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A25740 An apology for a yovnger brother, or, A discovrse proving that parents may dispose of their estates to which of their children they please by I. A. J. A. (John Ap Robert) 1641 (1641) Wing A3592; ESTC R9194 34,253 68

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and seuerall Accidents yet all are agreeable to the old and ancient Grounds of Reason in Nature the Grand-Mother of all Law Wherefore hauing before specified what the Law of Nature is touching the Point in Question I shall now declare what Temper or Forme hath thereto beene added by the Civill Lawyer After that Man-kinde was inforced yet by Natures Warrant to make as I haue said a partition of the Blessings of God and Nature and that Men were possest by the same Right of Goods Lands which they desir'd to leaue to Posterity Law-makers and in particular the Civilian devised by little and little certaine Formes of Inheritance and ordination of Heires at first somewhat rigorous giving to Parents power of Life Death ouer their Children and a free disposition of all their Fortunes to any one of them in his life but dying intestate then all which was the Fathers to be equally divided among the Children as well daughters as sonnes Which Constitution was afterward vpon good grounds altered the Father being bound to leaue every child a Portiō which the Civilian cals a Legitimate Others a Patrimony which at first was the eight part of the Fathers substance equally to be divided as hath beene said which after a while seeming litle the Law commanded that the Fourth part should be left without Controll except vpon just cause the Testator did disinherite him or them who by course of Law were to succeed him stil vpholding the former Lawes that as well daughters as sonnes should equally succeed their Parents dying intestate Herein assigning fourteene causes why an Heire might lawfully be disinherited Many hundred yeares passed frō the establishing of the Civill Law before it was ordained by force of Law that Parents should leaue a Childs part as it is now called or that they could not disinherit without expressing the cause thereof in their last Will yet in all this Time nor till this present Day the Privilege of engrossing all by Primogeniture was not once heard of or at lestwise not admitted but rather excluded as by many Text in the same Law it well appeares The End of the Imperiall or Roman Civill Law being only to maintaine Morall Iustice in three short Precepts Liue honestly Hurt no Man Giue every one his owne So that hee who obserues these three fulfills this Law yea the Law of Nature whence this Law is deriued Now if any Brother can proue that his Father either in his life by Deed or by Will at his Death disposing of his Goods and Lands no otherwise then I haue declar'd doth no act against these three why should he not content himselfe either with the Fruits of his Fathers loue or his owne Deserts what ever they bee True it is that in Naturall Iustice children during their Fathers life haue Ius ad rem not Ius in re to a Fathers Goods Wherevpon the Law calleth them quasi bonorum Patris Dominos Which their Right only takes effect after their Fathers Death For during life he hath power to alter alien sell giue as it shall please him according to forme of Law but being dead without Will or disposition thereof they fall vpon his children according to the Law of Nations This Law embraceth a twofold Iustice the one in Exchange the other in Distribution The first hath not to doe with our cause The other * This warrants not the injurious Abdication of vnnatural Parents irremediable by the common Law as is also the oppression of Orphans by lewd Step-fathers and sharking Executors See D. Ridleys View republisht by a learned Student of the Royall College of Christ Church Oxon part 4. Sect. 1. 2. rather commends then condemnes a Father who vpon good Occasion that is for the bad Demerits of his Eldest Sonne and for the preservation of his Family shall giue or convey his Lands or Goods to the Younger For the Nature of distributiue Iustice is not only to giue proportionally to the well-deseruing but also to forbeare to place Benefits vpon any one who shall abuse them or vse thē to any other end then to that good for which they were lent and hee shall leaue them And this is Ius suum vnicuique tribuere For no man can giue or sell his Goods to an evill end or to any one who he assures himselfe will vse them to the Dishonour of God or the Wrong of those who shall liue with him or by him whereof I will treat more in the seventh Chapter being then to handle what a Father may in Conscience doe or not doe in our present Question with sinne without sin And thus much of the Civill