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A50916 Of reformation touching chvrch-discipline in England, and the cavses that hitherto have hindred it two bookes, written to a freind [sic] Milton, John, 1608-1674. 1641 (1641) Wing M2134; ESTC R17896 44,575 96

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displeasing to the people then to have in-acted that no Bishop should be chosen without his will so long did this right remain to the people in the midst of other palpable corruptions Now for Episcopall dignity what it was see out of Ignatius who in his Epistle to those of Trallis confesseth that the Presbyters are his fellow Counsellers and fellow benchers And Cyprian in many places as in the 6. 41. 52. Epist. speaking of Presbyters calls them his Compresbyters as if he deem'd himself no other whenas by the same place it appeares he was a Bishop he calls them Brethren but that will be thought his meeknesse yea but the Presbyters and Deacons writing to him think they doe him honour enough when they phrase him no higher then Brother Cyprian and deare Cyprian in the 26. Epist. For their Authority 't is evident not to have bin single but depending on the counsel of the Presbyters as from 〈◊〉 was ere while alledg'd and the same Cyprian acknowledges as much in the 6 Epist. and addes therto that he had determin'd from his entrance into the Office of Bishop to doe nothing without the consent of his people and so in the 31. Epist for it were tedious to course through all his writings which are so full of the like assertions insomuch that ev'n in the womb and center of Apostacy Rome it selfe there yet remains a glimps of this truth for the Pope himselfe as a learned English writer notes well performeth all E●…clesiasticall jurisdiction as in Consistory amongst his Cardinals which were originally but the Parish Priests of Rome Thus then did the Spirit of unity and meeknesse inspire and animate every joynt and sinew of the mysticall body but now the gravest and worthiest Minister atrue Bishop of his fold shall be revil'd and ruffl'd by an insulting and only-Canon-wise Prelate as if he were some slight paltry companion and the people of God redeem'd and wash'd with Christs blood and dignify'd with so many glorious titles of Saints and sons in the Gospel are now no better reputed then impure ethnicks and lay dogs stones Pillars and Crucifixes have now the honour and the almes due to Christs living members the Table of Communion now become a Table of separation stands like an exalted platforme upon the brow of the quire fortifi'd with bulwark ●…and barricado to keep off the profane touch of the Laicks whilst the obscene and surfered Priest scruples not to paw and mammock the sacramentall bread as familiarly as his Tavern Bisket And thus the people vilifi'd and rejected by them give over the earnest study of vertue and godlinesse as a thing of greater purity then they need and the search of divine knowledge as a mystery too high for their capacity's and only for Church-men to meddle with which is that the Prelates desire that when they have brought us back to Popish blindnesse we might commit to their dispose the whole managing of our salvation for they think it was never faire world with them since that time But he that will mould a modern Bishop into a primitive must yeeld him to be elected by the popular voyce undiocest unrevenu'd unlorded and leave him nothing but brotherly equality matchles temperance frequent fasting incessant prayer and preaching continual watchings and labours in his Ministery which what a rich bootie it would be what a plump endowment to the many-benefice-gaping mouth of a Prelate what a relish it would give to his canary-sucking and swan-eating palat let old Bishop Mountain judge for me How little therfore those ancient times make for moderne Bishops hath bin plainly discours'd but let them make for them as much as they will yet why we ought not stand to their arbitrement shall now appeare by a threefold corruption which will be found upon them times were spreadingly infected men of those times fouly tainted writings of those men dangerously adulterated These Positions are to be made good out of those times witnessing of themselves First Ignatius in his early dayes testifies to the Churches of Asia that even then Heresies were sprung up and rife every where as Eusebius relates in his 3. Book 35. chap. after the Greek number And Hegesippus a grave Church writer of prime Antiquity affirms in the same Book of Euseb. c. 32. that while the Apostles were on earth the depravers of doctrine did