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A30986 That the bishops in England may and ought to vote in cases of blood written in the late times upon occasion of the Earl of Straffords case / by [a] learned pen ; with some answers to the objections of the then Bishop of Lincoln, against bishops voting in Parliament. Barlow, Thomas, 1607-1691. 1680 (1680) Wing W2677C; Wing B845; ESTC R17167 16,504 22

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2 d. to absent themselves when they listed from this Assembly of the Estate contrary to the Kings Commands in the Writs of Summons and to the duties of their places as Peers of Parliament Howbeit they shewed more Courtesie or more Wit at the least than our present Prelates for they never offered to retire themselves in those dayes before their Protestation was benignly received and suffered to be entred upon the Parliament Roll by the King and the Lords and the House of Commons The Second Reason of this Prelate is of the same Nature and built upon a Medium of Sands which is soon undermined and washed away That although he doubted not of the Legality or Comliness of an Ecclesiastical Peer of the Kingdom of England to Vote in a Judgment of Blood as they do continually in the passing of all Appeals and Attainders in Parliament yet because it is not the practice of Prelates in other parts of the Christian World so to do he thought it better to avoid Scandal and the talk of other Nations That there being in the High Courts of Parliament and Star-Chamber Judges enough besides the Prelates they might without any prejudice to King or Countrey forbear Voting in these Judicatures Somewhat the rather because all our Bishops in England are Divines and Preachers of the Gospel and consequently of mercy rather than of Judgment Who never touch upon the sharpness of the Law unless it be to prepare mens hearts to receive the Comfort of the Gospel But this Prelate cannot but know that these Canons that Oppose the Kings Prerogative are taken away in the Kingdom of England by the Statute of 25 Henry the 8 th which they are not elsewhere And this Bishop if he have not forgot it was taught all this in the Case of Irregularity pursued against Arch-Bishop Abbots when this Bishop fearing the Censure of the Sorbonists in Paris refused to be Consecrated by Abbots unless he the said Abbots would procure himself absolved from that Irregularity which he had Contracted in killing a man by Chance-medly which he was enforced at the last to do this other Prelate being then in his rising and warm Blood and liking better of many good Benefices than of one mean Bishoprick refusing stiffly to be made Bishop of Lincoln upon any other Condition For Bishops making of Procurators in Causes of Blood IT doth not appear that Bishops ever made Protestations or withdrew in Cases of this Nature before the 11th nor after the 21 st of Rich. the 2 d. And yet the Attainders in the 11 th year are afterwards ratified by the Consent of the Lords Spiritual 11 Rich. 2. as you see by their Act of consent Rott 11 Rich. 2. no. 38. And the Printed Statutes And in his twenty first year they made Procurators first Thomas Percy in Writing 21 Rich. 2. no. 9. where you have his Proxie set down in Latine and then Scrop Earl of Worcester by word of mouth As the Roll is 21 Rich. 2. no. 50. where Scrop gives Sentence in the like Causes by vertue of that Procuration as the Roll saith And that this Proxie of the Prelates was not left with a Lay-man for the dispatch of other Civil Causes only but for Judgments of Blood also it is appealed to all Histories and Law-Books that have been Written from that time to this present day Thomas of Walsingham Lived under Henry the 6 th and he saith that it was exacted of the Prelates for it was not their own seeking as you may see upon the Rolls that because they could not be present in Judgments of Blood their Procurator upon the like occasion might assent unto such a Business Walsing in Rich. 2. pag. 354. So likewise in his Hypodigma Neustria pag. 550. Littleton Lived under Edward the 4 th and he pronounceth for himself and all his fellow Judges That the Lords Spiritual who cannot consent to the Death of a man shall make a Procurator in the Parliament before the Steward is to proceed to gather Votes c. The Year-Book 10 Ed. the 4 th no. 17. Stamford Lived under Henry the 8th Edward the 6 th Queen Mary And he saith clearly That when a Peer is Indicted of Treason or Felonie in Parliament the Lords Spiritual shall make a Procurator for them Stam. Pleas of the Crown lib. 3. pag. 153. Mr. John Selden Lives still than whom peradventure there Lived not an abler Lawyer in both the Laws from the 21 st of Richard the 2 d to this day And he saith that the Clergy by reason of the Canon Laws not the Common Laws absented themselves sometimes from such Judgments and committed their whole Interest for the time to a Lay-Proxie Tit. of Honour 2 d part pag. 704. Lastly for the Canon-Law in this point it is not only dispensed