flockes and Pastors of one Diocie was unknown to the Apostles far more a Bishop of Bishops a provincial Bishop an Archbishop having iurisdiction and power over the comprovinciall Bishops The Church being for the most part within
iurisdiction power is united and anexed to the crown from whence it is derived as from a source unto them and by law they are bound to make their proces and writings in the kings name and not in their own names and that their seals should be graved with the Kings armes as I have already declared in the first chapter It is true that they make processes in their owne name and use their own seals but herein they transgresse the formes prescribed by lawTheir manner of holding in Capite in chiefe of the king their Episcopall power and jurisdiction is not changed for all that want of formalitie as before I have cleared out of Bishop Farrars answer Sir Edward Cooke in the 5. booke of his Reports doth prove That the Function and Iurisdiction of Bishops and Archbishops in England is by and from the Kings of England and concludeth that though the proceedings and progresse of the Ecclesiasticall Courts run in the Bishops name yet both their courts and lawes whereby they proceed are the Kings as M. Sheerwood in his Reply to Downam doth report So then all the acts of their Episcopall jurisdiction are performed by authoritie derived from the King If ye will call that authoritie civill then actions of a spirituall nature are performed by a civill authoritie which is absurd But seeing this is impossible that civill authoritie can be elevated to so high a nature it must follow that it is truely spirituall power which is united to and derived from the possessor of the Crown I meane in the estimation of men and judgement of the Law howbeit in it selfe and by Gods Law it cannot be done It followeth therefore that all the Iurisdiction properly spirituall which the English Prelates doe exercise as Prelates is unlawfull how soever they have the warrant of mens Lawes It is but onely to save their own credite that they have set Downam Bilson and other their friends on worke to plead that Bishops are above Pastors jure divino by divine Institution which they are not able to prove Next is to be considered their sole authoritie which is censured by Sir Francis Bacon now Chancellour of England after this manner There be two circumstances in the administration of Bishops wherein I confesse I could never be satisfied The one the sole exercise of their authoritie The other the deputation of their authoritie For the first the Bishop giveth orders alone excommunicateth alone judgeth alone This seemeth to bee a thing almost without exemple in government and therefore not unlikely to have crept in in the degenerate and corrupt times We see that the greatest Kings and Monarches have their councell There is no temporal Court in any land of the higher sort where the authoritie doth rest in one person The Kings bench common pleas and the Exchequer are benches of a certain number of judges The Chauncellour of England ●ath the assistance of 12 masters of the Chauncerie The master of the Words hath 4 Councell of the court so hath the Chauncellour of the Dutchy In the Exchequer chamber the Lord Treasurer is ioyned with the Chauncellour and the Barons The Masters of Requests are ever more then one The justices of Assize are two The Lord President in the Marches and in the North have Councell of divers The Starre Chamber is an Assembly of the Kings privie Councell aspersed with Lords spirituall and temporall So as in all the Courts the principal person hath ever either colleagues or assessours The like is to be found in other well governed kingdomes abroad where the jurisdiction is yet more distributed as in the Courts of Parliament of France and in other places No man will deny but the acts that passe by the Bishops iurisdiction are of as great importance as those that posse by the civill Courts For mens soules are more pretious then their bodies and so are their good names Bishope have their infirmities and have no exception from that generall malediction against all men living Vae soli nam si ceciderit c. Nay we see that the first warrant in spirituall causes is directed to a number Dic Ecclesiae which is not so in temporall matters And wee see that in generall causes of Church government there are as well assemblies of all the Clergie in councels as of the Estates in Parliament whence the● should this sole exercise of jurisdiction come Surely I doe suppose and I doe thinke upon good ground that ab initio non fuit ita and that the Deanes and Chapters were councells about the Seas and Chaires of Bishops at the first and were unto them a Presbyterie or Consistorie and medled not onely with the disposing of their revenues and endowments but much more in jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall But that is probable that the Dean and Chapter stucke close to the Bishop in matters of profit and the worlds and would not loose their hold But in matters of jurisdiction which they accounted but trouble and attendance they suffred the Bishops to encroch and usurpe and so the one continueth and the other is lost And we see that the Bishop of Rome fas est ab hoste doceri and no question in that Church the first institutions were excellent performeth all Ecclesiasticall iurisdiction as in Consistorie And whereof consisteth this his Consistorie but of the parish priests of Rome which terme themselves Cardinals a Cardinibus mundi because the Bishop pretendeth to bee universall over