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A56274 The moderation of the Church of England considered as useful for allaying the present distempers which the indisposition of the time hath contracted by Timothy Puller ... Puller, Timothy, 1638?-1693. 1679 (1679) Wing P4197; ESTC R10670 256,737 603

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for University Preachers we promise We will preach without odious invectives and indiscreet discourses by name or plain Circumstances we will not defame any Man Much to this purpose is set forth in our Homilies * Homily against Contention That by being soft meek and gentle in answering we may overcome our Adversary with gentleness especially in Matters of Religion and God's Word which should be used with all modesty soberness and chastity For it is better to give place meekly than to win the Victory with breach of Charity Of such an Apostolical Spirit is our Church * ●ius simplex affectus interdum tolerandu● est etiamsi cum aliquo conjunctus est Errore Erasm de amab Eccl. Concor So S. Austin call'd the Pelagians and Optatus of Milevis his Contempory call'd the Donatists Brethren and before them S. Cyprian wisheth and persuadeth that none of the Brethren might perish So our Church calls and treats the Dissenters as Brethren In confuting Opinions Our Church always spares the Persons how severe soever she is upon the Error because in the Divisions of hearts that are in the World it is certain some good may dissent * Duct Dub. l. 3. c. 4. So moderate also and just is our Church she is far from deterring others from her Communion by branding any with the note of Heresy unless upon just reason and cause distinguishing also between a Heretic and those who are by Heretics seduced * Quidam Schismatum Duces caeteri tamen vel simplicitate capti vel errore inducti vel aliquâ fallentis astutiae calliditate decepti à fallaciae laqueis vos solvite S. Cypr. de unit Eccl. Yea where there might be just cause Our Church rather chuseth to imitate St. Paul 's demeanour at Athens where finding the City full of Idols or wholly given to Idolatry He doth not fall foul upon Bishop Sanderson's Preface to his Serm. §. 16. them nor exclaim against them in any reproachful manner no nor so much as call them Idolaters though they were such and that in a very high degree but tempering his speech with lenity and condescention he telleth them only of their Superstition and that in the calmest manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye are somewhat Act. 17. 23 too superstitious the comparative degree in such kind of speaking being usually taken for a diminuent term § 5. In reference to Peace and Charity which is the excellent Bond of Ecclesiastical Society the Moderation of the Church appears from its most earnest and frequent Precepts and Desires and Declarations for Peace It being that quiet condition of Being in which any thing may exercise its proper and suitable Actions in order to its good and perfection Wherefore because the proper Actions of the Church regularly tend to the perfection of Truth and Goodness and these most obtain when Peace bestows upon them Ornament Strength and Blessing Therefore our Church hath done so much to procure to keep to restore this Peace every where especially among the Churches * See the Questions in the Ordination of Bishops Priests and Deacons K Edw. 6. and Q. Eliz. Injunc §. 21. Homily of Charity Hom. against Contention § 6. The Moderation of our Church gives it a singular advantage to convince Dissenters upon right and proper Principles in defect of which in disputation with the Romanists Bishop Sanderson and others have observed many have disserved their Cause either mistaking the Question or mingling some of their own false Principles with their Argument either over-shooting or coming short of the Mark Wherefore those of our Separatists are very injurious to the Protestant Cause who take so much pains to elevate and depreciate the Labours of our Conformable Clergy which so sensibly have prest the Romanists because they have manag'd those Controversies upon the only right Principles Which requires greater variety and depth of true Learning than seems to be well consisting with the Principles of a rigid Separation § 7. Because of the excellent Moderation of our Church it hath bin judged by the most Learned and the most equal Judges of things so well pitcht in Her Principles and of so rare a temper in her Constitution that it is rightly resolved to be the best and most proper for * Accepi perniciosam esse in omni arte vel Doctrinâ assertionem audacem extremam Gerson de vitâ Sp. Arbitrating and reconciling the present Differences of Christendom Wholsom indeed was the Advice which King James gave his Divines which were to be at Dort In case of main opposition between any over-much addicted to their own Opinions your endeavours shall be that certain Propositions be moderately laid down which may tend for the mitigation of heat on both sides The same is already performed in our Constitution for a general Accommodation of Controversy Neither will any I hope have the worse Opinion of our Church because Grotius thought the Church of England a right Medium of * V. Bp. Bramhalls Vind. p. 23. Reconciliation Whose Pacificatory Design Mr. Baxter took to be one of the most blessed noble Works that any Man Ib. p. 22. can be imploied in And certainly Peace without the loss of Truth is a most valuable acquist Yet Mens fingers do Vià Media Bp. Halls Remains p. 387. so itch after the maintenance of their Opinions that they can hardly contain themselves from flying upon the fairest Moderation of any Vmpire Wherefore no wonder if the Church of England hath the fortune of other wise and good Arbitrators not to please both Parties † Hic accidit quod usu veniri solet iis qui contrarias Opiniones student reconciliare ut utrique in Mediâ Opinione oppugnandâ vires suas