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A56274 The moderation of the Church of England considered as useful for allaying the present distempers which the indisposition of the time hath contracted by Timothy Puller ... Puller, Timothy, 1638?-1693. 1679 (1679) Wing P4197; ESTC R10670 256,737 603

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As to those among us who are most moderate it may be wisht they will afford their own Example in what they allow in Discourse and that they would labour as effectually to prevail on those who depend on their Judgments and Example § 3. Whereas many of our Dissenting Brethren profess they desire the Interest of Jesus Christ may be promoted and that sanctity of Life and the pure Worship of God and the Communion of Saints and the Edification of the Church and the Reformed Protestant Religion may be maintained and encreased and in all Debates they appeal to the Holy Scriptures and many of them say they are desirous to rectify Mistakes and to lay aside all prejudice and passion and partiality and profess they desire their Judgments and Practices may be guided in the ways of Truth and Peace Supposing all this if we meet with such as will admit what follows into fair consideration I should think it the most proper means by some such degrees as follow to bring them if it be possible to understand the good Constitution of things among us 1. By letting such by clear Instances see how unmoveably we hold the Faith and Doctrine of Christ delivered in Holy Scripture which together with the whole Church of God the Church of England doth keep inviolably witness unto them faithfully and so constantly appeal to as the only perfect Rule of Faith and Manners V. Ch. 4. 2. Since the best and most useful sort of Moderation is that which governs us as we ought in the real Practice of Vertue and Goodness whereunto tend all the Moderation of the Laws and the Doctrine and Discipline of God's Church yet which is a lamentable thing to consider this is most silently past over and scarce known by the Name at that same time that a huge clamour is rais'd among us for Moderation in Religion in which all that are concerned may know and understand that the great Design and Desire of our Church is to promote holiness of Life Among us all may not only be as holy as they will but that they may be so they are assisted and encouraged most earnestly by the Laws and Constitutions and Offices and Councils of our Church which if they were rightly understood would be known uniformly to tend to no less 3. Such may consider that all the appointed means of Grace and Salvation are by our Church publicly and amply taken care of as duly and effectually as may be 4. In a Church where substantial Piety is so truly procured throughout the whole Constitution it might at least mitigate the great offence taken to consider what is more largely shewed Ch. 8. That our Church never did own her very few Ceremonies any other than accidental and mutable Circumstances for Order and Comeliness-sake but never asserted them any essential or necessary part of God's Worship Such may also consider the Rules of reasonable behaviour and submission to the Church as are moderately laid down Chap. 6. § 10. 5. Because our Dissenters by their dividing from us seem to endanger very much the Interest of the Reformed Religion which they appear so zealous to uphold Let them be pleased to consider the real danger of their being acted by Romish Agents and Incendiaries while they take the second direct course to destroy this reformed Establishment among us as is more particularly considered in Chap. 17. 6. Such may do well to consider truly those easy and proper Consequences which follow the Consideration of the Church being a Society with relation to a Christian Kingdom as ours is from whence sundry special Obligations may be inferred to bind every one who calls himself Christian to maintain the Peace and union of such a Society especially if we look on the Church as a Society formed by God himself and therefore common Christians are not to look upon themselves as Spiritual Governors as if they had any power in themselves to constitute new Bounds or new Extents to its Being or Authority but are to think they have an easier and safer task quietly to accept and obey that which is constituted by lawful Authority in all things not repugnant to the revealed Will of God And since every one's being of the Church doth suppose their duty to communicate in those Sacraments and Holy Offices which are appointed as a public Sign before God and Man that we do confess Christ Jesus and is an evidence of our holding communion with God's Church and that we are obedient to the Laws of this Society and the Government thereof in that fixed part of the Church we live in it follows that we are obliged unto the Peace of this Church by the intent of our Baptismal Vow when we were incorporated as Members of Christ's Body the Church And we are bound to maintain the same Peace of this Society of the Church as we live in a Christian Kingdom where the Religion of the Kingdom is so great a part of its Laws Upon which account Schism renders the safety of Kingdoms very hazardous beside that it looseth the Bands of all Friendship Sacred and Civil and breeds enmity among nearest Relations and Neighbours It tends exceedingly to the dishonour of the Public Laws and opens a gap to the most dissolute making void the exercise and effect of the Discipline of the Church upon the scandalous which otherwise to the prophane World would prove terrible as an Army with Banners It is the only way any can take to destroy all being of a Visible Church to corrupt her Doctrine and destroy her Power and is so great a sin as Martyrdom it self cannot expiate it Such do as much as they can make void the Design of our Blessed Saviour Who died that be might gather into one the Children of God that are scattered abroad 11 S. John 52. the night before our Lord was betrayed when he instituted the Sacrament of Unity How fervently did he pray for the Peace of the Church 17 S. John 11. Holy Father keep through thy own Name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as I am one V. 21. That they also may be one in us that the World may believe that thou hast sent me Whereas these Schisms which we have tend to weaken or take away the greatest outward Witness we have of the truth of Holy Scriptures and of our very Christianity namely the Testimony of God's Church from the beginning and do expose our most excellent Religion to the contempt and entertainment of Atheists The sad account for which let them beware of who make it their idle business to defame the Church in her Holy Offices and alienate all whom they can from her Communion Let them pretend what they will in the mean time to intimate Communion with God they indeed take away the Unity of the Church as much as in them lies but in effect they take it away from themselves and they cut themselves off from Communion with the rest of the
5. In her Orders also for dispensing the Holy Scripture to all within her Communion § 6. In governing the reading of the Scripture and communing on the same § 7. In her judgment of the Canonical and Apocryphal Books § 8. The Divine Authority of the Holy Scripture our Church rather doth take for granted than prove too laboriously or uncertainly § 9. All immoderate extravagancies concerning interpretation of Holy Scripture avoided by our Church p. 48 Chap. V. Of the Moderation of the Church in applying the Rule of Faith to it self § 1. Avoiding extremes on either hand in relation to the authority of the Vniversal Church § 2. The Decrees of Councils § 3. The Testimony of the Fathers § 4. Other Traditions § 5. Our Churches own Testimony § 6. The use of Reason § 7. The Testimony of the Spirit § 8. Of the testimony and operation of the Holy Spirit the judgment of our Church according to great Moderation more largely declared p. 77 Chap. VI. The Moderation of the Church in its judgment of Doctrines § 1. Our Church doth wisely distinguish between what is necessary for Salvation and what is not § 2. Her Articles are few § 3. Which are generally exhibited not as Articles of Faith but consent Concerning subscription § 4. Our Articles are propounded so as to avoid unnecessary controversy § 5. The wise Moderation of the Kings of England in their Injunctions to Preachers and Orders taken to preserve Truth Vnity and Charity § 6. The Controversies of the late Age are well moderated by the determinations of our Church § 7. As our Church requires our consent in nothing contrary to sense or reason so it hath also contain'd it self from immoderate curiosity in treating of venerable mysteries § 8. Our Church doth not insist upon such kinds of certainty as others without just cause do exact § 9. Doctrines are so propounded to those in our Churches Communion as not to render useless their own reasons and judgments The reasonableness of which is proved and the Objections answered § 10. The use which we are all allowed of our private judgments is requir'd to be menag'd with a due submission to the Church The duty of which submission is laid down in sundry Propositions p. 114 Chap. VII Of the Moderation of our Church in what relates to the worship of God § 1. Our Prayers are not mingled with controversy § 2. They are framed according to a most grave and serious manner with moderate variety and proper length § 3. In the zeal of Reformation our Church did not cast off what was good in it self § 4. In all our Churches there are the same Rules § 5. Common Prayers for the vulgar required in English To Ministers and Scholars a just and moderate liberty allowed § 6. The obligation of the Church leaves the method of private Devotions to a general liberty § 7. Of the Moderation of the Church in appointing her hours and times of Prayer § 8. In her use and judgment of Sermons § 9. In what is required of people with reference to their Parish Church § 10. The excellent Moderation of the Church in her Orders for the reverent reading of Divine Service and Consecrating the Sacraments in such a voice as may be heard § 11. In her Form and use of Catechizing § 12. The interest of inward and outward worship are both secured according to an excellent Moderation in our Church § 13. The Moderation of the Church in what relates to Oaths p. 166 Chap. VIII Of the Moderation of the Church in relation to Ceremonies § 1. In the Ceremonies of our Church which are very few and those of great antiquity simplicity clear signification and use our Church avoids either sort of superstition § 2. They have constantly been declared to be in themselves indifferent and alterable but in that our Church avoids variableness is a further proof of its Moderation § 3. They are professed by the Church to be no part of Religion much less the chief nor to have any supernatural effect belonging to them § 4. Abundant care is taken to give plain and frequent reasons and interpretations of what in this nature is enjoined to prevent mistakes § 5. The Moderation of our Church even in point of Ceremonies compar'd with those who have raised so great a dust in this Controversy § 6. Many innocent Rites and usages our Church never went about to introduce and why § 7. The Obligation of our Church in this matter is very mild § 8. The Moderation of our Church in her appointment of Vestments § 9. The Benedictions of our Church are according to great Piety and Wisdom ordered § 10. The Moderation of our Church in her appointments of Gestures § 11. Of the respect which is held due to places and things distinguished to Gods Service our Church judgeth and practiseth according to an excellent Moderation p. 201 Chap. IX Of the Moderation of our Church with respect to Holy-Days namely both the Feasts and Fasts of the Church § 1. The Feasts of the Church are few and those for great reason chose with care to avoid the excesses of the Romanists § 2. The further behaviour of the Church in her Feasts most useful and prudent § 3. We celebrate the memory of Saints but of none whose existence or sanctity is uncertain § 4. The excellent ends of our Churches honour to Saints are set down § 5. That they are Festivally Commemorated not out of opinion of worship or merit or absolute necessity thereof to Religion § 6. Our Church runs not into any excess in any Prayer to Saints § 7. Nor with reference to Images § 8. Whether our Church in any of these practices be justly charged of Popery by those who Canonize among themselves those who are of uncertain sanctity § 9. The Moderation of our Church in its honour given to Angels § 10. And to the Blessed Virgin § 11. Our Church hath taken great care that a special honour be had to the Lords Day and that the Lords Day nor any other Festival be abused to Luxury and Impiety § 12. The Moderation of the Church with reference to its Musick and Psalmody § 13. The Moderation of our appointed Fast The Lenten or Paschal Fast how far Religious by the Precept of the Church p. 234 Chap. X. Of the Moderation of the Church in reference to the Holy Sacraments § 1. The Moderation of our Church raiseth no strife about words relating thereunto § 2. Her Moderation in what is asserted of the number of Sacraments § 3. In that her Orders for the Administration of the Sacraments are most suitable to the ends of their appointments § 4. In that our Church doth not make the benefit of the Sacraments to depend upon unrequired conditions In reference to Holy Baptism § 1. Our Church doth make nothing of the essence of Baptism but the use of the invariable Form § 2. The Moderation of our Church toward Infants unbaptized
Gospel Ch. 1. v. 7. But unto them of Philippi also was this grace given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe in him but also to suffer for his sake v. 29. § 3. Thus it is evident that this Exhortation of S. Paul here to Moderation is indeed directed by him absolutely to the patient and suffering sort of Christians Which let those take notice of especially who affect so much to be counted the suffering party which if they are who call themselves so then the Apostle speaks more to them than any Let your Moderation be known unto all d Of this perhaps they may be better satisfied from Mr. Pools Synopsis Criticorum De afflictionibus hîc agitur Zanch. Ver. Er. Bez. c. But it is the cause only makes the Martyr Some may suffer indeed justly as a due reward of their deeds through their own ill will Others according to the will of God 1 S. Pet. 4. 16 19. when they have done nothing amiss S. Luke 23. 