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B20451 Justice vindicated from the false fucus [i.e. focus] put upon it, by [brace] Thomas White gent., Mr. Thomas Hobbs, and Hugo Grotius as also elements of power & subjection, wherein is demonstrated the cause of all humane, Christian, and legal society : and as a previous introduction to these, is shewed, the method by which men must necessarily attain arts & sciences / by Roger Coke.; Reports. Part 10. French Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1660 (1660) Wing C4979 450,561 399

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accounted Abrahams faith St. James 2. 23. That he would have offered up Isaac though by the law of nature Abraham should have preserved his sonne and so God ceased the motion of the Sun and Moon upon Joshua's prayer Jos 10. 12. And caused the same to go retrogade ten degrees upon the prayer of Hezekias and Isaiah 2 Kings 20. 11. It is true that nothing less then that power which made a Law can alter it the Laws therefore of God whether positive or natural have an eternal and immutable obligation upon all the men in the world but whatsoever power may make a Law that power may alter it Divine Laws therefore whether positive or natural cannot have any obligation upon God but he may alter them when he pleases CHAP. VI. The Obligation of Divine and Humane Laws upon the Consciences and Persons of Men. 1. COnscience comes of con and scio to know together with reason Conscience or some law Conscientia est animi quaedam ratio lex quâ de recte factis secus admonemur Conscience is a certain reason or law of the Mind whereby we are well or ill advised of our deeds The laws therefore of Man may not only be violated by doing contrary to them but by consenting to them As he which does contrary to that he thinks though the doing of the thing be just yet 't is unjustly done by him for whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14. 23. 2. The affirmative precepts of God they do semper obligare yet they The obligation of the laws of God do not oblige ad semper As when he commands us to pray continually it is not to be expected a man should be always in the act of prayer but so to live as he does nothing which may indispose him from praying But Gods negative precepts do not only always oblige but oblige ad semper too for there is no time at all wherein it is lawful for a man to kill to steal to commit adultery c. Deut. 5. 17 18 19 20 21. negative in all instances 3. Ecclesiastical laws do oblige in Conscience If thy brother shall neglect Ecclesiastical laws oblige in conscience to hear thee tell it to the Church but if he neglect to hear the Church let him be to thee as a heathen man or Publican Mat. 18. 17. And the Scribes and Pharises sit in Moses chair all therefore whatsoever they bid you observe and do but do not after their works for they say and do not Mat. 23. 2 3. If then by the law of our Saviour the Jews were to observe and do whatsoever the Scribes and Pharises commanded them because they sate in Moses seat sure with as much or much more reason ought Christians to observe and do whatsoever the Church which our Saviour Christ himself hath planted doth command them 4. My kingdom is not of this world Joh. 18. 36. God sent not his Son In conscience only into the world to judge the world but that by him he might save the world Joh. 3. 17. And O man who has made me a Judge or divider amongst you If then our Saviours kingdom were not of this world if God sent not his Son to judge the world and if our Saviour were not a Judge among men then cannot the Church of Christ have any power from Christ in the kingdoms of the world nor to judge the world nor to be a Judge or divider among men 5. Ecclesiastical laws according to the usage and custom of England To what things Ecclesiastical laws have reference relate to Blasphemy Apostacie from Christianity Heresies Schisms Holy Orders Admissions Institution of Clerks Celebration of Divine Service Rights of Matrimony Divorces general Bastardy Subtraction and Right of Tythes Oblations Obventions Dilapidations Excommunication Reparation of Churches Probate of Testaments Administrations and Accounts upon the same Simony Incests Fornications Adulteries Sollicitation of Chastity Pensions Procurations Appeals in Ecclesiastical cases Commutation of Penance which are determined by Ecclesiastical Judges 6. So that there is a mixt Conusance in the Ecclesiastical Judicature All things determinable by Ecclesiastical Judges are not meerly spiritual viz. of things meerly Spiritual by which they are impowered to judge and take conusance of and that by no humane power but only as they are impowered and sent by our Saviour and are only his Ministers viz. the taking conusance of Blasphemy Excommunication Heresie Holy Orders Celebration of Divine Service c. And this Ghostly power the Church and Ecclesiastical persons had before ever Temporal powers received the Gospel of Christ or were converted to Christianity And also after it pleased God that Nations and Kingdoms were converted to Christianity and that Kings did become nursing fathers and Queens nursing mothers Isa 49. 