withal by the Kings Summons to his Prelates but by the Lords themselves in this very Cause of the Earl of Strafford by their examining of the two arch-Arch-Bishops and a Bishop for Witnesses in the said Cause which is no less forbidden in the Canon Law than to Judge in Causes of Blood Lyndwood Fol. 146. pag. 2. When the effect of this Paper was opened and the Records and all the Books produced by the Bishop of Lincoln who had been in the Tower to search the said Records the Lords declared and ordered that they would use no Proxies of their own in this Tryal with a Salvo of their Right against any other time And thereupon the said Bishop finding the Inclination of the House and Timidity of his Brethren offered the like Declaration with the like Salvo in point of Right for the Lords the Bishops which was accepted of and entered into the Book the Bishop of Lincoln dictating the same THE Bishop of Lincoln's ARGUMENTS That Bishops ought not to Vote in Parliament With the Answers thereunto Arg. I. BEcause it is a very great hindrance to the Exercise of their Ministerial Function Answer 1. It is not so much hindrance as their conveneing in General Councils Synods Convocations Assemblies Classes and the like in all the Churches Reformed or otherwise 2. It is propter majus bonum Ecclesiae 3. The Apostles unnecessarily put themselves to more hindrances to work for their livelyhood Acts 20.24 1 Thes. 2.9 2 Thes. 3.8 Arg. II. Because they do vow and undertake at their Ordination when they enter into Holy Orders that they will give themselves wholly to that Vocation Answer 1. This Vow and undertaking in Ministers Ordination is quite mistaken the words are in the Bishops exhortation not in the Ministers Answer 2. The Bishop hopes they will give themselves wholly to that and not to any other Trade or Vocation 3. Wholly in a Moral and not in a Mathematical sense that will admit of no Latitude Arg. III. Because Councils and Canons in several Ages do forbid them to meddle in Secular Affairs Answer 1. Councils and Canons against Bishops Votes in Parliament were never in use in this
they backed with one of the Canons of the Apostles as they call them the 7th in Number yet is it clear their main Authority is fetch'd from this obscure Synod of Toledo where 18 Bishops only were convened under Bamba the Goth who of a Plow-man was made a King and of a King a cloistred Monk as you may see in the History of Rodericus Santius par 2. cap. 32. This is all the goodly ground that either Gratian in his Decrees or Innocentius the 3d in the Decretals or Roger Hoveden in his History alledge against the Ecclesiastical Peers and their sitting as Judges in Causes of Blood to wit this famous Gothish Council of Toledo The first that openly planted this Canon here in England was Stephen Langton a Cardinal the Popes Creature as his Holyness was pleased to stile him in his Bull and thrust upon the See of Canterbury by a Papal Provision where he continued in Rebellion against his Soveraign as long as King John lived This Arch-Bishop under Colour of Ecclesiastical Immunity as this Canon is Marshalled by Lindwood at Osney neer Oxford did Ordain Ne quis Clericus beneficiatus vel in sacris ordinibus constitutus that no Clergy-man having a Benefice or otherwise in Holy Orders should presume to be present in that place Vbi judicium sanguinis tractatur vel exerceatur And this is the first Canon Broached in this Kingdom to this Effect That of Othobon being subsequent in time and a meer Forraign or Legatine Constitution See it at large in Lyndwoods Constitu lib. 3. at the end of the Book And by Vertue of a branch of this very Constitution the now Arch-Bishop 2 years sithence Fined the Bishop of Glocester in the High Commission because he had given way in time of Pestilence only that a Sessions or Judgment of Blood might be kept in a Sacred place which was likewise Inhibited in this Canon But this admits of a Multitude of Answers 1. Quod haec Dictio Clericus ex vi verbi non comprehendit Episcopum This word Clerk in the Canon Law reacheth not to a Bishop or a Peer of the Realm saith Lyndwood in his third Book cap. de Locatis Conductis 2. The Irregularity incurred by Judicature in Causes of Blood is only Jure positivo and therefore dispensable by the Pope saith Covarruvias in Clem. Si furiosus Par. 2. § 5. no 1. And here in England it is Dispenced with in Bishops by the King who in his Writs or Summons to the Parliament Commands the Lords Spiritual without any exception of Causes of Blood to joyn in all Matters and Consultations whatsoever with the Temporal Peers of the Kingdom these Summons being unto them a sufficient Dispensation so to do And Othobon himself Inhibiting other Clerks to use these Secular Judicatures hath a Salvo to preserve the Priviledges of our Lord the King whereby he may use any of their Services in that kind when he shall see Cause in the Title called Ne Clerici jurisdictionem saecularem exerceant A Lyndwood in his Gloss upon that Text doth instance in the