41. and this I take to be the real Case of the Church of England Wherefore we seriously wish they would present themselves real examples of the thing it self who make so much noise of the word We may heartily wish they who seem so earnest for Moderation would consider whether it seems not agreeable to that equal temper of mind recommended in the Text for all to be disposed to interpret every thing to the best and to go as far as they can for peace and unity in the Church and compliance with what is enjoin'd I wish such would please to consider and read the words in their true sense with any of those Versions which are given of them Let your equity e Bez. Castell Your gentleness f Trem. Dr. Ham. Your patient mind g Our old English Tr. Erasm Par. Your taking all in good part h Bez Com. Your reasonable Conversation i S. Ambr. Your modesty k Vulg. Lat. S. Hier. Your giving way one to another l Erasmus Your Moderation be known unto all § 4. That we may the more clearly understand the Moderation of our Church we will further inquire into their false notions of Moderation who so vehemently seem to require it in our Church which requiries are made either to private persons or to those in authority 1. When private persons are called upon to let their Moderation be known unto all men They as far as they know their own minds themselves and are not averse to declare it in their writings and other expressions of their meaning undeniable by Moderation would have 1. Either an Indifferency whether they do or do not what is required or 2. They mean an Omission of what is appointed or 3. They understand by it the doing quite contrary When appeal for Moderation is made to Governours by Moderation they would understand either 1. A forbearance of the execution of Laws especially which relate to matters Ecclesiastical or 2. An abolition of them or 3. An utter alteration of Government So that all the burden for Moderation relates to the remission of the obligation and observance of the Laws especially of the Church and their whole sense of Moderation doth contain many odd suppositions particularly that the conditions of our Communion are very unlawful very immoderate and inexpedient Wherefore if in the following discourse we make it appear that the entire constitution of our Church doth exhibite as great Moderation and as equal temper as any Church in the Christian World doth or ever did since the Primitive Times we shall justify our Constitutions from those exceptions mentioned and a thousand times as many more as they can raise For supposing at present which afterward I shall plainly demonstrate that the conditions of our Communion are not unlawful and that the appointments of the Church as they are and what relates thereunto are very moderate then it will plainly and necessarily follow 1. That an indifference in doing or not doing what is required or an omission of what is matter of duty or doing quite contrary must needs be so far from Moderation that it will appear to be a great affront to the authority of a well-setled Kingdom and Church and the more moderate this is the higher will be the aggravation of their crime 2. As to the forbearance of the execution of such Laws I shall only say thus much That if for political considerations Superiours should give way at any time to such a forbearance it may not be unseasonable to consider as among the Jews there were some things permitted or tolerated not for their own goodness but because of the hardness of the hearts of the people So when Constitutions equal in themselves are remitted in consideration only of the weakness of the people the people ought to be instructed of the reason they have to be humbled for their own imperfection that they may not glory in their shame lest they go on to take heart against the Laws and accustom themselves to frowardness 3. As to change or abolition of Laws I only here touch upon what hereafter will be more amply shew'd That the Moderation of our Church is such that she always hath publickly profest That the Rites of the Church and particular forms of worship are in their own nature indifferent and mutable And it is notorious matter of fact among us that the Church hath often made those alterations which occasion hath required and for the same reasons can do the like again 4. As to an utter alteration of the Government which some there are would look at as a prime point of Moderation I should be very injurious to truth if I should not observe That some who begin with but desires of Moderation never leave till they end in the utter subversion and extirpation of what they declare themselves averse from which renders this undertaking more necessary Thus King Charles I. m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Med. 11. took notice of some Reformers who by vulgar clamours and assistance did demand not only Toleration of themselves in their vanity novelty and confusion but also abolition of Laws against them and a total extirpation of that Government whose Rights they have a mind to invade Lastly To take their words in the most mild sense not for an absolute change of the entire Government but for such an alteration of the Laws as seems to be meant by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moderation as it is sometimes taken for a correction of the Laws by Equity Most known unto all it may be that the Church of England never refuseth this But in cases of such mitigations and remissions as are called for we must consider there is generally supposed either an unjust sentence or some rigour of the Law or some great inconvenience attending All which the wisdom of Government will not hastily and at every motion determine especially when such alterations are challenged as matter of
say O but how shall I know that the Holy Ghost is within me Some man perchance will say forsooth as the tree is known by the fruit so is also the Holy Ghost The fruits of the Holy Ghost according to the mind of St Paul are these Gal. 5. Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Gentleness Goodness Faithfulness Meekness Temperance c. Contrariwise the deeds of the flesh are these Adultery Fornication Vncleanness Wantonness Idolatry Witchcraft Hatred Debate Emulation Wrath Contention Sedition Heresy Envy Murder Drunkenness Gluttony and such like Here now is the Glass wherein thou must behold thy self and discern whether thou hast the Holy Ghost within thee or the spirit of the flesh If thou see thy works be vertuous and good consonant to the prescript rule of Gods word savoury and tasting not of the flesh but the Spirit then assure thy self thou art endued with the Holy Ghost otherwise in thinking well of thy self thou dost but deceive thy self The Holy Ghost doth always declare himself by his fruitful and gracious gifts b 2d Part of the Hom. for Whit-sunday But to conclude ye shall briefly take this short lesson Wherever ye find the spirit of arrogance and pride the spirit of envy hatred contention cruelty c. Assure your selves that there is the spirit of the Devil and not of God albeit they pretend to the world outwardly ever so much Holiness for as the Gospel teacheth us The Spirit of Jesus is a good holy sweet lowly merciful Spirit full of charity and love full of forgiveness and pity not rendring evil for evil extremity for extremity According to which rule If any man live uprightly of him it may be safely pronounced That he hath the Holy Ghost within him if not there is a plain token he doth usurp the name of the Holy Ghost in vain As for the manner and measure of the operations of the Holy Spirit The modesty and Moderation of our Church doth not decree any thing lest as St Austin saith Humane infirmity proceed beyond what is safe Yet our Church gives a right account in sundry places of its Homilies c Second Part of the Homily of Falling from God How the Holy Spirit comes to be withdrawn from men By all these Examples of Holy Scripture we know that as we forsake God so shall he even forsake us When he withdraweth from us his word the right doctrine of Christ his gracious assistance and aid which is ever joined with his Word and leaveth us to our own wit and will and strength He declareth then he beginneth to forsake us d First Part of the Homily of falling from God which is as it follows after any do neglect the same if they be unthankful to him if they order not their lives according to his Example and Doctrine c. From whence we see also that our Church judgeth the promise of the spirit is as the blessings of the Gospel are generally conditional For as God for his part delivered his Son to suffer death for us so again we for our parts should walk in a godly life as becometh his Children so to do e 2. Part of the Homily of Alms-deeds He that is first made good by the Spirit and Grace of God afterward bringeth forth good fruits As for those who affirm a supernatural and immediate illumination necessary without which other ordinary means are insufficient either to give us certainty of the authority or interpretation of Divine Writ 1. They affirm that which no where is declared 2. That which we have little reason to credit from them that affirm so We having neither experience of their extraordinary knowledge or goodness but have found them most mistaken of any in their interpretations of Scripture and also by the notes of having the Spirit delivered in Scripture what is quite different hath appear'd 3. The holding such an opinion tends to lessen the authority of the written word of God and to make the dictates of the humane spirit if not sometime the Diabolical equal with the Holy Canon And those others who lay the stress of the proof of the authority of Scripture and the certainty of Faith and the interpretation of Scripture upon such uncertainties as only the internal testimony of the Spirit as is yet neither proved necessary or real however of which there is no proof unto others verily such labour unprofitably to overthrow Christianity and render all our Faith uncertain 4. Their Doctrine leads to such Enthusiasm as is not consistent with the peace of Kingdoms much less the peace of Gods Church But such is the constant Moderation of our Church though it doth reject and oppose all fanatical and ungrounded pretences to the Spirit Yet our Church most frequently and with all humble reverence owns the necessity of the gracious aids and assistance of the Spirit as the phrase is in our Homilies several times used as without which we can do nothing pleasing to God For in the power and vertue of the Holy Ghost resteth all wisdom and all ability to know God and to please him f 3d Part of the Homily for Rogation Week Therefore we pray that in all things he will mercifully direct and rule our hearts we pray to God to grant us his Spirit that those things which we do may please him g In the Absolution Collect after the H. C. Hom. of falling from God To prevent us in all our doings c. because of the ill condition of those who are not governed by the Spirit of God CHAP. VI. The Moderation of the Church in its judgment of Doctrines § 1. Our Church doth wisely distinguish between what is necessary for Salvation and what is not § 2. Her Articles are few § 3. Which are generally exhibited not as Articles of Faith but consent Concerning subscription § 4. Our Articles are propounded so as to avoid unnecessary controversy § 5. The wise Moderation of the Kings of England in their Injunctions to Preachers and Orders taken to preserve Truth Vnity and Charity § 6. The Controversies of the late Age are well moderated by the determinations of our Church § 7. As our Church requires our consent in nothing contrary to sense or reason so it hath also contain'd it self from immoderate curiosity in treating of venerable mysteries § 8. Our Church doth not insist upon such kinds of certainty as others without just cause do exact § 9. Doctrines are so propounded to those in our Churches Communion as not to render useless their own reasons and judgments The reasonableness of which is proved and the Objections answered § 10. The use which we are all allowed of our private judgments is requir'd to be menag'd with a due submission to the Church The duty of which submission is laid down in sundry Propositions § 1. BEcause all things in Divine Revelation are alike true but not alike necessary for furtherance of Faith and Piety and establishing Union among Christians
THE MODERATION OF THE Church of England Considered As useful for allaying the present distempers which the indisposition of the Time hath contracted BY TIMOTHY PULLER D. D. Pref. to the Book of Com. Pr. It hath been the wisdom of the Church of England ever since the first compiling her publick Liturgy to keep the Mean between the two Extremes In which review we have endeavoured to observe the like Moderation LONDON Printed by J. M. for Richard Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St Paul's Church-Yard MDCLXXIX NISI DOMINUS ADFUISSET NOBIS 24 Psl 1. Pr●● Ieus Simpl MODE BATION Printed for Rich Chiswell in St Pauls Church yard ANIMO ET FIDE The Right honble Francis North Baron of Guilford 1703 TO THE MOST REVEREND Father in GOD WILLIAM By Divine Providence Lord Archbishop OF CANTERBURY Primate of all ENGLAND and Metropolitan and one of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council May it please your Grace THis Essay for the Vindication of Our Church addresseth in just Gratitude to Your Archiepiscopal See with this assurance that the Moderation of the Church of England oweth it self as much to the wisdom and admirable temper of Your Graces Predecessors as to any one thing whatsoever next to the most Divine and supreme influences which so signally govern'd them and the rest of our first Reformers to follow incomparably the sage advice which Gregory the Great anciently sent to Your Predecessor Austin of Canterbury That of the divers usages of several Churches he should chuse what was most religious and right for the use of the English for said that Bishop of Rome things are not to be loved for the sake of a place but places for the sake of good things according to which determination of that Learned and Pious Father it may be easy now to decide What Church whose Primates which Constitution deserves our love and honour most unless any will prefer that which is extravagantly corrupt before what is most moderately and excellently reformed Your Grace best knows how that Brotherly * Novit Fraternitas tua c. B. Greg. Ep. ex Registro l. 12. Indic 7. c. 3. sort of Communication was generally preserved in the Church by other Patriarchs even with the Bishops of Rome so long as these were Examples of the same Moderation with S. Gregory who with a Primitive Roman Courage protested against the insolency of their stiling themselves Universal which well enough agrees with the Solecism of those who call only themselves Catholicks Before which novel kind of Phantastries 't is well known such as Boniface the Martyr the Apostle of the Germans as Baronius mentions * Ad an 726. n. 58. Tom. 9. mutually desired advice not only from Rome but of the Primates of England And whereas even since the first Reformation there have been Archbishops of Canterbury who have not only with wondrous success govern'd and defended Our Church from both sorts of Adversaries but have testified to the Equity of Her Rubricks with their own Blood when we consider what kind of adverse parties were the Authors of Their Martyrdom even the same who have given the Reformed Church of England Her two most extreme refining Tryals We must acknowledge them in the direct succession with Your Grace to be not only the Glorious Instruments but also the most famous Witnesses and Proofs of the Moderation of our Church who bear the first Names in Her Dipticks and deserve here first with Reverence to be mentioned to Your Grace who also for your inviolable adherence to the Church in spite of sufferings must hereafter be celebrated among Her Confessors There may be some account why in this Argument such an undertaking as this were it more worthy should especially desire Your Patronage not only in humble deference to the Authority Your Grace doth sustain in our Church to the universal joy and serious triumph of all whose affections have not been depraved with Schism and ill nature but in a more immediate reference because to Your special Archiepiscopal Prerogative belongeth the peculiar right and faculty of those dispensations which are a part of the Equity of our Church and her liberal benignity in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath been always honoured as a most venerable part of Her Laws Since therefore unto Your Clemency is so suitably committed in this publick Constitution the Custody of our Churches Indulgence and Benignity The Moderation of the Church with more than usual confidence returns to Your Grace for what her Casuists calls Inculpata Tutela and fears not now to be denied since Clemency is not only the Dignity of Your Title but Your Nature Neither is Your Primacy in our Church more eminent than Your Moderation is exemplary and known unto all Which I presume only to mention to borrow from thence a most Reverend Lustre and Life to the Noble Truth I have defended And so far as I have not improperly now asserted the Cause of the Church in which You preside I am sure not to sink in my trust of being supported by Your Graces good acceptance of the sincere undertaking of May it please Your Grace Your most obliged humble and dutiful Servant TIMO PULLER TO THE READER IF ever the practice of Moderation as well as any discourse thereon were seasonable it may be supposed now when for ought we know the lasting happiness of the Kingdom and the Church may depend immediately upon this rare and desirable temper acknowledged of all most excellent Yet it is a most unaccountable mystery of our present condition that notwithstanding the late surprizing discoveries have had nothing more notorious than that the chief design of the Jesuit Faction among the Romanists hath been the utter subversion of the present established Church of England nevertheless they who call themselves our Protestant Dissenters cannot be induced to come into entire union with our excellent reformed Church but rather chuse to unite with those Romanists in many of their unreasonable Cavils One of the methods which they who are Principals or Accessories in our Divisions for our extirpation have used hath been to engage the outcry in popular appeals concerning Persecution or Moderation This word and thing it self hath indeed much in it which is very Divine and therefore the more likely to be made use of with design by those who have used the most holy things to the most unhallowed purposes But I suppose the Experience which the late Age hath taught us will not so presently be out of print in our minds as to make us remit all our caution against the rigours of both extremes however they bear the same goodly pretences and unite in the same reproach of our Church Wherefore in sincere desire to assist the truth and equity of our Churches cause as well as to awaken if I may be so happy some into a more intimate sense of our common real interest I thought it an act of Justice as well as duty to enter some
