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A04779 The right and iurisdiction of the prelate, and the prince. Or, A treatise of ecclesiasticall, and regall authoritie. Compyled by I.E. student in diuinitie for the ful instruction and appeaceme[n]t of the consciences of English Catholikes, co[n]cerning the late oath of pretended allegeance. Togeather with a cleare & ample declaratio[n], of euery clause thereof, newlie reuewed and augmented by the authoure Kellison, Matthew. 1621 (1621) STC 14911; ESTC S107942 213,012 425

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appertained to military affaires And so from the first establishing of the law of Moyses the Temple and Synagogue was committed to the Tribe of LEVI the scepter and regall Authoritie was giuen to the Tribe of IVDA in like sort in the law of Grace when the Church came to her greatest perfection Christ appointed particularly Apostles Doctours Ephes 4. and Pastours to gouerne the Church and confirmed Princes in their temporall Authoritie commanding that obedience should be giuen to the Pastour in spirituall matters and to the Prince in temporall Mat. 22 Rom. 13 2. VVherfore least in giuing one of these Potentates too much Mat. 22 I may do iniutie to the other I must follow our Sauiours Commandement and so giue to Cesar that which belongeth to him that I take not from God and his Church what appertaineth to them And although in giuing both but their due I may perchance displease one yet if I may haue that indifferent audience which the grauitie and equitie of the cause requireth I hope to offend neither and how soeuet it happen I had rather displease then do wronge or iniurie And wheras in our Iland by the sway of Authoritie and terrour of lawes it hath bene made High Treason to denie the Prince Authoritie in matters Ecclesiasticall I protest that what I shall say in this matter proceedeth not from any disloyall minde towards my Princes true Authoritie nor from any itching desire I haue to lay open the disgrace of my Countrie which I would rather couer if it were possible with my owne life and bloud and to discharge my self from all iust imputation of Treason I desire to haue the leaue to plead this onlie for my defence that if this be Treason in mee not onlie all Catholick Priests Doctours and Prelates of the Church but also all the ancient subiectes not onlie of England but of all other Christian Countries must incurre the same imputation with me because there was neuer Christians before our English Protestants that gaue Ecclesiasticall power to Princes and there was neuer King of England or of any other Countrie what soeuer that euer was so hardie as to challenge such Authoritie before King HENRIE the Eight which his Challenge seemed so preposterous and monstrous that all the World stood and to this day standeth amazed at it and euen our Puritanes at home and all the new sectes abroade do abhorre and derest it And I in this Chapter shall bring such Argumentes against it that I hope that euen our English protestants who hitherto haue adored it wil be ashamed hence forth to submitt them selues to so monstrous Authoritie 3. My first Arguments shall be drawen from scriptures them selues For if the King had any such Authoritie then no doubt scripture which ●s aboue wee haue seene so often inculcateth Princes Authoritie in matters temporall would neuer haue kept silent this Ecclesiasticall power if they had had any such this being the greater and more eminent but scripture neuer giueth Princes this Authoritie neuer commandeth Christians to obey them in Ecclesiasticall matters but rather giueth that Authoritie to Apostles Bishops and Pastours and Commandeth obedience in this kinde to them not to Princes ergo Princes haue no Authoritie to command in Ecclesiasticall matters The Minor Proposition in which onlie consists the difficultie I proue out of those places of Scripture which aboue I haue alleaged and here will bring in againe yet to another purpose For to S. PETER no Temporall Prince but an Apostle and Pastour was promised the headship of the Church and consequently the soueraintie and supreame power of the Church Tues Petrus super hane Petram aedificabo Ecclesiam meam Mat. ●6 The Hebrew hath● Thou art a Rocke and vpon this Rocke will I build my Church And seing that to PETER it was sayd Thou art a Rocke to him also and not to CHRIST the Chiefe and independent Rocke nor to the faith of Christ as our Aduersaries would haue it it must needs be sayd and vpon this Rocke will I build my Church because the Relatiue This hath relation to him that was spoken of imediatly before which was only PETER not CHRIST nor the faith of CHRIST and therfore the Rocke and foundation of the Church and Head being all one it followeth that PETER and consequently the Pope his successour for the Church after PETERS tyme had as much neede or rather more of a Head and Pastour as in PETERS tyme and none euer practized Authoritie ouer all the Church but the Pope as all Councels and histories do witnesse is the supreme Head of the Church and so not euerie King no not any King in his Kingdome Apostles Prophetes Euangelists Pastours and Doctours onlie CHRIST gaue to gouerne his Church as S. PAVLE sayth not Princes Ephes 4. Mat. 18 To Apostles it was sayd VVhat soeuer you shall binde vpon earth shall be bound also in Heauen and what soe-euer you shall loose vpon earth shall be also loosed in heauen Ioan. 20 Neuer to Princes To Apostles it was said VVhose sinnes you shall forgiue they are forgiuen them and whose you shall retaine they are retained Neuer to Princes Of Bishops and Priests it was sayd Neb. 13. Obey your Prelates and be subiect to them for they watch as being to render account for your soules of Princes neuer rather they by these wordes are commanded also to obey Act. 20. To Bishops it was sayd Take heed● to your selues and the whole flocke wherein the Holie Ghost hath placed you Bishops to rule the Church which he hath purchased with his owne bloud to Princes neuer To a Bishop it was sayd Tit. 1. For this cause I left thee in CRETE that thou thouldst reforme the things that are wanting and thouldst order Priests by Cities as I also appointed thee To Princes neuer 4. I will not denie but that Princes are to assist the Church by sword scepter and Power and to punnish at the Churches direction not onlie Theefes and murderers but also Hereticks as CONSTANTINE and other Emperours did I graunt that they are nourcing Fathers Isay 49. but no Superiours to the Church And therfore if we read ouer both the old and new Testament we shall neuer finde that any King as King medled in the gouernment of Ecclesiasticall persons and matters 5. Bilson when he was VVardon of VVinchester wrote a booke called The True Difference betwixt Christian subiection and Vnchristian Rebellion in which he striueth but in vaine to prooue that the Prince hath supreme Authoritie in causes Ecclesiasticall and gouernment of the Church And to prooue this he citeth Nabuchodonosor Darius Par. 2. pag. 191 the King of Niniue Moyses Iosue Dauid Salomon Asa Iosaphat Ezechias Manasses Iosias and Nehemias as though they had gouerned the Ecclesiasticall affaires of the Synagogue In Tortura Torti pa. 363. So doth also D. ANDREWES But if I should graunt them that all these were by God appointed Rulers of
