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A40713 Leges AngliƦ, The lawfulness of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the Church of England asserted and vindicated in answer to Mr. Hickeringill's late pamphlet stiled, Naked truth, the 2d part by Fran. Fullwood ... Fullwood, Francis, d. 1693. 1681 (1681) Wing F2509; ESTC R18058 41,024 102

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proceed against the obstinate 2. 'T is yet very remarkable that for the form and manner of their Spiritual Courts and proceedings before the Conquest it was not here in England as it was at Rome and therefore our most Ancient Church-Government was not derived or Received from Rome This Law observes that before the Conqueror the Precepts of holy Canons as to distinct Jurisdictions were not observed in England that is the Canons of the Imperial Church for six or seven Hundred years before the Jurisdiction of that Church was divided from the Civil even by the Emperor Constantine himself but for so many hundred years before the Conquest our Jurisdictions were exercised together in Hundret as the Law acknowledgeth and is confessed 3. We here see a plain Establishment of our Spiritual Courts with power of Excommunication for non-appearance in the letter of this Ancient Law under the Kings defence and enforced with the Secular Arm and 't is observable that the distinction of the Ecclesiastical from the Civil Courts was made in the Kings own Name and not the Pope's by the Kings power and none other with the Counsel of his own Subjects only and not of Rome that we read of and only with respect and not in any obedience to the ancient Canons or foreign methods And thus the Jurisdiction in our Courts Ecclesiastical as distinct from the Civil is as far from being Popish in their Original as it was when they were conjoyned and therein so unlike to the distinct proceedings of the Spiritual power beyond the Seas so many hundred years before And thus our Spiritual Courts both before they were divided and when they came to be divided from our Civil Courts stand firm in the Ancient Laws of this Land 4. There are certain great Epoche's of the Legal Establishment of the Churches power which I shall but touch 1. It was received with Christianity and grew and flourished by our Ancient Laws before the Conquest 2. In the beginning of our Norman Constitution it was thus distinguished and establish'd by the Conqueror So it was in Magna Charta the first Statute 3. Vpon the Reformation in Hen. 8. it was re-establish'd 4. So it was upon the Return of Reformation after Queen Mary by Queen Eliz. And 5. so likewise upon the Return of our present gracious Soveraign King Charles II. 5. Further I hence observe that some Alterations in Ecclesiastical proceedings may be made by Law without any prejudice to the Churches power 'T is observed out of Spelman before that by this Law the Conqueror did not lessen the Churches power indeed some Inconveniences are usually consequent to publick changes and 't is thought by our Civilians that the many prohibitions which interrupt our Ecclesiastical Courts are occasioned by their being divided from the Temporal but may not that inconvenience be accidental to that Division Or if at any time there be just cause for the Church to complain in that respect is it not rather of the Judges than the Laws or the Constitution But to the matter before us admit for Instance that after Summary hearing and Sentence of the Judge in Cases of small Tithes Church rates and such trivial matters a Justice of the Peace or some other person being legally certified were impowered and obliged to grant Warrants of Distress It seems to me a greater inconvenience in exposing Excommunication in such light Causes would be hereby removed than any contracted by such an Alteration and methinks no one should disdain the new Office seeing the Superior Judge hath been ever bound to issue out the Writ de Excom Cap. and the Sheriff to imprison the party upon a Certificate from the Bishop But I must humbly leave such things to wiser Judges THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS and SECTIONS CHAP. I. THE general Proposition The Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction as now Exercised in the Church of England is Allow'd and Establish'd by the Laws of the Land Sect. 1. An Account of the Method Page 1. Sect. 2. Mr. Hickeringill ' s Reasoning Noted and Resolv'd p. 2. Sect. 3. The Propositions suggested by M. Hickeringill are these following p. 4 CHAP. II. Our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England was not derived from the Pope but from the Crown before the Reformation by Henry the Eighth p. 5. Proof against this Popish principle Sect. 1. From the root and branches of Ecclesiastical Power Donation Investiture Laws p. 6. Sect. 2. Jurisdiction p. 7. Sect. 3 4 5. p. 9 11 12. CHAP. III. King Hen. 8. did not by renouncing the Power pretended by the Pope make void the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction neither was it void before it was restored by Edw. 6. 2. p. 13. Sect. 2 3. p. 16 20. CHAP. IV. Ecclesiastical Jurisdictition is lawfully exercised without the King's Name or Stile in Processes c. notwithstanding the 1 Edw. 6. 2. p. 22. Sect. 1 2 3. p. 23 24 26. Sect. 4. 1 Edw. 6. 2. Repeal'd appears from practice p. 28. Sect. 5. 1 Edw. 6. 2. Repealed in the Judgment of all the Judges the King and Council p. 31. Sect. 6. Mr. H. Cary ' s Reason to the contrary considered p. 36. CHAP. V. The Act of 1 Eliz. 1. Establishing the High-Commission Court was not the foundation of Ordinary Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England against Mr. Hickeringill p. 41. CHAP. VI. How our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England came at first and is at present Establish'd by Law p. 46. Sect. 1. Jurisdiction of the Church in Common Law p. 51. Sect. 2. The Government Ecclesiastical is Establish'd in the Statutes of this Realm p. 54. CHAP. VII Of Canons and Convocations p. 60. The Conclusion p. 64. The Postscript p. 67. The Bookseller to the Reader THE absence of the Author and his inconvenient distance from London hath occasioned some small Errata's to escape the Press The Printer thinks it the best instance of pardon if his Escapes be not laid upon the Author and he hopes they are no greater than an ordinary understanding may amend and a little charity may forgive R. Royston CHAP. I. The General Proposition THE Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction As now Exercised in the Church of England is Allow'd and Establish'd by the Laws of the Land SECT 1. An Account of the Method AFTER so many hundred years confirmation both by Law and Practice 't is a marvellous thing this should be a question yet of late two worthy Gentlemen treading in the steps of some former Male-contents have ventured to make it one Mr. Edmond Hickeringill and Mr. H. Cary the first in his Book called Naked Truth the Second part the other in his modestly stiled The Law of England And it is to be observed they were both Printed very seasonably for the setling our distractions through the fears and danger of Popery I shall note what they say discover their gross and dangerous mistakes answer and remove their pitiful Objections and then endeavour to satisfie ordinary and honest enquirers both that and how our Ecclesiastical Jurisdication stands
