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A19461 A modest and reasonable examination, of some things in vse in the Church of England, sundrie times heretofore misliked and now lately, in a booke called the (Plea of the innocent:) and an assertion for true and Christian church policy, made for a full satisfaction to all those, that are of iudgement, and not possessed with a preiudice against this present church gouernment, wherein the principall poynts are fully, and peaceably aunswered, which seeme to bee offensiue in the ecclesiasticall state of this kingdome. The contentes whereof are set downe in the page following. Covell, William, d. 1614? 1604 (1604) STC 5882; ESTC S108881 174,201 234

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an o●her mans seruant He standeth or falleth to his owne Master And yet as that morall wise man saith It little skillet● with what minde that is d●●● which is euill done because th●●●ede is seene but the minde is not It is no praise not to doe th●●●●ich thou canst not And if the best excuse bee allowed both to him and others which can be afforded in so euill a cause wee must needes say That centention in the Church is the hurtfull effect of indiscrete Zeale And howsoeuer men bouldly apply that to themselues which was spoken by our Sauiour Christ. The Zeale of thine house hath euen eaten mee yet they little consider that with this Zeale of Gods honor which eateth them they haue no warrant that Gods house should be eaten by them true Zeale saith S. Austine desireth in his place to amend what is a misse but if he cannot he doth tollerate it and sigh for there is a Zeale that proceedeth from rancor and malice but not from loue Extraordinarie Zeale which exceedeth the limits of our priuate calling is then only no sinne when it proceedeth from the power of the spirit and not a priuate motion the same spirit warranting that Zeale by giuing an extraordinarie power as also an vnresistable strength all which were found in our Sauiour in the sonne of Eleazer in the Sonnes of Leuie in Elias and diuers others And if the Pleader hath performed any thing either more powerfully or more effectually than other men we are readie to confesse that this newe Contention arose from a holy Zeale But under this colour daungerous attempts haue beene committed in Gods Church Thus Anabaptist in Germanie cut off his brothers head in the sight of his Parents perswading them that the holy Ghost was the Author of that fact But because he could not make the Magistrate to beleuee so much hee himselfe by their sentence indured the same death And it were fitt all these Zealous murderers of their bretheren by their hot contentions were examined by the Magistrate of their lawfull calling for it is great pitie that Religion and Zeale and sometimes peraduenture a good cause all which are most innocent should suffer the reproach of a shamefull Act but such Zealous persons haue beene in all ages who vnder pretense to reforme Religion haue been the worst mē and the greatest enemies that Religion had when Claudins Nero gouerned there were some that called themselues Zealatours and vnder that name were earnest for Religion vntil thēselues had brought fier to consume the Temple for which they stroue and surely if humane reason haue leaue to coniecture what is like to be the euent of these euils Atheisme propanenes and sacrilege must al enter at the dore of Contention to burnvp Religion to robbe the Church And howsoeuer peace be best built vpō redēptiō of wrongs for otherwise to make an Vnitie without repeting the causes of discord is but rather to please vs with the name than with equitie to compound the wrongs wherein if we had beene the first yet it may appeare that we are not willing to vrge the Authors of these Contentions too farre in giuing a beginning to his euill surely their fault must needes be the greater which will not suffer it to haue an ende alter principium malo dedit alter modum abstulit neither can we excuse the bitternesse of some whose paines were little required to haue laboured in this cause as the former in the impure cōtentions of Martinisme defaced the gouernment of the Church in the persons of Bishops and Prelates so the other sort did lead into contēpt the exercises of religion in the persons of sundrie Preachers disgracing as one well noteth the higher matter though in the meaner person we can be cōtent to thinke that in many the beginning of these euils was a detestation which they had to the Church of Rome But we wish such men to know that first they haue iniured greatly the Church of Christ by hindering that increase which Religion in this Land might haue had if these violently had not beene ouer willing to contend with all men and then that as there is nothing of more vse so nothing in respect can be of greater daunger in Religiō thā Zeale is for this if it be directed aright is mother of much ●olines but being mislead is the Adulterous stepmother of much Hypocrisie and doub●lesse the corrupt fountaine of the greatest and most daungerous contentions that haue troubled this Church ha●● bin the faise