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A42491 A pillar of gratitude humbly dedicated to the glory of God the honour of His Majesty, the renown of this present legal, loyal, full, and free Parliament : upon their restoring the church of England to the primitive government of episcopacy : and re-investing bishops into their pristine honour and authority. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1661 (1661) Wing G366; ESTC R809 48,288 65

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due respects this one Christian request to your Honours in the behalf of many poor Ministers yea and of the souls of many poor people nay in the Name of your and our Saviour whose work the poorest Minister of the Gospel if able and honest doth perform and so for Christs sake is worthy of his wages and leaving it as a matter of great and publick importance to your pious and wise consideration in due time I cannot conclude better than as I began that so I may compleat the circle of our grateful and just acknowledgments with that eternal veneration praise honour and thanke which from my self and all my Reverend Brethren the Bishops and all the sober Clergy are duly and humbly returned first to the most blessed God whose judgments are unsearchable and whose mercies are everlasting Next To His most Gracoius Majesty for His munisicent and matchless goodness to the Bishops Clergy and Church of ENGLAND Lastly To Your most Noble Selves the Lords and Commons of this present Parliament who have thus taken away the sin reproach and scandal of Sacriledge Schism and Confusion which were by some unhappy men brought upon this sometime so famous Kingdom and flourishing Church of ENGLAND For whose vindication and comfort as the Author was not wanting in her greatest agonies and blackest afflictions publickly to compassionate her sighs and tears so he thought it his duty upon a publick more than private sense seriously to rejoyce and heartily to congratulate with her in this happy restauration which he hath oft prayed for and now lived to see because he is perswaded in his conscience if rightly managed with piety and charity that it highly tends to Gods glory to the honour of our blessed Saviour to the asserting of our true Religion as Christian and Reformed to the establishment of the publick peace in Church and State and lastly to that just and ingenious compensation of good for long endured evil which is highly deserved and justly expected by this Church of England from all its genuine Children not only because it was once well reformed and most flourishing but also because it hath been so grievously and as to man most unjustly afflicted and deformed For without doubt the pious Intentions and prudent Constitutions of the Church of England were such That nothing was or now is wanting in it to make a good Christian perfect to salvation if he be not wanting in himself and to the grace of God offered to him in the Ministery of this Church Every saving truth being maintained by Her Nothing added to or diminished from the word of God as saving or necessary Every holy Duty every divine Institution every sacred Mystery every necessary part of Gods Worship every moral Vertue every Christian Grace every usefully-good Work is either celebrated or enjoined or taught or recommended to every Christian both in private and publique according to their station Nor may any Christian justly blame the Church for any defect but rather their own hearts for want of humility devotion and gratitude to God and men There is holy sap and sweetness in all its Liturgical appointments if men were not surfeited with their own fancies prejudices and pride All things being set forth by the Church without the least tincture of any known Error in Doctrine or Superstition in the substance of Religious Duties and Devotion The outward Form also or publique Reverence and Solemnity of Duties is no other than what without question is left by God to the Liberty Prudence and Authority of every Church and Christian Politie as most consonant First To the Civility and Custome of the Nation Secondly To that outward Veneration which is accordingly due to the Divine Majesty Thirdly To the publick Solemnity and Decency of holy Duties in the Church Fourthly To the ancient Use and Custome of the primitive and best Churches Fiftly No where forbidden by Gods word or by any rule of right Reason Sixthly But chosen used and imposed by this Church within its own Precincts and Politie only under no other Notion than that which is lawful and true 1. In the nature of things circumstantial as still necessary in their general adherency to all outward Actions of need 2dly Yet as free and indifferent still in their nature although cast by authority in to meet Regulations as instances of our outward obedience in them to man for the Lords sake while they continue so