ancient and of latter times That the Kingdom of England is an absolute Monarchy and that the King is the only Supream Governour as well over Ecclesiastical persons and in Ecclesiastical Causes as Temporal To the due observation of which Laws both the King and the Subject are sworn V. IF you desire a more full and particular account of such Cases as being not provided for at Common Law are therefore and have been ever under the Spiritual power take this excellent Enumeration of my Lord Cawdri●s Case Coke Observe good Reader seeing that the determination of Heresies Schisms and Errors in Religion Ordering Examination Admission Institution and Deprivation of men of the Church which do concern God's true Religion and Service of right of Matrimony Diverces and general Bastardy whereupon depend the strength of mens Descents and Inheritances of Probate of Testaments and Letters of Administration without which no debt or duty due to any dead man can be recovered by the Common Law Mortuaries Pensions Procurations Reparations of Churches Simony Incest Adultery Fornication and Incontinency and some others doth not belong to the Common Law how necessary it was for administration of Justice that his Majestie 's Progenitors Kings of this Realm did by publick Authority authorize Ecclesiastical Courts under them to determine those great and important Causes Ecclesiastical exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Common Law by the Kings Laws Ecclesiastical which was done originally for two causes 1. That Justice should be administred under the Kings of this Realm within their own Kingdom to all their Subjects and in all causes 2. That the Kings of England should be furnished upon all occasions either foreign or domestical with Learned Professors as well of the Ecclesiastical as Temporal Laws VI. Ecclesiastical Laws are the Kings Laws though Processe be not in the Kings Name Now albeit the proceedings and Processe Coke Cawdr Case latter end of the Ecclesiastical Courts be in the Name of the Bishops c. it followeth not therefore that either the Court is not the Kings or the Law whereby they proceed is not the King's Law For taking one example for many every Leet or View of Frank-pledge holden by a Subject is kept in the Lords Name and yet it is the Kings Court and all the proceedings therein are directed by the Kings Laws VII Spiritual Causes secured from Prohibitions notwithstanding by Acts of Parliament Lord Coke Cawdries Case in Edw. 2. Albeit by the Ordinance of Circumspeete N. B. agatis made in the 13 year of Edw. 1. and by general allowance and usage the Ecclesiastical Court held Plea of Tithes Obventions Oblations Mortuaries Redemptions of Penance laying of violent hands upon a Clerk Defamations c. yet did not the Clergie think themselves assured nor quiet from Prohibitions purchased by Subjects until that King Edw. the Second by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal in and by consent of Parliament upon the Petitions of the Clergie had granted unto them to have Jurisdiction in those Cases The King in a Parliament holden in the Ninth year of his Reign after particular Answers made to their Petitions concerning the matters abovesaid doth grant and give his Royal assent in these words We desiring as much of right as we may to provide for the state of the Church of England and the tranquillity and quiet of the Prelates of the said Clergie to the honour of God and the amendment of the state of the said Church and of the Prelates and Clergie ratifying and approving all and singular the said Answers which appear in the said Act and all and singular things in the said Answers contained We do for Vs and Our Heirs grant and command that the said be inviolably kept for ever willing and granting for Vs and Our Heirs that the said Prelates and Clergie and their Successors for ever do exercise Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Premises according to the tenour of the said Answer VIII The Ecclesiaestical Jurisdiction is a branch of the Kings Supremacy and he that denieth it denieth the King to be a compleat Monarch Cawdries Case and Head of the whole intire body of the Realm as my Lord Coke assures us both from the Common Law and many Statutes in all Ages made on purpose from time to time to vindicate the Crown and secure our own Church and its Jurisdiction under the Crown from the Pope and his illegal Encroachments and Vsurpations before and more especially by Hen. 8. and since the Reformation as is very amply proved by my Lord Coke in his most excellent discourse on Cawdrie's Case and since very learnedly and fully by Sir John Davis Atturny General in Ireland in his Case of Praemunire called Labor's Case both which should be well read by all that desire satisfaction in this weighty point Thus the Jurisdiction of this Church in subordination to the Supream Head of it hath proceeded through all time in the Laws and Statutes of our own Kingdom and was never legally interrupted till the 17 of Car. 1. but that Act repeal'd by the 13 of our present gracious King it stands firm again according to the letter of the said last Act upon its ancient legal Basis IX The old Objection that the Spiritual Courts do not Act in the Kings Name c. is fully Answered in the Book but because it is only mentioned there that the Case was resolved by the Judges in L. Coke Rep. 12. p. 7. King James's time I shall here set it down as abridg'd for brevity out of 〈◊〉 Lord Coke by Manly Pasch 4. Jac. Regis At this Parliament it was strongly urg'd at a grand Committee of the Lords and Commons in the Painted Chamber that such Bishops as were made after the first day of the Session were not lawful Bishops 1. Admitting them Bishops yet the Manner and Form of their Seals Stiles Processe and proceedings in their Ecclesiastical Courts were not consonant to Law because by the Stat. 1 Edw. 6. 2. it is provided that thenceforth Bishops should not be Elective but Donative by Letters Patents of the King and for that at this day all Bishops were made by Election not Donation of the King therefore the said Bishops are not lawful 2. By the same Act it is provided that all Summons c. and Processe in Ecclesiastical Courts shall be made in the Kings Name and Stile and their Seals engraven with the Kings Arms and Certificates made in the Kings Name it was therefore concluded that the said Statute being still in force by consequence all the Bishops made after the Act of 1 Jac. were not lawful Bishops and the proceedings being in the Name of the Bishop makes them unlawful quia non observata forma infertur adnullatio Actus Upon consideration of these Objections by the Kings Commandment it was Resolved by Popham Chief Justice of England and Coke Atturny of the King and after affirmed by the Chief Baron and the other Justices attendant to the Parliament that the said Act of 1 Edw. 6. 2. is not now in force being Repealed Annulled and Annihilated by three several Acts of Parliament any whereof being in force it makes that Act of 1 Edw. 6. that it cannot stand quia Leges posteriores priores contrarias abrogant And by the Act of the 25 Hen. 8. c. 20. is set forth the manner of Election and Consecration of Archbishops and Bishops and also for the making and Execution of all things which belong to their Authority with which words the Stile and Seal of their Courts and the manner of their proceedings are included which Act of 25 Hen. 8. is Revived by 1 Eliz. c. 1. and consequently that of 1 Edw. 6. c. 2. is Repealed I advise the Reader to see it as more at large expressed and the repealing Statutes particularly mentioned and argued in my Lord Coke 12 Rep. p. 7 8 9. and bid him farewel and not be wiser than the Law FINIS A Catalogue of some Books lately Printed for Richard Royston ROma Ruit The Pillars of Rome broken wherein all the several Pleas for the Pope's Authority in England with all the Material Defences of them as they have been urged by Romanists from the beginning of our Reformation to this day are Revised and Answered By Fr. Fullwood D. D. Archdeacon of Totnes in Devon The New Distemper Or the Dissenters Usual Pleas for Comprehension Toleration and the Renouncing the Covenant Consider'd and Discuss'd with some Reflections upon Mr. Baxter's and Mr. Alsop's late Pamphlets published in Answer to the Reverend Dean of S. Paul's Sermon concerning Separation The Lively Picture of Lewis du Moulin drawn by an incomparable Hand Together with his Last Words Being his Retractation of all the Personal Reflections he had made on the Divines of the Church of England in several Books of his Signed by himself on the Fifth and the Seventeenth of October 1680. Christ's Counsel to his Church In Two Sermons preached at the two last Fasts By S. Patrick Dean of Peterburgh and Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty THE END
