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A61271 Episcopal jurisdiction asserted according to the right constitution thereof, by His Majesties laws, both ecclesiastical and temporal, occasioned by the stating and vindicating of the Bishop of Waterford's case, with the mayor and sheriffs of Waterford / by a diligent enquirer into the reasons and grounds thereof. Stanhope, Arthur, d. 1685?; Gore, Hugh, 1612 or 13-1691. 1671 (1671) Wing S5221; ESTC R21281 74,602 136

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King by His Ecclesiastical Judges has the hearing of them and determining in their causes and His leave and licence goes along therewith By vertue of being thus deputed and commissionated by the King the Bishops have and execute an exterior Jurisdiction which is as extensive and universal over all persons in causes belonging thereunto as is the Temporal Jurisdiction in the management of the Temporal Judges and where the Kings Commission is there is His power and there is His consent And where that Commission does not abridge and limit there all proceedings made by power from it have assuredly the Kings leave and licence in conjunction with them But if still notwithstanding all that has been said it be persisted in that there is a disparity of power in the two Jurisdictions as to the extensiveness thereof subjectively so as that the Ecclesiastical Judge in his way of proceedings may not but the Temporal Judge in his way may proceed against any civil Officers as Mayors and Sheriffs c. found Delinquents in any kind I demand How does it appear to be so What Law is there that constitutes this Disparity What legal course prescribed and set down to restrain the Ecclesiastical Judge in case he will be intermedling with such persons for it is irrational to imagine there should be such a Law and yet that it should be destitute of sufficient means to uphold and maintain it self by Truly I am not so vain as to say there is no Law extant which constitutes this Disparity because I know no such but I have been seriously inquisitive and diligent in searching after this but cannot attain a knowledge of any such and would any be so kind to inform me I should thankfully own that kindness Next for any legal course prescribed and set down to restrain Ecclesiastical Judges in case they will be intermedling with such persons If there be any such it must be one or other of these three wayes 1. By Writ of Provision and Praemunire Or 2. By a Writ of Indicavit Or 3. By a Writ of Prohibition By one or other of these the Ecclesiastical Judge is restrained in his proceedings and c●mmanded to desist from prosecuting further such matters as being before him are referred to in those Writs Now concerning the first That Provision and Praemunire has no place nor use in this matter I do for the present plainly declare and afterwards I shall have occasion more largely to prove it 2. Then for the Writ ●f Indicavit that is notoriously known to lie there where a Suit of Tythes is commenced in the Ecclesiastical Court which does amount to a fourth part or above of the whole Benefice or it lieth for the Patron where his Clerk is impleaded for the Advowson i. e. the Right of Patronage 3. There remains only the Writ of Prohibition This is said to be two-fold Prohibitio Juris Prohibitio Hominis Prohibitio Juris is such as is grounded on any Statute or Law of this Land Prohibitio Hominis is such as has no precise word or letter of the Law to sustain it but is raised up by Argument and by way of surmise and as the wit of man will suggest Now put these Prohibitions of both sorts together and I dare boldly affirm that none of either kind have been or can or ought to be granted so as to supersede the Ecclesiastical Judge from his legal proceedings against any person where the matter proceeded upon is indeed of Ecclesiastical cognizance meerly because such a person bears some office of civil power is a Mayor Sheriff Portrieve or any other in like place of authority And this is the reason why I take so much confidence in delivering this affirmation because it is the incompetency of the cause brought into tryal before the Ecclesiastical Judge and not this or that quality or condition of the parties proceeded against that alwayes makes way for moving for and granting of a Prohibition Thus much has been said for the removal of these Objections and still it is clear and evident that the exercise of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction by the Bishop over all persons whatsoever within his Diocess in matters and causes truly belonging thereunto tends not at all to the impa●ring or invading the Kings Royal Prerogative It has been the glory of our Kings to keep the Rights and Liberties of the Church safe and entire and never to interpret a just exerting and using of their Jurisdiction to be a diminishing of their Royal dignity In some old Presidents of the Writ de Excommunicato capiendo A priviledge peculiar to the Church of England above all the Realms of Christendom that I read of sayes Dr. Cosen Apol. par 1. p. 9. The King declares thus Nolumus quod libertas Ecclesiastica per nos vel Ministros nostros quoscunque aliqualiter violetur Register in bre orig p. 69. a. And again Jura libertates Ecclesiasticas illaesa volentes in omnibus observari ibidem But I have one greater instance hereof to add here At the time of His Majesties Coronation the Oath that He is pleased then to take has this Article therein That He will grant keep and confirm to His people of England the Laws and customs to them granted by the Kings of England His lawful and religious Predecessors and namely the Laws customs and Franchises granted to the Clergy by the glorious King St. Edward his Predecessor according to the Laws of God the true profession of the Gospel established in this Kingdom agreeable to the Prerogative of the Kings thereof and the ancient customs of this Land Afterwards one Bishop present reads this Admonition to the King before the people with a loud voyce Our Lord and King we beseech You to pardon and grant and to preserve unto us and to the Churches committed to our charge all Canonical Priviledges and due Law and Justice and that You would protect and defend us as every good King ought to be a● Protector and Defender of the Bishops and Churches under His Government Whereto the King answereth with a willing and devout heart I promise and grant my part and that I will preserve and maintain to you and the Churches c. By Canonical priviledges that belong to them and their Churches there must needs be implyed the Honour of their several Orders as that Bishops should be above Presbyters c. together with all their due Rights and Jurisdictions Dr. Stewards Answer to a Letter concerning the Church and the Revenues thereof Of these Laws Customs and Franchises granted to the Church and Clergy this of actual exercising Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical in causes belonging thereto is as I have before shewed one and that a principal one too Now to imagine that the King will bind Himself by Oath to the confirming of such Charters and Grants which he either resolves not to keep or such as are detrimental to Him and tend to the impairing His Prerogative is neither consistent with Reason nor Loyalty
he nor the two Sheriffs did give the Bishop a meeting as was desired of them whereupon the Bishop orders a Process to issue out and Convents them before him in the Consistory They refuse to appear though being duly Summoned and so run into Contempt Being called again and then appearing they were for their former Contempt enjoined an easie Penance They aggravate their former with this new Contempt in disobeying the Bishops Injunction and thereupon are mildly Censured by the Bishop Not Excommunicated as was falsely rumor'd and mouth'd abroad by Men that regarded not what proceeded from them whether Truth or Falshood so it might but serve their purposes but large intermissions of time there were betwixt every of these Proceedings as will be shewed hereafter And thus stands the matter of Fact in this whole Transaction Upon a Reflection now made on this whole matter in one Review Will not the Carriage of these persons appear of a strange form and kind to any sober and indifferent Man Hardly I think will it be parallel'd by President of any such that has formerly been Hardly be entertained with Credit that any such had lately been And the whole Proceeding being so as is here briefly declared Let the Persons concerned herein be so ingenuous as freely to confess and acknowledge the same If yet this be denied so may the truest Narrative of things be and yet have never the less of Truth in it for all that yet there is so much and so clear Evidence to Verifie what has been set down That if any Attempt be made of standing to such a Denial then an easie producing of this Evidence will both shame those Deniers and add to the Confirmation of the Truth hereof Howbeit some particularities in several passages of this Proceeding may find in the following Sections a more seasonable Discovery and Enlargement In the mean time the Question de Jure falls in to be discussed concerning the justifiableness of the Bishops proceedings herein Three main Exceptions I find much insisted upon and urged against these Proceedings The first is in relation to the Persons thus Convented and Censured for they being the Mayor and Sheriffs of a City under His Majesties Government and representing His Person it is said That thereupon they became exempt from any Episcopal Jurisdiction The second Exception is in relation to the Cause they were called in question upon for that is affirmed not to be of Ecclesiastical but Civil cognizance because said to be grounded on a real Contract betwixt the Corporation and the Church and so the holding Plea and judging of Contracts belongs not to the Consistory but to the Temporal Courts The third Exception is in relation to the manner of Proceedings which are affirmed to have been precipitous and hasty without such form and regularity as ought to be observed therein and therefore illegal and unjustifiable To these three Exceptions I shall oppose and endeavour to make good these three following Propositions which will both invalidate any force that might be in the Exceptions and likewise assert and make good the Legality of what was done herein I. Prop. The Bishops Jurisdiction in the Case before mentioned was Legally founded in respect of the Persons proceeded against II. Prop. The Bishops Jurisdiction over these persons was Legally founded in respect of the Cause proceeded upon III. Prop. The Bishops Jurisdiction was Legally managed in this Cause against these Persons in respect of the manner observed in the proceedings thereof I. Prop. The first Proposition The Bishops Jurisdiction in the case before mentioned was legally founded in respect of the Persons proceeded against To make this good is that which I am first obliged to endeavour And I do it thus by laying my foundation in this received Maxime concerning Spiritual jurisdictions That in all matters and causes of Ecclesiastical cognizances all Persons within any Diocess regularly and de jure communi are subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of that Diocess The original proceeding of which institution I mean as to the actual Exercise of such jurisdiction depends upon and derives principally from the bounty and munificence of Christian Emperors and Princes As for jurisdiction meerly spiritual convei'd in and at the time of Consecration inhaerent in every Bishop as he is such I here speak not of otherwise than as it is the foundation and ground from which this Actual exercise does arise and has the enlargements made to it both subjectively in respect of persons made subordinate thereto and objectively in respect of matters and causes appropriated to it Sundry instances making this Assertion good might be had in the Imperial Law But so it will appear to be to him that will but consult Titulum de Episcopali judicio in Codice Theodosiano Et Titulum de Episcopali Audientia in Codice Justinaneo Et legomni innovatione cessante leg Privilegia ibidem de Sacro Sanctis Ecclesiis whence Tholosanus Syntagmat lib. 47. de divisione judicii num 12. 