Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n great_a king_n kingdom_n 4,596 5 5.5955 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A70760 Bishop Overall's convocation-book, MDCVI concerning the government of God's catholick church, and the kingdoms of the whole world.; Bishop Overall's convocation book Overall, John, 1560-1619.; Sancroft, William, 1617-1693. 1690 (1690) Wing O607; ESTC R2082 200,463 346

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

own Sister Miriam for using some undutiful speeches against him was strucken by God with an exceeding great Leprosie and so odious was the murmuring of Korab Dathan and Abiram and their Confederates as the Lord caused the Earth to open and to swallow some of them quick and the Fire to consume the rest Joshua succeeding Moses the People professed their Subjection and Obedience unto him saying All that thou hast commanded us we will do and whithersoever thou sendest us we will go as we obeyed Moses in all things so will we obey thee Whosoever shall rebel against thy Commandment and will not obey thy Words in all that thou dost command him let him be put to death During the Reign of all the Judges though the People are noted for many great Enormities yet we do not find that they rebelled or shewed any great disobedience against them whom God had set over them to rule them except the particular murmuring and opposition of the Ephramites against Gideon and Jephtha at their first entrance upon conceit they had been contemned which opposition God punished with a great overthrow of them When the People had Kings according to the manner of other Nations to order and govern them their subjection was rather encreas'd than diminished according to Samuel's description of the King's Claim or manner of ruling which should reign over them To command not only over the Persons of his Subjects but also over their Goods which manner of ruling or dealing by any King without a just cause as it was Tyranny so to deny it when the necessity of the King and State did require it according to the Laws of the Kingdom was a great neglect of preserving the publick good and a high degree of disobedience Besides it is generally agreed upon that Obedience to Kings and civil Magistrates is prescribed to all Subjects in the Fifth Commandment where we are enjoyn'd to honour our Parents Whereby it followeth that subjection of Inferiours unto their Kings and Governours is grounded upon the very Law of Nature and consequently that the Sentences of Death awarded by God himself against such as shewed themselves disobedient and incorrigible to their Parents or cursed them or struck them were likewise due unto those who committed any such Offences against their Kings and Rulers being the Heads and Fathers of their Commonwealths and Kingdoms which is not only apparent by way of consequence but likewise by Example Practice and Precept as where Shimei is judged to die for cursing of David the Lord 's Anointed where David himself appointed by God to succeed King Saul would not be induced by any perswasions to lay violent hands upon his Master the King and where it is said Principi populi tui non maledices and again Ne maledicas Regi in corde tuo to which purpose more might be alledged CAN. XVI IF any Man therefore shall affirm that it was lawful in the Old Testament either for Children or Nephews to have been disobedient to their Fathers being their chief Governours from the Creation till Moses's time or afterward for the Children of Israel either under Moses Joshua the Iudges or their Kings to have been disobedient to them in their lawful Commandments or to have murmured or rebelled against them or that it was in those times more lawful unto Subjects for any cause whatsoever either to curse their Princes Kings or civil Governours or to bear Arms against them or to depose them from their Kingdoms or Principalities or to lay violent hands upon their Persons than it was in the said times lawful upon any occasion for Children either to have cursed their Parents or to have rebelled against them when they did reprove or correct them or to have withdrawn themselves from their subjection saying unto them they being private Men We will be no more your Children or you shall be no more our Fathers or bearing civil Authority over them we will depose you from your Government over us and will be no longer ruled by you or to have offered any violence unto them or to have beaten them and much less to have murthered them He doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XVII WHen God appointed Princes Judges and Kings to Reign over his people the manner usually was that they had notice of it thereby to conform themselves to obedience Moses and Aaron acquainted the Israelites with God's pleasure for their deliverance out of Egypt by their service agreeably to his Promise formerly made to Abraham and they chearfully and with great thankfullness submitted themselves to be ruled by them God having appointed Joshua to succeed Moses the same was signified by Moses to the Israelites and they willingly protested their obedience unto him Likewise no sooner did the Lord assign Judges to defend and govern them but presently they followed and obeyed them Upon the people's request Samuel having anointed Saul for their King when the same was made apparent to them either by casting of Lots or by answer from the Lord they shouted when they saw him and said God save the King King David being anointed by Samuel at God's appointment to succeed King Saul and after Saul's Death coming thereupon by God's direction to Hebron the Tribe of Judah presently anointed him again for their King and yielded themselves to be governed by him Seven years after all which time King David had Wars with Ishbosheth Saul's Son the rest of the Tribes came unto David and acknowledged that God had ordained him to be their Governour King David growing old and having appointed by God's direction his Son Solomon to be anointed King in his own Life time when the people knew that Zadok the Priest had so anointed him they forthwith upon the blowing of the Trumpets said all with one Voice God save King Solomon Afterwards also the like course was held upon the Death of every King to make his Successor known to the people Sometimes they were so addicted unto new Kings as they expected no further Circumstance but submitted themselves to their Government and sometimes it was held fit for the young Princes to imitate King David's Example by kind usage and loving words to knit more firmly their Subjects hearts unto them Placet eis CAN. XVII IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that the callings of Moses of Aaron of Joshua of the Iudges of Saul of David of Solomon or of any other of the Kings of Judah elected and named by God himself or coming to their Kingdoms by Succession according as Jacob by the Spirit of Prophecy had foretold did receive any such virtue or strength from the people their said notice presence and applause as that without the same the said callings of God either by Name or by Succession had been insufficient or that if the people had withstood any of them so called by God as is aforesaid they
dispose both the Rebellion of Subjects and the Malice and Greediness of encroaching Kings upon their Neighbours as albeit such their attempts of all sorts were in themselves very wicked and detestable in his sight yet he having the skill to bring Light out of Darkness and to use wicked Instruments and Actions for a good purpose did always frame and apply them to execute his own just Judgments When the Sins of a Nation but principally of his own People were of that Nature Height and Ripeness as his Justice could not fitly be put in execution by any other but by the wicked for example in the overthrowing of Hierusalem God's own City in burning of the Temple that was the place of his Glory and carrying his own People into Captivity though never so much by them deserved no godly King could well have been employed but such a One only as the King of Babylon was In respect of which their Imployment such wicked Instruments to execute God's just Judgments are called sometimes his Servants and the Rods of his Wrath or as Attila termed himself the Scourge of God And when having attained their ungodly desires whether ambitious Kings by bringing any Countrey into their subjection or disloyal Subjects by their rebellious rising against their natural Sovereigns they have established any of