kind of Protestation and proof also of the Moderation of our Church That if our Dissenting Brethren will but please to come near and view such fair and open testimonies as I have enumerated some sympathy with so just a temper may help to cool some of those Calentures to asswage and allay some of those unreasonable disorders which have discomposed the minds of many at present adverse to our Peace That while so remarkable a part of our Churches beauty appears from such a lifting up of her Veil so gentle and chearful an aspect may we hope win over some of those into better esteem of our Communion whom any Symmetry can affect whom any Moderation can overcome if they are not already irreconcilable that so the mildness and gentleness of our Church may no longer aggravate their separation with so much the more injustice unthankfulness and disingenuity even as the Moderation of our Church and Government renders the attempts of such Romanists as are concerned in them not only more scandalous and pernicious but most impious horrid and execrable As for others among us who sometime have appeared weary of their contests however unsetled hovering as it were in some motions for Union and frequently are toiling themselves in tedious contemplations of new Plots and Schemes of Government framing to themselves Idea's not very Platonical for peace and settlement I conceive a seasonable conviction among such of the real Moderation of our Church might save some of them their grievous labours for the future for how deficient they generally have been they themselves have shewed and if our Church is very moderate already I need not say they have been very superfluous There are indeed those who are still requiring that the Protestant Profession among us be setled in a due Latitude whereas we sincerely think the very thing desired is already the true temperament of our Church and such also as in no sort encourageth any indifferency or neutrality in Religion nor offers any such Principles to her Sons as allows them Proteus or Vertumnus like to be susceptible of divers shapes and forms in Religion as our Adversaries who do not understand our Church do suspect whereas the more any are fixed according to the right Principles of our Church the truer and firmer Protestants such are we shall manifestly prove and the more any are such the more truly moderate they are and their designs for peace must needs be the most discreet of any and the more to purpose So great a blessing I confess is less to be hoped for so long as the Masters of Factions have got such a mighty Dominion over the minds of their followers and have so far entangled them in their own passions and prejudices neither is it any wonder that noise and passion and hardy confidence iced over with some sanctimonious pretences can engage the affections of the vulgar more than ingenuity and real Moderation and when once this humour obtains of disaffecting what is setled with a lust after Novelties if what some love to call the pattern in the Mount should slide down from Heaven in the midst of them it would not continue long in favour and therefore no wonder if the Church of England is antiquated among such who are for new Modes in Ecclesiastical matters to gratify their sickly phansies and most divided interests While this affection is thus cherisht and thus kept up the mischief on 't is as when we preach such Doctrines as the duty of Communion with the Church and the like they generally are most absent whom the same concerns most so all testimonies which are brought in the cause of Gods Church are seldom taken notice of by such whom they are most proper to convince among the Romanists and the Separatists the Keepers of the peoples understandings not suffering them to peruse what may awaken or enlighten them and the more proper any thing is for that purpose the more industrious are they slily to stifle the reputation of such endeavours However I think it but just to vindicate unto publick authority the same fair interpretations which all private persons would gladly have for what they say or do and where the Church hath given mild interpretations on purpose for the general satisfaction of all it is but reasonable to make recognition of the same and when they are perversly wrested fairly to set them forth and certainly it is our duty to consider publick appointments which oblige us with all respect to their true ends and measures equally represented and it may be thought but a debt of gratitude for us to acknowledge such Liberties and Indulgences as we enjoy and to defend from malignant detractions the just wisdom of the Church in its excellent poise between undue extremes And so long as I have uprightly designed so just a duty the easy foresight of many ignorant or malicious exceptions hath not dasht me out of countenance but excited me and the more because I hope I have not only endeavoured to set forth the Moderation of the Church but to imitate the same In so much that where any thing is spoken to our Adversaries in our own defence I hope it hath not taken example from their own intemperate heats and since the Son of Syrach hath bid us Eccl. 37. 11. Not consult with a coward in matters of war nor with an envious man of unthankfulness nor with an unmerciful man touching kindness we despair to communicate advice of the Churches mildness with those who are of unmerciful tempers themselves therefore the more need we have all as well as we can to confirm one another in the recognition of those Virtues which justify the wisdom of our Church and afford our selves greater satisfaction in our Conformity although some are continually of such disturbed Spirits uneasy to themselves and morose they can seldom allow any time to reflect chearfully and thankfully upon the blessings they enjoy however they may give us leave to delight our selves in the serious contemplation of such proportions and measures as in the frame of our Church are most observable Which cannot but afford a rare and serious pleasure as well as use as it must be very delightful to behold any imitation of the Divine Wisdom which hath made all things in number weight and measure which governs the World and all his Creatures according to unsearchable measures of Righteousness and Equity who dispenseth all things sweetly and easily The more any Civil or Ecclesiastical Governments partake of such proportions it cannot but afford a fine and delicate reflection to find them out and admire them Such is the lovely prospect which we cannot but with delight take on the goodly frame and constitution of our Church of England Suitable to the rare temper of our excellent Monarchy we live under and the most benign disposition of our Laws which give very much to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 §. 27. subjects industry liberty and happiness and yet reserve
and Peace in the Church Our Church hath wisely distinguished between what is necessary absolutely and what only in some circumstances is necessary to Salvation Those things saith the Homily a 2d Part of the Homily of Scriptures that be plain to understand and necessary for Salvation every mans duty is to learn them and as for dark mysteries to be contented to be ignorant in them till such time as it shall please God to open those things unto them b Hom. 1. If it shall require to teach any truth or to do any thing requisite for our Salvation All those things saith St Chrysostom we may learn plentifully of the Scripture And in the 19. Article of the Church The Preaching of the pure word of God and the Administration of the Sacraments are made indispensable notes of the visible Church namely in all things that of necessity are requisite to the same and the 8th Article declares The three Creeds ought throughly to be believed and received for that they may be proved by most certain warrant of Holy Scripture where our Church gives the reason of her Faith and sheweth her earnestness in contending for it But the Moderation of our Church contains her self within the bounds of what is before made necessary The principal and essential points of the Doctrine of Salvation such as are fit to make up the unity of the Faith and constitute a Church are no other among us than what Christ and his Apostles at first made necessary which also the ancient Church received as necessary unto Baptism and for distinction of Heresy which fundamental Maxims of Christian Science are frequently and plainly repeated in Scripture and by our Church were first of all insisted on at the reformation of our Church as we see in the Institution of a Christian Man 1537. in the first Injunctions of our Kings and our Form of Catechism Whereas the Catechisms and Systems which have been set up in opposition to the Catechism and Articles of the Church of England have abounded with many doubtful and unnecessary definitions yet so insisted upon by some as if the Hinges of the Gate of Heaven turn'd upon those Propositions whereby many have agreed with Pope Pius the Fourth who by his Bull set out the Apostles Creed in a larger Edition of about as many more Articles without belief of which is declared no Salvation c Extra quam Nemo salvus esse potest Bulla Pii quarti super formâ Juramenti professionis fidei sub finem Concilii Trid. Unto such a strange Circumference is the body of their unnecessary belief extended whereas the Religion of our Church tends to the Center Which distinction of things necessary from what was not so King James according to the sense of our Church declares of great use to lay a foundation for the publick peace of the Church d Vt de necessariis conveniat omnis opera insumatur in non-necessariis libertati Christianae locus Rex Jacobus ad Card. Perr and of particular mens minds and the furtherance of true Faith and Piety § 2. Those Articles which are delivered by our Church for the avoiding of diversities of opinions and establishing consent touching true Religion 1. They are few especially those of positive Doctrine and the other negative positions were necessary to assert our liberty from the abuses and encroachments of the Romanists in their contrary affirmatives few if we consider either the time or the occasion of their being framed it being just about the meeting at Trent made it necessary for our Church to declare her sense of many Doctrines for the better satisfaction and directions of her Sons and to testify her equal conditions of Communion Especially also if we consider the cruel number of Articles which either the Westminster Divines or the Trent Councellors have imposed on their followers e Bishop ●ramball fol. p. 1018. Indeed the Romanists do call our Religion a negative Religion because in all the Controversies between us and them we maintain the negative that is we go as far as we dare or can with warrant from holy Scriptures and the Primitive Church and leave them in their excesses or those inventions which they themselves have added but in the mean while they forget that we maintain all those Articles and truths which are contained in any of the ancient Creeds of the Church which I hope are more than negative The Church of England saith Archbishop Laud f Archbishop Laud against Fisher 5. 14. comes far short of the Church of Romes severity whos 's Anathema's are not for 39. Articles but for very many more above one hundred in matter of Doctrine and that in many points as far remote from the foundation though to the far greater rack of Mens Consciences they must be all Fundamental if that Church have determined them Whereas the Church of England never declared that every one of her Articles are fundamentals in the Faith For it is one thing to say no one of them is superstitious or erroneous and quite another to say every one of them is fundamental Besides the Church of England prescribes only to her own Children and by those Articles provides but for her peaceable consent in those Doctrines of truth but the Church of Rome severely imposeth on all the World her Doctrine and that under pain of damnation § 3. These Articles of Religion are generally exhibited as Articles of Peace and consent not as Articles of Faith and Communion and as such they are propounded to all the Communicants in our Church g Schisin guarded p. 150. Bishop Lanies Sermons p. 48. in general For the avoiding Diversities of Opinions as the Title of the Articles is Not such a consent as Curcellaeus h Curcellaeus Religionis Christianae Institut C. 15. means where he supposeth some in the dregs of the Age of the Reformation obtrude their Confessions and Catechisms as a secondary rule if not of truth yet of consent such as ought to be urged only to an infallible truth 't is likely he might know many who did so But the consent designed to be established by our Articles is such a consent as may keep the Peace of our Church undisturbed according to the sense of the fifth Canon Where the Prohibition is directed against such as should speak against the 39. Articles as superstitious and erroneous such as may not with a good Conscience be subscribed to Whosoever shall hereafter affirm i Quicunque in posterum affirmabit c. Ecclesiae Anglic. Canon 5. not as the Council of Trent k Si quis contrà senserit Anathema sit Concil Trid. de peccato Originis directs its Anathema against those that shall so much as think diversly Wherefore our Church no where delivers our Articles as necessary to be believed neither by vertue of their own necessity or her own Command as several with Bishop Bramhall have noted For which reason subscription unto them is
reserves him not a right of liberty in Religion but only supposeth that he hath a right of trying examining and using his best judgment in order to the satisfaction of his Conscience which right if he duly useth it will certainly fix him in the true Religion whether that Religion be professed by his Prince or Nation or no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prove or try all things Hold fast that which is good saith the Apostle 1 Thess 5. 21. Here is a right to try examine and judge but no right or liberty in Religion This tryal is only in order to the holding fast that which is good i Dr J. Beaumonts Observations upon the Apology 1665. As the Royal Coyn no one can refuse every one may examine and try the same before he receives it So every Christian keeping himself within the bounds of due obedience and submission to his lawful Superiours hath a judgment of Discretion He may apply the rule of Holy Scripture for his own private instruction comfort edification and direction and for the framing of his Life and belief accordingly The Pastors of the Church have more than this a judgment of direction to expound and interpret the Scriptures to others and out of them to instruct the ignorant c. The Chief Pastors have yet a higher judgment of Jurisdiction to prescribe to enjoin to constitute to reform to censure to condemn to bind to loose judicially authoritatively in their respective charges k Bishop Bramhall's Answer to M. Militeira p. 72. Thus the danger of using a private judgment is prevented If it be further Objected 2. That such a permission is vain because of the impossibility in the vulgar to make use of it We Answer That such a meer ineptitude doth not take away ones right l Vt ratus sit actus pauciora requiruntur quàm ut recta sit actio Grotius de Imperio pag. 111. Beside our Gracious God requires of none otherwise than according to that ability which he hath given Wherefore the Moderation of our Church imitates the grace of God herein which requires nothing necessarily but what is so clearly propounded as to leave all inexcusable and therefore those that have skill to look to themselves in the common business of Life may discern as much as is required Those who have not use of their abilities the Idiotae the Moderation of the Church leaves to the mercy of God and the care of their Governours so far as they are capable for as Origen argues when Celsus objected to the Christians that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 m Origen c. Celsum l. 1. believe without any reason or examination The contrary thereunto Origen shews at large Yet of the vulgar he saith indeed it is impossible that all people should attain to the reasons of all Doctrines How can he get wisdom who is diligent to give the Kine Fodder c. Eccles 38. 