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A09254 The charge of God and the King to iudges and magistrates, for execution of iustice. In a sermon preached before Sr Henry Hobart Knight and Baronet, Lord Chiefe Iustice of the Common Pleas: and Sr Robert Haughton Knight, one of the iudges of the Kings Bench, at the Assises at Hartford. By William Pemberton B.D. and minister at high-Ongar in Essex. Pemberton, William, d. 1622. 1619 (1619) STC 19568; ESTC S103437 46,028 130

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to doe Euill and as Cicero doth accordingly write All iudgement was deuised eyther first for the deciding of controuersies or secondly punishment of malefactors The matters then as our reuerend Iudges also tell vs are Ciuill or Criminall that concerne right betweene man and man or punishment of crimos And therefore to giue to euery one his owne and to redresse iniuries is a principal office of iustice distributiue And to punish malefactors in causes criminall is an office of iustice vindicatiue as necessarie for the good of the common-wealth as the other Now this charge is to be obserued in all kinds of causes whether trespasses or crimes 1. heare 2. iudge righteously 2. The rule of righteous iudgement is the Law for the Law is a silent magistrate the Magistrate a speaking Law Now the Law this rule of iudgement is Humane or Diuine and the order for conformitie of iudgement must bee this Mans Law must bee subordinate to Gods Law the Iudges sentence to mans Law and therewithall to Gods Law Leges cū fuerint instit●tae non licebit indici de ipsissed secundū ipsas ●●dicare Aug. Lawes beeing once well established the Iudge must not iudge of them but by them as an Interpreter or them and the Interpreter must haue the same meaning with the Law maker otherwise wresting wordes strictly contrary to the meaning summum ius becomes summa iniuria strickt law flat iniustice These things being premised the directions or iniunctions giuen to the Iudges are two first to heare and seconde to iudge Within which three degrees of iudiciall processe which is the lawfull handling of the action are included or comprized first Hearing secondly discussing thirdly sentencing of causes vpon which as a consequent followes execution or thus first hearing of the cause secondly giuing of the sentence thirdly execution of the sentence pronounced which some take to be meant by that clause Yee shall not feare the face of man But vnder correction wee may take it thus These duties as three degrees in iudiciall processe are giuen in charge by Moses to the Iudges first to heare causes wisely and deliberately secondly to sentence the causes heard iustly and equally thirdly to execute iudgement according to sentence giuen faithfully and exactly or more briefely thus Three degrees in iudiciall processe The iudiciall processe hath three degrees to heare iustice speake iustice doe iustice To which are required three things in a Iudge an eye of knowledge a tongue of truth an hand of power And this is also the order to be obserued therein 1 There must first be hearing before the sentence be giuen else how can the sentence be iust 2 Sentence must be giuen before execution be done else how can the execution be warrantable 3. Execution must follow vppon sentence giuen else to what is such processe profitable But when causes are deliberately and discerningly heard so as the truth is seene as in the cleare glasse of wisedome when Sentence is iustly and equally giuen as the cause beares weight in the ballance of equitie And when sentence is throughly and exactly executed as with a sharpe sword of sufficient power then are these iniunctions and directions of Moses faithfully obserued and sufficiently performed The first degree To heare iustice The first degree in iudiciall processe is the hearing of iustice or of the cause to be iudged and this must needes be first else no iust sentence can be giuen Right iudgement doth presuppose sure knowledge You know the saying Si iudicas cognosce If yee will iudge Senec. Trag. take notice of the cause for the cause must be knowen before it can bee iudged and first heard that it may be knowne Qui statuit aliquid parte inaudita altera aequum licet statuerit haud aequus erit Senec. Plaut Gen. 11.5 Non humano modo hoc intelligamus sed vt per hoc erudiamur nun q●ā temerè fratres condemnandos neque auditu solo iudicandū nisi pluribus argumētis priùs certi reddamur Omnia enim ideo à Deo fiunt ob hoc tantâ ad erudiendum humanū genus vtitur sermonis attempera●ione Gen. 18. v. 20. v. 2. And he that shall giue sentence eyther partie not first herd though his sentence proue equall yet is hee not an equall Iudge The Lord himselfe obserues this order of processe where it s sayd That God went downe to see the Citie and Tower which the Nimrodians had builded On which place Chrysostome doth well obserue that Gods spirit doth declare by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or humane kind of speech that men ought not to condemne their brethren before certain knowledge and notice of their cause And before the finall sentence of destruction bee passed on Sodome the Lord first takes notice of their estate saying Because the crye of Sodome and Gomorrha is great and because their sin is very grieuous I will goe downe now and see whether they haue done altogether according to the crye of it which is come to mee and if not I will know The Lord who knew all things of himselfe will also take notice as by iudiciall processe thereby as in a Table to commend to our view as in a liuely picture or perfect patterne the order to bee obserued in iudiciall proceedings for humane profit and constant imitation And thus God first heard the Israelites groane vnder the burdens of Aegypt Exod. 2. v. 22.23 24. and then and not before he sent deliuerance To teach all Iudges Doctr. who beare Gods-Image and title in their office to follow him as their patterne in the execution thereof not precipitating sentence before due consideration well-weighing and discerning the equitie of the cause for if God did so who is the knower of all things who cannot be deceyued misled or corrupted much more ought men giue diligence hereunto who are daily subiect to be mistaken through ouer-sight to bee misled by affection transported through passion precipitated with preiudice and deceyued with colourable pretences and glosses But here I shall not need to prescribe to our reuerend godly and well-experienced Moderators of Iustice but onely poynt at such things as they know and which on occasion I haue sometimes obserued to be religiously practised in their iudiciall processe and this I shall the rather be bould to speake that inferiours of lesse both knowledge experience and conscience may take notice of such vertues for due approbation of them in their betters and respectiue imitation of them in themselues Hearing is eyther 1. simple hearing 2. Discussing Now this hearing which tends to the notice of the cause is eyther a simple hearing of both the parties or else an accurate discussing and examining of their euidences and proofes The first is the equall hearing of all persons both actor reus 1. Hearing plaintife and defendant Small as well as great Ier 26. v. 2.3.4.12.16 This was obserued in the arraignement of
