Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n bring_v good_a great_a 3,132 5 2.4770 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A18079 A second admonition to the parliament Cartwright, Thomas, 1535-1603, attributed name. 1572 (1572) STC 4713; ESTC S110798 53,046 74

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

deuise lawes for the preseruation and prosperitie of your common wealth and neglecte God his churche leaue that waste prouide not for that you shall finde as the * Prophet saith yee shall sowe muche and bring in little yee shall eate and not haue inoughe As for the Conuocation house whereof many haue conceiued a maruellous opinion and which should of duetie loke to these matters common experience dothe proue that they doe for the most parte apply them selues to the time and seeke rather to please and followe worldly pollicie then sincerely to promote Gods cause and to publishe his truth And hereof their last conuocations can be good witnesses But you say the Bishops are good men great clearkes they knowe what they haue to doe and possyble some of them doe excepte the God of thys worlde haue bl●nded their eyes and so did some of the popishe bishops but you were deceiued by them and you are like to be deceiued by these if you truste them so farre as experience teacheth Neuerthelesse you shall die in * your synnes you shal both * fall into the ditche But some will say that the admonition hindered other things As who shuld say that to further Gods cause is to hinder other matters that be profitable for the cōmon wealth doth the knowledge of God and the promoting of hys glory hinder profitable lawes that is a thyng that I would gladly learne for I coulde neuer vnderstand it before VVherfore this may be as a seconde Admonition wyth the like mynde as afore by them to craue redresse of the great abuses in oure Reformation of Religion some being continued from the papistes some deuised by the fantasticall heades of vayne menne and some though not maintayned yet suffered and not reformed vnto thys day yea and further as they afore doe againe appeale to thys hyghe Courte of Parliament from all other Courtes being ready to defende that whych I wryte touching the substance of it againste all men and that vppon the pearill of my lyfe Let me be but vprightly heard and interpreated The matter is Goddes ouerpasse it not lightly for we maye not thoughe you deuised lawes to cutte vs off as by some one byshop you haue bene ere nowe prouoked for oure partes thus leaue it The other bokes are shorte as it was requisite to present to you and therefore they haue not so muche tolde you how to Reforme as what to Reforme They haue tolde you of many things amisse and that very truely they haue tolde you in generall what were to be restored but howe to doe these things as it is the hardest poynte so it requireth as themselues saye a larger discourse I meane therfore to supplie as shortly as I can bicause I wryte as they dyd to you some thing that may make to the expressing of the matter so plainely that you may haue sufficient lyght to proceede by till they whych are endued wyth greater giftes discusse it more exactly or till we our selues who haue begon maye haue further oportunitie to proceede if it be neglected of theyr part which coulde we it better And yet this I dare say for the substance of those Treatises which is it that galleth the aduersaries mooste howe so euer they quarrell with them vpon wordes that it is so grounded vpon the vndoubted truthe of God his booke that the diuell of hell cannot wyth his coloures blemishe it saue he may seeke to suppresse it by violence nor any but he and those whome he hathe deceiued or whome God hath not yet giuen so much light vnto will or can stand against it I would and doe therefore earnestly admonishe them that knowe to knowe as they ought and to doe as they knowe and to beware of the God of this worlde that he deceiue them not for the time will come that this * dung shall be throwne openly in their faces to their euerlasting shame that maintain it like as at this day it hathe befallen to the sencelesse Papistes who will neuer giue ouer til they can neither wil nor chuse with shame inough Next I woulde and doe earnestly ad●●onishe those that are ignorant to learne to knowe and to beware of a blinde zeale which is more violent vniust then oughte else carying men headlong to maintain that they haue no reason for and wickedly to gainstand the expresse truth to their endlesse perdition Now to the matter I say that we are so skarce come to the outwarde face of a Churche rightly reformed that although some truth be taught by some preachers yet no preacher may withoute greate danger of the lawes vtter all truthe comprised