appointed 3dly Lawful in the divine Permission Commission and clear Approbation of the Churches Liberty and Authority in such things for publique order and decency 4thly In the necessity of such visible Order Decency and Uniformity fixed by Supreme Wisdom and Authority as most conducing to the Churches outward peace to avoid Faction Schisms Sedition Fury Confusion fires that easily kindle from small sparks if left to vulgar spirits 5thly And lastly all this pious and prudent Politie of the Church of England managed by such apt Overseers and proper Governours as this and all ancient Churches ever used from the Apostles daies under the Titles of Bishops Presidents and Fathers who are according to our Law chosen by the Clergy approved by the Church confirmed by the King as Supreme Governour inabled by Learning Matured by Experience Sanctified by Grace Consecrated by Prayer Devoted by Diligence Assisted by their Brethren of the Clergy Regulated by setled Laws and Canons to do their duty so as God their Consciences and all good men require of them in order to those great and eternal ends of saving their own and others souls besides the temporary blessings of the Churches unity and harmony as in Faith and Love so in Orderliness and Decency without which all Religion runs to Irreverence Faction and Confusion The angry eager and obstinate Quarrels then which some waspish men have long maintained and still do against some mutable words and Phrases in the Liturgy or against some little Rites and innocent yet few Ceremonies used by the Church of England are I fear much more deserved by and due to their own distempered hearts and should in all justice now be turned against the factions proud and pertinacious humours and opinions of those men who had rather quite ruine such an Ancient Famous Reformed and sometime Flourishing Church than rightly understand Her words and meaning or give Her leave to interpret them or than deny themselves in those petty Points of Reputation Opinion and Prejudice to which they may be popularly advanced as beyond a convenient retreat so beyond that humility diseretion meekness peaceableness modesty and charity which best becomes those Presbyters and people who are afraid to contest with their Princes their Bishops and their Countries united Wisdom and Authority lest they be found fighters against the God of order and peace who ought not to take courage from the Kings patience or turn his Indulgence into wantonness Nor have they any cause to be angry that they are not thought wiser than this whole Church and State or because they are not made Dictators to all Convocations Parliaments and Kings Nor should they be so ashamed to come at last from fighting and domineering to petitioning and deprecating or from sinning against God and man to return to their duty to repent and recant the evils the errors and excesses of their ways which God hath wonderfully convinced and confuted by his former blessings on this Church and his present blasting of their new Projects which have froth in their head and blood in their bottom as the water of those men who labour with the stone and Strangury and have their wounds from within What now remains but the Authors particular craving and Your Lordships with the other Gentlemens vouchsafing pardon for the great presumption of such an Orator who conscious to his many defects hath adventured by this grateful Excess to put Your Lordships and them upon the Exercise of Your and Their Noble Patience thereby to give the world a further great experiment of that Gentleness and Candor which adds Lustre to all Your other Honourable and Heroick Virtues of which no men are more witnesses than the Bishops and Clergy of the Church of England not only as wondring Spectators but as thankfull Enjoyers FINIS
Emperors and Christian Senators of Rome who assumed the chief Bishops of Churches in the Roman World into the Order and Honor of the Senators or Nobles of the Empire called Patricii whence Saint Patrick Primate of IRELAND had his name even from that Honor as the most learned Lord Primate Ussher observes in his Antiquitates Hibernicae That all men might see what esteem and love they then had for the Christian Religion as of all Religions the best and most deserving of Mankinde Also what regard they had for the prime Preachers and Professors of it Among whom none were thought more worthy of double honor than those that ruled well and labored also in the Word and Doctrine as all true Bishops ought to do yea all of them have so done and ever will as God enables them There being nothing so desirable in the Office of a Bishop as the goodness of the Work which seeks not our own things but the things of Jesus Christ and the publique Welfare of the Church over which God doth set them that they may at once save their own Souls and the Souls of them that hear them Furthermore