he gouerned also by others as assistants and counsellors Whence Kings and chiefe Rulers may take patterne for their practise Doctr. to giue speciall Charge to their Delegates and Deputies to execute iust iudgement vnto the people For so Moses the chiefe Ruler gaue charge to these new-elected Iudges and Rulers to heare and indge righteously the causes of all men Such a charge for a farewell did holy King Dauid giue vnto Salomon his succeeding sonne 1. King 2.2 3. I goe the way of all the earth be thou strong therefore and shew thy selfe a man And take heede to the charge of the Lord thy God to walke in his wayes and to keepe his statutes c. When he further injoynes him according to his wisdom to execute iustice on Ioab and Shimei and to shew mercy and kindnes to the sons of Barzillai The Aegyptian Kings were wont as Plutarch reporteth by the custome of their country to giue an oath to such as were appointed their Iudges that they should not speake or doe vnrighteously in iudgment though the King himselfe should charge and command them Which commendable practise Traiane the Emperor did worthily imitate and gaue a drawne sword to the Pretorian Lieutenant before all his Nobles saying vnto him Si bonus fuero pro me vtitor hoc gladio sin malus contrame If I shall be good vse this sword for me if euill against me or thus Hoc gladio pro me vtar is donec iusta fecero si iniusta secero contra me vtaris As long as I shall doe those things which are iust vse this sword for me if I do things vniust vse it against me A fact and speach most worthy an Emperor whose example at least in the scope thereof is fit to be imitated of euery good King who ought to acknowledge that God hath aduanced him as a little God ●s●l 82. to sit on the Throne and to rule ouer all others for the common good of all The oath which the King administreth to Iudges binds them to strict obseruation of iustice as it is recorded in the stature of the 18. of Edward the III. Ye shall do euen law execution of right to all his subiects rich and poore The oath of Iudges 18. Edw. 3 printed anno D●mius 1578. p 106. without hauing regard of any person And that yee denie to no man common right by the Kings letters nor none other mans nor for none other cause and in case any letters come come to you contrary to the law that yee do nothing by such letters but certifie the King thereof and goe forth to doe the law notwithstanding the same letters And this is agreable to the commandement of Antiochus the King of Asia That if letters came from him or his Nobles to interrupt the course of iustice they should pocket them vp supposing them to be vnwittingly written and so to proceed in a strict course of iustice A good King giues streit charge for execution of iustice because he knowes that the power of gouernment is as well onus as honos a burden as an honour ordeined for the common and vninersall welfare of all his subiects Salus populisupr●ms le●● est● whereof account must be giuen to God And he is alwaies in his owne estimation Magnus reip seruus Colimus Imperatorem vt hominē a Deo secundum sole Deo minorem Tertu● ad Scap. Super Imperatorē nox est nisi s●lus Deus qui fecit Imperaterē Optat. contr Parmenian lib. 3 the great seruant of the Cōmon-weale for place and authoritie aduanced and that most worthily aboue all both persons and states and yet in princely clemency respectiue of the meanest like a kind Master or * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Xenoph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gueua●a good Father For a good King differs nothing from a good Father who as he is maximus the greatest so is he optimus Par●m vllum super terrā non babet Chrysost ad pop Antioch ham 2. Patriae parens the best a common yea an vniuersall good who promoteth peace and publike welfare accounting all his felicitie as he is a Prince to consist in well-gouerning his Common-weale and in bestowing his life for the good thereof if need require as the Emperor Alexander Seuerus professed of himselfe Now then as it is the highest dignitie and most neerely annexed to the Royall Crowne of a Christian Prince to haue the title of prerogatiue to be Defender of the Christian Faith and to haue supreme authoritie ouer all causes and persons Ecclesiasticall and Ciuill so it apperteineth to him by that high authoritie to manifest his care for the common good as in making and executing of good and lawes for the promoting and establishing of Religion and Iustice Rex quia h●mo est D●mino ser●it viuen●o fideliter quia v. ro●tiam R●x est seruit l●ges iusta praec●pi● n●●s con●●ar●a prohibentes conuenienti vigore sanciendo Aug epist 50. ad Bonisa ium Idem contra Cresconium l. 3. c. 51. so also in electing good Delegates and competent Iudges and Ministers of iustice and in charging and obliging them by all bond of dutie to vse their authoritie to promote the publike good in examining and deciding all causes and controuersies with righteous iudgement and due execution of iustice which is the very life and soule of good and wholsome lawes And thus much of the person who gaue the Charge GOD the KING Now of the persons to whom the Charge was giuen Iudges and Magistrates Your Iudges II. Point That is not onely Iudges in the most strict and streit notion signification of the phrase but all Magistrates also and Ministers of iustice at least by true and necessarie consequence And most meete it is surely that such a strict charge should be giuen by God and the chiefe Ruler Doctr. to such as were elected and designed to be Iudges For they are for trust keepers of the Law and for their office speaking lawes and by their power and authoritie vnder God and the King principall swayers and dispensers of equitie and iustice And as Masters and Pilots in the ship of the Common-wealth who sit at the sterne and guide it forward through their wisdome and fidelitie in an euen a prosperous and succesfull course vnto the desired hauen of peace and prosperitie But through their carelesse neglect and heedlesse ouer-sight they cause fearefull shipwracke and miserable ruine And you know right well that when Iudges and Magistrates become wise and faithfull in deliberate sanxion and due execution of good and wholsome lawes and statutes that then by their good meanes and Gods good blessing Gods lawes are backed his ordinances established piety is promoted equitie preserued the Church is made pious the Common-wealth prosperous our communion with God and societie with man becomes most comfortable happy and blessed But when Rulers and Magistrates doe
Ieremiah the Prophet whom the Priests and Prophets apprehended and conuented before the Iudges and accused capitally as worthie of death for denouncing Gods iudgements against Iuda at Gods command Ieremiahs defence was accordingly heard he acquitted by the Princes and Iudges Ioh. 18.29 Pilate thus farre demeaned himselfe well in the case of our Sauiour while hee would not giue credite to the high-Priests accusation but would heare the poore defendant as well as these plaintifes though men of chief place and authoritie amongst them Nicodemus did reason like a worthie Iudge and prudent Magistrate Doth our Law condemne any man before it heare him Ioh. 7.51 and know what hee doth But the rest his vniust and vnequall Brethren did take him vppe very sharpely for it and resolued to condemne Christ absent and vnheard in his iust defence whereas the most grosse and most vile malefactor ought first to be conuicted by two witnesses at the least Deutr. 