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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A35698 Some remarks recommended unto ecclesiasticks of all perswasions Denton, William, 1605-1691. 1690 (1690) Wing D1068; ESTC R14 74,373 48

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King James the Parliament sitting Dr. Harsenet Bishop of Chichester Preached a Sermon at Whitehall upon Mark 12.17 Give unto Caesar c. wherein he insisted that Goods and Money were Caesars and therefore they were not to be denied unto him at which the whole Parliament stormed and took great Offence which that wise and peaceable Prince endeavoured to calm and qualifie by moderate Exposition thereof to the Lords and Commons for that purpose Assembled in the Banquetting-House viz. That the Doctor meant it according to the Laws and Customs of the Country wherein they did live This did mollifie but not satisfie and therefore the Sermon was burnt to satisfie their Indignation against such vile and destructive Doctrines for which he was well rewarded by being translated to Norwich Rush 177. then to York a shrewd sign that such Doctrines did please the Court tho' not the Parliament Likewise Mr. Ric. Montague who 21 Jac. printed an Answer to the late Gag of Protestants and about 22 Jac. printed another Book Entituled A Treatise of the Invocation of Saints 1 Car. 1. he printed another Entituled An Appeal to Caesar which Books contained so many Erronious and false Doctrines contrary to the very Articles agreed on in the Convocation held at London 1562. that they disobliged the whole Nation so much that the Commons House exhibited Articles against him 1 Car. and prayed that he might be punished This Cause began 21 Jac. when he had published a former Book called A new Gag for an old Goose and was then questioned in Parliament and committed to the Archbishop of Canterbury and ended in an Admonition only given to Montague by the Archbishop who disliked that Book and thought to suppress it but could not It was printed and dedicated to the King and his Cause was recommended to the Duke of Buckingham by the Bishops of Oxford Rochester and St. Davids all mighty Church of England Men not Puritans whereby they espoused it as their common Cause and Concern and Montague is made his Majesties Chaplain yet his Majesty was so just and prudent as to leave him to the Parliament which did not please the Bishops and the Commons House did exhibit Articles against him and prayed his Book might be burnt and himself punished but the Bishops prevailed so much with the King on their own behalf that he was made first Bishop of Chichester and then Bishop of Norwich and his Book only called in by Proclamation yet so as all Answers thereunto by Preaching or Writing were forbidden For the several Answers made by Dr. Featly Dr. G●ad in their Parallels by Mr. Burton Ward Yates Wetton Rouse in a Book called King James's Religion were all suppressed and some of the Printers questioned in the High Commission and Montague had a Royal Pardon which was inquired into 4 Car. by the Commons House In the same Parliament a Petition was exhibited from some Booksellers and Printers in London complaining of the restraint of Books written against Popery and the contrary allowed of by the only means of Dr. Land Bishop of London and divers of the Printers and Booksellers were sent for by Pursevants for Printing Books against Popery and the Licensing is only restrained to the Bishop of London and his Chaplains Ph. de Comines complained That tho' the King of France had a wise Council yet they rid all upon one Horse And must we be Priest-ridden by a Bishop and his Chaplains Upon which Mr. Selden declared That there was no Law to prevent Printing of any Books only a Decree in Star-Chamber and he advised that a Law might be made concerning Printing else one may be Fined Imprisoned prisoned and his Goods taken from him by vertue of such Decrees which is a great invasion upon the Liberty of the Subject About the same time also came out Cosins his Book of Seven Sacraments containing strange things against whom the Commons House exhibit 21 Articles whereof one was for calling some Gentlewomen Whores and Jades and Pagans and for tearing some of their Clothes when they were in their Seats in the Church because they would not bow to the Altar nor at the Name of Jesus c. Nalson 789. About this time the Clergy had wrought themselves with great Power and Interest at Court which encouraged the Inferior Clergy to great boldness and to pulpit any thing that might please as the very Road of Preferment Teach for Hire and Divine for Money Another that did appear bare faced and without any Vizard was one Sybthorp Vicar of Brackley scarce Batchellor of Art who preached Feb. 22. 