consocient ipsi interim in opinione suâ multò quàm antè obfirmatiores In Hist Concil Trid. l. 3. p. 239. Therefore our Church hath this left her as such have to be satisfied in her own integrity But however in this Matter Our Church cannot I conceive so properly be termed an Arbitrator or Umpire of the Differences of the Church how fitly soever she is qualified to be as she hath determined for her self which she hath right to do according to the Word of God and the practice of the Universal Church Yet in this Our Church hath performed so much as might be made use of in order to a due Reconciliation For suppose a Kingdom or State well setled as was the Primitive Church by Christ and there happens a Rebellion or Division the means of Reconciliation are the Laws to attempt a Reconciliation further is in no hand of right but theirs who have Power of the Law Any design further is but a Speculation and so in the Church to speak of Reconciliation otherwise than upon the foundation of its establishment is neither safe nor obtainable What is removed from the foundation is the proper Matter of Charity and mutual forbearance But as the
young Students by reading of late Writers and ungrounded Divines do broach many times unprofitable seditious and dangerous Doctrines to the scandal of the Church He injoin'd That none under a Bishop or Dean do presume to preach in any popular Auditory the deep points of Predestination Election Reprobation or of the Vniversality Resistibility or Irresistibility of Gods Grace But rather confine themselves wholly to those two Heads of Faith and a good Life which are all the subject of the ancient Sermons and Homilies That no Preacher of any denomination whatsoever shall presume to fall into bitter invectives and undecent railings against the Persons of either Papists or Puritans but modestly and gravely when they are occasion'd by their Text free both the Doctrine and Discipline of the Church of England from the Aspersions of the Adversaries King Charles of Blessed Memory set forth with the Articles a Declaration 1630. wherein he required thus In these curious and unhappy differences which have for so many hundred years in different times and places exercised the Church of Christ We will that all further curious search be laid aside and these disputes shut up in Gods promises as they be generally set forth to us in Holy Scriptures and the general meaning of the Articles of the Church of England It is to be wisht that all the Directions concerning Preachers in the several Kings Reigns since the Reformation were Imprinted on the minds of all the Clergy and others especially His present Majesties Directions Dated October 14. 1662. Which among other great reasons inducing were set forth because of the extravagance of sundry young Divines who took upon them in their popular Sermons to handle the deep points of Gods Eternal Counsels and Decrees and other fruitless controversies serving rather to amuse than profit the hearers which is done for the most part and with greatest confidence by such persons as least understand them Therefore they are admonisht not to spend their time in the search of such abstruse and speculative notions However that they presume not positively and doctrinally to determine anything concerning the same And for the edifying the people in Faith and Godliness That they in their ordinary Sermons insist chiefly on Catechetical Doctrines wherein are contained all the necessary and undoubted verities of Religion declaring withal unto their Congregations what Influences such Doctrines ought to have into their Lives and Conversations and stirring them up effectually as well by their Examples as their Doctrines to the practice of such religious and moral duties as are the proper results of the said Doctrines as Self-denial Contempt of the World Humility Patience Meekness Temperance Justice Mercy Obedience and the like and to a detestation c. And because these licentious times have corrupted Religion in the very roots and foundations That where there is an Afternoons Exercise it be especially spent either in explaining some part of the Church Catechism or what may conduce to the Exposition of the Liturgy and Prayers of the Church as occasion shall be offered The only cause they grew into contempt among the people being this that they were not understood The subscription for University Preachers in the University of Cambridge keeps its Subscribers within the same bounds and by the way I may note the Moderation and Excellent temper of our Vniversities at this time Having known for many Years together in Cambridge there have seldom been disputed in our Schools those Controversies which in the Age before did so much divide both Foreign Churches and ours and also our Vniversities themselves of our other Vniversity I am assured the same from my most Reverend Diocesan the Lord Bishop of Lincoln Having mentioned our Vniversities I conceive a very proper proof of the Moderation of our Church of England may be taken from the general practice in our Universities those noble Seminaries of the Church where among the Theses which are disputed in the Divinity Schools commonly one is given to assert our Church against the Romanists the other to defend our Church against other Sectaries The care of very many of our Bishops hath been also the same as may appear from one of their Exemplars of Subscription I have set it down in the Margent m Ego Curatus cui licentia praedicandi verbum Dei concedenda est sacras literas purè sincerè tractabo easque prudenti simplicitate populo exponam nec in sermonibus meis de rebus jam constitutis suscitabo Controversias nec spargam contentiones neque innovationem ullam doctrinâ vel Ceremoniis suadebo V. 1. Vol. Episcopii praes Praevorstii de concionibus because of its excellent use In the Instructions of King James 1618. to the Divines He sent over to the Synod of Dort One was