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A65227 Some observations upon the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the kings of England with an appendix in answer to part of a late book intitled, The King's visitatorial power asserted. Washington, Robert. 1689 (1689) Wing W1029; ESTC R10904 101,939 296

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Which any one may have recourse to in Spelm. Concil Eadmer Hist Mat. Paris and others In the beginning of King Henry the Second's Reign there was another Schism in the Popedom between Alexander and Victor upon which a great Council of Clergy and Laity out of the Kingdoms of England and France met to determine whether of the two should be acknowledged Pope within those Realms The matter was debated in Conspectu Regum Praesulum coram universâ quae convenerat multitudine Cleri Populi And Alexander was received for Pope and the Schismaticks Excommunicated The History is in Nubrig Lib. 2. c. 9. Pursuant to which President when there hapned in King Richard the Second's time to be another Schism in the Papacy and Act. of Parliament was made to declare who should be received Pope in England and a Law made for punishing any of the Clergy that should acknowledge the other Pope Vide Catt Records Ann. 2. Rich. 2. p. 180. What thing can be more purely Ecclesiastical than the determining who it lawfully chosen to be the Vniversal Bishop And yet neither the King nor the King and the Clergy would settle the point without the Laity By what has been said it appears That the Ancient Supremacy of the Kings of England in Ecclesiastical Matters was a very different thing not so much from what it is now by Law as from what it is apprehended to be by many amongst us The Error is fundamental and consists in ascribing Things Acts Powers c. to the King in person which belonged to were done and exercised by him no otherwise than in his Courts Appeals are said to have been to the King at Common Law And so an Abridgment of Law has it so Fox Rolls cap. 8. vid. Chron. Gerv. p. 1387. Speed and others And the Authority quoted is the Assize of Clarendon which in one Chapter directs that Appeals shall be from the Bishop to the Archbishop from the Archbishop to the King. But another Act of Parliament made about 12 years after clears the matter Sir Roger Twisden For in the mean time Becket was Murdered and King Henry the Second being put to hard Pennance for it part of his satisfaction was that he should agree not to hinder Appeals to Rome in Causes Ecclesiastical Mat. Paris p. 126. yet so as the party going was to give Security that he would not endeavour Malum Regis nec Regni But within Four Years after the Nation Assembled in Parliament would not quit their interest But the Assize of Clarendon was again renewed and a more close expression used concerning Appeals and such persons as had prosecuted any Justitiae faciant quaerere per consuetudinem terrae illos qui à Regno recesserunt nisi redire voluerint infra terminum nominatum stare Juri in Curiâ Domini Regis utlagentur c. This Gervas Dorobern who well understood it tells us was but renewing the Assize of Clarendon Rex Angliae Henricus convocatis Regni Primoribus apud Northamptoniam renovavit Assizam de Clarendon Here we see that such as were aggrieved by a Sentence given by the Archbishop were pursuant to the Statutes of Clarendon not to appeal to Rome but to the King Which the Statute of Northampton made but twelve years after explains to be to the Curia Regis By this and by what has been said before upon this Subject it appears that the ultimate Appeal in Causes Ecclesiastical as well as Temporal was to the Curia Regis or Parliament and that as the same Assemblies made Laws both for the Government of Church and State so the Supreme Judicature Ecclesiastical and Temporal was one and the same After that time Appeals were sometimes prosecuted in the Court of Rome that Statute and the Assize of Clarendon notwithstanding but this was only by connivance At last when the Pope got the better of King John who lay under great Disadvantages as all our Historians tell us and that in his Magna Charta these words were inserted V. Matth. Paris Pag. 258. Liceat unicuique de caetero exire de Regno nostro redire salvò securè per terram aquam salvâ fide nostra c. Then Appeals to Rome multiplyed for every little Cause and the Master-piece of Papal Encroachments was wrought effectually But it cannot be too often inculcated that the Laws of Clarendon which gave the ultimate Appeal to the Curia Regis as aforesaid are so often stiled the Avitae Consuetudines Regni Which shews sufficiently where the Supreme Judicature resided according to our old Constitution It appears by what has been said that King William the Conqueror was acknowledged to be God's Vicar appointed to govern his Church and yet that neither He nor his Successors pretended to make any Ecclesiastical Laws to bind the whole Kingdom but in a General