in the booke of god It is so circumscribed wrapt within the compasse of suche statutes suche penalties suche inst●uctions suche aduertisements suche articles suche canons suche sober caueats and suche manifo●●e pamphlets that in manner it doth but ●●epe out from beh●●de the screene The lawes of the lande the booke of common prayer the Queenes Iniunctions the Commissioners aduertisements the bishops late Canons Lindwoodes Proumetais euery bishops Articles in his d●ocesse my Lord of Canterburies sober caueates in his licences to preachers and hys highe Courte of prerogatiue or graue fatherly faculties these together or the worste of them as some of them be too badde may not be broken or offended against but with more daunger then to offende against the Bible To these subscribing and sub 〈…〉 ing againe and the third subscribing are re 〈…〉 red for these Preachers and others are endi 〈…〉 are fined are priso●ned are excommunicated are banished and haue worse things threatned them and the Bible that muste haue no further s●●pe then by these it is assigned Is this to professe God his worde is this are formation He that could not abide straunge fire in the olde law but burnt * them that vsed it what will he doe to vs in the newe lawe that erect a new and straunge course or worde to rule his church by What did the Pope but so he did suffer God his worde to haue a course as farre as it pleased him so that he might haue the whole authoritie aboue it so dyd the Popishe churche but we say the * worde is aboue the church then surely it is aboue the Englishe churche and aboue all these bookes afore rehearsed If it be so why are not they ouer ruled 〈◊〉 and not it by them Here falleth forthe to be ●●swered a shift of descant to turne and winde this 〈…〉 er Forsothe these are not repugnant saythe 〈◊〉 to the woorde of God no nor yet say we are 〈◊〉 consonante no more is chaffe like to quenche 〈◊〉 no nor yet can it abide the fire But gold can ●●uen so are these vnable to quenche the lighte of 〈◊〉 gospell no * nor yet can they ▪ abide the courte o● the gospell but true religion abideth the triall of the word of god As wel reasoned it were to say lay hay or stubble
causes also and that so handled that it woulde greeue a chaste earc to heare the bawdie pleading of many proctors and doctors in those courtes and the sumners yea and the registers themselues master Archdeacon and master Chauncellor are eiten faine to laughe it oute many times when they can keepe their countenance no longer An vnchast kinde of pleading of vnchast maters They haue much adoe in marriage matters when folke maye not marrie what degrees may not marrie and much more adoe about diuorcements then either God or equitie would restraining bothe parties from marriage as long as they bothe are aliue togyther Besides they haue the triall of titles to benefices and trial of tithes trial of testaments and by their high commissyon they may do many moe things and vse other then spirituall coertion as they call it they may do what they will sauing life I thinke beat prison punysh by the purse banishe I wot not what All persons dicares and curates all church wardens all side men sworne men and many forsworne and all paryshes are at their commaundement They may commaund al Matres Bailiffes Constables and such like officers All persons are open to them all iaylors obay them receiue their prysoners and hamper them as they enioyne them They haue good causes and bad brought before them and punish both sometimes but the worst seldomest least and the best oftenest and moste Many of their causes much of their dealings are declared in the former treatises therefore I wil be but brefe And thus I say y neither they nor any order we haue in Englād this day doth or can do that which only God his order can do and was appoynted to do Neither their prouincials nor the whole course of their canon lawe nor their articles nor commissions can rightly order Christes church nor any statute auaileth therevnto but only that lawe which bindeth the whole land to God hys orders for the gouerning of hys church And therfore to make lawes it auayleth not saue mere ciuil as in thys case which they count spiritual for the prouisyon of the ministery a law to stablysh a ryght reformatiō drawn out of the scriptures I would leaue to speake any further of their conuocation house bicause the force of it depēdeth vpon the other houses of parliament and my lords the bishops pleasures for nothyng they doe but for a fashion vntyll they come to the subsidie and they haue had prety deuises to stop their doing they haue had an order ere now to speake nothing but latin which was the way for many to tell but short tales for fear of shame But yet among abuses of these clergye men thys