opinion of vndiscret Zeale and when our contentions growe strong they spoyle saith Solo●●● a house full of facrifices and lest they should thinke wee are willing and esteeme it an honor to contend with them we say we haue taught the truth the auncient and perpetuall gouernment of the Church we haue maintained the reformed discipline by the example of the first and best Churches after the time of persecution we teach nothing but the pure Gospell of Christ wee administer the Sacraments as wee ought we are and haue learned to bee obedient to those that rule ouer vs we wish and prouide that the Ministerie of England may be learned that men may be diligent in that honorable fruction committed to them that all Idolatrie and superstition may be banished in one word that the Church may be cured from all their infirmities by the hand of authoritie and those lawfull meanes prouided for her safetie that noe rayling and contentious speeches to the disgrace of any mans person may be vsed by vs and if any man teach otherwise and consenteth not to the wholsome words of the Lord Iesus Christ and to the doctrine which is according to Godlinesse hee is puft vp and knoweth nothing but doateth about questions strife of words whereof commeth enuy strife raylings euill surmisinges froward disputation of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth which thinke that gaine is godlines for doubtlesse the wrath of man doth not accomplish the righteousnesse God for where enuy and strife is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes but wisedome that is from aboue is first pure then peaceable gentle easie to bee entreated full of mercy and good fruits without iudging and without Hypocrisie and the fruit of righteousnesse is sowne i● peace of them that can make peace Wee therefore beseech you breathren by the mercies of Christ Let vs be all of one minde let vs seeke peace and ensue it let there be noe strife I pray you betwext you vs neither betwext your beardmē nor our beard-men for we are Breatheren But if they will needes proceede in this intemperat manner to nourrish the flame of these vnhallowed Contentions which both strengthen the aduersaries and weaken our selues we can but wish that authoritie may cause their writings to bee abortiue and not see the Sunne but if their policies in this doo preuent lawes
the law is that the gates should not bee opened to receiue them which is the very end of that law which forbad it to bee done and the law of nature it cannot but bee a seueritie in those that denie it which must needes in the other be excusable furthering that end for which the law was made In all lawes as in all actiōs the end is the mark and this commonly is the publick good of that societie for which the law is made now if the same publick end wherat the church aymeth in prohibiting either Pluralities or non Residencie may be procured best by graunting dispensation for both these to some particuler men wee hold the law in forbidding intendeth so much and therefore in this case to dispense is not to breake the law of common right but rightly to apply it to his proper and peculiar vse wherein captiously to cleaue ouer strictly to the letter of it is rather to vnderstand lawes by the words then the intents of them which practise if wee shall vse in those lawes which had the best author and doubtlesse was able to set them best downe wee shall Iewishly keepe a Sabboth in abstayning from all things by the vertue of that law which commandeth thou shalt doe no manner of work fall into the heresie of some who held it vnlawfull vpon any occasion to sweare beecause our sauiour sayd thou shalt not sweare at all and yet in both whilst wee cleaue vnto the letter vtterly dissent from that which the law requireth Now so farre as lawes are Positiue and meerely humane it is in the power of their makers to dispense with them by vertue whereof whatsoeuer is done is not contrarie to the precept because for the doing hee hath the superiors warrant which if wee allow not in Gods lawes many things must bee sinne which doubtlesse were none Heerein if these men can proue that that which man dispenseth withall God doth not we will be content to heare them and must needes graunt that they haue not the authoritie of the superiour and that such Dispensations are without warrant But wee are and shall bee euer readie by the grace of him vpon whose mercie wee relie in all that wee doe to iustifie and maintaine the religious practise of our late Soueraigne in this against those who are willing vnthankfully vnnaturallie and irreligiouslie to depraue and traduce her most vertuous blessed happy gouernment For seeing that Dispensations are some meerely of grace wherein the Prince may lawfully respect one aboue another as in Legitimations Pardoning of heynous faults and such like in which for the dispensed or the dispenser ther is no other necessitie either in the court of man or the court of conscience sauing onely grace because it is to be thought the people and the lawes of euery countrie in these and other such matters haue yeelded this power vnto their Soueraigne