1626. at Lent Assizes at Northampton on Rom. 13.7 Which Sermon called Apostolical Obedience tho' full fraught with many Theses destructive to all human Society yet had such countenance from the Court-Clergy that they procured his Majesty to send to the Archbishop of Canterbury to License it for the Press for the better grace of the business which his Majesty did feveral times by Mr. William Murrey but the Archbishop like a true Nathaniel refused to give it an Imprimatur but not without great Reasons humbly submitted to his Majesty for his so doing It was afterwards carried to Dr. Worrall Chaplain to the then Bishop of London who having hand over head Licens'd it afterward took advice of Councel who told him That if all in that Sermon were true there was no meum tuum left to Subjects and that he might be called to an Account for it and hanged Whereupon he blotted out his Name again and the Book was afterward Licens'd by Laud then Bishop of London who gave it a great and stately Allowance and caused it to be dedicated to the King and published upon his Majesties Commission for the Raising of Money by the way of Loan which was by such Royal Authority to give greater countenance thereto It taught that the King's Duty is to direct and make Laws that nothing may excuse from Active Obedience but what is against the Law of God or Nature or Impossible That all Antiquity was absolutely for Absolute Obedience in all Civil and Temporal Things Laud also allowed the Book called The Seven Sacraments with all its Errors which were afterwards expunged Another bold faced Priest that did appear about the same time was Dr. Manwaring who promoted the same Design in two Sermons preached before the King and Court at Wintehall called Religion and Allegiance in which he declared That the King was not bound to observe the Laws of the Realm concerning the Subjects Rights and Liberty but that his Royal Will and Command in imposing Loans and Taxes without common consent in Parliament doth oblige the Subjects Conscience upon pain of Eternal Domnation that they who refused to pay this Loan offended against the Law of God and the Kings Supreme Authority and became guilty of Impiety Disloyalty and Rebellion and that the Authority of Parliament is not necessary for Raising the of Aids and Subsidies c. for which he was impeached
the Emperors Decrees were not executed by the bounty of Constance Cloro Caesar who governed it But a while after Constantine and Licinius granted freedom of Religion to the Christians approved of the Ecclesiastical Colledges called Churches granted generally throughout the Empire that they might gain and acquire stable Goods as well by Gift as Testament exempting also the Clergy from personal publick services that they might attend the Duties of Religion more constantly But the Clergy made so ill use of these Favours that Princes were forced to regulate them by Laws in the Year 370 Which St. Jerom confesseth to have been a Remedy against the Corruptions entred amongst the Clergy which was of getting Temporal Estates But that Law not being sufficient to suppress their greediness of getting Temporal Estates another Law was made Anno 390 to the same end and purpose this excess of getting was so unpleasant to St. Austin who lived in those Days that he openly declared against them saying The Ecclesiastical Ministry consisted not in getting and distributing much but in getting and distributing well Likewise he abhorred the new indirect ways they had found out of increasing their Stock and would never permit them in his Church and often declared in his Sermons That he had rather live on the Primitive Oblation than to have a care of Possessions which hindred from attending intirely upon the Principal Charge of a Bishop i. e. Spiritual things Notwithstanding all Laws Reprimands and Checks yet the Ecclesiastical Goods increased excessively above what it ought but the ancient manner of Governing and Distributing lasted till the Year 420. both the Oblation and the Ecclesiastical incoms from real Estates were in common and governed by Deacons Sub-Deacons and by other Assistants and distributed for the maintenance of Ecclesiastical Ministers and of the Poor The Colledge of Priests and the Bishops were the Superintendants so that the Bishops disposed of every thing and the Deacons executed it But after France Spain and Africa were divided from the Empire the Churches were differently governed The Eastern Church retained the common Government but in the Western the Bishops by Administrators and Superintendants made themselves Masters and to govern the Goods of the Church Arbitrarily from whence arose Confusions in the distribution of them and the Buildings fell to ruine and the Poor neglected and forsaken For which cause about the Year 470 in the Western Church it was ordained that the Ecclesiastical Goods should be divided into Four parts which alteration was also soon abused And also other changes made in the Government which in and through all things proved contrary to the Ancient as also the manner of chusing Ministers was instituted by the Apostles That Bishops Priests and other Ministers of God's Word and the Deacons Ministers of Temporal things should be elected by the Universality of the Faithful and should be ordained by the Bishops with laying of Hands on the Head a thing which lasts without alteration to this Day Which Custom continued about 200 Years The Bishops were chosen by the People and ordained by the Metropolitan in the presence of all the Com-provincial Bishops or else by their Consents c. And afterwards many Provinces for a better Form of Government were subject to one Primate whose Consent was also required for Ordaining Then the Priests Deacons and other Clergy Men were presented by the People and ordained by the Bishop or else nominated by the Bishops and with the Consent of the People ordained by him An unknown Man was never received neither did the Bishop ever Ordain one who was not approved of and commended or rather presented by the People and the Consent of the People was judged so necessary that Pope Leo the First treated amply that the Ordination of a Bishop could not be valid nor lawful which was not required by the People and by them approved of which was the Opinion of all the Saints of those times