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A39281 S. Austin imitated, or, Retractions and repentings in reference unto the late civil and ecclesiastical changes in this nation by John Ellis. Ellis, John, 1606?-1681. 1662 (1662) Wing E590; ESTC R24312 304,032 419

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their general exception The next is against the Ceremonies of this Church and of the Common-prayer Book in particular Of the Ceremonies in partic Against which they except these things First that they are not established by Law Secondly that they are superstitious Thirdly that they are scandalous Fourthly that they have been occasions of persecution Fifthly they are burdensom for their number And lastly even by the consequence of the Article 34. of the 2. Homilie of the time and place of Prayer by the very Preface of the Common-prayer Book it self and also the practice of the Bishops they ought to be removed Touching the first that they are not established they endeavour to prove first generally in that the Common-prayer Book is not established secondly particularly because of the Book of 2. and 5 6 Ed. 6. and the Act of Uniformity of Common-prayer Touching the first that they are not established In the Answ to the sixth gen Except because the Common-prayer Book is not established hath been answered above Touching the particular proof here the Brethren do prevaricate not unpalpably and very undutifully traduce Qu. Eliz. and the Parliament that established the Book of Common Prayer P. 34. For first they say that However the Rubrick before the Book of Common-prayer printed in 1 Eliz. directeth to use such Ornaments as were in use in 2 Edw. 6. Ornaments of service yet that is no part of the Book of Common-prayer which the Parliament of 1 Eliz. established because the Book of 5. 6 Edw. 6. hath no such Rubrick or direction and that Act of 1 Eliz. for Uniformity of Common-prayer injoyns all things to be done according to the Book of 5 6 Edw. 6. and none other nor otherwise therefore nothing according to the Book of 2 Edw. 6. which yet * P. 39. afterward they say is good Law So that they make that Parliament very weak and inconsiderate men Answ and indeed meer C. Combs if that word might be used in reference to so awfull an Assembly that what they appointed in the very entrance of the Book by Rubr. they would establish they did by the Act immediately overthrow They appoint such Ornaments in the Book unto the Minister in Divine Service as was in use by Act of Parliament in the second year of Ed. 6. And in the Act they conform the Prayer-book unto that of 5 6. Ed. 6. and none other or otherwise As if the former were not an Exception and a Prov●so also in the Act it self Act for Uniformity prope sinem Provided alwayes sayes the Act and be it enacted that such Ornaments of the Church and of the Ministers thereof shall be received and be in use as were in the Church of England by the Authority of Parliament in the second year of the Reign of King Edw. 6. untill other order shall be therein taken note by the Authority of the Queens Majesty Note with the advice of her Commissioners appointed and authorised under the Great Seal of England for Causes Ecclesiastical or of the Metropolitane of this Realm Which latter clause of the Act yields a farther Answer to the Breth viz. that if those Ornaments were not otherwise established either by the Act or by the Liturgie yet by this Act Other Ceremonies if they be established by the Queen and her Commissioners and so by the following Princes Q. hath power to ordain Ceremon Rites and Orders Ecclesiastical it is sufficient The like may be said for Ceremonies Rites and Orders appointed by the Book That Act immediately after the former words subjoyning And also that if there shall happen any contempt or irreverence to be used in the Ceremonies or Rites of the Church by the misusing of the Orders appointed in this Book the Queens Majesty may by the like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitane ordain and publish such further Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for the advancement of Gods glory the edifying of his Church and the due reverence of Christs holy Mysteries and Sacraments So that here is establishment enough Next they would prove that the Ceremonies in the Common-prayer Book for of those they are speaking are not established by Law Pag. 38. because the Common-prayer Book of 2 Edw. 6. is in some things referred to And particularly as to Ornaments and Rites both by the Rubrick before Common-prayer in the present Liturgy and by the Statute of 1 Eliz. 2. So that as to this point v●z of Ornaments and Rites which they named and as to Ceremonies for of those they are speaking and instance in them presently so much of that Book is still in force by Law But that Book hath expresly given a liberty in some of the things here desired to be no further imposed where in the last page thereof called Certain Notes for the more plain Explication and decent Ministration of things contained therein it saith As touching kneeling crossing holding up of hands knocking upon the breast and other gestures they may be used or left as every mans devotion serveth without blame This say the Brethren is still good Law c. wherein they do as well falsifie as prevaricate for neither the Rubrick before the Common-prayer nor the Act for Uniformity do name Ornaments and Rites as the Brethren recite the words but Ornaments only Now the word Rites comprehends the Ceremonies also which are not referred to in this Act but bounded in the Book it self and further liberty given to the Queen about them as we saw above out of the Act. Again they prevaricate for they know it was far from the meaning of that Rubrick they quote in 2 Ed. 6. when it names kneeling crossing and other gestures as things indifferent to be done or left according to every mans devotion Far it was from them to intend the Crosse in Baptism or the kneeling at the Communion or other gestur●s establisht in that very Book and by Act of Parliament and the latter whereof they explain by Rubrick in the Book of 5 6. Edw. 6. But the Brethren know they meant these words of such other Crossings and Kneelings and gestures which were many in those times not appointed by the Book So much for the ●stablishment The next is they are superstitious Superstitious Thirdly scandalous Both which have been replyed to above to which I referre for brevities sake only because this Tract is growen farre beyond what I intended The fourth is they have been occasions of persecution to man● able and godly peaceable Mini●te●s and sober Christians With reference to what hath been said above I add P●●●●●ble Minist●●s first Touching the Ministers that peac●●ble they are not if like the Brethren Who first end●avour to enflame the people as well as Parliament and then to cast questions of difference between the King and Parliament ●ag ●●● ●●●r ● about Prerogative ● as they not obscurely do by quarrell●ng the validity of the
Repentance and return 1 Pet. 3. I am obliged to render VVithall for the honour of those that went before us and have setled the things that here I plead for it is not amisse to shew 1 Cor. 7. that they had also the Spirit of God Besides it is requisite to Evidence that those that have not hearts to love this Church and Kingdom yet to hate them they have no Cause Add hereunto 'T is not perhaps impossible that some Eye by Gods direction may fall on these Lines who may thereby not only with a more steddy foot walk himself in the good and the old Paths Jer. 6.16 which I point at but may be of Influence also to cause others to do it likewise and not to suffer them to stumble in their ways from the ancient ones Jer. 17.15 to walk in paths in a way not cast up Lastly there is nothing new under the Sun Eccles 1.9 that which hath been may be again to the prevention whereof I have endevoured to contribute somewhat in this Treatise After some Recovery purging is most requisite Nam quae in Morbis relinquuntur post crisin Hipp. l. 2 Aph. 13. recidivas facere consueverunt Dreggs of Diseases if not digested or expelled do cause Relapses Especially in such distempers as are malignant Of which sort if any are Schisme and Sedition Fare thou well Septemb. 27. Anno Dom. 1661. The Contents of this Treatise The Chapters Sections and Pages are referred to as they are here Printed which sometimes but not often are amiss LIB I. Of the Civil Controversie CHAP. I. 1. OF the Right of Retractations allowable unto all men 2. Evidenced from the General Causes of Error 3. and of some great Examples of them Ancient and Modern CHAP. II. How far only the Author declined how he behaved himself therein and what awakened him unto Recovery pag. 15. CHAP. III. What the Author doth Retract both in General and in Particular 1. The War 2. Independency p. 24. CHAP. IV. Causes of the Authors falling and first the Negative p. 28. CHAP. V. The Causes positive And first in General p. 39. to 58. CHAP. VI. Causes particular to each Controversie And first of the VVar. SECT I. Cause general and privative Not obeying the Spirit of God p. 56. SECT II. Particular Motives to the VVar with their Refutation p. 58. to 83. CHAP. VII Reply to certain general Grounds for the VVar being the chief heads of a Book Entituled Scripture and Reason pleaded for Defensive Arms. p. 90. to 106. The Contents of the Second Book Of the Church Controversie CHAP. I. Of Independency SECT I. THe Occasion of the Authors lapse into it p. 109. SECT II. Causes 1. Privative viz. not obeying the particular Word of God p. 112. SECT III. Causes Positive p. 113. SECT IV. The Contents of Independency p. 114. CHAP. II. Of the Grounds of Separation And first in generall p. 119. CHAP. III. Particular Exceptions against the matter of the Premisses 1. Against the Articles or Doctrine p. 174. CHAP. IV. Of Worship and the Directory thereof the Common-Prayer-Book SECT I. Of Worship 1. In it self p. 195. 2. In the Ceremonies p. 196. SECT II. Objections particular against the matter of our Worship p. 204. SECT III. Exceptions against the Body of the Common-Prayer-Book SECT IV. A Vindication of the Compilers of the Liturgy in this particular p. 231. SECT VI. Exceptions against the Ceremonies pag. 270. CHAP. VI. Of the Assemblies their matter and mixture SECT I. The means in the Church of England of preserving them from Corruption p. 266. this number and some following are to be looked for in the 6. Chap. of the Second Book p. 269. SECT II. Causes Constitutive of the Church of England p. 270. SECT III. Apostolical Churches vitiated but no separation p. 273. SECT IV. The Primitive Churches also p. 275. SECT V. The Reformed Churches p. 280. CHAP. VII Of Discipline CHAP. VIII Of Government 1. By the Ministery in general and 2. by Episcopacy in particular Sect. 1. The Conditions requisite to the constitution of a Ministery p. 301. Sect. 2. Of Episcopacy It s Right and Title p. 304. Sect. 3. Exceptions against the former Government and Discipline 1. Episcopacy established by Law in Engl. p. 325. Subsect 2. Whether Episcopacy be a different order from Presbytery ibid. Subsect 3. The Question not of order but of Power p. 332. Subsect 4. Whether Ordination in the N. Testament without a Bishop p. 334. Sect. 4. Of the Book of Ordination Subsect 1. Bishops Imposition of hands upon Deacons p. 338. Subsect 2. Apostles choose Deacons ibid. Subsect 3. That phrase Receive the Holy Ghost defended p. 339. Subsect 4. Consecration of Bishops and Archbishops p. 346. Subs 5. Episcopal Jurisdiction p. 349. Sect. 6. The Close of the Church Controversie CHAP. IX The Proof and Trial of these Retractations CHAP. X. The Conclusion 1 A Petition p. 367. The Elder Son ibid. 2. An Admonition of Zanchy p. 368. 3. The Prediction of his late Majesty p. 370. CHAP. XI Additionals The Scope and Protestation of the AUTHOR Containing also an Explication of the FRONTISPIECE MY ayme is to perform by way of Retractation some small service Principi Patriae to the King and to my Country My allegeance to the one and engagement to the other and my lapsing in both so much obliging me Now a] Psal 20. the Kings honour is great in Gods Salvation And b] Psal 144. blessed are the people who have the Lord for their God But c] Amos 3. how can two walk together unless they be aggreed We d] 1 Joh. 3.5 must be like him if we would see him as he is Now God is a righteous God Psal 11. his countenance will behold onely the thing that is JUST This was the end of our Redemption viz. e] Tit. 2. to deliver us from the practise of all iniquity that we might live a godly righteous and sober life Now the the onely rule of this righteousness and justice is the f] Tit. 1. will of God Which will is revealed either generally in the Scripture and in the Law of Nature or particularly in the constitutions of every Nation which contradict not the former Hence g] D● Sibbis Souls conflict cap. 17. what is agreeable to Law is agreeable to Conscience said once the Lawyers Casuist Hence also h] Ro. 13.1 he that resists the Laws of particular Nations resists the Ordinance of God and he be he head or tail branch or rush as the i] Isa 3. Prophet phraseth it shall receive to himself damnation k] Eccles 10. He that brakes this hedge a serpent shall bite him he that removeth these foundation stones they shall fall upon him Laws therefore being the sacred impress of the will of God and the observance of them the obligement and security both of Majestrate and Subjects of Prince and People my onely scope is the
Christian Churches asserted in Answer to Mr. Hudson I may add this caution That for substance they are both of them Orthodox and useful and such in the composing whereof industry was used somewhat more than ordinary A few passages at the latter end of the Sermon in reference of the defence of the War against the King I do here retract And though I suppose I have evinced in the other Tractate that there is no Catholick or universal visible Governing Church and so laid ground for the Independency of the Church of England and other National Christian Churches yet that new practised Independency beginning at Separation and collecting themselves thence into small bodies and afterward assuming a right of non-subjection to any Juridical Superior Power Ecclesiastical I do also recal by these presents and retract CHAP. IV. The Causes of the Authors falling and first the Negative and such as were not AS in the Creation Gen. 1. Negations did precede the formation of things darkness before light and emptiness before repletion And as in Procreation privation goeth before So the Apostle writing to the Churches 1 Thess 2.3 begins at Negatives and what were not the causes of his preaching Our exhortation saith he was not of deceit nor guile Give me leave therefore to imitate both Nature and Religion here and to represent what were not the motives of my falling Lest any man should think that corrupt designments either in respect of persons or of things have tempted me And first for persons both those I have departed from as also those I now adhere unto No personal offence at the one or flattering notion of the other have at all provok'd me Neither despair of gaining by those now gone nor hope of vintage by these rising Luminaries do attract or draw me For I do not now begin my Retractations having then published them as we saw above when neither clowd from heaven nor vapour from the earth did seem to promise any shower of blessing When neither Sun nor Moon nor Star appeared but all hope that we should be saved was even vanished Sect. 1. Neither distaste of nor affection unto persons And first for persons To which I shall the rather speak because there is danger of falling into Scylla whilst we would avoid Charybdis and that a * Matth. 23.18 Proselyte may by Pharisaism and hypocrisie become two-fold more the child of hell than he was by profaneness Therefore that I may not seem to commit the same error against some now that was admitted against others before I shall represent my spirit and opinion touching persons of the side I have deserted and then of those whom in these cases I return unto Matth. 5. 1 Pet. 2.17 Gal. 6. First We are obliged to love and honor all men though especially the houshold of faith St. Austin not onely styles the persons he wrote against or had departed from sometimes * Dominis praedicalibus dilectissimis fratribus medaurensib ep 42. Dilect●ssimo fratri vinientio epist 48. honored or reverend or beloved brethren but also expresses his ' spirit toward them which I desire may be mine also in reference unto those I have now reflected on Illi in vos saeviant qui nesciunt cum quo labore verum inveniatur quam difficile caveantur errores Illi in vos saeviant qui nesciunt quàm rarum arduum sit carnalia phantasmata piae mentis serenitare superare Illi in vos saeviant qui nesciunt cum quantâ difficultate sanatur oculus interioris hominis ut possit intueri solem Illi in vos saeviant qui nesciunt quibus suspiriis gemitibus fiat ut ex quantacunque parte possit intelligi Deus Aug. contr epist q. voc Fundam cap. 2. Pastrento illi in vos saeviant qui nullo tali errore decepti sunt quali vos deceptos vident Ego saevire in vos omnino non possunt quos sicut meipsum illo tempore ita nunc debeo sustinere tanta patientiâ vobiscum agere quantae mecum egerunt proximi mei cum in vestro dogmate caecus errarem Let them saith he rage against you who do not know with what labour truth is found 1. The difficulty of Truth and how difficult it is to avoid errors Let them rage against you who know not how rare and hard a thing it is to scatter fleshly fancies by the light of a pious heart Let them rage against you who understand not how choice a thing it is so to cure the eye of the inward man that it may be able to behold the Sun Let them rage against you who know not with what sighs and groans it is effected that even the back-parts of God may be known Lastly Let them rage against you who have not been deceived with any such error as they see you to be deceived with For my self I can by no means be violent against you he means their persons and the persons of those that were not turbulent whom I ought now to bear as I did then my self and to deal with you in the same degree of patience that my friends did with me when I blindly wandred in your opinions 2. Besides the persons and worth of some 2. The worth and unworthiness of persons on both sides R. Hooker presat ad Pol. Eccles n. 2. from whom I now decline challengeth all due respect and some of those whom I now adhere unto as little We should be injurious to vertue it self saith Mr. Hooker if we did derogate from them whom their industry hath made great Bucer acknowledgeth both the usefulness of the labours even of the very Heathens toward Religion and highly predicates the Religion and piety of some of them Neminem verò offendat Bucer in Joh. 4.31 c. quòd Philosophorum laborem profuisse ad Evangelium puto omnis enim veritas à Deo est veritas sanè plurima in scriptis Philosophorum Poetarum legitur Jam quantulumcumque id fuerit quod de veritate Philosophi tradiderunt ad Deum certè animos hominum attraxerunt eosque ad Evangelium praepararunt sed quid opus est verbis Qui vel non in Cicerone Cicero miram Dei solidaeque pietatis cognitionem agnoscit eum necesse est ignorare quid sit Deus pietas Let no man saith he be offended that I judge the labours of the Philosophers to have been useful unto the Gospel for all truth is of God and verily there are many truths in the writings of the Philosophers and of the Poets Now how little soever it were of truth that they delivered surely it drew the minds of men unto God and by that did prepare them unto the Gospel But what need words he that doth not acknowledge even in Cicero a wonderful knowledge of God and of sound he meaneth serious not saving piety it must needs be that he knoweth neither what God nor piety