13. Inferrs this rule Prelati sunt ordinarii Judices Rerum Personarum suae jurisdictionis And moreover adds this Caesares tuentur defendunt sacerdotate judicium Privilegia ejus legibus stabiliunt And Gothofred on the former of these Laws infers this as a standing rule Innovatum contra Canones non subsistit By the ancient Canons Bishops were invested with this judiciary power Christian Emperours favourably confirm the same and any innovation thereupon is of no force The same power of jurisdiction in Bishops is allowed of and made good by Charles the Great In Capitular lib. 6. cap. 28. Paulus Fiacesius in his Book called Praxis Episcopalis cap. 4. Articul S.N.S. Layes down this Rule Episcopus in sua dioecesi habet intentionem fundatam super omnes de diaecesi And to confirm the said rule so laid down by him he produces there the Authority of many places in the body of the Canon Law Indeed where the matter is not of Ecclesiastical cognizance It is the incompetency of the matter or cause not the quality or place or office of any person that exempts him from that jurisdiction for as the f●rementioned Author observes Num. 2 Ibidem Episcopus alium Episcopum morantem in sua dioecesi ratione delicti ibidem commissi judicare punire potest If a Bishop have jurisdiction over another Bishop within his own Diocess where the Fuct is of Ecclesiastical cognizance there is certainly the ●ike if not a more forcible reason that the Bishops power should reach to all others of his Diocess And Javolenus has delivered this Rational and elegant Rule Cui jurisdictio Data est ea quoque concessa esse videntur sine quibus jurisdictio Explicari non potest L. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de jurisdictione omnium judicum The granting of a jurisdiction implyes a grant of all those things that conduce to a right discharge and exercise of it A power is included herein of presiding over and
calling all parties under that jurisdiction to answer in judgement of using Coercive means to such as are refractory and contumacious and bringing matters to a final and full Execution Gothofred sayes well hereupon Quoties casus omissus virtute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressi comprehendi potest toties ad illum fieri debet extensio But least this position may less pleasingly rellish with some pallates because of the Authority I have hither to made use of to establish it by The Imperial or Civil Law being not allowed in these Kingdoms save only in some particular Courts and causes which is to be said of the Canon Law likewise And in respect of the latter of these two some men are apt to look asquint upon any thing that is drawn out of it or grounded thereon They are ready to cry out upon such a thing as a Popish encroachment tending to Advance the Miter and Keyes above the Crown and Scepter * Yet these make up a part of the Kings Ecclesiastical Lawes being so qualified as by Statute is required in 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. To prevent this or any the like imputation my next and that my principal endeavour is to shew its accordance with the State Constitution and Lawes of these Kingdoms of England and Ireland under His Majesties Government that is with the Ecclesiastical and with the Municipal Lawes thereof and with the Kings Prerogative Royal. In respect of all which I do not doubt to affirm That this position viz. That all persons whatsoever within any Diocess regularly and de jure communi are subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of that Diocess in matters and causes of Ecclesiastical cognizance That this position I say is agreeable to the Ecclesiastical Lawes of these Kingdoms Not repugnant to the Municipal Lawes thereof Neither is it thirdly any thing intrenching upon or infringing His Majesties Prerogative Royal These all require distinct and particular considerations 1. It is agreeable to the Ecclesiastical Lawes of these Kingdoms in His late Majesties Proclamation of Royal Assent given to the Book of Canons and Constitutions Ecclesiastical of this Church of Ireland Anno 1634. I observe two things relating to our present purpose the former is a strict injunction upon all persons whatsoever to observe and obey them We do not only by our said Prerogative Royal and Supream Authority in causes Ecclesiastical ratifie confirm and establish by these our Letters Patents the said Canons Orders Ordinances and Constitutions and all and every thing therein contained as is aforesaid but do likewise propound publish and streightly enjoyn and command by our said Authority and by these our Letters Patents the same to be diligently observed executed and equally kept by all our loving Subjects of this our Kingdom in all points wherein they do or may concern every or any of them according to this our Will and pleasure hereby signifyed and expressed The other thing I observe therein is that impartial Execution of them which is required to be made and by whom to be made upon all persons whatsoever that refuse to obey them so it afterwards follows Streightly charging and commanding all Arch-Bishops and all others that exercise any Ecclesiastical jurisdiction within this Realm to see and procure that the same Canons Constitutions Orders and Ordinances be in all points duly observed Not sparing to execute the penalties in them severally mentioned upon Any that shall wittingly or willingly break or neglect to observe the same as they tender the Honour of God the peace of the Church tranquility of the Kingdom and their duties and service unto Vs their King and Sovereign All are commanded to obey these none have an Immunity from being punished if they do not obey them In the last Canon of that Book It is decreed That if Any within this Nation shall despise and contemn the Constitutions thereof Ratified and confirmed by Regal power or affirm that none shall be subject to them but such as were present and gave their voyces to them He shall be Excommunicated and not restored until he shall publickly revoke his Error In the 140 Canon of the Church of England published Anno 1603. It is more particularly and expresly set down and declared that all manner of Persons both of Clergie and Laity are to be subject to the Decrees mentioned in them in causes Ecclesiastical Although they were not themselves particularly assembled in the same Sacred Synod Let us now put both these things observed together and the result is this Here is a jurisdiction declared in respect of certain matters and causes and in respect of Persons indefinitly set down over all And in whom is this jurisdiction declared to be namely in Arch-bishops Bishops c. over whom is it declared to be over all surely The injunction of inflicting penalties in case of disobedience is as universal and extensive subjectively as is the command of obedience Here is no distinction nor exemption made of any Persons under any qualification or Vested with any office or subordinate civil power so as they should be thereby priviledged from Ecclesiastical jurisdiction in matters appertaining thereunto And Vbi lex non distinguit ibi nec nos distinguere debemus where the Law makes none neither may we make any distinction I have made my first instance in these Canons as part of the Kings Ecclesiastical Lawes But I am not to learn that when the Authority of our Canons is urged and that obedience which is required to them is called for There are a generation of such as are wise in their own conceits men of mighty deep understandings who think they pierce further into things and understand more than their poor shallow Brethren are able to do And these will question the Validity of these Canons and their legal obligingness on the Kings Majesties Subjects To all such therefore I shall fairly offer a few considerations and then leave in to their own sober thoughts to determine wha● Coherence there can be betwixt a disowning 〈…〉 the Authority of our Ecclesiastical 〈◊〉 and the profession of being dutiful and obediene Subjects 1 Many learned men both of the Municipal and Civil Law joyn in this opinion and affirm That the Kings Majesty may by virtue of His Supream Authority in matters Ecclesiastical confirm and ratifie into the force of Law Canons made in Convocations and that they be a part of the Kings Ecclesiastical Lawes Princeps tanquam supremus post Deum gubernator potest in causis Ecclesiasticis statuere quicquid verbo divino statutis consuetudinibus Regni sui non repugnaverit Cosen de Politeia Ecclesiastic Anglicana Tab. 1. A. And then he specifies the matter of his former Assertion thus viz. That this supream power of our King is in Condendis novis legibus sive canonibus in ijsdem administrandis relaxandis cirea statum Ecclesiasticum and this done cum Regius assensus fuerit adhibitus iis quae Synodus
of Fifty years of King Edward the Third the great Charter was several times confirmed The liberties priviledges and franchises of the Clergie were new ratified in the fourteenth and five and twentieth years of His Reign And so in the first sixth and eighth and twelfth years of Richard the second In the first second and fourth years of Henry the fourth It was enacted That the Lords Spiritual as well as Temporal should have and enjoy all their Rights and Liberties I grant indeed that in the Reign of two of these preceding Kings viz Edward the third and Richard the second that the two statutes of Proviso's and Praemunire were made But he that shall duly observe the end wherefore and the matter wherein and the persons against whom these statutes were made will not be able to find that any abridgment but rather a firmer settlement of Episcopal jurisdiction in the right Constitution of it was intended and came thereby That which was mainly aimed at and provided against in these statutes was to repress the encroachments of the Pope of Rome even upon the Bishops legal jurisdiction it self The Pope by His Emissaries in England from time to time drained the Kingdom of its Wealth He invaded the Kings Soveraign Rights by Mandates De providendo and expectative Graces granted of Ecclesiastical livings before the Incumbents were dead And besides He boldly intrenched on the Kings Temporal Courts many such unreasonable greivances there were which both King and People felt the load of and which to make them the heavier were fetch as far as Rome to be put upon them But all this while here are no exemptions to any particular persons or civil Officers to free them from Ecclesiastical jurisdiction where it proceeded in due manner and was exercised in matters properly cognizable by it That which must have the note of remark put upon it is this Provision is here made under severe penalties against acting by a derived power from and in an Usurped jurisdiction under the See of Rome This no English Bishop might do then This no Bishop in England or Ireland might or does or may do now One Act of Parliament will best serve to give light to another Now the statute 25 Hen. 8. cap. 21 affirms expresly that the statute of provision and praemunire of the 16th Richard secundi was made against such as sue to the Court of Rome against the Kings Crown and Dignity so that Episcopal jurisdiction in each respective Diocess and in matters of Ecclesiastical cognizance is so far from being impaired by these statutes that in truth it is more firmly fixed and corroborated thereby All these things were before the Reformation in England towards the dawning of which we meet with a noted statute in the 23th year of King Henry 8. cap. 9. designed as is conceived to restrain the Exorbitances used in summoning people out of the Diocess wherein they inhabit without leave of their Ordinaries which thing as it tended to the great vexation of the persons so