vile Hypothesis that will stand upon no better grounds for he knows that these are not so many new Officers of the Church but only Assistants allow'd by Law under Bishops and such other Spiritual men as have proper power of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction he knows there is no other Canon but the Law of the Land and that the Civil Magistrate hath power to tell us what is Scripture and that he hath told us S. Paul ' s Epistles are so where we read of helps in 1 Cor. 12. 28. Government and that Chancellors Commissaries Officials and Surrogates are but such helps under different names from the several ways and degrees of their Delegation That Registers are but to make and keep the Acts of Court c. Advocates and Proctors to order and manage Causes and Apparators to serve Processe and execute Mandates and that none but one in Orders meddles with the Keys either for Excommunication or Absolution Mr. Hickeringill is a man of great experience in Spiritual Jurisdiction and need not be told of these plain matters 5. And seeing the Statist will not be quieted but by Argument taken from Law I have written the following Treatise wherein I hope I have sufficiently demonstrated that our Ecclesiastical Courts are Establish'd in the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom Our Magna Charta it self or the great Charter of the English Liberties doth suppose and acknowledge the Legal exercise of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction by the forementioned Ministers as one of the Ancient Rights and Liberties of this Church and doth also ratifie confirm and establish it for ever at least in the Judgment of my Lord Coke in these words This Charter is Declaratory of the Ancient Law and Liberty of England Et habeat omnia Jura sua integra that is that all Ecclesiastical persons shall enjoy all their lawful Jurisdictions and other their Rights wholy without any Diminution or Substraction whatsoever and Jura sua shew plainly that no new right was given unto them but such as they had before hereby are Confirmed Libertates suas illaesas Libertates are here taken in two Sences 1. For the Laws of England 2. For Priviledges held by Parliament Charter or Prescription more than Ordinary Coke Magna Charta By all which Titles the Church of England Ecclesia non Moritur but Moriuntur Ecclesiastici holds her Ancient Liberty of keeping Courts to this day 6. Yet I do not say but the manner of proceedings in these Courts may be justly and reasonably altered as his gracious Majesty may be advised and yet the true Liberty of the Church be rather fortified than Violated Therefore after some Overtures made lately by a far greater Person in a larger Sphere my Narrower subject may suffer me humbly to offer my thoughts touching some Alterations that perhaps might not prejudice our Ecclesiastical Ministers or their Courts with all due submission to my Superiors These things following have been long in my thoughts 1. That a speedier way might be appointed for the dispatch of Causes in the Spiritual Courts than the present Legal Rules thereof will allow 2. That trivial matters such as small Tithes and Church-Rates might be summarily ended without exposing the solemn Sentence of Excommunication as is generally complain'd Especially considering that the Statute touching the Writ de Excom capi as well as Vulgar apprehension makes a difference in Original Causes though indeed the immediate cause of all Excommunication is always the contempt of the King 's Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in not obeying either its Summons or Sentence both these perhaps may be contrived by wise men without prejudice to the said Jurisdiction 3. That there is reason to reascertain the Fees for Probates of Wills and granting Letters of Administration with some moderate respect had to the difference of the value of Mony when the former Act was made and at this time so as the Officers in the Kings Spiritual Courts may live upon their Employment 4. And why Excommunication decreed in Court may not be sent to the Parochial Minister to be not only declared but Executed by him as the Bishops Surrogate and convenient time allowed him to endeavour to reconcile the offender and to prevent the Sentence if it may be I see not if that may give any satisfaction Such kind of Alterations perhaps may be admitted without real prejudice to the Church or rather with advantage as well as those made by the Conqueror when he divided the Ecclesiastical from the Civil Courts The Law by which he made that Division is famous the clauses of it concerning this matter may be desired by the Reader therefore I shall take the pains to transcribe them they are these Willielmus Gratia Dei Rex Anglorum c. William by the Grace of God King of England to all that have Land in the Bishoprick of Lincoln know ye all and all others my faithful People in England that the Episcopal Laws that have Non benè not well been exercised nor according to the Precepts of holy Canons even to me time in this Kingdom Concilio Communi with Common Counsel and with the Counsel of the Bishops and Abbots and all the chief men of my Kingdom I judge fit to be amended Moreover I Command and by my Kingly Authority injoyn That no Bishop or Archadeacon de Legibus Episcopalibus hold Placita Pleas any longer in Hundret nor bring any Ecclesiastical Cause to the Iudgment of Secular men but whosoever shall be called or questioned for any Cause according to the Ecclesiastical Laws he shall come to the place which the Bishop shall chuse and there shall answer for his Cause and not secundum Hundret and he shall do right to God and the Bishop not according to the Hundred but according to the Canons and Episcopal Laws But if any through pride will not appear Venire ad Justiciam Episcopalem let him be called the first second and third time and if yet he will not come let him be Excommunicated and if need be let the Strength and Justice of the King or Sheriff ad hoc Vindicandum adhibeatur This also I defend and by my Authority interdict that no Sheriff or other Minister of the King or any Lay-man do intermeddle with the Laws which belong to the Bishop Give me leave to subjoyn a few Notes upon this Law of the Conqueror and I have done 1. The substance and matters of Ecclesiastical Power and Connusance was the same long before this Law was made and not Altered by it 't was a Law of King Alured Si quis Dei rectitudines aliquas deforciat reddat lathlite cum Dacis witam cum Anglis And the same is afterwards confirmed and renewed by Canutus and other Kings whereby it appeareth that long before the Conquest the Authority and Jurisdiction of the Church was maintained by the setled Laws of the Kingdom and that Ecclesiastical Judges had power so anciently to Excommunicate and had the help of the King and the Sheriff to