THE RIGHT AND IVRISDICTION OF THE PRELATE and the PRINCE OR A TREATISE OF ECCLESIASTICALL and REGALL authoritie COMPYLED BY I. E. STVDENT IN DIVINITIE for the ful Instruction and appeacemēt of the consciences of English Catholikes cōcerning the late Oath of pretended Allegance Togeather with a cleare Ample declaratiō of euery clause thereof newlie reuewed and augmented by the Authoure Reddite ergo omnibus debita cui tributum tributum cui vectigal vectigal cui timorem timorem cui honorem honorem Rom. 13. Render therefore to all men their due to whom Tribute Tribute to whom Custome Custome to whom Feare Feare to whom Honour Honour Imprinted With licence of Superiours ANNO DOM. 1621. THE EPISTLE DEDICATORIE To the most renovvned and constant English CATHOLIKES THIS LIFE OF OVRS Right Honourable Worshipful and worthie Catholikes is à Rase and course in which we are to runne for the winning of a goale 1. Cor. 9. It is a Wrastling for a garland of eternall glorie 1. Cor. 9. It is a Warfare in which we are to fight against three mightie knowne and professed enemies for no lesse then a Kingdome of Heauen Our life as IOB saieth cap. 7. is Militia super terram A warfare in which we stand alwaies vpon our guarde alwaies in our armour alwayes with weapon in hand but it is a warfare on earth for in heauen it is a peace a labour here a rest there a sowing in teares here a reaping in ioy there a storme here a calme there a troublesome sea here a quiet hauen there a battaile here a triumph there and there fore the Church is called militant here triumphant there Wherefore as the husbandman laboureth in the field resteth onely at home The wayfaring man trauelleth in his ware takes his ease onely in his Inne The Romanes tryumphed not in the same place in which they waged warre but made warre in forraine Countries for Townes Prouinces and Kingdomes and tryūphed onely in Rome So we must not looke for ease peace triumphes and garlandes in this life but here we must prepare our selues to skirmishes encounters combats and battailes and in Heauen onely expect our Triumph The children of Israel got not the land of promise but by the dynt of the sword by many encounters and bloudie battailes neither shall wee obtaine heauen vnlesse we fight for it Regnum coelorum vim patitur violenti rapiunt illud Mat. 11. The Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence and the violent beare it away If we will winne this Cittie wee must lay siege vnto it by watching and praying If we will enter it we must make a breach by the batterie of good workes If we will take quiet possession of it we must make vvarre for it 2. So that the Church militant is an armie and an armie alwaies raunged in battaile array Terribilis vt Castrorum acies ordinata Cant. 6 Terrible as the armie of a Campe set in array In which you shal see nothing but choros castrorum Cant. 7. Companies of Campes In which armie the King is Christ his General is his chiefe Vicaire His Coronelles are Patriarches Bishops and other Prelates His Captaines and inferiour Commaunders are inferiour Priests and Pastours His souldiers are the rest of Christian troupes and Companies To the furnishing of this Armie all the Sacraments of the new law are instituted and ordained Matrimonie peopleth this armie and furnisheth it with men Baptisme presseth and enrolleth them Confirmation armeth them and giueth them their militarie Marke and liuerie The Sacred Eucharist vittaileth the Campe and furnisheth it with munition bread The Sacrament of Order createth Coronelles Captaines and such as are to commaund The Sacrament of Penance healeth and cureth the souldiers who in this warre are wounded and euen reuiueth them who are slaine and killed Extreame vnction riddeth them euen of the reliques of the woundes and diseases And so all Christians are pressed to the warre and ordained to fight the whole Church is a raunged Armie and euery Christian ought to singe that songe which DAVID sunge against GOLIATH Benedictus Dominus Deus meus qui docet manus meas ad praelium digitos meos ad bellum Psal 42. Blessed be our Lord my God who teacheth my handes to battaile and my fingers to warre 3. In this Armie you ô valiant and constant Catholikes are placed as in the most dangerous so in the most honourable rancke and place For as the Generall placeth there his most expert and hardie souldiers where the enemies Canon playeth oftenest the darts and arrowes flye thickest the pikes are planted like a wood most terriblie so our King CHRIST IESVS vnder whose banner and colours you fight knowing your vndaunted courage to be such that absit verbo inuidia you are the most valiant souldiers of the present Church militant he hath placed you against a wood of Pikes against a shower of Bullets and Pellets against the most furious assault that the common enemie giueth to the Christian Armie and Church militant of Christ 4. For whereas Christians amongst the Turks can buy their libertie of Conscience for money you by no tribute can purchase such a fauour And whereas in Holland and other countries the Magistrate layeth handes on Priests and Catholikes only when he findeth them at Masse or diuine seruice you are searched for more diligently then theeues murderers and publike harlots and are apprehended euen in the streetes and fieldes And although in Fraunce and the Low Countries Catholikes haue heretofore endured intollerable pillages cruell deathes and torments yet that furie lasted onely a while whilest the furie of heresie raged in her hoate beginning but against you the like furie hath long continued That cruelty was practised onely by way of tumult but against you the like sharpnes hath bin vsed vnder the colour of law shew of iustice So that no Nation no people Christian endureth at this day for Christ his Church and her Pastours authoritie that which you haue endured for these many yeares without interruption And whereas the more raging the Tempest is the sooner it is appeased the more furious bloudie the battaile is the sooner it is ended you haue this long time suffered a violent and furious persecution and yet you see no ende of this furie yea no hope of an ende by humane meanes oulde statutes being still renewed new enacted So that you are placed in that place of Christs Armie which is exposed to the greatest furie of the Enemie yea you are set as a Butt or marke against which the enemies of Gods Church are permitted to discharge all their Artillarie and to emptie the quiuers of all the pearsing arrowes of afflictions against you and fo you may say as IOB did Iob. 16. Posuit me quasi signum He bath set me to him selue as it were a marck to shoote at And seeing that he bath bene so long a spectator of these shottes and furious assaultes it seemech he taketh delight and