But all this so as that no Article of the Confession no point of Doctrine no part of Worship is altered And yet the Brethren have raised such a hue and cry as if the later Bishops yea and Princes not excepting Queen Elizabeth had a design to corrupt the Articles to poison the Worship to impose unestablished things upon the conscience and liberty of the Subject and to punish men for disobedience thereunto As if all Religion were pessundated and Omnia in pejus ruere retro sub●apsa referri All goes to ruine Thames to Tyber flows Th' Assembly to a Convocation grows As if as Pauls by the Brethrens fautors so the whole Church were like to be an Augaean Stable Well spake Tertullian of their fathers Prescript adv Heres non longè ab initio Scripturas obtendunt hac suâ audacia statim quosdam movent in ipso verò congressu firmos quidem fatigant infirmos capiunt medios cum scrupulo dimittunt They pretend Scripture saith he and by this their confidence they presently move some In disputation they trouble those that are strong they take the weak and send away the middle sort with doubting I conclude that notwithstanding the exceptions of the Brethren the Common-prayer-book as well as the Articles Act for uniformity of Com. prayer is established by Act of Parliament And that therefore If any manner of Parson Vicar or other whatsoever Minister shall preach declare or speak any thing in the derogation or depraving of the said faid Book or any thing therein contained or any part thereof and shall be thereof lawfully convicted shall forfeit c. I have done with the second Head of Objections viz. The establishing of the Liturgy and Worship Subsect 3. Discipline established Object I Come to that against the third the Discipline which they say is not established neither The discipline not establish'd They instance in the Episcopal Courts and Canons the first whereof is Jurisdiction Now the Bishops are of age Answ let them speak for themselves One of them Arch-bishop Whitgift against T. Cartwright Bishops Courts Lord Cant. speech at the censure of Dr. Bastwick c. in the Preface and the greatest in his time doth acknowledge That they exercise their jurisdiction in their Courts by vertue of the Laws and Commissions Royal onely The next in the same rank goes farther and upon occasion of such calumny makes it his suit unto the King and I do humbly in the Churches name desire your Majesty that it may be resolved by all the reverend Judges of England and then published by your Majesty that our keeping Courts and issuing Process in our own names and the like exceptions * Namely by T. Cartwright and others formerly taken and now renewed are not against the Laws of this Realm as 't is most certain they are not Thus far he What can indifferent men desire more then an appeal to all the legal Interpreters the Judges of that Law which they are said to violate and to the supreme Judge and spring-head thereof the King This for their Courts The Canons of the Church K. James As for the Canons Because the King-craft of that Prince which did confirm them as himself calls it is herein question'd as if he understood not what did touch his own prerogative and the Laws for he by his Authority under the Broad Seal confirmed those Canons I shall not take upon me the vindicat●on of so great a Person seeing he hath a Grandson and Successor our present Soveraign to do it for him at whose feet and the Laws I shall let that lie the rather because that point is like very shortly to be determined by publick authority So much for Discipline Subsect 4. Of Government Episcopal THe last is Government Episcopal namely and here 25 Edw. 3. Ann. 1350. Necessity of Reform p. 40. illis adhaeret aqua Themselves acknowledge and cite the Act saying That whereas the holy Church of England was FOVNDED in the estate of PRELACY within the said Realm of England by the said Grandfather Edw. 1. and his Progenitors and the Earls and other Nobles of his said Realm and their Ancestors to inform them and the people in the Law of God c. This then is granted to be according to the constitutions of this Nation Legal which is moreover known to all by this That all Acts of Parliament since that foundation have given the precedency of Baronship unto the Bishops the form usually being The Kings Majesty with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal Object doth enact c. Nay but though Episcopacy was established by Law 17 Car. cap. 1. Office of Episcopacy ceased yet it is not so now For the Act of 17 Car. 1.11 repeating the clause of the Act of 1 Eliz. 1. which instals the Queen and her Successors with power of Ecclesiastical jurisdiction the onely ground of the Bishops authority and jurisdiction Reasons for necessity of Reform p. 51 52 53. and repealing that clause did besides the taking away their Votes in Parliament take also away their power authority and jurisdiction and so the very office it self of Episcopacy whereupon the Ordinance of Lords and Commons makes all their grants void since 17 Car. 1. because then their Office expired Answ 1 For answer first in general That it was neither in the purpose nor to speak as the thing is in the power with due observance be it uttered of either Parliament or Prince to take away the powers which are essential and unseparable from the Crown and Office of a King which we see of right to have belonged and with praise to have been executed not onely in the Scripture both by Jewish and Heathenish Princes as by Nebuchadnezzar by Cyrus Dan. 3.29 Ezr. 6. Jon. 2. by Darius by the King of Ninive c. as well as by David Jehosophat Hezekiah and Josiah but also in the primitive Church by Constantine and Answ 2 others after him Besides we may not conceive the Parliament intended to countervene an express Article of the Confession of this Church Artic. 37. of the Civil Magistrate which having named the Queens Majesty saith Unto whom the chief government of all estates of this Realm whether they be Ecclesiastical or Civil in all causes doth appertain That prerogative which we see to have been given always to all godly Princes in holy Scripture by God himself And in particular that it was not the Answ 3 purpose of the King or the two Houses as then they were to take away the office and ordinary jurisdiction of Episcopacy appears evidently in that the King he asserts it to be a main cause of the war Ei k●● Basilic Med. 9. and of his own calamity for that he would not consent thereunto How oft saith the King was the business of the Bishops injoying their antient places Bishops Votes in Parliam and undoubted privileges in the
not his friend Apollos nor himself neither What is Paul saith he or what is Apollos but the Ministers by whom ye believed 1 Cor. 3.5 That they might learn in them not to think of others above that which is written chap. 4.6 Their idolizing of some had been the occasion of the Apostasie of many His Pupil Austin puts this Lecture into practice who in his writings against the separation of his time the Donatists and others endeavours to undeceive the people and sets down the faults as well as the errors of those Schismaticks One place for all Vnde tantae turbae convivarum ebriosorum innuptarum Aug. contr ep Parmen lib. 3. cap. 3. sed non incorruptarum innumerabilia stupra foeminarum unde tanta turba raptorum avarorum faeneratorum Vnde tam multi per suas quique regiones notissimi tantundem volentes sed non valentes Optati If you be wheat and not chaff saith he whence is it that there is in Optatus the Donatist or Separatist his faction such a crowd of luxurious persons drunkards unmarried but not unmarr'd women innumerable rapes and ravishments whence this throng among you of oppressors of covetous of usurers whence is it that there are so many who are well known in their several Countries to be as curst Cows though they have shorter horns Matth. 7.15.16 But had our Saviour been either understood or believed the ravening Wolves had never crept into the flock in their Sheeps cloathing but they would if observed have been discerned by their fruits interpreted Rending and tearing as was said before being a fruit of thorns and thistles not of the vine or fig-tree St. Paul attributes it to the folly and negligence Rom. 16.17 as well as the charity of the Romans that they did not observe that those who caused divisions amongst them contrary to the doctrine which they had received did but with flattering words and sweet preaching according to Mr. Tindals version deceive the simple and serve their own bellies But yet I must add that distinction here which our Saviour uses in another case I speak not of them all Joh. 6.70 But as the Sea the more it flows on one side the channel the lower it ebbs on the other so the immoderate preferring of some doth necessarily carry with it the undervaluing of and prejudice against others With the contempt of others better oft-times than the former This appeared in the Corinthians and Galatians who by how much the more they doted on their new teachers by so much deeplier were they prejudiced against their old Minister and Apostle Insomuch that he could neither speak nor write but he was taken either for a fool or a mad-man or an enemy 2 Cor. 10.10 chap. 5.13 His speech is contemptible say they And If I be besides my self saith he it is for your consolation implying that they thought so of him And Gal. 4.16 Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth Now the fruit of this evill root in my self was that I did not greatly mind what those of the contrary part either said or wrote Whom if I had piously and considerately heard and read it had in all likelyhood either prevented or recovered my falling sooner Euseb hist lib. 6. cap. 6. But not onely Dionysius in the Historian hath taught us to become boni numularii omnia Probantes quod bonum fuerit retinentes Good mony-changers ' proving all and keeping that which is good But Austin himself also hath informed us that a real adversary to the truth may be read so it be warily and with wisdom Hence it is that he commends the Rules of Tichonius the Donatist unto the reading of all men as we saw already Quod ideo dicendum putavi ut liber ipse legatur à studiosis cautè sanè legendus est Aug. de doctr Christ lib. 3. cap. 30. ad fin non solùm propter quaedam in quibus ut homo erravit sed maximè propter illa quae sicut Donatista haereticus posuit Which I therefore speak saith he that the book it self of Tychonius may be read by the studious so it be warily not only in regard of those things wherein he erred as a man but especially in regard of those which he wrote as a Donatist Job 7.51 But read he might be It was the precipitancy of the old Pharisees condemned by one of themselves when he came to some farther moderation That they condemned and judged a man before they heard what he could say for himself This is that which a Minister of the Gospel above all men should observe so to walk in the very eye of Christ as to do nothing by partiality 1 Tim. 5.21 This Canon therefore was transgressed 6. Cause Want of due reverence to the Church and State 1. In general 6. As the wisdom of Law-givers is seen not onely in the matter but the order also of their Laws so the Lord with great prudence placed that Precept first in the second Table of his Laws from whence directly or occasionally the observation of the rest depend Honor thy father and thy mother The true exposition of which is contained in the first rudiments to be instilled into children but through that neglect we want the efficacy of it being men yea and Teachers also viz. A neglect Catechism in the Book of Common-Prayer duly and heartily to honor and obey the King and his Ministers To submit our selves to all our governors teachers spiritual pastors c. That is a default in my reverence to the Church and Common-wealth with the Governors of both was another and an eminent cause of my prevaricating For the transgression of which commandment as I deprived my self of the promise annexed so incurred I the threatning implyed so that had it not been for the rich mercy of God and clemency of others my days might not have been so long in the land of the living as they have Although I committed nothing by Law criminal Isa 8.20 To the ' Law and to the Testimony saith the Prophet Which is not to be restrained to the Scriptures onely though so meant there but unto all expressions of the wisdom goodness and government of Almighty God toward men declared in the Laws which are nothing else but as I may so speak copies of those Attributes and of Gods eternal Law the first Original Hence the disobedience unto the Legitimate Governors Administrators and Expounders of the Law of God is made Rebellion against himself and a presumptuous sin by the Lord in Moses And in particular Deut. 17.2 In particular 1. Our own Church R. Hook Eccles Pol. l. 5. § 71. touching the Church the Laws Governors and body of it That speech of one doth not want its weight as none of his did As becometh them that follow in all humility the ways of peace we honor reverence and obey in the
very next degree unto God the voice of the Church of God wherein we live And they whose wits are too glorious to fall to so low an ebb they that have risen and swollen so high that the banks of ordinary Rivers are unable to keep them in they whose wanton contentions in the causes whereof we have spoken do make all where they go a Sea even they at their highest float may be constrained both to see and grant that what their fancy will not yield to like their judgments cannot with reason condemn Thus he Which is not spoken to put the spirit of bondage and blind belief but the spirit of Sonship and Adoption into mens breasts in order to the Church the spirit of filial and child-like not of slavish obedience This for the Church Then touching the Laws of our Nation 2. The Laws of this Nation it is to be observed that there is so great a sacredness upon them that the Apostles both Intermination and Prediction hath ever been verified Rom. 13.2 that from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot as the Prophet speaks the violation and resisting of them and the legitimate Governors by them hath proved a resistance of the Ordinance of God and they that have so done have received unto themselves judgment from the Lord for neglecting of his good and wholesome Laws In the Act for uniformity of Common-Prayer As the Parliament phraseth it Neither is this spoken in treachery to civil liberties or to make men slaves but subjects The Laws of these Kingdoms by an admirable temperament give very much to subjects liberty and happiness and yet reserve enough to the Majesty and Prerogative of any King who owns his people as subjects Eikon Basil M dit 27. not as slaves Says his late Majesty As implying that the reverence of the Laws preserves both the People from Rebellion and the Prince from Tyranny and both from ruine Memorable to this purpose is the counsel of that pious and peaceable man Dr. Sibs in a book of his which a * M● H. Ward The first he counted A Treatise on Rom. 8. intituled Christ opened c. Dr. Sibs Souls Const ct Edit 1st viz. 1635. pag. 364. great wit counted the second next the Scripture as to the argument it treats on he might perhaps have said the first The Doctors words are The Laws under which we live are particular determinations of the Law of God and therefore ought to be a rule unto us so far as they reach Law being the joynt reason and consent of many men for publick good hath an use for the guidance of all actions that fall under the same Where it dashes not against Gods Law what is agreeable to Law is agreeable to conscience Thus he Which passage as it seems was not a present truth or not a truth for the present times and therefore some did evirate geld alter and enervate into this in the following Editions unless mended in the later viz. The Laws under which we live are particular determinations of the Laws of God in some things of the second Table That which he laid down generally they put a double restriction upon First to the second Table Again to some things onely therein Then they add an instance which though it illustrates the Text yet is it not in the first Edition viz. For example says the following Editions The Law of God says Exact no more than what is thy due but what in particular is thy due and what another mans the Laws of men determine Thus far the Addition Now this wound being received by the Doctor in the house of his friends A wound received by Dr. Sibs in the house of his friend Zech. 13.6 for so I understand and when scarce cold in his grave and his books being in the hands of all men what may we think Authors more antient in the hands of enemies and re-published have met withal Wherein we are the more to observe the providence of God who hath made the Jews and Turks Capsarios nostros Aug. Enarrat Psal 40. as St. Austin speaks the faithful keepers of our Libraries 7. 7. Cause Not weighing Causes so much as Persons and Appendixes But the more immediate spring of this irregular motion was the reflecting on persons on both sides and some appendant and concomitant things as was noted above rather then unpartial weighing the causes themselves as denuded of all Patrons Concomitants and Appendixes viz. What ground of the war what plea for Independency The fallacy was by arguing à non causa ad causam and not applying solid Logick to sound Divinity St. Austins offer to his adversary is good advice Cont. Maximin A●ian lib. 3. cap. 14. Scripturarum authoritatibus non quorumvis propriis sed utrisque communibus testibus res cum re causa cum causa ratio cum ratione concertet Let matter saith he contend with matter cause with cause reason with reason by authority of Scripture which may not be proper to one side but common unto both I am clear One cause of the miscarriage in the late differences Jam. 2.1 that this hath imposed on many on both sides and in both causes viz. that men have had the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ in respect of persons or at the least of consequences and have eye● more the persons engaged or wh●t might be the issue of things than the matters themselves Rom. 3.8 But the Apostle prohibits a disproportion between the means and the end We ' must not do evil that good may come thereof Fiat justitia ruat coelum Plutarch in vita Aristid n. 609. We must do what is right though heaven and earth go together The Athenians though Heathen yet in a certain case they rejected the counsel of Themistocles though useful to the Common-wealth because it was not honest It was the occasion of the first sin in the world Respect of person for it was in gratiam uxoris Gen. 3. for the pleasing of his wife in all likelihood But our esteem of persons is best directed by the original rule And there prima secundae the first commandment with promise is that we honor our father and mother but which especiallv the Father of our c untry and the Mother of our Christianity The King and the Church And for effects and consequences Matth. 7.16 our Saviours and the Apo●●les Philosophy and Logick for * Contr. Crescon lib. 1. cap. 14 cap. 17. Austin proves them to have used both would have directed us to make that a vine and not a thorn whereof we expect grapes Gal. 6.7 If we sow to the flesh and act on earthly grounds we shall from it reap corruption I conclude this with that of the wise-man Prov. 23.26 My son give me thy heart that 's the end And let thine eyes observe my ways there 's the means chap. 4.27 Let thine