all which Notorious and publick Miscarriages I wish he thought it fit to do publick Penance in another new and cleaner Sheet I have to do with two Adversaries Mr. Hickeringill and Mr. Cary the first wisheth the Church of England had more power than it now hath the other that it had less I presume in the name of the true Sons of this Church that we are very thankful for the power we have by the favour of our gracious King and his good Laws And as we do and always shall acknowledge the Dependance of our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction upon the Imperial Crown of this Realm So whether it seem good to the King and his High Court of Parliament to augment or lessen it or to continue it as it is we shall still maintain our Loyalty and manifest our duty and chearfully submit our selves But Lord forgive our Enemies Persecutors and Slanderers and turn their hearts THE POSTSCRIPT I Have reserved a few Authorities for the satisfaction of such as have no mind or leisure to read the Book which alone are sufficient to oppose and expose my Adversaries Objections I. Episcopal Government in the Church of England is as Ancient as the Church and at first was subordinate under God only to our Kings without any relation to or dependance on the Pope and declared to be so with the grounds and reasons thereof very early by Edw. 1. and Edw. and so Established by Acts of Parliament Read 25 Edw. 3. the summ is thus Here we have a Recital of the first Statute against Provisors to this effect Whereas the Holy Church of England was founded in the Estate of Prelacy by the Grandfather of this King and his Progenitors c. and by them endowed with great Possessions c. for them to inform the People in the Law of God to keep Hospitality c. And whereas the King and other founders of the said Prelacies were the Rightful Adowers thereof and upon Avoidance of such Ecclesiastical Promotions had power to advance thereunto their Kinsmen Friends and other Learned men of the birth of this Realm which being so advanced became able and worthy to serve the King in Council and other places in the Common-wealth The Bishop of Rome Usurping the Seigniory of such Possessions and Benefices did give the same to Aliens as if he were Rightful Patron of those Benefices whereas by the Law of England he never had the Right Patronage thereof whereby in short time all the Spiritual Promotions in this Realm would be ingrossed into the hands of strangers Canonical Elections of Prelates would be abolished works of Charity would cease the Founders and true Patrons would be disinherited the Kings Council weakned and the whole Kingdom impoverished and the Laws and Rights of the Realm destroyed Upon this complaint it was resolved in Parliament That these Oppressions and grievances should not be suffered in any manner and therefore it was Enacted That the King and his Subjects should thenceforth enjoy their Rights of Patronage that free Elections of Archbishops and Bishops and other Prelates Elective should be made according to the Ancient Grants of the Kings Progenitors and their Founders and that No Provision from Rome should be put in Execution but that those Provisors should be Attached Fined and Ransom'd at the Kings Will and withal imprisoned till they have renounced the benefit of their Bulls satisfied the Party grieved and given sureties not to commit the like offence again II. Before this forementioned Act was made the Spiritual Courts were in Being and had Power by the Law of the Land to try such Causes as were not to be tried by Common Law so declared and Establish'd by Acts of Parliament Vid. in the time of Edw. 1. and Edw. 2. near four Hundred years since Circumspectè agatis 13 Edw. 1. An. 1285. The King to his Judges sendeth greeting Use your selves circumspectly in all matters concerning the Bishop of Norwich and his Clergy not punishing them if they hold Plea in things as be meer Spiritual as Penance enjoyned by Prelates Corporal or Pecuniary for Fornication Adultery or such like for Tithes and Oblations due and accustomed Reparations of the Church and Church-yard Mortuaries Pensions laying violent hands upon a Clerk Causes of Defamation Perjury All such demands are to be made in the Spiritual Courts and the Spiritual Judge shall have power to take knowledge of them notwithstanding the Kings Prohibition III. Hereupon a Consultation was to be granted 24 Edw. 1. as followeth Whereas Ecclesiastical Judges have often surceased to proceed by force of the Kings Writ of Prohibition in Cases whereas Remedy could not be had in the Kings Courts our Lord the King Willeth and Commandeth That where Ecclesiastical Judges do surcease in the aforesaid Cases by the Kings Prohibition that the Chancellor or the Chief Justice upon sight of the Libel at the instance of the Plaintiff if they can see that the Case cannot be redressed by Writ out of Chancery but that the Spiritual Court ought to determine the Matters shall write to the Ecclesiastical Judge that he proceed therein notwithstanding the Kings Prohibition More particularly Those Cases reserved by Law and Statute against which no Prohibition can be legally granted are enumerated in Articul Cleri 9 Edw. 2. IV. Thus the proceedings of the Spiritual Courts and the Causes belonging to them were supposed directed allowed and Establish'd by these Ancient Statutes And left those Causes have not been sufficiently specified no Prohibition shall be awarded out of Chancery but in Case where we have the connusance and of Right ought to have as it is in the 18 of Edw. 3. provided Whence 't is a general Rule both in Law and Statute That such cases as have no remedy provided in the other Law belong to the Spiritual Courts and indeed it hence appears they have ever done so because we no where find in our Laws that the Common Law did ever provide for them and because the Kingdom of England is an intire Empire where the King is furnish'd with a Temporalty and Spiritualty sufficient to administer Justice to all persons and in all Causes whatsoever And consequently what Causes are not in the connusance of the Common Law belong to the Spiritual Jurisdiction which is plainly implied in 24 Hen. 8. c. 12. and other Statutes Upon the same ground in Law depend three great truths 1. The Antiquity of Ecclesiastical Courts 2. Their dependance upon the Crown 3. The perfection of the Government to administer Justice in all cases to all persons from the Supream Power exercised in the Temporal and Spiritual Courts all which lie in the Preamble of that Statute according to our Ancient Laws For saith my Lord Coke in the conclusion of Cawdries Case it hath appeared as well by the ancient Common Laws of this Realm by the Resolution of the Judges and Sages of the Laws of England in all succession of Ages as by Authority of many Acts of Parliament
firm and unshaken upon the basis of our English Laws SECT II. Mr. Hickeringill's Reasoning Noted and Resolv'd Mr. Hickeringill is pleased to say that upon the Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. was built the High Commission Court and the Authority of all Canon-makers Synodical but down came the Fabrick when that Act was Repealed by 17 Car. 1. 11. and 13 Car. 2. 12. Where provision was made by striking at the foundation 1 Eliz. 1. that no more Commissions of that nature be granted any more only the Spiritual Courts by 13 Car. 2. 12. were to be in Statu quo wherein they were 1639. What state no great I 'le warrant you if the Basis on which their Star-Chamber and High-Commission-Court were built be taken away All Ecclesiastical Jurisdications till Hen. 8. were derived from the Pope as Supream of the Church this Head being beheaded the Supremacy was invested in the Crown But 1 Edw. 6. 2. Enacts that all Process Ecclesiastical should be in the Name and with the stile of the King c. So that if there be any Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England distinct from his Majesties Lay Courts all their Processes must be in the Kings Name c. 'T is true 1 Edw. 6. 2. is repealed by the 1 Mar. 2. but I care not for that for 't is revived by the Act of repeal 1 Jac. 25. The Clergy in Convocation acknowledged in their Petition that their Ecclesiastical power was at that time taken away So that their present Jurisdiction being not from God that 's certain 't is not from Man because his Majesty has promised 13 Car. 2. 