the said degenerate Forms of Government amongst their People the Authority either so unjustly gotten or wrung by force from the true and lawful Possessor being always God's Authority and therefore receiving no impeachment by the wickedness of those that have it is ever when any such alterations are throughly setled to be reverenced and obeyed and the People of all sorts as well of the Clergy as of the Laity are to be subject unto it not only for fear but also for conscience sake the Israelites in Egypt after Joseph's death being oppressed very tyrannically many ways did never rebel against any of those Kings but submitted themselves to their Authority though their Burthens were very intolerable both in respect of the impossible works imposed upon them and because also they might not offer Sacrifices to the Lord a special part of God's Worship without apparent danger of stoning to death Besides it may not be omitted when God himself sent Moses to deliver them from that Servitude he would not suffer him to carry them thence till Pharaoh their King gave them licence to depart Afterward also when the Jews being brought into subjection to the Kings of Babylon did by the instigation of false Prophets rebel against them they were in that respect greatly condemned by the Prophet Jeremy and in their Captivity which shortly after followed they lived by the direction of the said Prophet in great subjection and Obedience they prayed not only for their Kings and for their Children that they might live long and prosper but likewise for the State of their Government the good success whereof they were bound to seek and regard as well as any other of the King 's dutiful Subjects And thus they lived in Babylon and other places of that Dominion till the King gave them leave to depart notwithstanding in the mean time they endured many Calamities and were destitute for many years of the publick Service and Worship of God which was tyed to the Temple and might not elsewhere be practised or attempted CAN. XXVIII IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that the Subjects when they shake off the Yoke of their Obedience to their Sovereigns and set up a Form of Government among themselves after their own humours do not therein very wickedly or that it is lawful for any bordering Kings through Ambition and Malice to invade their Neighbours or that the Providence and Goodness of God in using of Rebellions and Oppressions to execute his Iustice against any King or Countrey doth mitigate or qualifie the Offences of any such Rebels or oppressing Kings or that when any such new Forms of Government begun by Rebellion are after throughly settled the Authority in them is not of God or that any who live within the Territories of such new Governments are not bound to be subject to God's Authority which is there executed but may rebel against the same or that the Jews either in Egypt or Babylon might lawfully for any cause have taken Arms against any of those Kings or have offered any violence to their Persons He doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XXIX ALthough the Jews upon their deliverance out of Captivity and restitution to their own Country received many favours from the Persian Kings and had liberty given them to live in a sort according to their own Laws yet they never recover'd their former Estate but liv'd in great subjection and servitude under them whilst that Monarchy endured The Temple and City of Hierusalem were again built but not with the magnificence which they had before Zorobabel first and then Nehemiah were made successively by the said Kings the Rulers and Governours of the Jews so restored but with divers restraints It was not forgotten what mighty Kings had ruled in Hierusalem and therefore the said Rulers were not permitted to govern any more in that Regal sort They were still subject to the direction of those Kings and paid unto them very large Tribute and Customs insomuch as when the Priests gave publick thanks unto God for his restoring unto them the state which they had they said thus withal unto him as bewailing their condition Behold we are Servants this day in the Land which thou gavest our Fathers it yieldeth much fruit unto the Kings whom thou hast set over us because of our sins and they have dominion over our Bodies and over our Cattel at our pleasure and we are in great affliction The extraordinary favour which was shewed to any was principally extended toward the Priests over whom the said Kings had not so jealous an eye as they had over the Princes and the rest of the People Howbeit the same notwithstanding they the said Priests were subject to their own immediate Princes both in Temporal and Ecclesiastical Causes as formerly the Priests had been to the Kings of Judah before the Captivity Their Governours forbad certain who said they were Priests from eating of the most holy things Nehemiah ministred an Oath unto the Priests he reform'd the abuses of the Sabbath and prescrib'd Orders for the better observing thereof He appointed certain of the Priests to oversee the Tithes in the Treasury He commanded the Levites to cleanse themselves and to keep the Gates and to sanctifie the Sabbath Eliasib the High-Priest having defiled the Temple by letting Tobias a Stranger a Chamber in the Court of the House of God where in afore times the Offerings the Incense the Vessels and such other things used in God's Service had been kept Nehemiah the Governour was greatly offended with it and displacing the said Tobias cast forth all his stuff out
to an House to a Ship and that therefore she must have but one Captain one humane Head one King one Pastor one Housholder and one Pilot that although there be but one and proper Head of the Church which is Christ that governeth the same spiritually yet she hath need of one visible Head or otherwise the Bishop of Rome and all other Bishops Pastors Doctors and Ministers were needless that although Christ be the Head of the Church yet he ought to have one underneath him by whom she may be governed as a King when he is present may govern his Kingdom himself but being absent doth usually appoint another under him who is called his Vice-Roy that every Diocess and Province hath her Bishops and Archbishops to govern the particular Churches under them within their several Charges and that therefore there must be one Bishop of the whole Catholick Church to rule and govern them all Lastly That as there is but one God one Faith and one Baptism so there must be in the Catholick Church but one chief Bishop and Judge upon whom all Men ought to depend Many more are the reasons grounded upon divers other similitudes which our Adversaries have heaped up together to uphold the Pope's Authority all of them being as vain and frivolous as the former For it is certain and manifest that as the Catholick Church is resembled in the Scriptures to an Host well ordered to a humane Body to a Kingdom to a Flock of Sheep to an House and to a Ship so Christ only is intended thereby to be her only General her only Head her only King her only Shepherd her only Housholder and her only Pilot. Neither can any other thing be inforced from the words mentioned of one Faith and one Baptism but that as we are only justified through a lively Faith in Christ so there is but one Baptism ordain'd whereby we have our first entrance into his Spiritual Kingdom and are made particular Members of his Catholick Church Besides in the like sense that the Catholick Church is resembled to an Host well order'd to a humane Body to a Kingdom to a Flock to an House to a Ship so may the Universal Kingdom of Christ over the whole World as he is the Creator of it be resembled to them all and the aforesaid Titles respectively attributed unto him The whole World is an Host under him well order'd and he is the General of it The whole World is but as one Body whereof he is the Head being the Life of all Men from whom as from their Head they have their Sense Understanding and Motion The whole Universal World is but his Kingdom and he is the King of it ruling and disposing it as seemeth best to his divine Wisdom The whole World is with him but one Flock and he is the Shepherd of it all Men in it being the Sheep of his Pasture to whom he giveth food and sustentation in due season Also he ordereth all the affairs in the World as a good Housholder doth order and direct all the businesses and troubles appertaining to his Family Likewife the whole World may aptly be compared