19.15 before sentence of iudgement be passed against him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demosth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ante meridi●m causam conscito cum perorarint ambo praesentes 12. Tab. Hee that answereth a matter before it be heard it is folly and shame vnto him saith the Wiseman Prou. 18.13 It was the equitie of the Iudges by the law of the Athenians Ne visum nec auditum hominem damnare nefas vlti●um censetur Ammon Marcel Nulla maior iniuria quam indictâ causâ aliquem iudicare to hear both parties alike And an Iniunction set downe in the 12. Tables at auncient Rome Before mid-day take notice of the cause when both the persons in presence haue pleaded And it was alwaies accounted a most haynous offence Lucianus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato in Demodico ex Poeta to sentence or condemne men their causes not first heard And prudent prouision is made by all good lawes that iudgement bee not giuen before the cause bee heard 2. Discussing Iudicantem oportet cuncta rimari et ordinem rerum plēna inquisitione decurrere quousque ad veritatem perueniatur E lentherius As there must be a simple equall hearing of both the parties so must there be an accurate examination and exquisite discussing of the cause This is the law of God Deutr. 13. ver 12.13 That if the Iudge haue heard of an abhomination done as the seducing of Gods people he must inquire make search ask and that diligently great is the emphasis and weight of the words and if it bee found certainely true then must hee punish Deutr. 17.4.5.6 Ioshuah 7.22 1. Sam. 14.43 Ionah 1.8.10 Ioshuah would not condemne Achan vpon Gods Lot and his owne confession vntill hee found by search his confession to be true Not Saul Ionathan nor the Mariners Ionah taken by lot vntill examination and hearing of their answer and defence Ioh. 7. and Nicodemus doth take it an expresse poynt in Gods Law That a man ought not to be cōdemned vpon bare hearing no not till it bee knowne what hee hath done Thus did righteous Iob in his legall processe The cause that I knew not I searched out Iob. 29.16 And thus farre did Pilate well in the cause of Christ Act. 25.27 Act. 24 22.27 Ioh. 18.30 And Festus the President of Caesaria and Foelix his Predecessor in the case of St. Paul And Salomons wisedome was experienced and admired in that first case of the two harlots who contended for the child 1 King 3. when after strict examination through a wise inuention and semblance of diuiding the quicke childe he did extort a confession from the true mother by strange commotion of her naturall affection And God himselfe doth often inculcate this as the dutie of the Iudge The Iudges shall make diligent inquisition Deutr. 29.18 and for this cause they had neede both to haue and vse those excellent parts of wisdome and vnderstanding which God requireth of them and bestoweth vpon them Deutr. 1.13 How needfull and helpfull in iudiciall processe is the exquisite and accurate discussing of the cause it may appeare by this that the more exactly the cause is discerned and knowne the more iust sentence may thereof be giuen as Great Demosthenes did well obserue Wherefore there are required as you know right well in a Iudge or Magistrate in hearing of causes that they may be equally heard and exquisitely discussed Things to be obserued in hearing of causes sundry things to be obserued and practised Serious attention to the matter in hand that no materiall proofe or important reason tending to euince the equitie of the cause through heedles neglect be omitted or let passe without obseruation and notice taken thereof For as one well learned and experienced saith well In eo sape quod aures praetervectum est status causae versatur Joan. Bodin de repub In that oft-times which passeth by the eare doth the state of the cause consist Wise moderation and ordering of the processe that impertinent digressions odious invectiues and calumnious imputations among pleaders or witnesses vsed to prejudice the contrary person or cause be seasonably interrupted and sharply rejected and that neither party be hindred by his aduersaries rash interruptions and caused to omit or conceale what may make for his purpose and to cleare the equitie of his iust and equall cause It is the part of the Pleader or Aduocate Arist lib. Rhet. onely to declare whether the thing be so or not so done or not done whether iust or vniust the Iudge himselfe must know And here I desire the learned and experienced Moderators of iustice to consider whether for the most part the wrong-doer be not the more peeuish and clamorous and best armed with Pleaders and Aduocates against the innocent There must be invincible patience and vnweariable forbearance of the slownesse of speach dulnesse of conceit rudenesse of behauiour and other infirmities and weaknesses of many the meaner and inferior sort whose testimonies for others or defences for themselues in iudiciall processe are of necessitie required Such wants and defects must be passed by with charitable forbearance and compassionate respect All vnquiet affections and inordinate passions of hatred loue enuie an ger rash zeale or the like must be quite put off and wholy laid aside Desire and anger are ill Counsellors worse Iudges Consultores sunt p●ssimi cupido ira Salust Amor turbat constia Hieron Loue troubleth counsels Enuie neuer speakes well that is iustly saith our common Prouerbe Yea all inordinate affections blind the eyes and preiudice iudgement and therefore all dealers in iudgement especially the chiefe swayers must speake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without affections It was the oath of the Heathen Iudges as the Orator doth report Audiam accusatorē r●um fine affectibus personarum r●spectione Demosth I will heare the plaintiffe and defendant with an equall mind without affections and respect of persons Not
or religion is yet a brother for common nature and humane condition and must haue right done him as being a brother Your Brethren The name brother is a name of speciall relation and notes out a speciall vicinitie of one vnto another and some degree of equalitie one with another The persons whose causes are to be heard and iudged are brethren to the Iudge not indeed in function or equalitie of condition For herein are Iudges and Magistrates exalted aboue them Rom. 13.1 and for this cause they owe reuerence and respect to the Iudges As for Anabaptisticall conceits Confutat which denie lawfull Magistracie and would bring in vnseemely paritie and confused anarchie they are to be vtterly renounced and farre abandoned out of the hearts of all true Christians and that auncient law is to be embraced which calleth it sacriledge not to reuerence and obey the Magistrate and those who do contemne the Magistrate doe contemne euen God himselfe who is the ordeiner and mainteiner of magistracie as the Lord himselfe saith vnto Samuel 1 Sam. 8.7 Yet is the Iudge to account them his brethren Brethren I say in common nature and humanitie brethren it may be in grace and Christianitie brethren both in humane condition and christian profession Which consideration ought to stir vp Iudges and Magistrates vnto alacritie and cheerefulnesse in execution of their function Doctr. seeing all their imployments trauels therein tend to the good and profit of their brethren Now what studie is too vncessant what trauaile too toylesom what labour too great what time too long what tolerancie too tedious in procuring the weale and welfare of their brethren Especially seeing they are set apart to this honorable imployment by ordination and injunction of God and the King who haue highly aduanced them aboue their brethren to be Iudges and deciders of their persons and causes Cypr. Quo sublimior gloria est eo maior cura est The higher is their glory the greater should be their care Wherefore I beseech you from the Lord most reuerend Iudges heare the causes and iudge righteously betweene your brethren for they are your brethren But if one only or some few were brethren to the Iudge and not the rest Nemo fere est qui sit bonus index in suis rebus Arist polit lib. 3. Insitū est mortalibus cunctis vt se sua ament sint benigni in suis causis