cited it also aimed at the very encroaching on the several Ordinaries Rights on pretence of some legantine power or Nuncio's Court or other extraordinary cause In the preamble of which Statute it is affirmed That all persons of any quality or condition may be cited before their Ordinaries so it be in proper cause and due Order The body of that statute provideth that no citation be made out of the Diocess where the party dwelleth but where some spiritual offence or cause is committed or done So that a contrario sensu sayes the learned and judicious Dr. Cosen Apol. p. 67. in any offence or cause spiritual any Subject may be cited within his or her Diocess And in some peculiar causes there mentioned and recited they may be cited out of their Diocess Now the power of citing presupposes a full jurisdiction that is a power to proceed further thereupon in all due requisits and forms that belong to any cause whether it be upon instance or of matter of correction Since the Reformation that all jurisdiction Ecclesiastical is de facto as it was alwayes de jure united to and so derived from the Imperial Crown of England there is by the statute of the first of Queen Elizabeth cap. 1. Full power and authority given to the Ecclesiastical Judges for the Executing of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as before time See also a statute made in Ireland in the 28. year of King Henry the 8. called an Act against the Authority of the Bishop of Rome towards the latter end thereof Provided that notwithstanding this Act or any other Act made for the taking away of the said Bishop of Romes Vsurped power Authority Preheminence Jurisdiction or any other thing or things in the same comprised That all and every Archbishop Bishop Arch-Deacon Commissary and Official and every of them shall and may use and exercise in the name of the King only Vid. infra p. 53. all such Canons Constitutions Ordinances and Synodals provincial being already made for the direction and order of Spiritual and Ecclesiastical causes which be not contrariant nor repugnant to the Kings Lawes statutes and customs of this Land nor to the Damage and Hurt of the Kings Prerogative Royal in such manner and form as they were used and Executed before the making of this Act till such time as the Kings Highness shall order and determine according to his Lawes of England and such order and determination as shall be requisite for the same and the same to be certified hither under the Kings Great Seal or otherwise ordered by Parliament And while I am thus enumerating the several statutes which the former position is not contrariant to but rather strengthned by I must not omit the making mention of those statutes and Acts of Parliament that are set out and published meerly upon Ecclesiastical causes and matters which are reckoned by some as those that enter into and make up the body of the Kings Ecclesiastical Laws Zouch de jure Eccles p. 1. Sec. 1. c. whether these be matters of a civil or criminal Nature matters of civil cognizance are either such as concern Precontracts and other matrimonial causes In Ireland 33 Hen. 8 cap. 6. In England 32 Hen. 8. c. 38. 1 and 2 Edward 6. c. 23. 1 Elizab. 1. o● such as concern Testamentary matters 21 Hen. 8. cap. 5. In this Kingdom 28 Hen. 8. cap. 18. Also matters of Tythes and the pursuits and impleadings thereup on He●● 33 Hen. 8. c. 12. In England to the two Statutes mentioned before called circumspecte Agatis and Articuli Cleris These may be added viz. 1 Richard 2. c. 14.27 and 28 Hen. 8. c. 20. 32 Hen. 8. c. 7. 2 Edward 6. cap. 13. Concerning all which all persons without distinction of place or office who are concerned in any of these causes they are subject to Episcopal jurisdiction to which the same causes do appertain and by which they are managed And for matters
which are criminal To pass by other statutes I instance in these two only The one De Excommunicato capiendo in 5 Elizab. c. 23. where the several crimes therein mentioned subject all such as shall be detected and found guilty of any of them to the Ecclesiastical Tribunal The other is the statute for Uniformity of Common-Prayer c. 1 Elizab. cap. 2. In this statute after a charge given in this Solemn and strict manner The Queens most Excellent Majesty The Lords Temporal and all the Commons in this present Parliament assembled do in Gods Name earnestly require and charge all the Archbishops and Bishops to endeavor their utmost for the due execution thereof●● And then it follows for their power and authority in this behalf Be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and singular the said Archbishops Bishops c. and all other their officers exercising Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as well in places exempt as not exempt within their Diocess shall have full power and authority by this Act to reform correct and punish by censures of the Church all and singular Persons which shall offend within any of their Jurisdictions or Diocesses after the said Feast of St. John the Baptist next coming against this Act or Statute any other Law Statute Priviledge liberty or provision heretofore made had or suffered to the contrary notwithstanding See a so the statute made secundo Elizab. cap. 2 here in Ireland The thing we had in hand to make good was this That all persons whatsoever within any Diocess regularly and de jure communi are subject to the Bishop of that Diocess in matters and causes of Ecclesiastical cognizance that this position is not repugnant to the statute Laws of these Kingdoms This I think has been fully evidenced and needs no further enlarging upon And to give one instance of this jurisdictive and coercive power in Bishops over all indefinitely it shall be in the matter of substracting and detaining of Tythes a cause properly and anciently cognizable before them That ample Charter granted by King William the first to the Clergie and mentioned at large by Mr. Selden in his History of Tythes cap. 8. p. 225. The conclusion of which is after this manner Quicunque decimam detinuerit per justitiam Episcopi Regis si necesse fuerit ad redditionem arguatur Startle not Reader at the eying of this that the Bishops power of Justicing has here precedency of place before the Kings conceive not that this was to set Episcopal power on high and make Regal Authority subordinate to it But this declares to whose judicial cognizance under the King the proceeding against detainers of Tythes of what quality and condition soever they be does immediatery appertain who is the Officer and Minister of Justice therein And the Kings power being after mentioned is so set down by way of judicial order and consequence not of subordination in power and Authority Thus much these very words si necesse fuerit plainly do import as if it were said should any of these detainers prove refractory and contumacious against the Bishops authority so that there were a necessity of invoking the secu●ar power the King would then be present therewith and by poenal coercions compel them to give obedience thereto Now for what concerns any other part of the Common Law it may be also both safely and truly in respect of the thing it self affirmed That Ecclesiastical proceedings according to the position laid down bears no contrariety therewith as is set down by Dr. and Student lib. 1 c. 6. That Episcopal jurisdiction is of force in this Kingdom even by the Laws of this Realm in certain particular instances mentioned is reported by Dr. Cosen from a certain Author writing in King Hen. 8th time Apol. part 1. p. 7. The Author is shewing that the Bishop of Rome has not nor ought to have any jurisdiction in His Majesties Kingdoms by the Laws of this Realm The medium whereby he proves this thing is this because Certificates of Bishops in certain cases are allowed by the Common Law and admitted in the Kings Courts But the Popes Certificate is not admitted vid. Lord Coke Instit 4. cap. 74. circa initium de jure Regis Ecclesiastico p. 23. 26. diversos casus thidem citatos Besides in the statute of Appeals 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. mention is made of spiritual jurisdiction exercised in causes belonging to the same and it is there expresly said That such exercise is grounded on the Laws and customs of this Realm circa mitium dicti statuti Now certainly a statute best informs any one what is truly and what is agreeable to the Common Law The Bishops are by the Common Law the immediate Officers and Ministers of Justice to the Kings Courts in causes Ecclesiastical Lord Coke de jure Regis Ecclesiastico pag. 23. And for what belongs to any custom or ancient usage that has the force of Law among us I cannot find out any such that is impugned by what I have affirmed But thus I may safely determine That if any manner and course of things established by long use and consent of our Ancestors and still kept on foot by daily continuance and practice be a custom and may set up for a Law not-written Then certainly the thing that has been affirmed that is the exercise of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction by Bishops over all persons within their respective Diocesses and in causes belonging to it and thus far endeavoured to be p●oved is not at all contrariant thereto but of perfect agreement yea of the same Nature with it Are there any that after all this will make their reply and tell us of persons exempted from Epis●● pa● power and the exercise thereof bound up and restrained in respect of such and for proof of this will alledge the Authoritative proceeding of King William the Conqueror who would not suffer any Bishop to Excommunicate any of his Barons or Officers for Adultery Incest or any such Heinous crime except by the Kings command first made acquainted therewith By the way it must be known that the word Baron is not to be taken in that limited and restrictive sense as to understand thereby the Higher Nobility to which Votes in Parliament do belong But generally for such who by Tenure in chief or in Capite held land of the King Selden spicelegium ad Eadmerum referente Tho. Fullero B. 3. Histor Eccles p. 4. Whatsoever now shall be collected hence to overthrow what has been before said is easily answered For King William very well understood his own Imperal power and right over the whole body Politick whereof the Clergie were a part And that by vertue thereof the Actual Exercise of both Civil and Ecclesiastical jurisdiction did flow from him And that he might where and when he saw cause restrain the Execution of either how long or in respect of what persons he pleased and this by special