26. Wherefore saith Origen what more compendious way could be contrived to relieve the poor multitude than the plain doctrine of Jesus for this we find by experience that they that before wallowed in Vice thereby now are delivered but why should the Stoicks and Platonists quarrel at Christians for believing when all of them believe those they apply themselves to in the Sect they judge most excellent § 10. So great being the Moderation of our Church because never the less as the temper of men generally now is among us since these licentious times especially have corrupted them the most are very captious of what hath the femblance of priviledge and such also are most apt to neglect their duty It is very great justice and equity that all be convinced of the due submission we also owe to the Church in reference to this matter The sum of which duty I shall lay down in such brief Propositions as are agreeable to an easy reason to infer from the comparing of relations 1. All good Christians who love the Church of God and its Peace will for Truth and Conscience sake hearken to the Church and those set over them on purpose to guide and direct them especially in case of doubt 2. Such will well weigh the moments of reasons which the Church offers and be ready with all due regard to entertain what the Church resolves and readily also approve of those resolutions unless it appear manifestly that such determinations contradict the word of God and the sense of the Universal Church which no good man will unadvisedly conceive much less seek occasions for exception 3. In a doubtful and equal Case such will encline to what is publickly determin'd because of the relation of superiority between the Church and its Members and because of the many great advantages they know the Church hath in its judgment above themselves because also the better any are and the more humble and sincere the more they are prepared to suspect and distrust their own judgments and not to lean unto their own understandings 4. If in any case it should happen that such should differently opine or judge however such will afford a practical submission in many Cases which they may and ought the liberty of their own thoughts remaining which is sufficient if they cannot but dissent Modest and pious persons will upon many occasions have their Faith to themselves and reserve their different apprehensions in a continent silence which is to be wise unto sobriety 5. If before they come to know the judgment of the Church they should go about to divulge their sense in speaking or writing such will do it with submission to the Church and to those to whom is committed the care of censure If there should happen such a lawful and necessary occasion which they cannot avoid to declare their apprehension different from the Church If the dissenter errs and cannot submit with consent he must e'ne bear patiently the inconvenience of his error which if in a less principal matter on this side Heresy and Schism such an infirmity n Aliter sapere quam se res habet humana tentatio est S. Aug. de Bapt. l. 2. and temptation incident to humane nature happen o Qualiter pro hoc ipso falsae opinionis errore in die judicii puniendi sunt nullus potest scire nisi judex Salvianus de gubern Dei c. 11. §. 4. They that would retain their integrity must preserve 1. An entire Charity to others 2. A reverent respect to the Church and as much as is possible an inviolable Communion therewith 3. Such ought to endeavour to comply in other points more diligently 4. Such ought to profess their dissent from the Church with great reluctancy and sorrow 5. They must be very willing to own their error when they are convinced thereof In the mean while they are bound to lay it aside Whereby retaining inviolable Communion with the Church such already being in preparation of mind disposed to renounce their error when they
made between a Preaching and a non-Preaching Minister a Canon 46 67. Preface to the Homilies who though he be not so profoundly learned as others of which learned sort blessed be God we have some good abundance yet if he be blameless in his Life and faithful in his Office and observant of the appointments of the Church by the grace of God there are so many helps ready provided by the wisdom of the Church among us That a not-Preaching Minister may perform a Ministerial Office both for the necessary edification of the people and the just satisfaction of the Church more than many Preaching Ministers of whose discretion and wise order the Church cannot be so well secured Hear we Archbishop Whitgift b Answer to the Admon 1572. I am fully perswaded That he cometh nearer the mind of the Apostle who orderly preacheth once a Month than some who are back-biters at other Mens Tables and run up and down seldom or never studying though they preach twice a day For though no Church doth more promote and encourage the proficiency of her Sons in all useful literature yet the Church thinks it not reason to reject the Ministry of a not-preaching Minister otherwise reasonably qualified Can. 34. where it is necessary especially when as the Church declares the Sacraments are effectually administred by them that have not the gift of Preaching Artic. 26. The care of the Church is also to be taken notice of in requiring those who are beneficed to procure at least a Sermon to the people once a Month c Can. 46 47. And especially there being wholsome Homilies for the other Days the Church hath done her part in providing for the spiritual sustenance of her Children both for their necessity and entertainment and those who can Preach as Blessed be God there are many think it their duty to do the same frequently and constantly § 9. The order of the Church is also That none neglect their own Parish Church and with great reason to avoid unspeakable confusion Yet even in d Stat. 1. R. Eliz. c. 2. 32 Eliz c. 1. Q. Elizabeth's Injunctions 1559. § 33. the Precept is exprest with this indulgence Except it be by the occasion of some extraordinary Sermon in some Parish of the same Town and in the Articles for enquiry in the first Year of her Reign one was Whether you know any that in contempt of their own Parish Church do resort to any other Church So in the Homily e The Homily of the right use of the Church 't is said That to the said House or Temple of God at all times by common order appointed are all people that be Godly indeed bound with all diligence to resort unless by sickness or other most urgent causes they be letted therefrom So willing was always our Church and the Constitution of the Kingdom to allow all reasonable Liberty provided it might not be abused No Man saith the Bishop of London-Derry in his Vindication was ever punisht for instructing his own Family but it may be for holding unlawful Conventicles or for instructing them in Seditious Schismatical or Heretical Principles Nor for going to the next Parish to hear a Sermon thousands did it daily and never suffered for it But it may be for neglecting or deserting his Parish Church f Quisque in suâ Parochiâ sacris coetibus ad●● ibi Christi Ceremoniis vacet Sacramentaque omnia percipiat ut qui haec sacere ●●●ligal Excommunicetur Eucer de Eccs Angl. Censura c. 3. and gadding up and down after Non-Conformists and strange unknown Forms of serving God § 10. Because as Bucer observed too many did not in the reading or reciting the Divine Service use that devout reverent and intelligible manner as was fit The special care of the Church hath always been very great of this as appears from the admonition to all Ministers Ecclesiastical in the beginning of the second Part of the Homilies and in Queen Elizabeth's Injunctions 1559. and in the several Articles for enquiry by all which all care is taken g Vi. Librum quorundam Canonum 1571. That all Ministers and Readers of publick Prayers Chapters and Homilies shall be charged to read leisurely plainly and distinctly h 39 Article 35. and the Rubrick requires the Minister to read the Lessons standing and turning himself so as he may best be heard of all such as are present Which Precepts contain as much as the general Missal i Liquet omnino requiri ut Ministri Ecclesiarum has preces Psalmos conciones recitent summâ gravitate religione disertè quoque perspicué Bucer de Ordin Eccl. Anglic. c. 1. Canatur legatur drticulatim explanatè reverendo gestu ad aedificationem orantis interea laici Wicelii Meth. concor c. 17. Rubricks which require the Priest to read neither too precipitantly fast nor too morosely slow with a voice mean and grave fit to excite Devotion and which is accommodate to the Hearers But whereas in the Mass the Romanists are enjoin'd a secret and private whispering In our Church it is otherwise Ordered for the common benefit which Order our Homily of the Common-Prayer and Sacraments defends from divers testimonies of Scriptures and Doctors and the Constitution of Justinian k Justin Novel Constit 23. who lived 527 Years after Christ which is this We Command that all Bishops and Priests do celebrate the Holy Oblation and the Prayers in Holy Baptism not speaking low but with a clear or loud voice which may be heard of the people that thereby the minds of the hearers may be stirred up with great Devotion in uttering the Prayers of the Lord God for so that Holy Apostle teacheth in his first Epistle to the Corinthians c. 14. Therefore for these causes it is convenient that among other Prayers those things also which are spoken in the holy Oblation be uttered and spoken of the most religious Priests unto our Lord Jesus Christ our God with the Holy Ghost with a loud voice Which is as our Homily takes notice a plain Decree of Justinian for Praying and Administring of Sacraments in a known tongue contrary to the opinion of them that would have ignorance make devotion To this head of right reading the Divine Service belongs the Order of our Church to use the Divine Service in publick as Order hath prescribed l Non transcu●●●ndo 〈◊〉 Syncopando Syn. Ling. 14 4. Can. 14. not chopping and changing adding and plucking away m Second Part of the Homily for Whit-sunday as the Homily speaks of the Romanists intermingling their own Traditions Yet though the Church doth not allow her Clergy to mangle her Offices yet where need is remissions are allow'd as in the Office of private Baptism Communion of the sick and the like And if any Liberties left to the prudence and discretion of the Ministers be a proper instance of the Moderation of the Church many might be
given which are allowed with which such may be contented as in some cases where some present resolution and practice is required in other matters of less concern where an indifferent variety is allowed but more instances there are of what is left to the discretion of the Ordinary n See the Preface concerning the Service of the Church Canon 53. Second Rubrick before the Preface of the Ceremonies Admon to Min. Eccles before the second Part of the Homilies Sundry Rubricks § 11. Having spoken of the Moderation and Wisdom of the Church in what relates to Sermons because Catechising o Canon 59. 1603. Lib. quor Canonum 1571. is an useful sort of Preaching I cannot but note the Moderation of the Church in framing such a Form of Catechism as the ancient Fathers p S. Aug. de Catechizandis rudibus S. Ambros de iis qui S. Mysteriis initiantur commended So full and comprehensive is the Exposition of the foundations of our Religion and yet without those curious questions which are not needful to trouble the green heads of those who are to be Catechised however which are not to be set forth as fundamental This was the excellent judgment of King James q Conference at Hampton-Court who approved of one uniform Catechism in the fewest and plainest affirmative terms that may be all curious and deep questions being avoided not like the ignorant Catechisms in Scotland set out by every one who was the Son of a good Man Thus the judicious r Pax Ecclesiae p. 54. Bishop Sanderson for the Peace of the Church and to preserve Unity and Charity his third direction is That Catechisms should not be farced with School points and private tenets but contain only clear and undoubted Truths Whereas the Church of Rome and many other Sects have stuft their Catechisms with some of their private opinions even so much that sometimes their Catechisms are not only to contain the sums of Christianity but they are the distinctive notes of their party in maintaining which some of them place so great a part of Religion and therefore no wonder if according to their great wisdom in other things they enamel their Catechisms with what is to them so pretious I shall only here add what Dr Hammond saith of this our Church Catechism ſ Vindication of the ancient Liturgy of the Church of England §. 40. If we would all keep our selves within that Moderation and propose no larger Catalogue of Articles to be believed by all than the Apostles Creed as 't is explain'd in our Catechism and lay greater weight upon the Vow of Baptism and all the Commands of God as they are explain'd by Christ and only add the Explication and use of the Sacraments in those commodious and most intelligible expressions and none other which are there set down I should be confident there would be less hating and damning one another more Piety and Charity and so true Christianity among Christians and Protestants than hitherto hath been met with § 12. This Chapter ought not to be dismissed before we take notice how the interest both of the inward and outward worship of God is according to a just Moderation secured in our Church For 1. In all the Instructions and Precepts of the Church Her designs and intent appear very sincere to promote the worship of God according to his Will Wherefore our Church makes none else partakers of the Divine Worship as neither Saints nor Angels nor the Blessed Virgin The Ceremonies as will be further shewed are not held by our Church as any part of the Divine Worship but only outward signs and helps of Devotion Our Church lays also greatest stress upon the inward affection and intention of the mind as the most necessary and principal part of the Divine Worship as that which only can render all outward expressions of our Honour of God acceptable Because in the affection of the Heart is the consummation of all moral goodness t Actus exterior nihil addit bonitatis aut malitiae actui interiori nisi per accidens D. Tho. 1. 2● q. 20. Art 4. especially in the worship of God For the best Being is to be served with the most excellent operations of our best Faculties Therefore God who is the most Excellent most Infinite and most pure Spirit must be worshipped in Spirit and in Truth in due regard to which just consideration all the Offices of our Church are framed so as to promote chiefly a due sense of God and of the Divine Attributes a Heavenly and spiritual disposition of Mind a real and unaffected Piety a sincere and hearty Devotion For as the Homily saith u Of Holy Scripture first Part. Without a single eye pure intent and good mind nothing is allowed for good before God But notwithstanding the inward worship of the Heart is held most necessary and principal in our Church is instantly required the outward worship of God also as in all acts of outward as well as inward obedience in many of which the affection cannot be sincere without the outward exercise of such acts when they can be performed as in consecrating also a just portion of our time and Estates to the honour of God the humble service of our bodies reverend gestures and behaviour which are but proper and fit to encrease in our selves and others the inward honour of God also In respect to both these parts of worship those who duly honour God may be fitly denominated devout persons But the probable reason why many who call themselves Saints do disdain the name of Devout is because the Attribute of Devotion seems to intimate also the outward reverent behaviour of body as the necessary Companion of the inward integrity of the mind which outward reverence such judge too meanly of Lastly In our Church the worship of God is supposed to proceed not so much from a principle of fear and dread as of love and thankfulness Whereas some in a way to overthrow all Religion have given out That the fear of God is only the dread men have of some unknown arbitrary and uncontroulable power Such a fear they suppose the only motive to the worship of God the only foundation and bond of Justice An Experiment taken up to keep men obedient to Laws The Moderation of our Church governs it self very justly in this matter accounting the due fear of the Soveraignty and power of God very useful to the good as well as the bad to make all heedful and careful in their duty Therefore in the Office of Commination as in many other places also the threats of God against impenitent Sinners are by our Church denounced Yet the first and the chief reason of our worship of God is frequently owned in the Offices of our Church and supposed to be a sense of the Infinite Divine Excellencies and his constant bounty and benefits and gracious goodness to mankind especially in our Lord Jesus