Council of the Kingdom That the King's Supremacy was so far from being Personal that an Archbishop did as it were appeal from himself in Person to himself in Parliament and that the King submitted and owned the Jurisdiction That the same Archbishop understood the Law to be that the Assent of the Laity was necessary to the making of Ecclesiastical Laws by which they were to be bound That the King could not of his own Authority permit a Legate to exercise his Office within the Realm That leave to exercise his Office could not be given him but in Parliament That the King could not part with Investitures if he would without the Assent of the People That Parliaments determined who ought to be received as Pope within the Realm That Appeals were to the Curia Regis by the Avitae Consuetudines Regni And that Bishops were elected in Parliament Whence I conclude that a Personal Supremacy has no warrant from Antiquity The clearing the Antient Supremacy and stating the Matter aright is of great use in this present Age in which as one sort of Men over-stock us with Jure Divino's so the Lawyers accost us often with the Common Law and the King's Perogative at Common Law and that this and the other Act is but declarative of the Common Law and gives the King no new Power And yet as the Divines have little or no ground for their Jure Divine's no more have the Lawyers in these Matters of the Supremacy any thing to warrant their late Hyperbole's but Shadows and Imaginations They found a Power exercised by the Pope which they had good reason to think injurious to the Crown they had heard that from the beginning it was not so And thus far they were right But how it was exercised before the Court of Rome and the Clergy invaded it they had forgot it having been usurpt upon Four hundred years before they were born For it is in vain to look for a true Scheme of the Antient Legal Supremacy at a nearer distance than from the Reigns of King John King Richard the First King Henry the
by whole-sale is altogether needless in a Constitution wherein Concitò reformari possunt by the same Authority that made them In Forty days time a Parliament may be summoned to consent to what alteration they shall think fit to be made And it is the constant practice observed to this day that at the beginning of every Parliament a Committee is appointed to consider what Laws are inconvenient and have need to be altered continued or repealed If the Parliament shall not think fit to make any alteration the Laws must remain in force and ought to be put in execution for there can be no Reformation of them made Sine Communitatis Procerum assensu And the reason is because by such assent Primitus emanârant The Repealing of a Law or which is all one a total Suspension of a Law is making a new Law whatever quibbles and foolish distinctions may be pretended to be made in the Case Now the Laws of England do not oriri Principis voluntate and rherefore a Repeal or total Suspension of a Law grounded upon the voluntas Principis only is not warranted by that model of the English Government that Fortescue presents us with He that asserts such a Power in the King to Suspend Laws Enacted by the Consent of the whole Kingdom turns the Government of this Nation topsie turvie Lord Chief Justice Herbert in Sir Edward Hales his Case And makes the Laws of England indeed the King's Laws contrary to the style of all Antiquity of all History and contrary to the forms of Legal Proceedings even to this day Lex terrae and Leges terrae Leges Consuetudines Angliae Leges Angliae Statuta Angliae Assiza Regni are known and common Expressions Leges Regis sounds harsh the phrase is uncouth because the Notion included in it is false nor was ever thought of by our Forefathers The Statutes of Praemunire and Provisors and the method of dispensing with them before the Reformation will abundantly disclose to us where the power of dispensing with Acts of Parliament even in Ecclesiastical Matters was vested In the 16th Year of King Richard the Second the Archbishop of Canterbury declared the Causes of the Parliament The second of which was to provide some remedy touching the Statute of Provisors for eschewing debate betwixt the Pope and the King and his Parliament Cot. Records p. 346. King Richard needed not have put himself to the trouble of convening his Parliament in order to provide a Remedy in such case if by the Law as it was then understood he might by his Perogative have dispensed with the Statutes of Provisors and all other Laws concerning Ecclesiastical Matters In the 17th R. 2. It was enacted in Parliament that Tydeman late Abbot of Beawliew and Elect of Landaffe by the Popes Provision should enjoy the same Bishoprick notwithstanding any Act so always as this be taken for no Example Ibid. p. 354. So that tho Tydeman had a Dispensation from the King he durst not trust to it without getting his Title to his Abby confirmed in Parliament The like President occurs in 18 H. 6. The