priviledge and immunity granted by him to such persons And yet that jurisdiction so restrained be no more impeached thereby than the ordinary setled course of the common Law by the Exemption of one or more particular persons from being proceeded against therein Let us seek to understand this by a very plain and familiar example every day obversant before us His Majesty has a standing Army in Ireland in Pay and under His Command All the Officers and private Souldiers therein for some good reasons best known to himself in His great wisdom are exempted from any Civil or criminal Impleadments before the Ecclesiastical or Temporal Tribunals without leave first had and obtained from His Royal self or His Vice gerent here Now will it not be a weak inconsequent way of arguing to conclude from hence that the Judges in the Peinpora Courts have not an universal jurisdiction subjectively in respect of those over whom they are appointed because a few a●e by special priviledge exempted from it It will be so too certainly to conclude the like of the Bishops the Kings Ecclesiastical Judges in the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction because s●●re certain person or persons may by peculiar dispensation be taken out of the same let the utm●st be urged that can be fetch 't out of this present instance from William the Conqueror yet we shall find enough to stil and quiet that and in the same kind too remember we but the 12th chapter of the statute ca●ed Articuli Cleri a● t●e before mentioned By that it will be apparent That King William even in this particular did not so narrowly bound Episcopal jurisdiction as King Edward the second did let it loose extend and enlarge it The one exempted his servants and Tenants from the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction The other almost three hundred years after and by a statute Law gave both up and fully submitted them to it With●ut more adoe The question is not whether the King as Supream Governour over all persons in all Ecclesiastical things and causes may exempt any of his Retainers or any subordinate Officers in places of Civil power under Him from being impleaded or proceed●d against in Ecclesiastical Courts But the question is whether he has Actually done it or no or if done it whether to persons so qualified as our case proceeds upon The former I do not I must not I dare not deny For the Regal power and Supremacy reaches as far in granting priviledges and immunities to any who are thought worthy of the same in respect of Ecclesiastical matters and tryals as it does in respect of civil matters and tryals What he may do in the one he may do in the other Thus I read That the King by His Prerogative may give protection to such persons as are His debtors so as not to be sued by their Creditors till Himself be satisfied Fitz. Nat. br fol. 28. B. Instances more might be given of this kind So he may likewise exempt from the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction But that His Majestie has Actually done this to persons so qualified as our case proceeds upon and quatenus as they are so qualified is that thing the contrary to which I have hitherto engaged my self to make clear and have yet something remaining to add thereto For the present instance from William the Conqueror It was no restraining of Episcopal jurisdiction but in such a particular matter reserving to himself the power of appointing the exercise of it or if it yet will be looked upon as a restraint put thereon yet it must be withall considered that he did not so much limit and restrain in this case as he was pleased to give greater scope to it in a matter of far greater importance as shall be shewed by and by Mean while I sum up this point thus That the Established course of Ecclesiastical proceedings is not repugnant to the Municipal Laws of this Kingdom that by the gracious indulgence concessions of our Pious Princes a liberty and power is granted by them to the Bishops to exercise actually Ecclesiastical jurisdiction upon the Subjects of the Crown That they may be summoned That refractory and contumacious persons may by coercive power be reduced to good order That compulsories may be issued forth and censures inflicted where just occasion requires and all due requisits have preceded They may hear and determine in causes of instance between party and party and also proceed against any criminals under Ecclesiastical cognizance of what quality and condition soever they be for correction and reformation of manners 3. This Position That all persons within any Diocess regularly and de jure communi are subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of that Diocess in all matters and causes of Ecclesiastical cognizance is not any way intrenching upon or infringing His Majesties Prerogative Royal. The Kings Prerogative is called by Sir Henry Spelman Glossar ibid. Lex Regie dignitatis by the Civilians Jus Imperii by the later Feudists jus Regaliorum And the import of all these is comprised in this description given thereof The Kings Prerogative is that special power preheminence or priviledge that the King hath in any kind over and above other persons and above the ordinary course of the Common Law Cowell ibidem A branch of this is the Kings Legistative power in Ecelesiastical matters and causes with the advice and consent of such as are appointed thereto And by the Statute of King Edward the second in the Seventeenth year of His Reign called Prerogativa Regis it is said That whatsoever Gracious concessions the King is pleased to make unto the Honour of Gods Church and good of the Common wealth and for the remedy of such as be grieved He would not that at any time they should turn in prejudice of Himself or of His Crown but that such Rights as appertain to Him should be saved in all points Rastal's Collection ibidem Now the Actual Exercise of Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical being that which by special Favour of our Kings is granted to the Bishops after a very large and ample manner if any thing therefore in that Grart should tend to the diminution of the Rights of the Crown yet by the Statute before mentioned these is still a salvo to them in all respects whatsoever so that in regard of His Majesties Prerogative Royal in this particular branch of it as well as in all the rest the Position before set down does not nay cannot indeed infringe the same I touched a little before the derivation of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction as to the executive part of it from the Crown As every Bishop at the time of his Consecration d●es by Solemn Oath recognize the Kings Majesty to be the onely Supreme Governor in this Realm in all Spiritual and Ecclesiastical things and causes as Temporal and by receiving from the King a Patent of Restitution of His Temporalities is thereby invested with Actual Jurisdiction that is a power to exercise and execute such Jurisdiction
in foro externo contentioso in such causes as belong thereto so in the exercise and proceedings made in the same he depends upon the King from whom he derives his a thority and right to exercise In all Appeals made to the King in His Chancery He defers to him as habenti Supremam authoritatem Ecclesiasticam being the chief and Supreme Ordinary and acquiesces in his final and ultimate decisions A little before I mentioned a Grant of King William the Conqueror wherein great scope was given to Episcopal Jurisdiction it is now proper to set down what that was and this Historical account we may take thereof By this King an entire Jurisdiction was assigned to the Bishops by themselves wherein they should have cognizance of all matters and causes relating to Religion It seems by the Ancient Saxon Law the Bishops and Sheriffs jointly kept their Courts together at certain set times of the year in the Conquerors time these two Jurisdictions thus concurring were parted asunder Fullers Church History of Britain Book 3. p. 5. from Eadmer who lived in the time of King Henry the first gives some account hereof * Spelman in Glossar v. Hundredum But I shall set down the same in the words of a late and a learned Writer proper to the occasion he was upon Conquestor porro Forum Ecclesiasticum à Laico distinxit Nam cum antea sub Anglo-Saxonibus singulis mensibus Aldermannus seu Praeses unà cum Episcopo jus dixissent in Curia Centenaria quam Hundredum dicimus mandavit Episcopis Archidiaconis ne deinceps jus dicant in Curia Centenaria sed in loco per Episcopum designando ibique judicent secundum Canones Leges Episcopales contumaces contra corum mandata Excommunicationis sententiâ Brachio Regio parere cogantur cum Praecepto Vicecomitibus Praepositis Regiis dato ne aliquem in jus vocent coram se de iis quae ad Forum Episcopalem spectant Dr. Duck de Authoritate Juris Civilis in Regno Angliae lib. 2. cap. 8. p. 2. sect 26. And in the margent of his Book alledges * Apud quem●● See this Charter more amply and fully declared the same being granted and directed to Rhemigius the first B●shop of Lincoln ib. Coke's Instit p. 4. cap. 54. lib. 2. cap. 6. sect 135. Char. 2. Rich. 2. m. 1. By this it appears how early the exercise of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction by Bishops was on foot in the Kingdom of England and that as it derived it self from the Crown for besides this distinct constituting of an Ecclesiastical Court from the Court of the Tourn even before the separation before spoken of was made yet the Bishops had then the judicial cognizance of Ecclesiastical causes and matters peculiarly reserved to them so it is plainly colligible from the Laws of King Edgar among which this was one Celeberimus autem ex omni Satrapia conventus his quotannis Agitor cui quidem illius Dioceseos Episcopus Aldermannus intersunto quorum alter jura divina alter jura humana populum edoceto Lord Coke on the Statute of Circumspecte Agatis v. Curia Christianitatis I might yet trace Antiquity higher in this point but my reading is too slender and my opportunities too mean that I should think my self able to give a punctual and exact Account thereof Take notice only in brief what the Pen of a learned Writer has set down The British Saxon and Danish Kings did usually with their Clergy or great Council make Ecclesiastical Laws and regulate the external Discipline of the Church within their Dominions Among the Laws of King Edward the Confessor these were two of them one that makes it the office of a King to govern the Church as the Vicar of God another supposes a paramount power in the King over the Ecclesiastical Courts because they were to take cognizance of wrong done in Ecclesiastical Courts Archbishop Bramhall's Vindication of the Church of England c. p. 67. King Edward the Confessor was indeed after the time of King Edgar before mentioned but taking both together and what was done by both thence is shewed that the practice of former Kings was followed by them and that there was an Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction then and before exercised by Bishops which exercise thereof derived from and was regulated by these and other preceding Kings of England That which has been said makes very fair for our purpose and points out to us to take notice of these several observable things 1. That the Exercise of Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical by Bishops in the right constitution thereof in the Kingdom of England had no deperdance on Rome 2. That much of the intermediate practice in this kind degenerated from its first and right institution and until the time of Henry the eighth was a meer usurpation and encreachment on the English Crown 3. That whereas 't is said The Bishops were to judge secundum Canones Leges Episcopales by Canons I understand the Canons of General and Provincial Councils abroad especially the first four General Councils according as was Enacted by the Emperor Justinian Authent collat 9. Novell 131. cap. de Regulis cap. Sancimus igitur And by Leges Episcopales I understand their Home-laws I mean the Ecclesiastical Laws made by the British Saxon and Danish Kings with the Council of their Bishops variety of which may be found by him that will consult Sir Henry Spelman's Councils The body of the Canon Law was not then in being my meaning is it was not so as such The several particulars that the Decrees consist and were made up of were indeed then and long before in being but they were not compiled together till near fourscore years after this●s and that was done by Gratian the Monk in the year as some say for there is much difference in the computation of this time 11 49. Ridley's view c. p. 74. And by Eugenius the third allowed to be read in the Schools * Of Greg. 9. set forth Anno 1230. The Decret in sexto Anno 1297. The Clementines of Clent 5 set forth Anno 1317. And not long after were extant the Extravagan's of John the 22d and other Popes and to be alledged for Law And for the Decretals c. Clementines and Extravagants they came in successively along while after Here by the way is seen the vanity and wildness of some mens fancies that by all means will have Bishops Courts to be of Pop●sh extraction and that both in their Erection and Constitution they receive influence and authority from the Romish Consittory Than which nothing is more untrue in its self and unhist or ical as to the right deducing the primitive Institution hereof not to speak of the Eastern Churches even in the Kingdom of England it self 4. This is also hence observable That the present course commanded and observed by the Bishops in the Exercise of this Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction suits nearly with