of God Bishop Hall in his Remains Wise Christians sit down in the mean now under the Gospel avoiding a careless and parsimonious neglect on the one side and a superstitions slovenliness on the other the painted looks and lascivious gaudiness of the Church upon the Hills and the careless neglected dress of some Churches in the Vally Far be it from me saith c ● 1. Disc 2. Mr Mede to be a Patron of Idolatry or Superstition in the least degree yet I am afraid lest we who have reformed the worship of God from that pollution and blessed be his name therefore by bending the crooked stick too much the other way have run too far into the contrary extreme To observe the just mean in practice is somewhat difficult nevertheless our Church in its rules doth no more favour Sacriledge than Idolatry If the personal faults of any have caused a scandal on us for either the Church laments the same and that there may be the less publick temptation to Sacrilege among us as it hath been in other Nations the immoderate bounty of exorbitant Donations is limited as by Statute of Mortmain lest the secular state should become impoverished Though that which was heretofore said of those things that were given that they were in a dead hand may more justly be said of those things that are taken away d View of Civ and Eccl. Law Part. 3. c. 4. §. 1. The Monuments of our Church are also full of instances of our Churches observing the mean between superstition and profaneness The horrible abuses saith e Hom. of repairing of Churches the Homily and abominations they that supply the room of Christ have purged and cleansed the Church of England of taking away all such fulsomness and filthiness as through ignorance and blind devotion hath crept into the Church these many hundred years The Homilies also condemn such sumptuousness as put people in peril of Idolatry yet They require all convenient cleanness and ornament where we cannot attain to an honourable magnificence For as the Homily saith When Gods House is well adorned with places convenient to sit in f Canon 83. 1603. with the Pulpit for the Preacher with the Lords Table g Canon 82. for the Ministration of the Holy Supper and the Font h Canon 81. to Christen in also is kept clean comely and sweetly the people are more comforted to resort thither and tarry the whole time appointed them i Hom. of Idolatry ● Part. Thus the 85. Canon provides That the Church be well and sufficiently repaired and so from time to time kept and maintained that all things be in such orderly and decent sort without dust or any thing that may be noisome or unseemly as becometh the House of God That there be a terrior of Glebe Lands and other possessions belonging to the Churches Canon 87. That the Churches be not profaned Canon 88. That the Bible and Common-Prayer Book and the Book of Homilies be had in every Church c. Can. 80. Unto all this I wish some would add the Consideration of what Mr Baxter hath writ Temples Vtensils c. devoted lawfully Christian Direct p. 915. Qu. 170. separated by man for holy uses are holy as justly related to God by that lawful separation Ministers are more holy than Temples Lands Vtensils as being nearlier related to holy things and things separated by God are more holy than those justly separated by man And so of Days every thing should be reverenced according to the measure of its Holiness and this expressed by such signs gestures actions as are fittest to honour God to whom they are related and so to be uncovered in Church and use reverent carriage and gestures there doth tend to preserve the due reverence to God and to his worship 1 Cor. 16. 20. CHAP. IX Of the Moderation of our Church with respect to Holy-Days namely both the Feasts and Fasts of the Church § 1. The Feasts of the Church are few and those for great reason chose with care to avoid the excesses of the Romanists § 2. The further behaviour of the Church in her Feasts most useful and prudent § 3. We celebrate the memory of Saints but of none whose existence or sanctity is uncertain § 4. The excellent ends of our Churches honour to Saints are set down § 5. That they are Festivally Commemorated not out of opinion of worship or merit or absolute necessity thereof to Religion § 6. Our Church runs not into any excess in any Prayer to Saints § 7. Nor with reference to Images § 8. Whether our Church in any of these practices be justly charged of Popery by those who Canonize among themselves those who are of uncertain sanctity § 9. The Moderation of our Church in its honour given to Angels § 10. And to the Blessed Virgin § 11. Our Church hath taken great care that a special honour be had to the Lords Day and that the Lords Day nor any other Festival be abused to Luxury and Impiety § 12. The Moderation of the Church with reference to its Musick and Psalmody § 13. The Moderation of our appointed Fasts The Lenten or Paschal Fast how far Religious by the Precept of the Church § 1. COncerning Holy-Days in general it may suffice here only to repeat the words of our Bishops in answer to the Presbyterian Brethren 1661. N. 6. The observation of Saints days is not of divine but Ecclesiastical Institution and therefore it is not necessary that they should have any other ground in Scripture than other Institutions of the same nature so that they be agreeable to the Scripture in the general end for the promoting of Piety and the observation of them was ancient as appears by the Rituals and Liturgies and by the joint consent of Antiquity and by the ancient Translation of the Bible as the Syriack and Aethiopick where the Lessons appointed for Holy-Days are noted and set down the former of which was made near the Apostles times Besides our Saviour himself kept a Feast of the Churches Institution viz. The Feast of Dedication S. Jo. 12. 22. The choice end of these dayes being not Feasting but the exercise of Holy Duties they are fitter called Holy-Days than Festivals and though they be all of like nature it doth not follow that they are equal The exceeding number of Festivals in the Roman Church that they have neither mean nor measure in making new Holy-days as Mr Latimer saith a Sermon to the Convocation hath been the frequent complaint not only of many Learned Protestants b Vetus querela est de nimis magnâ festorum multitudin● Chemn Exam. Pars 4. p. 162. but also of very many of the Roman Communion as might be instanced Who have thought that the Salvation of men would have been better consulted if there were fewer Solemnities and greater Devotion alledging that of St Bernard c Patriae est non exilii frequentia haec
fidem sanctis vocibus pascimus spem erigimus fiduciam figimus c. Tertull Apol. All manner of persons within this Church of England that from henceforth they celebrate and keep the Lords Day commonly called Sunday and other Holy-days according to Gods holy will and pleasure and the Orders of the Church of England prescribed in that behalf that is in hearing of the Word of God read and taught in private and publick Prayers in acknowledging their offences to God and amendment of the same in reconciling themselves charitably to their neighbours where displeasure hath been in oftentimes receiving the Holy Communion of the body and blood of Christ in visiting of the poor and sick and using all good and sober Conversation Much to the same purpose is largely insisted on in the Homily of place and time of Prayer All persons saith the late Statute q Car. 2. 29. shall on every Lords Day apply themselves to the observation of the same by exercising themselves in the duties of Piety and true Religion publickly and privately and no Tradesman shall do or exercise any worldly labour c. Works of necessity and Charity only excepted r Cunctarum artium officia venerabili die solis quiescant l. 3. Cod. Tit. de Feriis Which Statute of the Kingdom seems to have taken its Rule of Moderation from our excellent Homilies Which do reprove those who ride Journeys buy and sell and make all days alike who profane such holy times by pride and other excesses Albeit the same Homily declares the Commandment of God doth not bind Christian people so straitly to observe the utter Ceremonies of the Sabbath Day as it was given to the Jews ſ Audimus apud Bohemos exoriri novum Judaeorum genus Sabbatarios appellant qui tantâ superstitione servant sabbatum ut si quid eo die inciderit in c●●lum nolint eximere Erasm de amab Concord as touching forbearing of work and labour in time of necessity and so the Injunctions of King Edw. 6. and Queen Eliz. § 20. conclude Notwithstanding all Parsons Vicars and Curates shall teach and declare unto their Parishioners that they may with a safe and quiet Conscience after Common-Prayer in time of Harvest labour upon the Holy and Festival Days and save that thing which God hath sent So by King Edw. 6. it was ordered that the Lords of the Council should upon every Sunday attend the publick affairs of the Realm The Church also and the Laws of the Kingdom have taken the same wise care to set such Holy-Dayes in every term t Taceat apparitio advocatio delitescat nihil ●odem die sibi vendicat scena theatralis l. 3. Cod. Tit. de feriis V. Act for abrogation of Holy-dayes 1536. R. Hen 8. V. R. H. 8. Injunctions Hist of Reform Collection of Records l. 3. p. 161. Legum conditores festos instituerunt dies ut ad hilaritatem homines publicè cogerentur tanquam necessarium laboribus temperamentum Sen. de Tranquill. c. 15. that beside the ordinary Vacations there may be some days of respite from secular businesses and contests of Law for the exercises of Peace Charity and Devotion So careful have our Laws in Church and Kingdom been to avoid profaneness on one hand and on the other hand all sorts of superstition that is either Heathenish or Jewish usages as such For as the Homily of Prayer earnestly blames them who abuse holy times and places with intolerable superstitions as hath been in use in the Church of Rome so on the other hand it doth not countenance those opinions which tend to establish among us such observances as were peculiar to the Jews After the recital of the fourth Commandment in the Decalogue our Church prays That our hearts be inclin'd to keep that Law therein rightly acknowledging a moral equity that Christians should observe such a proportion of time as hath been the practice of the Church in which time all impediments to sacred and religious duties publick or private are to be avoided according to the equity of the Divine Law and the Precept of Gods Church The Moderation of our Church in its judgment of the Lords Day Bishop Bramhall hath observed from the Homily of the Church as concurrent with his own judgment u Discourse of the Sabbath or Lords Day p. 932. 1. That the Homily denieth not the Lords Day the name of Sabbath That it finds no Law of the Sabbath Gen. 23. That the Homily finds no seventh Day Sabbath before Moses his time The Homily gives no power to the fourth Commandement as it was given to the Jews to oblige Christians but only as it was and so far as it was a Law of nature The Homily makes the first day of the week to signify the Lords Day The Homily makes the end of changing the Weekly Festival of the Church to have been in honour of Christs Resurrection The Homily derives the Lords Day down from the Ascension of Christ immediately But the Homily doth express that p. 916. the fourth Commandment doth not bind Christians over-streightly Not to the external Ceremonies of the Sabbath not to the rigorous part of it to forbear all work As to the question By what authority this change was made I find no cause to doubt saith the Bishop but that it was made by the authority of Christ that is by divine authority 'T is true we find no express precept recorded in Holy Scripture for the setting a-part the first day of the Week for the service of God Neither is it necessary that there should be an express Precept for it founded in Holy Scripture to prove it to be a divine right The perpetual and universal practice of the Catholick Church including all the Apostles themselves is a sufficient proof of the divine right of it that at least it was an Apostolical Institution and Ordinance not temporary but perpetual § 12. With the Festivals it may not be improper to join the notice of the Moderation of our Church in reference to her Musick and Psalmody wherein the Constitution of our Church sheweth us the true temper of Religion which as it is the most serious so it is the most pleasant of all performances and is most suited to the nature temper and condition of man in which joy and sorrow have a very interchangeable interest therefore S. James saith Is any afflicted let him pray is any merry let him sing Psalms Jam. 3. 13. Accordingly in our Church Prayer and praise fill up the measures of Divine Worship and can there be any performance more pleasant than to join with and imitate the Heavenly Host in the high praises of God Neither doth our Church judge it enough for us to make melody in our hearts to the Lord but doth require us to serve God also with our x Omnes affectus spiritûs nostri pro sua diversitate habent proprios modos in voce cantu quorum occultâ
all other matters referring to that Sacrament and all the other five Sacraments also in every thing referring to Faith and Doctrine and Rites agree in heart and confession of mouth with all things received in the Roman Church and all the decrees of that Council made or to be made exhibiting all duty to the Pope as the universal Bishop of the Church c. Such gainful and advantageous bargains will they be sure to make for themselves and the keeping up their usurpations before they will allow any concession or mitigate any extreme rigour in their most unwarrantable practises or they will not fail to annex such conditions as shall render their concessions ineffectual § 2. The Doctrine of Transubstantiation which the Church of Rome receives as an Article of Faith absolutely and simply necessary to Salvation and propounds it to be received by all under a terrible Anathema y Conc. Trid. Sess 13. Can. 2. is by our Church plainly denied as contrary both to Holy Scriptures and all testimonies of venerable antiquity and as a doctrine liable to grievous consequences z V. Hist. Transubst à Jo. Dunelmensi which judgment of our Church may appear to them that peruse our Articles 28 29. Order of Communion Rubricks Homilies several Statutes of the Land particularly the late Statute wherein is provided that all that are in office do declare that they do believe that there is not any Transubstantiation in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper or in the Elements of Bread and Wine at or after the Consecration thereof by any person whatsoever yet such is the accurate Moderation of the Church of England in avoiding one error it runs not into other extremes for in the Office of the Holy Communion in the Church Catechism in the Apology for the Church of England is asserted the real presence a Archbishop Vsher's Serm. 18 Febr. 1620. of Christ in the Sacrament according to Scripture and the judgment b Patres dehortantur à quaestione 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hâc piâ Moderatione si Rex Eccl. Angl. utuntur quae invidia R. Jac. ad C. Per. of the Church of God but the particular mode and manner thereof any otherwise than that it is spiritual mystical and sacramental the Church of England according to the same Rule and practice of the Catholick Church doth not too curiously pry into or search See Ch. 5. § 6. § 3. As the Church of England doth earnestly and passionately invite and expostulates with those of her Communion to frequent the Holy Sacrament as in the exhortations before the Holy Communion in the Conclusion of the Homily of the place and time of Prayer and in Q. Eliz. Articles for Doctrine and Preaching all Ministers are required to excite the people to often and devout receiving the Holy Communion c V. Librum quorundam Canonum 1571. Jam vero singulis mensibus coenam celebrari maximè nobis placeret Calvin Ep. p. 452. and in Colleges and Collegiate Churches the Holy Communion is required to be administred every Sunday unless there be reasonable cause to the contrary d V. Rubr. 4. after H. C. Canon 23. V. Rubr. 8. after H. C. Canon 21. 