the Kingdom Dec. 15. 1642. was the fountain of all the following mischiefs The very first line is Your Majesties most humble and loyal subjects the Lords and Commons in Parliament assembled Next the Oathes of Allegiance and Supremacy do declare That the Kings Majesty is the onely Supream Governor of this Realm over all persons and in all causes 2. Oathes of Supremacy and Allegiance 3 Eliz. cap. 1. Kings Answer to the Remonstrance of May 26. 1642. Remonstr of Lords and Commons Nov. 2. 1642. Ecclesiastical and Temporal and of all other his Dominions and Countries Yea and every Parliament-man before he can sit is bound by Law to swear them Now this is not answered in my judgment by a saying out of a Private * Fleta lib. 1. cap. 17. de justitiariis substituendis Lawyer that Rex habet in populo regendo superiores legem per quam factus est curiam suam videlicet Comites Barones And by that other that Rex est major singulis but minor universis For the former Author hath that sentence and words out of Bracton who hath several times also the quite contrary as shall appear Again It is against the tenor and current of Law and Lawyers and the known practise of the Nation Thirdly It may bear an other interpretation namely understanding the Law either of God who makes Kings Prov. 8. or of men made with the Kings consent whereunto he hath voluntarily obliged himself from which at first he might be free And by the superiority of his Court their legal jurisdiction conferred on them by his approbation for decision of ordinary controversies that may fall betwixt himself and his Subjects but not simply his superiors first because he calls it His Court now the owner is greater than the thing owned as such Again else the Earls and Barons were the superior power to the King Fourthly This refers not at all to the House of Commons whereof neither Fleta nor his Author Bracton in this sentence make any mention Again secondly the Oathes of Supremacy and Allegiance and the style the Parliament speak in of his Majesties loyal and humble subjects the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament Remonstr Nov. 2. 1642. are not answered by saying that this of supream head and governor over all persons Object in all causes is meant of singular persons rather than of Courts or of the collective Body of the whole Kingdom And that it is meant in Curia not in Camera in his Courts not in his private Capacity and properly onely in his high Court of Parliament wherein and wherewith his Majesty hath supream Power For first Answ 1 The Oathes speak comprehensively both of Persons and Causes over all and in all So again the style of humble and obedient subjects is spoken as from them as the two Houses of Parliament for so they say assembled in Parliament Now if Subjects then and there sure Soveraigns or associates in Soveraignty they cannot be the terms in the same respect are contradictory Thirdly If the King be acknowledged to be the fountain of justice as the Law and Lawyers say he is of which anon then both Laws and Courts flow from him and thence are called his Laws his Courts and so ordine naturae dignitatis both in nature and dignity must be before and above both His splendor is in his Courts but his Supremacy not onely there but in his person also from whence it was derived to his Courts For there must be a First in nature either the King or his Courts and if they be His Courts then he made them and therefore in esse naturae before them Neither doth it hence follow as is there inferred Object That then the King may over-rule all his Courts Ibid. even the Parliament it self and so the goodly frame of Government should soon be dissolved and Arbitrary power brought in Answ For the King having both consented and sworn to the Laws and to the maintaining the jurisdiction of his Courts acting according to those Laws is not now in that respect sui juris and arbitrary in Government but obliged both to God and man to act by Laws and to preserve his Courts unviolate But if any Court shall assume a greater power than the King and Law hath given them or act in opposition to that power from whom they had their being whilst he doth not openly reject all Laws and Government much less when he doth rationally together with as many or more both of Lords and Commons though excluded the formality of being in such a place judge that he acts according to Law in the main of his proceedings In such case and in such actings they are not such a Court nor are not authorised with power from above but act excentrically and as private persons unto whom the Declaration grants the King to be superior As the Army having received Commission from the two Houses of Parliament afterward turned their Arms against them which they could not do by their Commission as also a great fautor of their proceedings since then spake in my hearing God thereby perhaps representing to the Houses by the Army their own failings toward their Superior And the Armies reasoning was on the like principles viz. That they were entrusted with power for the Kingdoms preservation and that the Parliament degenerating they must not see the Kingdom perish Object 3 Neither may it be received that if the Parliament may take account of what is done by his Majesty in his inferiour Courts Ibid. much more of what is done by him without the authority of any Court For to speak properly the Parliament takes account not of the Kings actions or authority in his Courts but of his Officers and of their administration of that authority and this also by the Kings consent established by Law whereby they are enabled so to do Or to speak yet more properly The Parliament that is the King Lords and Commons for the Parliament is not without the King as being the Head of it but without and in opposition unto him and the Laws they do not take such cognizance Again for that saying That they might much more take account of the Kings actions that are done without the authority of any Court meaning the great administration of Justice and the raising of Arms Seeing no Court is superior to its Author the King therefore no Court can give authority to him but he to them nor can they call him to account for then they were his superiors and had the Regal Power and himself should be no King as is expresly affirm'd in Mr. St. John's speech against Ship-mony of which afterward Humbly represent to him they may his miscarriages and punish his Ministers so it may be done without sedition and assuming the Sword which is inseparable from the Supreme Power Lastly How can this be assented unto that because when the Title is dubious Ibid. pag. ult he is
adds Ejurationem spontalem excipio de qua nulla inter mortales dubitatio which I need not English Bilson of Subj Rebel part 3. edit Lond. 1586. pag. 276 280. because for substance the same is delivered before him by our own Bishop of Winchester I must confess saith he that except the Laws of those Realms do permit the people to stand on their right if the Prince would offer that wrong I dare not allow their arms Cases may fall out even in Christian Kingdoms where the people may plead their right against the Prince and not be charged with rebellion Phil. As when for example Theop. If the Prince should go about to subject his Kingdom to a forreign Realm or change the form of the Common-wealth from Empery to Tyranny or neglect the Laws established by common consent of Prince and People to execute his own pleasure In these and other cases which might be named if the Nobles and Commons joyn together to defend their antient and accustomed Liberty Regiment and Laws they may not well be counted Rebels I never denyed that the people might preserve the foundation But part 3. pag. 144. he saith It is the Popes Divinity that Princes have their power from the people which he saith they have from God freedom and form of their Common-wealth which they fore-prised when they first consented to have a King I never said That Kingdoms and Common-wealths might not proportion their States as they thought best by their publick Laws which afterward the Princes themselves may not violate In Kingdoms where Princes bear rule by the sword Princes will we do not mean the Princes private will against his Laws but his Precept derived from his Laws and agreeing with his Laws which though it be wicked yet may not be resisted of any subject with armed violence Mary when Princes offer their subjects not justice but force and despise all Laws to practise their lusts Not every nor any private man may take the sword to redress the Prince But if the LAWS of the land appoint the nobles as next to the King to assert him in doing right and with-hold him from doing wrong Note If the Laws appoint THEN be they licensed by mans LAW and so not prohibited by Gods to interpose themselves for safeguard of equity and innocency and by all lawful and needful means to procure the Prince to be reformed but in no case deprived Note Not disinherit where the Scepter is inherited But he explains himself further in the very next page viz. That he meant still according unto Law The rest of the Nobles saith he that did assist them the King of Navarre and the Prince of Conde against the King of France if it were the Kings act that did oppress them and not the Guises Note except the LAWS of the land do permit them means to save the State from open tyranny I wi●l not excuse And * part 3. pag. 144. elsewhere I will not saith he examine the Popes Divinity Zachary in his answer to the German Legates Aventin lib. p. 299. wherein he saith the people create their King and the people may when the cause so requireth forsake their King 't is you see the Popes Doctrine I will not saith he examine the Popes Divinity in that he saith Princes have their powers of the people which the Scripture saith they have of God And before part 2. p. m. 328. This is the Supremacy which we attribute to Princes that all men within their territories should obey their Laws or abide their pleasure and that no man on earth hath authority to take their Swords from them by Judicial sentence or Martial violence Howsoever as I said ☜ those things before may be so in Thesi and the matter absolutely considered yet being excited by the fruits to view all the roots again I cannot satisfie my conscience that in Hypothesi and in particular hîc and nunc Note Mr. Pyms speech at the charge of the Earl of Strasford pag. m. 5. Protection and Alleg. 1. Parliament Testimony Remonstr of the state of the Kingdom Novemb. 15. 1641. pag. 26. 1. Bills p●ss'd by the King the case was such with us at the beginning of the war And if there had been any urgency to any of those cases yet Mr. Pym whom all men know was no passionate Royallist saith If you take away the protection of the King the vigour and cheerfulness of Allegiance will be taken away though the OBLIGATION remain Protection then and Allegiance are not such correlatives as that they do se mutuò ponere tollere as some would have But to return That the case was not so with us and that this may appear to have been no groundless conceit of my own I produce the two Houses of Lords and Commons We acknowledge say they with much thankfulness that his Majesty hath passed more good Bills to the advantage of the subjects than have been in MANY AGES This for the matter of concessions pag. 23. 2. Security to the Subject Next for the Security hear them again The discontinuance of Parliaments is prevented by a Bill for Trìiennial Parliaments and the abrupt dissolution of this Parliament by another Bill by which it is provided it shall not be dissolved or adjourn without the consent of both Houses Which two Laws well considered may be thought more advantagious than ALL the former because they SECURE a full operation of the present remedy and afford a PERPETVAL spring of remedies for the future Thus the Parliament Sir Benjamin Rudyard his testimony Now secondly That these considerations did then wo●k strongly upon the hearts of some of their own Members against engaging in the War may be seen by a speech printed of Sr. Benjamin Rudyards In h●s Ep●st●e Dedicat●ry to him of one of his Tr●ctates among the rest of Mr. Rous's works to whose worth and piety Mr. Francis Rous a member also gives upon his own long and intimate knowledge a very high elogy He in that speech in the House of Commons July the 9. Anno 1642. page 2. saith Mr. Speaker I am touched I am pierced with an apprehension of the honor of the House and success of Parliament The best way to give a stop to these desperate immenent mischiefs Sir B njamin Rudyard his speech in Parliament is to make a fair way for the KING 's RE●VRN hither it will likewise give best satisfaction to the people and will be our best justification And again page 3. Note If any man could have credibly told us 1 that within three years you shall have a Parliament 2 that Ship-mony shall be taken away by an Act of Parliament 1. Acts passed the reasons and grounds of it so rooted out as that neither it nor any thing like it can ever grow up again 3 That Monopolies 4 the High-commission Court 5 the Star-chamber 6 the Bishops Votes shall be taken
the Clerk of the Market the compulsion of subjects to receive Knighthood are by other beneficial Laws reformed Many excellent Laws and provisions are in preparation which they there enumerate Then a little before they say The discontinuance of Parliament is prevented by a Bill for a Triennial Parliament and the abrupt dissolution of this by another Bill Whence they truly collect and profess pag. 26. We acknowledge with much thankfulness that h●s Majesty hath passed more good Bills to the advantage of the subject than have been in MANY ages Thus they Now were not the former failings of Government sufficiently remedied and the fear of future is acknowledged here to be secured and prevented No ground then of the War for what was passed Come we to the second K●ngs preparation for war The Kings preparations for War he saith they were first they the contrary if it be hard to determine perhaps it is not greatly material seeing they were very near one the other and that argued both jealousie I say a jealousie of intentions to destroy each the other and actings to prevent it Now take it at the worst that the King prepared first which yet doth not appear yet considering that he having granted all the former Acts acknowledged to amend the past and secure the future and they not satisfying but high demandings and declarations still and actings in his conscience no doubt he did as in reason he might apprehend intentions in some to destroy the Government as it hath since come to pass and the Laws of the Nation he might be induced thereunto by a consideration of his duty and doubtless was seeing no other way though often tryed would prevail The motions of the Houses and specially of the Commons did give occasion to him to think of securing the Liberties from such intrenchings 3. Not yielding the Militia c. Touching the last His not granting that Petition and giving way to the Militia and rendring up those who adhered to him and returning to London and concurring with the Houses and disbanding his forces and recalling his Commissions of Array and others Military The rendring of the Militia had been to depose himself of Soveraignty whose especial ensign and security is the power of the Sword His giving up those who adhered to him 1 Sam. 11. had in appearance been to send Uriah for his faithful service to his enemies To return to London was to object him to those temptations which he could not nor perhaps any Prince ought to hazard himself unto unless more effectual order had been taken to prevent both contumely and danger which is a truth howsoever flighted To concur with the Houses at this time had been to have given up at once both his safety and conscience The recalling his Commissions and disbanding his Forces unless both themselves had done so too and also had declared their repentance for their provocations of him had been to strip both himself and Kingdom of necessary defence against those whom he had cause to think would invade both as it proved afterward So that by high and extraordinary actings to provoke the King to like undertakings and then to raise Arms because he would not desert them without security is as if one should by assault provoke a man to draw his sword and then fight him because he will not put it up again and stand to mercy 4. No Law alleadged for the war in particular But a fundamental error it was in that declaration that held out the grounds of the war That no particular Law was alledg'd to enable them to that way of securing the Nation For granting all to be as was suggested yet onely id possumus quod jure possumus Rom. 3. We may not do evil as all actings above our sphere is that good may come of it This should have been the chief ground for conscience to rest upon Kings Proclamation from York Jun. 18. 1642. forbidding levying of Soldiers Whereas on the contrary the King alledges divers particular Laws for his bearing of the Sword as also examples of men that have upon necessity some real some pretended taken the Sword and though they have done service to the King and Common-wealth by it have been forc'd to obtain their pardon There is no need here to name particulars the constant practise in the Nation justifying the Kings sole bearing of the sword Now to come to an issue The issue of the Quest The King as much fears the ruine of the Laws and himself as the two Houses do the Liberties and themselves and their grounds we will suppose though not grant are equal The King is in possession and by Law entrusted with the Sword to protect both The two Houses produce none Then sure as this should have prevented resistance then so especially taking in what hath followed ought it to provoke repentance now And thus much in answer to the fourth Motive SECT III. Answer to the fifth Motive Examples I Come now to the last viz. The Examples in Scripture and in latter times together with the approbation of such Examples by our Princes and Bishops above alledg'd To all which I answer first in general Isa 10 That we must apply our selves first unto the Law and to the Testimony if they speak not according to this rule there is no light in them to guide us by And that in Examples the greatest of all is the Captain of our Salvation Matth. 22. who ever did precept and practice to give unto Cesar the things that were Cesars yea Matth. 17. ult for peace-sake to give him that which was not his from some All other examples we must so follow 1 Cor. 11.1 as they follow him Matth. 26.52 now he forbad to resist for they that take the sword shall perish by the sword namely if such to whom the sword is not committed The Sword which must needs be the supreme Magistrate the sword being the Ensign of supreme power Rom. 13. Hence that of the Apostle The higher powers bear not the sword for nought they then are they who bear the sword This in general 2. David But in particular 1. David's retaining a few men to guard himself being design'd King from the violence of private men and from the sudden and passionate assaults of Saul's distemper and malice fleeing and not fighting such as was the Prophet Elisha his holding the Kings messenger at the door 2 Reg. 6.32 who saw the King coming to change his sentence 1 Sam. 14.45 Also the peoples rescuing of Jonathan not by any set contest or battel but by a friendly kind of violence And the Priests thrusting Vzziah being leprous 2 Chron. 26.20 out of the Temple but not resisting any of his Regal precepts or such forcible impressions All these and such like are ridiculous-parallels to the raising of an Army and managing of a War For though these examples shew that