and Canon Lawyers Averment of an Elder Brothers Right to his Fathers Fortunes CHAP. 5. That the present custom in our Country of giuing All or almost All to the Eldest was never so begunne that it meant to exclude iust Remedies for such Evills as should grow out of the abuse of that Custome when it may make Fathers guilty of their Sonnes faults and of their Families ruines I Haue purposely reserued to treat of the Lawes of our Country in the last place because I assure my selfe they are of most force to sway the Point in question For many things may be permitted by the Lawes of God and Nature and yet contrarily prohibited or practised by course of Law in severall States of the World as the Law-makers and Customes of Countries allow or command I confesse the generall practise of our Time among Parents is to leaue either All or most part of their Lands to their Eldest Sonne This questionlesse as hath beene said was first devised in former Ages for the preservation of a Family and to raise One who might bee a Comfort to his Brothers Sisters and Family and in whom his Progenitors Vertues might liue to the World And I wil not deny but the Partition of Lands may reduce in the end a goodly Estate to Nothing or to so litle as it may be like an Atome in the Sun yet I finde in Naturall Reason that ex nihilo nihil fit or at lest that Haud facilè emergunt quorum virtutibus obstat Res angusta domi But if Men faile of those happy Ends Cessante ratione cessat Lex to which this generall Custome should guid then could I wish that they would not vse That for their Destruction which was meant for their Preservation For who sees not in these our Times many vnbridled youths so violently carried away with the humour of spending that they neglect Brother and Sister yea bring to extreame misery their Naturall Mothers after their Fathers Death by their vnthriftinesse What help for this hath Law left vnto vs No meanes to bridle these vnruly Colts if they become Heires according to the custome of our Time No truly For some starting-hole will bee found to vnty the Knot which a Fathers care once tied How then Must many a hopefull and well-deseruing Brother and Sister bee left to
that Forme and Power of Law where such an Act should bee done And this is I presume without controll what the Law of Nature commanded touching the Matter in Question Next let vs see what the Lawes of God doe command CHAP. 3. That the breach of some written Lawes of God vpon warrant of the primary Law of Nature is without sinne that therefore there can be no such Right in Primogeniture which is not in the Fathers power to avoid though there were a precept to the contrary as there is not IF Nature being taken for the principal all-producing Cause of the whole Frame of the Vniverse with all Creatures therein being nothing else but the working Will of the Highest and first Mover as Divines Philosophers hold then surely must Natures Law bee his Will which hee cannot contradict or counter-mand except hee should bee contrary to Himselfe which he cannot For what is in God is God therefore Constant and Immutable Out of which Principle it is easily proued that if the Law of God teach that which the Law of Nature hath ordained the Right of Inheritance cannot be tied to any other person or persons then to those which the Fathers Will approues according to the Power giuen him by the Lawes of Nations where he liues Which Power deriued from Natures Law cannot erre from the Law of God For whosoever shall consider but of Gods Commandements giuen to Man shall well find that God thereby hath still seconded his former Ordinances giuen by Nature For so long as Man-kinde liued in a sort after the Innocence which Gods Grace in his first Creation had wrought in him God gaue him no other Law But when as by sinne those sparks which remained after his Fall were quite extinguished he gaue him New Lawes yet agreeable to Nature As for example in our present Affaires When Man had made by Natures privilege partition of Gods and Natures Blessings then God said to his People by the mouth of Moses Thou shalt not steal Thou shalt not covet thy Neighbours house his Wife his Ox his Asse or any thing that is his As also Thou shalt not kill Which with all other his Commandements teaching what sinne is are agreeable to the Law of Nature yet are dispensed withall as farre as the Lawes of Nature euer permitted For though that the expresse Command of God bee thou shalt not couet any thing that is thy Neighbours nor kill yet in some Cases Both may lawfully be done The one in extreame Want of present Food the other in defence of Life Goods In which the Law of God is good by the Originall Law of Nature which made All for the sustenance of Man and gaue leaue to defend Life