Archbishop of Roan had the Profits of the Bishoprick of Ely granted to him by the Pope and confirmed in Parliament Ibid. p. 623. But in the Fifteenth year of King Richard the Second the Commons for the great Affiance which they reposed in the King granted that the King by the Advice of his Lords might make such Toleration touching the Statute of Provision as to him should seem good until the next Parliament so as the Statute be repealed in no Article thereof nor none disturbed of his lawful Possession So also as they may disagree thereto at the next Parliament with this Protestation That this their Assent being in truth a Novelty be had or taken for no Example Ibid. p. 342. And in the Sixteenth year of the same King the Commons grant to the King that he by the Advice of his Lords should have power to moderate the Statute of Provisions to the Honour of God and saving the Rights of the Crown and to put the same in execution so as the same be declared in the next Parliament to the end the Commons may then agree to the same or no. Ibid. pag. 347. The occasions of these Concessions were the then circumstances of the Kings Affairs who was often at enmity with France and made advantage of the Pope's Friendship which he obtained by this and other Methods of the like kind The like Instances occur in the same Collection p. 362 In the Twentieth year of the same King. p. 393 In the First year of King Henry the Fourth p. 406 In the Second year of King Henry the Fourth From hence it appears that those Times had no notion of any absolute Power any inseparable Perogative in the King himself of dispensing with those Laws without his Parliaments consent For they grant the King such Power and that but for a time and so as they may disagree to it at their next Meeting and with a protestation that this their Assent be not drawn into Example and declare their giving the King such Power to be a Novelty And all this they do with a saving to the Rights of the Crown which let them if they can explain the meaning of who imagine that the uniting of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to the Crown of England by the Statute of 1 Eliz. is a vesting of it in the King's Person In this same interval of Time the Statutes of Praemunire were enacted viz. 27 Edw. 3. cap. 1. and 38 Edw. 3. cap. 1. 16 R. 2. and some others with which how far it was lawful for the King to dispense take an account from what hapned to Cardinal Wolsey in King Henry the Eighths time He had a Commission from the Pope to exercise his Office of Legate here in England he had the King's leave so to do he exercised that Office many years without controul and was submitted to almost universally I remember but one Obstruction offered to have been made to him and that was by Hunne a Merchant-Taylor in London The History of which may be read at large in Fox and Dr. Burnet's History of the Reformation And yet the whole Clergy were afterwards attainted of a Praemunire for submitting to such Foreign Authority as the same Authors the Lord Herbert and others abundantly testifie But Stephen Gardiner's Letter to the Duke of Somerset concerning that Matter as it is very remarkable for many other Passages so this ensuing part I think proper to be here inserted because it will save me the trouble of relating the History and of endeavouring to open the Reasons of that Proceeding Now whether the King may command against an Act of Parliament and what Danger they may fall in that break a Law with the King's consent I dare say no Man alive at this day hath had more Experience with the Judges and Lawyers than I First I had experience in my
Anselm's contempt consist in Disobeying the Law and not the King 's Personal and Arbitrary Will and Pleasure If any Man depart the Realm at this Day after a Writ of Ne Exeat Regnum served upon him he becomes a Fugitive and the King may seize his Estate as he did the Archbishops Temporalities And yet we have no Act of Parliament for this now upon Record but Custom Time out of Mind which we call Common-Law Yet among the Laws of Clarendon this is one VIZ. Archiepiscopis Episcopis Personis Regni non liceat Exire Regnum absque Licentia Domini Regis Decem Scriptores pag. 1386 1387. Matth. Paris pag. 100. And Polydore Virgill pag. 171. carries this Law up as high as to the Reign of King William Rufus Publico Edicto Vetuit says he Vnumquemque sine Licentiâ suâ Ex Angliâ egredi qui mos lexve dicitur Ne Exeas Regnum Quae adhuc cùm ita res requirit usurpatur And it appears by the Register Fol. 193 194. That Religious Persons purchased Licences to go beyond the Sea. And Bracton tells us Lib. Quinto Fol. 413. b. That those Writs were de Communi Consilio totius Regni Concessa Approbata Of which more hereafter And great Reason there was that they who were then strugling with the Government to Introduce a Foreign Jurisdiction should when they went beyond Sea Assecurare Regem quod nec in eundo vel redeundo vel moram faciendo perquirerent