23. to Gods Church then did Kings cherish and defend Gods Church and endued it with many Priviledges and Immunities which ere while was persecuted by them or other Powers but yet could not these Immunities or Priviledges divest them of that Ghostly power which our Saviour by divine institution gave his Church It is true no question but that originally not only all Bishopricks and their bounds and the division of all Parishes and the conusance the Church hath of Tythes of Probate of Wills of granting of Letters of Administration and Accounts upon the same the right of Institution and Induction and the erection of all Ecclesiastical Courts c. were all originally of the Kings foundation and donation and that to him only by all divine and humane laws belongs the care and preservation of all his Subjects none excepted in all causes And therefore not only all those things which relate to the extern peace and quiet of the Church although exercised by Ecclesiastical persons but all those priviledges and immunities which the Church or Churchmen have in a Church planted which the Primitive Christians and Apostles had not in the persecution of the Church when planting are originally Grants of Kings and Supreme Powers and so Temporal or Secular Laws but in regard they accidentally have reference to the Church and are exercised by Ecclesiastical persons they are not improperly called the Kings Ecclesiastical Laws And sure either ignorance of this or faction hath made men run into two contrary extremes one That Kings have no right to their Crowns but in ordine ad bonum spirituale and so cannot be Kings or That all power and jurisdiction in all causes is from the King and so cannot there be any such thing as Christian faith Religion or any Ghostly power left by our Saviour with his Church to continue to the end of the world which every Christian man de fide ought to believe and submit to before any Temporal Law or Power in the world Object But beeause Ecclesiastical laws have not infallibility affixed to them if they command any thing repugnant to Divine laws do they then oblige Answer No for God
sing the 50. Psalm for the King and for all that will as he willeth and for all other who deserve well of him If a man accuse another of any crime let him make him recompence unless he did it upon * * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Procession-days and if he do so afterward let it be as before it was Ecclesiastical Laws made by King Edmund Who began to reign in the Year 940. EDmund the King in the Solemn Feast of Easter gathered to London a great company as well of Ecclesiasticks as of the People There was Oda and Wulstan Archbishops and many other Bishops that they might as well take care for the health of their own souls as for the souls of them committed to their charge Of the Man who hath vowed Chastity Cap. 1 First they who are entred into Religion and who should give Gods people an example of virtue to imitate according to their Order be they Men or Women let them live chaste But if they shall not do it then let the Canon punish them that is let them forfeit all they have in the world and if they mend not their manners not be buried in the Sanctuary Of Tythes and Church-scot Every Christian which shall not pay his Tythes his First-fruits and his Alms let him be accursed Of him who shall defloure a Nun or commit Adultery If a man shall carnally know a Nun let him be as if he had killed a man or be denied Burial in the Sanctuary and let the same Law be to him who commits Adultery Of Re-edifying the Church We will that every Bishop at his own costs shall repair the House of God and also minde the King that all Gods Houses be well adorned which thing is very behooful Of men Perjured and worshiping Heathen Gods They who are Perjured and offer Heathenish sacrifice shall be for ever shut out from things pertaining to God unless they soon repent and mend their manners Ecclesiastical Laws made by King Eadgar Who began to reign in the year of our Lord 959. THe Laws which Eadgar the King in a great Assembly ordained to the glory of God the ornament of himself and the profit of all his Nation First let the Church of God enjoy all its rights and immunities and let every man pay his Tythes to each Church to which he is subject whether it be of Plow-land or Inland of men of free condition or lands of Villains Of Church-tribute If a man of free condition hath a Church upon his freehold which hath a place of Burial belonging to it let him bestow one third part of his Tithes upon the Church but if there be no place of Burial about the Church let the Lord of the ground give to the Priest of the nine parts what he will And let the Church-tribute of every Church be paid out of the lands of all Freemen Of Tithes And let every one pay tithes of