Senec. Lege decernimꝰ neminē sibi essi indicem aut ius dicere debere Imper. Cod. lib. 2. tit 5. Qui iurisdictioni praeest neque sibi ius dicere d●bet neque vxori vel liberis vel caeteris quos secum habet then were he not a fit and a competent Iudge for then were the case in some sort his owne and few are fit Iudges in their owne causes For its inbred in all mortall men to loue themselues and their owne things and to be kind and fauourable in their owne causes And therefore the auncient lawes of Emperors forbade that men should be Iudges to giue sentence for themselues And it is an assertion of that great Lawyer Vlpian that no man ought to be Iudge for himselfe or his wife or children or the rest that are neere vnto him But now the parties are all brethren among themselues aswell as to the Iudge and that in nature nation and profession of religion as the Iewes were and as we are And why should men contend seeing they are brethren why should men defraud oppresse rob spoyle maime or murther their brethren It is a very great both sin and shame that men of the same Nation and language who liue vnder the same King and lawes who enjoy the same liberties and priuiledges who are linked together in neighbourhood and acquaintance yea who partake in the same communitie of grace and communion of glory should not liue in loue together and keepe the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace Ephef 4 3. but defraud oppresse and injure one another And if through their owne corruption and Satans malice they fall at variance discord and controuersie then surely such as are designed and appointed by God and the King to performe and execute the most honorable office and function of Iudges and Magistrates ought to vse their best endeauour to compound controuersies to right wrongs to punish crimes and by all good meanes to procure both publike and priuate peace that all men may liue safely quietly and louingly together because they are brethren Lastly suppose any be a stranger for particular nation or profession of religion yet is he still a brother in common nature and humane condition and therefore must haue iustice done to him as being a brother both vnto the Iudge and vnto his neighbour Heare and iudge righteously between a man the stranger that is with him All men were created one in nature reasonable creatures all were instamped with the image of God all retaine their simple nature though all haue not recouered Gods image but remaine corrupted and all must haue iustice for it s founded in nature Yea and for a Christian Iudge not to doe iustice to an Ethnick or pagan contending with a Christian were to abuse his function to blemish his religion to harden the Pagan in his infidelitie and sin And not to right a Christian contending with a Pagan were besides the abuse of his function to neglect his dutie to one deare to God Fit it is that he should receiue equitie and iustice at the hand of the Iudge who hath found grace and mercy at the hand of God Among the Iewes there was one Law for all for the stranger and for one of their countrey if either sinned either must be punished Leuit. 24. v. 16 22. The summe of all is this All men are brethren to the Iudge himselfe therefore he must in loue and dutie labour to releeue them all All are brethren amongst themselues therefore he must haue equall respect for righting of them all Wherefore as Moses from God said to these Iudges so I from the same God say vnto you all most reuerend Iudges and all ministers of iustice Heare and iudge righteously betweene your brethren and betweene euery man and his brother and the stranger that is with him And so much of the persons III. Point Admonitions or Cautions Now I proceede to the third particular obserued in this charge namely The admonitions or cautions giuen to the Iudges against pestilent impediments which are frequent enemies to equitie and iustice which are in number two 1. Acceptation of persons for sinister respects 2. Feare of mens greatnes who will be offended at iustice The former admonition or caution is against that principall impediment of iustice The first impediment of iustice acceptation of persons which is set downe 1. Negatiuely so that the vice is forbidden Yee shall not respect persons in iudgment 2. Affirmatiuely so that the vertue is
haue done vnto his brother So shalt thou put away the euill from among you and those which remaine shall heare and feare and from hence-forth shall commit no such euill among you And thy eye shall not pitie but life shall go for life and the morall law doth eternally establish that the wilfull murtherer should die the death Gen. 9.6 I acknowledge indeed that famous Emperors haue bene much admired for clemencie and pitie Suet. Vesp as Titus Vespasian who wept for just executions and whereas the Emperors themselues vsed then to iudge of life and death Tranquill in Tito he was hardly drawne to giue iudgment at all and vtterly vnwilling to condemne any to death Mauricius who by his good will would not haue so much as a Traytor die Euagr. l. 6. c. 1. Augustus in prudence second to none yet being to examine a parricide began thus ●an Bod. de rep lib. 4. cap. 6. Certè patrem non occidisti Surely thou hast not slaine thy father In which words he did not onely instruct the guilty person what he should answer to the Prince and Iudge but also in admirable humanitie did pardon the parricide Theodosius Socr. lib. 7. c. 22. who was wont to wish that he could recall to life such as had wronged him Nero himselfe otherwaies cruell who being asked to subscribe to a sentence of death gaue this answer Vtinam liter as nescirem I would I could not tell how to write But be it granted that Clemency is a princely vertue as the King of Bees is without a sting and Bounty another Nihil est quod Imperatorem meliùs commendat gentibus quam Clementia Antoninus ad Coniugem Valcatius in vita Cassij which winnes much loue for which cause Titus Vespasian was accounted the loue and delight of mankind yet excesse herein is no vertue but a vice when it hinders the current of needfull execution of iustice And nothing is so contrary to the office of a Iudge as such mercy when the Iudge becomes more mild than law in sparing the execution of notorious malefactors Such impunitie of grosse offences is as one saith a most certaine argument of the perishing estate of a Common-wealth Punishments duely executed are the sinewes of the weale-publike 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demosthenes True indeed in cases of difficultie there must be inclination to mercy In lesser offences once or seldome committed mitigation of seueritie Frequenter qui peccant lugent veniam vix merentur Such as often offend though they mourne for their fault yet scarce deserue pardon saith Augustine And Christian compassion in seueritie of censure commiserating the misery of a guilty person beseemes a Christian Iudge who when he pronounceth the sentence of death may with Augustus Seneca in lib. de Clementia ex imo pectore suspiria ducere fetch deepe sighes from the bottom of his heart and be more sorry for them than they are for themselues yet law must haue course iustice must be done that euill may thereby be taken away that others that heare may feare and doe no more so presumptuously and that the land stand not before God guilty of blood lest Gods sword be vnsheathed and his hand strengthned to the reuenging of so great and so sinfull conniuencies when impunitie is permitted to bloody crying finnes In few words to conclude this point As those Iudges or Magistrates are not to be imitated who in acerbitie of punishments affect the opinion of seueritie so neither those who by too