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A13028 An assertion for true and Christian church-policie VVherein certaine politike obiections made against the planting of pastours and elders in every congregation, are sufficientlie aunswered. And wherein also sundrie projectes are set downe, how the discipline by pastors & elders may be planted, without any derogation to the Kings royal prerogatiue, any indignitie to the three estates in Parleament, or any greater alteration of the laudable lawes, statutes, or customes of the realme, then may well be made without damage to the people. Stoughton, William, fl. 1584.; Knollys, Francis, Sir, d. 1643. 1604 (1604) STC 23318; ESTC S117843 177,506 448

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manner thereof is none other manner of gouerment nor forme of The maner of policie by Pastors and Elders in the Church is agreeable to the government in the cōmō weale pollicie thē such as they and their progenitors and Ancestors for many hundred yeares togither without interruption haue vsed and enioyed in the common weale And that therefore it will be a very easy matter to transferre the same to the gouerment of the Church For by the reasons and principles of their own gouerment in the common weale and by the sence feeling thereof they may wel be induced to thinke that they haue iniurie if they haue not as much to doe in matters of the Church as they haue to doe in matters of the common weale seeing they touch their commoditie and benefitt spiritually as the other doeth temporally And withall on the other side I shall doe my best indeavour to aduertise them that the gouernement of the Church by Prelacie is such a maner of gouernment as was neuer yet The government of the Church by Prelacie disagreeable to the government vsed in the common weale in the administration of iustice by any subiect no not touching the outward forme thereof once admitted into any part of common weale and that therefore the same if it may please the King will very easely bee sent and transmarined vnto Rome frō whence it first came where it had it originall and birth-right And to the end that we may clearelie discerne whether the nature of the gouerment of the Church by Prelacie or the nature of the gouerment desired to be planted by Pastors and Elders be more agreable to the nature of the pollicie receaued and vsed both by the Nobles and common people in the common weale it is necessarie that the manners and formes both of Prelaticall Pastorall gouernment be made familiar vnto the minde of the Reader And because wee haue alreadie declared the manner of the election and confirmation both of a Bishopp into his Episcopall Sea of a Minister into his Pastorall charge what the one is by the lawe alreadie established and what the other by a law desired to be established ought to be wee will not any more speake of their entrāce into eyther of their places vnles only a litle to recreate the Reader we merely note what answere some Bb. haue made when as long chasing after Bishopricks they haue chafed in their minds for feare of loosing their pray as was the answere of that Italian Bishopp The answer of an Italian Bishop loth to loose his Bishopricke who beeing thrise demaunded of the Archb. as the manner is vis Episcopari vis Episcopari vis Episcopari and being willed by one standing by thrise againe to aunswere as the maner is nolo nolo nolo He making no bones at the matter aunswered aloude with an oath Proh Deum dedine ego tot milia Florenorum pro volo Episcopari iam debeo dicere nolo or as was the answere of that English Bishop who having promised a Courtier one annuitie of xx pound during The answer of an English Bishop having obteyned his congedelier his life out of his Bishopricke if he could procure the speedie sealing of his congedelier within a while after whē it was sealed he rapt out an oath sware by Iesus God that the same Gentleman had done more for him then an other great Courtier who before hande for that purpose had receyued frō him one thousand markes But whether all Bishoppes buye their congedeliers dearer or better cheape is not a matter incident to this treatise onlie if they buie deare they may happelie think with them selues that they may sell deere vendere iure potest emerat ille prius setteth not anie price vpon any wares in the Royall exchange But to returne to our purpose whence by occasion of those Bishoplie oathes and answeres wee haue a little digressed let vs see what is the maner The maner of the administration of spiritual iustice in the Church by Prelacie and forme of the administration of spirituall iustice in the gouernment of the Church by Prelacie as the same is ordinarilie administred in all places throughout the Church of Englande Wherein that we be not mistaken it is to be vnderstood that the maner of administratiō of iustice wherof we speak is that administration of iustice onlie whiche respecteth the punishment of crimes eccllesiasticall to be inflicted by spirituall censures In all which cases penances suspension and excommunications in the Bishops consistorie proceed from the iudgement and authoritie of the Bishoppe alone if he bee present or from the sentence and power of his Vicar generall or Cōmissarie alone if he be absent Nay doth not everi such censure likewise in the Archdeacons consistorie proceede from the sole authoritie of the Archdeacon or if he bee absent from the sole authoritie of his officiall But if the like course of the execution of Iustice as this is can not be found to be an ordinarie course of Iustice in the common weale where Iustice is administred in criminall causes by the ministerie of a subiect I would faine learne what preiudice may be feared to redound vnto the cōmon weale if the administration of spirituall Iustice after a sort were established to be after the same manner in the Church after which civill Iustice is alreadie practised in the common weale I said after a sort to this end least I