was ever made nevertheless at the happy Restauration of our Gracious Sovereign that now is viz. Anno Dom. 1660. The said Act of the 17. of King Charles the First is repealed and that was Anno decimo tertio Caroli Secundi and in that Act of Repeal it is thus declared That the said Act of the 17. of King Charles the First notwithstanding All Archbishops Bishops and all others exercising Ecclesiastical jurisdiction may proceed determine sentence execute and exercise all manner of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and all censures and coercions appertaining and belonging to the same before the making of the Act before recited in all causes and matters belonging to Ecclesiastical jurisdiction according to the Kings Majesties Ecclesiastical Laws used and practised in this Realm in as ample manner form as they did might lawfully have done before the making of the said Act. This Act is indeed attended with three Provisoes The first is concerning the High-commission Court which is excepted from having any revival or force or authority given to it or to the erection of any other such like Court by commission hereby The second Proviso is concerning the Oath called the Oath ex Officio which is excepted against and forbid to be tendred or administred unto any in the exercising of any Spiritual jurisdiction The third Proviso is to limit and confine the power of Ecclesiastical Judges in all their proceedings to what was and by Law might be used before the year 1639. observe the year mentioned to be 1639 which plainly includes allows and confirms King Charles the First His Proclamation in the year 1637. In this clause and branch of this Statute provision is also made against any confirmation to be given to the Canons made Anno 1640. These particulars onely excepted and here provided against all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction as to it's exstensiveness in all causes of Spiritual cognizance over all persons of what quality and degree soever they be or in what Office soever they are in those causes is firmly ratified and established Bartolus his Rule is truly applicable here Exceptio firmat Regulam in non-exceptis But let all this be granted will the Excepters say that proceedings in Ecclesiastical Courts against private persons either in matters of instance or correction are not entrenching on the Prerogative Royal yet the case is otherwise when such proceedings are bent upon publick Officers as Mayors and Sheriffs c. because they are vested with the Kings Authority and nearly represent His Person They are His Ministers and Dispensers of Justice and by such proceedings against them publick affairs might be hindred of their dispatch and the Kings business not be executed I Answer there is no otherwise in this case For if the matter be justifiable that is if the cause any such proceeding is begun upon do belong to Ecclesiastical cognizance then the Spiritual Jurisdiction in the Bishops management reaches such publick Officers as well as others and that without invading or in the least violating the Kings Prerogative If occasions so require Ecclesiastical censures may be inflicted on them as well as on any other of the Kings subjects that do offend And yet the doing of that will not be a censuring the King in Effigie as some have with very little reason and but too much passion affirmed Observe we what may be done and adjuged against such publick Officers in the Kings Temporal Courts A Mayor and Sheriffs may be impleaded before the Kings Temporal Judges in causes Civil The people of Waterford may remember one or two instances hereof very lately when the School-master there sued the Mayor and Sheriffs before the Lords Justices of Assize for detaining the Salary they had contracted to pay him A Mayor of any City or Corporation may be arrested may during the time of his Mayoralty be sued to an Out-lawry in the Kings Temporal Courts The Kings Temporal Judges may upon contempts convent Mayors before them and occasion so requiring commit them to prison It is not long since that a case in Waterford was coming near this when in one Whaley's cause a Writ of Error was brought from the Court of the Kings Bench This the Mayor refusing to obey and complaint thereof being made to the Court a Pursuivant was ordered to attach the Mayor and bring him before the Judges there to answer his contempt which undoubtedly would have been done if the Execution of that Order had not been seasonably prevented by an Affidavit made to this effect That the Mayor did not refuse to obey the said Writ of Error but onely deferred the admitting of it until he sate judicially in Court the same having been before privately exhibited to him By this means that proceeding was stopped which else would have manifested that the Mayor of Waterford is not so absolute but is indeed under controll and may be convented and punished by the Kings temporal Judges without any affront done to the King in Effigie or to his power and authority which he the said Mayor in his proper station and within his own Precinct does bear And that Sheriffs even while they are in the exercise of their Office may be proceeded against in the Kings Temporal Courts none can be ignorant of that understands the practice of those Courts and remembers there is such a Court as the Exchequer or has undergone the Office of a Sheriff A Sheriff by the Statute of Westminster 1. cap. 9. Anno tertio Edvardi primi for not doing his Duty and for concealing of Felons may be fined and imprisoned One Bronchard in Queen Elizabeths time being Sheriff had an Information Exhibited in the Star-chamber against him for returning one that was not chosen a Knight of the Parliament Abridgement of the Reports of the Lord Dyer 425. A Sheriff of Barkshire was committed to the Fleet and fined by the Court of Common Pleas for unjust taking of Fees Brownloes Reports second part p. 283. I doubt not but the Learned in the Municipal Laws are able to furnish out plenty of instances of this kind Well then Mayors and Sheriffs may be Impleaded may be Out-lawed may be Arrested may be Fined may be Imprisoned in the Kings Temporal Courts by from and before his Temporal Judges And in all these Inflictions here 's no Fining no Arresting no Out-lawing no Imprisoning no Attaching the King in Effigie nor any intrenching upon his Authority from himself to his subordinate civil Officers Here 's no hindring the dispensing of Justice no obstructing the Kings business nor letting the execution of His Majesties service in the hands of these publick Officers that is at all dreaded hereby And pray How then comes it to pass that the case is not the same when in matters of Ecclesiastical cognizance the Kings Ecclesiastical Judge in his Ecclesiastical Courts proceeds against such persons by penalties proper and usually inflicted therein Is not the Kings Authority in His Ecclesiastical Courts in matters belonging to them as forcible and
coercive respectively to the manner of proceedings therein as the same Regal Authority is in the temporal Courts in matters belonging to them and respectively to the manner of proceedings therein The King hath both Jurisdictions united in Him as has been largely before shewed Rex habet omnia jura in manu sua It is a Maxim concerning the King which I read cited from Bracton lib. 2. c. 24. * So it is also said Rex est mixta persona quia tum Ecclesiasticam turn temporalem Jurisdictionem habet 11 Hen. 7.12 Now all is completed in these two Jurisdictions which although they may be diverse yet they are not contrary in him they are both radically and fundamentally in him and derivatively only in all Officers and Ministers of Justice in either kind Is the King then absolute in the one and yet limited in the other less powerful in his Ecclesiastical than in his civil Supremacy That is Supreme and not Supreme Thus to say is either to contradict ones self or neither better nor worse than plainly to derogate from the Kings Ecclesiastical Supremacy and to give him the Name but to deny the Thing It incurs the danger of implied if not direct disowning Regal Supremacy in all causes Ecclesiastical and over all persons that may be concerned therein It is plainly to make a magis and minus in that Authority which will not admit any such thing * Regia dignitas est indivisibilis Coke 4 Instit c. 48. it being alwayes equally and alike forcible in all that is chief and supreme in both Administrations Ecclesiastical and Civil Let 's state a Case or two for better illustration sake A Suit is commenced in the Ecclesiastical Court before the Bishop the Kings Ecclesiastical Judge presiding therein concerning a matter we will suppose not properly cognizable there The Defendant hereupon sues out a Prohibition which he exhibits before the Bishop the Ecclesiastical Judge This the Bishop refuses to admit and notwithstanding the same proceeds in the cause Complaint hereof being made to the Court granting the said Prohibition an Attachment is awarded against the Ecclesiastical Judge * It may be so and issues out of the Chance●y although the Prohibition came from the King Bench or Common Pleas. Lord Co●e cap. 8. 4 Instit He is apprehended and brought to answer for his contempt in refusing to obey the Kings Prohibition I question not now but to have a free concurrency of every mans vote allowing this to be very legal and just because the Kings Authority in the Temporal Court and in such matters as belong thereunto is in this case contemned and disobeyed and therefore ought to be answered for by the contemners of it Now invert the case a little A Bishop the Kings Ecclesiastical Judge convents before him in the Kings Ecclesiastical Court a person bearing some civil Office suppose the Mayor of a Corporation or some Sheriff of a County perhaps at the instance of a party perhaps in a matter of correction This Mayor or Sheriff refuses to appear upon the Summoning or appearing refuses to obey such Injunctions as are given him by the Bishop and for his contempt therein has a censure inflicted on him Tell me now ought not this case be allowed as legal and just as the other The reason is certainly the same because the Kings Authority in his Ecclesiastical Court and matters belonging thereunto is contemned and disobeyed and therefore ought to be answered for by the contemners of it and if the reason be the same partiality or prejudice may make a disparity but in the true nature of the thing there is none at all For the Kings Authority being equally committed to both spiritual and temporal Judge in the concernancy of such things as belong to each the violaters and contemners of either be they of what quality and condition soever are justly punishable by those in either Jurisdiction who are vested with Authority respectively for executing the same But there are those who will not be satified with all this and that they may not seem to be without some grounds they are not without their Objections against it It will therefore be very pertinent to the present design to free our former Assertion from such Inferences as hence may be made contrary to it The Assertion was this That the Exercise of Episcopal Jurisdiction over persons in Office of civil power and trust is not any way intrenching upon or infringing His Majesties Prerogative Royal. To this there is first opposed that Branch and Article of the Statute of Clarenaon of which we find mention made by Matth. Paris in his History of the Reign of King Henry the second the chapter that begins thus Anno Domini 1164. in these words Nullus qui de Rege tenet in capite nec aliquis Dominicorum Ministrorum ejus Excommunicetur nec alicujus eorum terrae sub interdicto ponantur nisi prius Dominus Rex si in Regno fuerio conveniatur