young living creatures before Pentecost and the tithes of the fruits of the earth before the * * Sure it is meant the Autumnal Equinox for no tithes can be renewed before the Vernal Equinox and Church-tribute at the feast of S. Martin If any one shall not pay let him incur the punishment expressed in the Doom-book And if any one shall not pay his tithes as we have set down then may the Kings Sheriff and the Bishop and the Mass-priest of the Church meet and take the tenth part due to the Church and return the ninth part back again to him without thanks as to the other eight parts let the Lord have one half the Bishop the other Let this be though he be the Kings man or of free condition Of the Hearth-penny And let the Hearth-penny be paid before the Feast of S. Peter and if it then be not paid let him carry that penny and thirty pence more to Rome and confirm by a certain Certificate in writing that he did detain it and let him pay over and above one hundred and twenty shillings to the King If afterward a man shall not pay it and carry the penny and thirty pence to Rome he shall pay two hundred shillings to the King but if he shall make default the third time he shall forfeit all he hath Of Festival and Fasting-days Let every Sunday be held a Feasting-day from noontide of Saturday until the twilight of Munday he which will not celebrate it let him undergo the penalty in the Judgment-book and other Feast-days shall be bidden and let all Fasting-days be held with all godliness Canons set forth under King Edgar THese things which follow belong to the Constitutions of King Edgar concerning the Manner of Life of Men ordained to Gods service 1. We teach that the Minister of God do zealously serve and minister to God and intercede to God for all Christian people and that every one of them be faithful and obedient to their Superiors and unanimous in common necessity affording help to one another before God and men and that they be firm and faithful to their Secular Lords 2. And we teach that every one give another honor and that the younger do religiously pay love and obedience to the elder and that the elder do diligently instruct the younger 3. And we teach that at every Synod every year be had Books and Vestiments agreeable to the service of God and Ink and Parchment to write their Constitutions and moreover a Three-days assembly 4. And we teach that every Priest coming to the Synod have his Clerk and man fed at his hand or faithful in service and none unknown or given to folly and let them all come together in the faith and love of God almighty 5. We also teach that if any ill happen to a Priest or any one do him wrong it be referred to the Synod and let all take it as offered to them all and bring help that reparation may be made according to the will of the Bishop 6. And we teach that the Priest make known to the Synod if any in his Parish be found contumacious against God or who does nourish any grievous sin and that he is not able or dares not produce him to amendment for fear of the world 7. And we teach that among Priests there be no strifes and wrangling nor let them be deferred to the Secular power but let them be composed among themselves or if need be put off to the Bishop 8. And we teach no Priest whether consecrate at Benedict shall forsake his Church at his own will but have it for his rightful wife 9. We also teach that no Priest meddle with those things which belong to another Priest whether in his Church or Parish or acquaintance or fraternity nor in any other thing belonging to him 10. And we teach that no Priest take away the Scholar of another not having first asked leave of him to whom he belonged 11. And we teach that every Priest diligently learn to increase the learning
in derogation to Christian Faith or Religion they might plead Conscience because the Obedience they owe thereunto is superior to all Humane Laws But when as God is to be publickly Worshipped and your Majesty obeyed by the light of Humane Nature whenas he that heareth and obeyeth not the Church is to be accounted an Infidel and Heathen man and neither your Majesty nor Church enjoyning any thing contrary to the Law of Nature or Gods Will revealed in Scriptures but conformable to these for men your natural Subjects and Born and Baptized in a Christian Church in contradiction to all these to plead Liberty of Conscience to be Atheists Hypocrites and Schismaticks is such a monstrous Paradox as is not imaginable should proceed from reasonable creatures not aiming at some further mischief And when your Majesty shall with bleeding tears reflect upon the manners of these men thus pretending Liberty of Conscience you will finde them never to have made any conscience of Liberty their Manners no whit better then their Religion but as great enemies to Humane Society as Christian Religion For they no sooner upon pretence of Liberty of Conscience got licence of action but what followed Rapine Plunder Sequestration Sacriledge Regicidism and