to a Ship in that the State of all Mankind living in it is subject as a Ship on the Sea unto all manner of contrary Winds Tempests and Storms of which Ship were not Christ as he is the Creator of the World the only Pilot the World could not subsist And as the Catholick Church is resembled to a Fold which containeth in it all that believe in Christ so may the universal Kingdom of Christ over all the World be compared unto a Fold in that it containeth in it all Mankind generally his Heavenly Care and Providence evermore protecting them Moreover as there is but one Catholick Church one Head or Spiritual Ruler of it Christ our Redeemer one Christian Faith one Baptism one Gospel one Truth one and the self-same Form or Nature of all the several Theological Virtues and one Inheritance which are all of them to be taught embraced and expected by all that are true Members of the Catholick Church So there is but one Universal Kingdom in all the World the Creator of it being the sole Emperour and Governour of it one moral Faith one Nature of Truth to be observed amongst all one rule and nature of Justice one moral Law one nature of Equity one Kind Form or Nature of all the several Virtues both Moral and Intellectual which are to be put in practice as occasion requireth in this one Empire by as many as expect from Christ their Emperour any happy success in their Worldly affairs But as all these Unities in the temporal Monarchy of Christ are no sufficient grounds to warrant this assertion that there ought to be one temporal King or Emperour under Christ to govern the whole World so the aforesaid Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Unities are not able to establish or uphold this Inference That one Pope must of necessity have the Government under Christ of the whole Catholick Church Also from the authority of Scripture that God made all Mankind of one Adam to signify that he would have all Men to depend upon one why may it not as well be collected that he meant that all the Men in the World should depend upon one Emperour for causes Temporal as upon one Pope in Causes Ecclesiastical Likewise it is a very absurd conceit that our Jesuit maintaineth when he saith That although Christ be the Head of the Church yet he ought to have one underneath him by whom she may be governed as a King when he is present may govern his Kingdom himself and when he is absent appoint his Vice-Roy Of likelyhood this Fellow would perswade us that Christ is sometimes absent from his Church to the end that the Pope may be his grand Deputy For otherwise by his own Example Christ may govern the Catholick Church without the Pope as the King ruling himself in his own Kingdom needeth no Vice-Roy That Christ is never absent from his Church but doth by his Power Grace and Virtue of the Holy Ghost still defend and protect it It is plain by his own words where he saith Lo I am with you always unto the end of the World It is true that he told his Apostles that he was to depart from them meaning that they must be deprived of his Corporal presence but did he signify unto them that for their comfort he would leave St. Peter in his place and after him the Bishops of Rome St. Peter's Successors to govern his Church to the end of the World No such matter These are our Saviour Christ's words It is expedient for you that I go away for if I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you Again When he is come which is the Spirit of truth he will lead you into all truth Again I will pray to my Father and he
to Gregory the Seventh's days also a huge Heap of the Pope's Bulls from the said Gregory's time to Pius Quintus and lastly no short summ of Papal Constitutions set forth a little before the said 7th Book of the Decretals So as all these Volumes being put together they exceed as far the Body of the Civil Law as the usurped Dignity of the Papacy exceedeth the mean Estate of the Empire Placet eis John Overall CAP. XII WE have in the former Chapter made mention of the new and later sort of Decretals Bulls and Constitutions not knowing what Credit the Popes will bestow upon them hereafter and therefore leaving them to their Chance we have thought it expedient to return to the ancient Canon-Law revived and approved not long since by Gregory the Thirteenth where we find a new Ocean of Questions Disputations Quarrels and Brabblements For as it happen'd with the Civil-Law that it no sooner was again renew'd and restor'd by Lotharius but sundry great Doctors began to write many Books and Commentaries upon it to explain it and to discuss the Difficulties which did arise in it So fell it out with the Canon-Law the number being almost infinite of Glossographers that made short Notes upon it and of Canonists who set forth large Discourses for the salving of Contradictions and many other Absurdities Amongst all which Lawyers Doctors Glossographers and Canonists assisted as every Man's Fancy led him with many Schoolmen and sundry Divines such as they were there did shortly after grow many great Controversies and endless Oppositions The Civilians of Italy perceiving by the body of the Civil Law how far the Empire was dejected from that Royal Estate and Majesty which once it enjoyed and finding also that many of the best Reasons in their Judgments which the Popes the Canon-Law the Glossographers the Canonists the Schoolmen and many more had brought to prove that the Pope ought to have Jurisdiction over all the Churches in the World as that Bees had a Captain that Beasts a Leader that One is fit to end Controversies that a Monarchy is the best Form of Government and that One must he over All to receive Appeals to give Direction unto All to punish all rebellious persons and many such like were fully as forcible and strong to prove that there ought to be one Emperour over all the World they did very stifly and resolutely insist upon that Point and went so roundly to work in it by force of the said Reasons and with many other Arguments that some of them would needs have it Heresie for any man to hold the contrary alledging a Text for their purpose where it is said That in those days there came a Commandment from Augustus Caesar that all the World should be taxed Against those Italian Civilians Vltramontane the Civilians on this side the Alpes Frenchmen Spaniards and of other Countries opposed themselves with all their force not in any dislike of the Honour due to the Emperours but because otherwise their Masters the Kings of France of Spain and of divers other Kingdoms who had freed themselves long before from the Empire should be brought again de jure at the least by the foresaid Reasons to be subject unto it Whereupon in Confutation of them and to strengthen their own Assertion they alledged that one Bee was never the Captain over all Bees nor one Crane the General of all Cranes nor one Beast the Leader of all Beasts that it was against the Law of God the Law of Nature and the Law of Nations that there was never any Monarchs so great but there were in the World many Kings who were never subject unto them that the place of Scripture is to be understood of all places in the World that were then under the Romans and ought to be extended no further That a Monarchy is then best when it is contain'd within such limits as it may well be govern'd that all Monarchies hitherto had ever their bounds which were well known That it is impossible for all men to fetch Justice from one place or to receive thence any benefit by their Appeals and so after many other such Arguments they do conclude that to think that the Emperour ought to have the Government of all the World is a vain an absurd and an untrue conceit Now we are to consider how in all these troubled Disputations and Oppositions the Glossographers Canonists School-men and Parasitical Divines that were sworn to the Pope behaved themselves As soon as the Civil Law began to flourish as being read by the Emperour's Commandment in sundry Universities Gregory the Ninth began to smell what was like to come of it and therefore did afterward forbid it to be read in Paris being the especial Place then as it seemeth where it was most esteemed But as touching the Point so controverted when these Champions of the Popes saw how the Matter went That either they must hold that there ought to be but one Emperour over all the Kingdoms in the World or else be forced to confess that there ought not to be One Pope over all the Churches in the World the same Reason being as pregnant for the