Clerks of the Chancery and others Nor are these Writs of the Bishops Dispensations only but Mandates also and Bishops have been Fined at the Kings-Bench and elsewhere for Absenting themselves from Counsels in Parliament as now they are required to do without the Kings special leave and Licence first Obtained 3. When they are forbidden Interesse to be present the meaning is not in the very Canons themselves that they should go out of the Room but only that they should not be present to add Authority Help or Advice to any Sentence Pronounced against a particular individual Person in a Cause of Blood or mutilation of Members If he be present Authorizando consilium opem vel operam dando then he Contracts an Irregularity and not otherwise saith our Lyndwood out of Innocentius And the Canon reacheth no further than to him that shall Pronounce Sentence of Death or mutilation upon a particular Person For Prelates that are of Council with the King in Parliament or otherwise being demanded the Law in such and such a Case without naming any individual Person may Answer generaliter loquendo as that Treason is to be punished with Death and a Counterfeiter of the Kings Coyn is to be Burned c. Cardinal Hostiensis lib. 2. cap. de fals monet Allowed by John Montague de Collatione Parliamentorum in Tractat. Docto● vol. 10. pag. 121. 4. These Canons are not in Force in England to bind the Subjects of this Kingdom for several reasons 1. Because they are against his Majesties Prerogative as you may see it clearly in the Articles of Clarendon and the Writ of Summons and therefore abolished by the Statute of 25º of Henry the 8 th It is his Majesties Prerogative declared at Claredon that all such Ecclesiastical Peers as hold of him by Barony should Assist in the Kings Judicatures until the very actual pronouncing of a Sentence of Blood And this holdeth all along from Henry the first down to the latter end of Queen Elizabeth who imployed Arch-Bishop Whitguift as a Commissioner upon the Life of a Personage not to be named without Horror and as the first keeper and examiner of Robert the most Noble Earl of Essex after that Commotion in London And to say that this Canon is Confirmed by Common Law in this Kingdom is a very Tale there being nothing in all the Common Law that tends that way 2. It hath been Voted in the House of Commons this very Sessions of Parliament that no Canons sithence the Conquest either Introduced from Rome by Legatine Power or made in our Synods never had in any Age nor yet have at this Instant any Power to bind the Subjects of this Realm unless they be Confirmed by Act of Parliament Now these Canons which Inhibit the presence of Church-men in Causes that concern Life and Member were never Confirmed by any but seem to be Impeached by diverse and sundry Acts of Parliament 3. The whole House of Peers have this very Session despised and set aside this Canon Law which some of the young Lords cry up again in the same Session and in the very same Cause to take away the Votes of the Bishops in the Case of the Earl of Strafford For by the same Canon-Law that forbids Clergy-men to Sentence they of that Coat are more strictly Inhibited to give Testimony in Causes of Blood Nec etiam potest esse Testis vel Tabellio in Causa Sanguinis saith my Lyndwood fol. 146. pag. 2. For no man co-operates more to a Sentence of Death than the Witness upon whose attestation the Sentence is principally Founded saith Lopez in his Practica Criminalis Cap. 98. Dist. 21. And yet have these Lords admitted as Witnesses produced by the Commons against the Earl of Strafford the arch-Arch-Bishops of Canterbury and Armache together with the Bishop of London the which Lords now Command all Bishops to withdraw in the
That the BISHOPS IN ENGLAND May and Ought to Vote in Cases of Blood Written in the Late Times upon occasion of the Earl of Straffords Case By Learned Pen With some ANSWERS to the OBJECTIONS of the then Bishop of Lincoln AGAINST Bishops Voting in PARLIAMENT LONDON Printed for Walter Davis 1680. TO THE READER Reader THis Discourse was Written by a Learned Gentleman of the Long-Robe at the beginning of the late troubles in the Case of the Earl of Strafford but never Printed The same Question being started afresh and the consideration of it revived upon the like Occasion it is thought fit to be Published now If it minister any satisfaction to the Reader in the Case the Publisher has his end That Bishops in England may and ought to Vote in Causa Sanguinis and that they were never Inhibited by any Law of this Land or the Lay-Peers so to do before this time and that their voluntary forbearance heretofore to sentence in this Case proceeded from their own Fears of the Canons and Court of Rome and some private ends they then had And by the special leave of the King and both Houses in plein Parliament who were gratiously pleased to allow of their Protestations for their Indemnity as Church-men when they might have rejected their said Protestations if they had pleased With