superbiam quemadmodum digni sunt Dei justo judicio in omnibus supervenienti By whose command saith he men are born by the same command Kings are constituted fit for those who in each time are to be governed by them Some of them are given for the amendment and profit of their subjects and preservation of Justice but some for terrour and punishment and rebuke and some for mockery and contumely and pride according as men deserve the just judgment of God prevailing in all things Thus he by which he implies prayer and patience but no resistance Tertullian likewise Apologet. cap. 30. cap. 33. cap. 37. A quo sunt secundi Reges post quem Deum primi ante omnes super omnes Deos. From whom God they Kings are second after whom they are first before all and above all Gods that is above all inferiour Magistrates In a word we may see the sense of Antiquity in this point in him Instit l. 3. c. 3. § 10. Aug. Contr. Faust lib. 22. cap. 75. from whom Calvin would have us learn it in all viz. S. Austin Ordo naturalis hoc poscit ut suscipiendi belli Anthoritas penes principem sit exequendi autem ministerium milites debeant Natural order saith he requires this that the Authority of undertaking war be in the power of the Prince but that the souldiers owe the service of execution and management And that they wanted not either number or strength one of the former Authours gives us assurance Tertul. Apologet cap. 37. Si enim hostes extraneos non tantum vindices occultos agere vellemus deesset nobis res numerorum copiarum If we would saith he become open enemies and not secret revengers would there be wanting to us the force either of number or Armies And so shews that the Christians filled all places insomuch that should they but have withdrawn themselves only from the rest of men they should have made a desolation in the world And thus of the Primitive Christians * Anticavalierism 7. Reformed Churches So vain is it to say that Tertullian was mistaken in their number 7. In the last place come we to the examples of the Reformed Churches particularly those of France and Holland who are said to have defended themselves by arms as we have done defended by our Writers and owned by our Princes For Answer First we are to note that though perhaps it should be granted that it may be lawful in some cases for oppressed subjects to call for help unto other Foraign and lawful power because these powers are coordinate with their own in respect of degree and dignity and in such case there is no violation of order by the rising up of the inferiour against his Prince But secondly they were neither defended by our Writers Difference of Subject and Rebel part 3. pag. 279. Ed. Lond. 1586. nor patronized by our Princes farther then the Laws and their case as represented by them did allow If the Laws of the Land saith Dr. Bilson speaking of the French the Scottish and the Holland Civil wars do not permit them to guard their lives when they are assaulted with unjust force against law we will never excuse them from rebellion And a little after for my part I must confess saith he that except the Laws of those Realms do permit the people to stand on their right if the Prince would offer that wrong I dare not allow their arms And another treating of the same example saith Quarum injuriarum atrocitates Abbot de Antichrist cap. 7. n. 5 6. occasionem fortè dederunt bello civili dum vim vi propulsant tantummodo qui contra jus fasque indignissimè habiti id sibi per patrias LEGES licere judicarunt The horribleness of which injuries saith he peradventure gave occasion to the Civil war whilst they do only repell force by force and who contrary to all right and equity were treated most unworthily and did judge that they might do so by the Laws of their Country And again Hîc verò politica res agitur quid principi juris in subditos per leges cujusque Reip. fundatrices permissum sit The question here saith he is matter of Civil policy viz. What power the Prince hath over his subjects by the fundamental Laws of each Common-wealth So that we see they defended these actions of the Protestants abroad so far only as they were legal This for their cause But as to ours the former Authour shews it to be different The German Emperour saith he is elected and his power abated by the liberties of the Princes Bils of Subj and Rebel part 3. p. 277. But the Queen of England hath one and the same right over all her subjects be they NOBLES or others You see he makes our cause and case Kings of Engl laws and allegiance to differ from the former CHAP. VII Reply to certain general Reasons for the War Scripture and Reason for defence of Arms a Book so called AND now to draw towards an end of this first point the War The defences made in the justification of the War they are of three sorts from Scripture from Law and from Reason Those from Scripture and Law have been replyed to before SECT I. Law TO those from Reason laid down in the Book quoted in the Margin a seven fold errour more especially hath miscarried the Authours though men otherwise of Learning and Piety first in mistaking the word Law They seem to take the word Law to signifie only the agreements pactions and rules established by mutual consent betwixt Prince and people and make this only to be the ground of subjection and of commanding So that what is beyond it is no way obligatory either to be performed or suffered under farther then necessity and the want of power to resist doth enforce But they forget that there is another and superiour Law viz. that of God's Soveraignty oftentimes appointing an Invader or an Usurper or a Tyrant to rule for the punishment of a people Whose will only is the Law and whom God will have obeyed by all subjects in things lawful and not resisted in things unlawful So he appointed Nebuchadnezzar Jer. 25.15 not onely to rule over the Jews but over all the Nations there mentioned and they are enjoyned to obedience unto him So Hos 13.11 Hos 13.11 Jeroboam and the following Kings over the ten Tribes in his wrath as himself saith or even over all Israel as Saul who is understood to be pointed at in that Text. And of their Kings 't is expresly said they should onely be able to cry out in that day which by their practise 1 Sam. 8.18 may be understood that they should be allowed to do no other For else why joyned they not with David or why did not David himself resist him but always fled from him And the punishment of all those subjects that rebelled in the
1● Quis non his pollicitationibus non alliceretur praesertim adolescentis animus cupidus veri Who would not have been inveigled with these promises especially the mind of a young man thirsty for truth As Austin once of himself in refeference unto the Manichees SECT IV. Of the Contents of Independency and in particular of the second and third of them viz. congregation and non subjection The Ingredients of Indep coll g ble out of the Apologetic Narration of the 5. Br. BUt to come neerer and to particulars There are three things in Independency especially First separation viz. from full and constant fellowship and communion with the Parochial Assemblies Secondly Congregation or collecting and constituting themselves into another body Lastly Independency and assuming or usurping of intire Ecclesiastical power into that body so as to be judicially and of right subject unto none other which is the esse and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Independency Of the two latter viz. Congregation and non subjection I shall speak here because I shall have occasion of much more large Discourse about the former namely separation And now for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that they do so congregate that is visible for they do by a certain covenant constitute themselves into a distinct body And that they arrogate an Independency also Apologet. Narrat pag. 23. although in words they reject the name saying That proud and insolent title of Independency was affixed unto us yet in as much as they do in terminis affirm first that any other particular Church hath only power to declare non communion with an offending Church pag. 19. Secondly that a Classis or combination of Churches have no juridical power over any particular one Pag. 15. pag. 17. Thirdly that the Magistrates power is of another nature though of use over the Church doth it not follow They also rightly denying a Catholick visible Church unavoidably that as a Church and as to Ecclesiastical jurisdiction they depend on none and therefore are Independent That therefore such they are as to congregating and Independing is beyond all contradiction Now then for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and their grounds why they are so to shew the unsufficiency of them or which is all one that they ought not so to do is the next thing to be evidenced And 't is not so hard nor needs so long a proof if we consider their own grounds already yeilded and the unlawfulness of separation which shall the Lord assisting be cleared in the consequent and which themselves also seem to damn For we had likewise the fatal miscarriages and shipw●a●ks of the separation say they as Land-marks to forewarn us of those rocks and shelves they ran upon Apologetic Narrat pag. 5. And would God it had done it for the Independents have split upon the very same divisions First then for their concessions If it be true that all that conscience of the defilements say they we conceived to cleave to the true worship of God in them pag. 6. Concessions of Independents against Independency or of the unwarranted power in Church Governours exercised therein did never work in us any other thought much less opinion but that multitudes of the Assemblies and Parochial Congregations thereof were the true Churches and body of Christ and the Ministry thereof a true Ministry Then doubtless first their habitual Separation from such though in some acts rarely they did communicate with some of them was ipso facto unlawful and a Schisme evident This the foundation falling their superstructure of congregating into a body and binding themselves to that society which implies a constant renunciation of the former Churches is as drunkenness to thirst and their arrogating of a self-sufficient and independent power is as the fastening their iniquity with cords of vanity So that there seems no more needful for this place then that ex ore tuo serve nequam Matth. 25. out of thy own mouth thou shalt be judged Dost thou confess that notwithstanding any defilements in the worship any usurpation in the Church-Governours any pag. 6. mixture in the Congregations that yet multitudes of them were the true Churches and body of Christ and wilt thou separate thy self constantly and draw others from the true body of Christ Joh. 15. Are not the branches when broken off from the true Vine cut off from the * Quicquid à matrice discesserit seorsim vivere spirari non poterit substantian salutis amittit Cypr. de Simplic prolator p. edit Erasm 1520. 173. juice sap and life of the tree must they not needs wither and in the end be gathered to be burned I end this with that knock of the Hammer of this headless Schism for they are Independent St. Austin Hoc ergo Ticho●ius cùm vehementer copioseque dissereret ora contradicentium multis magnis ac manifestis sanctarum scripturarum testimoniis oppilaret non vidit quod consequenter videndum fuit Parmenianus autem ceterique Donatistae viderunt hoc esse consequens maluerunt suscipere obstinatissimum animum adversus apertissimam veritatem quam eâ concessâ superari ab Africanus Ecclesiis Aug. contr Ep. Parm. l. 1. c. 1. Independents This that the Church was not in Africk onely 1. their Inconsiderateness but diffused through the whole world when as Ticonius had earnestly and copiously discoursed and by many weighty and evident arguments of the holy Scriptures stopt the mouthes of the gain-sayers yet did not see that which by consequence did clearly follow 2. Or their Obstinacy On the other side Parmenian and the rest of the Donatists the separation saw the consequence and would rather assume a most stubborn resolution against manifest truth than by yielding to it be overcome of the African I may add in reference to those we speak of the English Churches But secondly toward satisfaction unto others if not to them What kind of Independency is here condemned I must explain my self All Independency of Churches is not denyed For then we must condemn the Church of England and other reformed who do not act as acknowledging any superior body on whom they do depend But according to the confession of this Church every particular or National Church Artic. 34. hath authority to ordain change and abolish Ceremonies or rites of the Church ordain'd onely by mans authority so that all things be done to edifying So Article 57 The Queens Majesty hath the chief power unto whom the chief government of all estates of of this Realm in all causes doth appertain and ought not to be subject to any foreign jurisdiction It speaks of causes Ecclesiastical Vindiciae Catholicae or the Rights of particular Christian Churches asserted Which kind of Independency I have elsewhere sufficiently if I mistake not vindicated But the Independency here opposed is that whereby Christians being before incorporated as members
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 high detonations and thundrings Of it what the Antients thought we shall hear from Austin Aug. contr Epist Parm. l. 3. c. 2. Consilia separationis inauia sunt pernitiosa atque sacrilega quia impia superba sunt Thoughts saith he of separation are vain and pestilent yea sacrilegious because they are ungodly and presumptuous Tom. 7. part 1. And one half of a whole Tome of his is on this Argument 2. But more especially Five things in the Church pretended as grounds of separation There are five things in the Church from whence there might be pretended ground of separation viz. the Doctrine the Worship the Assemblies the Discipline and the Government Now there are against them Exceptions both general and particular First generally in no less than seven accusations First that many things in ●hem are unnecessary 1. General exceptions against them Secondly inconvenient and of ill consequence to the Church Thirdly for their rise but human inventions Or fourthly at the best but Apocryphal not Scriptural Yea fifthly Popish superstitions and taken out of the Mass-book Moreover sixthly such as are not established by the Laws of this Church and Nation Seventhly and lastly that there is an engagement for the removing or reforming of them all in the late Solemn League and Covenant I might for answer unto all these as also to the particular exceptions against any of the premises and the matter of them refer the Reader unto that elaborate and in my judgment unanswerable work of the learned Hooker In which Argument I may truly say of him Prefat in Ecles polit n. 2. as he doth of Calvin in reference to his Commentaries and Institutions viz. In which whosoever after him bestowed their labour he gained the advantage of prejudice against them if they gain-said and of glory above them if they consented So fully hath he therein vindicated the Worship and Discipline of this Church Colon. in Compend Calv. Inst in prefat And therefore Quem tu studiosa juventus Nocturnâ versate manu versate diurnâ To be commended to the diligent perusal of all that love the peace of this Jerusalem But because new pens must be apposed to Neoterick Opponents and my Argument engages me I shall speak something SECT I. Unnecessary TO begin with the first viz. That many things in them are unnecessary For answer Answ It should be considered that 't is easie for private men Private men and those in a lower station to mistake in judging of the motions of superior Orbs and Intelligences A man that stands upon the Watch-tower and such are publick persons sees what those should do who are beneath him Ezek. 3.17 and what is necessary better than a wiser man that is below The reason is that men of inferior place are not assisted with the advantage of so much information with the presence and general view of so many things nor ordinarily with that measure of the Spirit as being to act both in a narrower and a lower sphere which God doth usually Publick persons and as it were pro formâ communicate unto men of higher place who for the good of mankind and of his Church doth commonly furnish men according to the places he calleth them unto 1 S●m 10.6 Saul being appointed King was forthwith indued with another spirit So the High Priest that crucified the Lord Jesus Joh. 11.51 uttered a mysterious and most precious Oracle touching the extent of the death of Chr●st for all the children of God scattered abroad in all Nations And 't is expressly added Being the High priest that year as representing the cause And a divine sentence saith Solomon is in the mouth of the King Prov. 16.10 his lips do not transgress in judgment Now if he assisted the former and such like How much more then is he the Author of those Laws injoyning what is necessary in his Church which have been made by his Saints indued further with the heavenly grace of his Spirit and directed as much as might be with such instructions R Hook Eccles pol. lib. 3. sect 9. as his sacred Wo●d doth yield saith my Author And I may add and several of whom have laid down their lives for his truth SECT II. Inconvenient and of ill consequence A Second general Exception against the premises is that they are Inconvenient and of evil consequence first scandalous to the weak occasions of silencing able Ministers and of troubling many good people To the first Answ Scandal what Rom. 14.21 13. 1 Cor. 8.9 scandal is not that which some persons may be offended at but properly that which makes our brother to offend and stumble as it is implicitely described by the Apostle Now the things we speak of are for the keeping of them from falling and in the right way If any will censure before he see and understand the matter we must object unto them the Apostles own practise who did bo●h circumcise Act. 16.3 with Gal. 2.3 5. and refuse also to circumcise yea and sacrifice too as he saw it made for more general edification Though it could not be without offence to some both Jews and Gentiles Act. 21.26 and seem'd unto them scandalous insomuch that the Apostles at Jerusalem perswaded him to use certain of the legal Ceremonies and to sacrifice for the satisfying of some that were so prejudiced against him To the second 2. Able Ministers silenced That the premises are occasions that some able Ministers not conforming are silenced They must remember that it is not the goodness of the timber nor bigness of the piece that makes it useful for the building but its fitness If it be knotty or crooked or otherwise unproportionable a less and of meaner stuff may do better When the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 11. that certain Ministers were transformed into Angels of light doth he not imply that they were men both of parts great and piety very specious and yet for the rents that they made in the Churches calleth them the ministers of Satan and else-where wisheth Gal. 5. that they were cut off It is not the skill of a soldier nor his courage but his obedience unto government that makes him capable of an Office Metall without breaking makes the Horse to cast h●s Rider And St. Austin Contra Parmen l. 1. c. 1. when he commends Tichonius the Donatist as hominem acri ingenio praeditum uberi eloquio himself a man in●ued with a sharp wit and fluent eloquence Rom. 16 1● would not yet have had him his Colleague at Hippo for men by sweet preaching as was noted before may cause such divisions in the Church that the brethren may be warned to beware of them And it will lie at their own and not at the Churches dore if their Talent have been wrapped up in a napkin And it had been better both for this Church and Nation