12. never to empower them with any more Commissions to the worlds end But this I do not peremptorily assert I here protest I know not by what Authority we do these things considering the premises and the repealing of 1 Eliz. 1. By the Statute of Hen. 8. all these Ordinary Jurisdictions were cut off and were revived by 1 Edw. 6. upon Conditions only This is the very Naked Truth under his first Query and in his Conclufion and up and down this worthy Book that is such a shabbly lawless Logick such a rude and shatter'd way of reasoning as deserves to be reduc'd with a rod and lasht into method and sence and better manners Especially if you single out his false and sturdy begging Propositions fraught with a wretched design of robbing his own Mother in the Kings high way with which he challenges passage to cheat and abuse the Country My business is only to apprehend the Vagabonds and commit them to the justice of some more severe and smarter hand SECT III. The Propositions suggested by Mr. Hickeringill are these following I. That before Hen. 8. all Ecclesiastical Jurisdication in England was derived from the Pope as Mr. Cary p. 6. II. That Hen. 8. when he annex'd the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to the Crown he took it wholly away from our Ecclesiastical Ministers III. That the Church had no Jurisdiction after Hen. 8. had annex'd it to the Crown till 1 Edw. 6. 2. IV. That if there be any Ecclesiastical Power in our Church it cannot be executed but in the Name and with the Stile c. of the King according to 1 Edw. 6. 2. V. That all our Ecclesiastical Power was lately founded in 1 Eliz. 1. as it establish'd the High-Commission-Court and that Act being Repeal'd all Ecclesiastical Power was taken away with the Power of that High Commission On a Rock consisting of these Sands stands our mighty Champion triumphing with his Naked Truth but we come now to sift them CHAP. II. Our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England was not derived from the Pope but from the Crown before the Reformation by Henry the Eighth DARE any Protestant stand to the contrary had the Pope really Authority here before Henry the Eighth did our Bishops indeed receive all their power exercised so many hundred years together originally from the Pope was not their Political Jurisdiction derived from and depending on the Crown Imperial and founded in our own Laws the Customs and Statutes of the Realm are these the Popes Laws and not the Kings was there not Ecclesiastical power in England both for Legislation and Execution ab origine before the Papal Vsurpation was not Popery at first and all along till Hen. 8. an illegal usurpation upon our more Ancient Government never own'd much less establish'd in the true Ancient Laws of England and under that very Notion rejected and expelled by him How then did our Bishops c. derive all their power from the Pope before Hen. 8. to say so is not more like an Hobbist than a Papist I thought I had caught an Hobby but War-Hawk Proof against this Popish principle SECT 1. From the root and branches of Ecclesiastical Power Donation Investiture Laws I. It was a known Law long before Hen. 8. that the Church of England was founded 25 Edw. 3. 25 Edw. 1. in Episcopacy by our Kings c. and not in the Papacy II. The Collation and Donation of Bishopricks and Nomination of Bishops did always belong to the King yea all the Bishopricks in this Realm are of the Kings Foundation and the full Right of Investiture was ever in the Crown Coke 1. Inst 2. S. 648. to deny it may be a praemunire III. When once the Bishops are legally invested their proper Jurisdiction came into 35 Hen. 8. 20. their hands by the Laws without any power derived from the Pope Who saith otherwise knows nothing or means ill IV. It was acknowledg'd That Convocations are always have been and ought to be Assembled by the Kings Writ only 't is Law 35 Hen. 8. 19. V. As the power to make Laws for the Church was ever in the King so the Laws themselves must be his and none other bind us This Realm Recognizing no Superiour 35 Hen. 8. 21. As 16 Rich. 2. 5. under God but the King hath been and is free from any Laws but such as have been devised within this Realm or at our Liberty have been consented to and made custom by use and not by any foreign power SECT II. Jurisdiction THUS our Ancient Ecclesiastical Governours and Laws depended upon the Crown and not upon the Pope by the Laws of England and in the Judgment of all the States of the Kingdom before Han. 8. and so did also the execution of those Laws by those Governours in the same publick Judgment a little better than Mr. Hickeringill's Popish opinion 2. In fundry old Authentick Histories and Chronicles it is manifest that this Realm is an Empire having an Imperial Crown to which belongs a body Politick compacted of Spiritualty and Temporalty furnished thus with Jurisdiction to yield Justice in all causes without restraint from any foreign Prince The body Spiritual having power when any Cause of Divine Law hapned to come in question the English Church called the Spiritualty which always hath been reputed and also found of that sort for knowledge c. without
any exteriour person to declare and determine all such doubts and to administer all such offices as appertain to them for the due administration whereof the Kings of this Realm have endowed the said Church both with honour and possessions both these Authorities and Jurisdictions do conjoyn in the due Administration of Justice the one to help the other And whereas the King his most noble Progenitors and the Nobility and Commons of this Realm at divers and sundry Parliaments as well in the time of King Edw. 1. Edw. 3. Rich. 2. Hen. 4. all which were certainly before Hen. 8. and other noble Kings made sundry Ordinances Laws Statutes and provisions for the entire and sure preservation of the Prerogatives and Jurisdiction Spiritual and Temporal of the said Imperial Crown from the annoyance and Authority of the See of Rome from time to time as often as any such attempt might be known or espied Vid. 25 Hen. 8. 12. These things plainly shew that the whole State in Hen. 8's time was not of Mr. Hickeringill's mind but that before that time the whole power of the Church was independent on the Pope and not derived from him but originally inherent in the Crown and Laws of England whatever he blatters to the contrary Vid. 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 4. cap. 22. pag. 123. Sect. 3. 27 Edw. 3. cap. 1. 38 Edw. 3. c. 4. Stat. 2. c. 1. 2 Rich. 2. cap. 6. 3 Rich. 2. c. 3. S. 2. 12 Rich. 2. c. 15. 13 Rich. 2. Stat. 2. c. 2. 16 Rich. 2. c. 5. 2 Hen. 4. c. 3 4. 7 Hen. 4. c. 6. 9. Hen. 4. c. 8. 1 Hen. 5. 7. 3 Hen. 5. Stat. 2. c. 4. Adde to these Mr. Cawdries Case in my Lord Coke and he must be unreasonably ill affected to the Church of England that is not more than satisfied that the chief and Supream Governours thereof were the Kings of England and not the Pope before the Reign of Hen. 8. 3. Also it was the sence of the whole Kingdom that the Pope's power and Jurisdiction here was usurped and illegal contrary to Gods Laws the Laws and Statutes of this Realm and in derogation of the IMperial Crown thereof and that it was timorously and ignorantly submitted unto before Hen. 8. as the words of that Statute are 28 Hen. 8. cap. 16. SECT III. BUT if our Gentleman be wiser than to believe their words the matter is evident in our ancient Laws and constant practice accordingly before Hen. 8. his time Indeed all the Statutes of provision against foreign powers are to own and defend the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction at home under this Crown Yea all the Statutes made on purpose to restrain and limit the Spiritual Jurisdiction in certain cases and respects do allow and establish it in others exceptio confirmat Regulam in non exceptis 2. Much plainer all the Statutes that prohibit the Kings Civil Courts to interrupt the Ecclesiastical proceedings but in such cases and the Statutes granting consultations in such cases and the Statutes directing appeals in the Spiritual Courts and appeals to the Chancery it self and the Laws ratifying and effectually binding their Sentence by the Writ de exc cap. much more plainly do these establish the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the laws of the Land before Hen. 8. 3. By this time 't is vain to mention the Statutes which of old did specifie and allow particular matters to be tried only in the Ecclesiastical Courts such as Tithes 18 Edw. 3. 