some Answers to the Objections of the Bishop of Lincoln 1. IT is not Prohibitum quia malum nor any way evil in it self no more than it is an evil thing in it self to do Justice 2. It was in use before the Law when the eldest of the Family was King Priest and Prophet 3. It was in use under the Law and so continued in the Priests and Levites down to Annas and Caiphas Nay after the Death of Christ as appears by the Scourging of the Apostles the Stoning of Stephen the directing of St. Paul to be smitten on the mouth c. It was in use in the persons of the Apostles themselves as in that Judgment given upon Ananias and Saphira in the first of the Acts In the Tradition to Sathan as most of the Antient Fathers expound that Censure And generally in all the Word of God there is no one Text that Inhibits Church-men more than Lay-men to use this kind of Judicature For that Precept to be no striker 1 Tim. 3.3 is no more to be appropriated unto a Bishop from the rest of Christian men than that not given to Wine or Roaring which immediately precedes the same In this Island it was in use before the Romans entered the same when the Druyds Si caedes factae poenas constituunt gave all Sentences in Causes of Blood Caes. de bello Gallico lib. 6. see Mr. Selden's Epinomis Cap. 2. Nor is it like the Romans should forbid it in Church-men whose Pontifical Colledge after the entertaining of the 12 Tables medled in all matters of this kind Strabo Geograph lib. 4. And it is not like that the Christian Religion excluded Bishops in this Island from Secular Judicatures considering that King Lucius is directed by the advice of his Council to take out his Laws for the reigling of this Kingdom Ex utraque Pagina that is out of the Old and New Testament which could not be done in that Age without the help of his Bishops See Sir Hen. Spelmans Councils pag. 34. ad Annum Domini 185. And how the great Prelates amongst the Antient Britains were wholly imployed in these kind of Secular Agitations you may see by the Ecclesiastical Laws of Howel Dha set forth by Sir Henry Spelman in his Councils pag. 408. ad Annum Domini 940. 4. And a little before this Howel Dha lived King Aethelstan In the 2 Cap. of whose Ecclesiastical Laws we have it peremptorily set down hinc debent Episcopi cum seculi Judicibus interesse judiciis and particularly in all Judgments of the Ordals which no man that understandeth the word can make any doubt to have been extended to the mutilation of Humane members Sir Spelman's Councils pag. 405. ad Annum Domini 928. 5. And that the Bishops joyned alwayes with the Secular Lords in all these Judiciary Laws and Acts under the whole Reign of the Saxons and Danes within this Island we may see by those Saxon and Danish Laws or rather Capitularies which amongst the French and Germans do signifie a mixture of Laws made by the Prince the Bishops and the Barons to reigle both Church and Common-wealth set forth by Mr. Lambert Anno 1568. see particularly the 9th Chap. of King Edwards Laws de his qui ad judicium ferri vel aquae judicati sunt per Justitiam Regis It is in Mr. Lamberts Laws fol. 128. And thus it continued in this Kingdom long after the Conquest to wit in Henry Beauclarks time after whose Reign it began first of all to be a little limited and restrained For at Clarindon Anno Dom. 1164. the 8th of the Calends of February in the 11th year of Henry the 2. a general Record is agreed upon by that Kings special Command of all the Customs and Liberties of this Kingdom ever sithence Henry the first that Kings Grand-Father as you may see in Matthew Paris pag. 96. of the first Edition where amongst other Customs agreed upon this is one Arch-Bishops Bishops and all other Persons of this Kingdom which hold of the King in Capite are to enjoy their Possessions of the King as a Baronie and by reason thereof are to answer before the Judges and Officers of the King and to observe and perform all the Kings Customs And just as the rest of the Barons ought for it was a duty the King then required from them as the King now by his Summons doth from us to be present in the Judgments of the Kings Courts together with the rest of the Barons until such time as they shall there proceed to the mangling of members or Sentence of Death And here in the last words is a diversity of reading For Matthew Paris a young Monk that lived long after reads this Custom thus Quousque perveniatur ad diminutionem membrorum vel ad mortem Which may be wrested to the first agitation of any Charge tending that way But Quadrilogus a Book written in that very Age and the Copy of the Articles of Clarindon which Becket sent to Rome extant at this day in the Vatican Library and out of the which Baronius in his Annals ad Annum 1164 transcribes it reads the Custom thus Vsque perveniatur in Judicio ad diminutionem membrorum c. which leaves the Bishops to sit there until the Judgement come to be pronounced amounting to Death or mutilation of members And as this was agreed to be the Custom so was it the Practise also after the 11th year to wit in the 15th year of Henry the 2. At what time the Lay-Peers are so far from requiring the Bishops to withdraw that they endeavour to force them alone to hear and determine a matter