with with the losse of anothers Blood yea Life if otherwise it cannot be Vpon which Ground I argue thus Suppose the Law of God did at this present command which indeed it doth not that the Inheritance should be left to any one particular Person and namely to the Elder-Brother yet in some Cases it would not binde the Father to obserue it For as in the former Commandements vpon some considerations the Commandement may bee dispens'd withall so in this For it is not sufficient to be the Elder-Brother or the neerest in Blood to gaine an Inheritance in the Case which I haue now proposed for other Circumstances must concurre which if they be wanting bare propinquity or ancienty of Blood may iustly be rejected he that is second third fourth fift or last may lawfully be preferred before the First and this by all Law Divine and Humane and by all Reason Conscience and Custome of Nations Christian For if it should happen that the next in Blood should be a Naturall Foole or a Mad-man or being taken by the Turkes or Moores in his Infancy and educated in their Religion would maintaine the same or if any other such Accident ministring cause of iust Exception should fall out is it likely that any Law would allow that such a man should be admitted to the Inheritance Wherefore how idly should they talke that would haue it to bee his Birth-right or that God Nature had made him Heire since neither God nor Nature doth immediatly make Heires as before is declared Vpon which Ground our Common Lawyers say that No Heires are borne but Men and Law make them I confesse that in Holy Writ great * In allusion hereto the Church Triumphant is stiled The Church of the First-borne Heb. 12.23 Respect is had of the first-begotten and a Blessing is held to come to Parents thereby But this Blessing I presuppose to bee that thereby the Feare of sterility was taken away which in the Old Law was held to be a great Punishment of God in respect thereof Parents had of themselues and by the Nationall Lawes Customes a great Regard of their First-begotten and preferd them to the better part of their Possessions yet not by any Command from God as a Precept to binde his Elect people vnder paine of sinne For had any such Law bound them vnder such a Penalty then should it binde all Christians now on the same Conditions But we see it by Generall Practise of all Countries to be otherwise Therefore it followes directly that it was not Gods Command but a Nationall Law For God both is and ever was One without change to all his People so ever were will be his Laws Positiue made for them that truly worship him The Claime which Esau made to his Birth-right was not by the Law of God as some ignorantly affirme but by the Lawes of his Country For should the Divine Law haue commanded it it had been sinne in his Mother and Brother by Cunning to haue got it from him Neither could the Father or the State wherein they liued vpon no just cause knowne but to God alone without sinne haue setled the same vpon his Brother Iacob as it was and as it may seeme Iacob praelatione divinâ primogenituram benedictionem promeruit Ita Eximius Praesul D. Episc Cicestr Apparat I. by allowance from God and as it may bee judged by the successe Whereby it is thought that God ordained it as a Punishment of the One and Blessing of the Other which by the permission of sinne to bee committed God never doth Neither did the Nationall Law or Custome of the Iewes as it is said absolutely command the Father to leaue to his first begotten all or the greatest part of his Goods and Fortunes But in case he died not disposing thereof by Act in his Life or Will at his death then the Custome † Viz. Grounded on the Right of Primogeniture See Deut. 21.17 and the Geneva note there of the Nation laid a double Portion on the Eldest or First-begot providing for the rest proportionally By all which you may collect that neither the Law of God or Man in this case commanded that Esau should haue the Inheritance
the Mercy of this Whirlewinde There is no Necessity For our Law hath giuen Power to a Father and Free-will to dispose of his Owne according as Reason shall guid his Will without all obligation to his Heire Besides this Custome takes place only after a Fathers Death if hee dispose not what is his by Deed in life or by Will at his Death But lest my Words bee more generally taken then they are meant I meane those Fathers who are possest of their Lands in Fee or Fee-taile that is are absolute of themselues and haue not vpon good Consideration convaied their Lands from themselues For all our Lawyers agree that such Parents may alien sell and giue by power of our Law their Lands to whom they will without respect of Person or Eldership But may some say the Custome is otherwise this