That they should advise the Ministers of those Churches that they do not deliver in the Pulpit to the people those things for ordinary Doctrines which are the highest points of Schools and not fit for vulgar capacity but are disputable on both sides and that they carry themselves with that advice moderation and discretion as became them c. After all these great Testimonies of Moderation in our Church it is proper to mention what we meet with in the Pacific Dr Hammonds Discourse of Gods Grace and Decrees § 24. This I suppose the reason both of our Churches Moderation in framing the Article of Predestination and of our late Kings Declaration in silencing the debate of the Question For if by these methods the Church could but have prevailed to have the Definitions of the several pretenders forgotten All men contenting themselves as our Article prescribes with the Promises of God as they are declared in Scripture the turmoil and heat and impertinence of disputes had been prevented which now goes for engagement in Gods cause And blessed be God the design of the Churches Moderation and of our Gracious King the Churches Moderatour and Governour hath thus far had excellent effect in the Church and our Universities that for a long time there hath been a great silence from that noise and learned squabble which sometimes formerly disturbed the Churches Peace so that now we may be more at leisure without prejudice and passion to review and admire the wise and excellent determinations of our Church § 6. To shew how well the Controversies of the late Age have been moderated by our Church might deserve a just Treatise by it self But our Church seems to observe the same advice which King James gave to the Divines going over to Dort 1618. In case of opposition between any over-much addicted to their own opinions their endeavours should be that certain Positions be moderately laid down which may tend to the mitigation of heat on both sides Our Church throughout hath done the same thing as might be instanced at large in the Controversies between us and the Romanists and between others also Indeed the Articles and especially the Homilies do copiously and
and others that do not hold with them they do very much hazard their right and title to the said Catholic Church as much as by any thing CHAP. XVI Of the Moderation of the Church of England in her Reformation § 1. The Reformation of our Church as it had just grounds and was by just Authority so it was managed with due Moderation the Idea of our Reformation having bin impartial § 2. The whole manner of it so far as concerned our Church was with great temper § 3. She separated from the Romish Errors not from their Persons any more than needs must § 4. Our Charity exceeds that of the Church of Rome which denys Salvation to all who are not of her Communion § 5. The Preparation of our Church to submit to the Church Vniversal saves us from Schism § 6. The Reformation of our Church was the more Christian because not fierce but well governed § 7. Albeit the Moderation of our Church seems to have enraged her Adversaries yet because of this Moderation our Church is the better prepared to survive Persecution § 8. The Moderation of our Church in her Reformation was founded on Rules of absolute Justice as in sundry great Instances is made to appear § 1. THe moderate and orderly Reformation of the Church of England Bishop Bramhall well calls the Terror and Eye-sore of Rome * Answer to the Bp. of Chalcedon p. 244. because of 3 Conditions of a lawful Reformation well agreeing thereto viz. Just Grounds Sufficient Authority Due Moderation 1. Just Grounds Under which head I shall not take too large a compass to illustrate the Moderation of our Reformation either from the manifold Usurpations and Corruptions of the Church of Rome at that time nor from the invidious task of looking into the extreme Rigors of any other Models of Reformation Neither is it here necessary to reflect more particularly on Matters of Fact historically relating hereunto which have bin copiously set forth by a multitude of Writers both Ecclesiastical and Civil which abundantly justify this Reformation both in its Causes and Proceedings clearly manifesting how this Church was justified therein from the unjust conditions of Communion which the Church of Rome peremptorily insisted upon 2. That it might have Just Authority the said Reformation was manag'd by the Guides and Governors of the Church and was confirmed by Supream Authority and so in every particular was as legal as any Reformation could or ought to be as doth sufficiently appear from Matter of Fact recounted in the Histories and Monuments thereof Wherein the Princes acted their parts and the Clergie theirs they calling together the Bishops and others of the Clergie to consider of what might seem worthy Reformation and the Clergie did their part for being called together by Regal Power they met in a National Synod of 62 and the Articles were agreed on and were afterward confirmed by Acts of State and Royal Assent * Arch-Bp Laud §. 24. Any Reformation otherwise than Regular is as much against the Principles of our Church as any one can wish and had the Doctrine of our Homilies bin well regarded it might have prevented much mischief consequent on later Reformations Lest any Persons upon colour of destroying Images make any stir or disturbance in the Common-Wealth it must always be remembred that the redress of such public Enormities pertaineth to the Magistrates and such as are in Authority and not to private Persons In the Homilies against wilful Rebellion is set forth at large the sufficient reason of our Church's Reformation viz. the Intolerable Usurpations of the Bishop of Rome To the same purpose * Angli necessitate dirâ cogente secessionem fecerunt Casaub ad C. Per. the Apologie of the Church of England doth express it self more largely than need be repeated We did nothing rashly or insolently for the sake of any worldly pleasure or advantage but upon great advice and deliberation we shook off a Yoke which we had no obligation to endure † Postermò ab illo decessimus cui obstrecti non eramus ejusque jugum ac tyrannidem excussimus Apol. Eccl. Angl. §. 