7. the offences of Ecclesiastical persons 1 Hen. 7. c. 4. causes Testamentary 18 Edw. 3. 6. Synodals and procurations and pensions c. 15 Hen. 8. 19. Defamations 9 Edw. 2. 3. 1 Edw. 3. c. 11 c. all which are clear evidences that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was establish'd by the Statutelaws of this Realm and consequently did not depend upon was not derived from any foreign power before the 20 of Hen. 8. SECT IV. TO seek for the Original of our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and Courts in the Statute-book is more than ridiculous seeing they both stood in a flourishing estate long before the beginning of that book and are among the number of the great things which were then secundum consuetudinem leges Angliae and are plainly establish'd in the Common Law of the Land by which they have stood and been practis'd ever since as we shall prove more fully anon 2. Magna Charta which is found first in the book of Statutes and is said by Lawyers to be Common Law i. e. shews us what is Common Law in this Kingdom begins thus We have granted and confirmed for us and our Heirs for ever that the Church of England shall be free and shall have all her whole Rights and Liberties Inviolable Reserving to all Archbishops and Bishops and all persons as well Spiritual as Temporal all their Free Liberties and free Customs which they have had in times past and which we have granted to be holden within this Realm and all men of this Realm as well Spiritual as Temporal shall observe the same against all persons 3. Now what can any man that knows the practice of the Spiritual Courts before that time at that time and ever since imagine what is meant by the Liberties and Customs of the Church i. e. in the sence of Mr. Hickeringill and the words of Magna Charta Archbishops Bishops and all Spiritual men but the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical in the first and chief place And these by the great Charter are confirm'd for ever and the like confirmation hath been made by the many succeeding Kings and Parliaments in their confirmation of Magna Charta 4. Therefore I cannot but conclude that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction being founded in the Common Law Magna Charta and the Statutes by so long practice beyond all Records is in the very Constitution of the Kingdom The great men of the Church having always had authority in the very making of Laws as they had before Magna Charta and been reputed as in the Statute of Eliz. one of the three States in Parliament and the Execution also of the Ecclesiastical Laws of the Church of England SECT V. LASTLY All this is plainly confirm'd by ancient Ecclesiastical Canons which seems to be an Argument of great weight with Mr. Hickeringill as well as by the Ancient Laws and Customs of the Land In the Apostles Canons 't is ordained that every National Church should have its own chief or head and thence derive all Power under the Crown 'T is acknowledged against the Papists that we had our Archbishops and Bishops before the Vsurpation of the Pope We were anciently a Patriarchate independent upon Rome The four first Councils confirm'd the Apostles Canons and establish'd our ancient Cyprian priviledge Let after encroachments of the Pope be accordingly renounced as lawless Vsurpations Let us quietly enjoy our restored ancient priviledges and let ancient Custom prevail according to the Sentence of the ancient Councils in spight of
all Papists and Hobbists CHAP. III. King Hen. 8. did not by renouncing the Power pretended by the Pope make void the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction neither was it void before it was restored by 1 Edw. 6. 2. IT 's somewhat difficult to make this Proposition than it is in its self more plain pray Mr. Wise-man where and by what words did Hen. 8. cut off as you say all those ordinary Jurisdictions Did that great Prince and his Parliament intend by any Statute then made to cut them off or not If they did intend it how came it to pass that they continued in their usual course of power and proceedings all the rest of his Reign which may be presumed to be near ten years Was that watchful Prince so asleep was the whole Kingdom so stupid so long a time to suffer such oppression by invasion of the Crown and the peoples Liberties by a company of Church-men now deprived of the Pope's assistance and without any power at all or were the Ecclesiastical Governours so desperate or careless as to lie under so much danger of praemunire neither desisting to act without power nor to sue for it 2. But perhaps though the King and Parliament did not intend it yet the words of the Statute express enough to dissolve and cut off all those ordinary Jurisdictions and no body could see through this milstone or tumble it upon the Churches head before Mr. Hickeringill was inspired to do it in a lucky time I will answer him with a story There was a certain Lord laid claim to a Mannor that was in another Lord's possession upon Trial it was found that the Plaintiffe had the Right of it and he that had had possession was thrown out and the other the Right Owner was as he ought to be put into the possession of the said Mannor but it was observed that though the Lords were changed yet the Customs and Courts and Officers were not changed at all but all things proceeded as before 3. Thus King Hen. 8. and his Parliament express'd themselves as if on purpose to our present case only that the Pope's power then was rather in a pretended claim than in possession as is evident from that notable Statute 24 Hen. 8. c. 12. where we have the Kings Supremacy first asserted with a body Politick of the Spiritualty and Temporalty every way furnish'd with Authorities and Jurisdictions to administer Justice to the whole Realm Thus the Imperial Crown fully accomplish'd throws off the pretence of the Pope as King Edw. Rich. and Hen. 4. had done before yet as they also did reserves as well the Spiritualty and its Jurisdiction as the Temporalty and its Jurisdiction Afterwards 4. The King doth by his Royal assent and by the assents of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons Assembled and by the Authority of the same Enact Establish and Ordain that all Causes Testamentary Causes of Matrimony and Divorces rights of Tithes Oblations and Obventions the knowledge whereof by the goodness of Princes of this Realm and by the Laws and Customs of the same appertaineth to the Spiritual Jurisdiction of this Realm shall be from henceforth heard examined discuss'd clearly finally and definitively adjudged and determined in such Courts Spiritual and Temporal as the natures of the controversie shall require 5. 'T is plain therefore that though Hen. 8. did cut off the Pope's pretence which is the great intention of that excellent Law yet the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was not dissolved but annex'd or declared to be annex'd to the Imperial Crown of this Realm and to continue to exercise its power in the Spiritual Courts as before according to the Laws and Customs of the Land Read the Statute and you will not only see a continuance of the Spiritual Courts supposed and allow'd but special directions touching proceedings and Appeals therein SECT II. IF King Hen. 8. did take away the Ecclesiastical Authority of the Church of England he did either remove the Officers or deny their power to make Canons or destroy their Courts and the exercise of their Jurisdiction but he did do neither but rather by Acts of Parliament establish'd them all I. For the first touching the Governours of the Church consult Statute 31 Hen. 8. 