Custome is a Law True it is the Custome But let vs see whether it binde sub peccato or as a Custome which rather invites then commands There was never any Command to tye a Father vnder a Penalty which admits no limitation but it was euer left indifferent and then only to take place where former Provision according to course of Law is not made Then surely a Parent is free from this devouring Custome and may considerately prevent what Evill it may bring to his posterity yea Reason commands it should be so For Interest Reip. vt quilibet re suâ benè vtatur It concernes the publike State that Men be Good Husbands saith the Ciuill Law For if a Man can neither sell nor set much lesse can hee giue any thing to another which he thinkes in his Conscience will vse it to the Dishonour of God and the Ruine of himselfe or others Divines hold that it is not lawfull to sell or let a house to any that hee thinkes assuredly will make thereof a Stewes or to sell giue or lend a Weapon to a man who intends therewith to doe murther Excommunications are imposed on them who sell Armes Offensiue or Defensiue to Turks though they bee not assured they will vse them against Christians Thus we see the Rule of Conscience not onely commands a man to vse wel those Fortunes which God hath bestowed on him but forbids him either vpon Affection or Gaine to part with them to others who will abuse them lest hee partake of others sinne which a Parent may doe after death who leaues his Lands to a desperate Vnthrift But what Religion and Conscience commands shall be declared in the following Chapter In which vpon Principles drawne from the former Conclusions shall be argued what sinne may bee contracted by the parting an Estate among Sonnes or by disinheriting an Eldest son vpon just Cause to whom the Father is onely tied by the Custome of the the Countrey without Obligation of Promise or Contract in Marriage which may alter the Case CHAP 6. That it is no offence before God for a Father being Tenent in Fee-simple to disinherit the Eldest or to parcell his estate vpon cause and that extreame vices of Heires Apparent together with the fewer meanes which younger Brothers haue now to liue on then heretofore cryeth out against the contrary opinion THE Right of these insociable Inheritors of which wee now treat may grow as I conceaue from three Titles or Claimes which they may pretend to a Fathers Inheritance and whereby it may be deemed as they thinke sinne in a Father vpon what Desert soeuer to barre them of the said Right These three Titles are Purchase Custome and Entaile Of each seuerally And of the first which is Purchase Surely in the Iudgement of the Good Learned there is no question in Law or Conscience but that a sonne joyned Purchaser with his Father hath Ius in re and by Equity must surviuing his Father inherite such Lands as were purchased in their Names Now of the other two though it be as cleere as Noone-light that a Lord in Fee-simple or Tenent in Taile may sel or giue by course of our common Law at his pleasure all such Lands held by him in that kind according to those formes of Law which the learned in our Lawes haue and can set downe yet there seems to arise a great Difficulty how such an Act or Acts may in Conscience be executed I haue heard some say in this our Case summum Ius summa injuria Of these Points therefore I will speake Salvo meliori judicio what may in Conscience vpō good and just Occasion giuen by the Sonne to his Father bee put in Execution It is well knowne to all Divines as I haue said that Holy Writ hath not prescribed any direct or precise Forme to the Children of God whereby they are bound in Conscience to dispose of their Lands and Goods but hath absolutely left them to the Customes of their Country where any Act of that kinde shall be executed only as confirming all Formes of Devises which by publike Consent and Authority either haue or shall in rightfull manner bee devised or ordained Out of this Ground and others prementioned let vs examine whether a Father parting his Fortunes by Power of Law and on just Cause shall do a wrongfull and sinfull Act as some would make it I confesse that every Act in it selfe or by circumstance evill and which vpon no occasion can be justified is both before God and Man sinne and by no meanes to be executed by a Christian But that the parting of an Inheritance or Disinheriting of an Eldest Sonne vpon just and evident cause of incapacity according to Course of Law is an Act of that Nature doth not appeare For I finde not that either the Law of Nature or Grace nor yet the Lawes of Man Common Civill or Canon ever for bad such Acts whereby sinne may bee imputed to those who doe them on good Considerations Sure I am that the Canon and Civill Law are