Agitation of the self-same Cause Bishops it seems may be Witnesses to kill outright but may not sit in the Discussion of the Cause to help in Case of Innocency a distressed Noble man whereas the very Gothish Bishops who first invented this exclusion of Prelates from such Judicatures allow them to Vote as long as there is any hope left of clearing the party or gaining of Pardon Concil Tolet. 4. can 31. And by the beginning of that Canon observe the use in Spain in that Age Anno Dom. 633 as touching this Doctrine Saepe Principes contra quoslibet Majestatis obnoxios sacerdotibus negotia sua committunt You shall find it in the fourth Tome of Binius his last Edition of the Councils pag. 592. Lastly in the Case of Arch-Bishop Abbots all the great Civilians and Judges of this Kingdom as Dr. Steward Sir Henry Martin the Lord Chief Justice Ho●bar● and Judge Doderidge which two last were well vers'd in the Canon Law delivered positively that all Irregularities introduced by Canons upon Ecclesiastical Persons concerning matters of Blood were taken away by the Reformation of the Church of England And were repugnant to the Statute of 25 of Henry 8. as restraining the Kings most just Prerogative to imploy his own Subjects in such functions and Offices as his Predecessors had done and to allow them those Priviledges and Recreations as by the Laws and Customs of this Realm they had formerly enjoyed Notwithstanding the Decree de Clerico venatore or the Constitution Ne Clerici saecularem jurisdictionem exerceant or any other in that kind The only Objection which appears upon any Learning or Record against Church-mens Voting in this Kingdom in Causes of Blood are two or three Protestations entred by the Bishops amongst the Records of the upper House of Parliament and some few passages in the Law-Books relating thereunto The Protestation the Lords now principally stood upon is that of William Courtney Arch-Bishop of Canterbury 11º Ric. 2. inserted in the Book of Priviledges which Mr. Selden Collected for the Lords of the upper House In the Margen whereof that passage out of Roger Hoveden whereof we spake before about Clergy-mens agitation of Judgments of Blood is unluckily inserted and for want of due Consideration of this point and some suspition of partial carriage in the Bishops in the Case of the Earl of Strafford hath been eagerly pressed upon the Bishops by some of the Lords in such an unusual and unaccustomed manner that if the Bishop of Lincoln who offered to speak unto this Objection had not voluntarily withdrawn himself he and the rest of the Bishops had been without hearing Voted out of the House in the Agitation of a Splinter of that Cause of the Earl of Strafford which came not neer any matter of Blood An Act never done before in that Honourable House and now Executed suddenly without the least Consideration of the merit of the Cause The only words insisted upon in this Protestation in question are these Because in this present Parliament certain matters are agitated whereat it is not Lawful for us according to the Prescript of Holy Canons to be present And by and by after they say these matters are such in the which nec possumus nec debemus interesse we neither can nor may be present This is the Protestation most stood upon for that of Arch-Bishop Arundel 21 Rich. 2. at what time the Bishops going forth left their Proxies notwithstanding with the Lay-Lords and consequently continued present in Judicature in the eye and Construction of the Law it is not so full and ample as this of Courtney's And therefore I must apply my Answers to this Protestation principally which are diverse and fit to be weighed and understood First I do observe that Bishops never Protested or withdrew in Cases of Blood but under the unsteddy Reign of Richard the Second only Never before never after the time of that unfortunate King from the Conquest to this present Parliament for ought appeareth in Record or History And that one Swallow should make us such a Spring and one Omission should create a Law or Custome against so many Actions of the English Prelates under so many Kings before so many Kings and Queens after that young Prince seems unto me a strange Doctrine Especially when I consider that by the Rules of the Civil and Canon Law a Protestation dies with the Death of him that makes it and is Regularly vacuated and disannulled Per contrarium actum subsequentem protestationem by any one subsequent Act varying from the tenour of the said Protestation Reg. juris Jo. Baptist. Nicolai par 2. Now that you may know how the Prelates carryed themselves in this Point and actually voted in Causes of Treason and sometimes to Blood before Richard the 2 d I refer me to what I cited before out of Mr. Selden and he out of Stephanides concerning Thomas a Becket Condemned by his Peers Ecclesiastical and Temporal about 15 of Henry the 2 d Arch-Bishop Stratford acquitted of high Treason in Parliament by four Prelates four Earls and four Barons under Edward the 3 d. Antiquitates Britanniae pag. 223. 