my design in this brief Commemoration of excellent and deserving Bishops in the Church of ENGLAND is to make it appear to his Majesty to your Honors and to all the English World if there needed further demonstrations than our late Miseries How partial how oppressive how destructive to all good Learning and generous Piety in Church-men especially many of whom in former times were Sons of noble and illustrious Families How injurious also to God and Man to Church and State to Kings and Subjects to true Religion and sober Reformation those Popular Projects are have been and ever will be which with tumultuating Partiality Plebeian Sordidness and Mechanick Importunity shall seek to deprive the publique Wisdom and Counsels of this Nation of the light and influence of those greater Stars or the guidance and defence of those good Angels such as our English Bishops have been and ever ought to be and I hope ever will be Whose fatal Thrusting by head and shoulders out of the House of Peers and more out of the House of God this Church was followed with such Stygian Darkness Hellish Horror and barbarous Confusion as cast out both Commons Lords and Kings from their Places Seats and Thrones supplying their and the Bishops places with such Associates in the House of Lords as were worse than any solitude For in stead of Kingly Majesty sitting on the Throne attended with ancient and honorable Peers Lords Spiritual and Temporal they brought into the Capitol or sacred Senate of this British Empire many that were not the Sons of noble blood nor yet men of noble Education or liberal Endowments but I●ms and Ohims Vultures and Harpies Satyres and unclean Beasts who how ever so impudently wicked as to be ashamed of no sin no not of Sacriledge Perjury Rebellion and Regicide yet were infinitely discountenanced and blushed to see themselves in that august high and honorable place just as Owls and Bats got into an Eagles nest some of them being such pieces of mean Birth of mechanick Breeding and of monstrous Insolency as your selves and your forefathers might without any unjust brow have disdained as Job speaks to have set them with the Dogs of your Flocks So that the bringing in of Bishops again into your House of Parliament is as it were a new Consecrating of it after it had been so lewdly polluted and horridly profaned by those Abaddons and Apollyons This Mercy of God this Favor of his Majesty this Nobleness of the Peers and this Generosity of the House of Commons to the Bishops of ENGLAND yea to this Church and State is the more welcom remarkable and miraculous because they come as a glorious Light after a most dismal Darkness as the great Calm followed the Storm that Christ rebuked as a fair Port or firm Land after much tossing tempest and shipwrack as a gracious Rain after long Drought as the shadow of a great Rock in a weary Land This Honor after Debasement is as King Pharaohs Preferments bestowed on Joseph or Evil-Merodack's lifting up the Head of Jehojakin after the squallor of their Prisons As the fair Robes which the Angel commanded should be put upon Joshua the High-Priest after his filthy garments were taken off Or as King Nebuchadnezzar advancing Daniel from the Lions Den and the other three Confessors from the fiery Furnace to be Governors of Provinces For although all Estates and Degrees of worthy Men have suffered much in our late Tumults and Tragedies yet none more than the loyal and conformable Clergy and among them the reverend Bishops most of all being stripped at once of their Estates and Honors of all supports and encouragements except those of a good Cause and a good Conscience These as the highest branches of stately Trees when felled or as the tops of lofty Towers when overthrown lapsu graviore cadunt not only fall first themselves to the ground but with the greater stroke and bruise to others whose sufferings were their greatest afflictions Your Lordships and the other Gentlemen know too well that the Exclusion of the Bishops or the State Ecclesiastical if I may in respect of their peculiar Function their relation to and representation of the whole Clergy as chief Fathers in the Church so stile them stilo veteri as Sir Edward Coke and other great Lawyers do without the offence of any Presbyterian Criticks The Exclusion I say of them from all Parliamentary yea and all Synodical Councels was not onely their utter undoing but the first sad Presage or direful Omen of those after-subversions and confusions which made havock of all those ancient Laws and Constitutions by which no less the Coronets of our Nobility and the Crowns of our Kings than the Mitres of our Bishops were setled This gap once made by Tumultuating Importunities Popular Threatnings and Petitionary Terrors much God knows against the Choice and Genius of his late Majesty of blessed memory no less than against the sense of the