so farre from forbidding them that they command as a Thing in Equity the Father either to divide his Inheritance or allow him according to his Affection to giue to one more then to another yet with this Proviso that hee who hath the lest haue his * Or lawfull Portion See pag. 61. of Dr Ridleys View illustrated by the judiciously ●e●●ined Mr Gregory Childs part which the Law doth also assigne except on just desert he disinherit any one which at this day may yea must bee by Will with the cause of Disinherison therein specified Of which Causes the Imperiall Lawes haue set downe foureteene as may well appeare to them who are desirous to vnderstand more thereof So it is evident that by these two Lawes no sinne can grow vpon such Acts being done vpon their Warrant and vpon on such Consideration as is formerly deliuered As for the Common Lawes of our Realme sure it is they allow no lesse and with a greater Privilege For a Man may by this Law giue his Lands held in Fee either by Deed in his life
or by Will at his death to any of his Children yea to a stranger without rendring a Reason why he doth so True it is that a Father not disposing thereof in such sort Custome giues the whole Estate to the Eldest yet in some part of our Countrey the youngest Brother by custome is to haue the Land held by some kind of Tenure if the Father in his life-time dispose not thereof As yet therefore I cannot see how any sinne is committed or contracted by the former Acts being neither done against the Law of God or Man as we haue proued vnlesse it should be said to bee sin not to leaue it to the Power of a Custome which cannot be except the former Law shall bee proued not to be of Force and not to be executed which can no way be done Though I must confesse that the Custome of leauing the Child-estate to the Eldest sonne hath of latter Times beene much imbraced by our Gentry for the preservation of their Families for which it was invented For the Times haue so ruled that Men of sort being either idle or not possest with a couetous Humour haue contented themselues with their Fathers Fortunes and prefer'd their younger sonnes by those meanes which the Times did afford namely by many commendable Courses as either by service of Spirituall and Ecclesiasticall Persons whereby many were raised or by professing a spirituall Life wherby the younger Brother hath oft-times in Honour stept before the Elder But this manner of Life is not so gratefull to our English Gentlemens Natures as anciently it hath beene The Trade of the Merchant the Military profession the Courtiers life advanced many more then now they doe and lastly Elder Brothers in former Ages were generally of better Temper in spending and if they had no humour to get yet had they a care to keepe what was left them and ever held themselues bound by Religion to provide for their younger Brothers and Sisters left to their Dispose which now is far otherwise For some Elder Brothers are found to spend more in a yeare idly then would prefer or maintaine a whole Family Nobly and to suffer their Brothers Sisters to shift which as these Times shape is often-times to liue either lewdly or most miserably * Strenue esurire being forced either to forget their good Education or to lay aside all Badges of Gentry who otherwise with some reasonable helpes might doe God their Country and Family much Honour Since we haue gone so farre let vs see on what Ground this Custome first hath risen Surely for the maintenance of a Family yet led with an Ambitiō at the Example of Princes who finding some difficulties in the admitting of many to a Gouernment and feeling what Inconveniences the parting of an Estate brought devised that One should governe sometime the Worthiest sometime the Eldest was Elected according as the Order was agreed vpon and yet the other Brothers were maintained like Princes And this Custome also among them hath beene broken without Imputation of sinne For to goe no further then our late Times 't is well knowne that Ferdinand Charles the fift his Brother being setled in the Empire divided his Estate To Maximilian his Eldest sonne he left the Empire with Austria Hungary and Bohemia To Charles his second sonne Stiria Carinthia and other Dominions And to Ferdinand the youngest he gaue the Earledome of Tyroll All which if in his life-time hee had not disposed had come to the Eldest Also Philip the second late King of Spaine gaue to his Daughter the 17 Provinces which were of Right to haue descended to his sonne after his Death if otherwise he had not disposed in his life And this was adjudged lawfull by Graue Divines otherwise surely they would never haue done it But doth this Custome in meaner Degrees work that Effect which it hath done in them No truly For