of the other Ubi videbat cruentum facinus Idem ibid. cap. 1. ibi rursum timebat reatum perjurii Ne Deum offenderet pe●erando Deum offendit saeviendo Where he saw a bloody villany there he feared the guilt of perjury and lest he should offend God by forswearing there he offended God by cruel murdering saith the same Author Subsect 2. What the Covenant obligeth to THus far hath been shewen that the Covenant in reference to the performance of the contents of it bindeth not Yet doth it bind and oblige very strongly For Ecce sanctus David non quidem juratus sanguinem hominis fudit sed eum falsum jurasse negare quis poterit de duobus peccatis elegit mi●us sed minus fuit illud in conparatione majoris Nam per seipsum appensum magnum malum est falsa juratio Behold holy David Aug. ubi supra cap. 3. he would not shed a mans blood though he had sworn it But who can deny but that he was forsworn of two evils he chose the least It was indeed the least in comparison of the greater but else of it self false swearing is a great sin Saith the same St. Austin Now great sins do bind and oblige unto deep repentance As Paul in another case 2 Cor. x2 ult I must bewail saith he those that committed these lasciviousnesses and have not repented Job 42. We must as Job did after he had spoken words that he understood not to God even abhor our selves and repent in dust and ashes And with the blessed Apostle we must be humbled as oft as we reflect upon it and think the worse of of our selves as long as we live as he did for his sin though not committed in light as ours was 1 Cor. 15. I am not worthy saith he to be called an Apostle because I persecuted the Church of God So every one of us I am not worthy to be called a Christian a subject of the Kings or a son of the Church because I entred into this Covenant But yet with his comfort and some kind of recompence where he had cone the wrong viz. Yet by the grace of God I am what I am that is a penitent and a convert and as a token of it I laboured more abundantly then they all that had not so offended As 't is also prophesied in this cause some should do Eicon Basilic Medit. 27. Prov. 24.21 22. And let us for the future fear God and the King and not meddle with them that are given to change the government of Church and State for their destruction hath come suddenly and who foreknew the ruine of them both i. e. those that have both deserted God in his Church and the King in the State and Common-wealth Prov. 1.10 And if hereafter sinners in that kind entice thee consent thou not no though they should say Come we will have all one purse For they lay wait for their own blood as we have seen And let us not deceive our selves one horn of this dilemma will wound us Either the Covenant is to be literally kept or else repented of Remember palliations expositions and evasions here will do no good Prov. 28.13 Psal 32. Numb 32.23 For he that covereth this sin shall not prosper And whilst we hold our peace our bones will consume through Gods heavy hand upon us And our sin will find us out For there is no darkness nor shadow of death Job 34.22 where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves saith Elihu And thus far of the general exceptions against the Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government of the Church of England viz. That they are unnecessary inconvenient humane inventions Apocryphal Popish not established by Law And an Engagement and Covenant for the removing or reforming of them CHAP. III. Grounds of Separation and Exceptions particular against the Matter of the Premises SECT I. Against the Articles or Doctrine 2. Exceptions particular against the matter of the premises Independents excepts not Apologet. narrat pag. 29. PRoceed we now unto the Exceptions particular namely against the matter of the Doctrine Worship Assemblies Discipline and Government And first of those against the Articles or Doctrine The Independent or dissenting Brethren acknowledge That in the review and examination of the Articles of our Church so are their words our judgments say they have still concurred with the greatest part of our Brethren neither do we know wherein we have dissented Some Presbyters now do But certain of the Presbyterian Brethren do dissent and object against them first doubtfulness secondly error thirdly tyranny in the act requiring subscription Necessity of Reform pag. 1. c. 1. Doubtfulness and fourthly defectiveness and imperfection First doubtfulness because in the book of Articles now printed and ever since 10 Carol. 1. there is a declaration of his late Majesty to the Articles to this effect 1. That those Articles contain the true Doctrine of the Church of England agreeable to Gods Word 2. That the Clergy upon just occasion may have liberty from the King Kings deelar before the Articles under the Broad Seal to deliberate on such things as make for the establishment of the same doctrine yet so that no varying in the least degree should be endured 3. That no man should put his own sense upon them but take the Articles in the literal and grammatical sense pag. 2. whence the Brethren infer that by this Declaration no Minister shall have liberty to interpret any one of these Articles And therefore they will remain doubtful But first Answ 1 this doubtfulness is not per se and in the Articles themselves but per accidens and in reference to this declaration Again though they are proh●bited to put any Answ 2 new sense as the King speaks or their own sense as the Judge in Smiths case Necessity of Reform p. 5. yet are they not forbidden to explain the literal and grammatical sense The Scripture in the fundamentals of salvation also the Laws and Acts of Parliament are so to be taken and yet Divines there and Judges here have ever been allowed to open those senses or else the one must not preach nor the other declare Law Thirdly when unto that liberty Answ 3 granted to the Clergy there is this restraint expresly put upon it viz. That from the Doctrine established the least varying shall not be endured and that nothing shall be concluded contrary to the Laws and Customs of the Land is there not a fair assurance that the present doctrine shall remain fixed and that if any heterodox sense shall be put upon them it shall be lawful to oppose the literal and grammatical sense whether in the Article or Explication Fourthly when the Declaration Answ 4 saith We will that all further curious search be laid aside and these disputes shut up in Gods promises as they be generally set forth unto us in the holy
as few as may be and that we leave mens judgments free in many things by reason that the obscurity in a number of them is exceeding great I have done with the first general head the Doctrine and Articles wherein as being the foundation the more time hath been expended CHAP. IV. Of Worship and of the Directory there of the Liturgy SECT I. Of Worship THE next is Worship 2. VVorship 1. In it self wherein the thing especially to be observed is Purity as in Doctrine Truth Now the purity of worship I take it Purity of it wherein consisting is defin'd by the matter whereof it is composed the object whereunto and medium or mean by which it is directed if these be right the Worship it self is pure For the evidencing that ours is such consider we it first in it self and then in the Appendixes of it the Ceremonies 1. In it self That of the Church of England such and so our Worship in the Church of England is directed onely to the onely true God in the Unity of Essence and Trinity of Persons the Maker and Governor of all things And the Worship which we tender unto him is for matter according to his will as shall be proved Lastly it is by the onely and alone medium and mediation of God manifested in the flesh the Man Christ Jesus but of the Creatures whether the blessed Virgin although 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Mother of God or Saint or Angel we joyn none with him as is to be seen in the frequent closure of our prayers in the publick Liturgy The second Collect in the Letany Through our ONELY Mediator and Advocate Jesus Christ our Lord. Which is also proved negatively because there is in the Liturgy no prayer neither directly nor indirectly to any but God himself nor by any other but Jesus Christ 2. In the Ceremonies which destroy not the substance of worship 2. In respect of Ceremonies which are annexed to it Now Ceremonies being but the appendixes and circumstances of Worship either as ornaments or advantages to it unless they be such as at least imply either another object or person to be worshipped than God or another Mediator than Christ and so a contradiction to the worship whereon they hang How should they destroy the purity of worship Perturb and trouble it they may by their multitude or unusefulness but vitiate it they cannot Now all our Ceremonies are so few in number and so explained e●ther by Doctrine or Canon or other publick writings for their * Dr. Burgess of the three innocent Ceremonies See the form of private Baptism and Can. 30. with the Rubricks Mr. Ph. N. innocency and use that they seem not capable of the former evills though they had been all urged But for the matter of our worship the most weighty men of the other ways do not much except against it I am sure I have heard one of the best of them acknowledge lately That there was nothing in the Common-prayer-book for the matter of it against the word of God Now all separation is a division all division tends to dissipation But to commit this against a Church whose worship is for the matter sound and the Ceremonies not opposite thereunto because some of them have been abused formerly to superstition savours of worse then their weakness 1 Cor. 10.25 28. who refused the meat though in the shambles because it had been once consecrated unto an Idol But rather take we his advice misericorditer igitur corripiat homo quod potest Aug. contr epist Parmen lib. 3. cap. 2. quod autem non potest patienter ferat cum dilectione gemat atque lugeat donec ille desuper emendet corrigat aut usque ad messem differat erradicare zizania paleam ventilare Let a man therefore gently amend what he may and and what he cannot let him bear with patience and lament with love until God from above do reform it or correct it or defer until the harvest the rooting out of the tares and the winnowing of the chaff But in particular the Ceremonies are but four especially Bowing at the naming Jesus The Cross in Bapt. Keeling at the Communion And the Surpliss in reading Service Omitting what hath been satisfactorily discoursed on these by others as [a] Conser Hampt Court King James [b] Can. 30. The Canons of 1603. Can. 30. [c] Eccles Polit. Mr. Hooker [d] The three Innocent ceremonies Hieron in Isa 45.23 Mr. Burgess and divers more I shall for the first recite the Judgment of Antiquity represented by St. Jerome on those words of Isaiah By my self have I sworn that every knee shall bow to me c. Hoc jurat quòd Idolis derelictis omne genu ei flectat coelestium terrestrium infernorum omnis per illum juret lingua mortalium In quo perspicuè significatur populus Christianus Moris est enim ecclesiastici Christo Genu flectere Bowing at the name of Jesus Quod Judaei mentis superbiam demonstrantes omnino non faciunt This he swears That forsaking Idols every knee should bow to him of things in Heaven in the Earth and under the Earth and every tongue of mortal men swear by him in which is clearly signified the Christian people for it is the custome of the Church to BOW the KNEE to Christ Which the Jews declaring the pride of their hearts will by no means do Wherein Explained we may note two causes of refusing to bow at the naming of the Lord Jesus First Jewish unbelief and secondly The like haughtiness and pride of spirit To which we may add in respect of some I hope a needless fear of superstition Touching the next the Cross in Baptisme Although I cannot hope to satisfie those whom the Canon of the Church hath not satisfied Against which Canon Cross in Bapt. Can. 30. the late Authors of the Treatise of the necessity of Reformation have this Exception that it hath not with its reasons Pag. 60. Ed. 2. added either Scripture or Fathers Whereas it mentions both though naming none By this reason they may decline all the Articles yea and most Confessions in Europe which generally omit both as being too paedantical for a confession or the Canons of a Church Wherein also their iniquity as well as unskilfulness appeareth Who say of the Rubrick explaining the use of the ceremony of kneeling at the communion Pag. of the inserted sheet the third that the Compilers had solidly and excellently declared in what sense they intended kneeling at the Communion omitted in the Book of Q. Eliz. and yet that hath neither Scripture nor Father alledged But this pleased because it ministred quarrel against the present Common-prayer-book I might refer for more ample satisfaction to the exact diligence in this point also of that hyperaspistes of our Church in these matters Mr. Hooker Eccles Polit. li. 5. §
displeased God so sore and filthily defiled his holy house and his place of prayer Which last words the Brethren refer to piping singing and playing on Organs Whereas 't is evident that passage hath respect especially to that before where it spake of Images Idols Altars with gross and filthy corrupting the Lords holy Supper and the Gazeing sights Again It condemneth not all piping singing or playing on Organs but such as they were wont to have which was both superstitious for kind and too much for quantity Matth. 6. He that forbad us to pray as the Heathen either for babling or length did not forbid us to pray soberly and upon just occasion largely Thirdly If you take all in concreto and together then singing is also condemned by the Homily for it is ranked with piping and Organs Therefore it must be understood with the former restriction such singing as was then and so such piping such organing namely such as took up so much time and was fitted more to please the fancy than for godly delight and spiritual excitation of the affection and edification Lastly The Composers of these Homilies were Bishops the Homil. were approved by Bishops and by Princes and Parliaments who had Organs and singing in their Chappels and Cathedrals besides the Royal Chappel And therefore cannot be understood to condemn that thing in Doctrine which themselves did allow in practise unless we should compare them to him * Deletum in Autographo repositum ab operis who having an Altar in his Chappel yet wrote strenuously for The holy Table Name and Thing This detorting therefore of mens words against their scope and meaning by the Brethren savours of their folly who as he speaks Job 13.7 will lie for God which he as little owns as stands in need of To the last The Bishops omitting the Pastoral Staff which by the 2 Edw. 6. he is enjoyned to have in his hand or to have it born by his Chaplain First the Common-prayer in the Rubrick referrs to that Act of 2 Edw. 6. onely in respect of ornaments to be used in the time of the Communion Rubrick before the Confession of sins and other times of his Ministration not to other things or times as this which is an ornament to themselves which for humility's sake they have omitted and to avoid ostentation but this is no example for othe●s to neglect the things that concern the more immediate worship of God In the former things the Law gives it as a priviledge in these it puts it on as an obligation A Knight shall wear his Spurs and Sword that is he may but He shall serve the King in his Wars that is he must I shall end this discourse with that which Austin ended his de Ritib Ecclesiae concerning the Ceremonies of the Church Ep. 119. Januar cap. ult Sic itaque adhibeatur scientia tanquam machina quaedam per quam structura charitatis assurgat quae maneat in aeternum etiam cùm scientia destruetur quae ad finem charitatis adhibita multum est utilis per se autem ipsam sine tali sine non modo superflua sed etiam pernitiosa probata est Let us therefore so make use of knowledge as we would do of an Engine by which the building of Charity may be raised which abideth for ever even when Knowledge shall be destroyed Which knowledge when it is applyed to charity is very useful that of it self without such an end and use is not onely found to be a supersluous but even a pernitious matter Saith this Father I add Vade tu fac similiter And thus we have found mighty and vehement informations K. James Proclamation for the uniformity of Com. prayer supported with so weak and ssender proof as it appeareth unto Us and Our Councel that there was no cause why any change at all should be made in that which was most impugned the Book of Common-prayer neither in the Doctrine which appeared to be sincere neither in the Forms and Rites which were justified out of the practice of the Primitive Church saith King James I conclude with an Admonition an earnest Suit 1. An Admonition and an humble Supplication My Admonition is to all first that they beware lest this * Let not every wanton Wit be permitted to bring what fancies he list into the Pulpit c. Dr. Ushers Serm. before the Commons Feb. 18. 1620. pag. 6. Exod. 32. Amos 8.11 wantonness arising from spiritual fulness as it is in the bodily They ate and drank and then rose up to play be not punished with a famine not of bread and water but of hearing the Word of God either in the letter or in the saving power of it and of enjoying his holy Worship Next That they would apply to this in its proportion what one of the learned Professors of Tigur hath concerning the Scripture on an occasion of the curiosities of some about that Quis enim alius in Scripturis praeter Dei cognitionem fidem vitae nostrae officium scopus nobis esse vel possit vel debeat non video * R. Gualter presat in 3. Tom. operum Zuinglii VVhat things we are to aim at in reading of Scripture More then the knowledge of God Faith and the duties of our life what other end we should aim at in Scripture I say or in a confession of faith and form of Worship I see not Now these by the Articles and Liturgy as they are that we have as plentifully enjoyed as any other Church is acknowledged by other Churches as shall appear and is on all hands owned My earnnest suit is unto these Brethren 2. A Suit Isa that now labour of this Book that they would not travell to bring forth but wind That they would consider the water is now troubled on both sides the penny in the bottom will not be seen That in paring of the nails too near there is peril of cutting of the flesh And that if any thing in it self considered may need amendment yet as in some diseases at least in some remedies Medicina est morbo pejor The medicine worse than the malady Plutarch de sanitat inenda non procul à fine According to that of the Philosopher Longissimè a recta ratione absunt qui ejiciendorum è corpore redundantium humorum causa qui familiares corpori sunt consueti in corpus inficiunt coccos Gnidios scammoniam aliaque medicamenta a temperie corporis aliena saeva Accustomed humors though not so good in the body are yet better grapled with then scammony 3. An humble Supplication unto Authority Isa 49. Revel 12. My humble supplication is to those who are in power if so be that this voice shall by any eccho ascend their ears That they would be as 't is promised nursing fathers unto this child-birth of the Church That they would be as a wall to