should bee mistaken For the meaning is not that spirituall Iustice should bee ministred exactly in No one subiect in the cōmon weale can alone exercise civill iustice in causes criminall every respect after the maner of civill Iustice but the comparison standeth onlie in this that as not any one temporall subiect alone hath authoritie to heare to examine and to iudge any one criminall cause in any Court of civill iustice in the common weale so likewise that not any one spirituall person alone should haue authoritie to be examiner and iudge of any one criminall cause in any Court of spirituall Iustice in the Church For if certain principall The administration of spiritual Iustice by Pastors Elders agreeable to the execution of civill iustice in the common weale godly persons associated vnto a learned and zealous Pastor in the presence and with the consent and authoritie of the people of every Parish did enioyne penance suspend or excommunicate a spirituall offendor were not this forme of administration of spirituall iustice more consonant agreeable and conformable to the daily executiō of civill Iustice in the Courts of the cōmon weale then is the administration of spirituall Iustice by the Bishopp alone or by his Vicar general alone in his Consistorie and to make this matter more familiar in the mind of the Reader for an instāce or two let vs suppose that Mai. Doctor Bancroft were still Parson of S. Andros Maister D. Bancroft with his assistāts letter able to
law these offices and functions haue bin and yet are dayly vndertaken and executed to the full And what mā then if there were none other rewarde for Civilians would tenne or twelue yeres togither beat his braine and trouble his witts in the studie of the civill lawe when every silly canonist might be able and learned inough to sit in the Bishops throne and to be iudge in his consistorie Besides if the Admonitor speake sooth viz that Civilians in this Realm liue not by the vse of the civill lawe to what end then should he feare an overthrow of the studie thereof For if there be no vse of it in this Realme for the maintenance of this life to what vse then should men studie the same in this Realme As for the vse of it among strangers and forraigne nations without the Realme the same as I suppose is no greater then such as 3. or 4. Civilians may bee able well inough fully to deliver the law touching all matters of controversie that may grow to question during the whole space of a Kinges raigne If no man lived in this Realme by the trade of brewing Beere but that all Brewers did live by the trade of brewing Ale what should we neede to feare the decaye of Beere-brewers or what vse were there of them In like sort if men liue onelie by the vse offices and functions of the canon law that men liue not as he saith by the vse of the civill law within the Realme what follie were it to studie the one whereas without the knowledge therof he might live by the other And therefore it seemeth that the Admonitor by his own weapon as much as in him lay hath given the whole studie of the civill law a most desperate and deadly wound And to the end we may vnderstand what reward maintenance Civilians by the offices functions of the canon law doe receyve yearely for their service and attendance in the Bishops and Archdeacons their Courts We will examine what fees Doctors of the civil law being Chancelors Commissaries or Officials haue vsually and ordinarily allowed vnto them by their Lords and Maisters Fees for probat of Testaments graunting of administrations Fees for probat of testaments let to farme with their appendances of late yeares in some places whether in all or how many I know not haue bin demised vnto farm for an annual rent out of which either a small or no portion at all hath bin allowed vnto the Chancelor or Official for his service in this behalf Wherevpon as I coniecture it hath fallen out rather then that those Officers would worke keepe courts travaile for litle or nought there have bin exacted greater fees for the dispatch of these things then by law ought to haue bin paied Perquisits of courts arising vpon suits commenced betwene partie and partie it must bee a plentifull harvest and there must be multi amici curiae in a Bb. consistorie if ordinarily communibus annis they amoūr in the whole to twentie pounds by the yeare and yet these perquisits belong not wholy to the Chancelor but are to be devided betweene him the Register And touching Fees for excommunication and absolution fees for institutiō induction licences to preach licences for Curates and Readers For testimoniall of subscription or licences to marrie without banes fees for cōmutation of penance fees for relaxation of sequestrations touching these manner of Fees if the same be fees no way warantable howe are not then such Fees every way dishonorable for a Doctor of the civill lawe Fees due for the executiō of the functions of the canon lavve dishonorable for a Doctor of the civil lavv to take either of Ministers or people There must bee therefore some other hope of better reward maintenance to incite and incourage schollers to the studie of the civill law thē are these beggerlie and vnlawfull fees depending vpon the functions and exacted by the officers of the canon law or ells the vse of the civil law as the Admonitor saith must necessarilie in short time be overthrovven For if Fees for probat of Testaments and granting of administrations with their appendices shall still be let to farme and if also many vnlawfull Fees were quite inhibited there would remaine I trowe but a very poore pittance for Civilians out of the functions of the canon law to maintaine their Doctoralities withall But what better reward can there bee for Civilians then hath already bin mentioned If the Admonitor had not willingly put a hoodwincke Civilians 〈◊〉 Englād liue not only by the functiōs of canō lavv before his eyes hee might haue seene that the civilians liue not wholy altogether by the