150 159 160 c. The Church of England did but behave her self as became a free Church enjoying the Rights of a Patriarchal See according to the Rules of the Universal Church it reformed it self when it had high need For as King Henry the 8th said in his last Letter to the Pope Better is it in the middle way to return than always to run forth head-long and do ill 3. The Due Moderation of our Reformation will appear if we consider 1. The Idea or Form of our Reformatation was neither taken from Luther nor Calvin as the Romanists love to speak of us * Impia mysteria instituta ad Cal●ini praescriptum Bulla Pii 5. contra R. Elizab. Calvinicas aliquot deprecationes substituit De Schism Angl. p. 165. In illis Angliae legi●us quae alios actus Sacrilegos ut Participationem Calvinianae coenae similes Communicationes in eorum ritibus praecipiunt Suraii Def. l. 6. c. 11. nor from any other but from the Holy Scriptures according to the use of the Primitive Church which were only its measures according to which our Church practis'd the part of the Elective Philosopher and chose what she thought most agreeable among the rest she seemeth to come nearest the Augustan Confession and the Consultation of Herman Arch-Bishop of Colon which was also set forth in English 1548. Among others that have reformed their Churches I have often saith Saravia admired the wisdom of those who restored the true Worship of God to the Church of England who so temper'd themselves that they cannot be reproved for having departed from the Ancient and Primitive Custom of the Church of God and that Moderation they have used that by their Example they have invited others to reform and deterred none * Sarav Desins Praef. * Ea omnia sublata sunt quae nimium onerosa operosa sunt Lud Capel inter Thes Salmur 6. Between those who were loth to bid adieu to their Ceremonies and others whose Reformation had no bounds our Godly Reformers compiled the excellent Model of our Liturgie in so moderate and well-temper'd a Mode as neither part had Alliance of D. off c. 1. just cause to think themselves agrieved † So that the Church of England appears faithfully to have practised the same counsel which P. Gregory the Great gave unto Austin the Monk when he was sent over into England From all Churches chuse whatsoever things are Pious and Religious whatsoever things are Right and being gathered into one bundle commend them to the Minds of the English for their use ¶ B. Greg. Epistol ex registro l. 12. indic 7. For having laid their Ground that Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to Salvation Artic. 6. They do upon that * Huic Basi Reformationem Britannicam niti
Bull against Queen Elizabeth they will cry out God hath set them over all Princes and Nations to pluck up and destroy and to scatter to plant and to build They will presently be for binding Kings in Chains and our Nobles in Fetters of Iron that the Saints may rule and that the mountain of his Holiness may be exalted 9. In the mean while they have among them such a political and artificial dependence on their principal Leaders and the administration of their Body is cast into such a method for communication of News and * Tantum vaferrimi veteratores ex solâ correspondentiâ utilitatem ad unio●em tuendam sentiunt Hospin de Jesuitis l. 4. intelligence of their Affairs and Interests as we may be sure is contrived and menaged and directed by more subtil Wits than their own being so very like the same method which the Agents of Rome use themselves for the propagation and disposition of their Matters To mention nothing now further of their Agreements with the severest Emissaries of Rome in their pretences to all mortification of Spirit and mildness In their pretences to extraordinary and miraculous Gifts in their many kinds of Superstitions and Pharisaicalness in their clamours also of Persecution in their grievous Anathema's and Curses they use against us too like the Roman Curses by Bell Book and Candle which sheweth what is the Light within them § 9. It might be no difficult thing to shew some of those steps and degrees by which some commonly advance to Popery who separate from Communion with our Church The first step to Division is When what is amiss in Government and Governours in Church or State is set forth to the full advantage of dissatisfaction as may make withal the most lamentable out-cry that may be unto which there shall never be wanting arch and cunning Instruments who by all plausible means shall stir up the humour and Passions and Zeal of the People under such pretences as shall most inflame and excite them Then in the next place are made such immoderate pretences to Purity and profession of Saintship as when poor simple People experience upon trial the same to be false and not to answer their expectation they run and seek from one Sect to another till they come to be Quakers and so as we see in the next preparation to Popery 3. Having thus cast off all Forms as dangerous and unlawful being raised to expect every-where the effects of a Spirit extraordinary they are made so Enthusiastical 't is hard to contain them within ordinary bounds till they arrive at the perfection of Enthusiasm the Light within 4. By the way we must note there is no one Principle which hath bin the Original of all this Enthusiasm and Division more than that Nothing is lawful to be done but for which there is an express Example or Precept in the Scripture Which attributing to the Holy Scriptures that Perfection which is beside the end of them doth tend by consequence to take away the true perfection of them which they have which hath bin considered in the 4th Chapter which hath bin found true for all these sub-divisions of Sects have tended in the conclusion to cast off Holy Scripture as a Rule By the consequences of this Principle is come to pass what Arch-Bishop Whitgift and Hooker and others foretold If Puritanism should prevail it would soon draw in Anabaptism From them we have had Quakers and Seekers and other Sects which divide us and are ready to destroy us and to bring in Popery as it were at the back door I may not dissemble my own fears saith Bishop Sanderson * Pref. to his Serm V. Arch. Bp. Laud's dying Speech if things still go on as they have hitherto proceeded the application that some have made of that passage John 11. 