malum sive damnum Domino Regi Constitution Clarend Suprad But as Mr. Selden says in his Metamorphosis Anglorum pag. 237. Huc referas Scil. ad temp Henrici Secundi an cum Polydoro ad Rufum an ad posteriora tempora rescriptum quod in Regesto NE EXEAS REGNVM habetur haud ità multùm interest nec quaestionem accurare operae pretium est Quis enim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verum potis est elicere It being almost impossible to find out the Original of this Law and it appearing by the Register that whenever it did begin it began by Authority of Parliament and since nothing is known to the contrary but that it might begin in King William Rufus his Time to whose Time Polydere Virgill refers it and if it did not since Parliaments were frequently held then and One famous one at Rochingham during this very Controversie betwixt the King and Anselm Eadmer pag. 38. about his going to Rome in which he asked leave to depart and was denyed it Who knows but there might then be a particular Prohibition to him by the King in that Great Council But be that how it will the Truth in this Matter lies too deep by reason of the loss of almost all the Civil Laws made in the Reigns of Our First Norman Kings through the Embezelment of Records and the Carelessness of the Monks of those times for the Doctor to draw a good Argument from hence of the Danger of disobeying the King 's Personal Command Nay further if this Instance were never so much for him First It was in King William Rufus his Reign the Irregularities and Tyranny of whose Government was such and the Matters of Fact so lamely Reported to us that no Argument drawn from what he might do will be very conclusive to the Legality or Illegality of any thing And Secondly There is a very good Law made since VIZ. Ann. 14 Edwardi 3. cap. 6. to Protect the Clergy from incurring any such prejudice for the future for not doing whatsoever they are bid to do We Will and Grant for Vs and our Heirs that from henceforth We nor our Heirs shall not take nor cause to be taken into our Hands the Temporalities of Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors nor other People of Holy Church of what Estate or Condition they be without a Just and True Cause according to the Law of the Land and Judgment thereupon given The Doctor makes account pag. 146 147. that the Oath which he says Anselm had taken whereby he promised the King Eadmer pag. 39. lib. 2. se usus ac leges suas usquequaque deinceps servaturum eas sibi contra omnes homines fideliter defensurum was no ways like the present Oath of Supremacy Whereby he would represent the Supremacy as a quite other thing and much more Exorbitant since the Reformation than it was in King William Rufus his Time Which is a great Errour For the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Kings of England was then almost entire and in puris naturalibus Foreign Jurisdiction had not then grown upon our Constitution The Bishops indeed were warping Rome-wards which caused the Government to have a watchful Eye upon them and to enjoyn Oaths upon them for security against Vsurpations then feared because attempted as after the Reformation they were enjoyned to prevent the return of them But the Oath of Supremacy prescribed by primo Elizabeth being only to Assist and Defend all Jurisdictions Priviledges Preheminencies and Authorities Granted or Belonging to the Queen's Highness her Heirs and Successors Or Vnited and Annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm is the same in Substance with Swearing in King William Rufus his Time to Keep and Defend the Laws and Vsages of the Realm For those Jurisdictions Priviledges Preheminencies and Authorities which having been torn from the Crown were restored by the primo Elizabeth and by the several Acts of King Henry the Eighth thereby revived were in being and actually enjoyed in King William Rufus his Time and before and for some time after He was the Supreme Governour of the Realm in Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Things and Causes as well as Temporal Witness that Law of King Edward the Confessor revived and confirmed by King William the First Rex quia Vicarius summi Regis est ad hoc est Constitutus ut Regnum terrenum populum Domini super omnia Sanctam Veneretur Ecclesiam ejus Regat ab injuriosis defendat maleficos ab eâ evellat destruat penitùs disperdat Lambard leg pag. 142. And the several Branches afterwards lopped off from the King's Supremacy were endeavoured to be preserved and secured by the Laws of Clarendon The Third Chapter of which provides against the Exemption of Clerks from the King's Justice The Eighth against Appeals to Rome The Twelfth secures the King's Right and Interest in the Elections of Archbishops Bishops Abbots and Priors c. These Constitutions then called the Avitae Consuetudines Regni Archbishop Becket promisit in verbo sacerdotali de plano se velle custodire Similiter Episcopi promiserunt Juraverunt Gerv. Dorob Coll. pag. 1366. This was no other than the Modern Oath of Supremacy without any material difference The Archbishop did not pretend that the Laws of Clarendon as Wicked and Unjust as he might think them were any other than Explanations and Assertions of the Ancient Vsages of the Realm His Suffragans tell him in a Letter