4 Edward 3 Roger de Mortimer Berisford Travers and others adjudged Traytors by the Earls Barons and Peers 16º Edward 3. Thomas de Berkley was acquitted of Treason in pleno Parliamento c. And especially I refer me to that Roll of 21 Rich. 2 no. 10. 50 Which avers that Judgments and Ordinances in the time of that Kings Progenitors had been avoided by the absence of the Clergy which makes the Commons thereto pray that the Prelates would make a Procurator by whom they might in all Judgments of Blood be at the least legally if they durst not be bodily present in such Judgments And then for the practice sithence the Reign of Rich. the 2 d In the first of Henry the 4 th the Commons thank the Lords Spiritual and Temporal for their good and rightful Judgment in freeing the Earl of Northumberland from Treason 3 of Henry the 5 th the Commons pray a Confirmation of the Judgment given upon the Earl of Cambridge by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal 5 of Henry the 5 th Sir John Oldcastle is Attainted of Treason and Heresie by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal 28 of Henry the 6 th the Duke of Suffolk charged with Treason before the Lords Spiritual and Temporal 31 Henry the 6 th the Earl of Devon and so down to the Earl of Bristols Case wherein 22º Maij. 1626. ten Bishops are joyned with ten Earls and ten Barons in the disquisition and agitation of that supposed Treason I leave it therefore to the Judgment of any indifferent man whether these Protestations made all under one Kings Reign and dying with the Parties that made them can void a Right and Custom grounded by a continual Practice to the contrary in all other Tryals that have been sithence the Conquest to this present Parliament Secondly it is fitting we
know the Nature of a Protestation which some peradventure may mistake Protestatio est animi nostri declaratio juris acquirendi vel conservandi vel damnum depellendi causa facta saith Spigelius Calvin and all the Civilians No Protestation is made by any man in his Wits to destroy his own Right and much less another mans but to acquire or preserve some Right or to avoid and put off some Wrong that was like to happen to the party or Parties that make the Protestation As here in Courtneys Protestation the Prelates in the first place conceive a Right and Power they had voluntarily to absent themselves whilst some matters were treated of at that time in that House of Lords which by the Canon Law the breach whereof the Popes of Rome did in those times vindicate with far more severity than they did the transgressions of the Laws of God they were not permitted to be present at and all this not for want of Right to be there in all Causes but for honesty and preservation of their Estates as it is in the Act of Parliament 11 Rich. 2. In the second place they did preserve their former Right as Peers which they still had though voluntarily absenting of themselves More solito interessendi considerandi tractandi ordinandi definiendi all things without exception Acted and Executed in that Parliament And in the Last place they protest against any loss of Right of being or Voting in Parliament that could befal them for this voluntary absenting of themselves at this time And where in this Protestation is there one word to prejudice their Successors or to authorize any Peer to Command his fellow Peer called thither by more Antient prescription of time and by the same Writs of Summons that himself is to withdraw and go out from this Common Council of the Kingdom Thirdly we do not certainly know what these matters were whereat Arch-Bishop Courtney conceived the Prelates neither could nor ought to be present These matters are left in loose and general words in that Protestation Some conceive indeed it was at the Condemnation of Tressilian Brambre the Lord Beauchamp and others See Antiquit. Brit. pag. 286. But the notes of Priviledges belonging to the Lords collected by Mr. Selden do with more reason a great deal assign this going forth of the Prelates to be occasioned by certain Appeals of Treason advanced in that Parliament by the Duke of Glocester against Alexander Arch-Bishop of York whom the Popish Canons of those times as you know exempted as a Sacred Person from the cognisance of King or Parliament and therefore the rest of the Bishops as the squares went then neither could nor ought to be present and parties to break upon the Exemptions Immunities and Priviledges of that great Prelate But the Earl of Strafford is not the Arch-Bishop but the President of York and to challenge any such Exemptions and Immunities from the cognisance of the King or Parliament amounts at this time to little less than Treason and therefore is th●● Protestation very unseasonably urged to thrust out any