48. The Romans will come and take away both our Place and Nation will prove but a true Prophecy and Popery will over-run all at the last 5. But when they are run out of all possibility of pretending any Scripture to justify their Actions they then warrant them by Providence and such a necessity as God hath called them unto by extraordinary Revelations and Impulses which in the next remove comes to be Light within them 6. And when once they are off from our legal Establishments what can stop the Divisions of several Sects from ending in confusion and being made a prey of by designing Men whose business is when the Public is on fire to make out their Spoils And who think we are most cunning and industrious to make the advantage by all this but they whose greatest Business and industrious Design is to have our Church ruined Who make use of our Divisions to cry up also the necessity of an Infallible Judg of Controversy The Infallible private Spirit is a fair preparation thereunto and when they have broken and discredited the Authority of our Church they have that taken away which gives them most hinderance and opposition § 10. What hath bin in so many Instances proved is most agreeable 1. To the Art Industry and Design of the Romanists to make use of the Prejudices and Passions the divided Principles and Interests of Men to serve their purposes which are by any means whatsoever to multiply Proselytes and enlarge their Party Wherefore the Thesis of Bishop Bramhall out of Nilus was worthy such an Assertor That the Papacy as it was challenged and usurped in many places and as it hath bin usurped in our Native Country was either the Procreant or Conservant Cause or both Procreant and Conservant of all the Ecclesiastical Controversies in the Christian World * Bp. Br. Gro. Rel. p. 74. 2. This is no more than what is agreeable to most common experience since the Reformation and hath bin noted with great authority and remark In the Preamble of the Act of Parliament 27. Hen. 8. 1536. The Public Authority of the Kingdom took notice how many of the Pope's Emissaries were practising up and down the Kingdom and persuading the People to acknowledg his pretended Authority In the Homily against Rebellion it is observed That the Bishops of Rome by the Ministry of their disguised Chaplains creep into Houses in Laymens Apparel and raise Rebellion The same Comenius relates was practised by them in the Bohemian Church † Admiscebant se personati quidam qui Papa causam promoturi dissentines mutuas promovebant Histor §. 36. Our English History tells us of sundry seditious Motions soon after and about the time of the Reformation which received their Impressions and Continuance from the influence of Romish Agents as * V. Acts and Monuments p. 1086. 1087 1306. in the Lincolnshire and Yorkshire and Devonshire Commotions and Rebellions which were actuated by Monks Priests and Papists And how the like Game hath bin played ever since especially from the beginning of our Troubles in England Scotland Ireland c. Mr. Fowlis gives sundry proofs in
Christ which of themselves are sufficient motives to Religion and make the same proceed from the most free and most suitable and noble principle that can be of affection and thankfulness to God § 13. Because an Oath is an act of Divine Worship in which we solemnly invoke God as a witness to what we swear It is but proper here to take notice of the Moderation of our Church in what relates to Oaths 1. Our Church doth in the 39. Article of Religion excellently declare and in the Homily against perjury at large prove The lawfulness and benefits of swearing for causes necessary and honest and for the ending of controversy and sets forth also the sore danger of perjury 2. Our Church doth at large testify against customary and unnecessary Swearing and the mentioned Homily declares the danger and vanity thereof Both these purposes of the Homily are briefly contained in the 39th Article Thus As we confess vain and rash Swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Jesus Christ and James his Apostle So we judge That Christian Religion doth not prohibite but that a man may swear when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of Faith and Charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in Justice Judgment and Truth In a few lines also of the Homily our Church seems fully to determine the whole Controversy which our Sectaries have rais'd concerning Swearing When Christ so earnestly forbad Swearing it may not be understood as though he did forbid all manner of Oaths but he forbiddeth all vain Swearing and forswearing both by God and by his Creatures as the common use of Swearing in buying and selling and in daily Communication to the intent every Christian mans word should be as well regarded in such matters as if he confirm'd his Communication with an Oath for the truth is as Theophylact writeth no man is less trusted than he that useth much to swear Beside the practice of the Gentiles to swear by Creatures the Jews had fallen into that Custom which gave our Saviour and St James occasion to forbid such S. Mat. 5. 34. S. James 5. 