Murder upon the Estates of the Church Crown and the Sacred Person of your Royal Father and the principal members of Church and State who were your best and most Loyal and their Fellow-Subjects when as by the Law or Light of Nature no man ought to do that willingly to another which he would not have done to himself Nor is this humor only Topical or confined within the limits of your Dominion but wheresoever men would not pay the Duty they ought to God in the first Table they have never better perform'd that to their neighbor in the second although it hath not pleased God to permit them to attain such a degree of Impiety as here in your Majesties Dominions and your Majesty may believe it that the times are changed not these mens manners and dispositions to attempt the like again whensoever they get an opportunity however these things at present will be better cured by your Majesties Christian Patience and example then by your severe Execution of the established Laws against them yet if the Laborer be worthy of his Hire then is he who is Hired worthy to Labor and these men who pretending Conscience neglect or refuse to perform the Duties of the Church are utterly unworthy the Means of the Church Mans necessity is Gods oportunity It is Gods usual way in his Providence doubtless to manifest the greatness of his Power to us Mortals here below when mens extremities are at the highest then to relieve them having it may be the least reasons or hope to expect it and indeed what less then the power and grace of God in a Christian Prince so Religious so Just so Merciful and so descended at such a time could have cured the wide wounds of our miserable Church and distracted State D'avila reports of Coligny the Admiral of France that he would usually prefer himself before Caesar or Alexander because they acquired greatness by prosperous Fortune whereas notwithstanding that Fortune was always adverse to him he still rose more formidable and terrible to his adversaries Sure it is an admirable thing that after all the adversity of your Affairs God should without force or blood exalt your Sacred Head above the Storms and Waves of such Enemies who had neither Religion Law Justice or Reason but only force and blood in stead of and against these to maintain their Cause It cannot but be a consolation to any man in adversity rightly considering how God in the ordinary nature of things does afflict men who place happiness in things of this world and reward the afflictions of men especially who suffer for a good Conscience even in this world for no man placeing happiness in things here below can so enjoy them but necessarily a time will come when he shall say I take no pleasure in them and then it will be miserum fuisse beatum whereas other men who are afflicted and suffer persecution are no ways affrighted at the terrors of death but rather with joy expect happiness in another world after they shall be freed from the cares and troubles of this or if it pleases God to free them from their afflictions here then they truly convert miserum fuisse beatum into beatum fuisse miserum Besides your Majesties individual happiness in making so right construction of your precedent affections and the advantages you have acquired by your severe education therein your Subjects like men who have been long sick will better learn to esteem health from their many sufferings in your absence will for the future learn to set a truer estimation upon your Prosperity and Presence And may the God of Peace the God of Mercy and the God of Justice so Crown the antecedent adverse fortune of You Sir the most Peaceable the most Merciful Just and best of Princes that being as Good and Just as Trajan and as Devout and Religious as Constantine the Great or Theodosius the first you may be of your Subjects as beloved as was Augustus and the Arbitrator of Christendom as well as Defender of the Christian Faith And when this your Diadem shall descend to your next Heir you may then assume a Celestial one which shall never be subject to time variation or chance Which is and always shall be the daily Payer of SIR Your most Devoted and most Obedient Subject ROGER COKE OBSERVATIONS UPON Mr THO WHITE 's GROUNDS OF Obedience Government Mr HOBBS his BOOK De Cive AND UPON HVGO GROTIVS De Jure Belli Pacis Prematur nunquam Opprimitur veritas Nulla res magis operae pretium est sive ad utilitatem fructuosior sive ad animi voluptatem jucundior esse potest quàm Justitia quâ quidem post Deum Immortalem rerum omnium Publicarum Fundamenta nituntur Corruptio verò optimi est pessima By ROGER COKE LONDON Printed by T. N. for G. Bedel and T. Collins at the Middle-Temple Gate 1660. TO THE READER I Have often with great admiration considered in my self how that all men good and bad rich and poor noble and ignoble have with one voice commended Virtue and decried Vice and yet scarce any man in a thousand hath made Virtue the rule or reason of his actions Nor is it a thing less worth admiration to consider how that all men generally have not only a natural spight against their Superiors and are unwilling to obey them but also a propense desire to attain to Liberty and do tread under foot all things which may be called sacred to the attaining thereof and yet at no time or place in the world did ever men accomplish it I did therefore conclude with my self that not only all Moral Virtue but Humane Society did proceed from higher then any humane or voluntary causes