Protestant Prelate from Voting in Parliament Lastly a Protestation in the Civil or Canon Law for the Law of this Land knoweth it not is but a Testation or Witnessing before-hand of a mans own mind or Opinion whereby we that Protest provide to save and preserve our own Right for the time to come It concludes no man besides our selves no Stranger to this Act no Heir no Successor but if it be admitted sticks as inherent in the Singular and individual Person until either the Party dies or the Protestation be withdrawn and revoked And therefore what is a Protestation made by William Courtney to William Laud or by Thomas Arundel to bind Thomas Morton And what one Rule in the Common Law of the Land in the journal Book or in the Records of the Town can be produced to exclude the Lords Spiritual from sitting and Voting in Causes of Blood They were sometimes by the great favour of the King the Lords and the Commons not otherwise permitted to absent themselves never before this time Commanded by the Lay-Lords to forbear their Votes in any Cause whatsoever that was agitated in Parliament So our Law-Books say that the Prelates by the Canon Law may make a Procurator in Parliament when a Peer is to be Tryed which is enough to shew their Right thereunto 10 Edward the 4 th fol. 6. B. placit 17. And that it is only the Canon-Law that inhibits them to Vote in Sanguinary Causes Stamford pleas of the Crown fol. 59. The Canon Law saith Stamford in a distinct and separated Notion and therefore not grown in his Age to any such Usance or Custom as made it Common Law or the Law of this Land Objection But the Bishop of Lincoln and Bishop Andrews before him did alwayes forbear to Vote in Causes of Blood and did voluntarily retire out of the House when this Cause of the Earl of Strafford came to any serious Agitation Neither putting this withdrawing of the Prelates to any Vote nor offering to enter any Protestation Answer That Bishop had no opportunity to enter Protestations which you shall never find to have been offered by the Prelates but in Plein Parliaments when the three Bodies are together And his voluntary withdrawing of himself he may live to Repent him of if he shall hereafter be questioned for the same at the Kings-Bench or elsewhere He was called thither by his Writ which he did not so easily Obtain to sit and not to withdraw himself from Parliament when he pleased Besides his extraordinary Obligations to the Lords at this time whom he could not offend without great suspicion of high Ingratitude He is the first Prelate that ever was fetched out of the Tower and brought to sit in Parliament by the Black-Rod And therefore we are not so much to consider that Prelates Opinions or Actions in this kind as the reasons he gave for the same which as I have heard them Rehearsed are to speak modestly of them no Demonstrations His first and main Reason was that of the Record and Statute of 11 Rich. the 2 d. That it is the Honesty of that Calling not to intermeddle in matters of Blood The French word Honesteté signifies decency and Comliness as though it were a Butcherly and loathsome matter to be a Judge or to do Right upon a Malefactor to Death or loss of Members But this is an Imaginary decency never known in Nature or Scripture as I said before but begotten by Ignorance in the dark Fog and Mists of Popery Such an Honesty of the Clergy it was to have a Shaven Crown to depend upon their Holy Father the Pope to Plead Exemptions and to refuse to Answer for Felonies in the Kings Courts c. All these Particulars were esteemed in those dayes the Honesteté of the Clergy and such an Honesty it was in the Prelates of England in the loose Reign of Rich. the
Kingdom and therefore they are abolished by the Statute of 25 Henry the 8 th 2. So are they by the same Statute because the Lords have declared That the Bishops Vote here by the Laws and Statute of this Realm And all Canons that Cross with these are there abolished 3. So are they by the same Statute as thwarting the Kings Prerogative to call Bishops by Summons to Vote in Parliament 4. So are they by the Vote in the House of Commons 21 Maij. 1641 Because they are not Confirmed by Act of Parliament 5. This Argument was deserted by Mr. Perpoint and confest to be but an Argumentum ad hominem Arg. IIII. Because the twenty four Bishops have a dependancy upon the Arch-Bishops and because of their Oath of Canonical obedience to them Answer 1. They have no dependancy upon the Arch-Bishops but in points of Appeal and Visitation only and owe them no Obedience but in these two points None at all in Parliament where they are Pares they are equals and as Bracton tels us Par in Parem non habet imperium What hath Canonical Obedience to do with a Vote in Parliament declared in this Bill to be no Ecclesiastical but a Secular Affair 2. This Argument reacheth not the two Arch-Bishops discharged in the Rubrick from this Oath and therefore is no Reason for the passing of this Bill Arg. V. Because they are but for their Lives and therefore