this Vine that it may grow up and flourish and as a sense unto this Vineyard full of choice plants both from breaking in upon it by odious calumnies and from others breaking out and making it but a stalking-horse to shoot at further game That they would preserve it sarta tecta which hath for its matter the sacred Doctrine for form the divine Worship for use both a Sanctuary for a godly soul and a Bulwark against the lesser Vermine and greater beasts of Separation and Popery And in a word hath been consecrated unto us and came swimming in the bloood of Martyrs and sealed by the holy Ghost unto our hearts and by the presence of God on our outward blessings Finally Act. 5.6 Edw. 6. 1 Eliz. 1. That they would please to reflect on and revive that wherein the Kings most excellent Majesty the Lords Temporal For establishing the Book of Common-prayer and all the Commons in this present Parliament assembled doth in Gods Name earnestly require and charge all the Arch-bishops Bishops and other Ordinaries that they shall endeavour themselves to the uttermost of their knowledge that due and true execution hereof for establishing the Liturgy may be had throughout their Diocesses and Charges Note as they will answer before God for such evils and plagues wherewith Almighty God may justly punish his people for neglecting this good and wholesome Law I have done with the two first the Doctrine and Worship the Articles and Liturgy CHAP. VI. Of the Assemblies their matter and mixture SECT I. The means of preserving them from corruption COme we to the third that is the Assemblies the impurity whereof is a grand motive unto Independents and Separation wherein the Church is clear the guilt must lie either on the negligence of persons entrusted or the necessity of times and the condition of the Church The Laws The Laws do meet with all both criminal and penal offences and evils if these be executed there can be no notorious offendors And there are but two things necessary to preserve an Assembly pure Instruction and Correction or Discipline upon offendors Now the Church hath strictly appointed Catechism through all the grounds of Christian Religion prohibiting any to come unto the Lords Table Rubrick after the Confirmation who cannot give an account of them and for the better ripening thereunto hath ordained confirmation as a preparative And for Discipline to preserve the Congregation pure the Rubrick before the Order of the Holy Communion hath these words So many as intend to be partakers of the Holy Communion Rubrick before the Communion shall signifie their names to the Curate c. And if any of those be an open and notorious evil liver or have done any wrong the Curate having knowledge thereof shall advertise him in any wise not to presume to the Lords Table until he have openly declared himself that he hath repented truly and amended and that he have recompensed the party whom he hath wronged or at the least declare himself to be in full purpose so to do The same order shall the ●urate use with those betwixt whom he perceiveth malice and hatred to reign NOT SVFFERING them to be partakers of the Lords Table until he KNOW them to be reconciled Wherein you see there is full provision made for the purity of the Church The Authors of necessity of Reformation pag. 48. say of this Rubrick for its fulness in point of Discipline What is this but as much and as high Jurisdiction as any Bishop can use in that particular Object But I am not ignorant that this Rubrick hath not served for a Plea at all seasons Cases may so fall out Respons that summum jus may be summa injuria and as in the Civil so in the Ecclesiastical Judicatories there may be cause to fly to the Courts of Equity for the moderation of the rigor of the letter of the Law But the intention of the Church is plain and if it can not always attain its end yet Est aliquid prodire tenus Independents Acknowledgement si non datur ultra Yea and the congregational Brethren themselves acknowledge That whatsoever defilements they apprehended in the Worship or Government of the Church yet it did never work in them any other thought much less opinion but that MULTITUDES of the Assemblies and PAROCHIAL Congregations Apologet. narrat pag. 6. were the true Churches and Body of Christ And again in the same page We always have professed and that in these times when the Churches of England were the most either actually overspread with defilements or in the greatest danger thereof that we both did and would hold a COMMUNION with them as CHURCHES of Christ Which reminds me of a speech of one in his dealing with persons of these Principles Aug. contr Parmen lib. 1. cap. 8. Et adversum nos loquuntur nobiscum loquuntur cum eos obmutescere compellat veritas silere non permittit iniquitas that is They speak against us and they speak for us and when truth constraineth them silence yet their iniquity will not let them hold their peace But touching the purity of the Assemblies it is no doubt with the Church in this life as it is with every member of it who if sensible hath cause deeply to cry out with the Apostle under the sense of the mixtures of corruption Wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Rom. 7. Would we have mixtures born with in our selves if Hanc veniam petimus demus vicissim let us yield it to the Body especially seeing we have for our warrant not onely the state of the Jewish Church which in its greatest Apostacy was owned by the Lord as his Spouse and the Members of it for his Children Where is the bill of your mothers divorcement Isa 50.1 Ezek. 16.20 And thou hast taken my children which thou hast born unto me and offered them to idols Neither is it sufficient here to say Robins Apol. for Separat cap. 12. That this Church was holy in Abraham and also a typical one for it was to be holy in it self and a real Church too as well as typical for they did eat the same spiritual meat c. 1 Cor. 10. And the Catholick Church comprehends the Jewish as well as that which is Christian properly as is truly asserted in the seventh Article of the Confession of the Church of England We have not onely this president but also the example of our Lord and Saviour who communicated with that Church and did not gather another out of it till the consummation of that Polity and till they had declared themselves open adversaries to the scope of Scripture both in Doctrine and Worship In the mean time both going up to their feasts and commanding his Hearers to attend upon the Doctrine of their Teachers Mat. 23.2 3. and himself living and dying a member
sanare i. e. We hope that by grave counsel and specially yours speaking to Aurelius Bishop of Carthage God may heal the many carnal defilements and spiritual sicknesses which the Church of Africa note a National Church A National Church labours of in many but bewails in few Again a little after Comessationes ebrietates ita concessae licite putantur ut in honorem etiam beatissimorum Martyrum non solum per dies solennes quod ipsum quis non lugendum videa● qui hec non carnis oculis inspicit sed quotidie celebrentur That is Rioting and Drunkenness is accounted so allowable and lawful that it is solemnly committed in honour of the blessed Martyrs and that not onely on their Festival Days which yet who can see with spiritual eye and not bewail but even every day also Again in the same place Tanta pestilentia est hujus mali ut sanari prorsus quantum mihi videtur nisi Concilii authoritate non possit i. e. So spreading is this plague that absolutely to heal it cannot in my opinion be done without the Authority of a Council This of Drunkenness Next for Contentions and Deceits in the same Letter he adds De contentione autem dolo quid me attine● dicere quando ista vitia non in plebe sed in nostro numero graviora sunt Horum autem morborum mater superbia est humanae laudis aviditas qua etiam hypocrisin saepe ge●erat That is What should I speak of Contention and Deceitfulness seeing these vices are more notorious in our Order Now the root of these diseases is Pride and thirst after humane applause which oftentimes doth breed and beget Hypocrisie Thus he of the vitiousness of Church-members ● ●et no S●para●ion Now touching his vehemency against Separation notwithstanding all those Writings of his against the Donatists might be alledged But the third Book against Parmenian touching this point one of our first and great Reformers saith Is locus hac maxima tempestate nobis singulari diligentiá legendus perpendendus fuerit 〈…〉 Ma● 〈◊〉 i. e. ●●s a place that should especially in these times be read with diligence and considered And Calvin alledging a passage out of that Book to this purpose introduceth it with a bene ergo prudenter Augustinus ' well and wisely spake Saint Austin Instit lib. 4. c. 1. 5. 16. and then citeth a Plea very pertinent to our purpose Aug. contr Parmen lib 3. cap. 1. à principio Cum omnis pia ratio modus Ecclesiasticae disciplinae unitatem spiritus in vinculo pacis maximè debeat intueri quod Apostolus sufferendo invicem praecipit custodiri quo non custodito medicinae vindicta non tantum superflua sed etiam pernitiosa propterea nec medicina esse convincitur Illi filii mali qui non odio iniquitatum alienarum sed studio contentionum suorum infirmas plebes jactantia sui nominis irretitas vel totas trahere vel certè dividere affectant superbia tumidi pervicacia vaesani calumniis insidiosi seditionibus turbulenti ne luce veritatis carere ostendautur umbram rigidae severitatis obtendunt quo in scripturis sanctis salvâ dilectionis sinceritate custodita pacis unitate ad corrigenda fraterna vitia moderatiore curatione fieri praecepta sunt ad sacrilegium schismatis occasionem praecisionis usurpant That is All just measure of Ecclesiastical Discipline ought especially to have respect unto the Unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace which the Apostle directs us to preserve by mutual suffering one another And which bond of peace not being kept the medicine of Discipline is not onely supersluous but pernicious and therefore no medicine at all These sons of Belial which not so much out of hatred of other mens sins as out of love to their own contentions having intangled the innocent multitude with their vaunting and vain-glorious names endeavor to draw them wholly or to divide them Men swoln with pride mad in stubbornness laying wait by slanders turbulent in Seditions O England lest they should be proved to want the light of Truth they hold forth the shadow of Severity and Discipline And those things which are commanded in the Scripture saving Charity and Unity for the moderate Reformation of our Brethrens failings those things they abuse to sacrilegious and prophane Schism and to occasion of Separation Thus that place And afterwards he adds which was noted above Et revera si contagio peccandi multitudinem invaserit C●p. 2. divinae disciplinae severa misericordia necessaria est nam consilia separationis inania sunt pernitiosa atque sacrilega quia impia superba sunt plus perturbant infirmos bonos quàm corrigunt animosos malos i. e. And truly if the contagion of sin have invaded the multitude the severe mercy of Gods correction is necessary but the fancy of remedying it by separating is vain and pernicious yea sacrilegious and prophane because it is a wicked and proud conception and doth more disturb the weak that are good then correct the stubborn that are naught And a little after concludes as we heard above Misericorditer igitur corripiat homo quod potest quod autem non potest patienter ferat cum dilectione gemat atque lugeat donec aut ille desuper aut emendet aut corrigat aut usque ad messem differat eradicare ziza●ia paleam ventilare i. e. Let a man therefore correct gently what he may and what he cannot let him bear and with love bewail and lament until God from above shall either amend it or rebuke it or else defer till the Harvest to pluck up the Tares and to purge away the Chaff Thus far he touching the second particular namely Separation And so I have done with the Testimony of Antiquity SECT V. The Reformed Churches I Come now to the Reformed Churches two or three of whose Worthies I shall produce as witnesses in this Cause whereof the first shall be the last and latest one unto whom this Nation is much obliged for his Dedication of both those Parts of his accurate and useful Labours for the Defence of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead Zanch. de Trib. Eloh in Epist deel utrique parti Epist ded ad comit Be●fo d. part 2. praefix And for his wholesom Admonition to us to take heed of the Socinian Leaven in questioning the Godhead of Christ or of the Holy Ghost And specially for his Observation viz. That the Eastern Churches were never over-run by the Turk till they were first over-run with Arianism He Lib. de divort 2. in sine I say in the close of all his Works and as it were a sacred seal leaves us this Aphorism Quamplurimos esse minime negamus qui hac tantùm de causa inter fratres censeantur quòd eandem Christi puram
purpose among them and yet if it may be How there may be Conversion in a Schismatical Assembly yet it is by that Doctrine and Worship which they had in this Church and have abused unto Separation as Austin once of the Donatists Quasi vero ex hoc generet unde separata est non ex hoc unde conjuncta est Aug. de Bapt. contr Donat. lib. 3. cap. 10. Separata est enim à vinculo charitatis pacis sed adjuncta est in uno Baptismate Itaque est una Ecclesia quae sola Catholica nominatur quicquid suum habet in Communionibus diversorum à sua communitate separatis per hoc quod suum in eis habet IPSA utique generat non ILLAE As if saith he those Assemblies did convert as they are separated and not as they are conjoyned They are separated from the bond of charity and peace with the Church but they are joyned in one Baptism and so in the other Sacrament and Administration of the Word Therefore there is one Church which onely is called Catholick and whatsoever it hath in the Assemblies of those that are separate from its Communion by THAT which it hath of its own in those Companies IT doth beget and generate A Summary of the former Arguments and not THEY Thus he most truly But as I said seeing Conversion is acknowledged by them to be true and frequent in the Church of England seeing it is rare if at all among the Separation seeing if it be 't is by vertue of what they have had from this Church seeing the fruits are fruits of the Flesh and not of the Spirit that grow most among them as such and that of the worst kinde also 1. Against separate Assemblies as we saw before And the Apostle reckons fornications which I have known some among them to defend under the notion of plurality of wives variance hatred heresies seditions Gal. 5. among those works And our own experience in this Nation of late daies hath abundantly lessened us Seeing I say this Church is their Parent and the Ministers of it their Fathers in the Lord 1 Cor. 4.15 as the Apostle saith of himself to a Church that cast him off as these do them And lastly Seeing they do so vilifie though some of them gives good words with their mouth as the Psalmist speaks yet they curse with their heart that is Apol. Narrat pag. 6. Psal 62.4 they labour the division and ruine of it let them remember that Hee that curseth his Father Prov. 30. and chaseth away his Mother the Crows of the vallies shall pick out his eyes as they have done the eyes of some that way of late Isa 45.10 For woe unto him that saith unto his Father what begettest thou or to the Woman Ephes 6.12 what hast thou brought forth There are spiritual wickednesses Those that said unto their Brethren stand off Isa 65.5 I am holier than thou were a smoak in the Lords nostrils all the day Our Lord and Saviour declined those Separatists for that may be the Etymology of the word Pharisee Mat. 9.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Separavit Luke 18.9.14 as we saw above and did eat with the Publicans and Sinners And the Penitent one of them went down to his house justified rather than the other I have insisted the longer upon this point the matter and members of the Assemblies first because in nature it is primum essentiae constitutionis principium the first thing in every being as also because the adversaries do say it is Fundi nostri calamitas prima praecipua ex qua plerasque alias oriundas crederem i. e. Robins Apol. pro separat cap. 12. p. m. 92. The main calamity of our Church the first and chief from whence they beleeve most of the other corruptions do arise To which I have also adjoyned discourse touching the form of it also namely its covenanting with the Lord in the professing and owning the Covenant of Grace both in Baptism and at riper years at Confirmation before admission to full Communion in the Holy Sacrament that so it might appear that the whole Essence of this Church is sound the causes constitutive viz. the matter and form of it being so I shut up this touching the Assemblies and our experience of the presence of God in them notwithstanding whatsoever matter and mixtures of them with that of Mr. Brightman Brightman in Apoc. 3.20 touched in part above to the Separation of his time Quamobrem redite ad unitatem Ecclesiae quae vos genuit aluit si fugiatis hunc Christum qui cum Electis in nostris coetibus coenat ac eos vicissim excipit profecto nusquam invenietis Wherefore saith he Return ye again into the Unity of that Church which hath both begotten and bred you up If ye flee from this Christ who doth sup with his Elect ones in our Assemblies and again receiveth and entertaineth them assure your selves you shall finde him no where Thus Mr. Brightman A man otherwise not over zealous for the Church of England And thus I have done with the first three things considerable in the Church and offences which have been occasions of separation to Independency namely the Doctrine the Worship and the Assemblie CHAP. VII Of Discipline 4. Cause of Separation Discipline I Come now unto the fourth to wit the Discipline wherein I shall indeavour brevity because of the former largeness and because the Main is already dispatched First Therefore to the persons wee deal against 1. The persons for Discipline Buc. in Zeph. 3. 20. pag. ult then to the thing it self for the former Certè ab Amicâ fraternâ admonitione incipiendum est hac pretermissa de excommunicatione quaeritari plusquam Pharisaicum est ne dicam Satanicum saith Bucer that is Certainly man ought in Discipline to begin at loving and brotherly admonition if this be neglected to complain of the want of Excommunication and Discipline is more than Pharisaical that I say not Satanical Thus hee Now with those that depart for want of Discipline they shoot with white powder as they say and the Bolt comes before the Thunder they separate and excommunicate the whole Assembly before they see if they can reform it 2. The Matter Secondly For the matter it self And first for the thing then for the manner and persons that have executed it For the thing There is in the Church of England as much Discipline both in Law and execution before Late-times as is usually executable in so great a body either by the Laws of the Common Wealth or the Canons of the Church Civil Laws in a Church are Church-Laws and seeing Church and Common Wealth are incorporated into one as was that first Church of God the Jewish seeing the work is done in the whole body for the preservation of its being and purity what
for use that without it the Churches could not be preserved neither in Truth nor Vnity And though Hierome seem to imply that there was some times when the Churches were governed without it yet unless hee mean the time of the Apostles who were themselves instead of it no time by his own words can be assigned when the Church either could or did want it neither doth hee name any certain time or alledge any Author as hee useth to do in case of History neither under correction of men of larger reading do I beleeve hee could Seeing it is evident in the Ecclesiastical History and by the Monuments of the most Antient Writers that Episcopacy was contiguous with the Apostles time as appears by Ignatius Policarpus Vide Eus Hist Hieron de Scriptorib Ecclesiast Clemens Irenaeus and others Whereas Hierome lived in the fourth Century above three hundred years after Christ 'T is true St. Austin that mirrour of Modesty and Humility writing unto this same Hierome when hee had received some contemptuous expressions from him as I said before Aug. ad Hieron Epist. 