as God preuented the Iewes and whereas they by lawe of Nature had permission to choose their Kinges yet for their greater good he chose thē one him selue immediatelie so although by the lawe of Nature men otherwise might haue prescribed the manner of worshipping God and the worship had been lawfull so that it had been the worship of the true God and had been free from superstition yet because God hath ordained vs to a supernaturall end and would haue our Ecclesiasticall gouernment free from all superstition he hath himselfe appointed the manner of gouernment and hath giuen the Authoritie So in the lawe of Moyses he chose the Tribe of LEVI to serue in the Tabernacle and Temple and to menage Ecclesiasticall matters he instituted also sacrifices sacramentes and Ceremonies in like sort in the new lawe of Grace vnder which we liue he committed the gouernment of his Church to the Apostles and Disciples only and their successours he instituted seuen Sacramentes and a sacrifice he gaue vs a lawe and beleefe which first he deliuered by preaching then by the written Ghospelles and Epistles of his Apostles and other thinges he committed to the Church which he had instituted and established 5. So that as there is a Ciuill and Temporall Power residing in the Common wealth by which the Prince or Magistrate can gouerne and rule and cōmaund for the conseruation and promotion of the Temporall good of the same so is there a spirituall and Ecclesiasticall Power residing in the Church by which the Pastours haue Authoritie to preach teach administer Sacraments determine of matters of Religion to call Councelles for the better clearing of matters and enacte lawes which shall be thought expedient vnto the honour of God the spirituall good of the Church and euerie ones saluation And this is called Ecclesiasticall power which is distinct from the Temporall in many pointes 6. First in respect of the end and finall cause for Temporall power of it selfe aymeth only at Temporali Iustice peace and conseruation of the Temporall state of the Kingdome or Common wealth Ecclesiasticall power intendeth in this life the spirituall health of the soule and eternall rest and peace in the next Secondlie these powers haue diuers Actes and seing that powers are distinct by their Actes it followeth that Temporall and Ecclesiasticall or spirituall power are distinct That they haue distinct Actes it is manifest for the Temporall power maketh lawes for this corporall life and Temporalle state but the spirituall and Ecclesiasticall power maketh lawes for the soule and her direction the Temporall power remitteth the paines only of sinnes but the spirituall Power remitteth the sinne it self according to that Ioan. 20 Quorum remiseritis peccata c. VVhose sinnes you shall forgiue c. The Temporall power inflicteth and remitteth only Ciuill and Temporall punishments as imprisonment banishment temporall death but the spirituall power as now it is for in the old law there was not Potestas Clauium excommunicateth suspendeth interdicteth which are spiritual punishments and bonds of the soule and remitteth not only these paines but also eternall death and paine of Hell for when the Priest remitteth mortall sinnes he chaūgeth eternall paine into temporall yea some times when the Penitent cometh with a great contrition he remitteth both Eternall and Temporall Thirdly they differ in their obiectes for the spirituall power disposeth not of Temporall thinges but only as they are necessary to the spirituall The Temporall meddleth not with spirituall nor Ecclesiasticall matters according to that of S. AMBROSE S. Ambr. lib. 5. ep 33. ad Marcel soror Ad Impetatorem Palatia pertinent ad sacerdotem Ecclesiae Publicorum tibi maenium ius commissum est non sacrorum To the Emperour Pallaces appertaine to the Priest Churches to thee Emperour the right of common Walles is committed not of Churches And NICHOLAS Pope in an Epistle to MICHAEL the Emperour Ca. Cum ad verū dist 96. Vide etiā ca. Quoniam d. 10. Nec Imperator iura Pontificum arripuit nec Pontifex nomen Imperatoris vsurpauit quoniam Christus sic actibus propriis dignitatibus distinctis officia potestatis vtriusque discreuit Neither hath the Emperour taken to him the rights of Bishops neither hath the Bishop vsurped the name of the Emperour because Christ hath distinguished the offices of both by their distinct actes and dignities Fourthlie they differ in respect of the subiect and materiall cause for although it be not impossible for these two Powers to consort in the same subiect for we see they did in Melchisedech and in the first begotten of the Iewes in the law of Nature and in the Machabees who were Priests and Princes and consequentlie had temporall and spirituall power yet as in other thinges these powers are distinct so God not only in the law of Grace but also in the law written of Moyses would haue these powers placed in distinct subiectes and Persons 2. Paral● 19. For in the law of Moyses AMARIAS menaged matters of the Church law ZABADIAS gouerned the affaires of the Kingdome the Kinges and Princes of the Iewes were of the Tribe of IVDA the Priests of the Tribe of LEVI and those gouerned onely the Common VVealth enacted Temporall lawes waged battaile c. whereas the Priests ruled it matters of the Tabernacle and Temple offered sacrifice and gouerned the Synagogue And now in the law of Grace Christ gaue all spirituall power to the Apostles and their successours and not to Princes for to the Apostles and their successours it was saied VVhatsoeuer you shall bynd vpon earth Mat. 18. shal be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer you shall losse vpon earth shal be loosed in heauen To Princes it was neuer sayd so To the Apostles and their successours it was sayd Ioan. 20. Whose sinnes you shall forgiue they are forgiuen them and whose you shall retaine they are retained To Princes neuer To S. PETER an Apostle and Priest it was sayed Mat. 16 Thou art Peter and vppon this Rock will I build my Church To no Prince was it euer sayd in that sort To Apostles and Priests Christ sayed Matth. vlt. Goinge therefore teach ye all Nations baptising them in the name of the father the sonne and the holy Ghost To Princes neuer To Apostles and Priests Christ said Ioan. 6. As my liuing father hath sent me so I send you that is to preach to minister Sacramentes and to gouerne the Church Ephes 4. To Princes neuer To the Apostles Doctours Pastours Prophets Christ committed his Church to be gouerned Act. 28. to Princes neuer To Priests S. Paul gaue this admonition Attendite vobis vniuerso gregi in quo vos Spiritus Sanctus posuit Episcopos regere Ecclesiam Dei quam acquisiuit sanguine suo Take heede to your selues and to the whole flocke wherin the holy Ghost hath placed you Bishops to rule the Church of God which he hath purchased