practise of the canon law but partly also and that most honorably by the vse of the civill lawe If a Doctor of the civill lawe bee Iudge or Advocate in the Court of Admiraltie if he be Iudge or Advocate in the prerogatiue Court so farre as the same Court handleth onely matters of Legacies Testaments and Codicills to what vse can the canō law serue him or what advantage can the same lawe bring him in Besides to what vse serveth the canon law vnto a Doctor of the civill law if he shall finde favor in the Kings sight if it please the King to make him one of the Maisters of his Requestes or one of the twelue Maisters of his high Court of Chancerie or to be the Maister of his Roles or to be his Highnes Embassador vnto forreyne Nations of to be one of his H. most honorable privie Councel or to be one of his principall Secretaries It followeth not therefore as the Admo pretendeth that eyther the Civilians in this Realme live not by the vse of the civill law but by the offices functions of the canon lawe and such things as are within the compasse therof or that the hope of rewarde and by that meanes the whole studie of the civill law must be taken away if once the canon law should be abolished Neither would it bee any hard matter for the King if the Civilians might finde grac● in his sight to appoint Courtes offices and all maner of processe and proceedings in iudgement for Doctors of the civill law to heare determine in the Kings name all causes being now within the compasse of any civill or ecclesiasticall law within this Realme And although a litle candle can giue but a litle light and a small Spring can send●● forth but a small streame yet because great fiers are kindled sometimes by 〈◊〉 tle sparkles and smal streames 〈◊〉 togither may in tyme growe into great rivers I shall desire the great Civilians with their floods lamps of learning to helpe forward such a law as where●● the studie of the civill law may bee vpholden the reward and maintenance of Civilians without any function frō the Canon law may be enlarged many cōtroversies and disorders in the church may be pacified and
the Kings prerogative Royall be duely advanced Which things if it might please them rightly to consider then let them humblie and seriouslie beseech our Sovereine Lord the King and States in Parleament to giue their consentes to such a law as the proiect ensuing may warrant thē the same not to be dangerous to the overthrowe of their civill studies The Proiect of an Act for the explanation and amplifying of one branch of a statute made in the first yeere of the raigne of Queene Elizabeth entituled An Act restoringe to the Crowne the ancient iurisdiction over the state Ecclesiasticall and also for the declaring and reviving of a statute made in the first yere of King Edward the sixt entituled An Act what seales and stiles Bishops and other spiritual persons exercising iurisdiction ecclesiasticall shall vse FOr asmuch as by one braunch of an Act made in the first yeere of our late Soveraigne Ladie of blessed memorie Queene Elizabeth entituled an Act restoring to the Crowne the auncient iurisdiction over the state Ecclesiastical Spirituall and abolishing all forraigne power repugnant to the same it was established and enacted That such iurisdictions priviledges superiorities and preheminences spiritual and ecclesiasticall as by anie spirituall or ecclesiasticall power or authoritie hath heeretofore bin or may lawfully be exercised or vsed for the visitation of the Ecclesiasticall state and persons and for reformation order correction of the same and of all maner errors heresies schismes abuses offences contempts and enormities should for euer by authoritie of that present Parleament be vnited and annexed to the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme by meanes whereof it may now be made a questiō whether any Archbishops or other Ecclesiasticall persons having since that time vsed or exercised any such spirituall or ecclesiasticall iurisdiction in their owne right or names might lawfully haue done or hereafter may lawfully doe the same without speciall warrant and authoritie derived immediatly frō your Highnes by and vnder your H. letters patents And whereas also by a statute made in the first yeare of Kinge Edward the sixt entituled an act what seales and stile Bishops or other spirituall persons shall vse it was ordained that all and singular Archbishops and Bishops others exercising ecclesiastical iurisdictiō should in their processe vse the Kings name and stile and not their owne and also that their Seales should bee graved with the Kings armes And forasmuch also as it must bee highly derogatorie to the Imperiall Crowne of this your Highnesse Realme that any cause whatsoever ecclesiasticall or temporall within these your H. Dominions should be heard or adiudged without warrant or commission from your Highnes your heyres successors or not in the name stile and dignitie of your Highnes your heyres and successors or that anie seales should be annexed to anie promesse but onelie your Kinglie seale and armes May it therefore please the King at the humble supplication of his Commons to haue it enacted That the aforesaid branch of the aforesaid Act made in the first yeere of Queene Elizabeth her raigne everie part thereof may still remayne for ever be in force And to the end the true intent and meaning of the said statute made in the first yeere of King Edward the sixt may be declared and revived that likewise by the authoritie aforesaid it may be ordayned and enacted that all and singular Ecclesiastical Courts and Consistories belonging to any Archb. Bb. Suffraganes Colege Deane and Chapiter Prebendarie or to any Ecclesiasticall person or persons whatsoever and which haue heretofore bin commonly called reputed taken or knowne to bee Courts or Consistories for causes of instance or wherein any suite complaint or action betwene partie and partie for any matter or cause wherin iudgment of law civil or canon