A thing worthy to be noted now a Days when that Election is declared to be illegitimate and null where the People have any share Thus is seen how things in the Government of the Church are degenerated from what they were in purer times even quite contrary that now accounted lawful which was then accounted wicked and that now unjust which then was reputed holy The Clergy finding the sweet and great Advantages of the Favours granted by Princes did improve them to the uttermost but by such means as were not pleasing to the Faithful of which St. Austin and St. Chrisostom greatly complained in their times For they increased the common Stock by undue practises and distributed over much to themselves and neglecting the Poor And their Wealth so vastly and unjustly increasing they instituted new kinds of Government which they changed at pleasure until at last it came to that we see at this Day Not content with the old ways of getting about the 500 Year another sort of Religious Colledges called Monasteries were erected Monkery began in Egypt about the Year 300 and from thence past into Greece whereby St. Basil at the Year 370 it was formed in the manner which yet continues But in Italy about the Year 350 it was brought to Rome by Athanasius but had little encouragement till about the Year 500 when St. Equitius and St. Benedict gave it a settled Form The Institution of Equitius increased but little but that of Benedict spread it self all over Italy and beyond the Mountains The Monks in those Days were not Ecclesiasticks but Seculars and in the Monasteries without the Cities they lived on their own Labour Arts and Husbandry together with some addition out of the publick Oblations and were governed by the Abbot The Abbot Tritemius makes Account that Monasteries of the Benedictine Monks were 15000 besides Prepositures and lesser Convents The Monks themselves chose their own Abbots by this time the Bishops by tricks and cunning Artifices became absolute Dispensators of the Fourth part of the Churches Goods which made the haughty Clergy mind Temporal Goods more than Spiritual and to make themselves Eminent and Popular whence arose Discords Seditions Tumults and Blows to the great Disturbance of Civil States especially about the Election of Clergy Dignitaries which Primarily at the first Institution was in the People beyond contradiction but afterwards by the cunning craftiness of those that lay in wait to deceive it was sometimes in the Clergy sometimes in the Prince sometimes in a mixture one chusing and another confirming as the Interest and Power of the one or the other could prevail Elections being then used not as the end of Divine Service but for secular Interests and worldly Ends. Antiquity knew of no distinction between Ordination and Benefice and Ordaining was then the same thing as to give an Office and the right of having ones livelihood from the common Goods of the Church But afterward through Wars and Confusions the Clergy being driven from their Ministries had recourse and retired
God and remember that the Redeemer of the oppressed is mighty and never more ready to avenge the Cause of the innocent and oppressed than when it is most neglected by his Vice-gerents Ahab and Jezabel exercised in Israel Authority without controul Who should punish the oppression of Naboth the Lord takes the Cause into his own Hand and causeth Dogs to lick hhis Blood in the very place where they licked the innocent Blood of Naboth and the Dogs did eat the Flesh of Jezabel that cursed Woman by the wall of Jezreel so there is Blood for Blood and an utter extinction of Ahab's posterity 1 Kings 21. lege Taleonis M. B. in his Sermon before his Majesty on the 2 Pet. 3.16 lays down for a sure Rule That it is the Duty of private men to submit their Judgments in matters of Religion to the Determinations of those whom God hath constituted to be their Spiritual Guides and Governours unless it manifestly appears that such Determinations are contrary to God's Word pag. 6. And so we are if any * Apollos Minister of Caesarea and of Iconia was an Eloquent Man mighty in the Scripture instructed in the way of the Lord servent in the Spirit why spake and taught diligently the things of the Lord and spake boldly in the Synagogue and yet Aquila and Priscilla his Wife Tent-makers when they heard him took him home and expounded to him the way of God more perfectly Acts 18.24 25 26. private Man teach another any Truths and to believe the private Man before any Spiritual Guides or Governours that preach and teach Untruths and every Man for himself is the proper Judge of what is taught The Apostles themselves tho' infallible submitted their Doctrines to the Judgment of their Disciples Judge ye Acts 4.19 1 Cor. 10.15 and so must our Guides and Governors which he would insinuate here to be the Clergy i. e. Bishops and Priests if so he will be mistaken they are only Officers in the Church to Teach Baptize c. but the Church in the truest sense i. e. the whole Congregation of the Faithful is to govern its own Body and the Officers thereof not the Officers the Church which will not please The Ecclesiastical Politician declares That it is absolutely necessary to the Peace and Government of the World that the Supreme Magistrate of every Commonwealth should be vested with a Power to Govern and Conduct the Consciences of Subjects in Affairs of Religion pag. 10. How is it possible that the Supreme Magistrate and our Spiritual Guides and Governors should both have the guide of our Consciences And that Peace and