Which no man can denie but that it is spoken with the Emperours honour for what more honourable then that the Emperour should be called the sonne of the Church And then say I if he be a sonne he is a subiect no lesse then the sonne to the father The same Doctour in a booke wrote of Priestlie Dignitie sayth yet more Honor sublimitas Episcopalis sayeth he nullis poterit comparationibus adaequari Lib. de dignit sacerd cap. 2. Si Regum fulgori compares Principum Diademati longè erit inferius quàm si plumbi metallum ad auri fulgorem compares quippe cum videas Regum colla Principum submitti genibus sacerdotum exosculatis ecrum dexteris orationibus eorum credant se communiri The honour dignitie and Highnes of a Bishop cannot be equalized by any comparisons If thou compare it to Kinglie lustre and the diademe of Princes thou shalt say lesse then if thou shouldst cōpare lead to the glittering gould for as much as thou seest Kinges and Princes neckes submitted to the knees of Priests and thē selues kissing their right handes to be waranted by their prayers Hom. 4. de verbis Isaiae S. CHYSOSTOME Regi corpora commissa sunt sacerdoti auima Rex maculas corporum remittit sacerdos autem maculas peccatorum Ille cogit hic exhortatur Ille necessitate hic consilio Ille habet armasensibilia bic arma spiritualia Ille bellum gerit cum Barbaris mihi sacerdoti bellnm est aduersus Daemones Maior hic Principatus propterea Rex caput submittit manui sacerdotis vbique in veteri scriptura sacerdotes inungebant Reges To the King bodies are committed to the Priest soules The King forgiueth the punishments of the bodie the Priest the blottes and blemishes of sinnes He compelleth the Priest exhorteth he by necessitie this by counsell he hath sensible weapons this spirituall he makes warre against the Barbares I the Priest am to wage battaile against the deuils Greater is this Principalitie and therfore the King inclineth his head to the hand of the Priest and euerie where in the old Testament Priests did annoint Kinges And againe Siquidē sacerdotiū Principatus est Hom. 5. de verbis Isaiae ipso etiā regno venerabilius ac maius c. Because Priest hoode is a Principalitie and that greater and more venerable then the Kingdome Speake not to mee of the purple and diademe and goulden robes these all be but shadowes and more vaine then springe flowers Speake not to mee of these thinges but if thou wilt see the difference betwixt a King and a Priest way the power giuen to them both and thou shalt see the Priest fitting much higher in dignitie then the Kinge For a though the Throne of a Kinge seeme to vs admirable for the pretious stones wherewith it is couered yet he hath allosted him onely the administration of earthlie thinges But to the Priest a throne is placed in heauen and he hath authoritie to pronounce sentence in heauenlie businesses Who sayth so Mat. 18. The King of the heauens him selfe What soeuer you shall bynde vppon earth shall be bound also in heauen and whatsoeuer you shall loose vppon earth shal be loosed also in heauen What can be compared with this honour from earth heauen taketh the principall power of iudging For the iudge sitteth on earth our Lord folioweth his seruaunt and whatsoeuer he shall iudge heere below that he approueth aboue And a little after Eoque Deus ipsum regale caput sacerdotis manibus subiecit not erudiens quod hic Princeps est illo maior Siquidom id quod minus est benedictionem accipit ab eo quod praestantius est And so much God hathsubmitted the Kinges head to the handes of the Priest teaching vs that this Prince is greater then he for he that is lesse receaueth benediction from him that is greater Yea S. CHYSOSTOME giueth not only Bishops but also euen Deacons Hom. 33. in Matth hom 83. in eund Authoririe ouer Kings Si dux igitur quispiam saieth he si Consul ipse si qui diademate ornatur indignè adeat cohibe ac coërce maiorem tu illo potestatem habes If therfore any Capitaine or Consul if he that is adorned with a diademe approach vnworthilie keepe him backe and restrayne him thou hast greater power then he And to this purpose we read that S. Re. MIGIVS the Apostle of France Histoire de l'Eglise de Reins lib. 1. cap. 13. a little before his death commanded the Bishops to excommunicate the Kinges of France if they should waste or inuade the Churches But aboue all most forcible is the testimonie of Ignat. Epist ad Smyrn S. IGNATIVS an Apostles scholler who so extolleth Princelie dignitie that yet he giues the precedence vnto the Bishops authoritie Honora Deum sayth he vt omnium authorem Dominum c. Honour God as the Authour and Lord of all and the Bishop as the Prince of Priests bearing the Image of God and houlding his princedome of him and his Priesthood of Christ And after him you must honour also the King For none is to be prefered before God nor equal to him nor none more honourable in the Church then the Bishop exercising the Priesthood of God for the saluation of the world Neither is any equall to the King in the Hoste or Campe procuring peace and beneuolence to the other Princes vnder him For he that honoureth the Bishop shal be honoured of God and he that dishonoureth him shall of God be dishonoured For if any man rising against the King is worthie of damnation how shall be escape Gods Iudgements that attempteth any thing against or without the Bishop For Priesthood is the Chiefe and summe of all mans good which wh● soeuer disgraceth dishonoureth God and our Lord IESVS Christ the Chiefe Priest of God 11. Sixtlie this I proue by Emperours and Kings proper confession who all of them haue acknowledged Bishops and especiallie the Chiefe Bishop of Rome their Fathers Pastours and superiours and those that haue supreame authoritie ouet them CONSTANTINE the Great in an ●ict of his shortely after his baptisme ●saieth thus Cap. Cōstantinus 2. dist 96. Vtile iudicauimus c. vt sicut in terris Beatus Petrus Vicarius filij Dei videtur esse constitutus it a etiam Pontifices qui ipsius Principis Apostolorum vices gerunt Principatus potestatem amplius quàm terrenae Imperialis Nostrae Serenitatis mansuetudo habere videtur concessam à nobis nostroque Imperio obtineant Wee haue Iudged it profitable that as blessed Peeter is appointed the vicaire of the sonne of God in earth so also Bishops who are Vicegerents of this Prince of the Apostles should haue more amplie the power of principalitie graunted by vs and our Empire Ruffin lib. 1. cap. 2. then our terrene Imperiall Serenitie seemeth to haue And Russinus relateth how that when certaine Bishops assembled at
of their Kinglie Authoritie and if the woolfe come he may not only crie out against him by denouncing Gods law and Iudgements nor only strike him with his spirituall staffe but he may also vse euen the Temporall Club to chase him from the flocke and fould as many worthy Prelates of the Church haue done whose examples we shall anon alleadge And yet this not withstāding there shall still be a difference betwixt the Pope and the Temporall Prince because the Pope is to vse in the first place his spirituall glaiue and not to meddle with Kinges Regalities or temporall armes but onlie when it is necessarie for the good of the Church and when the Spirituall censures will no● suffice the Prince is to vse Temporall armes and not to meddle with the Spirituall at all 9. Mat. 18. The like Argument I deduce out of these wordes of CHRIST Si Ecclesiam non audierit sit tibi tanquam Ethnicus Publicanus If he will not heare the Church Chrysost in hunc locum let him be to thee as an Ethnike and Publican By the Church are vnderstood the Prelates of the Church and especially the Chiefe Prelate the Pope who gouerneth and commandeth in the Church and so this place is like to the former place of Deuteronomie Deut. 17 For as God there sayth that he that will not obey the high Priest shal be sentenced to death so here CHRIST sayth that he who will not obey the Pastours and especiallie the high Pastour shall be holden as an Ethnick and Publican that is by excommunication shal be cast out of all societie of the Church for with the Ethnikes and Publicans the Iewes had no commerce nor communication If then he contemne this censure of the Church the Chiefe Pastour may take his armes from him by which he molesteth