hath bin or is required shall and may for ever hereafter be reputed taken and adiudged to be Courts and iudgmentseats meerely civill secular and temporall and not hence foorth Ecclesiasticall or spirituall and as of right belonging and apperteyning to the Royall Crowne and dignitie of our Soveraigne Lorde Kinge Iames that nowe is his heyres and successors for ever And that all causes of instance and controversies betwene partie partie at this day determinable in any of the said Courts heretofore taken and reputed ecclesiasticall shall for ever hereafter bee taken reputed and adiudged to be causes meerely civill secular and temporall as in trueth they ought to be and of right are belonging and appertayning to the iurisdiction of the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme And further that your H. liege people may be the better kept in awe by some authorised to be your H. Officers Ministers to execute iustice in your Highnes name and vnder your H. stile and title of King of England Scotlād Frāce and Ireland defendor of the faith c. in the said Courtes and Constories and in the said causes and controversies Bee it therefore enacted by the authoritie aforesaid That all the right title and interest of in and to the said Courts and Consistories and in and to the causes controversies aforesaide by any power iurisdiction or authoritie heretofore reputed Ecclesiasticall but by this Act adiudged civill secular and temporall shall for ever hereafter actually and reallie be invested and appropried in and to the Royall person of our Soveraigne Lord the King that now is his heyres successors Kinges and Queenes of this Realme And that it shall and may bee lawfull to and for our saide Soveraigne Lord and King his heyres and successors in all and everie Shire and Shires Diocesse and Diocesses within his H. Dominions and Countries by his and their letters patents vnder the great Seale of England from tyme to tyme and at all tymes to nominat and appoint one or moe able and sufficient Doctor or Doctors learned in the civill law to be his and their civil secular and temporal Officer and Officers Minister and Ministers of Iustice in the same civill secular and temporall Courts Consistories which in and ouer his and their royall name stile and dignitie shall as Iudge and Iudges doe perform execute all and every such act and acts thing and things whatsoeuer in and about the execution of iustice and equitie in those Courts according to the course and order of the civill lawe or the Ecclesiasticall canons and constitutions of the Realme as heretofore hath bin vsed and accustomed to bee done by for or in the name of any Archbb. Bb College Cathedral Church Deane Archdeacon Prebendary or any other Ecclesiasticall person or persons whatsoeuer And that all and every such civill secular and temporall Officer and Officers Minister and Ministers Iudge Iudges in his and their processe shall vse one manner of Seale only and none other hauing graued decently therein your Kingly armes with certaine characters for the knowledge of the Diocesse or Shire And further bee it enacted c That it shall and may be lawfull by
honorable Coūcell keeper of the Kings privie Seale or two of them calling vnto them one Bishop one temporal Lord of the Kings most honorable Councell the two chiefe Iustices of the Kinges bench and common Pleas for the time being or other two of the Kings Iustices in their absence haue full power and authoritie to punish after their demerits all misdoers being founde colpable before them If wee search our statutes besids the Courts and matters determinable in these spoken of before we shall find that the complaints of errour whether it touch the King or any other person 31. E 3. c. 21 made in the Exchecquer should be done to come before the Chancelor Treasurer who taking to them two Iustices other sage persons are duely to examine the busines and if any errour be found to correct amend the Roles c. By reason of delayes of iudgments vsed in the Chauncerie in the 14. E. 3. c 5 Kinges bench common bench and in the Exchecquer it was assented established and accorded that a Prelate two Earles and two Barons chosen by the Parleamēt by good advise of the Chancelour c. shall proceed to take a good accord and to make a good iudgement When it was complayned vnto the King that the profites c. of his Realme by ●0 K. 2. c. 1 some great Officers c. were much withdrawen and cloyned c. it pleased the King c. to cōmit the surveighing aswell of the estate c. of his house c. vnto the honourable Fathers in God William Archbishop of Canterburie and Alexander Archbishop of Yorke c. by a statute of commission for a 6. H. 6. Sewers by a statute for punishmēt of b 11. H. 5. c. 25. periurie by a statut against making or executing of actes or ordinances by any c 19 H. 7. c. 7. Maisters c. being not examined c. by the Lord Chancelour Treasurer or chiefe Iustices c. By a statute for the erection of the Court of d 27. H. 8. c 27. Augmētation by a statute for erection of the Court of firste e 32. H. c. 45. fruits tenthes and lastly by an f 27. Eli. c. 8 acte for redresse of erroneous iudgements in the Court commonly called the Kinges Bench By all these statutes I say it is very apparant that the Administration of publike affaires in the cōmon weale hath never bene vsually committed to the advisemnet discretion or definitiue sentence of any one man alone Which point is yet more fully and more perfectly Lord president and counsell in Wales Lord president coūsell in the North parts Lord Deputie counsell in Irelande The Kinge and his honorable privie Counsel to be vnderstood by the establishment continuance of the Kings Lord President and Councell in Wales of the Kings Lord President and Counsel established for the North of the Kinges Lord Deputie and Councell within the Realme of Irelande of the Kings Highnesse most honorable privie Councell chosen by him for the assistance of his Royall person in matters apperteyning to his