one as for the other they joyned with the Italian Civilians that there ought to be but one Emperour Marry how Forsooth remembring Gregory the Seventh Adrian the Fourth Innocentius the Third and that great Augustus Caesar Boniface the Eighth and divers other Popes how Emperour-like they had demeaned themselves and what great Authority they challenged the said Pontifical Champions fell to this Issue That the Pope being Christ's Vicar who was Lord of lords and King of kings it must needs follow that the Pope was likewise that One Emperour who was to govern all the World in Temporal Causes as he did all the Churches in the World in Ecclesiastical Causes And thereupon they reasoned in this sort Christ is Lord of all the World but the Pope is Christ's Vicar on Earth therefore the Pope is Lord of all the World Again The Emperour is the Pope's Vicar and his Successour in all Temporal Causes therefore the Emperour is Lord of all the World all Temporal Jurisdiction being habitually in the Pope and from him derived to the Emperour And many of the Italian Lawyers especially such as mixed their Studies with the Canon-Law were well enough content that so as the Emperour might be Lord of all how and whence he had it whether from God or from the Pope they stood indifferent But for all this the French and Spanish Lawyers stuck to their tackling and were peremptory That neither the Pope nor the Emperour had any such Universal Dominion over all the World And divers likewise of the said Italian Doctours that were not too much addicted to the Canon-Law were not afraid to hold and maintain That the Emperour held as well from God the Authority which he had as the Pope did his Papacy Howbeit such was the
the Disorders and Idolatry in those days were ascribed by the Holy Ghost to the want of Judges Chief Rulers or Kings amongst them who should have reformed those Enormities not only in them but likewise in the Priests themselves if they did not their Duties especially in suppressing of Idolatry as they should have done CAN. XIII IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that the Israelites fell not into many Evils and Disorders by being left destitute of a certain chief Governour after Joshua's Death or that when God raised up Iudges to rule and govern them the Peoples consent was necessary thereunto or that the said Iudges being once appointed by God to those places received their Authority in that behalf from the People or that the fact of the Sichemites may lawfully be imitated by any Christian People in so chusing to themselves a King or Iudge according to their own humours or that the want of Kings Princes and Rulers in any Country is not the Mother of disorder and confusion he doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XIV IT is manifest in the Scriptures That Moses directed by the Spirit of God did foresee that the time should come when the Israelites being quietly setled in the Land of Canaan should be govern'd by Kings after the manner of other Nations And therefore Almighty God did set down by Moses's Pen the Duty of all Kings and the Rules whereby they ought to govern Jacob also being illuminated by the same holy Spirit did not only foretel that it would come to pass that the Tribe of Judah should bear the Scepter and that the Kingdom or Government of Judah should be held by Succession according to the manner of other Nations but likewise tha the said Scepter or Government should not be taken away from that Tribe until the coming of Christ And it seemeth that the People were not altogether ignorant of this foreseen alteration when finding divers wants and confusions amongst them after the Death of one Judge before God was pleased to appoint them another they first offer'd rashly to Gideon their Prince that his Children and Off-spring should succeed him in that Government And afterward being weary of depending upon God's pleasure and misliking the rule of Samuel's Sons they urged him undutifully and unseasonably that they might have a King to rule over them as other Nations had meaning thereby principally as we suppose that such their Kings might by Succession govern them so as one being dead they might still have another We say that they urged Samuel to this purpose undutifully and unseasonably and that thereupon Saul was appointed to be their King because otherwise if they had expected God's good pleasure and time and contented themselves with his care over them in raising up when he thought meet their Judges to govern them they should have found shortly after that the Prophecy of Jacob should have been fulfilled and that God would have given the Scepter of Judah into the hands of David and of his Posterity according to their desire CAN. XIV IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that the People of Israel did not grievously sin in being weary of Gods immediate Election and appointment of their chief Governors or that the peoples preposterous hast did any way prejudice the Dignity and Authority of Saul's Regal Power or afterward of the Scepter of Judah or that the People then had in themselves any Authority to set up a King over them for then they would not have been so earnest with Samuel to make them a King or that after David's advancement to that Kingdom he was not as truly call'd thereunto by God himself as Aaron was to the Priesthood or that David's Posterity had not by God's Ordinance as rightful an Interest to succeed him in his said Kingdom as either Aaron's Sons had to succeed him in the Priesthood or Moses Joshua and the rest of the Iudges notwithstanding that God himself did chuse and named them particularly had in their Governments or that the People then had any more Authority to have withstood either David or any of his Posterity from being their King than they had to have expelled either Moses or Joshua or any of the rest of the Iudges whom God by name did appoint to govern them he doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XV. IT is manifest in the Scriptures that the Kings in the Old Testament notwithstanding that they had their Kingdoms by Succession were as strictly bound to the observation of God's Laws in their Government as Moses Joshua or any other the Judges or Princes elected named and appointed by God himself They knew well as Jethro said that it was impossible for themselves to hear and decide all the Causes and Controversies that might happen in their Kingdoms and by Moses's Example were not ignorant that they might appoint and have Judges to govern under them not only in every Tribe but generally over all their Kingdom and therefore they did therein accordingly follow the Example of Moses being approved by God himself no ways either diminishing their Regal Authority or purposing to puff up their Subjects with a conceit of any their own Interest in the Government which they had not from or under them but thereby ordering their Kingdoms with such a temperate and Fatherly Moderation as was most agreeable for the Government of God's People CAN. XV. IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that the Kings in the Old Testament were not bound as strictly to observe the Laws of God in their Governments as were Moses Joshua and the rest of the Iudges or that they had any greater liberty to do what they list than the others had or that they had no Authority by the Example of Moses and of all the rest of their Predecessors in their Princely Government to delegate and appoint such Iudges and Governours under them as the other Princes formerly under them had appointed or that because the said Kings did imitate the said Princes in appointing such Iudges to assist them in the Government of their Kingdoms therefore their Governments were to be judged rather Aristocratical than truly Monarchical he doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XVI WHen God first ordained civil Magistrates and gave them Authority his meaning was that the People whom they were to govern should be subject unto them From the beginning of the World till Moses's time whilst the People of God that profess'd his true Worship were governed by that Authority which was Potestas Patria and in a sort Regia their Children and Nephews were bound by the Law of Nature to honour reverence and obey them God having raised up Moses to deliver the Children of Israel out of Egypt and to govern them afterward as their King or chief Ruler they promised that they would hear him and do those things which he in the Name of God should command them Being in the Wilderness his