her and seing that his Temporall power is that which is his Chiefest weapon the High Pastour may depriue him of it else the high visible Priest of the New law should be inferiour to the High Priest of the oulde law and MOYSES should be preferred before CHRIST and the Synagogue before the Church To make this deduction of more force I obserue that this place conuinceth that the Pastour of the Church may separate a disobedient Christian from the societie of the rest which is a Temporall punishment being a priuation of Temporall conuersation whence it followeth thar if the disobedience and default deserue it he may also depriue a Prince of his Crowne and Temporall Authoritie that being also a Temporall paine Which Argument shall be confirmed more hereafter 10. Many also and not improbablie alleage for proofe of that which hath bene said those words of our Blessed Sauiour to his Apostles Mat. 18. Whatsoeuer you shall binde vpon earth shall be bound also in heauen and what soeuer you shall loose vpon earth shal be loosed also in heauen For although this power of binding and loosing giuen to the Apostles and their Successours especiallie the Chiefe Pastour hath for her ordinarie functions loosing or detaining sinnes excommunicating or absoluing dispensing in vowes and oathes c. yet the wordes being generall VVhat soeuer you shall bind vpon earth it seemeth that they should not so be restrained but that they may be extended to loosing and absoluing euen from Temporall allegeance and obedience to the Prince when obedience to the Prince can not stand with the conseruation of the Churches right or faith for which that power was giuen And if the Pastour may free the subiects in this case from all obligation of obedience or dutie to the Prince he may make them no subiects and consequentlie the Prince no King nor superiour for the Prince and subiects are correlatiues which are of this nature that one cannot be without the other and one destroyed the other is destroyed VVherfore if the Chiefe Pastour of the Church can absolue the subiects from their allegeance be can make them no subiects if he can make them no subiectes he can make the Prince no Superiour and consequentlie depriue him of all Temporall Authoritie by which he is Superiour VVherevpon not only the learned writers of this time Cardinall BELLARMINE SVAREZ SCHVLKENIVS and others but also some of the auncients haue vnderstood this place of loosing in some case euen from Temporall allegeance S. GREGORIE the Seuenth who deposed HENRIE the fourth Emperour of that name in his depositiō which BARONIVS alleageth Baron tom 11. Anno 1080. num 11. calling vpon S. PETER and S. PAVLE sayth thus Agite nunc quaeso Patres Principes sanctissimi vt omnis mundus intelligat cognoscat quia si potestis in Coelo ligare obsoluere potestis in terra Imperia● Regna Principatus Ducatus Marchias Comitatus omnium hominum possessiones pro meritis tollere vnicuique concedere Goe to now I pray you ô most holy Fathers and Princes that all the world may vnderstand and know that if you can bynde and loose in heauen you can in earth take away according to their deserts from euerie one and giue to others Empires Kingdomes Principalities Dukedomes Marquisdomes Counties and all mens possessions So INNOCENT the fourth in the Councell of Lions and in the deposition of FREDERICK the second expoundeth the same and warranteth therby his authority in deposing And thus much concerning proofes of the Popes authority out of scripture for deposing Princes and punishing Hereticks and rebelles to the Church by Temporall chastisements CHAPTER IX By Theologicall arguments grounded in principles of faith and the Nature of the Church as it is an absolute Common wealth the same power of the Supreame Pastour is prooued 1. WHat proofe holie Scripture yeeldeth for this veritie we haue seene in ther former Chapter Now let vs see what proofe reason grounded in faith and the Churches Nature can afforde vs. My first Argument I deduce from the comparison before mentioned betwixt the Spirituall and Temporall power by which I haue made it manifest that the Spirituall power exceedeth the Temporall as in many other things so in inflicting penalties and punishments for the Temporall power can onlie punish the bodie the Spirituall can chastize the soule that power can only decree and indict Temporall penalties and mulcts this can lay spirituall Censures and bonds vpon the soule euen excommunication This power which the Church hath to excommunicate I haue aboue in part prooued out of diuerse places of Scripture which here with some others I shall alleadge againe for my present purpose For to omitt that S. PAVL excommunicated that Incestuous Corinthian 1. Cor. 5. 1. Tim. 1. Tit. 3. 2. Thes 3. 2. Ioan. 1 2. Cor. 10 as also Hyminaeus and Alexander he insinuateth the same power where he commands vs to shunne hereticks and not to say Aue vnto them As also where he sayth Arma militiae nostrae non carnalia sunt sed potentia Deo ad destructionem c. The weapons of our warfare are not
pleasure not in your enimies crueltie and furie but in your dexteritie in warding constancie in keeping your standing patience in suffering and enduring 5. And truely your afflictions seeme to me neither inferiour nor vnlike to those of IOB and your patience seemeth to match and to aequalize his only the order of your afflictions seeme different For he was assaulted first in his goods thē in his person you cōtrariewise first in your bodies and liues now in your goods and liuings The Sabeians haue rushed in vpon you as well as on IOB and haue spoyled many of you impouerished the rest Irruerunt Sabei tuleruntque omnia Iob. 1. The Sabeians came in violently and haue taken all things from you the fire also of God fell from heauen and striking the sheepe of IOB and the seruants hath consumed thē Iob. 1. and a fire not from heauen vnlesse by diuine permission but frō earth yea from hell and the vnquenchable thirst of hauing hath consumed all your substance The Chaldees made three troupes to inuade the Camels of IOB stroke his seruants with the sword Iob 1. So haue they by three troupes to wit Concupiscentia carnis Concupiscence of the flesh 1. Ioan. 2. Concupiscentia oculorum concupiscence of the eyes and Superbia vitae pride of life inuaded you because to satisfie their lust and carnalitie their auarice desire of riches and all that may be seene by the eyes their pride and ambition of greatnesse they haue made hauocke of all you haue A vehement winde blowing boysteroussly from the countrey of the Defert shooke the foure Corners of Iobs house which falling oppressed his Children Iob. 5. The like whirle winde from the North and desert of heresie hath shaken your houses and by their fall hath ruinated your families oppressed your persons your wiues and children 6. And least the deuill should exprobate vnto you as he did to IOB that hetherto your goods haue rather suffered then you and that therefore if God would touch your bodie and corporal life hee should soone see you breake out into impatience because skinne for skinne and all things that a man hath he will giue for his life Iob. 2 God hath permitted Satan by his ministers to haue power ouer your bodies and corporal life also as appeareth by the prisons in which some of you haue