vei justitiarius ejus si fuerit extra Regnum ut rectum de eo faciat Et ita ut quod pertinebat ad Regis Curiam ●bi terminetur Et de eo quod spectat ad Curiam Ecclesiasticam ad eandem mittatur ut ibidem terminetur I did a little before and do now again acknowledge That the King of England may by His Prerogative Royal when and to whom he pleases give exemption from Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction But that He has done it to persons in subordinate Offices of civil power is not proved from this instance all the dispute will be who are comprehended under this expression Dominicorum Ministrorum what kind and sort of persons are pointed at thereby And here I say plainly that persons in subordinate Offices of civil power are not these Dominici Ministri Regis My Lord Cokes Exposition hereof is my warrantry and authority for saying so * 2 p. Instit Exposition on the 12th Article of the Statute called Articuli Cleri 9 Ed. 2. The place I refer to in the Margent will inform us That Dominici Ministri Regis are such as belonged to the Kings Houshold as the Tenentes de Capite are such as held of the King by Grand Serjeanty and Knights service and were to give their attendance on the Kings person whensoever required thereto To these is this exemption granted but note here withall that the exemption in this Statute is not absolute but proceeds with a reserve and a limitation that if the cause any such person is to be convented upon be judged by the King or His Justice in the Kings absence to belong to the Ecclesiastical Court thither both cause and person must be sent and that person notwithstanding such exemption be proceeded against and that cause there be determined That which is in the principal aim and provision of this Statute is this that the King be made acquainted before any censures be inflicted on any account upon any of His servants
displeased thereat for as one Historian informs us * Mat. Paris Anno 1250. p. 777. and he a Votary to the Pope in another case hapning but two years before viz. in the 36th year of this Kings Reign and which this passage must undoub●edly refer to Non sine redargutione peritorum haec fecit Dominus Rex quod scilicet conquestus fuerit super haec Domino Papae The Pope to be sure was forward enough to engage himself in the concerns of Princes and so would make himself more officious to gratifie the King than was needful whereas the provision which by the Laws was made against any such encroachments and the Kings own Regal power to put the same Laws in execution would have given him better relief than any indult or dispensation from the Pope could do Well upon the Reasons before specified prohibitions issued out from King Henry to keep the Bishops from censuring his Officers but notwithstanding them still they would be encroaching on the Kings Rights in his temporal Courts and so they continued to the time of King Edward the first the son and immediate successor of the former King and thence proceeded the issuing of that Kings prohibitory mandates Requiring and commanding the Bishops not to Excommunicate his Bayliffs and Officers without his previous Licence and Order That is as by what is to be collected from the state of affairs in these times until the King fully understood the nature of the cause these Officers and Bayliffs were convented upon for as I declared before they were often censured and excommunicated because they opposed the Popish encroachments on the Kings temporal Rights therefore the King would understand the true grounds of such proceedings that if the matter were of civil concernment his Officers might be freed from such vexatious and unjust prosecutions but if it appeared to be of Ecclesiastical cognizance they were then delivered up to the Jurisdiction thereof This I conceive to be the very genuine and true meaning hereof for these reasons first because it is consonant to the end and purport of other Writs of the like nature the Author has not recited these Records at large which if he had done very probably something plainly directing to this conception might have been found therein Moreover by the Statute called prohibitio formata de Statuto Articuli Cleri * Which Stature had ●e●●●ence to certain Articles of the Clergy ●●h bi●ed in Parl●ament hold Anno 51. Hen. 3. made the beginning of King Edwards Reign The spiritual Jurisdiction is not at all restrained subjectively that is respectively to persons being of this or that condition or quality but only objectively as to causes namely such as had been usurped before by the spiritual Courts Lastly this is made good also from approved practice in this very Kings Reign as will appear by this remarkable story that now follows Thomas the Noble Earl of Lancaster had to wife Alice only Daughter and Heir of Henry Earl of Lincoln at the same time John Earl of Warren was married to King Edward the first his Neece yet the said Earl Warren by great force and strong hand caused the said Alice Countess of Lancaster to be fetched from the Earl of Lancasters house in Canford in Dorset shire and in great pomp and bravery in despight of the Earl of Lancaster to be brought to him to his Castle of Rye●gate in Surrey where they lived in open advowtry John Langton was then Bishop of Chichester and Chancellor of England and being a man of a brave spirit and fearing not the face of great men according to his office and duty he called the said Earl Warren in question for the said shameful and open Adultery and by Ecclesiastical censures Excommunicated him for the same as he well deserved sayes my Lord Coke who reports this Story * Exp●f●●ion on the Statute called Articuli super Chartas Anno 28 Edvard 1. page 573. This hapned about the 29th year of King Edv. 1. and surely is an instance proper to inform us what the right state of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was then and that supposing the matter to be indeed belonging to the Ecclesiastical Tribunal no person of greatest dignity under the King nor any others in civil office and place of power are exempted from it nor did the Kings prohibitory Writs give any such exemption Thus it was while the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction did de facto stand divided from the Crown and before our Kings re-assumed their Rights in the same But forasmuch as now there is an entire Union of both jurisdictions in one supream King and Governour the exercise of the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction is certainly at least as extensive as full and as Universal now as it was before And whereas the obtaining and having the Kings leave and licence to the inflicting any censures on His Bayliffs and Officers is mentioned in those prohibitory Writs whence it may be inferred that admitting Ecclesiastical judges may proceed against and censure occasion so requiring it the Kings Officers in civil powers yet the Kings leave and order so to do must first be had and obtained To this I say that now by the right constitution of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and as the exercise thereof is derived from the Crown the Kings leave and licence in the whole procedure thereof is implicitely indeed yet as truly and certainly had and obtained as if a particular and express mandate from the King were issued out upon each several cause civil or criminal that belongs to the cognizance thereof The E●clesiastical judge acts by a power as immediately derived from the King as any Temporal Judge does The Bishop is as amply and compleatly Commissionated for the Exercise of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction both subjectively and objectively in foro Externo contentioso which Commission passes in His Majesties Letters Patents for Restauration of the Temporalities as any other Temporal Judge in any of the Kings Temporal Courts And upon this account it is as truly affirmed That nothing is done in the Ecclesiastical Court Rege inconsulto as the same is said concerning the Temporal Court Habet Rex diversas Curias in quibus diversae Actiones terminantur sayes Bracton and he lived in one of these Kings Reign viz that of King Henry 3d whence Sir Edward Coke draws this conclusion That the King hath committed and distributed all his whole power of Judicature to several Courts of Justice and in this he refers to Ecclesiastical Courts as well as Temporal And from the Statute 24 Hen. 8. cap. 2. he declares thus That the Laws Ecclesiastical and Temporal were and yet are administred adjudged and executed by sundry Judges * His Jurisdiction of Courts cap. 7. p. 70. c. Hence is that saying That the King does judge by his Judges Thus in matters of Ecclesiastical cognizance the King judges by His Ecclesiastical Judges and whatsoever persons are any way concerned therein and impleaded in the Ecclesiastical Court the
nor Religion Here is no need of that Writ in the Kings behalf called Ad quod Damnum As what damage and prejudice will come to the King by confirming Episcopal Jurisdidiction and allowing the actual exercise thereof for in truth the exercise thereof kept in its right constitution and dependance for such a Jurisdiction is only here intended is so far from diminishing the Right and darkning the Jewels of the Crown that they receive a greater lustre and resplendency thereby We have spoken of the Kings Oath which He is pleased at the time of His Coronation to take for the benefit and security of His Subjects There is also the Subjects Oath which they are to take in Recognition of the Kings Sovereignty and in testimony of their fidelity to him I mean the Oath of Supremacy a consideration of which is very proper and pertinent to the matter in hand especially that one branch which the Taker there f●swears to and declares that To his power he will assist and defend all Jurisdictions Priviledges Preheminences and Authorities united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm In which words the E●● esiastical Jurisdiction is if not only yet specia●ly aimed at Now let such persons that are p●aced in Offices of civil Power and Authority and conceit themselves not subject to Ecclesiastica● Jurisdiction because of their being in such Offices and who yet do take this Oath at the entrance into their Offices let them I say soberly and advisedly bethink themselves how consistent an Oath taken for the observance and defence of the Ecclesiastical J●r●sdiction is with a plain disowning of such Ju●●ction as to themselves or impugning of it and bearing themselves disobediently to it or exempting themselves from it in matters which the Law has clearly appropriated to it or in a word to act any thing to the prejudice of the lawful proceedings thereof It is frivolous and vain to alledge that they acknowledge and will submit to this Jurisdiction in the King and yet at the same time deny their submission to the exercise of it by the Bishops This I say is a vain and frivolous Allegation because it is not a notional and speculative acknowledgment that such a Jurisdiction is united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm which only fulfills the imp●rt of this Oath But it is an obedience in practice by submitting to the lawful exercise of it that is the soope and intendment of it Now the King exercises no judiciary power in His own person but commits it to His Judges the King hath wholly left matters of Judicature according to His Laws to His Judges * Lord Cole 4 In●it p 71. And the Bishops are those Judges to whom the Ecclesiast Jurisdiction is committed and to them the execution thereof belongeth now what is done in deregation of that power and authority derivatively residing in them is done in like manner in deregation of the same power primitively that is as it is originally in and derives from the King Himself I have said thus much concerning this branch of the Oath of Supremacy not that I take upon me to judge any man but because I take it to be my duty to recommend the consideration of this thing as a matter of very weighty