ought to be obeyed before Man nay if any man in his conscience believes that they do repugn Gods law whereas they do not in that thing he ought not to submit to them But let that man have a care that he have not the spirit of pride in him which he pretends to be Conscience for an evil Conscience shall never justifie any man for his disobedience nor shall ever any mans hating of Idols excuse his committing of Sacrilege And let no man hope that his fancying some errors in a Church does give him a liberty of putting himself out of the communion and society of the Church and setting up of himself in stead of it No Christian man can hope for salvation but as he is a Member of Christs Church nor ought any Christian man to hope that any Heathen man can be saved in the ordinary way of salvation For there is no name under heaven by which a man can be saved but only by the name of Jesus And He that obeys not the Church is to be accounted as a Heathen man S. Mat. 18. 17. 7. Temporal or Secular laws oblige not only in Conscience but also The obligation of temporal Laws to temporal punishments That they inflict temporal punishments is evident every where in the world as well for spiritual as temporal crimes Thus did Phineas turn away Gods wrath from the children of Israel Numb 25. 11. So did Joshuah for Achans sacrilege that is stealing or converting to common or prophane uses what is dedicated and offered up to God attone and pacify Gods wrath by stoning Achan to death Jos 7. So did Solomon put Shimei to death by Davids will because he cursed Gods Anointed and his Soveraign which was a spiritual crime And God commands the temporal powers not to suffer a Witch to live and Witch-craft is a spiritual crime And that temporal laws do oblige aswell in conscience as inflict corporal pecumary mulcts is evident Rom. 13. 5. Wherefore ye must needs be subject not only for wrath but also for conscience sake And the subjection that the Apostle there speaks of is to temporal powers Object But God has ordained temporal powers for the preservation of peace what if they command things which do not conduce to the preservation of peace among men ought they to be obeyed by them who are in subjection to them or not Answ I answer The question is absurd for the temporal commands or laws cannot hinder peace among men but the disobedience to them is that which hinders peace among men Charity is the chiefect Theological Virtue and preferred before Faith or Hope Charity beleeveth all things 1 Cor. 13. And how can I be a Charitable man and not beleeve that supreme powers assisted by the best qualified men who make it their whole employment see and understand more that such a law is for the good and peace of the governed then I who am not versed in those things nor dounderstand from what reasons and grounds this thing became a law But who is he that disputes his obedience and speaks evil of dignities No man that is a private man that judges another but condemns himself Ro. 2. 1. And speak not evil one of another he that speaketh evil of his brother and judgeth his brother speaketh evil of the law and judgeth the law but if thou judge the law thou art not a doer of the law but a judge Jam 4. 11. 8. Temporal Laws oblige the Conscience when they command nothing When Temporal Laws oblige the Conscience contrary to the Law of God nor his Church when they command any thing contrary to the Law of God and impose a penalty for not observance Men must submit to the penalty but obey God For whoso loses his life for my sake and the gospels shall find it St. Mar. 8. 35. 9. Temporal Laws oblige not in Conscience when they command Ecclesiastical Laws oblige in Conscience before Temporal contrary to Ecclesiastical for spiritual peace is to be preferred before worldly the good of the soule before that of the body First seek the kingdome of heaven and the righteousness thereof St. Mat. 6 33. CHAP. VII Of Promises Contracts c. 1. A Promise is the giving of a Mans Faith unto another that he will A Promise do or give or not do or give such a thing fidem do me daturum vel prestiturum aut non or dabo or faciam or non dabo or faciam is a promise and to the performance of his promise is every Man obliged by the Law of Nature But when the Declaration of my will does not evade into Faith given my Annot. will being free continues free after such declaration as well as before As if I say volo dare vel facere I will or intend to do or give such a thing yet when I will I may will to do such a thing and therefore if