Princes euen where they cannot by prerogatiue as with vs challenge so much right wee doubt not but their assertion is to manacle the Kings hands and to binde them in these chaines of their owne making who teach the world that Lawes must haue that force that all Dispensations are vnlawfull and transgressions of them Now touching other dispensations which are called of iustice they are conuersant either about the law of God and nature or about the positiue law of man in the first there is no dispensation from man yet interpretations are allowed to show that the generallitie of the words do not indeede extend to some speciall cases and that of those thinges which strong and manifest arguments teach vs that God himselfe would not haue included in the generalitie of his law Interpretation Declaration and Limitation may bee made and this by the lawyers is called one kinde of dispensation of iustice whereby the bond of the law is not released but the law is interpreted in such case not to haue force according to the true meāing of it Now in the other dispensations of Iustice which are bestowed about the positiue lawes of man we must obserue two things first that the law remaining yet the reason in some particuler case doth cease which ought by the prince or the inferiour Iudge in dispensing to bee so declared the second is when the law is grounded vpon diuers reasons whereof some ceasing and some continuing the law is notwithstanding in force vnlesse a dispensation of Iustice bee graunted to vs. There are also besides these dispensations mixt partlie of grace and partlie of Iustice because that he graunteth it it is grace fauour yet it is Iustice because he granteth it to none but vpon iust cause so that when a King dispenseth with any positiue law of man the law teacheth vs to intend and presume both that there is a cause why hee should so doe and that the same cause is iust and sufficient and doubtlesse hee that receiueth such dispensation sinneth not against the law nor his own conscience because hee is by the same authoritie deliuered from the bond of that law by the which hee stood bound So that if the Church ought to honour learned personages not onely in word but indeed as in prouiding more liberallie to help and releeue them by the Church reueneues then for others not so learned because learning doth not onelie profit the owner but the Vniuersall Church and that causes of absence from their seuerall Cures may bee such as shal be beneficiall to the Church and iust as for recouerie of Health if called by his Superiours authoritie if for repulsing of greeuous Iniuries if sent vpon ambassage or to giue attendance if his help bee required for pacifiing of Scismes in other places if his paines bee necessarie for the confirming of the doctrine of the Church either by speaking or writing if his presence be necessarie for consultation about Church matters at some Sinode particuler prouinciall Nationall or generall if some other parts of the Church were in more need and whollie destitute of a Pastor or for any other such cause allowed by those whom the lawes haue trusted with the examination of these things shall wee that are inferiours out of enuie towards other mens respect and grace the due merit of their worthinesse whereof wee are far short make the world beleeue that the great Sinne of Non Residencie hath three goodlie vndersetters which are also broad figge leaues to couer the nakednesse of these learned men whereby many are vpholden in their sinne first rewardes of learning secondlie the power of the state to order the liuing of the Church thirdlie that so they preach they are not to b●e charged although they Preach not in their owne parish and make this onelie the originall of the ignorance of the whole land whom to reproue say they was to bee accounted a conuentickler a Puritan an enemie to the state could any thing in the eares of wisemen haue
and Zeale is thought to bee farre lesse But we will hope much better of these men than that sufferance hath made them proud and their pride more contentious than heretofore And therefore me thinkes it is most straung that any man should haue so little vnderstanding as one of them hath who make vs beleeue that the Countenaunce of the Bishops were more estraunged from them now than euer before for doubtlesse if the great moderation of those persons whom our late Souereigne of blessed memorie thought fit to be aduansed to that place to be called Bishoppes had not with more than fatherly care ●estrained it selfe in compassion towards them from seuere execution of Iust lawes their occasions of complaint peraduenture would haue beene farre greater though not more reasonable but surely the Vnitie of the Church had beene much more There is nothing so daungerous as lenitie in that case where patience giueth occation for insolent contention to be more proud a thing as vnsufferable in it owne nature at all times so then especially most destitute of all excuse when inferiour persons are aptest to prouoke and the things in question in their owne iudgment are of no great momēt as those then haue don euill