Kingly estate and lastly of the supreame and grand Councell of the three estates in Parleament for matters concerning The Kinge his grand Counsell in Parleament the Church the King and the common Weale For whether respect bee had vnto the secrete affaires of the Kings estate consulted vpō in his Highnesse Councell Chamber by his privie Counsaylors or whether we regard the publike tractation of matters in Parleament there can bee no man so simple as not to knowe both these privie and open negotiatiōs to be carried by most voyces of those persons who by the King are called to those honorable assemblies And what a vaine iangling then doth the Admonitor keepe how idlely and wranglingly doth he dispute when against the government of the church by Pastours and Elders he obiecteth that the same will interrupt the lawes of the Realme that it wil be great occasion of partiall affectionate dealing that some will incline to one parte and that the residue wil bee wrought to favour the other and that thereby it wil be a matter of strife discord schisme and heresies Howbeit if never any of these extremities and dangers haue fallen out in the common weale by any partiall or affectionate dealing of the Kings Deputies Presidents Iudges Iusticers and other Officers Ministers associated vnto thē for the administratiō of Iustice or equitie in any of the Kings civill Courtes howe much lesse cause haue we to feare any partialitie affectiō working inclination favour strife debate schismaticall or hereticall opinions if once Pastours and Elders in every Congregation and not thoroughout a Diocesse one Bishop alone had the spirituall administration of the Church-causes Can many temporall Officers Iusticers and Iudges rightly and indifferently administer the law and execute iustice and iudgment without that that some doe incline to one part without that the residue bee wrought to favour the other part And cannot spirituall Officers dispatch spiritual affaires without that that they be partially affectionally disposed What is it so easie a matter that the Ancients of God and the Ministers of Christ can the one part incline to righteousnes and the residue be wrought to favor wickednes can some incline to God and vnto Christ and can other some be wrought to follow Satan and Antichrist For what other controversie is required to be decided by Pastours and Elders then the controversie of sinne betwene the soule of man and his God And is there any Christian Pastour or Elder that wil be wrought rather to favour the sinne of a mortall man then the glorie of his immortall God But to leaue the state of the Kingdome and common weale and the good vsages and customes of the same let vs come to the state of the Church it selfe and to the lawfull government thereof established even amongst vs at this day The gouerment of the Church ought not to be by one alone For whatsoever our reverend Bishoppes practise to the contrarie yet touching ordination and deposition of Ministers touching excommunication and absolution touching the order and rule of Colleges Cathedrall churches and the Vniversities the ecclesiasticall law doth not commit the administration of these things and regiment of these places to any one person alone The Vniversities admit not the goverment of the Chancelour being present nor of his Vicechancelour The gouerment in the Vniuersities not by one alone him selfe being absent as of one alone the Doctors Procurators Regents non-Regents haue all voyces and by most of their voyces the Vniversitie causes take successe The businesses The goverment in Colleges not by one alone of Colleges by the statutes of their founders are commended to the industrie and fidelitie of the President Vice-president and fellowes vnto the Provost Viceprovost and fellowes vnto the Warden Sub-warden and fellowes vnto the Maister
can any way be pregnant to proue the other And touching his assumption viz but the planting of the gouerment practised by the Apostles and primitiue Church will draw with it many great alterations of the state of gouerment of the lawes If in this place he vnderstood the state of Church gouerment and of the lawes Ecclesiasticall now in vse then is the proposition true And yet notwithstanding we avow the Gospell to be so farre from incurring any ouerthrow by such an alteration as thereby it is certayne that the same shal more more florish and be perpetuallie established by reason that this alteration should be made frō that which by long experience is knowne to be corrupt vnto that which is knowne by the holy Scriptures to be pure and sincere From a gouerment I say and lawes authorized by tradition and commandements of man alone to a policy lawes founded and descended by and from God him selfe But if the Admonitor by the assumption ment to enforme vs that the planting of the Apostolical gouerment will draw with it manie and great alterations of the temporall state of gouernment and of the temporall lawes statutes or customes of the kingdome then as before to his first so now also to his seconde I answere negatiuely and affirme that the The planting of the Apostolicall gouermēt will draw no alteratiō of the lawes of the realm with it planting of the said Apostolicall gouerment will not draw with it any least alteration of anie part of that temporall state of gouerment nor almost of anie one common statute or customarie law of the Land which may not rather bee altered thē reteyned For this platforme of gouerment we are able by the helpe of God to defend the same generallie for the most part to be most agreeable and correspondent to the nature qualitie disposition estate of our countrey people common weale and lawes as in our particular answeres to his particular reasons shall more at large appeare In all new and extraordinarie alterations it is not onely requisite to abolish al bad opinions out of the minds of those that know not the drift of the enterprisers but it is also necessarie that the defence of such alterations