as we haue proued it is rather the Overthrow then the Preservation of many Families Let vs see withall whether Families flourished not as much and more then now they doe before this Custome was receaued Livy saith that three hundred of the Fabij Vna dies Fabios ad bellum miserat omnes Ovid. Fast all of one Name and Family issued out of Rome Gates at one time on their owne Cost for Defense of their City which was done before this Custome was dream'd of In Scotland three hundred of the Name and Family of Frasers Gentlemen were at one Time slaine in Fight by their Enemies Neighbours and 140 Gentlemen of one Name in Yorkshiere waited on their chiefe or principal Man of their House at that time High Sheriffe In other Countries many Noble Families from the Romans downeward haue continued where this Custome hath beene deemed vnjust as by their Laws is manifest wheras in our Country in these our Times if there bee one Family in a Shire which is of three hundred yeares continuance very many others are scarse of fiue Descents in a Blood Why should our Age then seeing the Fruit of this Custome to be so small embrace it with such Zeale as to deeme the Breach thereof being warranted for Good and Iust by the Law of God Nature and Man to be a sinne Is it held both lawfull and expedient in some Countries for the preservation of a Family that Degrees of Kindred should be dispensed with to marry contrary to Ecclesiasticall Canons and the Generall Practise and can it be lawfull before God and Man for the preservation of our Goods to venture our Liues and to kill a Theefe who shall assault vs and that perhaps for a Trifle and yet that for preservation of our whole Estate and perpetuity of a Family it shall bee reputed sinne to breake a bare Custome vnder no Penalty Obligatory yea alwaies allowed by Law Never was it heard that a Custome * Customes against Lawes are void by the Civill Law was of such force to abrogate a Law so farre that it should bee deem'd a sinne to follow the said Law though it haue Power to dispense with the Law which otherwise to infringe were sinne especially when as the the Law is both more pious and more naturall then the Custome is For how farre is it from the Law of Nature and from the Practise of Paternall Piety the Father dying intestate the Eldest sonne to become Lord Paramount of all his Fathers Lands not to be bound by Law to provide for Brother or Sister but at his owne good liking Aliud Tempus alios mores postulat Men of Vertue Men of Learning Vertue both now and in former Ages in this our Countrey haue brok this Custome * This Custome is contrary to the iudgement practise of the Primitiue Church as is cleare in Salvianus who intimateth that aequa haereditatis portio was vsually left by Christian Parents to their Children and that to doe otherwise were Grosse Iniquity Ad Eccles Cath pag 422. 425. Edit Oxon
should be relieued with his Owne for so it may bee deemed though in loue to his Child he hath passed the Estate yet ought hee to be therewith preserued from Thraldome in his Necessity Which if it be so as confessedly it is how reasonable a thing yea how commendable and far † So Salvianus Non iniustè testator sapiens non relinquit quod haeres impius non meretur Ad Ecc. Cath. l. 3. from sinne is it for a Father truely Lord of his owne without all Tie of Law Divine or Humane as I haue proued to dispose his Lands to the Honour of God and Comfort of his Family to a Younger Sonne when in all probability the Elder will neither vse it to the One nor the Other but rather to wallow in Riot and Sensuality CHAP. 8. That Vnthriftinesse is one knowne name of many hidden sinnes and is alone a sufficient cause of disinherison proved by the Law of God and Man HAuing vpon good Consideration enlarged my selfe beyond my first intention I haue resolu'd vnder my Readers Favour on the precedent Principles to Argue one Question more for the accomplishment of this Discourse viz Whether a Father may disinherit his Eldest Son or Heire at Common Law for such an Vnthriftinesse as in most mens * Viz Grounded on the concurrence of great and violent Presumptions Iudgements is like to bee the Ruine of his Family Though many foule sinnes besides the Abuse of Gods Blessings bee concomitant to vnthriftinesse yet because they are not apparent to the World de absconditis non judicat Praetor I will briefly argue Whether in Reason or Conscience a desperate Vnthrift may be disinherited It is well knowne to all the Wise Temperate whose Iudgements Passion doth not ouer-sway how great an Enemy Prodigality or Vnthriftinesse is to all manner of Goodnesse and how cunningly she not only hinders the Increase of all Vertues in those in whom she raignes but also vnjustly oft-times cuts off the vertuous