but lurk but they once gon with open forehead they durst preach down the truth with falsities yea those that are reckon'd for orthodox began to make sad and shamefull rents in the Church about the trivial celebration of Feasts not agreeing when to keep Easter day which controversie grew so hot that Victor the Bishop of Rome Excommunicated all the Churches of Asia for no other cause and was worthily therof reprov'd by Irenaeus For can any sound Theologer think that these great Fathers understood what was Gospel or what was Excommunication doubtlesse that which led the good men into fraud and error was that they attended more to the neer tradition of what they heard the Apostles somtimes did then to what they had left written not considering that many things which they did were by the Apostles themselves profest to be done only for the present and of meer indulgence to some scrupulous converts of the Circumcision but what they writ was of firm decree to all future ages Look but a century lower in the 1. cap. of Eusebius 8. Book What a universal tetter of impurity had invenom'd every part order and degree of the Church to omit the lay herd which will be little regarded those that seem'd to be our Pastors saith he overturning the Law of Gods worship burnt in contentions one towards another and incresing in hatred and bitternes outragiously sought to uphold Lordship and command as it were a tyranny Stay but a little magnanimous Bishops suppresse your aspiring thoughts for there is nothing wanting but Constantine to reigne and then Tyranny her selfe shall give up all her cittadels into your hands and count ye thence forward her trustiest agents Such were these that must be call'd the ancientest and most virgin times between Christ and Constantine Nor was this general contagion in their actions and not in their writings who is ignorant of the foul errors the ridiculous wresting of Scripture the Heresies the vanities thick sown through the volums of Justin Mar●…yr Clemens Origen 〈◊〉 and others of eldest time Who would think him fit to write an Apology for Christian Faith to the Roman Senat that would tell them how of the Angels which he must needs mean those in Gen. call'd the Sons of God mixing with Women were begotten the Devills as good Justin Martyr in his Apology told them But more indignation would it move to any Christian that shall read Tertullian terming S. Paul a novice and raw in grace for reproving S. Peter at Antioch worthy to be blam'd if we beleeve the Epistle to the Galatians perhaps from this hint the blasphemous
strook through the black and settled Night of Ignornnce and Antichristian Tyranny me thinks a soveraigne and reviving joy must needs rush into the bosome of him that reads or heares and the sweet Odour of the returning Gospell imbath his Soule with the fragrancy of Heaven Then was the Sacred BIBLE sought out of the dusty corners where prophane Falshood and Neglect had throwne it the Schooles opened Divine and Humane Learning rak't out of the embers of forgotten Tongues the Princes and Cities trooping apace to the new erected Banner of Salvation the Martyrs with the unresistable might of Weaknesse shaking the Powers of Darknesse and scorning the fiery rage of the old red Dragon The pleasing pursuit of these thoughts hath oft-times led mee into a serious question and debatement with my selfe how it should come to passe that England having had this grace and honour from GOD to bee the first that should set up a Standard for the recovery of lost Truth and blow the first Evangelick Trumpet to the Nations holding up as from a Hill the new Lampe of saving light to all Christendome should now be last and most unsettl'd in the enjoyment of that Peace whereof we taught the way to others although indeed our Wicklefs preaching at which all the succeding Reformers more effectually lighted their Tapers was to his Countrey-men but a short blaze soone dampt and stifl'd by the Pope and Prelates for sixe or seven Kings Reignes yet me thinkes the Precedencie which GOD gave this Iland to be the first Restorer of buried Truth should have beene followed with more happy successe and sooner attain'd Perfection in which as yet we are amongst the last for albeit in purity of Doctrine we agree with our Brethren yet in execution and applying of Doctrine home and laying the salve to the very Orifice of the wound yea tenting and searching to the Core without which Pulpit Preaching is but shooting at Rovers in this we are no better then a Schisme from all the Reformation and a sore scandall to them for while wee hold Ordination