a Man make twenty Wills yet when be will he may unwill them all So if a Man upon things appearing reasonable does will to give or do any thing yet if upon discourse or reasoning it shall appear that the giving or doing such a thing will not have such an event as he proposed he may choose whether he will give or do that thing nay if he be convinced that the doing of such an act will not have such an effect as he proposed and shall notwithstanding do it this is the act of a wilful and not a prudent Man 2. A Vow is when one plights his Faith to God that he will give A Vow to God or a Creature such a thing All Promises and Vowes are either made by words in the future tense as dabo or faciam or by words in the present tense as fidem do but then the habendum prestandum or faciendum is alwaies in the futuretense as fidem do me daturum vel facturum 3. A Contract or Pact is the conditional act of two or more mutually A Contract or Pact promising one another to give one another something in exchange or when two or more mutually promise one another that if one will do or give such a thing that then the other will do or give such a thing upon the doing or giving of one part the other is by Law obliged to performe his promise or upon the giving or receiving any part of what is contracted for both parties are obliged to performe their contract As if I contract with another to give him ten pounds for a horse and give him six pence or more or less this being an outward express sign of the contract both parties are obliged the one to pay the residue of the mony and the other to deliver the horse or upon the payment or delivery of the horse by one party the Law obligeth the other to the performance of his promise So if I promise another to give him five shillings c. to do such a thing for my self or for
contradicting it converted the world to Christianity And although our Saviour gave power to all his Disciples to preach the Gospel yet only to the Apostles He expounded the Scriptures beginning at Moses And it was Luk. 24. 27. the Apostles understandings which he opened that they might understand the Scriptures And the spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets ver 45. Our Saviour therefore having promised the continuance of all ghostly power in his Church and having given the power of the interpretation of the Scriptures that is those Scriptures which concern him immediately only to his Apostles the authority of the interpretation of the Scriptures is continued only in their successors the Bishops As my Father sent me so send I you S. Joh. 20. 21. 17. Our Saviour being the Head of the Catholique Church therefore To whom the right of making Ecclesiastical laws belongs all the body of the Church cannot make one Article de fide and Whoso shall go about to adde or diminish from the prophesie of the book of life God shall plague him and take away his part from the book of life Rev. 22. 18 19. Yet where he gives command to his Church to do any thing but gives it no direction how it should be done as Let all things be done decently and in order 1 Cor. 14. 40. there he gives the Church a power to make laws for the execution of his command for decencie and order must presuppose laws and directions and where there are no laws there things must necessarily be done indecently and disorderly It therefore belongs to the magisterial or governing part of the Church that is the Bishops to make laws for the decencie and order of the Publique service of God Consecration Sacraments things offered up to God and Rites of Marriage 18. It was only to Timothy as Bishop of the Ephesians that S. Paul To whom the composing of Publique Liturgies belongs 1 Tim. cap. 2. exhorts that first of all prayers supplications intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men Therefore to Bishops it only belongs And S. Ambrose his Liturgy is continued in Milan to this day if no alteration were since the Council of Trent 19. The next Order in the Church of Christ to Apostles and Bishops Of Priests and their function is that of Presbytery or Priesthood as S. Paul says 1 Cor. 12. 28. God hath set some in the Church first Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly Teachers The Sacerdotal or Priestly power in most things is the same with Episcopal or Pontificial as both of them have power to consecrate the Sacrament of our Lords Supper and give it to the Laity both of them have power of Absolution and Remission of the sins of believing and repenting sinners both have power of Benediction of offering up the service of the Church both of them have power to preach the Gospel that is preach what our Saviour the Apostles and Evangelists taught and what Interpretation the Church hath made both have power of publique baptizing Infants both have power of visitation of the Sick celebrating Marriage and pronouncing man and wife But Ordination Confirmation Excommunication Interpretation of Scriptures And therefore if any Priest preaches any