offices who haue renued the memorie of almost outworne errors so are they lesse tollerable in this that hauing poysoned the world with so euill opinions they seeme notwithstanding earnestly and humbly desirous to liue in peace assuring themselues that what difference soeuer prosperitie breedes doubtlesse persecution would make vs to be all one but euer reseruing this priuiledge to themselues that the Bishops in submission as offendours must first yeeld But if a man rightly consider the originall of this sinne of contention and what affections they are which giue strength vnto it hee can hardely in reason expect quietnesse to be found in the patrons of this cause pride enuie and vaine Glorie are the originall fountaies of this euill for where inferiour persons both for place and Iudgment haue ouerualued their owne fancies by their owne conceit it is no more like that in humilitie they should once yeeld thā it is possible for obedient humilitie to become proude The distance being equall in both only in this the disaduantage greater that wee haue all of vs an aptnesse to doe euill but without grace no possible meanes in our selues to become good Hereunto if we add the second that as out of pride we loue our selues so out of enuie wee hate others no man can maruell if men that are proude vaine glorious and enuious easely also bee founde contentious for that which in different opinions maketh conten●i●●s to cease is when men are perswaded of their betters that they are not easily deceiued and of themselues that they may and doe easely erre but all contentions are not of the same nature for some neede no excuse when we resist as we are bound for the defence of a good cause for other a small excuse may serue in that being without order yet they are not scandalous but that which is common with these men is highly sinfull without all colourable show of excuse when they are more vnreuerently bitter than is beseeming the grauitie of the persons with whom they striue and more vehement than is aunswerable to the cause that they would defend For the seruant of the Lord must not striue but must be gentle towards all men apt to teach suffering the euill men patiently so that if any man had these defects that were an aduersarie in this cause We must instruct them with meekenesse that are contrarie minded proouing if at any time God will giue them repentance that they may knowe the truth If any man teach otherwise hee is puft vp and knoweth nothing but doteth about questions and striffe of words whereof commeth enuy strife raylings euill surmisings all which are to no profit but to peruert the hearers And surely as the Apostle telleth vs Where enuie and strifes is there is sedition and all manner of euill workes But if after so much patience so many fould cleare and modest defences of a iust cause any man lust to be contentious we haue noe such custome neither the Churches of God Thus Coutention through the corruption of our nature being seldome limited in the end becommeth Inordinate and a foule sinne and so consequently without warrant when either we contend about that which is so true or so trifling that we ought not or whether we contend in that maner that doth not become vs or in that place or last of all with those persons that are vnbefitting The error in the first is that of the disciples which should be the greatest which exāple saith Beda is willingly reade of many that desire f●ō the Scripture to find● example to warrant them to the like cōtention but saith S. Ambrose if the Apostles contend it is not made a pretence of excuse for vs but set downe for a Caueat In the second the fault in those clamorous rayling and vuciuill speaches by aduersaries of all sides wherein if some in our Church had not beene too forward to aunswere their aduersaries in the same kind the best causes had beene handled with better praise and the worst had beene performed with lesse blame hence commeth it that hee who for learning hath not deserued least for the defence of our Church for modestie of writing onely excepted hath deserued best The place and the persons are ordinary circumstances to make our contentions to bee more faultie but seldome though the Scholeman say otherwise doe I finde any reason for men of the Church for to warant either For̄whereas there is amongst vs Enuying strife and diuisions are we not Carnall and walke as men For saith Salomon it is a mans honor to cease from strife but euerie foole will be medling And doubtlesse if in this cause of the Church gouernment many whose conditions and learning might Iustly haue inioyned them silence had not beene medling Moderation with Grauitie might haue determined that cause which stoode only supported with a hott Zeale And seeing the best warrant of our actions must be the sincere Testimonie of our conscience from a true feare I wonder how some Inferiour and meane men could thinke it lawfull for them to vndertake a matter of that moment nay to receiue it being almost deade when men of farre greater learning and dwiseome did remaine silent some excuse peraduenture I could allowe him if others farre more worthie had not had as much Zeale and had not beene as farre better able to defend the cause but it may be he taketh his labour to be well imployed hauing made in his opinion for the good of the Church a benifit of that small Talent which God hath giuen him Other ends for which the world hath censured him hardly I dare not acc●●● him of for who am I that I should condemne