are not fit to have Legislative Power over the Honours Inheritances Persons and Liberties of others Ans. 1. Bishops are not for their Lives only but for their Successors also in their Land and Honour As the Earls and Barons also are for their Successors in their Lands and Honours and holding their Lands in Fee-Simple may with as good reason Vote in the Honour Inheritance Persons and Liberties of others as others may and do in theirs 2. Many Peers have been Created for their Lives only and the Earl of Surrey for the Life of his Father who yet Voted in this House 3. The Knights Citizens and Burgesses are chosen for one Parliament only and yet use their Legislative Power nor will their being Elected difference their Case for the Lords use that Power in a greater eminency who are not Elected 4. A Burgess that hath a free-hold but for term of Life only may Vote and assent to a Law in Parliament 5. No such exception ever heard of in the Diets of Germany the Corteses of Spain or the three Estates in France where the Prelates Vote in all these points with the Nobility and the Commons Arg. VI. Because of Bishops dependancy and expectancy of Translations to places of greater profit Answ. 1. This Argument supposeth all Kings and all Bishops to be very faulty if they take the time of their Votes in Parliament from these dependancies and expectancies 2. This may be said of all the Kings great Officers of all the Noble Members of both Houses who may be conceived as well as Bishops to have their Expectancies and consequently to be deprived by this Reason of Voting in Parliament 3. This Argument reacheth not at the two Arch-Bishops and so falls short of the Votes which are to be taken away by this Bill Arg. VII That several Bishops have of late much encroached upon the Consciences and properties of the Subjects and they and their Successors will be much encouraged still to encroach and the Subjects will be much discouraged from Complaining against such encroachments if 26 of that Order be to be Judges upon these Complaints The same Reason extends to their Legislative Power in any Bill to pass for the regulation of their Power upon any emergent inconveniency by it Answ. 1. This Argument fights not against Bishops Votes in Parliament but against their Votes in Convocation where if any where they have encroached upon the Consciences and Properties of the Subject Nor yet at the Votes of such Bishops there as are not guilty of this Offence Nor need the Subject to be discouraged in Complaining against the like Grievance though 26 of that Order continue Judges for they shall not Vote as Judges in their own Cause when they are Legally Charged And if they should Vote what were that to the purpose when the Lay-Peers are still four to one The Bishops Assisted with a double Number of Mitred Abbots and Priors could not hinder the Laws made against the Court of Rome the Alien Cardinals and Prelates the Provisors the Suiters to the Popes Consistory under Edw. 3 d Rich. 2 d and Hen. 4 th Much more may those emergent exhorbitances of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction be soon curbed and redressed in this inequality of Votes between the Temporal and Spiritual Lords So as this Argument doth not so much hurt the Votes as it quails the Courage of the Bishops who may justly fear by this and by the next Argument that the taking away of their Votes is but a kind of forerunner to the abolishing of their Jurisdiction Arg. VIII Because the whole Number of them is interessed to maintain the Jurisdiction of Bishops which hath been found so grievous to the three Kingdoms that Scotland hath utterly abolished it and Multitudes in England and Ireland have Petitioned against it Answ. 1. This Argument is not against the Vote of Bishops but against Episcopacy it self which must be removed because Scotland hath done so and some in England and Ireland would have it so and yet peradventure ten times as great a Number as these desire the contrary 2. There will be found Peers enough in the Upper-House to reform any thing that is amiss in the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction although the twenty six Prelates should be so wicked as to oppose it as there were found Peers enough in that Noble House to curb the Court of Rome and the Revenues of the Cardinals under Edw. 3 d to meet with the Provisors under Ric. 2 d to put all the Clergy into a Praemunire under Hen. 8 and to Reform the Religion 1º Elizabeth notwithstanding the Opposition of all the Bishops Arg. IX Because the Bishops being Lords of Parliament it setteth too great a distance betwe●● them and the rest of their Brethren in the Ministry which occasioneth pride in them discontent in others and disquiet in the Church Answ. This is an Argument from Moral Philosophy which affords no Demonstrations All are not proud that vote in Parliament nor discontented that are not so imployed This Argument fights only against their title of being Lords which is not the Question at this time FINIS