1003. Rubr. 8. after H. C. and on the first or second Sunday of every month So also the Church of England doth lay its general Command according to great Moderation in requiring every one thrice at least every year to Communicate e Qui in nataii D. Paschate Pentecosle non Communicant Catholici non credantur Conc. Agath Can. 18. well tempering her Injunction in accommodation to the necessity of the Age between the earnest practice of devotion which was in the Primitive Church f Quando Domini nostri adhuc calebat cruor fervebat recens in credentibus fides S. Hieron ad Demetr Ep. 8. when they commonly Communicated at least every Lords Day and Festival and between the remissness of the Church of Rome g Dolemus tantam Christianorum incuriam ut semel tantùm in anno sumant c. Concil Rhem. 1583. which expresly requires all of her Communion to celebrate but once every Year h In Pentecoste rarior est Communio ideo fortasse Concilium Tridentinum hoc tempore nuptias solennes fieri permisit C. Bellarm. de Matrim Sacram. l. 1. c. 31. and the followers of the Directory who for many years together lamentably neglected the administration and participation of the Eucharist i V. Coena q. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V. S. Eccl. Angl. Vindic. c. 3. as beside our own memory Mr Prin often testifies and the History of the Times soon after the Reformation tell us of some who from adoring the Elements fell to contemn them wherefore there issued out a Proclamation k Fuller's Eccl. His P. 387. concerning the irreverent talking of the Sacrament § 4. As our Church offers the Holy Eucharist only to those who have given due testimony of their knowledge and Christian belief in having been confirmed by the Bishop l V. Rubr. after Confirm Injunctions of King Edw. 6. Canon 29. So it requires that none be admitted Godfathers or Godmothers at Christening or Confirmation but such as have received the Holy Communion Yet because S. Paul remits every particular Christian to a Self-examination without any order either to Minister or Lay-Elder to exclude any from the Holy Communion upon their Examination therefore the Moderation of our Church is such it doth not depress adult Christians below the order of persons first to be Catechiz'd requiring them to such rigid Examinations as have been sometime used like the auricular Confessions of the Romanists among which Examiners of the adult Professors the being of a party hath been too often the note of preparation for their Church Communion Neither doth our most moderate Church judge any uncapable of the Sacraments whom she judgeth not unworthy of her Communion m Homily of the Sacrament We must take heed saith the Homily lest of the Memory it be made a Sacrifice lest of a Communion it be made a private eating Wherefore as the redemption of our Lord is offered to all that do not wilfully reject so great grace so is the Holy Communion in our Church to all that are not unfit to receive it And such as are the Church is not wanting to admonish and forewarn n V. Exhorta and Admon before the H. C. and takes all due care to provide against their intrusion as the general corruption of mankind now doth admit according to the Rubrick and Canon o Canon 26. concerning Notorious Offenders On which Bishop Andrews his note was Our Law will not suffer the Minister to judge any man a notorious offender but him who is so convinced by some legal sentence § 5. Our Church of England doth not admit any private Masses p Conc. Trid. Sess 22. Can. 8. 39 Artic. 31. Hom. of Sacr. which in
Man's Conscience * V. Proceedings against the Traytors And yet Suarius ¶ Suarius de poen disp 33. §. 1. determins That in no case for no end though it was to save a whole Commonwealth from a great Evil Temporal or Spiritual may it be lawful to violate Confession Ja. Binet † I S. Casaub ad Frontod p. 140. went higher It was better all Kings should perish than even once the Seal of Confession should be violated The Catholic Apologist goes higher yet Pag. 426. The Sacrament of Confession is of such Reverence among us that we cannot lawfully disclose a secret known by it tho it were to save Christianity it self Nay the Apologie for Garnet * Eud. Jo. Apol. pro Garnetto p. 327. hath a notable fetch to bring in all the Gun-powder Conspirators as Martyrs for saith he It is the common opinion of Catholicks That all who receive the Matter from the Confessor by the consent of the Penitent are bound by Religion of Secrecy But what abuse of Confession is this to hold those Martyrs who confessed a Wickedness they were resolved to commit And their Priests absolved them from a Treason they were then sworn to undertake § 4. The Discipline of our Church doth by no means exclude the use of External Penance And in its judgment is more right than the Church of Rome To inforce both inward and outward Penance our Church hath a special Office of Commination upon solemn occasion to be used And for some scandalous Sins when Notorious solemn Penance is by a special Canon required for the Humiliation and Compunction of the Sinner for the Example of others and for the Edification of the Church * V. Artic proclero The Commutation of which for very good Reasons requiring the Church hath taken care sometime to moderate But the Commutations allowed by our Commutationem a. injunctae poenitentiae nec Cancellarius faciet nec Archidiac nec Officialis nec Commissarius Ea potestas multis gravibus de causis Episcopo soli reservabitur V. Libr. qu. Canonum 1571. Church are sincerely designed for the ends of Charity and Religion and the consideration of Piety but are not taxed in a penitentiary Table as it were to invite Men to sin The De Polit. Eccl. Angl. c. 6. p. 328. godly Discipline of the Primitive Church of open Penance for the Conviction of V. Office of Commination Notorious Offenders the Church of England wisheth may be restored again But The satisfaction that God requires of us saith the Homily of Repentance is that we cease from evil and do good and if we have done any Man wrong to endeavour our selves to make him true amends to the uttermost of our power following in this the example of Zacheus c. Nevertheless the Penances in the Church of Rome which there are called Satisfactions and are counted Deletory of Sin and Meritorious of Pardon our Church doth account no otherwise than Superstitious § 5. The Absolution of the Priest hath its due honour and use in our Church altho it be made no part of any Sacrament of Penance And that the Moderation of our Church may be more perceived observe 1. That our Church ascribeth not the power of Remission of Sin to any but to God only 2. It constantly holds That Faith and true Repentance are the necessary conditions of receiving the benefit of Remission of Sin 3. It asserts what is most true that the Ministers of the Church have a special Power and Commission which other Believers have not authoritatively to declare this Absolution and Remission of Sin for the benefit and consolation of true Penitency which if duly dispensed cannot but have a real effect from the very promise of Christ S. Jo. 20. 23. Vid. S. Chrys Hom. 5. in Esaiam 4. This Penitence our Church makes not a new Sacrament as doth the Church of Rome but a means of returning to the Grace of God bestowed in Baptism They which in act or deed sin after Baptism saith our Homily when they turn to God unfeignedly they are likewise washed by this Sacrifice from their Sins Poenitentia nihil aliud est quam reditus ad promissionem gratiae Baptismi Chemn exam de paenit p. 199. The rare temper and proportion which the Church of England useth in Commensurating the Forms of Absolution to the degrees of Preparation and Necessity is to be observed That at the beginning of Morning and Evening Prayer after a general Confession the Form of Absolution is in general Declarative and by way of Proposition In the Office of Communion it is by way of Intercession In the Visitation of the Sick when it is supposed and enjoyned that the Penitent shall disburthen himself of the clamorous loads on his Conscience the Church prescribes a Medicinal Form by way of delegate Authority Therefore saith the Bishop of Down It is the excellent Temper of the Church so to prescribe her Forms of Absolution as to shew them to be the results of the whole Priestly Office All which Forms V. Bishop Sparrow's Rationale p. 23. in Sence and Vertue are the same 5. For Visitation of the Sick such is the care of our Church that by its Canon When any Person is dangerously Sick Can. 67. 1603. in any Parish the Minister or Curate having knowledg thereof shall resort unto him or her if the Disease be not known or probably suspected to be Infectious to instruct and comfort them in their Distress according to the Order of the Common-Prayer-Book if he be no Preacher or if he be a Preacher then as he shall think most needful and convenient And so in the Rubric it is said The Minister may use that or the like Exhortation From both which passages altho we are not greedy of Liberty yet for good Reasons and the occasional Necessity of accommodating our addresses in that kind to the particular cases of Persons we observe the Moderation of our Church in complying accurately with all the Necessities of her People And further we note from that Canon That altho in Prudence and Kindness and Christian Duty the Minister may and ought in many cases to go of his own accord to visit his Charge especially yet we cannot say that the Church doth bind always her Minister thereunto till he be certified According to the words of St. James Chap. 5 ver 14. Is any sick among you let him call for the Elders of the Church c. Yet because in a matter of such concern the Church would not have its Ministers use such a Capricio as to stand upon their Niceties in so serious and momentous a Matter nor the People so forgetful of their own Interest as to neglect their part therein therefore so punctual is our Church and moderate according to Reason the Canon only saith The Minister having knowledg thereof shall resort c. Excellent was the Injunction of King Edward the 6th 1547. and
the late History of the Irish Affairs Which most remarkable Story is a strange proof of the dangerous influence on Kingdoms which is to be expected from the propagation of the Roman Faith and is also a great Instance of the Moderation of our Governments and how ineffectual the same is on such § 8. The Rules and Orders of our Church are mildly and moderately framed Our Church being ever most remov'd from the guilt or humour of Domineering over the Consciences of any She teacheth and enforceth the Divine Commands and useth her Liberty in those things which are left undetermin'd and are within her own just Compass The Precepts of the Church which are very few are justly affirmed to bind by virtue of the Command of God yet their Obligation which is declared not to be Universal only to her Sons and that but so long as she judgeth expedient is intended or remitted as just reason of the Case requires No Councils Evangelical are any where made into Laws in our Church or set up as a Fund for Merit and Supererogation but are left free for our further exercise and endeavour after Christian Perfection Which because it cannot be thorowly attained in this imperfect state therefore the Moderation of our Church no where pretends to this perfection either of Knowledg or of Grace So K. James affirmed to the Cardinal He never should boast of this Church as being perfectly without spot or wrinkle § 9. For Illustration sake if we would compare the moderation of our Laws with the Laws of the Roman Church we cannot better do it than by taking into Consideration a Chapter of Card. Bellarmine's * C. Bellarm l. de Pontif. Ro. cap. de comparatione Legum wherein he useth very neat Sleights to elevate the heaviness and number of the Pontifical Laws and to make them fewer and lighter than were the Ordinances among the Jews For saith he the Laws absolutely impos'd upon all Christians by our Church are scarce found any more than four viz. To observe the Feasts of the Church And the Fasts and to Confess once a Year and to Communicate at Easter Indeed the Men of that generation are so wise that until any be a through Proselyte there is all shew of Moderation that may be to entice them into their Communion But first what Bondage was there ever among the Jews comparable to that one Obligation among the Romanists to believe the Church and Pope of Rome infallible with the Consequences of that in practice which are heavier than all the Jewish Observances set together 2ly On the Supposition that there were only those four general Precepts of the Church we may consider how great Burdens any one of them singly do contain 1. In that their Feasts are so excessive in their number and the observation of them have so many Superstitions V. Ch. 9. The same 2. is to be said of their Fasts 3. In that Auricular Confession of all Mortal Sins with all their Circumstances is enjoyn'd as by Divine Right V. Ch. 11. 4. The slightest Precept of the four is the last of Communicating at Easter But considering therewith the round belief of Transubstantiation which all are required to have we may truly say with our Bishop Hall * Remains p. 30. The Pope's little Finger is heavier than Moses 's Loins But perhaps one reason why the Cardinal saith there are so few Precepts of the Church is because he will say that many of the rest are Divine Commands as Extreme Unction c. The rest saith he of which the Tomes of Councils and Books of Canon Law are so full are not Laws but Admonitions only or pious Institutions without obligation to Fault However there are great store of them of a great Bulk But it is strange that so many Canons of Councils and other Laws enforced with Anathema should have no intended obligation to a Fault in case of Transgression Why were such Laws made or why were such Anathemaes annexed Or saith he They are Conditional Laws as of Celibacy in case any enter into sacred Orders which are not to be accounted burdensome because the Law leaves them to their choice as also in case of Vows How many and how strict observances are contained under such conditional Obligations is too well known to be largely insisted on The Purifications the choice of Meats among the Jews had not all of them comparably so many Rites and Orders and Laws as the Pontifical Oeconomy hath But to make the Precepts of the Church show very light and easie indeed The four Laws of the Church saith Bellarmin are rather a determination of the Divine Law than any new Law for by the Divine Law we are bound to dedicate some time to the Worship of God sometimes to Fast to Confess to Communicate True indeed But then the general Rules of Scripture the edification of Christian People the practice of the Primitive Church the ends of Religious Actions themselves ought to give measure to Laws as in the Church of England is practised and not to let their Commands run out into such lavish extremity where God hath left us at so large and safe freedom Lastly he saith The Commands of the Church have a most moderate Obligation for in their Fasts those who are Sick and Aged are accepted And for Festivals their observation also is dispensed with upon a just Cause So that in conclusion the Church of Rome is the most moderate Governour that ever was for there it is the easiest matter to get off from the strictest Precepts that are if you have Money but the Poor cannot be comforted * Nota diligenter quod hujusmodi gratia dispensationes non conceduntur pauperibus quia non sunt ideo non possunt consolari Taxa Cancel Apostol So great is the moderation of the Church of Rome so large are her Indulgences whether for Commission of Sin or for Omission of Duty § 10. Having mentioned the mildness of the Churche's Power It is meet for the further shewing her Moderation to note That our Church in the Government of her Ecclesiastical Courts in their manner of Process Sentence Appeals doth make use of the Law of Equity moderating even the practice of that also with all due Subordination to other Superiour Laws According to Equity our Church desires all its Laws may be interpreted ¶ Benignius leges interpretandae sunt quo voluntas earum conservetur Capienda est occasio quae praebet benignius responsum She admits of a mitigation of a rigid Sentence She doth sometimes dispense with her General Rules upon the exception of a particular Case Just reason requiring she admits a commutation of her Censures When there is sufficient Cause she is ready to abrogate any such Laws as are found inexpedient and inconvenient The reason of her Laws ceasing they are made to cease also And to take cognizance of their desires who ask a relaxation of strict or rigid Law there