be made forcible against the opposition of all gaynesayers We will descend to the particulars ioyne issue with the Admonitor And vpon allegations exceptions witnesses and recordes to be made sworne examined and produced out of the holie Scriptures and lawes of the Land alreadie setled on the behalf of our cause before our Soveraigne Lord the King his Nobles and cōmons in Parleament we shall submit our selues and our cause to the Kings Royall and most Christian Iudgement In the meane time we 〈◊〉 that not onely the former clause of this admonitorie Bill but that al other clauses following in the same bill for the invaliditie insufficiencie indignitie and nullitie of them are to be throwne out and dismissed from the Kings Court especiallie for that the particulars opened by the Admonitor can not serue for any reasonable warning to induce the common people to relie themselues vpō his I am of opinion to the which wee plead at barr as followeth Admonition First saith he the whole State of Pag. 77. the Lawes of this Realme wil be altered For the Canon Law must be vtterlie taken away with all Offices to the same belonging which to supply with other lawes and functions without many inconveniences would bee verie hard the vse and studie of the civill law wil be vtterly overthrown Assertion When by a common acceptance and vse of speech these words whole state of the lawes of the Realme are vnderstood of the common and statute lawes of the Realme that is to say of the Kings temporall lawes and not of Canon or civill lawes it cannot followe that the whole state of the lawes of the Realme should Canon and civil laws no part of the laws of the Realme but only by sufferance be altered though the Canon and civill lawes with all Offices to the same belonging should be vtterly taken away be wholy overthrowne For no more could the Admonitor prove the canon or civill law at any time heretofore to haue bin any part of the lawes of this Realm otherwise then onlie by c 2. 25. H 8. C 21. in the preamble sufferance of our Kings acceptance long vse and custome of our people then can any man proue a parsly-bed a rosemary-twigge or an ivie-branch to be any part of the scite of the Castle of Farnham And therefore he might aswell haue concluded thus the whole scite of the Castle of Farnham wil bee transposed for the Boxetrees the heythorn arboures and the quicke set hedges planted within the Castle-garden must be removed cast away which were but a proof proouelesse and a reason reasonlesse If then by the abrogation of the canon or civill law scarce any one part of the lawes of this Realme should bee changed what reason haue we to thinke that the whole state of the lawes of the Realme must be altered Besides to conclude the whole by an argument drawen ab enumeratione partium and yet not to number the tenth part of such parts as were to bee numbred is I am sure neither good logike nor good law Moreover if all the canon-law I meane all the papall and forraigne canon law devised and ordeined at Rome or els where without the Realme and consequently all the Offices functions to the same belonging bee alreadie vtterlie taken away what hope of reward can Civilians expect from the vse of such things as are within the compasse of that law or of what efficacie is this argument to prove an alteration of anie part of the lawes of this Realme or that the studie of the Civill Law should be vtterly overthrowne For the whole state of the lawes properlie called the lawes of the Realme hath stood and continued many yeeres since the same Papal and canon law was abolished And as touching the Civilians for them to seeke after prefermentes by An imbasemēt for Civiliās to haue preferment by offices of the canon law offices and functions of the canon law is an embasement of their honorable profession especiallie since farre greater rewardes might verie easilie be provided for them if once they would put to their helping handes for the onely establishment and practise of the civil law in the principall causes now handled by them in the Courtes called Ecclesiasticall The canon law be abolished out of the Realme ought not to be vsed But how may it be proved that the Papall and forreign canon law is alreadie taken away and ought not to be vsed in England For my part I heartilie wish that some learned men in the common law would vouchsafe to shew vnto the King and Parleament their clere knowledge in this point In the meane season I shall not be negligent to gather set downe what in mine
of Tythes Testaments and Matrimonie matters also of adulterie slander c. are in these mens iudgments mere tēporal c. therefore to bee dealt in by the temporall Magistrate onely which as yet haue eyther none at all or very fewe lawes touching those things therefore the common lawe of the Realme must by that occasion receaue also a verie great alteration For it wil bee no small matter to applie these things to the temporal law to appoint Courts Officers and manner of processe and proceedings in iudgement for the same Assertion In deed we hold that all these matters whereof mention is here made and all Matters of tythes and other causes of like nature perteine to civill Iustice others of the like nature are merely civill and temporall and by the temporall Magistrate alone to bee dealt in and to be discussed if we consider the administration of externall and civill iustice And this wee thinke wil be graunted of all and not be denied of any vnlesse they be too to popishly addicted In regard whereof wee haue drawen as before is mentioned a proiect howe Courts and maner of processe and proceedinges in iudgement by Doctors of the civill law may be appointed by the King and his high Court of Parleamēt without that that the common law of the Realme by the occasion of any such courts officer or maner of processe and proceedings must receave any alteration at al muchlesse a very great alteration Howbeit if it should not please the King and that the Civilians could not