3. that it may be Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament that all Archbishops and Bishops of this Realm may by Authority of this present Parliament and not by any provision or other foreign Authority enjoy and retain their Archbishopricks and Bishopricks in as large and ample manner as if they had been promoted elected confirmed and Consecrated according to the due course of the Laws of this Realm And that every Archbishop and Bishop of this Realm may minister use and exercise all and every thing and things pertaining to the Office or Order of any Archbishop or Bishop with all Tokens Ensigns and Ceremonies thereunto lawfully belonging Further that all Ecclesiastical persons of the Kings Realm all Archdeacons Deans and other having Offices may by Authority of this Act and not c. administer use and exercise all things appertaining to their Dignities and Offices so it be not expresly against the Laws of God and this Realm II. Neither did King Hen. 8. take away the power of the Bishops and others to make Canons in Convocation as appears by the Statute of the 25 of Hen. 8. 19. In that Statute among other things upon the Petition of the Clergy two things are granted to our purpose touching Ecclesiastical Canons 1. The old ones 't is provided that such Canons being already made which be not contrariant nor repugnant to the Laws Statutes and Customs of this Realm nor to the damage of the Kings prerogative Royal shall now be used and exercised as they were before the making of this Act till such time as they be viewed by the said Thirty two persons according to the Tenor of this Act which was never done therefore such old Canons are yet of force by this Act. Vid. Sect. 6. 2. For the making of new Canons the Convocation hath power reserved by this same Act provided the Convocation be called by the Kings writ and that they have the Royal assent and licence to make promulgate and execute such Canons as you may read Sect. 1. of the said Statute Indeed the Convocation used a larger power in making Canons before as is there noted which they say they will not henceforth presume to do but it therefore follows that they may still use their power so limited and derived from the Crown which is the evident intention of the Act. For by restraining the Clergy thus to proceed in making Canons the Law allows them the power so to do and by making the exceptions and limitations confirms their Authority so far as it is not excepted against III. Neither lastly did King Hen. 8. take away the ordinary Jurisdiction of Ecclesiastical Governours as exercised in the Spiritual Courts according to the Laws and Canons of this
Censure in those Courts be in the Name or with the Stile of the King or under the Kings Seal or that their Seals of Office have in them the Kings Arms. And that the Statute of primo Edvardi Sexti c. 2. which Enacted the Contrary is not now in force We are also of Opinion that the Bishops Archdeacons and other Ecclesiastical Persons may keep their Visitations as usually they have done without Commission under the great Seal of England so to do John Brampstone John Finch Humph. Davenport Will. Jones Jo. Dinham Ri. Hutton George Crooke Tho. Trevor George Vernon Ro. Berkley Fr. Crawly Ri. Weston Inrolled in the Courts of Exchequer Kings Bench Common Pleas and Register's in the Courts of High Commission and Star-Chamber Hereupon followed the Kings Proclamation declaring that the proceedings of his Majesties Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers are according to the Law of the Land as are the words of the Title I shall only transcribe the Conclusion of the Proclamation which you have faithfully in these words AND his Royal Majesty hath thought fit with the Advice of his Council that a publick Declaration of these Opinions and Resolutions of his Reverend and Learned Iudges being agreeable to the Judgment and Resolutions of former times should be made known to all his Subjects as well to Vindicate the legal proceedings of his Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers from the unjust and Scandalous imputation of invading or entrenching on his Royal Prerogative as to settle the minds and stop the mouths of all unquiet Spirits that for the future they presume not to censure his Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers in these their Iust and Warranted proceedings And hereof his Majesty admonisheth all his Subjects to take Darning as they shall answer the Contrary at their Perils Given at the Court at Lindhurst Aug. 18. in the Thirteenth Year of his Majesties Reign God save the King You may see the Cafe fully the Reasons on both sides and the Judges determination the Fourth of King James to which this Proclamation may refer Coke Rep. 12. p. 7 8. Now I could almost submit it to Mr. Cary or Mr. Hickeringill himself whether it be fitter or safer for Ecclesiastical Judges to proceed in their Courts as they now do or alter their proceedings and presume upon the King by using his Royal Name and Stile and Arms contrary to all this Evidence and Reason and Law SECT VI. Mr. H. Cary's Reason to the contrary considered BUT Mr. Cary saith He seeth not a drachm of Reason why the Spiritual Courts should not make their Processe in the Kings name as well as the Temporal Courts since those as well as these are the Kings Courts He seems to talk Pothecary without so much as a drachm of Reason the usage of the Courts and the evidence aforesaid is better Law than his pitiful guesses Neither is there colour of Reason in what he saith if these two things appear 1. That the Ecclesiastical Ministers do sufficiently and openly acknowledge the dependance of their Courts upon the Crown without using his Majesties Name or Stile or Arms. 2. That there is not the same reason that the Spiritual Courts should use the Kings Name c. that there is for the Temporal 1. For the first the Ecclesiastical Judges accept their places thankfully as the Kings donation and not the Popes then they readily grant they depend upon the Crown even for the exercise of their Spiritual function and that they receive all coercive and external Jurisdiction immediately from the Crown and the Laws of the Land and not from the Pope Again they all take the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance before their Instalment which are the fence of the Crown against Popery And then in all their publick Prayers before their Sermons the Bishops and Archdeacons c. do Recognize the Kings Supremacy in all Ecclesiastical things and causes as well as Civil Again they Take the late Test and the same Oaths at the publick Sessions And lastly Mr. Cary himself confesseth that they acknowledge the said Supremacy in their publick Canons or Constitutions of the whole Church of England as he notes p. 2. in Can. 1 2. 1603. And are all these less significant to testifie their dependance on and acknowledgement of their derivation from the Crown than the Kings Name and Stile and Arms which may be far enough from the Conscience in a Processe 2. For the second that there is not the same reason to use the Kings name in Ecclesiastical as in Civil Courts is apparent from the true cause of using it in the Civil Courts which being not known or well heeded may be the cause of the exception for Bishop Sanderson hath well observed the true reason of using the Kings name in any Court is not thereby to acknowledge the Emanation of the power or Jurisdiction of that Court from or the subordination of that power unto the Kings power or Authority as the objector seems to suppose but rather to shew the same Court to be one of the Kings own immediate Courts wherein the King himself is supposed in the construction of the Law either by his personal or virtual power to be present and the not using the Kings name in other Courts doth not signifie that they do not Act by the Kings Authority but only that the Judges in them are no immediate representatives of the Kings person nor have consequently any allowance from him to use his Name in the execution of them 1. This difference is evident among the Common Law Courts of this Kingdom for though all the immediate Courts of the King do act expresly in his Name yet many other more distant Courts do not as all Courts-Baron Customary-Courts of Copyholders c. and such Courts as are held by the Kings grant by Charter to Corporations and the Universities in all which Summons are issued out and Judgments given and all Acts and proceedings made and done in the name of such persons as have chief Authority in the said Courts and not in the Name of the King thus their stiles run A. B. Major Civitatis Exon N. M. Cancellarius Vniversitatis Oxon. and the like and not Carolus Dei gratia 2. Once more a little nearer to our case there are other Courts that are guided by the Civil as distinguish'd from the Common Law as the Court-Marshal and the Court of Admiralty the Kings Name in these is no more used than it is in the Courts Spiritual but all Processes Sentences and Acts in these Courts are in the Name of the Constable Head Marshal or Admiral and not in the Kings Name 3. I shall conclude this with those grave and weighty words of the same most admirable Bishop Sanderson in his excellent Treatise shewing that Episcopacy as Established by Law in England is not prejudicial to Regal Power worthy of every Englishman's reading his words to our purpose are these Which manner of proceeding like that of the Spiritual Courts constantly used in