12. kind of Swearing which also was in use among the Manichees as St Augustine notes x Jurabant saepissimè nulloque mentis scrupulo per Creaturas c. Faust 22. Seeing then all Swearing by the Creatures is counted by the Homily Vain-Swearing It can be deemed no other to swear by the y V. Catechism Trident Blessed Virgin or by Saints or their reliques since they have no delegated power to know our hearts or to punish Perjury At the solemn Inauguration of the Emperour he saith I swear unto God and S. Peter c. When any enter into a Monastery they say I vow unto God and to the Blessed Virgin and to S. Dominic or some other their particular Saint 3. Concerning the matter and obligation of lawful and unlawful Oaths we may hear our Church excellently advising and declaring Therefore whosoever maketh any promise binding himself thereunto by an Oath Let him foresee that the thing he promiseth be good and honest and not against the Commandment of God and that it be in his own power to perform it justly and such promises must men keep evermore assuredly But if a man at any time shall either of ignorance or of malice promise and swear to do any thing which is either against the Law of Almighty God or not in his power to perform let him take it for an unlawful Oath Of an unlawful Oath the same Homily determines in the Case of Herod That as he took a wicked Oath so he more wickedly performed the same These full and just determinations of the Church might be fitly commented on by what Bishop Sanderson hath writ of the obligation of Oaths especially in his third Prelection and may very justly also be applyed to the Case of the solemn League and Covenant which sufficiently justifies the abjuration of the Covenant as it is required in the Act of Uniformity 4. Our Church lays a great charge and weight on the words of the Prophet Jeremiah Ch. 4. V. 2. Thou shalt swear in Judgment Truth and Righteousness Whosoever sweareth let him be sure in his Conscience That his Oath have these three conditions z Homily against Perjury which also are mentioned in the 39th Article and largely insisted on in the Homily All which do sufficiently testify against the Equivocations and mental reservations which the Jesuits allow and defend which is a most notorious artifice of deceit a great profanation of the divine name and contrary to the nature and end of Oaths And that we may observe how rightly our Church judgeth of the Power of the Pope or of any other in rescinding and dispensing with lawful Oaths a Vi. Duo brevia Pontisicis Ro. 1. dat 1606. 2. dat 1607. contra juram Fidel. in R. Jac. Apologiâ yea dispensing with men aforehand to make unlawful Oaths and Vows as in Marriages within the degrees Levitical b Apol. of certain Proceedings in Courts Eccles p. 2. c. 2. p. 18. The sixth part of the Homily against wilful Rebellion speaking of the Bishops of Rome discharging the Subjects of the Kings of England of their Oath of Fidelity to their Soveraign Lord as particularly Innocent III. to King John calls it fitly A feigned discharging of their Oath and fealty and a vain cursing of the King Which practices of the Popes rely upon two Principles of the Church of Rome 1. That the Pope hath an absolute and Oecumenical Authority over the whole World and that all Oaths are to be taken with a reserve of his pleasure and that he hath the sole power to declare and dispense in what relates unto them 2. That Faith is not to be kept with Hereticks which Doctrines are published in the Books of the Famous Romanists neither prohibited nor animadverted on c Nullo modo Fides servanda Haereticis etiam Juramento firmata Simanca In interpreting Oaths as our Church doth not encourage any loose sense that the taker by any evasion may collude the design of the Law so also our Church rejects such rigid interpretations which force the words to a severe sense but where a fair and easy construction may be made by the natural interpretation of the words which is agreeable to truth and justice and may secure the intention of Superiours such a construction our Church is ready to allow of and encourage d Vi. Q. Eliz Admon V. Article 37. 5. The general Oaths enjoined or defended in our Church are but few and those for great causes appointed and with great Moderation framed As 1. The Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy The necessity and Moderation of which hath been largely expounded in the Apology of King James and others d See the Admonition of Q. Eliz 1559. of the Oath of Supremacy Nunc mitius ac moderatius substitutum est Sander de Schism Angl. p. 149. since which the
second the loud Clamour ¶ Quid juvant leges aequissimae ubi dominantur Domini dixissem Tyranni legum administri executores Altar Damas P. 579. Notwithstanding Our Edicts and Statutes made for their restraint are such as serve only to awake them and cause them to consider the innocence of that Cause for refusal of Communion in which they endure as they suppose great Losses Those who are sent over by them either for the retaining the already perverted or perverting others are either returned by us back again to them who dispatch them to us or without any wrong unto their Persons or danger to their Lives suffer an easie restraint which only hinders them from dispersing their Poyson they brought and had they not been stickling in our State Businesses and medling with our Prince's Crown there had not a drop of their Blood fallen to the Ground * T●t conjurationes machinationes rebelliores publicae in illo Regno ortae sunt ut illae non solum fuerint justae sed etiam Moderatae poenae delin quentium Ad R. Eliz. Rex Jac. in Apologià Quod me de Catholicorum persecutione calumniàntur nunquam probari potest quenquam Conscientiae causà Religionis ergo me regnante hactenus vel morte mulctatum fuisse vel in mortis periculo versari Rex Jacobus ibid. Yet they traduce our Judiciary Proceedings against them for sanguinary and violent striving to persuade other Nations that such as have suffered by Course of