whereas Subjects might Collate in those Days Churches of their own Foundation to any Clerk in Orders and give him the Investiture even without so much as a Presentation to the Bishop yet our Antient Kings Collated Bishopricks no otherwise than in Curia suâ For though Bishopricks were Royal Foundations yet they were Founded by Acts of Parliament as will appear by and by And one Great Reason why our Kings at least in those Days could not Erect Bishopricks and endow them otherwise was because they could not in those Days Alien their Crown Lands without the Assent of their Barons Non poterat Rex distrahere Patrimonium Regni And though King John told Pandulphus the Legate Omnes Praedecessores mei contulerunt Archiepiscopatus Episcopatus Abbathias in thalamis suis Monast Burton pag. 264. That must be understood to have been done since the Norman Conquest only though the contrary was frequently practised even in those Days and especially since the Constitutions of Clarendon For the Instance that he there gives of Wolstan's being made Bishop of Worcester in King Edward the Confessor his Time was far from a Collation in Thalamo if we believe himself when he resigned his Pastoral Staff at the Confessor's Tomb There concurred Electio Plebis Petitio Voluntas Episcoporum Gratia Procerum a full Parliament as well as the Authoritas Voluntas of the King himself Matth. Paris pag. 20 21. As for our Kings seizing the Temporalties of Bishops into their Hands and so suspending them à beneficio which the Doctor speaks of pag. 155. of which he says many Instances may be found in Mr. Prynn 's Historical Collections I suppose he would not be understood as if our Kings either might or used to seize them ad Libitum but by legal process and for some contempt for which by the Law they were liable to Seizure They were held of the King by Barony and though the Bishops pretended to an Exemption as to their Persons from the Laws of the Land yet their Temporalties which were held of the King and for which they did him Fealty were no-wise Exempted but that if they should commit Offences for which the King might by Law capere se ad Baronias suas they as well as the Laity that held by the same Tenure were equally liable to the Course and Rigour of the Law. What use this is of to the Doctor for the setting up some Notional Supremacy lodged in the King Personally I know not as yet Irregularities and Oppressions might well be used upon such occasions and Seizures made when there was no cause but the Statute of the fourteenth of Edward the Third cap. 6. aforementioned was provided to prevent such Mischiefs for the future But the Doctor was very ill advised in quoting pag. 155. to clear the point the Statutes of Provisions For those Statutes which every body knows and the Doctor will not deny to be only new Bullwarks to secure Old Rights were yet such as the King could never dispense with But when the Circumstances of his Affairs were such that to gratify the Pope and tye him to his Interest he found it convenient to have some Relaxation made of those Laws then were Parliaments called and at their first meeting one cause of their Convention declared to be to provide remedy touching the Statutes of Provisions for eschewing debate between the Pope and the King and his Realms And then we find leave given to the King from time to time to dispense with those Laws and that but for a time and this declar'd to be a Novelty Vid. Cotton's Abridgment pag. 341. 346. Annis 15. 16. Rich. 2. And the Complaints of the English Nation in Matth. Paris against the Pope's Provisions were grounded upon this VIZ. That Patroni Ecclesiarum ad eas cum Vacaverint Clericos idoneos praesentare non poterant sed conferebantur Ecclesiae Romanis qui penitùs Idioma Regni ignorabant pecuniam extra Regnum asportabant These Oppressions fell chiefly upon the Clergy as appears by most of the Laws against Provisions of which hereafter for the Pope assum'd a greater Power over them and Churches of which they were Patrons then he could pretend to over the Laity and they sometimes comply'd with his Provisions and submitted to collate Italians and Foreigners as at other times they did to heavy Exactions insomuch that in the year 1240. misit Dominus Papa praecepta sua Domino Cantuariensi Archiepiscopo Edmundo Sarisberiensi Lincolniensi Episcopis ut trecentis Romanis in primis beneficiis Vacantibus providerent scientes se suspensos à beneficiorum Collatione donec tot competenter providerentur Matth. Paris pag. 532. And it appears by the same Author that these and more were provided of Ecclesiastical Benefices in England Praebendas Ecclesias varios