rotted some haue statued some haue been choaked with stincking ayres as may easilye bee seene by the rackes in which your ioyntes haue been dissolued by the Tyburnes on which you haue been hanged and vnder which you haue been most butcherlie quartered vnbowelled Yea to augment your affliction many of you haue not wanted a IOBS wife carnal and worldly loue to busse in your eares that Carnall counsell Benedic Deo morere Iob. 2. Curse God and die Doe against thy Conscience frequent hereticall seruice take the oath of pretended Alleageance rather then vndoe thy selfe thy wife and Children Yet you haue not fayled with IOB to reprehend such a wise and tell her that shee hath spoken like one of the foolish woemen Iob. 2. as Sir THOMAS MORE told his wife that she was a foolish marchant to counsell him to sell eternitie for shorte and vncertaine time Many also of you haue not wanted heretickes of your bloud and stocke prefigured by IOBS false and fained friends Iob. 2. who haue gone about to perswade you that these miseries which oppresse you are befallen you for your obstinacie in Religion and yet you haue repelled such deceauing friends yea you haue cast from you such scandalyzing eyes that is you haue shaken off such friends though otherwise as deare and necessarie vnto you as your eyes and haue chosen rather to goe to heauen blinde Matt. 8. then to be directed by such ill-guyding eyes 8. But seeing that God hath not permitted Sathan to haue power ouer your soules but onely ouer your transitorie goods and mortal liues loose ye not either hart or courage Sathan indeede by his Ministers as one telleth you hath broken downe the walles of your house as no maruaile it was but of clay but he could not lay handes on your soule the good man of the house that being forbidden him he hath broken the chest of your bodie and no maruaile it was but of rotten board but he could not finger the treasure of your faith Gods grace and such like Iewels they being locked vp in the Cabinet of your conscience of which God and you onely keepe the key And therefore be yee not dismayed for the losse of your temporal goods liuings and libertie yea corporal life seeing the principal the soule is safe so long as you will But for all temporal losses giue God thankes and say with IOB Dominus dedit Dominus abstulit sit nomen Domini benedictum God gaue all this he hath taken all awaie be he praysed as much for the taking awaie as for the giuing 8. And doe you not imagine that God hath forsaken you in permitting this pillage of your goods and sackage of your estates for such goods are common to the good and bad rather take it for a signe of his father●ie loue in giuing you patience to beare with alacritie all those oppressions and perswade your selues that necesse erat quia accepti eratis Deo vt tentatio probaret vos Tob. 12. It was necessarie because you were acceptable to God that this tentation should prooue you God hath indeede cast you into a fornace of tribulation but as the Potter doth his earthen vessel to harden it not to breake it or as the Goldsmith doth his golde to purge it not to con●ume it He hath indeede chastised you but as his dearest children not as seruants and out of his loue more then out of anger as hee hath dealt with his Apostles his Martyrs yea his Mother yea his Sonne and all his dearest For it is his manner to chastice whom he loueth and to scourge euery childe that hee receaueth As vnto children hee offereth himselfe vnto you For wat sonne is there whō the father doth not correct Heb. 12. And when the correction is done he will embrace you and cast the rodde into the fier It is true he hath wounded you but as the Surgeon doth to let out the corrupt matter He woundeth and cureth striketh and his hands shal heale Iob. 5. And the arrowes of our Lord are in you Iob. 6. as they were in IOB but they are as tents which hee will pull out when they haue drawen out all corruptiō He hath permitted the winde of persecution to beat furiously vpon you but it is to blow away all chasse of imperfection and that the solid wheate of your vertues may be the purer He hath permitted you to be pilled polled and spoyled of your goods but that spoyling is but lopping and pruning that the tree hereafter may beare his fruits more aboundantly 9. Say not there fore God hath forsaken vs hee thinketh no more of vs and if your
who shall haue care of the spirituall and eternall life But let the one not encroache vpon the other let both helpe one another and both are stronger as was excellently obserued by NICHOLAS the Pope Nichol. epist ad Michael Imp. cap. Gum ad verum ventum est d. 96. Cum ad verum ventum est neque Imperator Iura Pontificatus arripuit nec Pontifex nomen Imperatoris vsurpauit quoniaem idem Mediator Dei hominum homo CHRISTVS IESVS sic propriis actibus dignitatibus distinctis officia Potestatis vtriusque difcreuit vt Christiani Imperatores pro aeternâ vitâ Pontificibus indigerent Pontifices pro cursu temporalium tantummodo rerum Imperialibus legibus vterentur VVhen it came to the vnderstanding of the truth neither the Emperour did take vnto him the rightes of Bishop-like authorotitie nor the Bishop did vsurp the name of the Emperour because the same Mediatour of God and men man Christ Iesus hath distinguished the offices of both powers by their proper actes and distinct dignities as that Christian Emperours for attaining eternall life should neede Bishops and Bishops should vse the Imperiall lawes for the cause only of temporall thinges 3. But as both are necessarie so both are not equall but the one inferiour to the other the one subordinate to the other else the one would be an hindrāce to the other and both would cause confusion And certes if we will not preferre the bodie before the soule heauen before earth temporall before eternall life VVe must preferre the spirituall and Ecclesiastieall power before the Temporall and consequentlie the Church before the Common VVealth 4. These two powers and the preeminēce of the spirituall before the Temporall were prefigured as Turrecremata hath well remarked by the two brazen Pillars in the Porch of Salomons Temple The Porch was a figure of the Church Militant Turrecr lib. 4. cap. 87. 