19. that Father was a little high in answer to him saith Quanquam enim secundum honorum vocabula quae jam Ecclesiae usus obtinuit Episcopatus Presbyterio major sit Object tamen in multis rebus Augustinus Hieronymo minor est Although saith hee according to titles of honour which now the USE of the Church hath obtained Episcopacy be superiour to Presbytery yet in many things Austin is inferiour to Hierome Answ Hee saith it is by use of the Church that Episcopacy is above Presbytery but hee speaketh of the difference of names and tiles implying that in the Scripture they have often all one name Epist ad Evagrium as Hierome had proved in that Commentary upon the first of Titus and elsewhere but doth not deny nor imply that the Office was the same Again hee saith the Use of the Church now this Use may be as antient as the Apostles Lastly Hee knew with whom hee was dealing and on purpose composed his expression to the qualifying of Jerome Vide Epist ad Hieron 15. as appears in his other Epistles to him hee doth not dispute ex professo this point Cyprian the antient of them both in the place now cited carries it very far for the dignity of Episcopacy ●●pr lib. 1. Ep. 3. and the eminency of one both in Place and Authority Having proved by many examples the preheminency of place and duty of Obedience by the Scripture given to the High Priests among the Jews applying to the Bishop in a Christian Church hee saith Cum haec tanta ac talia multa alia exempla praecedant quibus Sacerdotalis autoritas potestas divina dignatione firmatur quales putas esse eos qui Sacerdotum hostes contra Ecclesiam Catholicam rebelles nec praemonentis Domini comminatione nec futuri judicii ultione terrentur Neque enim aliundè haereses abortae sunt aut nata sunt schismata quàm inde quod Sacerdoti Dei non obtempetatur nec UNUS in Ecclesia ad tempus Sacerdos ad tempus Judex vice Christi cogitatur Cui si secundum Magisteria divina obtemperaret fraternitas universa nemo adversum Sacerdotum Collegium quicquam moneret nemo post divinum judicium post populi suffragium post Co-episcoporum consensum judicem se non jam Episcopi sed Dei faceret nemo dissidio unitatis Christi Ecclesiam scinderet that is Seeing these so great such and so many other examples have gone before by which the authority and power of the Priestly dignity is confirmed by Gods institution what kind of men do you think them who being enemies of the Priesthood and rebels against the Catholick Church are neither terrified by Gods threatnings nor yet with fear of the judgement to come For from no other cause do Heresies arise nor Factions in the Church have their beginning than from hence that there is not given obedience to the Priest of God hee means the Bishop as the words following will shew neither is considered that for the time there is but One Priest namely chief that ought to be in the Church of God and for the time but one Judge in the stead of Christ To whom according to the Doctrine of Christ did the whole Brother-hood give obedience no man would move any thing against the Colledge of Priests by whom the Bishops was chosen no man would make himself Judge not now of the Bishop but of God himself after that hee hath been chosen by the Divine Judgement by the suffrage of the people desired and by the consent of other Bishops confirmed I urge this Testimony being very antient Cyprian lived about the year 250. to shew the judgement of Antiquity touching Episcopacy namely the Institution Use and End of it viz. preservation of Truth and Peace in the Church as wee saw before out of St. Hierome Spur●ous testimonies though grayer-headed I pass not at Yea and Hieron himself elsewhere doth imply that a Bishop might ordain which a Presbyter could not do Quid enim facit exceptâ ordinatione Hieron Epist ad Evagr. Tom. 3. Episcopus quod Presbyter non facit that is what doth a Bishop do except Ordination which a Presbyter doth not thus hee but Ordination carries with it some Superiour jurisdiction Since my writing of this De Evangel Ministerium gradib cap. 23. I have consulted what Savania hath observed upon this place of Hierome on Tit. 1.5 against Beza and finde that his cogitations are the same much-what with mine as indeed it is obvious to any one considering of it neither do I see cause to alter them Savania Beza for any thing I finde in Beza his reply unto them whose judgement in this point wee shall hear anon out of the same writing And so I dismiss the Testimony from Antiquity Proceed wee now to the Judgement of the Reformed Churches expressed by their chief Writers and even those who have erected another Government Calvin the supposed Parent of Presbytery 1. The Reformed Christian Churches Judgement of Episcopacy but hee was onely the foster Father for Farel and Viret had before him ejected Episcopacy at Geneva or rather the Bishop hee the ground being as it were vacant raised Presbytery or rather ripened it in the room thereof Hee first argues the right of Episcopacy for the substance of it from Nature it self Calvin 1. Hoc natura dictat Unum ex singulis Collegiis delegendum exi precipua cura incumbat Epist. ad R pol. 1554. 2. Fateor quidem ut sunt hominum ingenia mores non posse ordinem stare inter verbi Ministros quin reliquis praesit Unus Praes ad duc Witemberg ante Epist ad Gal. Epist ad R. pol. 1554. then acknowledges the Necessity of it for the upholding of the order of the Ministery from the disposition and spirit of men both
Vide Epist l. 2. Tom. 8. with all his Titles and hath other Epistles also wherein hee stiles him and Bishop Jewel likewise Bishops and Prelates 5. Melancthon often Valde reprehendimur à nostris quod jurisdictionem Episcopis reddidimus Nam vulgus assuefactum libertati Epist. l. 5. Ep. 15. Luthe●o semel excusso jugo Episcoporum aegre patitur sibi rursum imponi illa vetera onera maximè oderunt illam dominationem Civitates Imperii De Doctrina Religionis nihil laborant tantum de Regno libertate sunt soliciti Again Cives tui ex Norico valde succensent nobis quod reddimus jurisdictionem Episcopis Fremunt alii socii indignantur Regnum Episcopis restitui Lib. 3. Ep. 178. Vito Theodoro Ego tamen etiam duriores conditiones arbitror nobis accipiendas esse propter publicam Ecclesiae tranquillitatem concordiam sed FATALIS aliqua necessitas urget Germanos Again Utinam utinam possim non quidem dominationem confirmare sed administrationem restituere Episcoporum Lib. 4. Ep. 104. Camerario video enim qualem simus habituri Ecclesiam dissolutâ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ecclesiastica video postea multo intollerabiliorem futuram tyrannidem quàm antea unquam fuit adhuc nihil adhuc concessimus adversariis praeter ea quae Lutherus censuit esse reddenda re bene ac diligenter considerata ante conventum Again Quo enim jure licebat nobis dissolvere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ecclesiasticam si Episcopi concedent illa quae aequum est eosco c dere ut liceat certè non expedit semper ita sensitipse Lutherus Quem nulla de causa quidam ut video amant nisi quia beneficio ejus sentiunt se Episcopos excussisse adeptos libertatem minimè utilem ad posteritatem Again Velim hoc tibi persuadeas de me deque multis aliis nos optare Ep. ad Episc Augustin Dupl Aberd. 12. P. 115. ut pace constitutâ Episcoporum potestas sit incolumis hanc plurimam prodesse Ecclesiis judicamus We are saith hee much reproved by men of our own side because wee have restored their jurisdiction unto the Bishops For the people being accustomed to liberty and having once shaken off the yoak of Bishops can hardly indure those old burdens to be laid on their shoulders again But those who especially hate that Government are the Cities of the Empire As for the Doctrine of Religion they minde it not only of Lordship and Liberty they are solicitous Again Thy Towns-men of Noricum saith hee to another are very angry with mee for restoring jurisdiction to Bishops other of our friends are in a rage also and are highly offended that the Government is restored to the Bishops But for my part I think that even harder conditions should be accepted by us for the publick peace and tranquillity of the Church But there is a kinde of FATAL necessity that hurries on the Germanes Again O I would to God I would to God I were able to restore unto the Bishops not indeed their Lordly domineering he means such as were exercised by some Popish Bishops but their jurisdiction and government for I perceive what kinde of Church wee are like to have when the Church Politie and Discipline is dissolved Note And I perceive moreover a much more intollerable tyranny in the Church like to arise than hitherto hath ever been we have as yet yeelded nothing to the adversaries Note more than Luther himself judged fit to be restored after hee had weighed the matter with diligence and care before the Convention Again By what right can we lawfully dissolve the Church Government whilst the Bishops will yeeld unto us what they ought to yeeld And if it were lawful yet surely it is not expedient And so Luther ever thought whom I perceive some do love for no other cause in the world but for that they see by him they have shaken off Episcopacy and gotten a liberty no way useful unto posterity Again I would have thee think saith hee to the Bishop of Ausburg and perswade thy self concerning mee and many others that wee desire that peace being settled the power of Bishops may continue unshaken And this their power wee judge to be specially useful for the Churches Thus hee as for the Tyranny hee speaks of it happens to the Church as to the State sometimes For Example The Keepers of the Liberties of England was a specious title yet wee know they left us not a dram of Liberty indeed So it is easie for Tyranny to arise in the Church under a new name and a Wolf in a sheeps clothing But as the former Author saith in the same place Zanch. ubi supra Why contend wee about Names when as hee hath truly noted the Necessity and Use of Episcopacy as to the thing and office is acknowledged and improved in all Christian Churches I have done with Zanchy Let mee subjoyn one more and hee of special note and which wee should the more observe him for Bucer de Regno Christi lib. 2. cap. 12. pag. 67. one of the English Reformers though a foreiner it is Bucer whose praises wee heard above lib. 1. cap. 1. Hear him once and again First Note in that book which hee wrote and dedicated to King Edward the sixth for the special use of this Church and Nation and it were well it might be a little looked into the more whose Title is of the Kingdome of Christ Hee saith Jam ex perpetua Ecclesiarum observatione ab ipsis jam Apostolis videmus Visum hoc esse Spiritui sancto ut inter Presbyteros qu●bus Ecclesiarum procuratio potissimum est commissa Unus Ecclesiarum totius sacri Ministerii curam gerat singularem eaque curâ solicitudine cunctis praeat aliis Qua de causa Episcopi nomen hujusmodi summis Ecclesiarum Curatoribus est peculiariter attributum Tametsi hi sine reliquorum Presbyterorum Consilio nihil statuere debeant Qui ipsi propter hanc communem Ecclesiae administrationem Episcopi in Scripturis vocentur Hi enim sicut dignitate demandata primaria Ecclesiarum solicitudine reliquos omnes sancti Ministerii ordines antecedunt ita debent voluntate studio Ecclesias rite administrandi prae omnibus aliis flagrare omnique facultate eas aedificandi praepollere Now saith hee by the perpetual observation of the Churches Note Episcopacy from the Holy Ghost from the very Apostles it seemed good to the Holy Ghost that among the Presbyters to whom the care of the Church is chiefly committed there should bee One who should specially sustain the cure and Government of the Churches and of the whole sacred Ministery and in that care and burden to be before all other For which cause the name of Bishop is attributed more peculiarly to these chief highest Rulers of the Churches although they without the counsel of the
King James's Proclamation for Uniformity of Common-prayer prefixed to some Editions of the Liturgy which by Law was established in the daies of the late Queen of famous memory blessed with a peace and prosperity both EXTRAORDINARY and of many years continuance A STRONG evidence that God was therewith well pleased The importunity of the complainers was great their affirmations vehement and the zeal wherewith the same did seem to bee accompanied very specious And they began such proceedings as did rather raise a scandal in the Church than take offence away and did other things carrying a very apparent shew of Sedition Upon this double experience when such motions of change were made to him hee * In his Proclamation for unity of Common-Prayer and confer H. Court crushed the chicken here in the shell lest it being hatched by indulgence might pick out his eyes as it did afterward some others and did well King Charls His Majesties Father yeelded in these things to Scotland but doth not obscurely bewail it If any saith hee speaking of Episcopacy shall impute my yeelding to them my failing and sin Icon. Basilic medit 17. p. m. 156. I can easily acknowledge it On the issue whereof no man can without horrour reflect Now Faelix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum O happy hee whom others failings make Wise to become and by them warning take But it may be times are different and am I made of the Kings Counsel I conclude all 2 Chron. 25.16 Erasm in Epist Hieron ad Heliodor Tom. 1. Ep. 1. in Antidot advers calumniam first with that of Erasmus Ad haec video esse non-nullos hujuscemodiingenio ut cùm apicula ad omnem flosculum ad omnem advolans fruticem tantum id excerpat quod ad mellificium sit conducibile ipsi solum hoc venentur si quid sit quod aliquo pacto Calumniari possint His mos est è toto libro quatuor aut quinque verba decerpere atque in eis calumniandis ostendere quantum ingenio polleant Non animadvertunt quibus temporibus cui Causes of calumniating of an Author qua occasione quo animo scripserit ille Neque conferunt quid praecesserit quid sequatur quid alio loco eadem de rescripserit Tantum urgent ac premunt quatuor illa verba ad ea machinas omnes admovent Syllogismorum detorquent depravant aliquoties non intellecta calumniantur That is I perceive saith Erasmus that some men are of that disposition that whereas the little Bee flyes to every flower and to every green thing onely that it may gather that whereof it would make honey these men only hunt after that which they may rail at The custome of such men is out of a whole book to cull out four or five words and in reviling of them to shew what abilities they have They consider not in what times the Author wrote nor to what persons nor upon what occasion nor with what intention Nor do they compare what went before with what follows after what hee said of the same matter in another place Onely they urge those four words they wrest they deprave and sometimes reproach what they understand not Thus far hee Next with that elegant and prudent observation absit invidia verbo of our late Soveraign upon this same Argument Icon. Basilic Medit. 27. To His Majesty that now is Not but that saith hee the draught being excellent as to the main both for Doctrine and Government in the Church of England some liues as in very good figures may happily need some sweetening or polishing Which might have easily been done by a safe and gentle hand if some mens praecipitancy had not violently demanded such rude alterations as would have quite destroyed all the beauty and proportion of the whole Thus the King The close of all Dr. Usher L. Primate of Armagh Serm. before the H. of Com. Febr. 18. 1620. pag. 6 7. Rom. 16.17 I seal up all with the grave admonition of a Primate Bishop and the Authentique Decision of this case by a Prince of Kings Let not every wanton wit saith the former to one of the Houses of Parliament bee permitted to bring what fancies hee list into the pulpit and to disturb things that have been well ordered I beseech you Brethen saith the Apostle mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which yee have learned and avoid them Howsoever wee may see cause why wee should dissent from others in matter of opinion yet let us remember that that is no cause why wee should break the Kings Peace and make a rent in the Church of God A thing deeply to bee thought of by the Ismaels Ismaels of our time whose hand is against every man Gen. 16.12 and every mans hand against them who bite and devour one another until they bee consumed one of another Gal. 5.15 who forsake the fellowship of the Saints and by sacrilegious separation break this bond of peace Little do these men consider how precious the Peace of the Church ought to be in our eyes to bee redeemed with a thousand of our lives and of what dangerous consequence the matter of Schism is unto their own souls For howsoever the Schismatick secundum affectum as the Schoolmen speak in his intention and wicked purpose taketh away unity from the Church even as hee that hateth God taketh away goodness from him as much as in him lyeth yet secundum effectum in truth and in very deed hee taketh away the unity of the Church onely from himself that is hee cutteth himself off from being united with the rest of the body and being dissevered from the body how is it possible that hee should retain communion with the head Thus that most learned Primate Note for whom the Brethren seem to have a special reverence in recommending of his Model of Episcopacy Necessit Reform p. 53. Wherein yet hee did propound but not prescribe his ●udgement according to that Seneca Illi qui in his rebus nobis praecesserunt non Domini sed Duces nostri sunt or as the Apostle as a helper 2 Cor. 1.24 not as a Lord over the Faith of the Church in this particular but especially as respecting the time when more could not well bee hoped for The last word as 't is meet shall bee the Kings and 't was his deciding one in these controversies after hearing of all debates about them at the conference at Hampt Court Proclamat for authorizing the book of Com. prayer at the close And last of all saith hee wee do admonish all men that herereafter they shall not expect nor attempt any further alteration in the common and publick form of Gods service from this which is now ESTABLISHED For that neither will wee give way to any to presume that our own judgement having determined in a matter of this weight shall bee sweighed to
sure that it is not there in any point condemned of Heresie unless it be of the ANABAPTISTS as it is here And I do not think but there be some as well there as in England and it is like enough that SUCH do finde fault with it Who are offended with the Liturgy Dr. Martin Nay even of Mr. Cox himself and other that were Preachers in King Edwards time they have disproved your * This Book established 5 6. Edw. 6. was re-established 1. Eliz. with two or three alterations and is that we now use as was proved above The Alterations are in the Act prefixed before the Service-Book second Book in divers points and have now made a third Book how say you which of these three Books will you allow now Careless Forsooth I say still as I have written that the second Book is good and godly and IN ALL POINTS agreeing to the Word of God and I am sure that neither Master Cox nor any other of our godly Preachers that be fled unto Frankford have condemned that Book IN ANY POINT as repugnant to the Word of God though perchance they have altered something therein according to the usage of that Country where now they are And I have not denied in my Articles but the Church of Christ hath power and authority to enlarge or diminish any thing in the same GOOD BOOK so far forth as it is agreeable to the Scriptures D. Martin But what authority have you or how durst you bee so bold to make an Article of the Faith concerning that Book to be beleeved of all men under pain of damnation Carelesse Ah Master Doctor have I bound any man to beleeve that Article under pain of damnation as you do charge mee I am sure there is no such word in all my Articles I have there written what I hold and beleeve my self as I am bound to do in conscience And now I will add thus much more That the same Book which is so consonant and agreeable to the Word of God ☞ Nore in the fear of God and consider being set forth by Common Authority both of the Kings Majesty that is dead and the whole Parliament House ought not to be despised by mee or any other private man under pain of Gods high displeasure and DAMNATION except they repent 2. Concerning Monarchy and that of this Nation * The Testimony of Mr. Sam. Ward sometime the famous Preacher of Ipswitch the Author of several elegant and useful pieces Hoc enim mihi ratum indubitatum semper fuit hoc semper cum Politicis Theologis gravissimis sensi palum apud omnes professus sum Monarchiam haereditariam sub qua mihi vitales auras feliciter haurine bonis omnimodis frui piè tranquillè degere contigit esse omnium quotquot extant aut excogitari possunt regiminum formae longè multumque praestantissimam utilissimam laudatissimam Cui me ex animo favere ille novit qui perscrutatur renes meos c. i. e. This hath alwaies been with mee a certain and undoubted maxime In his Preface to King Charls the first prefixed before his Treatise in Latine of the Load-stone dedicated unto him intituled Magnetis Reductorium this alwaies with the best States-men and Divines I have ever concluded and openly among all men professed viz. That a Monarchical Government hereditary under which providence hath so ordered that I have drawn my vital breath enjoyed many comforts have had the opportunity to live godly and quietly is of all Governments which are or can be divised by many degrees the best the most beneficial and most commendable to which that I am from my heart a well-wisher hee knows that searches my reins and my heart said that Author Dr. Sanderson the now Right Reverend Bishop of Lincoln in his late treatise intituled Episcopacy not prejudicial to Regal Power as established by Law in the Postscript Lastly Concerning the Divine Right of Episcopacy Though from one in that function yet because it derives it higher and founds it somewhat deeper more solidly and also briefer than is usually done deserves more special notice His words are My opinion is that Episcopal Government is not to bee derived meerly from Apostolical practice or Institution But that it is originally founded in the person and office of the Messias our Blessed Lord JESUS CHRIST who being sent by his heavenly Father to bee the great Apostle Heb. 3.1 Bishop and Pastor 1 Pet. 2.25 of his Church and annointed to that office immediately after his Baptism by JOHN with power and the Holy Ghost Act. 10.37 8. descending then upon him in a bodily shape Luke 3.22 did afterward before his ascension into Heaven send and impower his holy Apostles giving them the Holy Ghost likewise as his Father had given him John 20.21 to execute the same Apostolical Episcopal and Pastoral office for the ordering and governing of his Church until his coming again and so the same office to continue in them and their Successors unto the end of the world Mat. 28.18 20. This I take to be so clear from these and other like Texts of Scripture that if they shall bee diligently compared together both between themselves and with the following practice of all the Churches of Christ as well in the Apostles times as in the purest and Primitive times nearest thereunto there will bee left little cause why any man should doubt thereof Thus that Reverend Author II. Certain other Examples of Retractations In the next place other Instances of Retractations and repentings Beda prefat in Retract suas in Actor Apostol Tom. 6. Cujus Augustini industriam nobis quoque pro modulo nostro placuit imitari Nunc in idem volumen Actor Apostolic brevem Retractationis libellum condamus studio maximè vel addendi quae minus dicta vel emendandi quae socus quam placuit dicta videbantur The ingenuity and industry of St. Austin in his Retractations it is my purpose in my small measure to imitate also Now therefore let us compile a brief Treatise of Retractations with this intent especially either of adding those things which were not sufficiently expressed or of amending those that were expressed otherwise than did seem convenient saith venerable Bede Again For my part saith another though a late Author yet one of good note Good Reader Mr. Whately in his Bride-Bush in his advertisement to the Reader I account it no shame to confess and revoke an errour and will therefore do it plainly and without circumstance Then hee closes with this honest and Austin-like expression viz. From him that had rather confess his own error than make thee erre for company The like whereunto wee heard above out of that Father And Dr. Bishop Brownriggs sentence concerning Retractations Related by Dr. Gauden the now very Rev. Bishop of Excester his successon Brownrigge the late most worthy Bishop of Excester would say that Hee