is a great one the whole house is a great abuse but the polling of their cleargye for their clarkes fees and theyr disorderous chusing of their clarkes may be numbred among the rest of their enormities following none other order but for the face of a thyng sauing only my Lord byshops pleasure or else he will know why and yet it shal be as he wil when at is done for either his Archdeacon shal haue one roume to beare his charges wythall whych otherwise must be there Ex officio so ware hys owne charges or some other of hys frends shall haue that roume hys Chancellor shall haue the other to pleasure hym wyth not for any pleasure commonly y the Chācellor can do in thys house who ca scarse say as they say shue to a goose and if they had neede of a deuines answer or hym wing most commonly a dudging Canonist sometime a Doctor But when he is best best is to bad Thus I say for thys matter the byshop dealeth or to testowe it vpon hys chapleyne whych shall wayte at the stirrop or at y brydle to buy hym a new gowne somewhat wyth but as vnfit for the house as the former commonly but the byshop wyll haue the apoynting of bothe ro●me● O the tyrannie that they vse many many wayes I haue thus brefely as I could and handling matters as I ought passed through many abuses in the ministery and gouernment of the church of Christ in England and I haue accordyng to my pore talent declared what shoulde be the state of a well ordered and reformed church How many sortes of ministers how they shuld be called to y function what their effice is what order should be amongst them what metings conferences there should be for the continuing of true religion and for them to increase in knowledge by And in like sorte I haue waded in declaring what offycers there should be in the gouernment what stroke they may b●are so it be by the cōgregation what a consistorie is what excommunication is what prouision there shuld be made for the pore what the deacons office is and or al other orders of the consistorie which it pleased God that I had in mynde and thought most profitable to vtter It remayneth for me now to returne agayne to the state To the Queenes most excellent maiestie the hou 〈…〉 able Co 〈…〉 rs all the Nobilitie all the worshypfull Commons of thys realme And I humbly ●eseeche her Maiestie in principall to vouchsafe the hearyng of vs and lyke as 〈◊〉 make our appeare from the L. byshops to be vprightly heard what may be sayd of our partes further and more 〈…〉 ghly in thys matter of Gods by diuers o● no small learning and iudgement 〈…〉 tie of li●e so it will please her maiestie and you all ●erem to accept our appeale y not only we may 〈◊〉 jus be oppressed wrung as we are against all equale and conscience but also that God hys cause should not i● so troden vnder foote the benefite of hys churche so lyttle regarded suche daily contentions raised by and not pacified such greeuing of godly mennes consciences they not releeued In so quiera raigne of our soueraigne that Papists for pitie are not much disquieted and yet there should be a persecution of pore christians and the professors of the gospel suffered not farre vnlike to the s●●e articles whych cratty heades deuised and prought y king her noble father vnto as they wold do her maiestie how That we should haue God his cause by vs truely and faithfully propounded by others wyckedly oppugned and withstode yet it may not by vs againe be maintained wythout great per●l We beseeche you to pitie thys case and to prouide for it It is the case already of manye a thousand in this land yea it is the case of as many as seeke the Lord aright desire to haue hys owne orders restored Great troubles will come of it if it be not prouided for euen the same God that hath stirred me a man vnknowne to speake thoughe those poore men which are locked vp in Newgate neither do nor cā be suffred to speake wil dayly stir vp moas yet vnknown
the Prince and state by the godly learned menne of thys realme b●cause of y rawnesse of this people yet and also vsing earnest prayers wyth fasting as in the choise of the minister hauing made their choise thereafter they shall publishe their agreement in their parishe and after a sermon by their minister at their appoyntment and vppon their consent the minister may lay hys handes vppon euery of them to testify to them their admission This consistorie is for that onely congregation and must doe that which they we wyntly in any common cause of the churche And these are to employe themselues and to be employed by that congregation vpon the necessary and vrgent affaires of the same churche These are they in y church to whome our sauiour cōmaundeth them that haue twise or oftner admonished an offender and he heareth them not to vtter such an offender