wisest and soberest the most and best Persons of both Houses and in the whole Kingdom Good God! what Iliades of Miseries what Storms of Violence what Deluges of Mischief what Oceans of Confusion followed in Church and State The Tongues and Pens of some popular Ministers who were wantonly wicked and zealously cruel being once let loose against their Church Governors the Bishops how were all things soon set on fire even with the fire of Hell which burned to the very foundations of Church and Kingdom being like Tophet or those everlasting burnings which nothing but a miraculous showre of divine Mercy could thus allay or quench As no man did said wrote and suffered more in the behalf of Bishops and this Church than the best of Kings or with more Christian Heroick and Martyrly Courage So next that Royal Martyr were these godly Confessors the Bishops and other worthy
Clergy-men who a long time stood in the breach till there was no remedy but Sin and Judgement brake in upon them and all Estates as a mighty Torrent In which many of them lost more then all they had for the contagion of their calamities reached even to their Children Friends and Acquaintance the envy and fury of their Enemies seeking to exhaust all their Relations lest there should be any to relieve them with any thing but empty-handed pity I knew some Bishops and those of the first three whom I cannot mention without Honor nor remember their Enemies Cruelty without Horror who were in their old age reduced to live in great part as the Clergy did in Primitive Persecutions ex Donis Oblationibus by Alms and charitable Contributions So did the incomparable Lord Primate of Armagh Bishop Ussher and the most accomplished Bishop Brownrig Nor was the excellently learned and very aged Bishop of Durham Doctor Morton far from being an Object of meer Charity I am sure equal shame and grief mixed with just indignation affects me when I read expressed in his own words the churlish Cainish and contemptuous Carriage of some men to the late venerable Bishop of Nor●●ch Doctor Hall whose admired eloquence and meekness was capable like Orpheus his Harp to have charmed all wilde Beasts except bipedes Lupos two-legged Wolves I need not add to this Catalogue the acurate Doctor Prideaux late Bishop of Worcester verus librorum helluo who having first by indefatigable studies digested his excellent Library into his Minde was after forced again to devour all his Books with his Teeth turning them by a miraculous Faith and Patience into Bread for himself and his Children to whom he left no Legacy but pious Poverty Gods Blessing and a Fathers Prayers as appears in his last Will and Testament Blessed God! Who will not learn yea covet to want as well as to abound from these great Examples which are capable to render Indigence it self venerable Poverty desirable and Affliction lovely Since God never takes the good things of this World from so good men but as an indulgent Father he intends to give them better Physick for a time in stead of Food as he did to Job at last he repairs them with Pearls for Pebbles and with eternal Treasures for temporary trash How justly these Afflictions befel very worthy Bishops and other excellent Ministers then flourishing to a great number in the Church of ENGLAND as from the Hand of God their own Humility and Charity their Patience and Silence commands me neither to doubt nor dispute It befits us all to give glory to God to take shame to our selves to say it is of the Lords mercy that we are not utterly consumed that there is yet a Remnant that hath escaped But how unjustly as to the Hand of Man all these burdens of disgrace and indigence were cast upon such venerable Persons in their old age and infirmity I leave to the sober and equanimous World to judge when much evil was for many years inflicted upon them all and no malicious evil of fact was ever proved against one of ten of them They were all condemned but never tried deprived of their Ecclesiastical Rights in Law but not according to any known Law of God or Man Their great offence was that they did not think themselves wiser than the Laws of the Land and Canons of the Church That they would not divide what God had joined together Religion and Loyalty to fear God and honor the King That they chose suffering rather than sinning That they were not willing to have themselves with all the Clergy and the Gentry the Nobility and the Majesty of the Kings of ENGLAND forced to truckle under the Iron Bedstead of Presbytery or to tremble under the Wooden Ferula of Ruling Lay-Elders either Dependents or Independents whose insolency was more intolerable than that of an handmaid which was become heir to her Mistriss The unpardonable sin of those Reverend Fathers was that they chose rather to obey God and the King according to known Laws than to flatter or humor any Popular Faction how potent