the whole world And hereof againe we see divers shadowes yet remain in as much as the Deane and Chapter pro forma chooseth the Bishop which is the highest poynt of iuris●iction And that the Bishop when hee giveth orders if there be any ministers casually present calleth them to ioyne with him in imposition of hands and some other particulars And therefore that seemeth to me a thing reasonable and religious and according to the first institution that Bishops in the greatest causes and those which require a spirituall discerning namely the ordaining suspending or depriving Ministers in excommunication being restored to the true and proper use as shall be afterward touched in sentencing the validitie of marriage and legitimations in judging causes criminous as Simonie incest blasphemie and the like should not proceed sole and unassisted which point as I understand is a reformation that may be planted sine strepitu without any perturbation at all and that is a mater which will give strength to the Bishops countenance to the inferiour degrees of Prelates or Ministers and the better issue or proceeding in those causes that shall passe And as I wish thi● strength given to your Bishops in Councell so that is not unworthy your Majesties● royall consideration whether you shall not thinke fit to give strength to the generall councell of your Clergie the convocation house which was then restreyned when the state of the Clergie was thought a suspected part of th● Kingdome in regard of their late homage to the Bishop of Rome
shall require All ●auses testamentarie and their appendicles are impertinent for Episcopal audience or any Eccl●siasticall o●sistorie Bona caduca is taken in the lawes as when failing him to whom they belonged by law the goods fal to another as the akorn which falleth to the ground when there is none to take it up is called Caduc● glans By law Ecclesiasticall and co●firmed by the Municipall as 1. to conferre benefices or to institute into a benefice at the presentation of others 2. to command the persons institu●ed to be inducted 2. to command the fruits of vacant benefi●es to bee gathered and kep● in su●e custodie by some indifferent man to the use of the next successor 4. to assigne a competent portion to a vicar● 5. To grant dimissorie or testimoniall letters 6. to visit every third yeare th● Diocie O● institution collation induction we shall entreat in a fitter place As for the third the sequestration of the fruits of the vacant benefices the authour of the Assertion of the true Christian Church policie thus writeth By the interest where by the Bishop challengeth to be custos Eccl. siarum there happen as bad if not worse then these for there is no sooner a Church voyd but a post is sent in all haste with letters of sequestiction to sequester the fruits to the use of the next incumbent which next incumbent for the greater care taken to preserve the fruits to his use before hee can obteine to be put in reall possession must pay 10. shillings or a marke or more for these letters of sequestiation with as much more also for letters so called of relaxation besides 2 pence 3 pence or 4 pence a mise for pottage Somner ● And from hence as ● take it is the Patron very much 〈◊〉 For he being as appeareth by the Statute of 25 Edm. 3. Lord and Avower of the Benefice ought to have the custodie and possession thereof during vacancie The fourth should not be at the Bishops carving but it is no great matter what be modified to them seeing they are for the most part hirelings or blind guides As for the fift it is agreeable to good ordour that no Clergie man passing from one Diocesse to another should be admitted to take on any cure without letters of commendation and a Testimoniall of their honest life and conversation and sufficient qualification but that this should be in the Bishops power is against reason and therefore no wonder if many abuses and inconveniences arise upon their flight Passe-ports Visitation is needfull and it were better for the Church if it were annuall But that the Bishop or any other should be sole Visitor is hurtfull A number is more able to make a sharpe enquirie for moe eyes see better then one and would not be so foone drawen away with corrupt partialitie The chiefe part then of voluntarie jurisdiction is every three yeare to visit the Diocie and to enquire by the Church-wardens and Side-men of the excesses and defects either of the minister of the Church wardens themselves or the rest of the parishioners Or the Minister as he is Minister or as he is another sort of man As Minister either in respect of his publick function in committing or omitting what hee ought not or in respect of his private life for many things are tollerate in lay men which do not bes●eme Ministers Or the Church-wardens themselves and that concerning their office either in the Kirk or temple or out of it O● the rest of the Parishoners ●ither as having some peculiar function or any other Christians As having peculiar function Phisitians Chyrurgians Schoolemasters Mid-wives if they exercise their function not being approved or use ●●rcerie or superstition keepers of hospitals when according to their foundation the Bishop is only appoynted visitor or no other Of the other Christians offending against pie●ie righteousnesse sobrietie Against pietie as by blasphemy against God or the holy scripture idolatry superstition s●rcerie if it be such as by civill lawes of the kingdom is either not at all corrected or by order and dir●ction of the lawes is made also subject to Ecclesiasticall