other Interpretation of the Scriptures than what the received Interpretation of the Fathers of the Eastern and Western Churches have made and the Councils of the first 400 years after our Saviour which Interpretation is received and acknowledged by the Bishops of the Church of England the Bishops by the testimony of two or three witnesses may judge him Visiting Parochial Congregations composing Publique Forms of Prayers Consecration of Churches and things offered up to God belong only to Bishops 20. Deacons are almost in the same proportion to Priests as Priests Of Deacons and their function are to Bishops Deacons may preach the Gospel which is evident for the Samaritans were converted by the preaching of Philip. A Deacon is the Minister of Bishop and Priest to assist them in offering up the Publique Act. 8. 12. service of the Church in giving the Cup after them in the Sacrament in taking the offerings of the Priest in the Visitation of the sick in Publique Baptism But a Deacon cannot consecrate the Sacrament pronounce Absolution nor Benediction and these three no question are the Orders which S. Paul calls first Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly Teachers 1 Cor. 12. 28. for in all things but only preaching and baptizing a Deacon is the Minister of the Priest and Bishop 21. Ecclesia says S. Cyprian est plebs episcopo adunata or as the Church What is a Church of England hath defined it a Church is a Bishop Curates and Congregations committed to his charge Every Congregation being a Parish that is a Priest rightly instituted and inducted exercising his function and the inhabitants of that Parish conforming themselves to the rules of the Bishop Una ecclesia plures episcopos non habet plures presbyteros habet And therefore S. James says If any among you be sick let him call the elders of the Church cap. 5. 14. such was the Church of Ephesus of Smyrna Laodicea Antioch c. and such is the Church of London Rochester c. A National Church is the aggregation of several Churches in one A National Church Kingdom in the same form of Liturgy Doctrine and Publique Worship of God such are the Churches of Greece Moscovy England France c. The Catholique Church is all Christian Churches united to one Head The Catholique Church Christ Jesus 22. He that heareth not and obeyeth not the Church is to be accounted He that denies the authority of the Church denies the authority of the Scriptures S. Luk. 10. 16. as a Heathen man Matth. 18. 17. And what is a Heathen man but he which denies or believes not the Scriptures Nor is it men which men despise and set at nought in despising the Church but God and Christ himself for He that despiseth you viz. them sent by Christ despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me That Regality is a sacred order being an institution of God Gen. 49. 10. Annot. 1 and every King the Lords Anointed is in more then thirty places expressed by God himself It is therefore I conceive why the Church of Rome allows Kings the Sacrament in both kinds But how Kings as being Christian can have any ghostly power instituted by our Saviour to be only in his Church and that only by such means as he hath prescribed I do not understand For Kings as Kings are no essential part of Christs Church and therefore cannot create ghostly power And this King James confessed as you may read in Spotswoods History p. 514. And if Kings by becoming Christian have ghostly power then is the power left by our Saviour to his Church not only weakned by Kings being converted to Christianity but also divided which is
Before all things they propounded one God to be devoutly and holily worshiped and that there should be no Heathen worship c. Therefore they first decree that the peace of the Church be kept within Cap. 1 the walls holily and inviolably and also that tranquillity which is delivered into the Kings hand Furthermore if any man shall renounce the Christian faith so as by words or deeds he advance the Heathen worship he shall forfeit the price of his head or the punishment of the Law according to the offence If a man entred Religion or bound to God by promise steal or fight or forswear or commit adultery he shall forfeit the price of his head or suffer punishment for transgressing of the Law according to the nature of the crime at least he shall satisfie God according to the rules of the Church and be cast into prison if he cannot find Sureties If a Priest upon Feasting-days or Fasting-days shall go astray if it be among Englishmen let him be fined thirty shillings but if it happen among the Danes let him pay half a mark If a Mass-priest upon appointed days provide not Oil or deny Baptism as the use is among the English let him be fined and with the Danes the breach of the Law is twelve * * Quaere the value of an Oran Oran If any man of Religion commit any thing worthy of death let him be taken and held to the Bishops judgment Of Incest Furthermore it seemed good to the wise men that of men guilty of Incest