when he sayth tell the church These are they whose last admonition he of that church or they which regarde not shall be taken as a publicane or heathen These are they that shall admonishe all suche in that congregation as they knowe to liue with offence to the church or as be presented to them by good testimonie of their offence committed These be they which shall excommunicate the stubburne making the whole church priuie to their doings and shall vpon repentāce take order for the receiuing such an one in againe making open profession of hys or their repentance to the satisfying of y congregation Yet euer so must they excommunicate receiue the excommunicate in againe that they require the assent of their whole congregation shewing the greuousnesse of hys fact and howe they haue proceeded wyth him by admonition and hys contempt whych they shall doe bothe bicause their vpright dealing may appeare to y who le church and bicause they may not vsurpe authoritie ouer the whole churche whereby we might caste out the tirannie of the bishops bryng in a new tyrannie of theirs who are appointed by good order to haue the examination of matters the rest of the dealing in the name of the whole congregation Neuerthelesse what they do wel the congregation cannot alter neither shall the congregation put them or any of them out but vpō iust cause proued either in that consistorie or in some one of the counsels and the cause accepted for sufficient Neither may they or any of them leaue to deale in that turne except they can shew good cause to that consistorie and it to be approued by them wyth the consent of the whole congregation and good liking For neyther muste they lightly be broughte into suspition nor they must not lightly cast of so waighty a calling and function of suche importance no more then the ministers may They also shall examine all disordered ceremonies vsed in place of prayer and abolishe those which they finde euill or vnprofitable and bring in suche orders as their congregation shall haue neede of so they befew and apparant necessary both for edifying and profite decent order prouing it plainely to the whole church that it is so And in like sorte shall they suffer no lewd customes to remaine in their parishe either in ga●es or otherwise but hauing conferred of suche things amongste themselues they shall admonish him or them brotherly that he or they vse them not any more as vnseming to Christian men to vse the lyke or if they be common they shall geue open admonition and it shall be left In all these things in all things of the church they shall not meddle wyth the ciuill magistrates office nor wyth any other punishment but admonition and excommunication of the obstinate Yet this they must doe that he which hath lyued with offence to that congregation although he hath suffred the punishment of the law for hys offence against it yet he shall by them be admonished to satisfie the congregation to whom he hath geuen offence amongs whō he dwelleth As for example he that hath vsurie proued agaynst him so that he lose hys principal for taking aboue ten in the hundred yet shall he also for committing so hamous offence agaynste God and hys churche to the very ill example of others not be allowed to the Sacraments vntill he shewe hymselfe repentaunt for the faulte and study thereby to satisfie the congregation so offended by him These shal receiue the informations of the deacons for the releefe of the pore their accomptes for that which they shal lay out that way and of their diligēce in visiting them that the congregations maye by the Consistorie be certefyed of all thyngs concerning the poore bothe y there may be made prouision accordingly and that the prouision made may be wel husbanded and the pore may by the deacons be visited comforted and releeued accordyng to their lack Lastly one or moe of these assistants with one of the ministers a deacon or deacons shall be those y shall at their churches charges meete at the prouincial councell or nationall if there be any businesse that concerneth their churche Especially one of the ministers shall not faile and one of this assistance to be parties in any generall cause of all the churches that may be dealte in there whether it be concerning doctryne or manners Now a word or two of excommunication and deacons because I haue made mētion of them and then I will shew vpon what scriptures these orders are gros●●ed and a little compare them wyth those which we vse and some certaine matters incident to these then I will draw to an ende by God hys grace Excommunicat●on may not be vsed but after sondrye brotherly and sharpe admonitions too great occasions offences and contemptes shewed as the scripture is pla●e And in these cases they