concernment and fit to be made with all sobriety and seriousness I sum up all delivered on this first Proposition under this Head That Bishops proceeding by Authority and deriving the actual exercise of their Jurisdiction from the King are the Kings Ecclesiastical Judges dispensing Justice in the Kings Ecclesiastical Courts according to the Kings Ecclesiastical Laws And that the same Jurisdiction reaches to and over all persons whatsoever within their respective Diocesses all which is agreeable to the Ecclesiastical Laws of these Kingdoms and not repugnant to the Temporal Laws thereof nor yet infringing in any kind the Kings Prerogative Royal and therefore the Bishop of Waterford's Jurisdiction in the Case before laid down was legally founded in respect of the persons proceeded against Prob. II. The second Proposition is this The Bishops Jurisdiction over these persons was legally founded in respect of the cause that this proceeding was made upon The cause was the rendring an accompt of Moneys given and received to pious uses and rendring of an accompt of a large Rate levied to the use of the Church as also concerning the Reparation of the Body of the Cathedrall Church at Waterford That the Bishop is the proper competent Judge to exact an accompt of all such Moneys so given and so to be disposed of will not I suppose be denied or if it be denyed the worst of it is 't is but the being put to the proof of it which is no very difficult task and for sureness sake shall by and by be made good And for the Reparation of Churches that the same belongs to Ecclesiastical though the Law be clear for it will yee be made more clear by having those Laws for it produced But before that be entred upon some notice must be taken of what has been alledged and passed roundly from the mouths of many that concern'd them selves much in his matter That by ancient contract the Mayor Sheriffs and Commonalty of Waterford stand obliged to the making good this Reparation whence the Inference it made That all contracts being of civil cognizance therefore the Bishop was no competent Judge of that branch of the cause which was brought before him the same being not cognizable in the Ecolesiastical Court This Allegation at the first hearing seemed mighty fair and plausible insomuch as some persons otherwise no Enemies to Episcopal Jurisdiction were much concerned and startled thereat And when they first heard it they concluded presently that the Bishop had taken a matter in hand which he ought not to have moved a hand towards as not appertaining to his jurisdiction and so has usurped on the Temporal Courts Nay so strangely transported were some that in their heats they did not stick to affirm that the Bishop by doing what he did had incur'd some heavy penalty which they would not abate of an Ace less than a praemunire it self And many and hard and bitter were the cenfures that several open mouths pronounced upon him But causes as well as persons are sometimes prejudged and both were so in this case As a preparative to the clearing and making good that both cause and person were thus prejudged I shall speak something concerning the matter of contract so mainly insisted upon and that which raised the cry as if the Bishop grounded his proceeding on that contract and therein encroached on the Temporal Jurisdiction Let it therefore for the present be supposed That the Bishop did ground his Ecclesiastical proceeding on that contract although indeed the cause was not so laid yet supposing it were the inference that is thence made peradventure is not good as that the doing thereof was an encroachment on the Temporal Jurisdiction Peradventure
I say it is not For I will not be positive in what I am about to write but referring my self to better judgments I freely submit to their decisions herein This I propose then That all matters of contract arising from or upon causes originally of Spiritual cognizance are not exc●●ded from the Ecclesiastical Tribunal I put this case not much differing from that which we have before us Titius a parishioner of Dale with leave of the Parson and rest of the parishioners builds up an Isle or Out chappel adjoyning to the Parish Church of Dale and intends to reserve the same to himself and relations for the use of a burying place and undertakes to keep this Out-chappel from time to time in sufficient good and decent repair Notwithstanding this obligation so to do the repair of the same is neglected If the question were put to me before whom and in what Court Titius may be sued and compelled to make good the reparation thereof I should not doubt to answer that Titius may be proceeded against by the Ordinary ex Officio or impleaded by any voluntary Promoter of the Office in causa reparationis Capellae c. The Church wardens may present that neglect and the person guilty of it One Article usually given to present upon is this Whether the Church or Chappel in the Body and Chancel of it be in good repair If it be not through whose defaclt comes it to pass that it is not and this Article is grounded on the 93d Canon of this Church So then as the neglect and default is punishable by the Ordinary the reformation likewise thereof in making good the repair otherwise by contract undertaken for is to be enjoyned by the Ordinary Moreover Pensions out of Churches or any Annual Portion beeoming due from any Colledge Bishoprick Cathedral Church or Deanry to be paid to any Rector Vicar or Curate of a Parish Church if they be detained the same are demandable and to be recovered in the Ecclesiastical Court according to the Statute viz. 34 35 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Now the Right of paying any such Pensions and Annual Portions is grounded on Ancient-contract obliging thereunto In Compositions Real for Tythes made either between the Parson of one and the Parson of another parish for the stating and setling each others right and to prevent litigious impleadings of each other Also compositions made between the Parson and some one or more of his parishioners touching the not paying any Tythes at all but a certain setled and determinate sum in lieu thereof This is usual in this Kingdom for Mills that grind corn to compound for a certain sum to be paid instead of the Toll-tythe Now the Ecclesiastical Judge before whom these compositions are to be alledged may hear and determine thereof Tit. 120. Cler. Prax. Sir Thomas Ridley's View c. part 3. chap. 3. Sect. 6. Cose● Apol. p. 1. ch 10. There is a cause of Ecclesiastical cognizance called Negotium subtractionis Dotis causa nuptiarum promissae The case is thus Titius in consideration of Matrimony to be contracted and solemnized with his Daughter Partia by Sempronius promised Ten pounds to Sempronius The Matrimeny being solemnized and Titius not paying the promised sum Sempronius impleads him before the Ecclesiastical Judge for the same Titius sues out a prohibition Notwithstanding which Sempronius obtains a consultation wherein is affirmed That the Court Ecclefiastical may proceed therein This you may find reported by Dr. Cosen Apol. p. 1. pag. 26. And the several Opinions of Common Lawyers concurring therein More instances might be given of this kind to evince That all contracts arising from matters which are in their Original of Spiritual cognizance are not excluded from the Ecclesiastical Tribunal observe what is further said Although promises and contracts of Money are generally pleadable in the Courts of the common Law yet as Bracton writes Causae de rebus promissis ob causam Matrimonii in foro Ecclesiastico terminari debent quia cujus juris jurisdictionis est principale ejusdem erit accessorium And in another place he gives a reason for the same quia semper videndum propter quid aliquid sit aut permittatur Zouch Jurisdiction of the Admiralty p. 64. I do not affirm an absolute parity between these cases and that which is before us I refer'd my self before and do now still submit what is said to the judicious decisions of others But this is yet upon the supposal that what is objected was really so as is objected the contrary to which is most clear for as touching what relates to this Vindication there is no need at all to strain any doubtful or disputable case to make it favour the matter in hand for the contract here pretended was not insisted upon so as to make a foundation of any jurisdictive proceeding in the Ecclesiastical Court thereupon 'T is true the contract gave occasion to the Bishop to call upon and admonish the Mayor and Sheriffs of Waterford to look after what belonged to their duty to be done They being thus stirred up make rates levy and collect Money from the several Inhabitants for this end of repairing the Body of the Cathedral c. They receive the voluntary contributions for the Bells The Money thus levied collected and received is little disposed of for the uses intended The Church remains unrepaired the other works are neglected now what was regularly and legally to be done in this case was regularly and legally entred upon the work of reparation it self the accounting for Money levied raised contributed and received for that purpose and other matters relating to the Church are the grounds of this proceeding as by the several Acts of Court remaining in the Registry of Waterford may more fully appear Now that these are justisiable grounds whereon legally to found an Ecclesiastical proceeding comes to be made good which I shall do by laying down and proving these three Assertions 1. The rendring an accompt of Moneys given and received for pious causes and the right disposing thereof belongs to the Bishop within his own Diocess to call for and see performed 2. Reparations of Churches with all the incidents thereunto both by Temporal and Spiritual Law appertain to Ecclesiastical cognizance 3. The penalty of Praemunire will not be incurr'd by any Ecclesiastical Judge for making such proceedings 1. The rendring an accompt of Moneys given and received for pious causes and the right disposing thereof belongs to the Bishop within his own Diocess to call for and see performed Pious causes are set down in the Law to be of many and various kinds and to enjoy many and various priviledges for the many and various kinds of them see Leg. illud Leg. Sancimus Cod. de Sacro-sanctis Ecclesiis and Lindwood in cap. it a quorundam ad Verb. pias causas de Testamentis lib. 3. Provincial Constitut Among which these especially fall under our disquisition namely Legacies or other Donations