reward of many a worthy Predecessour yea giues occasion to the Evill to detract to the Good to suspect their Deserts All which how great a Wrong it is to a Noble Family I leaue to the indifferent Reader to censure I will not deny but there may bee many sinnes in a Man which in the sight of God and iudgement of Men of themselues are more haynous and deserue a farre greater Damnation then Prodigality doth Those sinnes more punishable which are more offensiue to common Society though lesse heinous in their par●●●ular nature yet are sinnes in this World to bee punisht not as they are in themselues but as by Circūstances they are offensiue to the Society Peace and Honour of Man-kind which God and Nature ever as the Reward to all Morall Vertues and as the cheefe End of Mans Life intended For otherwise Vsury Detraction Forgery Adultery Fornication Swearing and Drunkennesse with many more which are as greevous offences in the Eye of Heaven as Theft should be punisht with Death as Theft is But since they offend not so much the Peace of a publike Weale at which the Civill Magistrate aymes as Theft doth they are not censur'd with such seuere Punishment as it is All which shewes directly that Offences by Circumstance are made in a Civill Society against which they are committed either greater or lesser and are accordingly to be punisht and no lesse doth the Reason right Rule of State command Out of which Grounds it is evident that all Formes of Goverment doe most punish that Offender who directly or indirectly seekes to disturbe the Peace or overthrow the Liberty or disgrace the Dignity of the State where he liues yet many greater Offences then these may be committed as Incest and Apostasy which are not so sharply punisht by the Civill Magistrate For every one to whom God hath giuen power on Earth doth chiefly seeke the End for which his Power from aboue is giuen to him and doth censure and punish in the highest Degree those Offenses which tend to the Overthrow of a well-setled State by good lawfull Power confirmed Now to descend from these Premisses to the Point in Controversy and to apply what hath been said to our purpose It is well knowne to the World that a Family is a Civill Society yea the only Common-Weale which God Nature first ordained from which all Societies Republikes Species of Regiment tooke their Originall For the maintenance of which Society there is no Question but God hath giuen many * Fathers of Families had power to blesse curse disinherit and punish with death as appeares by the Examples of of Noë towards Cham Abraham towards Hagar and Ismael Iacob towards Simeon 〈◊〉 Levi and of Iuda towards Thamar Gen. 38.24 See Mr. Godwin vbi supra Privileges to a Father as well to reward the well-deseruing as to punish an evill child or member of his Body not only by depriuing them of their expected Fortunes but by cutting them off from his Body either by Abdication or Exile or Death it selfe For it is cleere by the Civll Law that a Father had for many yeares not only free Power to disinherit but also Power of Life and Death over his Children who should greivously offend him or his liuing vnder his Civill Government But since that Things vnknowne are growne out of Vse and may seeme as well incredible as strange I cannot in prudence passe ouer the Matter in Question so lightly as that it may bee worthily subiect to sharp Censure or rashly branded with the Marke of Vntruth Therefore laying aside the Testimony of the old Romane Lawes in the case of a Fathers Soveraigne Power over the life of his child given to him by the * Cap. 3. Dio. Halicar l. 2. Antiq. Twelue Tables where it is written Pater familiâs habeat jus vitae yea terque filium venundandi potestatem I will breefly and effectually proue out of the Sacred Text it selfe what I affirme There then it plainely appeares that Fathers had Power among the Iewes to cause their children for Riot Disorder or Vnthriftinesse to be ston'd to Death Ergo power to disinherit For the Greater ever includes the Lesse Not to seeme to speake without Booke it shall not bee amisse to set downe Moses words which are as follow If a Man haue a stubborne and rebellious sonne that will not obey the Command of his Father or Mother Deut. 21.18 and being chastised shall be vnreclaimable they shall apprehend and bring him to the Seniors of that City and to the place of Iustice and they shall say to them This our sonne is incorrigible and disobedient contemnes our Monitions abandons himselfe to riotous Excesse and is a Drunkard The Citizens shall then overwhelme him * Stoning was appointed a Death for Blasphemy Idolatry which by cōcurrence in this case argues how execrable a Crime Disobedience to Parents is in Gods sight with Stones and he shall dye that