Tranquillity of Commonwealth being the prime and most important end of Government can never be sufficiently secured unless Religion be subject to the Authority of the Supreme Power pag. 11. And unless Princes have Power to bind their Subjects to that Religion that they apprehend most advantageous to publick Peace and Tranquillity and restrain those Religious mistakes that tend to its subversion they are no better than Statues and Images of Authority pag. 12. For it is clear if this Ecclesiastical Polititian may be believed that a Prince is endued with a Power to conduct Religion and that must be subject to his Dominion as well as other Affairs of State pag. 13. The consequence of which Doctrines are That if Nebuchadnezzar erect his prodigious Idol and upon pain of a fiery Furnace require all to Worship it all People Nations and Languages must presently be upon their Faces and for their warrant for so doing he assures them That in Cases and Disputes of publick concernment private Men are not properly sui Juris they have no Power over their own Actions they are not to be directed by their own Judgments or determined by their own Wills but by the Commands and Determinations of the publick Conscience And if there be any sin in the command he that imposed it shall answer for it and not I whose Duty is to obey the commands of Authority will warrant my Obedience my Obedience will hallow or at least excuse my Action and so secure me from Sin if not from Error because I follow the best Guide and most probable Direction I am capable of and tho' I may mistake my Integrity shall perserve my Innocence In all doubtful and disputable Cases it is better to err with Authority than to be in the right against it and therefore in all such matters their Commands are the Supreme Rule of Conscience not only because the danger of a little Error and so it is if it be disputable is over-weighed by the importance of the great Duty of Obedience but because they are the fittest Judges pag. 308 309. What is this but down-right asserting the abominable Papal Doctrines of Probability and of blind Obedience brave Doctrines for a Tory Church of England Man to Preach and Print impuné Good God! whether are we posting I thank God I have been taught better things viz. Every one of us shall give account of himself to God Rom. 14.12 The soul that sinneth it shall die Ezek. 28.20 The soul of the publick conscience shall not be put to death for the sins of the private nor the souls of private consciences be put to death for the sins of the publick but every man shall be put to death for his own sin Deut. 24.16 Daw-Divines to Print that the publick Conscience shall stand between the private Conscience sinning by his Command and the Judgment of the great Day and excuse from Sin I thank God that I have been taught by true Church of England Men indeed that God never created Men nor ever endued them with Conscisciences or gave them Talents of Reason or Judgment subject and enslaved to the Judgment Conscience or Reason of others but hath endued and trusted every Man with his own proper Talent of Conscience Reason and Judgment to chuse for himself according to which only he shall be judged and stand or fall at the Day of Judgment and not according to any publick Conscience There would be very little need of Priests if blind Obedience ought to prevail and not our own free choice He proceeds and tells us That God hath appointed the Magistrates to be his Trustees and Officials here upon Earth to act and determine in moral Virtues and pious Devotions according to all accidents and emergencies of Affairs to assign new particulars of the Divine Law to declare new bounds of right and wrong which the Law of God neither doth nor can limit pag. 18. That it s absolutely necessary to the Peace and Happiness of Kingdoms that there be set up a more severe Government over Mens Consciences and Religions and Perswasions than over their Vices and Immoralities Preface to his Eccl. Pol. p. 53. And that Princes may with less bazard give liberty to Mens Vices and Debaucheries than to their Consciences pag. 55. I have heard it also preached before the King That it is better to
of most dismal consequence infinitely beyond that of the Non-Cons and which undeniably tends to the Persecution do I say nay even to the Destruction of the Protestant Religion throughout Europe which now lies at stake gasping and a bleeding in this critical juncture of Affairs and which is wonderful in the Eyes of most considerate Men that all the Papists of Europe are at Defiance with our mighty Neighbour but those of our own Nations which argues them to have but Irish Understandings and perhaps Religion also And if he should prevail Acium est de Religione Protestantium and must be Slaves to boot I shall now draw towards a conclusion first intimating an Axiome of that great Divine Dr. Thomas Jackson viz. such are the Reciprocal Embracements and Interweavings of Truth and Goodness that we cannot rightly judge any thing for Good which is not True nor deny any known Truth to be in its own nature Good yet it often comes to pass that our desires are so eager and passionate on several Objects as Riches Honours Impery c. that they get the start of Deliberation and our Minds and Inclinations so forcibly prepossessed thereof that they cannot be disswaded from a mistaken Good and that it is a true and real Evil and only a seeming Good And desires to have it abetted and countenanced with the Authority of Truth are unlawful and indeed prevaricating with God