which I mentioned before when some busie Sticklers were active and forward in fixing a Praemunire upon the Officers of the Chancery No Praemunire sayes He can be granted but at the Kings Suit and how can the King grant a Praemunire against Himself In the Court of Admiralty many more Prohibitions are brought than in the Ecclesiastical Courts There is a greater vicinity and likeness betwixt the matters tryable in that Court and those tryable at common Law and consequently greater occasion and probability of mistaking Now certainly such frequency of Prohibitions with the consequences of them would be very dilatory and tedious if the more compendious way of Praemunire were effectual and why not Praemunire lie here as well as in the Court Christian This is another Court or a Court under the large meaning of Alibi proceedings are divers therein from those of the common Law and I do not remember to have read any Praemunire brought for suing in the Admiralty excepting in two cases the one 38 Hen. 6. the other in 9 Hen. 7. Nevertheless saith Dr. Zouch although it be said that two Praemunires were brought upon such occasions yet it doth not appear that any judgment was given upon them See more to this purpose in his Jurisdiction of the Admiralty asserted But never to mince the matter Is it not here that the Shooe wrings It is the Ecclesiastical Court and that is become the great Eye-sore a thing that will not be looked upon as an offence in another Court is beheld by men through a magnifying Glass in this There are too many that cannot away at any hand with a Bishops Jurisdiction and what they do not like they easily quarrel at hence are all the prejudices that upon very little occasions are taken up and yet though good reasons be given are hardly laid down again The Spiritual Court shall be sure to have all the opprobrious and all the scurrilous imputations fastned to it Men love those sins too dearly that are punishable there and they love to hold too tenaciously those rights from others that are recoverable there Now no Delinquent loves that Judge who co●rects him for the sin he loves to c●ntinue in or will force from him the rights of others which he has no mind to part withall I wish it have not been from these or any other such gr●unds that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction has had so many opposites and that there has been such lying at catch and waiting for advantages against it so as to terrifie with the name of Praemunire whensoever men have a mind to say there is or that there is indeed some real miscarriage therein Thus far I have enlarged in making good the second Proposition I shall collect together under one view what has been delivered thereon It was not the matter of any civil contract but a cause indisputably of Ecclesiastical cognizance that was the ground of these proceedings and therefore no Praemunire imputable on that Accompt and admitting the contract had been the ground of these proceedings yet for the reasons before shewed no Praemunire could have been incurr'd hereby and therefore the Bishop of Waterford's Jurisdiction in the case before laid down was legally founded in respect of the cause proceeded upon PROP. III. The Bishops Jurisdiction was legally managed in this cause against these persons in respect of the manner observed and followed therein It was in favour to the Mayor and Sheriffs that a civil intimation was given to them from the Bishop desiring their meeting with him This civil intimation was I will not say despised but not answered with a correspondent civility in them for they did not give the meeting to the Bishop which he desired they would And yet the end of this desired meeting was in order to a fair accompting for Moneys received by them for the Churches use and for making good the reparation of the Body of the Cathedral Church They not giving I say the Bishop this desired meeting some competent time afterwards I think a weeks space intervening Process was caused to issue forth to call them to appear before the Bishop in his Consistory on a certain day after following I cannot go forward to the sequele of this proceeding thus begun without making some little animadversion on these persons I shall forbear giving it any worse term disingenuous carriage in their Petition of Complaint Exhibited to the Lord Deputy and Council In the first Section of which they say That they the Petitioners about Ten of the Clock in the Forenoon on the twentieth of July last received a Verbal Summons from the Apparator of the Diocess of Waterford to Appear at the Consistory Court of the said Diocess before the Lord Bishop of Waterford at Two of the clock the same day The disingenuity that I observe herein is most notorious for first they speak of a Verbal Summons from an Apparator than which nothing can be more ridiculous shall I say or more false 'T is both contrary to practice for any Verbal Summons to be given by an Apparator to any person and it is of no force nor validity if any such were given and it is contrary to Truth that any such was given The Bishop of Waterford better understands both what is the ordinary practice and what will hold good and is justifiable in practice than to order his Apparator to call any of his Diocess before him without a formal Process by Verbal Summons only Next it is said That this Verbal Summons was given at Ten of the clock in the Forenoon to appear at Two of the clock in the Afternoon of the same day Here is disingenuity again There being no Accord betwixt what is thus alledged and the Acts of Court that have been expedited in this proceeding I have made it my endeavour carefully to consult these and find that an Original Citation issued out of the Registry against these persons to appear on Wednesday the 22d of July betwixt the hours of Eight and Ten in the Forenoon of the same day And I find that this Citation was executed on the persons of these men by one Michael Curren the usual Mandatary of the Court according as he declared upon Oath on the 21 day of the Month of July which was Tuesday This is the first Act of proceedings in this cause and if we will credit that as it is attested by the Register a Sworn Officer and Notary Publick then the first Section of the Petition as it relates to these proceedings contains nothing of Truth in it And as little there is in the first part of the second Section for whereas the Petitioners say That on the Two and twentieth of the said Month they were Summoned to Appear at Ten of the clock at the said Court the same day The falsity of this appears plainly by what the aforesaid Mandatary upon Oath declared namely That he had Summoned them on the Tuesday which Tuesday was the One and twentieth not the
Two and twentieth of July And the ground of complaint had been tolerable indeed if the time of their Summoning and time of their Appearance had jump't together at one and the same hour I now go on further in drawing out the course and series of this Judicial proceeding The day being come that is to say Wednesday the 22d of July at which time the forementioned Process was returnable and the Bishop sitting in his Consistory the persons Summoned were called upon who not Appearing their Contumacy was accordingly accused and upon the Accusation by Decree of Court they were pronounced contumacious The Legality of this manner of proceeding thus far is sufficiently known by common practice and Lindwood gives this Rule Constitut Provincial Item omnes de Judiciis ad literam F. ubi aliquis apprehensus est personali citatione si sic citatus personaliter non compareat efficitur verè contumax And the 70th Canon of the Church of Ireland allows a Contumacy to be affixed to that person who neglects to appear upon citation I have heard that there was afterwards something alledged on their behalf why they could not appear upon that Summons and something they say in the second Section of their Petition to this purpose As that a Council of the City had been appointed against that time to consult about an Answer to a Letter sent by the Lord Deputy But two things come here into observation whence it seems probable that this matter was made use of at a pinch and so to serve as a little evasive shift when there was nothing else that could seemingly help them for as they mentioned in the first Section of their Petition this Letter was delivered to them from the Lord Deputy the Monday before now the answering of that would not I suppose be delayed until Wednesday and that very hour of Wednesday when upon due Summons before personally served they were to appear at the Bishops Consistory But indeed it is more then to be presumed that the appointment of their Council if any such were appointed then upon Wednesday and at that hour was designed as a colour wherewith they might be helped to elude their appearance upon the said Summens Moreover had they been really engaged in so necessary and earnest a business yet that could give no hindrance but they might haye sent some creditable person to make Affidavit of their being so employed which thing in all probability would have caused a respiting of their Appearance at that time Yes but they did send a Messenger sayes the Petition who acquainted the Bishop with the reason of their not appearing But if any such Messenger were sent he stood there incognito and was as a Mute in the company for no one did nor offered to make Affidavit theteof Add further Wednesday morning at Ten of the clock was the time they were called to appear at sayes the very Petition it self but the tenor of the Citation is betwixt the hours of Eight and Ten They were busie at Ten of the Clock to dispatch their return yet the Post is usually gone at that time They were not busie at Eight or between Eight and Nine and then too their Appearance had been good What shall we think hereof Truly by all that I can conceive hereof there could be no sufficient Allegation grounded hereon to free them from being in contempt for Non-appearance upon Legal Summons But allow they had been really aggrieved by this proceeding and that there being declared contumacious had been illegal Remedy there was for this a regular course might have been taken which if applied to would have given redress herein An Appeal to the Archbishop of the Province would have done both these This the Bishop would not nay could not deny them And if the ground of their Appeal were justifiable they would by that means have been rescued from the Bishops and protected under the Archbishops Jurisdiction This course I have been told was suggested to them but the Truth is it relished too much of condescention to give any shew of submission to Ecclesiastical power High spirits will rather want than be beholden for help to that hand which they do not like of Perhaps these persons lifted up with an Opinion of their Office as they thought themselves a degree above the being proceeded against by a Bishop so it would be beneath them to supplicate for any relief from an Archbishop Well upon this a second Process issues out to call them to Appear and shew cause if they had any why for their former contempt they ought not to undergo the penalty of a censure Upon this Summons they appear yet not a ledging any material or rationally conclusive Plea for purging their former contempt they are upon the accompt thereof enjoyned an easie penance This only to make an acknowledgment of their contempt and disobedience and to promise future Obedience The Heats before conceived in these mens breasts and hitherto suppressed now break out with some violence They fume and chafe at this imposition and disdain That Men in their Dignity being the Kings Lieutenants so they stiled themselves should be brought to make a publick acknowledgment and submission I am verily perswaded that if any reasonable application had been made to the Bishop by these persons and some private acknowledgment and submission tendred an easie composure of what had passed would have followed But the doing of this was so far from their Resolves that a friendly advice and proposal thereof was with scorn rejected The time appointed for making this Acknowledgment comes and as it came so it passed away without any observance of what was enjoyned This repeated contempt might have disordered a well composed temper but it had no power upon the Bishop alter him a little it might how could it well be otherwise but not so as to exasperate that spirit of Lenity which as he ought so he alwayes moderated himself by in matters of censures and other parts of corrective Discipline It directed him indeed to reflect on the Authority he was invested withall and how scandalously it was despised and that the Rod was to be taken in hand and something at least to be done in a way of correction that men might not be disobedient and refractory and then think they had done well in being so Authority contemned and passing with impunity ushers in both Atheism and confusion Wherefore that more severe and dreadful censure of Excommunication being laid aside it may be as for other reasons so upon this consideration likewise that they might not be discapacitated in the execution of their Offices This great censure I say being laid aside another is made use of that with ingenuous Christians might probably attain the end intended being tempered with more mildness and lenity The censure was this The persons so offending were suspended ab ingressu in Ecclesiam till such time as they had made publick satisfaction for the scandal given by their