of his said Chamber and brought thither again the Vessels of the House of God with the Meat-offerings and Incense CAN. XXIX IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that Almighty God kept not his promise to the Iews made in his name by the Prophet Jeremy as touching their deliverance by Cyrus out of their Captivity because they were not restor'd to any such perfect liberty and Government as they had before or that the said Kings of Persia continuing still by God's appointment a supream Authority over the Jews so restor'd might by them for any cause or under any colour have been defrauded of their Tributes or resisted by force of Arms or otherwise impeach'd either in their States or Persons or that Zorobabel and Nehemiah were not lawful Princes over the Jews because they were placed in that Government without the Peoples Election or that they the said Princes by dealing in Cases Ecclesiastical as is aforesaid did take more upon them than by God's appointment appertain'd to their charge or that the Priests both high and low had not grievously sinned if they had not submitted themselves in the said Ecclesiastical Causes to the direction of those their civil Governours he doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XXX THE High-Priest as before we have said in that mild and temperate Government which God himself had Ordained was the second Person in the Kingdom Whereupon the same after the Captivity being turn'd as it were into a Dukedom and for ought that appeareth the Princes after Nehemiah's time growing poor by reason of their payments to those Kings to whom they were Tributary and receiving small assistance or countenance from them because they were still jealous of them whereas the Priests it seemeth being freed from all-Tributes and Impositions grew rich and were no way suspected it came to pass the sins of the people so requiring that the High-Priest did easily oversway both their Princes and their People and thereby attained very great Authority in that Principality Only they stood in awe for the time of the Kings of Persia to whose Obedience they were bound by an Oath when they were made High-Priests but otherwise for ought we find they had no great regard of any other Authority which so advanced the dignity of the Priesthood as afterward the practices of the High-Priest's Children to succeed their Father in that high dignity grew as troublesome to the People as was their servitude to the Persians For Jesus the younger Brother of John the second High-Priest after Eliasib mentioned by Nehemiah procured by corruption the favour of the chief Governour of the Persians in those Countries adjoining for his assistance to deprive his Brother that he himself might enjoy the High-Priesthood whereof his elder Brother having some notice did kill him in the Temple which the said Governour took in so evil part as he spoiled the said Temple being as he said profaned with Blood and laid an exceeding great Tribute in that respect upon the People to indure for seven Years But John the High-Priest continued in his place After whose Death his two Sons Jaddus and Manasses fell at great variance the younger to make himself strong against his elder Brother Married contrary to the Law of God with a Daughter of Sanballat another Chief Ruler in Samaria under the King of Persia For which offence Jaddus notwithstanding the Authority of Sanballat remov'd him from the dignity of Priesthood and thereupon he the said Manasses procured by Sanballat's means a Temple to be built in Mount Garizin near Samaria in form and magnificence like to that in Hierusalem where he flourished and whither all the lewd persons of Judah had daily recourse Upon which occasion much trouble arose afterwards betwixt the Samaritans and the Jews The said Jaddus lived till the Monarchy of the Grecians began who when Alexander having overthrown Darius the King of the Persians sent unto him that he should assist him in his Wars and become Tributary to the Macedonians as he had been to the Persians return'd for his Answer that he might not yield thereunto because he had taken an Oath for his true Allegiance to Darius which he might not lawfully violate whilst Darius lived being by flight escaped when his Army was discomfited We have here cited and shall hereafter cite some things out of the Books of the Maccabees and other ancient Historiographers of purpose to continue the manner of the Government of the Jews in what case they stood from time to time after the days of Nehemiah not meaning thereby to attribute any Canonical Authority unto them nor to establish any point of Doctrine out of them but only to proportion and measure the regiment and actions of that people by the rules and analogy of the holy Scriptures CAN. XXX IF any Man therefore shall affirm contrary to the grounds and truths of the said holy Scriptures either that albeit Kings of Persia had authorized some succeeding Princes as they did Zorobabel and Nehemiah and whether they did so or no is not certain yet the High Priests might afterward have lawfully born the sway that they did and not been subject unto them as their Predecessors had been to Zorobabel and Nehemiah or that if Nehemiah continued alive in that Government till Jaddus's time as it is probable he did he might not lawfully being authorized as before though he were old have reform'd any abuse in the Priests both high and low or that they were not bound in Conscience to have obey'd him therein or that the Jews might lawfully have rebelled for any cause against the Persians during their Government over them or that Jaddus the High-Priest did amiss in binding his Allegiance to King Darius by an Oath or that he had not sinned if he had refused being thereunto required so to have sworn or that having so sworn he might lawfully have born Arms himself against Darius or have sollicited others whether Aliens or Jews thereunto he doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XXXI ALexander by God's Providence having vanquished the Persians the Jews amongst many other Nations became his Subjects He dealt favourably with them released them of some Payments granted them liberty to live according to their own Laws and left their Government in every point as he found it their Duties ordinary Tributes and some of their Royal Prerogatives always reserved to the Macedonians as they had been before to the Persians but this their tolerable Estate endured not long For upon Alexander's death his chief Captains conspiring together made such a scambling Division of the Empire amongst themselves as they could every one almost notwithstanding seeking how he might suppress the rest and attain the whole alone to himself So as thereupon the Jews were as free from the Macedonians as any other of their bordering Neighbours none of the said Captains having any lawful Interest or Title to Judah But that which turned to the benefit of some
by the Maccabees themselves because he was a Priest of the Seed of Aaron did traiterously notwithstanding and treacherously Murder sundry of the Jews and held the Government of that Country till Judas Maccabaeus put him to flight Howbeit accusing the Maccabees again of wicked things he urged afterward the said King to send a new Army against them and was himself as it seemeth in the Host when Judas Maccabaeus was slain Besides it is also reported of him how he commanded that the Walls of the Inner-Court of the Sanctuary should be destroy'd and how he pulled down the Monuments of the Prophets and how in that his so wicked and profane an attempt he was stricken with the Palsey and died with great torment Now concerning Onias who if he had been of lawful Age and might have had his right ought to have been High-Priest before both his Uncles Jason and Menelaus when he perceiv'd that Alcimus had gotten that place and saw no probability how he might get it from him he fled into Egypt and there procured a Temple to be built like unto that in Hierusalem whereof he was made the principal Ruler So greedy was he of the High-Priesthood that seeing he might not be High-Priest in Hierusalem he would needs be a High-Priest in Egypt against God's Command But perhaps the High-Priesthood amongst the Jews was better bestow'd afterwards Indeed now it came into the hands of the Maccabees but how they used it there is little mention It is probable that being so distracted as they were and so continually in a manner vexed with Wars