or prevalent soever still esteeming true piety and virtue in the midst of adversity to be more amiable than the most prosperous Impiety or triumphant Hypocrisie As the three innocent persons were less hurt by the Fire than those who cast them into the Furnace these were consumed the other not singed As no doubt those great Sufferers the Bishops of this Church willingly forgave their Persecutors and committed their Cause to Gods Pleading having no other care but this not to suffer as evil doers or as busie bodies or as perturbers of Church or State So they now greatly rejoyce in their past afflictions not onely for the good which they and others may have gained by them and for the gracious end which the LORD hath as we hope now put to them but also for those great and glorious Advantages which their former many long and sore calamities do now give to the present conspicuity of his Majesties goodness to the splendor of your Lordships noble favors and to the generosity of the House of Commons Thus by a most magnificent and illustrious Opportunity to express His Munificence and Your Kindness to the dejected Bishops to the oppressed Clergy and to the almost desolated Church of ENGLAND suitable to and in some respect far exceeding the pristine Examples of his Majesties Royal your Lordships and other Gentlemens loyal and religious Ancestors who were so far from casting the Bishops or chief Pilots of the Church over-board that they never thought themselves safer from shipwrack than when they were embarqued in the same Ship with Saint Paul and his pious Companions Your Lordships and the other worthy Gentlemen well know as I touched that Bishops in England have ever been contemporary with Parliaments time out of minde as they have been in all Christian Empires and Kingdoms Germany France Spain Sweden Denmark Hungary and others present and assistant in all their Diets and National Conventions So that our former Kings according to their Coronation Oaths and Parliaments according to Law did constantly indeed preserve Bishops in those ancient places and priviledges Immunities and Honors where they found them But You the present Lords and Commons concurrent with his Majesties Goodness have the singular Glory and Happiness to restore them to those ancient Dignities which they never forfeited and so were never before deprived of till their legal and deserved Honor was become their Sin and Crime till their good Manors made them guilty and their Revenues were counted their Delinquency lastly till their having of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was ground enough to devest them of all Authority and the Church of all Order and Government It is the singular Honor of this compleat Parliament which sits as it began with all that fulness of Authority and Liberty which is the life and soul the crown and glory of such august
and cruel revenge to which a military fierceness and just disdain of Nabal's Ingratitude and Indignity had transported him and them Or as Theodosius the Emperour did kindly and thankfully entertain the religious and resolute but respective reproofs of St Ambrose Bishop of Millain whom he reverenced as a Father and highly commended for that his freedom and fidelity to him which he said best became the Bishops or Prelates of the Church of Christ who are so to fear God as not to flatter any man The great work of your Lordships Honour and Wisdom with the Honourable House of Commons properly is to see Nè Leges Angliae temerè mutentur Nè Coronae Majestas minuatur Nè virtuti desit honoris praemium That the good old Laws Customes and Constitutions of England be not lightly changed That the Majesty of the King and Kingdom be not diminished for in uno Caesare res est publica we can have no Common weal but common woe if we have not a King clothed with that sacred and inviolable Majesty which is necessary for the publick welfare and safety Lastly It is among your Lordships and the Parliaments noblest cares and designs That no deserving vertue or ingenuous faculty which serves the publick welfare should despair of publick rewards and least of all learned Piety or the most noble and sacred Study of Divinity which is as the Sun or the greater light the author of that day which shines on our Souls to shew us the way to heaven and eternity whereas all other arts and sciences are but as the Moon and Stars to guide us in the momentary affairs of this world which is but the twilight state of a Christian Lest while the judicious Lawyers honest skill and commendable practice in our Common or Civil Laws or while the discreet valour of good Souldiers or the wholesome study of Physick or meer riches by any honest trade accumulated while I say any or all these are admitted not only to knock at the door but also to enter into the porch yea and to repose themselves in the Temple of Honour only the Learning