are by the persons and order asore not shut oute of the church dore as we vse but o●t of the churche of God and communion and felowshippe of the saintes they are deliuered to sathan and to be esteemed and to be no more taken for Christian men till they repent then Heathens or Turkes are saue that as they may be allowed yea and procured if it may be to come to heare sermons so also they may be conferred with by the brethren to bryng them to repentance But they shall not be allowed to the sacrament the pledge of Christ hys league with hys church vntill by repentāce they may be admitted as afore is sayde into the fellowship of the church againe Neyther shall any brother or sister vse hys or their companie but to admonishe them and exhort them to repētance or as he or she may the heathēs company for their necessary affaires in the world as they may haue dealing together or as a wife whych may not depart from her husband if he wil abide with her and yet shee may be admitted to the felowship of the
on their garmentes loued to be greeted and to be called Rabbi whyche thyngs by our sauioure are forbidden his ministers and an order enioyned that they which loke for it shuld not haue it but be least esteemed Thys is true reade the scriptures youre selues I pray you if you finde it not so disproue vs if it be founde so strengthen vs by your authorities and lette the worde of God haue the free course that it ought to haue They be but pretences to serue the glorious course that some of oure ministers are entred into when they say it is the credyte of the ministerie and the vpholding of the same and thys way of oures is the discrediting and ouerthrowing of the ministerie of all good orders and to bring confusion into the churche and as they pretende playne Anabaptistrie But they are no better but pretences and flat vntruthes for it is God hys owne order set by our sauioure and hys Apostles in his church and I trust as breefely as I can to make it appeare to be God his order and the lest order and the onely order which should be in the churche of god And as for the order whych they pretend to be maintained by them it may be that they knowe their order when they ride in their scarlet roa●es before the Queene and howe to poll their cleargye as they call them and all other in their diocesses howe to lease oute benefices to the patrones or by the persone or vicare and patrones meanes royally to lease them out to some other or to alienate the house or the gleebe for a round summe of money to their Lordships chestes or brybes to their wiues or to their children or to their offycers or seruauntes that they may haue their share thereby or how to kepe their courtes and gette them officers for their best aduauntage or howe to rattle vp these new fellowes these yong boyes that will not obey at a becke to their articles aduertisements canons caueates and such lyke stuffe of their owne forging or whatsoeuer proceedeth or is from or for their Lordly estate and degree or howe to pleasure their frende or frendes or freendes freende with a Benefice or wyth a Pr 〈…〉 so that it maye bee a good turne to themselues comming by simonie away or howe to lease out their owne temporaltyes of their bishopprickes yea possible akenate them from their successors and howe to matche their sonnes and their daughters together with great summes of money passing betweene them and how to purchase lands and leases in their wiues childrens names bicause if they were priests their children cannot inherite nor are legitimate by the lawes and howe to raise fines and rentes and many suche good orders moe they are verye skilfull in and keepe very diligently I woulde for experience some of their doings were examined and then no doubt we shoulde see manye of these goodly orders brought to lyght And tyll it be examined I would that they whych are honest men woulde bryng to lyghte their doings whych they knowe for as finely as they haue hādled the matters there are some which know inough and I trust they will impatt it ere long to the state y they whych are of so sharp a sight to see who offende them may themselues lie opē and shew how they offend God and his church and howe vtterly vnnecessary they are and to be remoued from their roumes and their roumes from the churche whych by them are continued to stall the popishe Bishops in their pompe againe if euer their tyme serue them heere For good orders lette vs heare any one they make but euen as the lawe directeth them which any other temporall officers myght and woulde doe as well as they if the lawes dyd not prohibite it And there is none other but lawes with them no God his booke no brotherly talke with them they will not runne in a premunire for any of all their brethren nor for