redditus opimos plusquam trecentos ad suam vel Papae contulerat legatus Otto voluntatem id p. 549. But many grievous Complaints and Petitions in Parliaments and in Letters to the Pope occur in Mr. Prynne's Historical Collections and in the Parliament Rolls against these Provisions as intolerable Grievances and contrary to all Law and Reason If at some times they were comply'd with upon condition that the Persons recommended by the Pope were of good condition and worthy of Promotion how does that relate to its being in the King's power even to admit the persons to the Dignity and Office as the Doctor ignorantly and childishly asserts But his conclusion VIZ. That the Exercise of their Government was according to the King's Laws I do not Quarrel with him about for it was or ought to have been so But not according to the King's Pleasure Nor would any unbyassed Man in Reading King Alfred's Laws have readily made such an Inference as the Doctor does pag. 155 156 telling us out of L. l. Alvredi that King Alfred reserved to himself the liberty even of Dispensing with the Marriage of Nuns Which he would represent as a thing prohibited by the Canons only and that the King reserved to himself a Power of Dispensing with it though without his Especial Dispensation he suffered the Canon to take place Now the Marriage of Nuns was really prohibited by a Law of the State by an Act of Parliament of that Age For Brompton giving us an Account of King Alfred's Laws says thus Ego Alfredus West-Saxonum Rex ostendi haec omnibus sapientibus meis dixerunt Placet ea Custodire And many Temporal Laws are amongst them all Enacted by the same Authority And the same Law or Canon that prohibits Nuns from Marrying gives the King and not only him but the Bishop of the Diocess leave to Dispense so that the Doctor might as well have argu'd for the Bishops as the Kings reserving a Power to himself of Dispensing The Words are Si quis Sanctimonialem ab Ecclesiâ abduxerit sine Licentia Regis vel Episcopi c. Then he says That our Kings Presided sometimes
them not warrantable by the Laws and Statutes of the Realm Now what use the Doctor can make of this Particular viz. of the King 's prohibiting the Clergy from Oppressing his Lay-Subjects contrary to Law I cannot discover Sir Roger's eighteenth and last particular is an observation in Matth. Paris where the Ecclesiasticks having enumerated several cases in which they held themselves hardly dealt with add That in all of them if the Spiritual Judge proceeded contrary to the King's prohibition he was attached and appearing before the Justices constrained to produce his proceedings that they might determine to which Court the Cause belonged By which says he it is manifest how the King's Courts had the superintendency over the Ecclesiastick This makes nothing for any Extrajudicial Personal Arbitrary power in the King in the Ecclesiastical matters and is so far from impugning that it corroborates my hypothesis That the Temporal and Ecclesiastical Courts often quarrel'd about their Jurisdiction and that the Clergy sometimes made and attempted to put in execution Canons directly contrary to the Laws of the Realm thereby endeavouring to usurp and encroach upon many matters which apparently belonged to the Common Laws as the tryal of Limits and Bounds of Parishes the Right of Patronage the tryal of right of Tythes by Indicavit Writs to the Bishop upon a recovery in a Quare impedit the tryal of Titles to Church-Lands concerning Distresses and Attachments within their own Fees and many other things which belonged to the King 's Temporal Courts That the Temporal Courts granted Prohibitions in these and other like cases that the Clergy hereupon complain'd not to the King but to the Parliament Ann. 51 H. 3. twice during the Reign of Edw. 1. and afterwards nono Edw. 2. may be read at large in the Lord Coke's second Institutes 599 600 601 c. So that the King determined to which Court Causes belonged either in his Courts of Ordinary Justice or if the Clergy remain'd unsatisfied with the Opinions of the Judges in his High Court of Parliament and no otherwise But we need not wonder that such a Prelate as Arch bishop Bancroft whose Divinity had taught him that the King may take what causes he shall please to determine from the determination of the Judges and determine them himself and that such Authority belonged to Kings by the Word of God in the Scripture we need not wonder I say to find him in King James the First 's time Exhibiting Articles of Abuses in granting Prohibitions against the Judges to the Lords of the Privy Council As if the Lords of the Privy Council had any Authority to direct the Judges in their administration of Justice or to set bounds to the Jurisdiction of any Court. Vid. 2 Inst 601 602 c. 12 Co. p. 63 64 65. By what has been said I hope it appears sufficiently that the Ancient Jurisdiction of our Kings in Ecclesiastical matters was such a Jurisdiction and no other than they