much facilitie seeke loue and affect the opinion of lenitie Both these are faults in the extreme swaruing from the office of a Iudge l. resp●●iendum de poenis as auncient lawes do teach and declare Equitie walkes in the golden meane betweene rigorous seueritie which punisheth any too much and cruell mercy which spareth a few to the hurt of many Application of the doctrine to sundry orders of Persons Now it remaineth that I should apply this charge for iustice of God and the King giuen by Moses to the Iudges of Israel to our Honorable and Reuerend Iudges here present neither to our Reuerend Iudges alone but to all those ministers and instruments of iustice sundry persons of different qualitie who concurre as assistants in the dispatch of this busines But because my speach hath already passed the bounds of the allotted time I seeme vrged by necessitie to forbeare the same and to commend the particular application thereof to your priuate deuout and godly meditations yet hoping your wisdomes will redeeme a litle time by cutting off some lesser occasions I will make bold to speake a litle to the principall of those persons whom this charge doth so neerly concerne My Honorable Lords you the reuerend Iudges of these Assizes 1 To Iudges I shall not need to speake much vnto you because the Lord in mercy hath bestowed vpon you to speake as I am well perswaded without flatterie a great measure of wisdom piety to deale in matters of iudgment iustly and conscionably and you haue right well approued both to King and Country your fidelitie and sinceritie in execution of your function in so much as we blesse God for you and pray to God to blesse you that you also may continue a blessing vnto vs. Yet giue me leaue to put you in minde of this your charge from God the King Heare the causes between your brethren and iudge righteously Your wisdome and long experience haue taught you well that that of Chrysostome is very true Ipsam causae inuenire iustitiam grande opus Lib. 3. de Sacerdotali dignit cap. 18. inventam verò nulla iniquitate corrumpere labo riosissimum To find out the very iustice of the cause is a great worke and therefore you had need to be very circumspect therein and when it s once found out then to corrupt it by no iniquitie is a most laborious thing and therefore you had neede to be very vpright therein And that I may ioyne with the reuerend Iudges those worthie magistrates 2. To Iustices of Peace the Iustices of Peace you well vnderstand what a fearefull sin it is to turne iudgement into Wormewood Amos. 5.7 and to leaue of righteousnesse in the Earth Ames 6.12 To turne iudgement into gall and the fruit of righteousnesse into Wormewood Ier. 5.28 To ouerpasse the deedes of the Wicked to execute no iudgement no not the iudgement of the fatherlesse to execute no iudgement for the poore What a fearefull sinne were it for any of you to suffer through your neglect or partiality iust iudgement neuer to goe forth Heb. 1.4 but the wicked to compasse about the righteous and wrong iudgement to proceed These are fearefull sinnes in Iudges and magistrates for which the Lord did sharpely threaten and seuerely punish his owne people Wherefore I earnestly beseech you from the Lord continue still if you haue begun to be men
I may be heard and Gods gracious blessing vpon that which shall be spoken and heard that it may redound to Gods glory and to our profit and comfort and so I proceede First generall Part. Giuing of the charge The first generall part formerly propounded is the giuing of the charge And I charged your Iudges at that time saying I. Point The Persons who gaue the Charge And the first particular therein obserued was the person who gaue it I that is Moses This one person Moses sustaines a double person 1. God First of God as he was a Prophet of God and spake from the mouth of God 2. The King Prudentiss●mus L●gislator ●ustissimus Princeps ac Propheta maximus Philo in vita Mosis Secondly of a King as he was the chiefe Ruler and gouernour and so it is the charge of GOD and the KING First this was the Charge of God for Moses the man of God was as was said an holy Prophet of God immediatly called of God to this holy function immediately assisted and directed in his execution by God and what he injoyned to this people he receiued it from God from Gods mouth or by inspiration of his Spirit or by some such speciall and infallible information of God Moses elected Iudges to helpe and assist him in iudging of causes with varietie and multitude whereof hee was ouer-charged and this he did by the wise and godly counsell of his father in law Iethro Exod. 18. yet vpon consultation also first had with God and expresse answer from the heauenly Oracle For so Iethro aduised him Exod. 18.23 If thou shalt doe this thing that is elect some assistant Iudges and God command thee so then shalt thou be able to endure And the conscience of Moses consulting with God did giue testimonie to this aduertisement of Iethro as the counsell of God and therefore this election of Iudges by Moses was in deede and effect the election of God and this Charge giuen to these New-elect was accordingly the charge of God Whence it followeth as a ground of all that I haue to speake that The charge for right execution of iustice giuen to Iudges by the Prophets of God is to be accounted the charge of God Doctr. This charge God giueth sometimes immediately with his owne mouth Exod. 10. thus God proclaimed the Morall Law which conteines all the grounds of equitie and iustice by his immediate voice and deliuered to Moses not onely the Ceremonials but also Iudicials by his immediate direction and by Moses vnto the Church as Leuit. 19.35 Yee shall not doe vnrighteousnesse in iudgement in line in weight or in measure And Moses in the execution of his weighty function did consult with God in his heauenly Oracle as did also Dauid and others 1 Sam. 3.7 8. in cases of difficultie not expressed in Gods word And God directed Ioshua Josh 1.1 2. after the death of Moses God giues this Charge sometimes by his instruments as Prophets Apostles and Ministers of the Gospell By Prophets as by Moses to these Iudges in this place and so by Isaiah to the Iudges of Iudah Is 1.17 Seeke iudgement releeue the oppressed iudge the fatherlesse plead for the widow By the prophet Ieremiah to the King of Iudah and his seruants Ierem. 2.2 3. Execute yee iudgement and righteousnesse and deliuer the spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor and do no wrong doe no violence to the stranger the fatherlesse nor the widow neither shed innocent blood in this place And Chap. 21. v. 12. O house of Dauid thus saith the Lord execute iudgement in the morning and deliuer him that is spoiled out of the hand of the oppressor By the kingly prophet Dauid Psal 2.10 Be wise now therefore ô yee Kings be instructed yee Iudges of the earth By the prophet Zachary to the Iewes Thus speaketh the Lord of Hostes Zach. 7.9 execute iudgement shew mercy And againe Zach. 8.16 Execute the iudgement of trueth and peace in your gates By his holy Apostles vnto Christian Magistrates as the Apostle S. Paul one for all the rest sets downe the office and charge of a Iudge or Ruler Rom. 13.3 4. saying Rulers are not a terrour to good workes but to the euill againe The Ruler is the minister of God a reuenger to execute wrath vpon him that doth euill Lastly God giues this charge by the Ministers of the Gospell who are his Ambassadors in matters of God to declare his will to the people of God And we Gods ministers stand charged of God as Timothie of St. Paul before God 2 Tim. 4.1 1 Tim. 5.21 and the Lord Iesus Christ and the elect Angels that we obserue all that God