they had no time to execute that office in such sort as otherwise divers of them no doubt would have done But it cannot be denied that some of that rank were greatly puffed up with that Authority and did thereby much forget themselves and the holy Duties appertaining to the High-Priesthood Else would not Aristobulus have so unnaturally famished his own Mother nor have suffer'd the cruel Murther of his Innocent Brother Antigonus nor would Alexander succeeding Aristobulus have committed the like Murther upon his younger Brother nor would afterward the two Sons of the said Alexander viz. Hircanus and Aristobulus have grown through their ambitious desires to such mortal hatred For Aristobulus thrusting his eldest Brother Hircanus from the High Priesthood and he the said Hircanus continuing still his claim they never ceased their Hostility till Pompey having subdued them both brought both them and the whole Country under the subjection of the Romans We omit what great sums of money they bestowed on either side to procure Pompey's favour to whom they had committed the deciding of their Causes and also how Hircanus assisted Pompey in his attempt against Hierusalem partly in hope thereby to get the High Priesthood and partly in malice against his Brother who as long as he could defended that City the Issue of all which strife was this Pompey subdued the City slew twelve thousand Men Aristobulus is put from the High Priesthood the civil Government is separated again from the High-Priesthood the High Priesthood is bestowed upon Hircanus for his Service and the civil Government thenceforth translated to strangers the Temple was spoiled and Hierusalem was made Tributary to the People of Rome Of all which Calamities falling in this sort upon the Jews the dissention betwixt Hircanus and Aristobulus was held in those days to have been the cause to the great blemish of their credits professing themselves to be God's High-Priests Besides while Jason Menelaus Alcimus and the Maccabees were busied in their said Un-Priestly Contentions and Greekish profanations divers Sects of Religion arose and encreased among the Jews especially that of the Pharisees a crafty and an arrogant kind of Men seditiously bent against their Kings and impugners without fear of their Authority In which course they were the rather animated because they found through their Hypocrisy that Women were generally addicted to them and that the People did so admire them as they believed in effect whatsoever they told them against any although it were never so false or maliciously devised by them And thus Religion went in those days when the Priests had gotten the Reins into their own hands although we doubt not but that there were some few notwithstanding both of the Priests and of the People who disliking of all their said hypocritical ambitious profane and wicked Practices cover'd sometimes with a pretence of Zeal and sometimes with the glorious name of the High Priesthood did truly from their hearts both fear and serve the Lord. CAN. XXXII IF any Man therefore because in the Law of God there was great obedience to the High-Priest prescribed and required or that it is said by the Prophet That the Priests Lips should preserve knowledge and that the People should seek the law of his mouth whereas the meaning of the Holy Ghost in those and such like places only is that the High-Priests were to be obeyed when they commanded that which was not repugnant to the law of God and that the Lips of the Priests ought to preserve knowledge shall affirm either that it was not wickedly done by their Priests to thrust the People into many imminent dangers for the maintenance of their lewd quarrels and factions or that they did not grievously offend God when they forsook his true worship and brought heathenish and profane Sacrifices into his Temple or that the People were bound to obey when they requir'd them to conform themselves to the Idolatrous worship of the Heathen or that it was lawful for any of the said High-Priests by injury bribery or cruelty to seek the High Priesthood or that the Priests and People that joined with them did not wickedly who assisted Pompey to invade Hierusalem and to bring their own Countrey in Bondage to the Romans or that any such Pharisaical Sects never ordained by God were lawfully then permitted to seduce the simpler sort of the People leading them into Factions and Dislike of their Superiours He doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XXXIII THE Jews being subdued by the Romans and brought under their subjection about sixty years before the coming of Christ were used by them very kindly and with great respect They had liberty granted them to live according to their own Laws so as they paid their Tributes and framed their Behaviour to Quietness and Obedience Hircanus the High-Priest placed by Pompey lived long after in great Authority But nothing would satisfie them till in the end it came to pass that as the Ambition and Strife betwixt Hircanus and Aristobulus brought Pompey upon them so now their own Wickedness and rebellious Hearts were the cause of their greater Servitude Afflictions and Miseries The remnant of the Maccabees Aristobulus and his two Sons Alexander and Antigonus would never desist from their rebellious Attempts until they were all cut off Antipater the first Governour or Procurator appointed
by the Romans was poysoned by one Maticus hoping thereby that Hircanus the High-Priest might have got a more absolute Authority and have been the chief Governour Alexander the Son of Aristobulus had been before very troublsome and carried many after him to their destruction but Antigonus his Brother did far exceed him who by the help of the Parthians rose up against Herod the Successour of Antipater and taking that Government upon him cut off Hircanus his Uncle's Ears that thereby he might be unable afterward to bear any more to his prejudice the Office of the High-Priest But shortly after he was subdued and put to death and his Father before him was poisoned by Pompey's Followers Howbeit no sooner were these Maccabees thus suppressed but divers other rebellious Persons thrust forward the People into Arms under pretence of their Love they bare to their Countrey and to the ancient Liberties thereof In which their wicked Fury sometimes they were content to follow this Man as their King and sometimes that Man such as were one Simon one Athrogus and Manahemus all of them very lewd and base Companions and at some other time every Rebellious Rout or Company would needs have a King of their own whereby in every corner of that Commonwealth there was a Petty King who still led the People by heaps to the slaughter and perished themselves with them Also there were some amongst them who finding no good success by having of such Kings did run into a contrary course affirming it to be unlawful for the Jews to acknowledge any Man but God himself to be their King and that they ought rather to suffer death than to call any Man Lord. The sum is That notwithstanding any great Distractions Dissention or bloody Combats amongst themselves which were very many and strange their Hearts were so hardened in Rebellion against the Romans and their Governours as they refused either to pay them any more Tribute or to pray for them but standing upon their Walls when they were besieged Caesari Patri ejus maledicebant There was never we think so obstinate and desperate a People for in their greatest extremities and when they saw nothing but imminent Death destruction of the Temple and the extirpation of their whole Nation no reasonable Conditions or Perswasions could move them Titus himself made a notable Oration unto them and commanded Josephus to deliver his Mind at another time more amply if it had been possible to have reclaimed them which Duty so imposed upon him Josephus performed very eloquently He told them that tho' the Romans had dealt sometimes very hardly with them yet their Rebellion was ever the cause of it that albeit Men might lawfully fight in defence of their Countrey when it was invaded by any yet being subdued and a new Government settled amongst them it was not lawful by Rebellion under pretence of Liberty to cast off that Yoke that their Fore-fathers being in Bondage under the Kings of Aegypt and Babylon and divers times in many other distresses did never of themselves by force of Arms seek their Liberty or Deliverance but ever expected the Lord's leisure who always in due time had