censures Breach of oath called Laesio fidei made before an Ecclesiasticall Iudge or voluntarily to any private man Heresie error against the Articles of Religion set forth in a Nationall Syno● holden the yeare 1562. and confirmed by royall authoritie sch●●me unlaw●ul conventicles absence from divine service in their own parish upon the Lords daye● or other festivall dayes where there is not a lawfull impediment unlawfull abstinence from par●aking of the Lords Supper which is to be celebrated thrice every year Against justice calumnie contumely r●proach anent any cause Ecclesiasticall Simoniacall suing for sacred orders or degrees or of a benefice Vsurie above the rate often in the hundred by yeare Temerarious administration of the goods of the deceased subornation of perjurie falshood or forgerie committed in any Ecclesiasticall action violence to a minister de●eining of that which was left in legacie to the use of the poore or of goods due to the publick uses of the Church d●●apidation of Ecclesiasticall goods and buildings Against sobriety as incontiniencie whatsoever committed with one of his kindred or bloud or of alliance either of them within the 4. degree exclusive according to the computation of the civill law which is called incest or adulterie or committed with a widow which is called stuprium or where both bee single tearmed fornication fi●thy speech sollicitation of anothers chastitie drunkennesse clandestine mariages either in respect of consent of parents or tutors not obteined or of the private place or witnesses moe then two not being present or the bannes not proclaimed three several times upon the Lords dayes or holy dayes in lawfull distance In this table we have an enumeration of offences belonging to Ecclesiasticall cognisance but it is unsufficient For there are many moe then are here expressed as Theft Sacriledge Murther Prophanation of the Sabboth Sodomie disturbance of divine service Polygamie Diffamation c. as by opening of the 10. commandements may be drawn out to a great number which ought to be censured by the Church This partition wall of crimes made in the Canon Law to make some crimes temporall others spirituall hath made the crimes reputed Ecclesiasticall to bee neglected by the Magistrates and many crimes not reputed Ecclesiasticall on the other side to be neglected by the Church As Adulterie howbeit by Gods law it be capitall so ought to be also by the law of man is not made capitall by their lawes but referred to the Ecclesiasticall Courts as proper to them many sins of witchcraft and sorcerie likewise And on the other side a Theefe should not passe uncensured by the Church howbeit he be overseen by the Magistrate For the church ought to deale with every scandalous sinner to bring the sinner to repentance notwithstanding the Magistrate pardō or neglect to punish Next they have the offences there
of conjunction and dissolution in the word the Church is to see that that order and these caveats bee observed which are contained in the word For it may fall out that both in binding up of marriage they may commit incest and in dissolving without a just cause may offend also It is the Churches duty to prevent and remove such offences But of other lawes civil and municipal they are not executors These lawes which are divine are of a mixt nature These which are civill belong onely to the civill Magistrate The Churches part is transferred to the cognisance of officials to whom it doth not belong And therfore Beza concerning this abuse writeth thus Sed quorsum hoc ad officiales promotores procuratores totam denique illam procorum colluviem quae Ecclesiam Dei i●mpridē devastat quorsum hoc ad illa non Ecclesiae tantūmodo Christianae verumetiā universi mundi de But what maketh this sayth he for officialls promoters Proctors and all that filth of swine which now a long time doth waste the Church of God What is this to these shamefull staines not onely of the Christian Church but also of the whole world Further beside the Churches part which is to take heed to offences and breach of Gods law they have taken the Canon law for the rule of their proceedings both in spousalls mariages and divorces And thirdly have taken in debts and dowries goods and chattels which are accessorie to marriage to judge upon and this must be called Ecclesiasticall cognisance Lastly these causes are of such weight that they are not to be committed to the skill or conscience of one base officiall It is observed by the author of the Assertion for Christian policie that mens inheritances many times hang in suspence upon question of l●gitimation or illegitimation of their children to be allowed or disallowed by the Canon law and that many Knights Esquires and Gentlemen doe complaine and bewa●le the stealing away and mariages of their daughters neeces neere kinswomen or wards Couples have been married and lived together 4 6 or moe yeares as man and wife and upon a new and sudden dislike and discontentment or upon a surmised precontract pretensedly proved by two suborned witnesses by vertue of the Canon law the husband was adiudged no husband the wife no wife Another example he relateth of one solemnly maried to a wife and after by reason of a precontract solemnly divorced from the same wife and compelled by censures of the Church to marry her for whom sentence of precontract was adjudged and yet authorized by the same consistorie about ten or twelve yeares after the divorce to resummon recall and rechallenge his first wife she having a testimoniall out of the same