injoynes vs without preiudice and we must do nothing of partialitie but must diuide the word of God aright 2 Tim. 2 15. dispensing Gods mysteries as his faithfull stewards and giuing to our Lords familie to each one his due portion Luc. 12.42 in due season and so prescribing to Iudges and Rulers their duties from God as we our selues expect to be iudged of God and we must not dare to corrupt the word of God but as of sinceritie 2 Cor. 2.17 as of God in the sight of God so ought we to speake in Christ and so I desire to speake vnto you Wherefore right Honorable and beloued in the Lord Vse let mee intreat you from the Lord that you receiue from vs who serue God in this function our charge for iustice as the charge of God not measuring the weight of our embassage by the meannesse of our persons but weighing the worthinesse of our calling and giuing entertainment to the truth which we speake according to Gods word not as the word of man but of God alwaies remembring that of our Sauiour to his Disciples and in them to vs Behold I send you and He that heareth you heareth me Luc 10. v. 3 16 and he that despiseth you despiseth me And that worthy saying of our most learned religious King in a solemne disputation in the Vniuersitie The King himselfe ought to obey the Minister At Cambridge March 16 14. tanquam spirituali medico ex verbo Dei praescribenti as to a spirituall Physician prescribing to him out of the word of God And this accords with his Maiesties instructions to the Prince his eldest sonne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pag. 10. When any of the spirituall office-bearers in the Church speaketh vnto you any thing that is well warranted by the word reuerence and obey them as the Heraulds of the most high God And so much of this as the Charge of God Now I come to it as the Charge of the King 2. The King giues this Charge The second person whom Moses susteineth in giuing of this Charge is the person of the King for hee was designed chiefe Ruler and Iudge of Gods people his authoritie was Regall his power Soueraigne though
to insist particularly on more particulars there must be firmenesse of memory to recall such euidences as were of most moment on either behalfe and wisdome and knowledge and a kind of dexteritie in conferring and comparing cause with cause and reason with reason and iudgement and learned skill in the lawes both diuine humane to weigh the proofes in the ballance of iustice and to discerne and distinguish of iust and vniust that so the cause may be fitted for sentence else cannot the sentence proue iust and equall Isai 5.20 but good shall be called euill and euill good the wicked shall be absolued the innocent condemned For that of Augustine is certainly true Ignorantia Iudicis est calamitas innocentis Aug. de Ciuit. Dei l. cap. 29. The ignorance of the Iudge is the calamitie of the innocent It was the speach of a learned man Quis est qui nescit tam multa in boni iudicis officio posita esse vt seritissimos etiam ac diligentissimos fugiant very well seene and experienced in this kind Who knowes not that so many things are required in the office of a good Iudge that they easily escape the most skilfull and diligent And therefore in a word Vse I to conclude this point all the will and skill vse and exercise of heart and eare body and mind had neede to be imployed in hearing of causes that all the weight of right or wrong being put into the ballance of equitie and iustice it may be discerned by the vnderstanding Iudge which of the scales is of greater poise and weight But for want of these and such like obseruations in this first degree of iudiciall processe 2 Vse there was much iniustice and sin committed by Iudges and Magistrates in the case of a Gen. 39.14 Ioseph of b 2 Sā 16.13 Mephibosheth of c 1 King 21.13 Naboth of d Am s 7.10 Amos of e Mat. 26.59 60. Christ Iesus of f Act. 6.13 14. Stephan of g Theodor hist Eccles l 1. c. 29. Socrat. lib. 1. c. Athanasius and very many others as Histories do record and experience doth declare And thus much of the first degree of iudiciall processe of the hearing of iustice Now I proceede to the second degree which is the speaking of iustice and iudge righteously After the cause is discerningly heard The II. Degree To speake iustice then is iudgment to be iustly giuen and sentence to be equally pronounced 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not according to affection and fauour but according to iustice and truth according to the prescript of wholsome law which is the square of equitie the law I say of Man and the law of God For as the law of the King who is the Head of the Common-wealth is the life of this bodie Politike so is the law of God the soule of the law of the King and as the law of the king ought to be conformed to the law of God which is the right rule indeed of equitie and iustice so the sentence of the Iudge must be conformed to the law of God and the King that it may be an equall sentence For the Law is nothing else but a silent Magistrate and the Magistrate a speaking law or a speaker of law And a Iudge or Iustice is a speaker of iustice and iudico is ius dico Judex hine dictus quod ius populis dicat quod iure disceptet id est 〈◊〉 iudicet iudex in quo iusi●tia des●d●ratur esse nequeat Iudex Isidor And therefore a Iudge or Iustice in whom iustice is not is not a Iudge but by equiuocation It is the injunction of the law diuine Iudges and officers shalt thou make and they shall iudge the people with iust iudgement Thou shalt not wrest iudgment That which is altogether iust shalt thou follow Deutr. 6. v. 18 19 20. Worthy an Emperor was the profession of Iustinian which I would commend to your godly imitation Aequam me vtrique parti tam in disceptandis controuersiis quam in tuenda disciplinâ praebebo N●utri par●i praeter 〈◊〉 sas ad●●ctꝰ ero quod si haec non o●ser●au●ro onu●i●us incommodis ero exp●situs tam hic quara in futuro se●ulo in borrè● do indicio magni Domini Dei salu●toris n●stri Iesu Chrisii habeboque partē cum Iuda lepram c●m Huzziah trem rea● cum Cain Aequū me vtrique parti tam in disceptandis cōtrouersiis quam in tuenda disciplina praebebo c. I will shew my selfe equall to both parties as well in deciding of controuersies as in defending of discipline I will fauour neither part beyond law and right and if I shall not obserue these things I shall be exposed to all discommodities both here and in the world to come in that dreadfull iudgement of our great Lord God and our Sauiour Iesus Christ and I shall haue my portion with Iudas the leprosie with Huzziah and trembling with Cain O memorable sentence worthy to be ingrauen in the very heart of Iudges and Magistrates with the point of a Diamond yea with the finger of Gods spirit And so much of this Now we are come to the last degree of the dutie of a Iudge in iudiciall processe The 3 Degree To do iustice which is the doing of iustice or execution of iudgment pronounced After the cause is discerningly heard with the eare of iustice and the sentence equally pronounced with the mouth of iustice then must execution be exactly done by the hand of iustice both in rendring to euery man his right and also in freeing the innocent and punishing malefactors For vnlesse this exact execution do follow the former processe is altogether fruitlesse and tends to no profit or good effect But in matters of controuersie the partie oppressed stands still vnreleeued after all his cost and painefull trauaile And in matters of crime enormities and disorders remaine still vnreformed And in both both Church and Common-wealth stand fearefully surcharged with the guilt of many sinnes And often for want of due execution of iudgement by the sword of the Magistrate the sword of Gods wrath is vnsheathed against a Land especially for the releeuing of the helplesse oppressed and in reuenging of bloody and crying sins And thus much of the instructions and injunctions giuen to the Iudges and of the three degrees of iudiciall processe which are the three duties of a good and worthy Iudge Now followeth the second particular obserued in this Charge II. Point Parties betweene whom they must heare Iudge namely the parties whose causes are to be heard and iudged which are set out in relation First to the Iudges your brethren Secondly among themselues Betweene euery man and his brother that is as was said of the same Nation of the same Religion neither onely so but of the same nature And the stranger that is with him a stranger for kindred nation