compassion upon them and that although they were then in the greatest distress that ever People were and could expect nothing but utter Ruine and Desolation yet if then they would submit themselves they might be received to Mercy For saith he the Romans ask but their ordinary Tribute which your Fore-fathers paid unto their Predecessours and if yet they may obtain the same they will neither destroy your City nor touch your Sanctuary but grant unto you freely your Families your Possessions and the Practice of your Sacred Laws But all these Offers they refused Howbeit the compassion of Titus towards them still continuing he again when they saw their Destruction more apparently required the said Josephus to deliver his Mind to the same effect to their chief Captain that he had done before to the People which he accomplished but in the hearing again of the People very throughly and in the end finding them obstinate I my self deserve blame saith he qui●● haec adversus fata suadeo Deique sententiâ condemnatos servare contendo Whereupon shortly after Titus protesting how loth he was thereunto assailed them with all his Forces which slew an infinite number of them burnt the Temple and destroyed the City Since which time they that then escaped and the rest of all the Race of the Jews have been dispersed far and near and lived like a cursed Generation in all Slavery and Servitude So that although we doubt not but that this heavy Judgment of God fell upon them principally for the hardness of their hearts in that they did not only refuse to hear the Voice of our Saviour Christ but likewise most malitiously unjustly and shamefully put him to death yet the immediate and apparent cause of it was their never-before-heard-of-like obstinate Rebellion CAN. XXXIII IF any Man therefore shall affirm either that Aristobulus the Father or either of his two Sons Alexander or Antigonus having all of them submitted themselves to the Government of the Romans did not sin when afterward they rebelled against them or that Maticus did not very wickedly in poisoning of Antipater because he thought thereby the better to strengthen Hircanus in his High-Priesthood or that the People ought not to detest all such seditious Persons as under pretence of Liberty and Religion shall sollicite them to Rebellion or that the Jews were not bound both to have paid their Tribute and to have prayed for Caesar without dissimulation sincerely and truly notwithstanding any pretence of Tyranny which they had willfully drawn upon their own heads or of any cause whatsoever or that such as cursed Caesar their chief Governour did not thereby deserve any corporal punishment which is due to be inflicted upon such Traytors or that the Rebellion against any King absolute Prince or Civil Magistrate for any cause whatsoever is not a sin very detestable in the sight of God and therefore by all that fear the Lord to be eschewed because it ever tendeth to mischief and sometimes to the overthrow of the Kingdom Principality and Country where it is raised He doth greatly Erre Placet eis CAP. XXXIV WE have spoken in the former Chapter of the Rebellion of the Jews against their civil Governours and the success thereof We made no mention either of the Priests or of any of those Sects of Religion which then bare sway amongst them Indeed it is likely that if they had done their Duties the People upon their Repentance might have regained God's Favour and prevented that utter desolation but it happen'd otherwise two factious Persons Judas and Matthias the best learned Men of the Jews and the most skilful Interpreters of the Laws of their Country growing into great favour with the People because of their said skill
with Rods. I was once stoned I suffered thrice Shipwrack Night and day have I been in the deep Sea In Journying I was often in perils of Water in perils of Robbers in perils of mine own Nation in perils amongst the Gentiles in perils in the Wilderness in perils in the Sea in perils amongst false Brethren In weariness and painfulness in watching often in hunger and thirst in fastings often in cold and nakedness Besides these things which are outward I am cumber'd daily and have the care of all the Churches Much is not written of St. Peter by the Evangelist St. Luke but it is not to be doubted that his Case was as bad as any of his Fellows When he began to Preach he was call'd in question with great eagerness and vehemently threatned Also with some other of the Apostles he was cast into Prison and beaten Likewise when James was killed by Herod's Commandment Peter was again Imprisoned and loaden with Irons and had assuredly in all likelyhood escaped hardly with his Life but that the Angel of the Lord delivered him In a word after many Afflictions Injuries Calamities and Miseries endured by the Apostles whilst they lived in this World they were in the end as well St. Peter as almost all the rest most spitefully and cruelly by the Enemies of Christ and of their own Salvation put to Death During the course of whose lives in so great dangers and manifold distresses out of question they would greatly have marvelled their hard Estates consider'd but especially St. Peter if he had known himself to be the sole Monarch under Christ over all the World and that the Emperour and all other Kings had been at that time his Vassals and that likewise they the rest of the Apostles had been under St. Peter so many Soveraign and Temporal Princes to have commanded and ruled amongst them throughout the whole World Neither do we see any true cause that might have moved St. Peter to have concealed that his so eminent temporal Power and Authority if he had thought it to have been the Ordinance of God or at least if he for modesty would have been silent why the rest of the Apostles should not have published it that the civil and temporal States in those times who knew no such Ordination made by Christ might have been left inexcusable Besides the concealing of a truth of so great importance was an injury offered to all the faithful in those days who had they been truly taught in these Mens conceits ought to have left their Obedience to the Emperour in all temporal Causes and for the dignity of the Gospel to have adher'd unto St. Peter to have been directed in them by him their temporal Monarch The consideration of all which inconveniences and consequents doth perswade us to think that none of the Apostles ever dreamed of any such temporal Soveraignty notwithstanding that they knew well the Scriptures how Christ told them That All Power in Heaven and Earth was given unto him how St. Peter had two Swords and how Ananias and Sapphira for lying to the Holy Ghost were stricken suddenly from Heaven with Death Touching the two first of which places the same being notoriously abused and wrested by the Canonists and their Adherents to prove the Popes temporal Monarchy the said Cardinal doth very resolutely reject the Arguments which are thence by them deduced And to the first he answereth Potestatem de quâ hic loquitur Dominus non esse potestatem temporalem ut Regnum terrenorum sed vel tantùm spiritualem ut B. Hieronymus B. Anselmus exponunt qui hunc esse volunt sensum eorum verborum Data est mihi omnis potestas in coelo in terrâ i.e. ut sicut in coelo Rex sum Angelorum ità per fidem regnem in cordibus hominum vel ut addit Theophylactus esse potestatem quandam summam in omnes creaturas non temporalem sed divinam vel divinae simillimam quae non potest communicari homini mortali That the Power whereof the Lord here speaketh is not a temporal Power like the Power of terrene Kings but it is either a spiritual Power as St. Hierom and St. Anselm do expound the said place who will have this to be the sense of those words All Power is given me in Heaven and Earth which is to say that as in Heaven I am King of Angels so by Faith I do reign in the hearts of Men or as Theophylact addeth it is a certain supream Power not temporal but divine or most like to the Divine Power which cannot be communicated to any mortal Man And for the second Argument drawn from St. Peter 's two Swords the same is set down by our said Cardinal in these words Secundò objiciunt Scripturam Luc. 22. Vbi Dominus duos gladios Petro concedit Cùm enim Discipuli dicerent Ecce duo gladii hic Dominus non ait nimis est sed satis est Quare B. Bernardus 4. 