and Religion of the Clergy the desert and industry of Divines who are the great Studiers and Interpreters of Gods Law the faithful dispensers of heavenly things these I say should to the shame and reproach of this Church and Kingdom be excluded from all temporal rewards and Honorary Encouragements After the method of the Apostate Julians envy and mockery who said the rewards of the world to come might serve their turns when he took from the Christian Orthodox Bishops and Clergy those large donations immunities and dignities which Constantine the great and other godly Emperours had endowed them and the Church of Christ withal The Justice and Nobleness of this Parliament hath sufficiently shewed to all the world how far your Honours are from the Schism and Sacriledge of either depriving this Church and Kingdom of Bishops which it enjoyed in all ages since it was Christian or of denying Bishops those Honours which the piety of your Progenitors was more ambitious to confer on them than they were to receive them The modest humility of ancient Bishops when most worthy thought themselves as we have cause to do less worthy of such high honour walking as Ammianus Marcellian tells us with grave steps modest looks and mortified behaviour But the generous piety of this as other Christian Nations thought that they then honoured God and their Saviour Jesus Christ when as Cornelius to St Peter they expressed their high respect and honour to the Bishops of the Church as to spiritual Fathers whose paternal benediction and peace in Christs Name as they oft desired with great devotion and respect so they ever judged Episcopal Presidency and Authority to be most suitable to the plethorick and sturdy temper of the people of England whose high spirits abhorre all levelling and are as impatient to be governed by their equalls or inferiours as water is to be kept within its own bounds And even now the wisdom of your Lordships and the Honourable House of Commons concurrent with his Majesties goodness in the restitution of Episcopacy and Bishops to their pristine honour and Jurisdiction must not in any reason be looked upon by us or any wise men as any partiality of favour to so few and to so inconsiderable persons as we are No doubtless your great and publick designs are in order to promote Gods glory to advance his Majesties service and to secure most effectually the peace of Church and State by adorning them with such Bishops and these with such authority as is most consonant to our ancient Laws and Constitutions to Catholick and Primitive Patterns to the Apostolick that is Christs Institution and to the Word of God who is the God of Order Besides most agreeable to the true Principles and those necessary proportions which must be observed in all political order and publick government for superiority and subordination all which are only to be perfectly seen used and enjoyed in this Episcopal Eminency or Autoritative Presidency That so the Church of ENGLAND may still enjoy as it hath by Gods blessing equal with any Church in any age since the Apostles dayes Its Ignatiusses Its Polycarps Its Polycratesses Its Irenaeusses Its Cyprians Its Ambroses It s Austins Its Chrysostomes Its Epiphaniusses Its Basils It s Gregories That is an holy succession of Evangelical Bishops of the same spirits and proportions with those elder and our later ones for learning piety prudence eloquence industry courage and constancy in the true faith of Jesus Christ That neither the Romanists on one side may quarrel with nor the Schismaticks on the other side invade and prostrate the honour of the Church of ENGLAND upon the oft but in vain objected account of Schismatical interrupting or intercluding the Apostolick succession of Bishops and therein varying in point of Episcopacy from it self as much as from all ancient and Catholick Churches to the infinite scandal of all good Christians and learned men both at home and abroad Many of whom do doubt and upon greater grounds than most of those vulgar scruples with which many please themselves to sight against and scratch at least the Church of England of the real validity of all Ministerial power and Ecclesiastical Authority and so of all mysterious dispensations and sacramental Consecrations where Bishops are wanting not by unavoidable necessity which is its own Apology but by a Presbyterian petulancy Schismatical Envy and Democratical Insolency which is so ambitious to ordain and rule in common that it giddily runs upon the rocks of Anarchy and Confusion Although we and all the soberly learned world must highly commend his Majesties Piety and Wisdom together with this Parliaments for their restoring Catholick Episcopacy and in that the great support of this Churches and Kingdoms peace And although we do justly esteem the honour and favour by God and man herein conferred on us yet we so much