to belong onely to Bishops as our Prelates doe wee must of necessity hold also their Ministers to be no Ministers and shortly after their Church to be no Church Not to speake of those sencelesse Ceremonies which wee onely retaine as a dangerous earnest of sliding back to Rome and serving meerely either as a mist to cover nakednesse where true grace is extinguisht or as an Enterlude to set out the pompe of Prelatisme Certainly it would be worth the while therefore and the paines to enquire more particularly what and how many the che●…We causes have been that have still hindred our Vniforme Con●… to the rest of the Churches abroad at this time especially when the Kingdome is in a good propensity thereto and all Men in Prayers in Hopes or in Disputes either for or against it Yet will I not insist on that which may seeme to be the cause on GODS part as his judgement on our sinnes the tryall of his owne the unmasking of Hypocrites nor shall I stay to speake of the continuall eagernes and extreame diligence of the Pope and Papists to stop the furtherance of Reformation which know they have no hold or hope of England their lost Darling longer then the government of Bishops bolsters them out and therefore plot all they can to uphold them as may bee seene by the Booke of Santa Clara the Popish Preist in defence of Bishops which came out piping hot much about the time that one of our own Prelats out of an ominous feare had writ on the same Argnment as if they had joyn'd their forces like good Confederates to support one falling Babel But I shall cheifly indeavour to declare those Causes that hinder the forwarding of true Discipline which are among our selves Orderly proceeding will divide our inquirie into our Fore-Fathers dayes and into our Times HENRY the 8. was the first that rent this Kingdome from the Popes Subjection totally but his Quarrell being more about Supremacie then other faultinesse in Religion that he regarded it is no marvell if hee stuck where he did The next default was in the Bishops who though they had renounc't the Pope they still hugg'd the Popedome and shar'd the Authority among themselves by their sixe bloody Articles persecuting the Protestants no slacker then the Pope would have done And doutles when ever the Pope shall fall if his ruine bee not like the sudden down-come of a Towre the Bishops when they see him tottering will leave him and fall to scrambling catch who may hee a Patriarch-dome and another what comes next hand as the French Cardinall of late and the See of Canterbury hath plainly affected In Edward the 6. Dayes why a compleate Reform was not effected to any considerate man may appeare First he no sooner entred into his Kingdome but into a Warre with Scotland from whence the Protector returning with Victory had but newly put his hand to repeale the 6. Articles and throw the Images out of Churches but Rebellions on all sides stir'd up by obdurate Papists and other Tumults with a plaine Warre in Norfolke holding tack against two of the Kings Generals made them of force content themselves with what they had already done Hereupon follow'd ambitious Contentions among the Peeres which ceas'd not but with the Protectors death who was the most zealous in this point and then Northumberland was hee that could doe most in England who little minding Religion as his Apostacie well shew'd at his death bent all his wit how to bring the Right of the Crowne into his owne Line And for the Bishops they were so far from any such worthy Attempts as that they suffer'd themselvs to be the commō stales to coun tenance with their prostituted Gravities every Politick Fe●…ch that was then on foot as oft as the Potent Statists pleas'd to employ them Never do we read that they made use of their Authority and high Place of accesse to bring the jarring Nobility to Christian peace or to withstand their di●…oyall Projects but if a Toleration for Masse were to be beg'd of the King for his Sister MARY lest CHARLES the Fifth should be angry who but the grave Prelates Cranmer and Ridley must be sent to extort it from the young King But out of the mouth of that godly and Royall Childe Christ himselfe return'd such an awfull repulse to those halting and time-serving Prelates that after much bold importunity they went their way not without shame and teares Nor was this the first time that they discover'd to bee followers of this World for when the Protectors Brother Lord Sudley the Admirall through private malice and mal-engine was to lose his life no man could bee found fitter then Bishop Latimer like another Doctor Shaw to divulge in his Sermon the forged Accusations laid to his charge thereby to defame him with the People who else was thought would take ill the innocent mans death unlesse the