consistorie of her lawfull divorce and being againe solemnly maried to another husband Licences of mariage have been granted out of their Ecclesiasticall Court with a blanke So the partie licenced was enabled if it had been their pleasure to marry another mans wife or his wives sister Many moe grosse absurdities are there alledged by th● learned authour which the Reader will s●arce beleeve But I omit them and many other things which might be sayd anent the particulars set down in this Table Succes●●on to the goods of the deceased is either or him who hath made his testam●nt or who hath died intestate The first 〈◊〉 her universall when the plea is for proving or improving the testament exhibited or particular when the suit is for to obtain a cer●ain lega●ie The s●cond is either properly when no testament is made or by way of in●estate as when there is none who will take upon them the burthen of executorie In either of the cases the action is either to obtaine the administration of the goods and that eithe● simply or with the later will annexed that it may be fulfilled or wit● the tutorship and to the use of the Min●r● or else the action is against him that ingyreth himselfe into the administration and intrometteth with the goods of the deceased not being inabled with any warrant Causes testamentarie and their appendicles are meere civill and temporall and therefore do not belong to spirituall Courts It is by the grant of Kings not by Ecclesiasticall right that Church consistories have medled with such causes Because Bishops were supposed to bee men of good conscience and that they would be carefull to see the later will of the deceased performed then others therefore they were reserved to Episcopal audience and cognisance of Ecclesiasticall Courts But this respect was not founded upon Gods word For we must not looke so much to conscience as to a lawfull calling or else all civill causes pleaded before a Iudge should be referred to Church-men because of their supposed good conscience And the truth is it is but supposed indeed For a Bishop or pastor that will medle in matters impertinent to his calling hath but a bad conscience Such a man will never make conscience of it more then another religious Christian. And what conscience they made of the matter may bee seene in that they transferred that which was committed to their trust to a base Officiall who hath as bad a conscience as the Bishop himselfe and badder if badder may be And as for skill in deciding such causes no man will deny but the civill judges are more able to cognosce and determine in them then Church-men By the common law sayth Lindwood these causes were not committed unto the Church but by the free grant of Princes And therefore in the lawes alledged by him approbation and insinuation of testaments are forbidden Clergiemen Et ratio redditur in juribus illis allegatis quia opprobrium est clericis si peritos ostendere vel●●t rerum for ●ense●●● May not matters of legacies and bequests of goods as well as of lands bee determined in remporall Courts Cannot the Iudges in temporal courts discerne upon proofes and other presumptions whether the testator was of perfect memorie or distracted as they doe in questions of lunacie madnesse or idiocie in men living Can they not define of two wills which is the first which is the later will whether the legacie remaine or bee recalled whether it bee pure or conditionall If a creditor may recouer his debt due by the testator in the tēporall Court what should hinder a legatarie to recover his legacie in the same Court This poynt is made cleare and amplified in the Assertion of true and Christian Church policie To conclude then probates of wills committing of Administrations sequestrations of the goods of the intestate recovering of legacies taking up of inventaries c. belong not to a Church Consistorie and it is a very great abuse that such Consistories should be called Church consistories and that spirituall censures should bee put in execution by them Ecclesiasticall dues and rights are 1. tithes which are either Praediall Personall or Mixt. Praediall tithes are such as come of the
The one to the end the Clergie might sue for that that was their sustentation before their own Iudges and the other is a kinde of pietie and religion which was thought incident to the performance of dead mens wills And surely for these two the Bishop in mine opinion may with lesse danger discharge himselfe upon his ordinarie Judges And I thinke likewise it will fall out that those suits are in the greatest number But for the rest which require a spirituall science and discretion in respect of their nature or of the scandall it were reason in mine opinion that there were no audience given but by the Bishop himselfe he being assisted as was touched before But it were necessarie also he were attended by his Chauncellour or some other his officers being learned in the civill lawes for his better instructions in poynts of formalitie or the courses of the Court which if it were done then were there lesse use of the officiall Court whereof there is now so much complaint And causes of the nature aforesayd being drawn to the audience of the Bishop would represse frivolous suits and have a grave and incorrupt proceeding to such causes as shall bee fit for the Court. There is a third forme also not of jurisdiction but of forme of proceeding which may deserve reformation the rather because it is contrary to the lawes and customes of this land and state which though they doe not rule this proceeding yet may they