is a Court of Faculties constituted on purpose to grant in many Cases not repugnant to the Law of God * Camden Britan. p. 110. a Dispensation of some Canons And if the Ecclesiastical Senate among the Disciplinarians might for the greater good of the Church dispence with a Rigid Law why Altare Damasc p. 85. may not the same be done in a Christian Kingdom by such Authority as the King and the Laws have constituted And we count it a great Moderation in our Establishment that there is amongst us a right of Appeal allowed in case of unjust Censure And the Moderation of our Public Government hath been such that Permissions which have been sometime known upon occasion were never allowed to make void the Laws of the Kingdom or the Church It may be added that in the separation and division of Causes which is made between our Ecclesiastical and Civil Courts as excellent Proportions and Measures are observable so instead of all is that the Rules of Ecclesiastical Practice are with all reserve and subordination to the Laws of the Kingdom For our Church useth no other voluntary Jurisdiction than what is established or confirmed and limited by the Statute or Municipal Law For the execution of which and to correct the Excesses and Defects which shall be found among the Ministers or People and to promote Piety Righteousness and Sobriety of Life and Conversation there are among us frequent Visitations appointed and practised by the Bishops and Arch-Deacons CHAP. XIII Of the Moderation of the Church and Kingdom referring to the Administration of Public Laws towards Offenders § 1. The occasion of that Mistake which is concerning the unlawfulness of Coercion in cases which concern Religion § 2. It may be very well consistent with the Moderation of the Church besides her own Censures to approve and sometimes desire such Coercion § 3. The Vse thereof in many Cases relating to Religion the undeniable Right of the Christian Magistrate § 4. Some of the chief Objections hereunto Answered § 5. Sundry proper Instances of the great Gentleness and most indulgent Care of our Church toward all its Members § 6. The Moderation of the Church and Kingdom not without their requisite and just Bounds § 7. The Recourse which our Church desires may be made to the Secular Arm is not but upon urgent and good Occasion § 8. Our Government defended from unjust Clamours of Persecution of the Romanists on one side and the Separatists on the other § 9. The Kings of England since the Reformation and especially his present Majesty Glorious Examples of this Moderation The effect of this Moderation yet much desired and wanted § 1. AS the nature of Moderation hath been Explained Ch. 1. The most proper Instances thereof are such as shew the Gentleness and Mildness of the Church with reference to such Censures and Punishments as are used and approved by Her Which is most necessary to be observed because the most general but groundless Objection against the Moderation of our Church hath been upon this Occasion Which if we truly consider ariseth either from a mistake in Judgment that all Coercion in matter of Religion is unlawful or else from an Impression which on the Phancy and Affection of easie and soft Dispositions hath been made from the Complaints of several to whom whatever looks like Penalty is commonly irksome and very unpleasing especially if it happens that they are guilty of the same wherefore they seem in haste to fly unto Religion as their Sanctuary against Punishment as if God's Religion and His Church had different Altars among us therefore I doubt not but when the Prejudice against the former Mistake is taken off Religion and the Church will appear to have the same Interest and the Moderation of the Church may be fairly acknowledged § 2. For the distinct understanding what is right in this Case we may first Consider how far toward this Coercion the Church can move of it self 1. We cannot but acknowledg the Church as a Society established by our Lord Christ and which was necessary to the being of a Church had Rulers therein appointed with Authority and Power to effect the necessary Ends of Government Which could not be without a power of Discipline to Rebuke Article 33 and Censure and Exclude from such a Society those who will not observe its just Laws Which proceeding was suitable to the Apostolical Practice and Command with relation to Offenders and agreable to what was practised among the Jews in their Synagogues the common Reasons of which are perpetually the same Namely that such a Community and Fellowship as the Church is be maintained in Unity Peace and Purity since without these no such Society can subsist and that such Offenders may if possible be reduced and amended who are bound to submit to such Censures by virtue of their own first Consent which was the Condition of being admitted to partake of the Privileges of such a Communion But in that general Contempt which is cast on Sacred things through the grievous Corruption of the Age since many are insensible of their Duty and Relation to the Church as Members and also are apt to despise the Church and her Spiritual Discipline Therefore the Church in a Christian Kingdom being in other Circumstances than considered alone by it self receiving thereby Defence in the exercise of its Power so far that many times the Christian Magistrate is pleased to add to the Spiritual Censures of the Church if need be such outward and sensible Punishments as may touch the Bodies or Goods or Temporal Interests of such Delinquents In such a case the Church hath reason to accept of such Defence and to approve also and defend the same civil Animadversions on Offenders since they are very lawful and useful and worthy a Christian Magistrate § 3. He being appointed of God for the punishment of Evil-doers and to execute Wrath on them Since they on whom the Church rightly inflicts her Censures are Evil-doers therefore such also the more they undervalue the Censures of the Church the more justly are they the subjects of the Civil Magistrates Punishment And since Offences which affront the Majesty of Heaven are of the highest Nature the more Religious a Magistrate is the more care he will take to see such Punished And since Christian Magistrates owe that duty to God from whom alone they receive their Power and Soveraignty they are therefore especially to take care of Religion and Common Reason and Experience instructs us This cannot be done unless such Laws are guarded with Sanctions of Punishments that so They may be indeed a Terror to those who will break the Peace and Order of the Church Especially when the Peace of the Church hath so great an Influence on the Peace of the Public State or Kingdom Which when it is Christian the Religion of the Kingdom is the chief part of its Laws This is the use of no other Power than what
cases such Omissions are pursued with more care and strictness because they destroy the very end for which the Power is given the Church to punish which is the preservation of Peace and Vnity § 5. Wherefore now it remains for us to observe the excellent measures of the Moderation of our Church in that Gentleness and Benignity which is shewed in the Administration of her Laws 1. Religion is no where allowed or desired to be more voluntary than among us And no where are any more required by their own choice and free use of their own understandings to take upon them the profession of their Religion 2. None by our Church were ever compelled to the Faith When did ever our Church encourage any Christian King to send his Arms to compel any Pagans or Infidels to the Faith 3. Let it be remembred None in our Church are punished only for their Opinion Even The Liberty of Prophesying saith Opinion may accidentally disturb Sect. 16. Num. 4. the public Peace through the overactiveness of the Person and the confidence of their Belief and the opinion of its appendant necessity and therefore Toleration of differing Persuasions in these cases is to be considered upon Political Grounds and is just to be admitted or denied as the Opinions or Tolerations of them may consist with the public and necessary ends of Government Let it also be remembred that our Church and Laws do allow a Liberty of Conscience and which is more a Liberty of Practice to such a degree as the Laws of the Kingdom and the Church judge safe for the Public Interest 'T is evident that they already allow a large and real Toleration within such bounds as They have judged the Public Peace may be secured which large Liberties all are not sensible of who enjoy them because they compare not the effects of that Spirit of Meekness in our Church with the Cuts of those Rods and Axes too I may say which have been prepared both by the Romish Communion and by other Disciplinarians And by the few things which our Church hath determin'd since there is so great a liberty left for Mutual Toleration It is evident that the Divine Moderation of our Church considers the frame of Man and the uncertainty difficulty and imperfection of Humane Knowledg the weakness and variety of Humane Understandings She alloweth much to the force of Prejudice Education and the power and artifice of Seducers Our Church makes a great reserve of Dispensation to Persons of modest humble docible and peaceful Spirits and proportions its Censures to the degrees of Malice and the Unchristian Temper which appears in Offenders and chiefly designs securing Peace and the true ends of Government and the common interest of her Communion 4. All Christian care is used to inform and instruct the Ignorant and those who are in Error with all Meekness and Patience * Blandâ pietate portandi sunt qui increpari pro suâ infirmitate non possunt Prosper de vitâ Contempl. c. 5. Counsels Debates Persuasions Concessions Indulgences from time to time have been used sufficient to justifie our Church and leave her obstinate Adversaries the more Inexcusable The Infirm and ¶ Veluti pueris absinthia tetra Cum dare conantur pri●● or as pocula circum Lucret. l. 4. Weak our Church receives with an Apostolic Care and earnestly provides they be not led into doubtful Disputations It doth not only pray that all such as have Erred and are Deceived may be led into the Way of Truth but requires her Ministers to use all private Conferences and means that may be to reduce the Dissenting Brother Which Method at large is prescribed in the 3 d Canon 1640. for the suppressing the growth of Popery and is also provided for in the 66 Canon 1603. It is not my purpose said King James † Confer at Hampt Court and I dare say it is not the Bishops intent presently and out of hand to enforce these things without Fatherly Admonitions Conferences V. Refor Leg. Eccl. de jud contr har c. 3. and Persuasions Wherefore the Rules of our Church require in the exercise of her Authority great Gravity Temper and Wariness There being no Earthly Providence so likely to secure the Obedience of Children as that of Parents not provoking them and the difference being not great and the danger equal whether that be done by too great severity of Punishments or levity of Commands the one abating the Love the other the Reverence due to the Parents * Dr. Ham. of resolv Controversies Our Church therefore maintains the Reverence due to her by laying greatest stress on the weightest matters of the Law and declares the keeping or omitting of a Ceremony in it self considered is but a small thing setting aside Wilfulness and Contempt ¶ Pref. of Cerem and which might in reason gain Love to our Church her Punishments are as mild as her Commands are reasonable 5. The Punishments for any Errors yea Heresy it self which by our Laws are allowed or by our Church are approved are so moderate as thereby may appear their design is not Destruction but Amendment and Edification As our Church doth earnestly commend Gentleness so it practiseth the same for as our Church saith † Homily of the state of Matrimony Honest Natures will sooner be retained in their Duties by gentle words than by extremity and severity and frowardness is not mended with frowardness but with softness Wherefore the Institution of a Christian Man saith The Bishops are not bound so precisely but they may attemper and forbear the Execution of their Jurisdiction when by so doing the Cure of the Offenders and the Tranquillity of the Church may be furthered Our Church being of the same Judgment with those Fathers of the Church who when the Donatists were intolerable they consented to some lesser Penalty but constantly condemned taking away their Lives * Semper tamen Augustinus excipit supplicium Mortis non quod illos hoc non mereri putaret sed tùm quia hoc decere Ecclesiae Mansuetudinem putaret C. Bellarm. de Laicis Tom. 2. l. 3. c. 21. At other times our Church moderates her Censures in proportion to the Offence for the reducing the Transgressor using a Medicinal Censure before a Precisive a less to prevent a greater Excommunication ¶ Canon 48. 88. 109. 115. This she resorts to as the last Remedy † Monitio omnes ferè Censuras Ecclesiasticas pracedit De Polit. Eccl. Anglic p. 315. and so also that the Church hath her Bosom open to any who return and repent of their wicked Errors and Practices and upon Repentance our Church is more ready to Absolve than otherwise to Bind and delights to give her Sons to God but very unwillingly * Form Senten Excommunic delivers them over to Satan ¶ Sic Episcopi affectus boni est postremò quod sanari non potest cum dolore abscindere
be lawful to attempt any thing against his Person and Life are so much the same that they cannot be more if we compare Lessius Suarez Bellarmine and many other Jesuits and Mr. White of Obedience and Government with Knox and Buchanan and many other Republicans since wherein both sorts as Rivals seem to deal with the People as some Gallants do by foolish Women flatter them so long into a pride and conceit of themselves so great that at length they become intolerable and ungovernable Of this sort were the Discourses in the Council of Basil related by Aeneas Sylvius afterward Pope who could not contain from highly commending * Quem Sermonem sic doctè sie verificè sic suaviter disputarit Commentar de gestis Concil Bas in Fascic rer expe● fol 4. the Bishop of Burgen for his admirably vilifying the Power of Kings Thus the worst of our Enthusiasts and of the Romanists agree in that Character of the Pharisees They mightily employed their Powers to oppose Kings † Jos Antiq l 17. c. 3. So true is the observation of King Charles the First ¶ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 §. 