the righteous and condemne the wicked Then that is maturely without needlesse delay Our Sauiour in the Parable doth note it as a marke of an vniust Iudge who is void of all feare of God Luc. 18. and regard of man that he deferred to doe iustice to the importunate widdow Iudges and Magistrates must in no wise bee like vnhappie Faelix Act. 24.27 who left Paul in bonds in hope of bribes but like vnto Festus his more equall Successor who hearing that Paul was kept bound at Cesaria promised to goe verie shortly thither and the very next day after his comming thither Act. 25.6 conuented him examined and handled his cause though he fayled in the processe of this businesse for feare of the Iewes This vniust delay of iudiciall processe hath beene an old and auncient corruption for reformation whereof sundry Decrees were made by those worthie Emperours Constantine Iustinian Gratian Valentinian and Theodosius against procrastination and dilatory courses in matters both of controuersie and crime In matters of Controuersie thus Iustinian doth define L. Properandū C. de iudicijs Iustin Imperat. Properandum nobis visum est ne lites penè fiant immortales et vitae hominum modum excedant In causes of controuersie it seemes good to vs that hast bee made least causes depending become immortall and exceed the measure of the life of man Causae pecuniarum et ciuiles omnes quocunque nomine veniant cuiuscunque sint quantitatis non vlterius quam ad triennij spacium extendi iubentur ibid. And what a great and grieuous both sin and shame is it especially in Christian common-wealths that the Sonne the aged Sonne should not liue long enough to see an end of the tedious suits of his intangled Father who trode a maze in his endlesse prosecution of Law for the relieuing of his still vnrighted wrongs In matters of Crime so saide the auncient Lawes Sic C. L. 1. de custodia reorum Constantinus imp●edicit statim debet quaestio fieri vt noxius puniatur innocens absoluatur Arraignements ought speedily to be made that the guilty may bee punished the innocent absolued and againe De his quos tenet carcer inclusos aperta definitione sancimus vt aut conuictos velox poena subducat aut liberandos custodiadiuturna non maceret Imp. p. p. p. Gratian Valentia Theodosius decernunt Concerning those who are in prison we doe by expresse definition enact that eyther speedy punishment shall make away the guiltie or continuall imprisonment shall not wast the innocent Our Lawes no doubt for decision of controuersies are both as perfect and expresse as these and therefore is it not a fowle offence and a fearefull sinne in any Iudges or Lawyers or other ministers of iustice to set to sale their heads and tongues their wits and words their places and functions for the warping and weauing on of the webbe of controuersies protracting of causes through needlesse delay for priuate respect of gayne fauour or enuy without due regard to common equitie or publique tranquillitie or weale and welfare of Church and Common-weale Reasons against vniust delay of iudgment In this case it s too true Delaye breedes danger daunger of Vndoing to the partie oppressed danger of presuming to the person oppressing danger of hurt to the party procuring delay and danger of ruine to Church and Common-weale It grieues the heart Reas 1. excruciates the soule of the partie oppressed to beare such a cruell and detestable iniury when vnder plausible pretence of Law iudgement and iustice hee is not onely delayed from his right and spends himselfe in prosecuting for it but withall incurres suspicion of one wicked and vniust as if hee himselfe were the doer of the wrong He that shall thus oppresse the iust in his righteous cause doth touch the apple of Gods owne eye which is a fearefull and dangerous sinne and prouoketh the Lord to reuenge the oppressed Griefe constraineth the iust 2 who finde no releefe by iust order of law to take vniust and vnlawfull courses as calumnies quarrels contentions and brawles to releeue and remedie their vnrighted wrongs and sometimes through impotencie of humane affections especially in women more conquerable of passions poysonings and murthers of their oppressing aduersaries and so with danger of their lands and goods they indanger the losse both of bodies and soules and shall not the vnjust occasioner of such euils communicate in the sinne and partake in the miserie Hereby is a wide flood gate opened and inlarged whereby hatred 3 contentions and capitall enmities are propagated and diffused by partners and kindred ouer whole families villages Cities Countries and Kingdomes which administer matter for mutinies and slaughters For the contentions of the proud are shedding of blood Sirach 27.16 and their scouldings are greeuous to heare And is not hence danger of ruine to the State And who is the cause of all this mischiefe but hinderers and peruerters of equitie and instice Or if such outward mischiefe do not hence ensue 4 yet hereby is Gods worship and exercises of religion as by an euill spirit and hellish furie of discord disturbed and poysoned while mens minds are distracted and exasperated with continued lawings and dissentions so that they can neither heare the word with attention and profit nor pray priuately or publikely with deuotion or zeale nor receiue the Sacraments with any quiet or comfort And shall not the vnjust hinderers of iudiciall processe from finall deciding of actions and controuersies stand guilty before the Tribunall of God as disturbers of diuine worship and breakers of spirituall peace Hereby is iustice it selfe profanely abused 5 and God himselfe the God of iustice and prescriber of equity most impiously contemned monstrously dishonoured as if he himselfe were vnequall or vnjust For when his Delegates and Deputies do peruert judgment they make God himselfe asmuch as in them lies to become author and approuer of their detestable impietie All Indges Counsellors 6 Attourneyes Sollicitors Sheriffes Iurors or witnesses or other ministers of iustice who by corrupt abuse of Gods sacred ordinance of iustice open a flood-gate or window to such enormities and euils shall themselues be convented vnlesse they repent before the most dreadfull Tribunall of God there to be convicted and sentenced for their fearfull offences All innocent persons who haue bin oppressed 7 yet by piety restrained from vnjust reuenge and preserued by Gods grace from vnlawfull remedies shall yet in priuate put vp their complaints with sighes and groanes to the Iudge of Heauen who as their kind patrone and powerfull protector shall take vengeance and punishment on such malefactors as haue not releeued but vnjustly oppressed and that vnder pretence of law such helplesse ones in their distresses and miseries The soune of Syrach in his Ecclesiasticus though it be not Canonicall describes this very well Ecclesiast 35. saying v.