had in Temporal matters viz. in their Great Councels and in their Ordinary Courts of Justice And that not only our Mercenary Doctor but more learned and wiser men than he have unwarily confounded that Jurisdiction with a Fiction of their own brains by which they have ascribed to the King a Personal Supremacy without any warrant from Antiquity Law or History Witness these loose Expressions in Sir Roger Twiden's Historical Vindication c. It cannot be denyed but the necessity of being in union with the true Pope at least in time of schism did wholly depend on the King pag. 2. The English have ever esteemed the Church of Canterbury in Spirituals that is quae sui sunt ordinis without any intervening Superior omnium nostrum mater comunis sub sponsi sui Jesu Christi dispositione in other things as points of Government the Ordering that of Right and Custom ever to have belonged to the King assisted with his Councel of Bishops and others of the Clergy who was therefore called Vicarius Christi c. pag. 21. The King and the Arch bishop or rather the Arch-bishop by the King's will and appointment had ever taken cognizance of all matters of Episcopacy as the Erection of Bishopricks disposing and translating of Bishops c. p. 24. and innumerable others But to go on with Dr. Johnston and draw to a conclusion he acknowledges pag. 157 that he does not find that by immediate Commission the Kings of England Visited before King Henry the Eighth's time And if no such thing can be found then what authority can our Kings now have to exercise such a Jurisdiction unless by vertue of some Act of Parliament made in or since his time But says he we have sufficient grounds to judge that whatever was done was by the King's Power and Authority which is a wild extravagant ignorant expression and hardly common sense And therefore says he Sir Edward Coke in Cawdrie's case Lays it down for a Rule That as in Temporal Causes the King by the Mouth of the Judges in the Courts of Justice doth judge and determine the same by the Temporal Laws of England so in causes Ecclesiastical and spiritual by his Ecclesiastical Judges according to the Ecclesiastical Laws of the Realm and that so many of the Ecclesiastical Laws as were proed approved and allowed here by and with general consent are aptly and rightly called the King's Ecclesiastical Laws and whosoever denyeth this denyeth the King to have full and plenary power to deliver Justice in all cases to all his Subjects c. pag. 157. which that he has he proves by the Preamble of stat 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. And what then May the King therefore erect New Courts directly contrary to positive Laws Command things arbitrarily upon pain of suspension deprivation c. and Command things contrary to Law by vertue of his Ecclesiastical Laws The Doctor concludes this Section with the Act of 26 Hen. 8. cap. 1. commonly called the Act of Supremacy which now stands Repealed And with 1 Eliz. by which he says all the Powers given by the Act of 26 H. 8. are restored to the Crown under the name of Supreme Governour But the former Discourse was designed to be brought down no lower then to the end of King Henry the Eighth's Reign And therefore I shall say nothing in this place of the Act of 1 Eliz. but perhaps I may have occasion to shew hereafter that the Doctor understands the Act of 1 Eliz. as little as any thing else that he pretends to write upon FINIS
That the King desired only dignitates Regibus ante debitas sibi exhiberi Hoved. pag. 292. b. And in another Letter to the Pope on the King's behalf they declare the same ibid. pag. 292 293. Our Archbishops indeed used to fetch their Palls from Rome but that Entitled the Pope to no Jurisdiction here So that the Subject Matters of the Laws of Clarendon then Enacted into Statute-Laws were in King William Rufus his Time the Laws and Vsages of the Realm and therefore Anselm's and Becket's Oaths were in Substance the same And those Laws and Vsages having been usurp'd upon since and the Usurpation purged by the Laws made about the time of the Reformation the Oath of Supremacy is now the same in Substance with those Ancient Oaths aforementioned Not but that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in some of its Branches may now be settled in another course of Administration than it was so long ago But those Alterations which yet are not very considerable have been made by Acts of Parliament by which if Men had been content to stand or fall many Notions that are now too rise amongst us would never have been hatched The Writ from R. de Glanville to the Abbot of Battle mentioned by the Doctor pag. 148. whereby he Commands him on the King's behalf by the Faith which he owed him not to proceed in the Cause that was depending betwixt the Monks of Canterbury and the Archbishop donec indè mecum fueris locutus was no other than a Probibition to him to proceed in a Cause depending before him and the Abbots of Feversham and