themselues which they doe refuse The conscience which doth erre though it binde vntill it be reformed ought notwithstanding to be reformed because either ignorance negligence pride inordinate affection faintnes perplexitie or selfe loue are the corrupt and originall causes of the errors of it So that if none of these haue ouerruled the conscience of these men but that knowledge with due consideration hath directed them in that they did we haue great reason to harken to their excuse and to regarde them with more attention whilest with reuerence and humilitie they alleage their conscience In the meane time for remedie against these errors let them not disdaine the counsell which wise men haue found to be most safe if it be of ignorance to say with Iehosaphat we know not what to doe but our eyes are towards thee if of negligence to come without partiallitie or preiudice as Nichodemus to Christ to those that for knowledge are fit to teach them If of pride to submit our selues one to another and especially to those that haue more learning do rule ouer vs for he that praiseth himselfe is not alowed but he whom the Lord praiseth A singularitie in this kinde hath been the originall of most heresies in all ages and not the least occasion of the troubles of these times for he that walketh vprightly walketh bouldly the rest are presumptuous but he that peruerteth his waies shall be knowne If from inordinate affection making that lawfull which we haue a minde to doe we must harken to iudgement and refuse our affections in this case for iudgement turned into affection doth all perish If from faintnes then onely to be scrupulous feareful when we haue cause least we thinke it lawfull because we streane a knat for to swallow a Cammell If of perplexitie when a man is closed as it were betwixt two sinnes where he is not able though willing to auoyde both that which will not make either to be lawfull will make one of them directly a lesse sinne This is not euer to do euill that good may come of it for though the casting away of things profitable for the sustenance of mans life be an vnthankfull abuse of the fruites of Gods good prouidence towards mankinde yet this consideration did not hinder Saint Paul from throwing corne into the sea when care of sauing mens liues made it necessarie to loose that which else had been better saued For of two such euils being not both euitable the choyse of the lesse is not euill and euils as a wise man noteth must be in our construction iudged ineuitable if there be no apparant ordinarie way to auoyde them because where counsell and aduise beare rule of Gods extraordinarie power without extraordinarie warrant wee cannot presume Last of al if of humility an error surely of least daunger we wish them onely to take heede of to much feare else we say it is the propertie of good mindes there to acknowledge a fault where no fault is For whilest the conscience of man is troubled in this manner grace repaireth in man the excellent image of his first maker Thus giuing our simple direction and not daring to censure the consciences of such as thinke their refusall to be warranted with pretence of conscience we will examine a little what they haue said and done and whether the exacting or refusing of subscription was a greater sinne If the vrging of subscription which the law required was the cause of those seuerall admonitions which the Parliament had surely a worse effect could not haue proceeded from so good a cause then that which was a vertuous inuention to make peace by the vnquiet disposition of some few should become the originall fountaine of so much warre And surely that mildnes which that reuerend Archbishop Grindall vsed in those times little auailed with those men for to make them better which in wisedome euer since hath caused others in that place for to vse the lesse For experience euen in them findeth it to be most true that fauour in that kinde they esteeme but desert and the patience of others but their owne merit Yet wise men in the same place at diuers times to the same persons may vse direct contrarie courses and both well The second inforcing of subscription in the three articles of supremacie the booke of common prayer with those things annexed and the booke of articles made in the Synode 1562. the first they allowe but as for both the other they esteeme them vnlawfull and such as the statute requireth not of them where me thinkes it is strange that men which doe not so much as the lawe requires will alleadge notwithstanding the lawe for their warrant in that which they doe not For if either the vrging of law by the vertue of law or not against law could in wisedome haue serued to make peace those men had little reason to haue been against it