be advised with for better directions and that is the oath ex officio wherein men are forced to accuse themselves and that is more are sworne unto blankes and not unto accusations and charges declared By the lawes of England no man is bound to accuse himselfe In the highest causes of treason torture is used for discoverie and not for evidence In capitall matters no delinquents answer upon oath is required no not permitted In criminall matters not capitall handled in the Starre-chamber and in causes of conscience handled in the Chauncerie for the most part grounded upon trust and secresie the oath of the partie is required But how where there is an accusation and an accuser which we call bills of complaint from which the complaint cannot varie and out of compasse of the which the defendant may not be examined exhibited into the court and by processe certified unto the defendant But to examine a man upon oath out of the insinuation of fame and out of accusations secret or undeclared though it have some countenance from the civil law yet it is so opposite ex Diametro to the sence of the common law as it may well receiue some limitation This wise Polititian maketh this overture supposing that the Bishops ample and spatious circuite will not be contracted and that these causes which in their owne nature are temporall wlll not be drawne from the ecclesiasticall Courts For such a reformation is not nor may not be 〈◊〉 at in these dayes at least Polititians will not hazard their places and hopes in seeking of it le●t Caesar ●tart But their is a day coming for the Antichrist and them also What we have spoken before against medling with civill causes their large Diocie and excluding the Presbyterie from the cōmon governement here not m●lled with I need not to repeat Alwayes the reader may take up very solide reasons against the deputation of their authoritie The ordinary Iudges who under the Prince execute judiciall administration in name of others are the Bishops deputies to wit the Vicar generall for the universitie of causes belonging to voluntarie jurisdiction 2. The officiall principall for the universitie of causes belonging to contentious jurisdiction 3. The Comm●ssary for certain● causes within a certaine part of the Diocie The persons having judiciall admininistration not brought in by any law have it eyther by Royall composition or privilege or prescription of time By prescription of time as 1. some in exempt jurisdictions 2. Archdeacons whose office constitute by law is to enquire in the repairing and covering of Kirks their implements in ecclesiasticall enormities to be punished to refer to the ordinary matters or greater moment to induct into benefices 2. jurisdiction as they haue it by prescription It is ●xerced e●ther by themselves or by their Officials 〈◊〉 Byshop hath a two fold power one of order another of jurisdiction The power of order he committeth to his Suffragane Bishop as ordaining of ministers and Deacons Bishoping of children dedication of Churches and church yards etc. Their jurisdiction is eyther voluntary or contentious The voluntary he cōmitteth when he is absent to his Vicar generall the contentious he commiteth to his Chauncelour and Com●●ssarie The Vicar generall then in absence of the Bishop may visite the Diocie or any part thereof give certificates into the Kings Courts of bastardie and of excommunicates commit administrations give licence to eate flesh upon forbidden dayes doe all that may be done by the Bishops voluntarie jurisdiction whereof we haue entreated already D. Field sayth that Bishops had Vicars generall that might doe all things almost that perteyne to the Bishops iurisdiction And Lindwood sayth that they might not onely enquire into but also punish and correct offences The other deputies of the Bishop may be also called his Vicars yet are they designed 〈◊〉 distinct name because they haue a distinct office to wit the Chancelour and the Commissarie The Chauncelour is the Bishops principall officiall deputed for his principall Consistorie The Commissarie is the Bishops officiall also but in some remote part onely or some places exempted from the Archdeacon and he is called in the Canon law Officialis foraneus id est extraneus sayth Canisius This distinction betwixt the Chauncellour and Commissarie is made cleare in Cowells interpreter as followeth Officialis in the Canon law is especially taken for him to whom any Bishop doth generally commit the charge of his spirituall iurisdiction And in this sence one in every Diocie is Officialis principalis whom the statutes and lawes of this kingdome call Chancellour Anno 32. Henr. 8. c. 15. the rest if there be more are by the Canon law called Officiales foranei gloss in Clement 2. de rescriptis but with us termed Commissaires Commissarij as in the statute of Henr. 8. sometimes Commissarij foranei The difference of these two poynts you may read in Lindwood tit de sequestra c. 1. But this word Officiall in our statutes and common law signifieth him whom the Archdeacon substituteth in the executing of his iurisdiction as appeareth by the statute above mentioned and many others places Againe Commissarius is a title of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction at least so farre as his commission permitteth him in places of the Diocie so farre distant from the chiefe citie as the Chauncellour cannot call the subiects to the Bishops principall Consistorie without their too great molestation This Commissarie is of the Canonists termed Commissarius or Officialis foraneus Lindw