finde favour in his sight by courts offices and maner of processe and proceedings in iudgement before specified or by the like to have the studie of the civill law advanced yet we thinke it convenient once againe to ●owe matters of Tythes c. may be dealt in by the Kings Iudges be examined howe these matters may be dealt in according to the rules groūd● of the common lawe before the Kings Iudges and Iustices of the Kings bench and common pleas By a statute of 32. H. 8. c. 7. it is cleare that all tythes oblations c. and other ecclesiasticall or spirituall profits by the lawe or statutes of the Realme may bee made temporal as being admitted to be abide go to and in temporall hands laye vses and profits From the reason 〈◊〉 which statute it is cleere that those law●● likewise may be reckoned amongst 〈◊〉 for temporall lawes which by the law●● and statutes of the Realme may be executed by temporall and lay persons and which are conversant about temporall and lay causes If then the execution of the lawes touching these matters may lawfully remaine abide in the hands of Doctors of the civill law being temporall and lay persons as alreadie vnder the Bishops they doe it can not be denied but that the Kings Iudges and Ius●icers of both Benches may be as competible Iudges to put in execution the lawes concerning these matters as Doctors of the civill law or other lay-men be But the causes are not reputed and called temporall lay causes amongst vs. What for that if in their owne nature simply considered these causes bee meerely laye and temporall causes such causes I meane as whereof the King a ●ay civill and temporall Magistrate by his lay civill and temporal Magistracie ●erived vnto him immediatly from the holy law of God may and ought to take ●ognizāce thervpō either in his own Royall person or by the person of any of his inferior Officers may giue abso●te peremptorie iudgement If I say ●hese things be so what booteth it or that wisedom is it contend that these causes and matters have bin and are stil adiudged to be therefore ecclesiasticall no temporal causes because through an abusive speech or through a vaine and evill custome they haue bin so called and accompted in times past And what if it hath pleased the Kinges Progenitors by sufferance to tollerate the execution of such lawes as concerne these things to be in the hands power of Ecclesiasticall persons yet here vpon it followeth not that in very deede and trueth the Magistracie of the said ecclesiasticall persons was an ecclesiasticall Magistracie or that they were ecclesiasticall Magistrats but their Magistracie was and remayned still a temporall magistracie they were and aboade temporall Magistrates For not more can the qualitie of the person alter the nature of the cause then can the qualitie of the cause alter the nature of the person And if it be true that matters determinable in tymes past by a Magistracie abusivelie called ecclesiastical be notwithstandinge properlie tempora●● matters and that the same Magistracie also be a temporall no spirituall Magistracie what a childish poore cōceit is it to challenge threp vpō the tēporall Magistrat that he hath none or verie few temporall lawes touching those matters And that therefore the people should not sollicit an alteratiō of abuses in Church-goverment least for want of temporall lawes the people should bee without ecclesiasticall discipline It will be no small matter saith hee to applie these things to the temporall lawe yea and so say I to But what of that The question is not how hardly these things may be applied to the temporall lawe but how small a matter it were to applie the temporall law vnto these thinges For it is not said in any law that casus ex iuribus but it is said in all lawes that The temporal law may easily be applied to causes nowe reputed ecclesiasticall ex casibus ●ura nascuntur And in deede the Phisition applieth not the disease to his phisicke but he prepareth his phisicke for the disease The husband-man he measureth not his groūd by the seed but his seed by the ground The Draper he meateth not his yarde by the cloth but his cloth by the yarde If in like maner the temporall lawes and the grounds and rules thereof were applied to these matters of tythes marriages c. whereof he speaketh what more alteration could there be of the temporall law by such an application then there is an alteration of the plūmet by laying it to the stone or then there is an alteration of the rule or yard by laying them to the timber cloth Besides he that rightly and after an exact equall proportion can apply one rule or maxime of the tēporall lawe to many more cases then wherevn to it hath bin vsually in former times applied he may rather be reputed an additioner then an alterer of the law But how may the temporall lawe be applied to those matters How even so and so as followeth By the statute 32. Howe Tythes may bee recouered in the Kings tēporall Courts H. 8. c. 7. it is declared that tythes oblations c. and other ecclesiastical or spirituall profitts c. bein̄g in laye mens handes to laye vses be no more ecclesiasticall but temporall goods and profittes and that if any person were disseysed