any of God hys matters neyther they will not haue the Queenes displeasure for any of them all they wil not be defaced whatsoeuer commeth of it nay they wil raile vpon and reuyle their brethren they will persecute and prisone them they will stirre her maiestie and all other agaynst them they will sterue stiffle and pine them to death Howe many good mennes deathes haue they bene the cause of by an inwarde sorrowe conceyued of their doings howe sodainly dyed master Pullen after they began to rage M. Horton M. Caruell and many others and howe did they kill y good mannes heart olde good M. Couerdale although they pretended they wold prouide for him after much adoe from the counsell and as they say from the Queene to them yet they allotted hym a small portion and paide hym by fittes and sometymes wyth base golde and mony if they had any worse then other whych I haue heard very crediblye reported Olde D. Turner was muche beholding to them being a good man an auncient preacher neuer shauen nor greased yet he had no small stirre by them M. Leauer M. Samson and some other at this day learned godly howe haue they greeued their good heartes vtterly leauing some of them wythout lyuing to the wyde worlde to shifte as they can And yet they may not shyfte some of them by those giftes whych God hath giuen them they may neyther preache nor teache chyldren publikely nor priuately And they that are in some liuings what sorowe doe they holde them wythall and howe ticklishly doe they holde them to euermore in dāger of being called before the hyghe Commissioners and to loose those liuings How many haue they driuen to leaue the ministerie and to liue by Phisicke and other suche meanes or to leaue their countrey Howe many students haue they discouraged from the studie of diuinitie and to chaunge their mindes since they sawe their dealings and to chaunge their studies also Howe many poore Artificers and other commoners in this citie and elsewhere haue they ill entreated brought vp slaūders vpon and by their ill vsage and lacke of diligent conference haue they not suffered to fall but haue bene the cause that they haue fallen into errors Contrarywise what incouragement and fauor haue they shewed to papists how haue they opened their eares to their complaints against the ministers and shut their eares when Papists haue bene complained vpon or slightly ouerpassed it Yea some of them haue sayde that cōformable Papistes were more tollerable then these precisians and godlye men that seeke for reformation Hanson of Oxforde whych amōgst other articles was charged iustly and is yet to be proued that he sayde Storie was an honest man was put to death wrongfully and had frendes alyue would reuenge hys death one day howe slightly dyd the Byshop of Canterbury vse hym what frendshippe founde Thurlbie in hys house may poore preachers be halfe so wel vsed or such other poore men
honourable worshipfull and others by whose meanes they are heere supported and maintained And I am sure of it we all fare the better for it at God hys handes And I beseche the whole state beseeche God that the whole stare may bend thēselues to haue more and more care for the godly straungers y are of the churches in deede and not to be greeued that they are so many but to pitte their present persecution and to comforte them For the other swine that are not of the churches I pray God they may fynde litle fauoure except they repent ioyne themselues to the churches Thus muche also of the Leacons Thys order of the church gouernment is grounded vpon that saying of our sauioure Tei the churche wherin it is certayne he alludeth to that consistorie of the Iewes and the scriptures that directe their gouernement And it is so certain that such a consistory they had and such elders as it shall not nede further to examine those scryptures but to come to the practise of the Apostles the churches plāted by them The apostle noteth y there are in the church bearing offyce ruling which should be had in estimation for their offyce two sortes of elders and rulers wherof the one sort also ruleth but they laboure in the woorde and doctrine to and their offyce is the principall He distinguisheth them to the Corinthes the teachers and the gouernoures because all gouernoures are not teachers but because al teachers are gouernoures as to Timothie before is said so to the Romaines deuiding the offyces of the churche into two sortes gouernment and ministring to the pore To the first office he assigneth doctors pastors and gouernors calling them by these names teachers exhorters and rulers and to the second offyce he assigneth deacons widowes callyng the first those that minyster and the widowes those that shew mercy Of the widowes I will say no further but vpon