15. of some Protestants They seem to have learned and to practise the worst Principles of the Papists And of both the Lord Bishop of Salisbury The Bigot and Jesuited Romanist the frighted and transported Reformist have bin Authors of the most horrible Treasons and Rebellions 20. I need not here particularly relate how many Doctrines of the Romanists tend to dissolve the very Bonds of Relative Duty one toward another as in their Monastical Vows absolving People from their Oaths and Allegiance and Faith with Hereticks c. How do many Principles of our Enthusiasts and Separatists tend to destroy the Relation of King and Subject Bishop and People Their very Divisions how do they alienate the minds of Christians one from another Tho they ought to belong to the same moderate Church are Subjects of the same most Gracious King are of the same Protestant and Reformed Interest beside the danger they bring to themselves and their Families by their pernicious and destructive Separation so many and more might be the Instances of their loosing the Bonds of Relative Duty § 8. Among other Sects it would grieve any one to behold so many seduced into the silly Herd of Quakers a Sect into which the very dregs of Heresy and Schism seem to have bin drein'd as it were into one Common Shore In the inventing and propagating which even Satan and the Jesuit seem to have club'd their utmost Art possessing them with an evil Spirit of Delusion which they call the Light within them according to which what is most contrary to Holy Scriptures and Right Reason and the testimony and judgment of the whole Church and the prudent command of Governors and the sence and custom of wise and pious Men must pass for an extraordinary illumination from God merely on the credit of their own saying so This one Enthusiastical Conceit of the Light within and Opinion of such Revelation from God is the most unhappy contrivance and suggestion that can be to lift up silly People above a possibility of being contradicted by any sober Principles of Scripture or Reason or regular Authority fitted to possess such with a lusty pride and bewitched conceit of themselves an incorrigible moroseness and obstinacy an intolerable censoriousness a sordid scorn of whatever is in just place above them and wonderfully disposeth such for Popery for when once they are sufficiently divided from our Church the Work is sufficiently done Then if any arch-Emissary from Rome will come with Visions and Revelations and a shew of extreme Authority and humor this People still in their outragious clamours against our Church especially if they will fall a quaking and groaning intolerably and appear in the Streets as some have done soundly be-dunged with Calumny and Filth such may make some People believe any Romish Tenets as Revelations from God That they have bin wrought and acted unto this by the common Authors of our Divisions is such plain attested matter of Fact that I suppose few considering Persons question it Some long since took notice that in the Northern Parts where there abounded most Popish Priests and Recusants there this upstart Sect of Quakers first sprung up sending thence their Emissaries two by two into other quarters of the Kingdom as the unclean Beasts entred the Ark by Couples beside which many Reasons confirm the same 1. The effect in that Spirit of Division and Delusion which so succesfully obtains among them to break in pieces the Peace and Order of the Church unto which of all Sects these are the most Antipodes to 2. There are none whose Tenets more tend to destroy the Holy Scripture as a perfect Rule of Faith and Manners instead of which and in opposition to the same they set up the Suggestions of their Light within them which they call the Word the only Guide unto Perfection * Perfectos se appellantes semina electionis De Valentinianis Iren. l. 1. which they and the Romanists pretend the one even unto supererogation of Merits the other to be above all need of confession of sin 3. None come so near the Papists in the matter of an infallible Judg of Doctrines 4. The Light within them is very much like the Enthusiasms of the Romanists as Dean Stillingfleet hath set them forth in the Fanaticism of the Church of Rome 5. They join with the severest Romanists in their reproaching the Offices and Orders of our Church and especially villfying her Clergy whom they would have by all means to vow wilful Poverty 6. By refusing all Oaths their Allegiance is left uncertain to the King which is the main thing such Papists would have 7. The King's Supremacy is left unacknowledged which is another principal preparation for the owning of the Pope's Supremacy 8. In that they refuse to assist their Prince in his Wars and pretend they hold it unlawful for any to fight By that Principle they not only take away the Power and Sword of the Magistrate and leave the King and Country undefended that none can live in peace and safety and consequently that Opinion leads to overthrow the very being of the whole Kingdom But the Pope also serves his Design by them being sure that so many as there are of that Sect so many will never oppose him by Arms Whereas they who bind can also loose and the same Agent can be able to stir up their Spirit of Zeal also which the longer it hath bin contained will be the more furious a Specimen and taste of which fury we experience in the keen violence of their Tongues which are as a very sharp Sword upon sundry slight occasions And when once they shall be assured that the Lord hath delivered a People to slaughter then Down Dagon then they will pretend they must be the Sampsons and like Pope Pius 5. in his
imperious among Men most decretory in their Sentences and most impatient of any disagreeing from them tho in the least minute and particular 3. If any do conceive the Church defective in some particular especially when few will deny but the principal and substantial Things are not wanting Christian Moderation requires all to supply any such supposed Defects as much as they can by such a Christian Charity ¶ Pii placidi homines misericorditèr corripiant quod possunt quod non possunt patientèr ferant cum dilectione gemant atque lugeant donec aut emendet Deus aut in messe eradicet zizania S. Aug. l. 3. contr Parm. c. 1. as thinketh hopeth believeth the best especially of their Governours and renders all Persons suspicious of their own Judgments and docible and humble in disposition and behaviour And while they charge the Church with being in some things deficient in others superfluous they ought to have the more care not to add thereunto their own faults in the same kind as being deficient in their Duty or superfluous in such exceptions as generally are so frivolous 4. It is most agreeable to the Rules of Moderation that those who are so earnest to have still more Moderation allowed them should first acknowledg such Moderation and Indulgence as they have received and also should take care that the same miss not of its desired and promised Effects from them Wherefore what the Bishops told the Presbyterian Brethren was but a very moderate admonition We conceive the most real expression of their thankfulness for his Majesties most Princely Condescention had bin a hearty compliance with his Majesties most earnest and passionate request for the use of the present Liturgie at least so much of it as they acknowledg by these Papers to be lawful Such also should readily and thankfully own whatsoever is good in the establishment which is over them and the real benefits and blessings which all do and may enjoy And since there are such Instances and Proofs of the Moderation of our Church Christian Moderation will also govern any who are concerned in this Matter well to understand and consider such Proofs and acknowledg what is true in them 5. It is but according to Christian Moderation that a special respect and regard be had to a reformed setled Establishment as Ours is which is in possession * In pari causâ possessor potior haberi debet Reg. jur of its Authority 1. Christian Moderation will dispose such well to consider how far they ought to bear against their own Inclination before they offer at the Violation of the Sacred Peace of God's Church 2. Christian Moderation will instruct any one that exemption from Obedience ought to be as clear as the Command to Obey † Infirmae prorsus voluntatis est indicium Statuta Seniorum studiosiùs disquirere haerere ad singula quae injunguntur exigere de quibusque rationem malè suspicari de omni praecepto cujus causa latuerit nec unquam libenter obedire S. Bern. de praec dispens 3. Such ought moderately to consider of the danger they threaten all Government Civil and Ecclesiastical and also the Interest especially of the Reformation who are so industrious to overthrow such an Establishment as ours is upon these kind of Dissatisfactions 6. Christian Moderation doth certainly govern all to use the same measures of practice for themselves and others that is to do as they would be done by * Non debet alteri per alterum iniquae conditio inferri Reg. juris Suppose therefore that any Plat-form the Exceptors against our Church propose was setled according to their own phancy They ought to consider whether they would endure to be reproached resisted disobeyed after such an establishment was made They who have used sundry significant Ceremonies themselves as were used in taking the Covenant should not be so violent against all Ceremony They who are against all Jewish Usages ought to have a care of Judaizing They who are zealous against Popery ought to have a care themselves both lest they run into Popery and lest they be carried thereinto however imprudently and unwarily They who could be forward to appoint Fasting-days and days of Thanksgiving upon accounts not so justifiable ought not to be against all our lawful and appointed Fasts and Festivals They who have made it the chief of their Exception against our Monarchy formerly that it made void Acts of Parliament by Prerogative when it did not should not be so earnest that the same be done for the sake of Papists and themselves They who would not have the miscarriages of some particular Brethren charged on their Party or themselves ought by the same Rule to have a care that they never charge our Church with the Faults of some particular Persons of our Communion making those the Vices of our Constitution which are only the Faults of some Persons which will be in the World so long as there are Men happy is it where there are fewest The same equity also which our Church sheweth unto others she may justly expect to receive Namely To be allowed such just and favourable Construction as in Preface to the Liturgy common equity ought to be allowed to all humane Writings especially such as are set forth by Authority 7. Christian Moderation will govern any when they have experienced an Evil not to run into the same again They therefore who have seen that the Consequences of their own Principles have proved worse than before they apprehended and that such immoderate Zeal as their own hath bin made use of to other purposes than they were aware and have seen and felt the horrid Effects of Confusion occasion'd from such Exceptions as these which are so busy now against our Church by the Rules of true Moderation ought to acknowledg the same constantly and to have a diligent care lest they split again upon the same Rocks This Christian Moderation will help any for avoiding one extreme from running unto another because they detest In vitium ducit culpae fuga si caret arte Horat. Papal Tyranny they will not therefore reject Episcopacy because of some defect in Discipline they will not therefore run into a culpable Separation because some are careless in their Prayers they will not therefore reject all Forms as unlawful Because of the Imperfection of all Forms of Government therefore they will not conclude Monarchy sinful Because some set up the Doctrine of Merit they will not therefore think good Works needless to Salvation Because too many neglect the Vow they made in their Baptism therefore they will not deny Infant Baptism Because in Popery there are such heaps of Fopperies therefore what was really good among them must not for their sakes be condemned Because what was typical of Christ under the Old Testament is abolished by our Christianity therefore other moral and useful Usages which were among the Jews are
Body and by being dissevered from the Body how it is possible they should retain Communion with the Head of that Body God only knows to whose infinite Mercy we leave them It is seriously and heartily to be wished that the Duty and Benefits of Communion with the Church were duly considered by all and the many more grievous Mischiefs of Schism than have bin here mentioned and in reference to our Church of England in particular as certainly her Moderation is a great aggravation of the Schisms which are so I suppose it a most true observation and deserves the common consent of all That the only Reason why our Church is not more generally embraced and admired is because the Purity of its Doctrine the Sobriety of its Devotion the Moderation of its Discipline the largeness of its Charity are not impartially and calmly examin'd and more generally understood Wherefore we wish that by God's Grace working love in all the hearts of those who do not understand consider so much they would yet consent to what the Peaceful and Holy Nazianzen declares in one of his Orations of Peace Thus saith he I resolve it is not good to be more indifferent than is meet nor too hot either through levity to be carried about with every one nor by disorder to separate from all when the manifest things of wickedness require our compliance then we are to contest with Fire and Sword rather than partake of their Leven But when only a suspicion of evil seizeth on our minds then Moderation and Condescention are more advisable rather than make a separation from others we relate unto as Members Wherefore let us embrace each other and be sincerely one and imitate our Blessed Mediatour who by his Blood hath reconciled all things and made peace Let us say to our Common Father Behold thy Sons gathered into One. Unto which I must add what the same Father from those Dissentions which were in the Church did conceive namely a great dread lest thereby Antichrist * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should come upon them on suddain taking advantages of their Discord It would be well if modest and quiet Persons could at length be convinced of the happiness of having and holding to a Rule † Pulchrum est tenere mensuram officii S Ambros offic l. 1. c. 10. And what a blessing it is to have every thing for their Spiritual use so readily and so well prepared to their hand and admit which we are in no wise forced here to affirm that sundry Orders might be much better Nevertheless whereunto we have already attained let us walk by the same Rule let us mind the same Thing 3 Phil. 13. In Matters of Indifferency the best way of cementing the ¶ Fracturam verò ligamen astringit cum culpam disciplina deprimit sed gravius scissuram sentiat si hanc immoderatiùs ligamenta constringant inter haec solicit a circumspectione providendum ne aut districtio rigida aut pietas sit remissa Greg. Mag. de cura past in part 2. c. 5. Fractions is unite the Parts in the Authority for then the Question is but one namely Whether the Authority shall be obeyed or not * Lib. of Prophec §. 17. Me thinks the Interest of the Christian Religion to free it from so great a scandal the Honour of the Kingdom and their Native Country and the Laws and the private Interest of themselves and their Families where greater Interest and Engagement with a Party and Prejudices do not hinder should prevail at length with more to embrace the Reconciliation of the Church which the best and wisest every-where have done convinced of the Moderation of our Church and the rest remain so divided and shattered among themselves only united by their common prejudice against the Church having had their mouths over and over stopt by solid Arguments and a palpable demonstration of their falsities and incongruities which have bin posted up to the World to their unanswerable conviction or else they have bin laught out of their ridiculous follies by them who have had a laudable art in so doing * Ingenuo culpam defigere ludo Persius Sat. 5. § 4. And indeed since the Church of England suffers so exceedingly between such extreme Adversaries which hath bin a great proof of her great Moderation no wonder if such as desire to maintain the even tenour of uniform Principles partake of the same hard measure with our Church † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thucyd. Wherefore for our calmly defending what is real Moderation we may surely expect to be accused as immoderate and to be suspected by either extreme of the number of their opposite Adversaries against which chance perhaps there is no Remedy Wherefore the sincerity of our Purpose and the goodness of our Cause we hope will support us For it is enough for the Disciple that he be as his Master and the Servant as his Lord Blessed be God we have yet the advantage of so excellent a Reformed Church on our side So the worthy Translators of the English Bible in their Epistle to King James comforted themselves If on the one side we shall be traduced by Popish Persons or if on the other side we shall be maligned by self-conceited Brethren who run th●ir own ways and give liking unto nothing but what is framed by themselves and hammered on their Anvil we may rest secure supported by the truth and innocency of a good Conscience For my own part I profess my self a lover and admirer of true Moderation and I hope I have observed the due measures of it * Moderatus sum Ipse mihi quant●●● lic●it non quod Ip●● de ●o●is ●erue●in● sed quid nostros Homines deced● spectavi Su●liv pref de Monach. in what I have writ with relation to either extreme And h●re I crave leave to repeat the dying words of the right Reverend Bishop Sanderson and to use them solemnly as my own As I do profess that I have lived so I desire and by the Grace of God resolve to die in the Communion of the Catholic Church of Christ and a true Son of the Church of England which as it stands by Law established to be both in Doctrine and Worship agreeable to the Word of God and in the most material Points of both conformable to the Faith and Practice of the Godly Church of Christ in the Primitive and purer times I do firmly believe Led so to do not so much from the force of Custom and Education to which the greatest part of Mankind owe their particular different Persuasions in Religion as upon the clear evidence of Truth and Reason after a serious and unpartial examination of the Grounds as well of Popery as Puritanism according to that measure of understanding and those opportunities which God hath afforded me and herein I am abundantly satisfied that the Schism which the Papists on one hand and V. Bishop Sanderson's