Reverend Bishop could warrant them there was no foule play What could be more impious then to debarre the Children of the King from their right to the Crowne To comply with the ambitious ●…urpation of a Traytor and to make void the last Will of HENRY 8 to which the Breakers had sworne observance Yet Bishop Cranmer one of the Executors and the other Bishops none refusing lest they should resist the Duke of Northumberland could find in their Consciences to set their hands to the disinabling and defeating not onely of Princesse MARY the Papist but of ELIZABETH the Protestant and by the Bishops judgement the Lawfull Issue of King HENRY Who then can thinke though these Prelates had sought a further Reformation that the least wry face of a Politician would not have hush't them But it will be said These men were Martyrs What then Though every true Christian will be a Martyr when he is called to it not presently does it follow that every one suffering for Religion is without exception Saint Paul writes that A man may give his Body to be burnt meaning for Religion and yet not have Charitie He is not therfore above all possibility of erring because hee burnes for some Points of Truth Witnes the Arians and Pelagians which were slaine by the Heathen for Christs sake yet we take both these for no true friends of Christ If the Martyrs saith Cyprian in his ●…0 Epistle decree one thing and the Gospel another either the Martyrs must lose their Crowne by not observing the Gospel for which they are Martyrs or the Majestie of the Gospel must be broken and lie flat if it can be overtopt by the novelty of any other Decree And heerewithall I invoke the Immortall DEITIE Reveler and Judge of Secrets That wherever I have in this BOOKE plainely and roundly though worthily and truly laid open the faults and blemishes of Fathers Martyrs or Christian Emperors or have otherwise inveighed against Error and Superstition with vehement Expressions I have done it neither out of malice nor list to speak evill nor any vaine-glory but of meere necessity to vindicate the spotlesse Truth from an ignominious bondage whose native worth is now become of such a low esteeme that shee is like to finde small credit with us for what she can say unlesse shee can bring a Ticket from 〈◊〉 Latimer and Ridley or prove her selfe a retainer to Constantine and weare his badge More tolerable it were for the Church of GOD that all these Names were utterly 〈◊〉 like the Brazen Serpent then that mens fond opinion should thus idolize them and the Heavenly Truth be thus captivated Now to proceed whatsoever the Bishops were it seemes they themselves were unsatisfi'd in matters of Religion as they then stood by that Commission granted to 8. Bishops 8. other Divines 8. Civilians 8. common Lawyers to frame Ecclesiasticall Constitutions which no wonder if it came to nothing for as Hayward relates both their Professions and their Ends were different Lastly we all know by Examples that exact Reformation is not perfited at the first push and those unweildy Times of Edward 6. may hold some Plea by this excuse Now let any reasonable man judge whether that Kings Reigne be a fit time from whence to patterne out the Constitution of a Church Discipline much lesse that it should yeeld occasion from whence to foster and establish the continuance of Imperfection with the commendatory subscriptions of Confessors and Martyrs to intitle and ingage a glorious Name to a grosse corruption It was not Episcopacie that wrought in them the Heavenly Fortitude of Martyrdome as little is it that Martyrdome can make good Episcopacie But it was Episcopacie that led the good and holy Men through the temptation of the Enemie and the snare of this present world to many blame-worthy and opprobrious Actions And it is still Episcopacie that before all our eyes worsens and sluggs the most learned and seeming religious of our Ministers who no sooner advanc't to it but like a seething pot set to coole sensibly exhale and reake out the greatest part of that zeale and those Gifts which were formerly in them settling in a skinny congealment of ease and sloth at the top and if they keep their Learning by some potent sway of Nature 't is a rare chance but their devotion most commonly comes to that queazy temper of luke-warmnesse that gives a Vomit to GOD himselfe But what doe wee suffer mis-shapen and enormous 〈◊〉 as we do thus to blanch and varnish