who were not able to proue that it was vnlawfull and knew the authoritie to be lawfull that required it of them Neither was there any great reason to hope for obedience in subscribing to the articles if the lawe required it seeing they are not willing towards the communion booke to affoord that allowance which the law required And howsoeuer I take not vpon me to interpret the meaning of that statute yet surely the pretended exception of law is of little force seeing both the Archbishops and Bishops and al the clergie in the conuocatiō subscribed vnto them and that all Canons which the Church doth make haue either confirmation vnder the great seale or the parties that make them haue warrant by the statute for that they doe And if it had not been euer their practise to make a pretence of law for that for which they haue no warrant neither would they doe it if the law commaunded it were better to be excused in that they refuse with pretence of law With the same boldnes some haue affirmed that the present gouernment of the Church of England by Archbishops and Bishops vnder the Prince is to be accounted vnlawfull by the statutes of this land and that to be a Lord Bishop is directly against the statute Eliz. 13. A practise like this some of the Church of Rome haue lately vsed against vs as though our oppositiō against them were beyond law and the instruments made for our defence and to cut them off were intruth the safest protection their actions had But haue these men that thus earnestly pretend law either neuer subscribed to any thing of their owne without law or euer been obedient to the lawes of others surely if they had the contention in this kinde had been buried that day when it was first borne But the English when they came to Franckeford were tied to subscribe to the same confession of faith which the French had after they themselues enioyned all to subscribe to their
so that from hence was vnderstoode by the name of a Benefice A pastorall cure of soules ouer the people of some parish whereas formerly it signified some standing Ecclesiasticall reuenue taken out of the treasure of God and alotted to a spirituall person to the end hee may vse the same and inioy it as his owne for tearme of life vnlesse his default cause depriuation And wee know that the Clergie for manie yeeres after Christ had no other Benefices but onely their Canonicall portions or monethlie Diuidends allowed vnto them according to their seuerall degrees and qualities out of the common stock of such guifts oblations and Tythes as the feruor of christian pietie did then yeeld In the Apostles time Churches were onelie in the cities in regard whereof those that liued in villages beeing without instruction were called Pagans which after by the example of others both intertaining and giuing allowance for the maintenance of the same truth those to whom principall care was committed in this kind appointed meaner men of lesse learning and lower qualitie to vndertake the instruction of those places who were desirous and willing to yeelde after the example of others oblations and tithes for maintenance of those that were placed ouer them Now to say that either seuerall parishes thus distinguished might by no permission bee allotted to the care and instruction of one man or that it were not lawfull for any reason how beneficiall soeuer to Gods Church to bee absent from that particuler care committed to him were in the former to denie all better trust and reward to men of more worth and greater abilities and desert and in the latter to bee ouer Tirannous in considering and allowing the cause of absence and peraduenture in a true construction ouer rigorouslie seuere in both But seing all men know which wee doubt but our aduersaries in this cause will conffesse that this limitation of particuler parishes was meerlie positiue and the inuentions of men thought and found better for the better performance of the Clergies dutie it cannot bee the absolute transgression of a deuine ordination in that sence as if either to haue moe parishes then one or from one to be absent at somtime were a direct vnexcusable breach of the morall law For the duties commanded not to bee done in them are by no meanes not for a moment euer allowed to be done at all which thraldome if in seueritie they bring vpon Gods church let them take heede what dangers they fall into themselues that by this meanes the church receiue not a greater harme whilst peraduenture in this case their remedie is worse then the disease is Now to allow absence vpon reason without appointing those causes and such as must iudge which are reasonable were to make all men to think that they had reason that were willing neither is there any great force from the nature of Relatiues if that were all why one may not as well haue diuers parishes as one parish haue diuers Pastors And howsoeuer wee hold not the reason good that beecause Tymothie Titus had manie congregations committed to their charge therefore others may yet the reason in their opinion from this example ought not to want strength who think a Bishop and a Minister is all one