the King shall have the higher and the Bishop the lower unless he shall abundantly make recompence to God and men and shall perform what is enjoined them by the Bishop If two brethren or two of the same alliance commit fornication with the same wife let them be fined the value of their head or be punished for the transgression of the Law according as is meet and as the crime deserves If a man condemned to death desires ingenuously to confess his sins to a Priest let it be granted him And let all men Gods laws so follow that they obtain Gods mercy and be acquitted of wise men If a Dane pay not his Tythes let him undergo the punishment of the breach of the Law let an Englishman be fined If a Dane withhold what is due to Rome let him be punished for the breach of the Law let an Englishman be fined If any Dane pay not to the Candles let him be punished for breach of the Law let an Englishman be fined If a Dane shall not pay the just Alms of the Plough let him be punished for breach of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law let an Englishman be fined If a Dane shall suppress or retain any Divine Laws or Duties let him be punished for breach of the Law let an Englishman be fined If any man wilfully wound another offering Divine service let him be guilty of death but if he shall die let him be outlawed and all Ministers of Justice apprehend him hurt or unwilling And if it were his fault that he was stricken or did against Gods law or resisted the King if a man so flatter himself let him be without recompence or as we say he has the means in his own hands Of working on Holidays If a Dane sell any thing upon Sunday let him forfeit the thing and twelve Ora's an Englishman thirty shillings If a Freeman do any work upon an Holiday let him forfeit his freedom or be fined and punished for breach of the Law let a Servant be beaten or be made to fear being beaten If a Dane shall make his Servant work upon a Holiday let him be punished for breach of the Law and an Englishman be fined Laws Ecclesiastical made by King Aethelstan Who began to reign in the year of our Lord 924. I Aethelstan King by the prudent counsel of Walshelmes mine Archbishop and other my Bishops command all Governors that are in my Government in the name of God and all his Saints and for their good will towards them that before all things they pay just Tythes as well out of our property as the duties of living creatures and fruits of the earth and that all Bishops Ealdermen and Sheriffs do the same thing And I will that my Bishops and Sheriffs who sit in judgment upon other men that they observe this rule and that they finish all these things upon the day we have appointed viz. the Anniversary of S. John Baptist beheaded Further when we think with our self what the most excellent Father Jacob said to God I will offer my tythes and a peace-offering to thee and what the Lord spake in the Gospel To the all-having man shall be given and he shall abound We moreover may think on those things which are so terribly written in this very book If you will not pay your tythes giving us only the tenth part the nine parts shall be taken from you Also we are admonished that Heavenly things are more excellent then Earthly and eternal things then our frail bodies Whensoever therefore ye hear what the Lord commands and what we ought to follow those things only I would have you to do which you can justly and lawfully prepare Of Church-breaking Cap. 5. Concerning the Ordal see Versteg an Seld. annal Anglo lib. 2. cap. 8. and Lamberts pref Saxon laws Cap. 23. And we command concerning Church-breaking if he be a man of the threefold * Ordal let him give satisfaction as is rehearsed in the Judgment-book Of them willing to undergo the Ordal If any man will undergo the Ordal then let him come three days before the Mass-priest hallow it and feed himself with bread and salt and water and worts before he go to Trial and let him go to Mass every day and The trial of the Ordal was either to be soused over head and ears in cold water or to thrust his hand a cubit deep into boiling hot water or to go barefoot or hold a burning hot iron in the Triers hand If they neither shak'd the rope to be pulled out of the water nor burned nor scalded their hands or feet they were acquited offer his gift and upon the day he shall undergo the Ordal let him take the Eucharist and swear that he is innocent and knows nothing of the wickedness whereof he is accused If it be of cold Water that the Question made let him be plunged over head and ears half an ell in the water but if it be of Iron let him hold it three days before he put it out of his hand And the Accuser shall proceed to follow the oath he made before and both shall fast by the command of God and the Bishop and let there be on neither side above twelve men but if the Accused comes with more then twelve men then unless they will depart let the Ordals be void And upon each Friday let every one of Gods Ministers in every Church