heare it so readie of resolution that they know which way their verdict shall goe assoone as they know the partie whom they would pleasure or please to bee the plaintife or the defendant before the cause bee opened or euidence produced But as the Law doth presume you to bee Gentlemen of choyce for wisedome and integritie and yeomen of good note for truth and honestie experienced in Law-courses and cases to bee tryed so be diligent in sifting and examming all proofes and euidences readie to conceiue and acknowledge apparant equitie and conscionable in bringing in an approued verdict not partiall nor vnequall in hope of reward or for feare of daunger for fauour to your friends or enuy to your aduersaries but such as may be allowed of God and men to your credite and comfort and the publique good Lastly you my brethren the bodie of the Countrey 6. To the body of the Countrey who seeke in these places of iudgement the face the Iudge to haue your causes tryed in matters of controuersie or else are brought hither to be iudged in matters of crime Follow peace with all men and holinesse without which no man shall see the Lord. Whatsoeuer you would that men should do vnto you euen so doe yee to them For matter of crime 1. Pet. 2.17 Psal 34.13 1. Pet. 3.11 take those exhortations Feare God honour the King Eschew euill and doe good Practise pietie toward God equitie toward men Liue holily as good Christians in a Christian Church liue blamelessely as good subiects in a Christian Common-wealth Auoid those capitall crimes and shamefull courses which bring men to censure before these iudgement seats And to speake particularly Rom. 13.3 If thou wilt not bee afraid of the power of the magistrate doe that which is good and thou shalt haue prayse of the same whosoeuer thou art But if thou doe euill then be afraid for he beareth not the sword in vaine for hee is the minister of God a reuenger to execute wrath vpon him which doth euill Art thou then a traytor to the King or Common-wealth a wilfull murtherer or poysoner of thy brother Then the sword of iustice must be sheathed in thy bloud that euill may be taken away that the land be not guilty of thy foule offence that others may heare and feare that sinne may bee punished in thee and preuented in other that heare or see thee If thou receiue censure for some smaller offence learne by this thy censure to amend thy life lest a worse thing hereafter befall thee for thy iterating of thy sinne will increase thy punishment In case of controuersie I beseech you all to obserue these rules seeke peace and follow after it follow peace with all men Defraud not one another Publicè interest vt lites iniustae atque inanes coerceantur ne Magistratus querelis atque causis nihil● occupetur neue ciues temerè iuter se rixentur pacemque turbent L. 21. ff si certum petatur And if controuersies arise vse all good meanes for the speedie compounding of them that the Iudgement-seat be not troubled with euery trifling brawle and needlesse suite And whereas none are more readie than you to cry out of Lawyers Atturneys and such men as vnconscionable in peruerting of iustice as vnreasonable extortioners and extorters of fees as defrauders and vndoers of the Common-weale scraping to themselues the fat of the land c. Take heed that the fault and cause of these euils doe not first issue and spring out from your selues from your peeuish and wrongfull and reuengefull dispositions Whosoeuer thou art therefore that complaynest of others take heed lest the fault be found in thy selfe Prosecute no bad cause of hatred to hurt another but onely good causes and that of necessitie to relieue thy selfe Packe no Iuries Suborne no witnesses Bribe no Iudges Lawyers nor ministers of justice vse no calumnies forgeries or vnjust protractions or vn-warrantable practises for the effecting of thy purposes in vnlawfull proceedings for if it fall out thou be justly cast in thy bad cause then shalt thou beare an heauie burden of iust punishment for thy wilfull prosecution of thy vnrighteous suit Or if by force or fraud thou preuayle against equitie then which is worse thou burdenest thy selfe with the fearefull guilt of double iniquitie And though thou get the day in the place of iudgement on earth yet shalt thou loose the day at Gods Iudgement-seat in Heauen Application to all ioyntly And now at length to grow to a finall conclusion of all these things being so as Iehosaphat that most worthy seruant of God did charge those Iudges whom he had made so do I a poore Minister of Christ in the name of the Lord charge you all that haue the least finger in matters of iustice as Reuerend Iudges worthy Iustices Counsellors Iurors witnesses and the rest Take heed what yee doe ● Chron. 19.6.7 for yee iudge not for man but for the Lord who is with you in the iudgement Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be vpon you take heed and do it for there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God nor respect of persons nor taking of gifts And as Moses to these Iudges of Israel in this place Heare the causes between your brethren and iudge righteously betweene euery man and his brother and the stranger that is with him Yee shall not respect persons in iudgement but you shall heare the small aswell as the great you shall not be afraid of the face of man V. and last poynt Of reseruation of iudgement for the iudgment is Gods Now I should proceed to the case of reseruation And if the cause be too hard for you bring it vnto me and I will heare of it But of this I say no more but this That whereas these causes and matters of iudgment are farre too great for any of vs who of our selues cannot thinke a good thought Therefore let vs appeale to God and to his Throne of grace for his assistance and blessing in these weighty affaires of Iudgment O blessed Lord God Father of mercies and God of all grace graunt we humbly intreat thee to our Iudges and Magistrates heauenly wisdom christian courage godly feare vncorrupted integritie in hearing and iudging to all the ministers and instruments of iustice and equitie vprightnes and good conscience in prosecuting and promoting of actions and causes to all the people louing affections and peaceable dispositions one toward another thankfulnes vnto thee for this thine ordinance of iudgement and dutiful obedience to the rules of pietie iustice and equitie that so vice may be punished vertue encouraged iniustice may be remoued equitie maintained The common-wealth may be prospered the Church enlarged our poore soules may be saued and thy great name glorified in the manifestation of thine aboundant mercie in our felicitie and that for the merits of thine onely Sonne and our onely Sauiour Iesus Christ the righteous Iudge of quicke and dead to whom with Thee O Father and with thy Holie-Spirit three glorious Persons but one only true and euer-liuing God be ascribed of vs and of thy whole Church all Honour Glorie Praise Power Maiestie Dominion and Thankes-giuing from this time forth for euer-more Amen All glorie be to GOD. FINIS