St. Augustine as Judges appointed by the Pope to hear and determine it They had cited the Archbishop to appear before them they had sent him Comminatoriam Epistolam eique diem peremptorium praefixerant They had no Legal Authority to Exercise Jurisdiction within the Realm for the Pope could give them none And therefore the Chief Justice prohibits them in the King's Name The Writ may be Read in Chron. Gervas Coll. pag. 1503. from whence the Doctor Quotes the Story Though he relates it Knavishly enough We find a Writ saith he to the Abbot of Battle c. wherein he Commands him on the part of the King by the Faith which he owes him and by the Oath which he made to him to do what he then enjoyned Never telling us that the thing enjoyn'd was the keeping of his Oath and observing the Law and that the Method observed by the King in sending him this Injunction was according to the Ordinary course of Justice and of proceedings at Law in the like Cases But the Doctor would raise a little Dust by this and a few other such pitiful Scraps to amuse his Readers and create an Opinion that the King may enjoyn any thing As to the Legantine Power he says pag. 148. It is apparent by several Instances that none Exercised any here without the King's leave whether by the Grant of Pope Nicholas to Edward the Confessor he disputes not But the Doctor takes for granted that with the King's leave a a Legate might be sent and Exercise his Office here Though what he Quotes for it out of Eadmerus pag. 125 126. concerning what passed betwixt King Henry the First and Pope Calixtus at Gisors makes nothing for his purpose Rex à Papa impetravit ut omnes Consuetudines quas Pater suus in Angliâ habuerat in Normanniâ sibi concederet maximè ut neminem aliquando legati Officio in Angliâ fungi permitteret si non ipse aliquâ praecipuâ querelâ exigente quae ab Archiepiscopo Cantuariorum caeterisque Episcopis Regni terminari non posset hoc fieri à Papâ postularet The coming in of a Legate at the King's Request to determine some great and difficult Controversie in particular which could not be decided by all the Bishops of England is one thing and the coming in of a Legate with a General Power to Exercise Jurisdiction over all the King's Subjects and to hold a Legantine Court is a quite other thing The Doctor says pag. 151. that Anno Domini 1138 Tertio Regis Stephan Albert or Alberic Cardinal of Hostia was the Pope's Legate and Consecrated Theobald Archbishop of Canterbury and called the Clergy to a Colloquium by Apostolical Authority by which it appears says he That the Canons of the Church now obtained and the King Assented to the Powers the Legate had so that what was Decreed had the King's Allowance It seems provided what was Decreed had the King's Allowance all was well and there needed no more But Gerv. Dorobern Coll. pag. 1344. tells us that Praedictus Albericus Apostolicâ Legatione functus venit in Angliam Domini Papae litteras ad Regem deferens lectis itaque litteris coram Rege Primoribus Angliae licèt non in primis vix tandèm pro Reverentiâ Domini Papae susceptus est So that this Legate was admitted by the Consent of the Primores Angliae as well as of the King. And consequently his Exercising his Office here with such Assent as aforesaid is no Argument that the King 's Personal Assent to his Powers without the Concurrence of his Primores would have made them ever a whit the better And when this Legate Celebrated his Synod at Westminster there were present Episcopi diversarum Provinciarum Numero XVII Abbates ferè XXX Cleri Populi Multitudo Numerosa See Spelman's Councils Volume the Second pag. 39. and Gerv. Dorobern Collect. pag. 1347. So that as the Assent of the Primores was had to his Entry so the Multitudo Numerosa Cleri Populi Assented to the Canons then made And the King 's single Assent to either would not have been sufficient Besides this I shall take leave to oppose the Judgement and Opinion of King Henry the First to that of the Doctor concerning the King's having or not having Authority to Admit a Legate hither from Rome When in his Reign Petrus Monachus Cluniacensis came hither from Pope Calixtus with a Legantine Power perductus ad Regem dignè ab eo susceptus est Et expositâ sui adventûs causâ Rex obtensâ expeditione in quâ tunc erat nam super Walenses eâ tempestate exercitum duxerat dixit se tanto negotio operam tunc quidem dare non posse cum Legationis illius stabilem Authoritatem non nisi per conniventiam Episcoporum Abbatum Procerum ac totius Regni Conventum roborari posse constaret Eadmer Lib. 6. pag. 137 138. He tells it him as a known Truth constaret that his Legacy could not be of any validity in this Nation without the Consent of the whole Kingdom in Parliament Which by reason of his Wars with the Welsh he was not then at leisure to call The Words following are Remarkable VIZ. Super haec patrias Consuetudines ab Apostolicâ sede sibi concessas nunquam se aequanimiter amissurum fore testabatur in quibus haec