so to of the Church by Prelacie to be Monarchicall because the Queene was a Monarch and that the reverend Bishop governed vnder a Monarch then what did hee els but put a weapon into the handes of Pastors and Elders to prove their governement also to be Princelie and Monarchicall Because Pastors Elders desire not to haue that maner of governement to bee brought into the Church otherwise then by the Royall assent Souveraigne authoritie and expresse commandement of our most gratious King and Monarch Besids if any governement may be therefore saide to be a Monarchie because the same is derived from an earthly Monarch howe much more then may the governement of the Churches by Pastors and Elders be adiudged Monarchical by reason the same is deduced from our heavenly and everlasting Monarch For the reverend Bb. by their publike preachings apologeticall Ma. Horne Bishoppe of Winch. Ma. Iewell Bishop of Sali Mai. Bilson Bishoppe of Winch. writings testifie that power authoritie to ordeine and depose Ministers to excommunicate and to absolue to devise and to establishe rites and ceremonies in the church to define what is trueth to pronounce what is falsehood to determine what is schisme and to cōdemne what is heresie our reverend Bb. I say confesse this power to bee originallie decided vnto the true Bishoppes and Pastours of the Church from the Kinglie and Soveraine power of our Saviour Christ By what name therefore soever the gouvernment of Pastours and Elders in the Churches be called there is no manner of cause to dislike of the planting of that government in a Monarchie because the same is instituted by the Monarch of Monarches who is able and readie to vphold the state of al Monarchies in common weales togither with the state of Aristocracie in his No cause for a Monarch to feare that his Christian subiectes should haue the sence of Aristocracie in Church goverment Church Neither is there any cause for anie Monarch in the world to feare the making of christian commō people by familiar experience to haue the sence feeling of the principles and reasons of Aristocracie For if a people haue once submitted their necks to the yoke of Christ they can liue a peaceable godly life vnder all kinds of powers because they knowe all kind of powers to be the ordenance of God But especially there is not neyther euer was neyther euer can there be any cause for any King or Monarch of England greatly as the Admonitor insinuateth to feare that the common people will very easely transferre the principles and reasons of Aristocracie to the gouerment of the common weale and therevpon bee induced to thinke that they haue iniurie if they haue not as much to doe in civill matters as they haue in matters of the Church seeing they also touch their commoditie and benefit temporallie as the other doeth spirituallie And certes it seemeth that the Admonitor was drawen very drie of reason whē he was fayne to plucke this stake from the hedge to make a fire and to kindle the wrath of the Magistrate against the forme of discipline by Pastors and Elders For whether hee intendeth that the Pastors and Elders will thinke them selues to haue iniurie if they deale not in all causes of the commō weale as well as in all causes of their churches or whether he ment that the common people will easely transferre the government of the common weale from a Kingly Monarchie to a noble Aristocracie there is neither soothnes nor soundnes in his meaning For sithence Pastors disclaime to deale in civil matters the learned Ministers against the reuerend Bishopps by the holy rules of our faith mainteyne that it is not lawful for a Minister of the Gospell to exercise civill magistracy and that it is not lawfull for the man of God to bee intangled with the affaires of this life how is it probable that those Ministers will easely oppugne their owne knowledge by their owne cōtrary practise Or how is it probable that they would over-loade them selues with that burthen to ease the Church wherof they haue contentedly exposed thē selues into a number of reproches contempts bytings persecutions As for that other intendement of the Admonitors that it is greatlie to be feared that the commō people will easely transferre Monarchie vnto Democracie or Aristocracie if the principles and reason thereof by experience were made familiar in their minds this reason I say might seeme to carrie some shewe of affrighting a Monarch if the same were insinuated vnto a king whose people were neuer acquainted with the principles reasons of Democracie or Aristocracie but this feare being insinuated vnto our late Souveraigne Ladie the Queene whose people euer since the time they first begā to be a people haue had their witts long exercised with the The people of England haue their wits exercised with the sence of Democracie Aristocrarie sence and feeling of the reasons principles aswell of Democracie as also of Aristocracie what sence had the Admonitor to vrge this feare That in the Kingdome of Englande the common people haue alreadie the sence and feeling of the reasons principles of Democracie cannot be denied For in euerie cause almost aswell of criminall as ciuill iustice some few only excepted to be executed in the common weale by the common lawes of the Realm haue they not some hand and dealing in the same by one meanes or other Nay which is more haue they not the sence and feeling of the making and vnmaking their owne lawes in Parleament And is not their consultation in Parleament a mere Democraticall consultation As much also there is to bee avowed for the sence and feeling of the reasons and principles of Aristocracie to be alreadie in the minds of the Peres the Nobles the Iudges and other great men of the Realme For are not the Wisest the Noblest the Chiefest taken out of these by the King to bee of his Counsell and to be Iudges and Iusticers in his Courts Yea and is not their assembly also in Parleament a mere Aristocraticall assembly And what translation then is there greatly to be feared out of the Church to bee made into the common weale when the minds of all sorts of our common wealthes-men be already seasoned with the things which hee feareth And when the common weale is alreadie seysed of the principles and reasons which he would not haue familiarly known vnto it Wherefore that the King the Nobles and cōmons may no more be scarred with the strangenes of these vncouth and vnknowne greeke names of Democracie and Aristocracie writtē in his booke with great and capitall letters I haue thought it my duty by these presents to informe them that the govermēt of the church by Pastors and Elders nowe wanting amongst vs and desired to bee brought into the Church by the Souveraine authority of our King Nobles and commons in Parleament for the outward form