public Justice for Religion sake only and not for Treason have Died ¶ M. Hales of dealing with erring Christians And the less wonder that these Penal Laws are not taken away until those Principles be fully renounced which gave occasion to them Yet this may be noted of the Moderation of our Government in not suffering the Course of our Law to proceed but when the apprehension of danger hath been great 2. As to most of our other Separatists Who seeth not their Hypocrisie who would make the World believe they are persecuted when with too much Lenity they are punished for their intolerable contempt of good Laws It is to be doubted what these Men will do when Persecution cometh indeed who make now so much of nothing ¶ Arch-Bishop Whitgift answer to Admon 1572. The Moderation of our Church in this matter Bishop Sanderson † Bishop Sanderson's judgment in one View thus also defends Our Church it is well known hath not always used that Rigour she might have done Where she hath been forced to proceed as far as Deprivation she hath ordinarily by her fair slow and compassionate proceeding therein sufficiently manifested her unwillingness thereunto and declared her self a Mother every way indulgent enough to such ill nurtured Children as will not be ruled by Her 2. Those that are suspended or deprived suffer it but justly for their obstinacy and contempt For however they would bear the World in hand that they are the only Persecuted ones and that they suffer for their Consciences yet in truth they do but abuse the Credulity of the simple therein And herein as in many other things jump with the Papists whom they would seem above all others most abhorrent from For as Seminary Priests and Jesuits give it out they suffer for Religion when the truth is they are justly executed for their prodigious Treasons and felonious or treacherous Practices against lawful Princes and States So the Brethren pretend they are persecuted for their Consciences when they are indeed but justly censured for their obstinate and pertinacious contempt of lawful Authority 'T is well known the Quakers were hanged in New-England Yet To these who so much cry out Persecution saith the Friendly Debate Are Pag. 218. Part. 1. you not allowed to worship God just as you please in your own Families May not some of your Neighbours joyn with you For shame do not complain of Persecution who are so kindly used * Si ea quae per misericordissimam disciplinam patiuntur comparentur sactis quae furi●sa temeritate committunt quis non videat qui magis Persecutores vocandi sunt S. Aug. Ep. 167. who endeavour'd in such a manner to oppose others The Common Prayer was never imposed with such Rigour as the Directory was * M. Dryden's Ep. Ded. 1678. We have already all the Liberty which Free-born Subjects can enjoy and all beyond is but License But if it be Liberty of Conscience which they pretend the Moderation of our Church is such that its Practice extends not to the severity of Persecution and its Discipline is withal so easie that it allows more freedom to dissent then any of the Sects would allow it In the mean while what right can be pretended by these Men to attempt Innovations in Church or State Who made them Trustees or to speak in their own Language the Keepers of the Liberties of England Wherefore if a perfect pattern of dealing with Erring Christians were to be sought there were not any like unto this of ours which as it takes not to it self liberty of Cruelty so it leaves not any the liberty of destroying their own Souls in the error of their Lives ¶ M. Hales of Erring Christians § 9. Here humble thankfulness and duty binds us to make mention of the most glorious examples of Princely Moderation which the Christian World ever hath exhibited namely the Moderation of our Kings which have been since the Reformation which gives a great Lustre to the subject here treated of Of whom those have been most fortunate to whom belongs that Character which was given of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mar. Anton. l. 1. §. 16. He had skill and knowledg when Rigour and Extremity and when Remisness and Moderation Neque multâ asperitate exulcerentur subditi nec nimiâ benignitate solvantur Gregor M. de Curà Pastor was in season Or as King James's Phrase to the Parliament 1622. was when the Spur and when the Bridle was to be used The very Enemies of Q. Elizabeth among the Romish Faction could not but confess that Her Laws and Procedings were very mild and merciful ¶ Watson's Quodlibets p. 303. V. Fowlis Hist of Popish Treasons l. 7. c. 2. c. And yet how very often did they Treasonably attempt against her Life Neither did her Indulgence sufficiently prevail with the other sort of Recusants to conform as the Queen by all means did desire That wise King James in his Basilicon † Pag. 31. earnestly from our dear-bought Experience warned his Son that his Mildness and Lenity found in Scotland little effect and the loss of his thanks was all his reward And in his Raign of the Romanists in England Isaac Casaubon asked Fronto Ducaeus * An illa divina in negotio Religionis Moderatio quicqam apud vestros profuit p. 73. Whether the King 's Divine Moderation in business of