lyke decasyon it is God hys order But for the other orders they must be in all well ordered churches of Christians The Apostle Paul and Barnabas set suche order in the churches whyche they planted It was so in the churches of Rome of Cornith of Ephesus An order is sette downe what mē they must be How they are to be chosen the ministers the assistantes the deacons yea and the widowes is declared in the Actes of the Apostles and the epistle to Timothie as ● sore is noted Howe they are to procede against offenders is declared by our sauioure and practised amōg the Thessalonians the Corinths and likewyse of the receiuing agayne of an excommunicate persone and howe they should vse hym while he abydeth excommunicate And the ordering of things comely and remouing abuses euery one to keepe hymselfe wythin his vocation so playne y places be that it nedeth no more but that it would please you to reade them and waighe them And in lyke sorte for conferences and councels to d●ale for the stay of the churches in true doctrine and in godly order and quyetnesse to the Corinthes it is plaine and the councell at Ierusalem wherein is dealt for all those causes of the churches at once The persons that were sent to the councel the persons that chefely dealt and how and the generall consent of the Apostles Elders and brethren would be well obserued as geuing great light for many purposes Well now who are our doers in this church gouernment how are they chosen what causes doe they deale in and how do they deale In euery parishe a consistorie there is not nor in euery great towne containing many paryshes nor in euery shire but onely one in a diocesse whych contayneth diuers shires I may peraduenture d● deceyued for there may be so many in adiocesse as there are Archdeaconries besydes the graund consistorie of y byshop or his su●stitute the Chauncellor for they say the Archdeacon or his substitute y officiall may visite oftner then y bishop kepe courts oftner then y Chancellor there are in some diocesse diuers Archdeacōs But what of all thys whence haue they their aucthoritie who called them what causes deale they in and how of God they haue not their authoritie they hold it by the Canon lawe and by the bishop And some of them pay the bishop full well for it they say And so they say that Chancellors offyces are so gainfull that some of them are in fee wyth their byshops for them yea they say some bishops haue payed for their byshoppricks other wayes though not to the Quene and that some of them haue large fees going out of their bishopprickes to their frends that holpe them to their preferments These are not rightly called And whereas there is a statute to auouche thys calling and aucthoritie that the byshops vsurpe the statute may make it good by lawe to holde suche titles and dignities but not before god I haue spoken of it before and seeing ministers must be equall and the order must be that some must be gouerned by all and not all by some in the church gouernment then y same argument is of force against Archdeacons and all such highe prelates which is agaynst Lorde byshops Lord byshops I say for the name bishop is not the name of a Lord but of a painfull minister and pastor or teacher and yet in deede in England euery byshop is a Lorde I knowe the common people would maruel yea and ioly wyse men too if they heard their pastor say I am your byshop a byshoppe on God hys name when were you made Lorde and so take him to be proude for no man is a byshop heere but he is also a Lord whych thyng I say because I doe not meane that the scripture alloweth not a byshop but not a Lord byshop A byshop or ouerseer or pastor and teacher in euery congregation the scripture doth allowe and hym or them to be the principal of the consistorie of their congregation it doth allowe but thys hyghe Prelacie it alloweth not but forbiddeth it vtterly Nowe then seeing they haue no lawfull callyng howe can they deale in any causes lawfully but yet they doe deale though not lawfully before God and that in infinite causes And the proctors and doctors of that law say the studie of the lawe is infinite because the causes are infinite one I trow en gendering another and so surely are the delayes and fees of those courtes infinite They haue to examine all transgressions agaynste the boke of common prayer the iniunctions the aduertisements the canons the metropoliticall articles the bishops articles of the diocesse all the spirituall causes as they call them of the whole diocesse or euery Archdeacon of hys circuite and the Archbishop of hys prouince and the Arches of the whole realme and for certayne causes the prerogatiue court of my Lord his grace of Canterburie is ouer the realme also Also of spirituall yea and many carnall