And whilst our Trains our counter-lustings and opposite inclinations stand in equal Balance there can be no settled Resolution or actual Choice And the Affections after such debatements will hardly sway the Soul unless the Understanding do wave and decline the Point whereat it stood and either yield to the suggestions and illusions of our fleshly Reasons for the time being as True and Good or at least not expresly condemn them for False nor with Christian Courage stoutly withstand them Truths or Precepts Divine considered in general or without incumberances annexed to their practise many there be which affect more vehemently than their more honestly and more humbly minded Brethren who more willingly subscribe to the narrow Rules of the Apostles and so walk more exactly and more blameless in all God's Commandments But a servent and precipitato imbracement arising not from a clear intellectual apprehension of the abstract Truth or zealous Sense of their Goodness but rather from general innate temper of desiring eagerly and fiercely whatsoever they desire at all becometh the Mint or Forge of metamorphosing and misrepresenting God's revealed Will in his Word whilst they descend to actual choice of particulars preferred in their course of life That Christ's Advice is to be followed before any contrary Counsel is not to be denied by any Christian yet such is the corruption of our nature that almost every Man in matters of practise prejudicial to their private earthly Interests will traverse the meaning whether of his clearest Maxims or most peremptory Mandates and supersede them Christ his reply to Martha complaining of her Sister for not helping her to etertain him Martha Martha thou art careful and troubled about many things but one thing is needful and Mary hath chosen the better part which shall not be taken away from her Luke 10.41 42. includes and warrants a Maxime of most Holy use viz. That a life priviledged and vacant from Secular Imployments for better Meditation and Solacing their Souls on Heaven and Heavenly things is the most compendious and comfortable Course to that endless Life which every good Christian proposeth as the sole end of this wearisome Pilgrimage that at the end of his Days he may obtain the end of his Hopes and be brought to the presence of God where is fulness of joy and at whose right-hand there are pleasures for evermore Were their Hearts true and constant to God to the true Interest of their Souls it were impossible but that their inclinations and assent should be swaied to the subordinate practises But as the Heart is deceitful above all things so it will quickly find Justifications or Apologies Tricks or Shams for the most sinister choices the proud and haughty Spirit thus fobs and shames his own judgment viz. practical Imployments for Preserments my opportunities and qualifications considered are the best course I can take either for my own or others good wherefore our Saviour's Advice to Martha rightly limited and interpreted is no way contrary to my choice And if he can light of other Sacred Passages which mention the advancements of God's Saints to Civil Dignities as Daniel's wearing a Purple Robe and furtherance of the Churches Cause by his High Place in the Court these he takes as sealed Warrants to Authorize his ambitious Desires or self-exalting Projects and so in a trimming way walking between God and Baal making the Souls of Men and the Glory of God subordinate to their ambitious Projections who Balaam like for the hope of Honour and Preferment rise early sit up late run and ride and become more sensless of God's displeasure than was his dumb Ass How many have we known pulpit Damnation against Pluralities of Benefices and afterwards having tasted the sweet of one have been content to swallow more preach against three Parsonages as the most ready way to get two How many have owned N●● Episcopari and yet accept thereof For Prelates and Priests to intangle and ingage themselves in Civil Concerns is unapostolical and to incumber themselves with Pluralities with two contra-distinct Offices and to be accounted as those that having put their hands to the plough and yet look back are not fit for the Kingdom of Heaven Luke 9.62 And according to St. Paul 2 Tim. 2.34 no man that warreth entangleth himself with the affairs of this life that he may please him who hath chosen him to be a Soldier and a Christian-life is a continual Warfare Is it not a sad and lamentable condition when the violence of our Passions shall endeavour by wrestings of places of Scripture and by false Reasonings to bring the strait and inflexible Rule of Truth to bend to their Bow the better to serve their base ends of Pride Pelf and Ambition For without some shew of agreement with God's Word no Dogmatical Assertion can be maintained as true by any Christian But I have done leaving them only to consider That the manifest and notorious abuse of Power be it Civil or Ecclesiastical dischargeth the Faithful from the sin of Contempt and Disobedience the very word Abuse undeniably insers as much in its own plain and proper signification And tho' this be an undeniable Truth yet the subtle Ecclesiasticks will coin Distinctions and false Reasonings to enervate or evade the force thereof So Bellarmine against Gerson in the point of Excommunication grants the consideration to be true hypothetically only viz. if it be meant of the Abuse of the Keys in points Essential as if the Prelate should exceed his Commission in which case he agrees with St. Peter Obiendum est