In this first distribution for the best discharge of their calling and the greatest benefit to the church of Christ if some vnder the Bishops aboue their bretheren which had moe and more distant parishes then any in our church all termed by one name though some were Suffraganes to Bishops it ought not to seeme a matter of vnreasonable fauour and vnlawfull to commit seuerall churches to the instruction and gouernment of some men whose learning discretion care is more eminent and that these may whilst their labours are vsed for the benefit of Christs flock lawfully bee absent and haue inferiour men of the Clergie for a tyme to supply and to execute their roomes so that doubtlesse a zeale in these reprouers did carrie them to far when alledging those extrauagant reasons against Pluralities they yeeld them to tend to couetousnesse that one man had the stipend of many that they make non Residents that it maintaines Ambition that it is the occasion of a gadding and roaguing ministerie no small cause why others want and lastly a taking away of that recompence which belongs to others these reasons in their opinion of some force howsoeuer they haue alreadie bene profoundly answered with much iudgement yet beecause they still please themselues in the rehearsall of them we can bee content both with patience to giue them hearing and withall to hope for this fauour at their hands that they will yeeld thus much to vs that many things may occasionally bee the accidentall procurers of much euill which are originally no causes nor iustly can suffer a reproofe as vnlawfull things Neither are these onely the occasions of the euills which they lay vpon them seeing either all or most are commonly to bee found amongst thē who notwithstāding would seeme to be furthest from this sin But seeing whatsoeuer in our Church is practised in either of these two Pluralities or non Residencie is not the corruption of some priuate man but the approbation and allowance of the Court of Parliament wherein what soeuer is established all men in the eie and construction of the law are thought and deemed to haue consented we cannot but thinke it vnreasonable and vnreuerend for these men to disanull or make question of an Act of their owne making and withall wee hope it both hath and shall appeare to the world that as it is not lawfull without dispensation to haue or to doe either so that authoritie to dispence in both is most agreeable to reason and Gods truth For seeing the disposition and limitation of priuate parishes extendeth no further but to be the wise Positiue inuention and ordination of those who formerlie haue gouerned in Gods Church and that all humane lawes are dispensable by supreame authoritie a dispensation being but the relaxation of a common right made vpon knowledge of the cause by him that hath right to dispence wee hope that likewise these may and that the lawes forbidding non Residencie Pluralities are in force still notwithstanding by Priuiledge some particulers are and are fit to bee exempted from the common right Doubtlesse neuer meere human law was either made with that wisedome or was in execution of so necessarie vse but that sometimes it was fitter to receiue Dispensation then to stand in force for seeing the best lawes of men are but the euidences of Humane reason which wee finde by experience groweth from a weakenesse to bee more strong and from imperfection to bee more absolute wee cannot in reason without inthralling our selues in too great a bondage deny Abrogation and Dispensation to humane lawes which are not to bee like those of the
weaknes feare haue denied thē libertie to examine what is well or ill done this alone made that easie passage of the Portingales and the Spaniards into the Indiaes which against a nation of lesse wealth or circuit furnished with more vnderstanding had doubtles been vnpossible if the forces of both kingdomes had been vnited such is the willingnes to resist in the defence of auncient libertie where the reason of man by ciuill education hath power to discern the qualitie of that which it doth defende But in those who are of a contrarie nature will dare to do much because they would seeme not to vnderstand little there to take a Crowne is to take a heauie burdē to gouerne is to rule men where euerie particular danger of moment must haue a remedie vnlesse they will hazard by the contēpt of some few the ruine of the whole state this consideration made Dioclesian who was neither the best nor the happiest that euer gouernd thinke truely that there was nothing harder than to rule well For if they shall either commit all to others which no King whose Nation was happie euer did or take all vpon themselues in both they shall finde if not equall yet the like certaine vnresistable danger therfore well said Saturninus to those that put on his kingly ornamēts frends ye know not what an euil it is to rule many dāgers hang ouer our heads for where in other cases feare maketh mē watch in this men vsually feare those that watch ouer them I know not a better securitie in this for the kingdom God make vs all thankefull that it hath