her 〈◊〉 with the faire colours as before of Mar●…yrdome so now of Episcopacie They are not 〈◊〉 GOD and all good Men know they are not that have fill'd this Land with late confusion and violence but a Tyrannicall crew and Corporation of Impostors that have blinded and abus'd the World so long under that Name He that inabl'd with gifts from God and the lawfull and Primitive choyce of the Church assembl'd in convenient number faithfully from that time forward feeds his Parochiall Flock ha's his coequall and compresbyteriall Power to ordaine Ministers and Deacons by publique Prayer and Vote of Christs Congregation in like sort as he himselfe was ordain'd and is a true Apostolick Bishop But when hee steps up into the Chayre of Pontificall Pride and changes a moderate and exemplary House for a mis-govern'd and haughty Palace spirituall Dignity for carnall Precedence and secular high Office and employment for the high Negotiations of his Heavenly 〈◊〉 Then he degrades then hee un-Bishops himselfe hee that makes him Bishop makes him no Bishop No marvell therfore if S. Martin complain'd to Sulpitius Severus that since hee was Bishop he felt inwardly a sensible decay of those vertues and graces that God had given him in great measure before Although the same Sulpitius write that he was nothing tainted or alter'd in his habit dyet or personall demeanour from that simple plainnesse to which he first betook himselfe It was not therfore that thing alone which God tooke displeasure at in the Bishops of those times but rather an universall rottennes and gangrene in the whole Function From hence then I passe to Qu. ELIZABETH the next Protestant Prince in whose Dayes why Religion attain'd not a perfect reducement in the beginning of her Reigne I suppose the hindring Causes will be found to bee common with some formerly alledg'd for King EDWARD 6. the greennesse of the Times the weake Estate which Qu. MARY left the Realme in the great Places and Offices executed by Papists the Judges the Lawyers the Justices of Peace for the most part Popish the Bishops firme to Rome from whence was to be expected the furious 〈◊〉 of Excommunications and absolving the People from their Obedience Next her private Councellours whoever they were perswaded her as Camden writes that the altering of Ecclesiasticall Policie would move sedition Then was the 〈◊〉 given to a number of moderate 〈◊〉 and Sir Tho. Smith a Statesman to bee purg'd and
Physick't And surely they were moderate Divines indeed neither hot nor cold 〈◊〉 Grindall the best of them afterwards Arch Bishop of Canterbury lost favour in the Court and I think was discharg'd the goverment of his See for favouring the Ministers though Camden seeme willing to finde another Cause therefore about her second Yeare in a Parliament of Men and Minds some scarce well grounded others belching the soure Crudities of yesterdayes Poperie those Constitutions of EDW. 6. which as you heard before no way satisfi'd the men that made them are now establish't for best and not to be mended From that time follow'd nothing but Imprisonments troubles disgraces on all those that found fault with the Decrees of the Conv●…cation and strait were they branded with the Name of Puritans As for the Queene her selfe shee was made beleeve that by putting downe Bishops her Prerogative would be infring'd of which shall be spoken anon as the course of Method brings it in And why the Prelats labour'd it should be so thought ask not them but ask their Bellies They had found a good Tabernacle they sate under a spreading Vine their Lot was fallen in a faire Inheritance And these perhaps were the cheife impeachments of a more sound rectifying the Church in the Queens Time From this Period I count to begin our Times which because they concerne us more neerely and our owne eyes and eares can give us the ampler scope to judge will require a more exact search and to effect this the speedier I shall distinguish such as I esteeme to be the hinderers of Reformation into 3. sorts Antiquitarians for so I had rather call them then Antiquaries whose labours are usefull and laudable 2. Libertines 3. Polititians To the votarists of Antiquity I shall think to have fully answer'd if I shall be able to prove out of Antiquity First that if they will conform our Bishops to the purer times they must mew their feathers and their pounces and make but curttail'd Bishops of them and we know they hate to be dockt and clipt as much as to be put down outright Secondly that those purer times were corrupt and their Books corrupted soon after Thirdly that the best of