4. de Consid Bonifacius octavus in Extravag Vnam sanctam de Majoritate Obedientiâ ex hoc loco deducunt Pontisicem duos gladios ex Christi institutione habere that is Secondly they object the Scriptures Luc. 22. Where the Lord doth grant two Swords to Peter For when the Disciples said Behold here are two Swords the Lord answered not they are too many but they are sufficient Therefore St. Bernard and Boniface the eighth do hence deduce that the Bishop of Rome by Christ's Institution hath two Swords Unto which objection our Cardinal saith thus Respondeo ad Literam nullam fieri mentionem in eo loco Evangelii de gladio spirituali vel temporali Pontificis sed solum Dominum illis verbis monere voluisse Discipulos tempore Passionis suae in iis angustiis metu ipsos futuros fuisse in quibus esse solent qui tunicam vendunt ut emant gladium ut ex Theophylacto aliisque Patribus colligitur I answer that according to the Letter there is no mention made in that place of the Gospel either of the spiritual or temporal Sword of the Bishop of Rome but that Christ meant only in those words to admonish his Disciples how they should be in the time of his Passion in those straights and fear wherein Men are accustomed to be who sell their Coat to buy them a Sword as it is to be collected out of Theophylact and other Fathers And for Bernard and Boniface he saith They did expound the said place mystically and meant not to have their words so far extended as the Objector would have them Which answer it is likely Bernard if he were now alive would take in good part but assuredly if any Cardinal in Bonifacius 's days had made it he would have smarted for it and might perhaps have tried the depth of Tiber. Neither do we suppose that the now Pope will give him any great thanks for it nor
of our mind that he will omit how the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven were given to St. Peter and so to the Roman Bishops his Successors and not to the Bishops of Constantinople and we likewise following his Example as a thing impertinent to our purpose will here omit the same Only we do observe that the contention betwixt the Bishop of Rome and the Bishop of Constantinople was de Primatu and that the Bishop of Rome obtain'd that place by Phocas his means which the Bishop of Constantinople did challenge to himself Whereupon we offer to Mens Considerations these two Arguments Whosoever taketh upon him that Primacy or place in the Church which John Bishop of Constantinople did challenge to himself is the forerunner of Antichrist but the Bishops of Rome do take upon them that Primacy and place Ergo. Again Those Priests which do adhere unto him that taketh upon him that place and Primacy which John the Bishop of Constantinople did challenge to himself are an Host prepared for the King of Pride but all the Priests that do adhere to the Bishop of Rome do adhere unto him that taketh upon him that Primacy and place which John the Bishop of Constantinople did challenge to himself Ergo. But our purpose is not to dispute only this we add that till this time that the Bishop of Rome had prevailed so far with Phocas as is aforementioned his Predecessors notwithstanding their great Authority after Constantine's Reign and favour with the Emperours succeeding they behaved themselves dutifully toward them and acknowledged them to be their Lords and Masters But afterward in short time they left those Phrases and began to call the Emperours their Sons To which alteration a very worthy Man taking exception he is answered by another of many good parts it must be confessed after this sort St. Gregory might call Mauricius his Lord either of Courtesie or of Custom and yet our holy Father Pius the Fourth shall not be bound to do the like in consideration that the Custom hath long since been discontinued Placet eis Jo. Overall CAP. V. ALthough when the Bishops of Rome after much opposition had obtain'd their desires for their Primacy beforementioned they might well enough as we suppose have been contented Yet forasmuch as still they remain'd in greater subjection to the Emperours than they thought was agreeable with their greatness their aspiring mind rested not there but began shortly after to cast about how they might in their places be independent and absolute For the compassing whereof they took hold of every occasion that might serve or be wrested and drawn to that purpose At the first receiving of the Gospel Men are ever for the most part very zealous and great Favourers of the Ministry In the Apostles times they sold their lands and possessions and laid the price of them at the Apostles feet St. Paul was received by the Galatians as an Angel of God yea as Jesus Christ and such was their love toward him that to have done him good they would have plucked out their Eyes and given them unto him When the Emperours of Rome became Christians they did exceed in this behalf especially towards the Bishops of that See bestowing upon them very great riches and ample possessions Of all which zealous Dispositions benefits and favours they ever made above all other Bishops their greatest advantage by imploying the same to the advancement of their greatness Wherein they were furthermore very much helped and further'd by the Authority which the Emperours gave unto them in temporal Causes holding them for their Gravity Learning and Discretion very meet and sit Persons in their own absence from Rome to do them that way very great service Besides if we shall deal sincerely and truly as we hold our selves always bound and more strictly in a cause of this Importance we must needs confess that it hath been the manner of Divines from the Apostles times almost to magnify and extol the worthiness and excellency of their own calling which was a very commendable and necessary course in many the ordinary contempt of the Ministry consider'd and had been so in all of them if they had not therewith depressed too much the Dignity and preheminence of Kings and Princes Comparisons in such Cases were ever worthily held to be odious Bishops and Priests might without any just reprehension have been resembled to Gold to the Sun and to what else is excellent without comparing the highest Magistrates under God in respect of themselves to the Moon to Lead and to some other things of such like base Estimation And we doubt not but that they would have refrain'd from such Comparisons if they could have foreseen how the Bishops of Rome would to the disgrace and dishonour of civil Authority have wrested and perverted them notwithstanding that their Inferences thereupon have ever had more shew and probability than substance and truth except we shall say that the Callings of Schoolmasters and Physicians are in Dignity to be preferr'd before all other Temporal Callings because the end of the one is the instructing of Mens understandings and of the other Health which either are or ought to be both of them in their kinds of greater Estimation than any other things whatsoever We shall not need to trouble our selves with the citing of any Authorities to prove how eagerly the Bishops of Rome especially after Boniface the Third had obtained of Phocas the said Supremacy have pressed the same Comparisons It is so evident both in their own Writings and likewise generally in all their Treatises who from time to time have laboured with all their force and might to advance above all other Authority upon Earth the Soveraignty of that See Placet eis John Overall CAP. VI. ALbeit the former occasions as they were handled and particularly the device last before specified wrought very much in the hearts of the simpler sort to the debasing of the Imperial and Regal Authority in respect of the Spiritual and that it was therefore prosecuted and amplified with all the skill and rhetorick that could be Yet there was another matter which troubled the Bishops of Rome exceedingly and never gave them rest until they had prevailed in it as if without it they had gained little by their Primacy It seemeth that Constantine the Great when he left Rome notwithstanding his especial benefits and favours to the Bishops of that See did in his wisdom think it fit that none should be advanced to that Bishoprick without the Emperour's consent For the better manifestation whereof it is to be observed that whilst the Bishops of Rome were labouring so earnestly for their Supremacy till Phocas's time the City of Rome had been four times surprised by divers barbarous Nations An. 413. by Alaricus the second King of the Goths Innocentius the First being then Bishop An. 457. by Gensericus the Leader of the Vandalls Leo the First being then Bishop An.