hoped every good man had his Retractations either actual or intentional that died in true Faith and Repentance howsoever all had not time to write their Retractations as St. Austin did This for Retractations III. An Evidence further of the sincerity of my own For the Truth of my Return unto the Church take part of a Letter written to a dying friend and neer relation Octob. 8. 60. Immediately after my recovery from my dangerous sickness above mentioned the rather because the matter may do good to some others also the words were these viz. The next thing I would remember you of is that you have according to the course of this world lived in Schism and separation from the Church your Minister and the Ordinances of God in the place where you live and particularly from the holy Communion Remember what the Holy Ghost saith 1 Cor. 11.30 For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many are dead If the prophanation then the total neglect of the Sacrament which argues a contempt of it is often punished in this manner Apply this and see the Exhortations before the Lords Supper in the Common-Prayer-Book where you shall see more of the danger of the neglect of this Ordinance Neither is Schism and withdrawing our selves from the Church in the place wherein wee live and the Ministry and Ordinances there a small sin For it is a rending and defiling and destroying of that particular body of Christ and Church of God Now the punishment is If any man defile or destroy so it is in the Margin of your Bible the Temple of God him will God destroy 1 Corinth 3.17 God is destroying of you in the midst of your years and this is your sin Your Example makes other stones of the spiritual building as one peece in a house falling makes way for another fall off too If all should do so God should have no Church no Ministry no Worship in that place Your Father did not so but waited humbly on God in his Ordinances and made use of such Ministry as God sent though sometimes mean and none of the best and encouraged them What is it then First ask the Lord earnest pardon Next go and bee reconciled to your * Mr. P. of St. 〈◊〉 A man fully conformable t● the Church of England Minister let proud men count never so meanly of him Crave his prayers attend upon his Ministry joyn with him in Publick Worship bee admitted to the Lords Table and go not out of the world as a Heathen of no Church and with no Sacraments If you will think on the premises though your condition should bee as the giving up of the Ghost as Job speaks yet God ordinarily works extraordinary things in such cases ' He brings down to the grave and raises up again 1 Sam. 2. Hee kills and makes alive Hee giveth forth the sentence of death and afterwards quickens again 2 Cor. 1. But so that we acknowledge that wee have sinned Job 33. observe that place and read Psal 107. Howsoever you will depart in peace namely in the Communion of Christ his Church and Ordinances and so with them be gathered into the bosome of Abraham there to expect the second appearance of the Great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ If you neglect these things my soul shall mourn in secret for you yet with this comfort that I have in part discharged it But let mee hope better things of you and such as do accompany salvation Consider what hath been said and the Lord give you understanding in all * This Lette● to have them 〈◊〉 been sent is 〈◊〉 known to se●ral persons i● Cambr. who● have seen t● Original wh● also I have 〈◊〉 covered Act. 24. things c. Thus far the Letter And now to put a final period to this large discourse in a word I beseech all men to be perswaded first That I do with the Blessed Apostle beleeve all things that are written in the Law and the Prophets in the Evangelists and Apostles next that I have hope towards God that there shall be a Resurrection both of the Just and the Unjust And lastly that hereupon I exercise my self to have a Conscience void of offence toward God and towards man alwaies with which Petition and Profession I cease and shut up all Sept. 13 Ann. Dom. 1661. Regni Carol. secundi Magn. Britann Franc. Hibern Regis sereniss 13. sed inaudito Dei Consilio Restituti cum eo Ecclesiae secundo * A●t M. 5 Adulation● epto i● Maii 29. 〈◊〉 mihi natali● per lavacr● generation● NOVAE 〈◊〉 excurrit Quod utrique secundissimè faustissimeque in perpetuum cedat Votum ex animo quotidian JOHANNIS ELLIS FINIS
alteration by the FRIVOLOUS suggestions of any LIGHT spirit Neither are wee ignorant of the inconveniences that do arise in GOVERNMENT by admitting INNOVATIONS in things once SETTLED by mature deliberation and how necessary it is to use CONSTANCY in the upholding of the publick determinations of states for that such is the unquietness and unstedfastness of some dispositions affecting every year NEW forms of things as if they should bee followed in their unconstancy would make all actions of state RIDICULOUS and contemptible Whereas the stedfast maintaining of things by good advice established is the weal of Common-Wealths Thus far of the first point of Independency viz. Separation the second and third Congregation and non Subjection have been spoken to above and of the causes of my recess from the Church thereunto with responsals to them Wherein for the clearing of things I have been much larger than my self intended But yet Absit enim ut multiloquium deputem quando necessaria dicuntur quantalib Sermonum multitudine ac prolixitate dicantur Aug. God forbid dhat I should count that Aug. Prolog in lib. Retract multitude of words when nothing is said but what is necessary although it be uttered with never so great a number of speeches or length of discourse saith S. Austin CHAP. IX The Proof and Tryal of these Retractations SECT I. LEt mee now subjoyn a certain proof and as it were divine tryal or attestation of these Retractations and then I shall conclude and dismiss the Reader It is one of the gracious providences which Almighty God exerciseth towards his Servants to put them to the tryal of their Faith and Profession 1 Cor. 3. 1 Pet. 1. and that by fire So the Apostle That the tryal of your Faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth though it be tryed by fire c. Hence hee smites them into the place of Dragons and covers them with the shadow of death that by extremity being put to examine their grounds if they were insufficient they might not dye for Psal 44.20 or in them and if good they might stick the closer to them Hereupon oftentimes sufferings sickness and the approach of death occasions the repenting of those things whereof men have been very confident Vid. The speeches of the Gent. that suffered as communicated by the publick intelligencer Mr. Cook As appeared now of late in the sad Example of those Gentlemen who suffered about the death of our late Soveraign As may bee seen on publication of the speeches of some of them and the wonderful consternation and unpreparedness for death of Mr. Peters And touching Mr. Cook I remember that hee being of the Independent opinion and writing a book for that way wrote also soon after the death of the King a vindication and defence of that his act Wherein hee much glorieth in the office hee performed in that affair Sollicitor as I take it he was and among other things hath these That hee was indifferent whether hee dyed by a stab or a pistol or by a Feaver or Consumption That in his pleading against other malefactors hee used to tremble but that in his actings against the King his blood sprung in his veins Yet wee hear he was of another minde at his death but whether so or no I insist not on it The prophane Schism of the Brownists chap. 7. pag. 41. And there is remarkable story in a Book intitled The prophane Schism of the Brownists written by some that had been in that seduction of a certain Minister one Mr. Gilgate who was misled that way and of Mr. Ainsworths company Who lying on his sick-bed and in peril of death uttered by way of repentance these most savoury and considerable words O Lord rebuke mee not in thine anger Psal 6. neither chastise mee in thy wrath for thine arrows have light upon mee and thine hand lieth upon mee There is nothing sound in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there rest in my bones because of my sin c. Having now long time been afflicted with sharp and grievous sickness whereby it hath pleased God to bring mee into more serious and deep consideration of my estate Note in separating from the Churches of Christ and still finding my separation to bee more unlawful the more I consider the same And while I felt my felt at the weakest and sickest and so pressed with the force of my disease that I even doubted of life I left my conscience most pressed with desire Note to revoke my separation And therefore do now think it my duty before I bee taken away hence and bee found no more or howsoever the Lord shall dispose of mee by life or death to give testimony to the truth whereof I am perswaded in my soul And as mine own disease and the hand of God stretched out upon mee The disease of the separation moveth mee to consider and testifie these things so the disease of the separation and the hand of God which I see to be stretched out a-against it doth also draw mee on the other side unto the same thing The disease of the separation is a hot and burning disease that consumeth and destroyeth many with the poisonous and contagious heat thereof of every company among them is a flame of condemnation to devour another The boyl of their contention swelleth and burneth incessantly and they have yet no poultess to break it nor any oyl to mollifie the same Then speaking of Mr. Ainsworth's and Mr. Johnson excommunicating one anothers members with much bitterness hee addeth It appears they never travelled in pain of them Note they never begot them by their Ministry but having seduced and stolen these children from the sides of other true Churches the right Mothers in whose womb they they were regenerate and born anew they are now become hard-hearted c. Like the false Mother that would have the childe divided And a little after I do now by this writing unfeignedly acknowledge my sin to bee great in renouncing the communion with so many faithful servants of God with whom once I lived Church of England Note In the Church of England I sinned against and dishonoured his name in refusing to hear the word of life preached in those Assemblies The life comfort and salvation that I expect and hope for in the Kingdome of Heaven is by the Faith of the Gospel preached in that Church and preached there with more power fruit and efficacy Note than I ever yet heard in the Churches of the Separation Then speaking of the Lady C. that desired to be in that way hee adds But for my part having now had sufficient experience of their waies I do freely acknowledge and profess in this bed of my sickness from which I know not whether ever I shall arise unto my former health that it should bee my great comfort to dye in the communion of those Churches
Note whom they have now rejected and to renounce my separation before I bee separated out of this world Thus far Mr. Will. Giigate with other things worth the noting SECT II. AS touching my self the like or if you will the contrary upon a contrary cause hath happened For in August last going to London with a great part of these Retractations with intention to print them wholly off as some of it was done before It pleased God to assault * Aug. 24. St. Barth day 1660. Job 19.12 On the Eve whereof now 1661. and in the same place not on design but occasionally I observe I am ultimately fitting this Chapter for the Press providence hath often such not to be neglected parallels mee with a whole squadron of diseases ' and as Job speaks hee sent out his troops against mee every one of them threatning no less than the approach of the King of Fears A Plurisie an high Malignant if not a pestilential Feaver the Jaundice and a Cough threatning a Consumption after all With the second whereof the Physicians being affrighted that was their word and it prevailing to a great measure of heat deprivation of sleep inequallity and interception of the pulse both in their fears and in my own sense I began to receive the sentence of death in my self 2 Cor. 1. It was now a time of most solemn exploration as in reference unto other matters so also unto that of Retractation both that which I had before * In the Tract intitled the Pastor and the Clerk Anno 1659. Gen. 8. published above mentioned and this which I had brought with mee for the Press But the Dove ' my conscience could finde no rest for the sole of its foot but in the Ark of this Church and State as established by Law And unto which I had by those Retractations declared my return And I did tremble at the thoughts of being found either in Sedition or Schism as to my judgement I formerly was Now the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 3. The fire shall try every mans work whether it bee Gold Hay or Stubble This proof therefore God having given mee of these Retractations I have made bold thus far with the Readers Candor here to impart it as perhaps not altogether useless SECT III. ANd now because nec medico in majus gratia referri potest Senec. de Benef lib. 3. cap. 35. nec nautae si naufragum sustulit Wee cannot be too thankful to our Medicant or to our Mariner saving us from Shipwrack Give mee leave by way of Recognition to reflect with Gratitude on the healing hands of those worthy persons Of Dr. Tho. Cox one of His now Majesties Physicians in ordinary who though designed formerly for another study yet Scire potestates herbarum usumque medendi Maluit Hee rather chose the power of herbs to know And that good Art whence health to man doth grow And of Dr. John Hill another of the Colledge my honoured friend and Collegiate now deceased lately Both Gratis and without Fee yea and with the offer of supply also because I was visited from mine own home And of Mr. Will. Bradford Apothecary my Collegiate also at the three black Lions in the Old-Bayley which God was pleased to make use of for my recovery None of these were of that number with him Tertul. advers Marcion lib. 1. qui nutriat morbum morâ praesidii periculum extendat dilatione remedii quo preciosius aut famosius curet That maintains the disease by the delay of remedy and augments the danger by deferring of help for the more gainful reward or the greater reputation But as one of them Qui plus impendit quàm medico necesse est pro me non pro fama artis extimuit Senec. de Benefic lib. 6. c. 16. Non fuit contentus remedia monstrare sed admonit Interea sollicitus assedit ad suspecta tempora occurrit Nullum Ministerium oneri illi nullum fastidio fuit Gemitos meos non securus audivit In turbâ multorum inuocantium ego illi potissima curatio fui Who performs more than might bee look't of a Doctor A Physician Careful not for his own credit but for my safety Not contented to prescribe the remedies but hee applies them In the mean while sits and observes diligently Hastens to be present at critical seasons Is neither weary nor ashamed of any office hee may do Hears my groans with trouble and so attends mee as if among the crowd that call for help my self onely were his patient And in a word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. Il. λ. A man of Art whose finger cures the sick More than the body of an Emperick SECT IV. BUt yet Non haec humanis opibus Aeneid 12. non arte Magistrâ Proveniunt Major agit Deus atque opera ad majora remittit This not by humane help nor Physicks skill 'T was God that did it whose most sacred will Is I should live to further service still Psal 147.3 After the old English Mark 2.7 For hee saith the Psalmist giveth medicine to heal their sickness Because sickness originally is the fruit of sin and none can forgive sin but God onely Hence they are joyned and joyntly ascribed unto him Psal 103.3 who forgiveth all thy sin who healeth all thy diseases Which is also the observation of Hezekiah being recovered from sickness Thou hast saith hee delivered mee from the pit of corruption Isa 38.17 for thou hast cast all my sins behinde thy back Psal 116.12 For my self therefore I must exclaim with the former And passionately interrogate my soul What shall I render unto the Lord for all these benefits towards mee And particularly for giving mee this further proof by this tryal that there is no peace to the wicked Isa 57. ult and Apostates from communion with this Church and from obedience to the fundamental Laws of this Nation The Laws being not onely a result of the reason of many men for publick good as that * Dr. Sibs Souls conflict cap. 17. Author speaks But also of the Law of Nature it self As the * Rom. 2.15 chap. 1.19 Apostle shews Nay an express even of Gods own Law As the same Apostle hath it a little before if * R. Hook Eccl. pol. l. 3. sec 9. therefore they have God for their Author contempt which is offered unto them cannot chuse but redound unto him Whose vindication of himself and such Laws wee have seen executed upon the violaters from the least of them unto the greatest The Lord therefore having delivered mee from so great a sin and so dangerous a sickness I will take the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the Lord Psal 116. I will pay my vows c. CHAP. X. The Conclusion Petitory Monitory Speratory SECT I. ANd now to close this Tractate I beseech all men to judge nothing before the time