those that then wrote disclaim that any man should repose on them and send all to the Scriptures First therfore if those that over-affect Antiquity will follow the square therof their Bishops must be elected by the hands of the whole Church The ancientest of the extant Fathers Ignatius writing to the Philadelphians saith that it belongs to them as to the Church of God to choose a Bishop Let no man cavill but take the Church of God as meaning the whole consistence of Orders and Members as S. Pauls Epistles expresse and this likewise being read over Besides this it is there to be mark'd that those Philadelphians are exhorted to choose a Bishop of Antioch Whence it seems by the way that there was not that wary limitation of Dioces in those times which is confirm'd even by a fast friend of Episcopacie Camden who cannot but love Bishops as well as old coins and his much lamented Monasteries for antiquities sake He writes in his description of Scotland that over all the world Bishops had no certaine Dioces till Pope Dionysius about the yeare 268. did cut them out and that the Bishops of Scotland executed their function in what place soever they came indifferently and without distinction till King Malcolm the third about the yeare 1070. whence may be guest what their function was was it to goe about circl'd with a band of rooking Officials with cloke bagges full of Citations and Processes to be serv'd by a corporalty of griffonlike Promooters and Apparitors Did he goe about to pitch down his Court as an Empirick does his banck to inveigle in all the mony of the Con̄trey no certainly it would not have bin permitted him to exercise any such function indifferently wherever he came And verily some such matter it was as want of a fat Dioces that kept our Britain Bishops so poore in the Primitive times that being call'd to the Councell of Ariminum in the yeare 359. they had not wherewithall to defray the charges of their journey but were fed and lodg'd upon the Emperors cost which must needs be no accidentall but usuall poverty in them for the author Sulp. Severus in his 2 Booke of Church History praises them and avouches it praise-worthy in a Bishop to be so poore as to have nothing of his own But to return to the ancient election of Bishops that it could not lawfully be without the consent of the people is so expresse in Cyprian and so often to be met with that to cite each place at large were to translate a good part of the volume therfore touching the chief passages I referre the rest to whom so list peruse the Author himselfe in the 24. Epist. If a Bishop saith he be once made and allow'd by the testimony and judgement of his collegues and the people no other can be made In the 55. When a Bishop is made by the suffrage of all the people in peace In the 68. marke but what he saies The people chiefly hath power either of choosing worthy ones or refusing unworthy this he there proves by authorities out of the old and new Testament and with solid reasons these were his antiquities This voyce of the people to be had ever in Episcopal elections was so well known before Cyprians time even to those that were without the Church that the Emperor Alexander Severus desir'd to have his governours of Provinces chosen in the same manner as 〈◊〉 can tell So little thought it he offensive to Monarchy and if single authorities perswade not hearken what the whole generall Councel of Nicaea the first and famousest of all the rest determines writing a Synodal Epist. to the African Churches to warn them of Arrianisme it exhorts them to choose orthodox Bishops in the place of the dead so they be worthy and the people choose them whereby they seem to make the peoples assent so necessary that merit without their free choyce were not sufficient to make a Bishop What would ye say now grave Fathers if you should wake and see unworthy Bishops or rather no Bishops but Egyptian task-masters of Ceremonies thrust purposely upon the groaning Church to the affliction and vexation of Gods people It was not of old that a Conspiracie of Bishops could frustrate and fob off the right of the people for we may read how S. Martin soon after Constantine was made Bishop of Turon in France by the peoples consent from all places thereabout m●…ugre all the opposition that the Bishops could make Thus went matters of the Church almost 400. yeare after Christ and very probably farre lower for Nicephorus Phocas the Greek Emperour whose reign fell neare the 1000. year of our Lord having done many things tyrannically is said by Cedrenus to have done nothing more grievous and