of her Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Magna Charta it self expounds what it means by holy Church i. e. the Bishops and Ministers of it which King Hen. 8. in the Statute saith is commonly called the Spiritualty and Mr. Hickeringill for all his scoffing knows that the Church of England allows a larger sence of the word Church viz. the Congregation of all faithful men c. And when we call the Clergie or the Governing-part of the Church the Church we use it in a Law-sence and as a term of Law as Acts of Parliament as well as the Civil or Canon-Law do But this by the way 2. When the subsequent Acts of Parliament do so frequently mention the Spiritual Courts and their Jurisdiction this to me is a legal allowance of them and indeed a Tacit or implicit acknowledgment of their more ancient antecedent Power and Common right and liberty by the undoubted Custom i. e. the Common Laws of the Land Yea those very Statutes that look at least obliquely upon them that say they are bounded by the Common Law that do of themselves limit and prohibit the Ecclesiastical Courts in some cases seem plainly to acknowledge them in other cases not excepted from their Jurisdiction But 3. More plainly and directly those Acts of Parliament that appear in the behalf of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in times of its trial and danger and vindicate its Rights and preserve and maintain its Liberties when most in question there have hapned such occasions wherein the Statutes have res●●ed and replevied the Ecclesiastical Power in all which the Statutes have been thus favourable to it three of late not to mention many formerly 1. Thus when some might imagine that by the alteration made by King Hen. 8. the Bishops and their Power was shaken the Statutes made in his time assure us that it was but to restore the ancient Jurisdiction and not to destroy it that Bishops should be elected and act as formerly especially as Coke noteth by the 25 Hen. 8. c. 20. it is Enacted That every person chosen invested Consecrated Archbishop or Bishop according to this Act shall do and execute every thing and things as any Archbishop or Bishop of this Realm without offending of the Prerogative Royal of the Crown and the Laws and Customs of the Realm at any time heretofore have done Note that this Statute contrary to the 1 Edw. 6. 2. was revived by Queen Eliz. 1. cap. 1. which the Judges thought and judged a full answer to all the Objections against the Churches proceedings contrary to the 1 Edw. 6. 2. and by this very Statute 1 Edw. 6. 2. stands clearly repealed as my Lord Coke observes Rep. 12. 8 9. which caused me to make choice of it for my present purpose 2. The second is observed in the time of Phil. and Mar. when the manner of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction had been altered by the 1 Edw. 6. the Statute establisheth the same as it was before in these words And the Ecclesiastical Jurisdictions of the Archbishops Bishops and other Ordinaries to be in the same estate for Processe of Suits punishment of crimes and execution of Censures of the Church and knowledge of causes belonging to the same and as large in those points as the said Jurisdiction was the 20 Hen. 8. which Statute of Phil. and Mar. repealed the 1 Edw. 6. 2. and was never repealed since as the Judges resolved in the foresaid Case 4 Jac. but evidently revived by 1 Eliz. 1. Sect. 13. 3. When thirdly the long Parl. 17 Car. 1. had disabled the Jurisdiction of the Courts Ecclesiastical it was very carefully restored and established by the Stat. 13 Car. 2. in these words Neither this Act shall take away any ordinary Jurisdiction from the said Archbishops c. but that they and every of them may proceed in all manner of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and in all Censures and Coercions belonging to the same as they did and might lawfully have done before the making of the said Act. Vid. 17 Car. 1. 4. 'T is sufficient yet I cannot but subjoyn one notable way more Argumentative enough alone by it self to prove the Ecclesiastical Courts to be allow'd and confirm'd by Statute viz. when the Statutes direct such particulars to be tried in these Courts and require these Spiritual Courts to use their power for the punishment of offenders and the doing Justice And I think there cannot be a better medium or clearer evidence than we have in this matter For if the Spiritual Courts have no power to try such matters and pass Judgment and punish in such cases why do the Statutes direct and remit such matters to them and why do the Statutes enjoyn them to take Connusance and proceed accordingly that so they do is plain In the 18 of Edw. 3. 6. 't is said that Processe in Causes Testamentary notoriously appertaineth to holy Church We must not blemish the Franchize of Holy Church And in the 18 of Edw. 3. 6. parties are to be dismissed from Secular Judges in Cause of Tithes and left to the Church Ordinaries have power to punish Ministers and Priests as in 1 Hen. 7. c. 4. Synodals Proxies Pensions c. are to be recovered in the Spiritual Courts Vid. 15 Hen. 8. c. 7. Sect. 7. The like is known touching Causes Matrimonial and Defamations c. I shall only instance one more viz. in the great Cause of Non-Conformity and that in an Act that is nearer to us and of unquestionable Authority which both directs what we should punish and most solemnly requires by its own Authority to exercise our Ecclesiastical Power by the very rules and proper methods of our Spiritual Courts in these words 1 Eliz. before the Common Prayer Provided always and be it Ordained and Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and singular Archbishops and Bishops and every of their Chancellors Commissaries Archdeacons and other Ordinaries having any peculiar Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction shall have full power and Authority by vertue of this Act as well to enquire in their Visitations Synods and elsewhere within their Jurisdiction at any other time or place to take accusation and informations of all and every the things above mentioned done committed or perpetrated within the limits of their Jurisdictions and Authority as to punish the same by Admonition Excommunication Sequestration or Deprivation and other Censures and Processe in like form as heretofore hath been used in like cases by the Queens Ecclesiastical Laws This doubtless is very plain And hereupon 't is solemnly required in these words a little before For the due execution hereof they do in Gods name earnestly require and charge all Archbishops Bishops and other Ordinaries that they shall endeavour themselves to the utmost of their knowledges that the due and true execution hereof may be had throughout their Dioceses and Charges as they will answer before God for such evils and plagues whereby Almighty God may justly punish his people for neglecting this good and wholsom Law Now