beene our happines than a good Prince nor for the Prince than a good Counsell nor for all than profitable and religious lawes These only are left vppon earth from men to be the strength and supporters to those that Rule ouer greate Kingedomes It is true which Tacitus saith that the most weightie labours of a Prince stand in need of the greatest helps therefore as tyrāts in al ages haue loathed nothing so much as good counsaile bestowing the greatest honors riches the iust recōpence of vertue vpon the worst persons whose vices serued only to make them forget thēselues and to ruinate the kingdome ouer which they gouernd so the best wisest haue euer made choise of such as were fit to be eies eares nay tongues hands all to be imployed for the common good for seldome saith one shall we see great men not to haue the assistance of great Counsaile to gouerne a great fortune nay there cannot be in a Prince a greater argument of wisedome nor a greater safetie to the Church and the common-wealth than in making his choice of a wise Councill some are of opinion that the chiefest reason why Rome florished so long was principally this because they that gouernd her followed not their owne but the Counsaile of the whole Senate Neither saith Augustus could any of these thinges meaning the troubles of his house that break out haue happened vnto me if Agrippa or Maecenas two wise Counsellours had now liued for doubtles there is not a better instrument of a happie kingdome than a wise and vertuous Counsellour who not vnfitly may be tearmed as Tacitus calleth him the ornament of peace Surely no lesse necessarie to a state that would florish than the soule to a bodie that would liue The consideration of this happines at this time maketh both the Church the Cōmonwealth dread Souereigne right honorable Lords to cast themselues at your feet and to lay open before your eyes the daungers which they feare without your gracious assistāce may fall vpon them And howsoeuer many other things of vse moment are like wheeles in this kingdome to stirre at your Honors motion yet Religion it selfe in the habit of the Church Religion that hath infinitely blest you this kingdome doth earnestly intreat that against all her enemies publike or priuate shee may rest florish and be fruitfull by your meanes and howsoeuer the Common-wealth may now be an humble suppliāt for redresse of those grieuances that offend her yet aboue all other the Church had most cause to feare that the time of a second consultation either through violence importunitie and sleight might haue beene fatall to her or that the contempt of his voyce in the dayes of peace might haue in iustice procured a scourge from the almightie to cause her to remember whom shee had despised the seuerall times for all states either to vse or to knowe their strength are peace and warre and the two professions that are the safetie of both are the militarie and the gowne It is no small care nor wisedome for a Realme to knowe when and with whom to fight and to thinke not onely vpon defence which were enough had it as much honor as safetie but vpon victorie surely in a kingdome carelesse of these men the King may oftener fight than ouercome and in his best successe peraduenture be more beholding to fortune than to his good Counsaile who surely of all other howsoeuer the warre be ended is most innocent and furthest from all blame yet it is strange to see how all men lay the faults of their inconsiderate folly rather vpon any thing than vpon themselues So that ignorance of true causes giuing the name to fortune men are willing to hide that with obscuring the cause calling it chaunce which only proceeded frō their want of Counsaile which wheresoeuer it is it leaueth no power either in peace or warre vnto that which they call Fortune I confesse sometimes there is a higher cause that Iustice which our sins awake which taketh strength from the best meanes and maketh the errors of Princes their Counsell the foundatiō of publike calamities but our purpose is not at this time to pleade for any other sauing onely for this Church for the happinesse whereof it seemeth that good lawes heretofore haue not beene so much wanting to vs as wee to them In penall lawes surely there is the greatest wisedome of those that make them and the greatest presumption of those that breake them so that for the safetie of all states but especially of the Church there are few things of greater aduantage thā the seueritie of Iustice in the strict execution of penall lawes for it is straunge that some inconueniences should first cause them seeme fit to be made and no disorder make them seeme necessarie to be obserued I thinke no other reason can be giuen but this that those lawes doe hire men with halfe the allowance to be informers which makes that good seruice to the commonwealth only in that respect odious as being not the effect of iustice and zeale but the vnconscionable desire of some couetous promoter the best remedie in this will be to referre the benefit of these to some publike vse for it is meete that vertue be maintained from the penaltie of vice and that