my own part be content to meet them in the mid-way so that all Novelties might be renounced on either side Which passage I find cited by Cressie's Answer to Dr. Pierce adding thus See the condescence of this great King The want of such Moderation makes the Church of Rome so irreconcilable as it is V. Ch. 13. § 7. § 6. It was the Speech of a wise Bishop concerning too suddain a Convert I do not well like a Man that tells me so presently he hath changed a whole Religion at once even so our Reformation was perfected by just degrees and being more moderate 't is hoped it is the more durable Dr. Hammond hath largely vindicated the honest policy of the Church of England for compliance only so far as was innocent I cannot imagine saith he but Liturgie Moderation and Charity may be able to bring in as fair a shole of Proselytes to convert as many Papists to us or at least confirm Protestants as an Ordinance for sequestration of all their Goods and Halter and Directory will be able to do I know what we justly call Moderation there are some will stile a halting between God and Baal * Altare Damas P. 558. a Laodicean luke-warmness of Reformation as hath bin they say matter of continual complaint to the Godly of this Nation * Mr. Henderson to K. Ch. I. Whereas certainly a fierceness and extremity in Reformation is as great reason of complaint for as Dr. Pierce hath it The Tepida quaedam temperatura Parker de Pol. Eccl. l. 1. c. 25. way to convince a Papist is to accuse them in measure of their Corruptions a Puritanical opposition confirms a Papist and makes him conclude he is Orthodox because he conquers Thus Bishop Sanderson ¶ V. Pref. to his Sermons observed that some promote the Interest of Rome and betray the Protestant Cause by mistaking the Question Wherefore let it be always remembred that our Church hath admirably imitated our blessed Saviour's Reformation which was a quiet and peaceable and orderly Reformation He did not pull down before he had another frame of Order instituted He did not destroy all before him as some Reformers do who love to run to the other extreme sundry Instances are often * Dr. Ham. view of the Director §. 43. given that our Lord made no more alteration than was necessary neither was his Reformation wrought by force of Arms with great noise and violence but it was gentle and according to great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moderation as became the Prince of Peace and the great Law-giver of his Church Somewhat the like Apology was made at the beginning of the Reformation It was said that as our Saviour did not reveal all things to his Disciples till they were able to bear them and as the Apostles did not of a suddain abolish all the Rites of Judaism but for some time to gain the Jews complyed with them and went to the Temple and offered Sacrifices So the People were not to be driven in this change The Clergie must be brought out of their Ignorance by degrees but to drive furiously and to do all at once might have spoiled the whole Design Therefore these slow steps were thought the surer and better Method * Hist of Reform l. 3. p. 219 But soon after the excellent frame of our Constitution was made more perfect considering which Doctor Cressy may be thought to owe a Penance for his Exomologesis where he saith of the English Church By the just judgment of God she had only power given her to destroy the Temple of God but not so much as to lay one stone towards the raising up another in the place of it † C. 55. §. ● § 7. This Moderation of our Church hath made it the great envy of the Church of Rome and the chiefest Object of its despite But of all places said a wise Writer * Europa Speculum Quarto p. 214 215. their Desires and Attempts to recover England have bin always and still are the strongest which altho in their more sober Moods sundry of them will acknowledg to have bin the only Nation that took the right way of justifiable Reformation in comparison of other who have run head-long rather to a tumultuous Innovation so they conceive it whereas that alteration which hath bin in England was brought in with peaceable and orderly proceeding by general consent of the Realm representatively assembled in Parliament a great part of their own Clergie according and conforming themselves thereunto no Luther no Calvin the square of our Faith The succession of Bishops and vocation of Ministers continued the Dignity and State of the Clergie preserved the more ancient usages of the Church not cancelled In sum no humour of affecting Contrariety but a charitable endeavour rather of Conformity with the Church of Rome in whatsoever they might not gain-saying to the express Law of God which is the only way of meet Reformations thereby the fitter to be an Vmpire to the rest Of all places in the World they desire most to recover this making full account that the rest would soon follow But to as high a Tide as they are risen in their desires thereof to as low an Ebb are they fallen in their Hopes being less now I perceive than ever having seen her Majesty so often and miraculously preserved their Treasons discovered their Excommunications vanished their Armies defeated their Books answered their chief Champions discouraged And we hope this Moderation of our Church may still with God's wonderful Providence preserve her * Vis consilii expers mole ruit suâ Vim temperatam Dii provehunt in majus and it hath not bin thought improbable that their immoderate asserting of the Authority of the Pope and their Severities to such as differ from them will some time or other awaken if not themselves yet such an understanding in others as may prove a truer Mother of Devotion than the Ignorance they cherish Bishop Bramhall therefore had good reason to say of the Romanists They fear our Moderation more than the violent opposition of others ¶ Fol. p. 957. § 8. This Moderation being the great praise of our Reformation I cannot but compare the effects of this Moderation in our Reformation by some of the Rules and Measures of Justice which a right Moderation always supposeth Which Justice also is considered as due to God and his Truth and hath appeared in the sincere endeavours of our Church for the advancing the true honour of Almighty God the suppression of Superstition * Pref. to Injunctions yet procuring of Reverence to God's Holy Mysteries and Sacraments † Pref. to the Liturgy Avoiding diversities of Opinions and establishing consent about true Religion ¶ Title of the Articles Preventing Factions and Schisms a Act for Uniform Preface How much Primitive simplicity and most discernable intent at the Glory of God and Edification of Men