3. Reg. 7. the Inner Temple of the Church Triumphant because as by the Porch the Iewes entred into the Temple so by the Church Militant and by no other way Christians haue entrance into the Church Triumphant The two brazen Pillars that sustained the Porch signified the Power Temporall spirituall which support the Church Militant and the pillar on the right hand signified the spirituall power the Pillar on the left hand the Temporall power whence it is that that must take the precedence of this and this must be subordinate to that 5. And truly that the spirituall and Ecclesiasticall power is superiour to the Temporall and more eminent then it I prooue First by those thinges by which I haue prooued them in the former Chapter to be distinct For the end and finall cause of the temporall power is temporall and naturall to witt temporall peace the end of the spirituall Authoritie is eternall and supernaturall peace the immediat cause efficient of the Temporall is the people the immediat cause of the spirituall is God The matters in which the temporall power is occupied are temporall the affaires which the spirituall gouerneth are Ecclesiasticall and spirituall the functions of the temporall are all temporall the functions of the spirituall power are all spirituall and supernaturall as absoluing from sinnes ministring Sacraments offering of sacrifices enacting lawes for the soules health excommunicating absoluing c. The temporall ruleth especially the bodies the spirituall the soules that ruleth the Kingdome or Common Wealth this the Church To the King the Keyes of Cities are offered to the Priest and Pastour the Keyes of heauen He remitteth temporall Mulctes and paynes no sinnes at all The Priest and Pastour remitteth sinnes and absolueth from all paynes He can cast out of his Kingdome by banishement the Pastour out of the Church by Excommunication And therfore looke how farre eternall felicitie excelleth temporall God the People supernaturall and diuine thinges naturall and humane spirituall functions temporall soules bodies the Church the Common VVealth the Keyes of heauen the Keyes of cities sinnes ciuill penalties eternall temporall punishment excommunication banishement so farre the Ecclesiasticall and spirituall excelleth the Ciuill and Temporall Authoritie By this Argument S. CHRYSOSTOM as alwaies very excellentlie proueth the Priests to be greater then the King Chrysost homil 4. de verbis Isaiae tom 5. Mane intra tuos terminos ô Rex alij sunt termini Regni alij sacerdotij hoc Regnum illo maius est Rex ea quae sunt in terris sortitus est administranda caeterùm ius sacerdotij è supernis descendit Regi corpora commissa sunt sacerdoti animae Maior hic Principatus propterea Rex caput submittit manui sacerdotis vbique in scripturâ sacordotes inungebant Reges Remaine within thy boundes O King others are the limites of the Kingdome others of Priesthood this Kingdome is greater then that The King hath the administration of the things of the earth but the right of Priesthood defcendeth from aboue To the King bodies are cōmitted to the Priest soules greater is this principalitie and therfore the King inclineth his head to the hand of the Priest and euerie where ●n Scripture Priests did anoint Kings Secondlie there is no Christian can denie but that since God hath ordained vs to a supernaturall end to witt the cleate vision and fruition of him selfe as all Scripture witnesseth that he hath all our goods also and states are ordained to the same end and are not well vsed but rather abused when they are vsed to serue our pleasures contrarie to that end whence followeth that all temporall thinges since the former Institution and ordination of God are Media meanes in respect not only of out supernaturall end but also of supernaturall meanes as Sacraments Grace and supernaturall functions which are more proportionate and more neere meanes to that end and consequentlie temporall power which ordaineth of these meanes is subiect to spirituall power which principally considereth the supernaturall meanes and end For as the art of ryding is more noble Arist li. 1. Eth. c. 1. then the art of making bridles as Aristotle to a like purpose reasoneth because this is ordained to that so the spirituall power which disposeth of supernaturall thinges is nobler then the Temporall this being ordained to that and the end being more noble then the meanes 6. Thirdlie Philosophers affirme that all habites and faculties are specified and dignified by their actes obiectes and endes and so Morall Philosophie which hath vertue and manners the health of the soule for its obiect is more noble then the art of Phisicke which teacheth only to cure the diseases of the bodie and to restore corporall health Seeing therefore that the obiects of spirituall power are supernaturall and heauenlie the obiects of Temporall power are naturall and earthlie the end also of spirituall power is eternall beatitude the end of temporall power temporall felicitie the actes also and functions of that power spirituall and supernaturall the actes of this naturall and
may raigne ouer them are content that this opinion of the Popes authoritie be taught in schooles and published in printed bookes And therfore of late his Catholike Maiestie with three Bishops of his Counsell and the Inquisition of Spaine authorized the printing and setting forth of a booke of this subiect composed by a learned Diuine Franciscus Suarius intituled Defensio fidei Catholicae Apostolicae aduersus Anglicanae sectae errores c. in which the Authoritie of the Pope in deposing Princes who by their tyrannie against the Church make them selues vnworthy of their honourable roome and place is largelie and learnedlie defended and prooued 2. I confesse that the Popes Temporall Authoritie which he hath in ROME and ITALIE proceeded not from the immediat guift of CHRIST but rather commeth to him by the a Cap. Cōstantinus d. 96. c. Ego Ludouic d. 63. ca. futuram 12. q. 1. Naucler gen 13. Magd. Cent. 4. c. 7. Petr. Damian disp cum Reg. Aduoc Anselm li. 4 c. 32. Iuo Carn p. 5. Decr. cap. 49. Genebr lib. 3. Chron. Abrahā Leuita in ca. 11. Dan. Donation of CONSTANTINE PIPIN CHARLES the Great LEWIS the Godlie and other Princes as is testified partlie by the Canon law partlie by the Actes of SILVESTER partlie by other auncient writers I graunt also that Christ made him no temporall Prince but only Pastour of the Christian world For although many b Ostiens in cap. quod super his de voto voti Redemp Anton. 3. p. tit 22. cap. 5 §. 13. Silu. V. Papa V. Legitimus Canonists affirme that the Pope is Temporall Lord of the whole world yet c Henr. quod lib. 6. q. 23. Turrecr lib. 2. Summ● cap. 113. Caiet tom 1. Opusc tract 2. cap. 3. 2.2 q. 43. art 8. passim recentiores Diuines stand against them in this point and not without good reason For looke what power the Pope hath by Diuine right he hath from the Apostles And seing that CHRIST made his Apostles Pastours Ephes 4. Ioan. 21 Mat. 16. not Princes and gaue them a Church to rule not a Kingdome bestowed on them the Keyes of heauen not of Cities Mat. 18. Act. 20. Mat. 28. gaue them power to bind and loose the soule not the bodie to teach and baptize all Nations not to subiugate them and built his Church vpon an Apostle not vpon any King or Prince It followeth euidently that the Pope by Christs donation hath no title to Kingdomes and Empires 3. True it is that many Diuines and those also of note are of opinion that Christ as man was Temporall King ouer all the world which is the expresse opinion of S. a Anton. 3 p. tit 3. cap. 2. Antonine b Almai tract de potest Ecc. c. 8. Almainus c Turrec lib. 2. Summae cap. 116. Turrecremata d Ostiēs in cap. quod super his de voto voti redemp Ostiensis e Duran tract de Iurisd Eccl qu. 43. Durand f Nauar. in cap. Nouit de Iudiciis not 3. n. 8. 130. Nauar and others which they also prooue out of diuers places of scripture as Apoc. ● Princeps Regum terrae Prince of the Kings of the earth Apoc. 19. Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium King of Kings and Lord of Lords Act. 10. Hic est omnium Dominus This is Lord of all Psalm 8. and Heb. 9. Omnia subiecisti sub pedibus eius Thou hast subiected all things vnder his feet Matt. vlt. Data est mihi omnis potestas in Coelo in terra All power is giuen to me in heauen and in earth Yet most Interpreters expound these places as meant of Christs spirituall and Priestlie Power by which he was spirituall King of the world And though it be verie probable 1. Vasq 3 p. disp 87. ca. 3. as the Leardned Vasquez sheweth that Christ in deede as man was Temporall King of the world and had that Regall dignitie not by election or descent but only by Hypostaticall vnion which did so eleuate and dignifie his humane nature that it gaue him Authoritie euen as man ouer all the Kings of the earth by which he might haue commanded them euen in Temporall things and might haue depriued them of their Crownes Yet this it not so certaine because many Diuines also holde that Christ as man was no Temporall King But howsoeuer all allmost do agree that Christ neuer vsed any Regall power nor did actually raigne as King ouer any Countrie much lesse ouer all the world And therfore he sayd Ioan. 18 Regnum meum non est de hoc mundo My Kingdome is not of this world Because although his spirituall Kingdome the Church be in this world yet it is not of this world in respect of the spirituall authoritie and graces of the Church which are from heanen And although it be probable that he had Kinglie authoritie which is called Ius regnandi A right to raigne by which he might haue raigned and ruled temporallie in the world yet as I haue said he neuer actually raigned neither did he exercise any Kinglie act of his Kinglie Power and so hauing sayd that his kingdome is not of this world Ibidem be giueth a reason thetof saying Si enim ex hoc mundo esset Regnum meum ministri vtique decertarent vt non traderer Iudaeis For if my Kingdome were of this world my Ministers verily would striue that I should not be deliuered to the Iewes Which is a good reason if you vnderstand by his Kingdome the actual exercise of his Kinglie authoritie for otherwise one may be a true King in respect of his right as Kings driuen by force out of their Kingdomes are and yet haue no souldiers nor ministers to fight for them Ioan. 2. I know some Authours contend that he did actually exercise the Temporall power of a King when with a whippe he chased buyers and sellers out of the Temple yet that he did by the office of a Redeemer and Prophet whose part was to correct sinnes and abuses Others say that he vsed Kinglie Authoritie when he cast the Deuils into the Hogges and them into the sea Matth. 8. and when he withered the Figgetree Mat. 21. Mar. 11. Otherwise saye they he had done iniurie to the owners But all this an other Prophet might haue done though no King much more CHRIST the Prophet of Prophets and yet should he haue done no iniurie to the owner seing that what Prophets do miraculously they do by authority from God who is supreme Lord ouer life goods and all And because CHRIST did not actually raigne therfore Emperours and Kinges were absolute and were not vicaires or delegates to CHRIST and CHRIST tooke neither crownes nor scepters from them according to that of the Hymne of the Epiphanie In 1. Vesp Epiph. Hostis Herodes impie Christum venire quid times Non eripit mortalia Qui
by the peoples consent and although IOAS who was the right heyre was yet liuing yet because that was not knowen it seemeth that the people generallie consented to ATHALIA which consent was sufficient to make her lawfull Queene otherwise we must call in question the Titles of many Kings whose Predecessours entred into the possession of their Kingdomes by violence and inuasion and without all Title and yet afterwards prooued lawfull Kings by the common reception and consent of the people actually raigning for some time with expresse or tacitt consent of the people giuing à sufficient Title At least this example sheweth that the High Priest might be Iudge of the Kings right and Title which was to meddle in a Temporall matter and no lesse then a Kings Title 5. ELIAS also though a Prophet onlie 3. Reg. 18 4. Reg. 1. 2. and no Temporall Prince consumed by fire from Heauen OCHOSIAS Captaines and their fifties and made a massacre of Iesabels false Prophetes Againe ELISEVS his scholler by his curse sett Beares vpon those vngracious boyes who called him by scorne Bald-pate he stroke Giezi with the leprosie which he had taken from NAAMAN for his symonie Certes ELIAS was so famous for chrastizing rebellious Princes and their Captaines Eccl. 48. that Ecclesiasticus pronounceth thus of him VVho didst cast downe Kings to destruction and didst easilie breake their might and the glorious from their bed And howbeit they did this by extraordinarie and Propheticall power yet these examples shew how it is not vnbeseeming Spirituall power to controule sometimes Princes and to punish them euen temporally when Gods glorie and his Churches right and honour requireth it Num. 25 I could alleadge the example of MOYSES who caused the Princes to be hanged on Gibbets against the sunne for communicating with the Moabites in sactifice Exod. 32 who also by the assistāce of the sonnes of LEVI killed aboue three thowsand for adoring the Goulden Calfe But I will come to the Newe law and see what proofes it yeeldeth 6. The new law though it be the law of Charitie not seueritie loue not feare yet it is not without examples of Temporall punishment vsed euen by the spirituall sword 1. Cor. 5 1. Tim. 1 S. PAVL excommunicated the In cestuous Christian as also Hyminaeus and Alexander and deliuered them vp to Satan for the destruction of the flesh for in the Primatiue Church to excommunication was annexed a Temporall punishment D. Th. 3. p. in Addit q. 21. a. 2. ad 3. Act. 13. by reason that then when any was excommunicated the Deuill by and by possessed him and tormented him corporally In the new law I behould S. PAVL stricking Elymas the Magician with corporall blindnes for hindring the fruict of the Ghospell Act. 5. and I find S. PETER pronouncing sentence of present death against Ananias and Saphira his wife for defrauding the Apostles in the price of the peece of land which they had vowed And although this also they did by the guift of miracles and extraordinarie prerogatiue of their Apostleship yet this sheweth that Tēporall punishment doth not altogether surpasse the actiuitie and force of Spirituall power 7. Secondlie I prooue this by another Argument drawne from the persons of thē on whom it seemeth the Church may by warrant of scripture inflict Temporall punishment such as are obstinat Hereticks disobedient Princes to the Church D. Kellyson Rep. p. 185. Deut. 13 Blasphemers persecutours c. which examples a writer of this tyme alleageth though to another end In the old law which was a figure of the new false Prophets who persuaded to follow false Gods were slaine and stoned to death and the whole Citie that permitted worship of straunge Gods was commanded to be sacked and vtterly destroyed Deut. 17 And as we haue seene whosoeuer stubbornlie disobeyed the High Priest in matters pertaining to the law was to be killed And shall the Heretick stubborne against the Church who persuadeth vs to follow straunge Religions goe scotfree The person that was infected with a Corporall leprosie Leu. 13● was separated from all societie and shall obstinat Hereticks prefigured by such infected and infecting persons be permitted to conuerse with vs yea to rule and gouerne amongst Christians heresie being a spirituall leprosie Aug lib. 2. quaest Euang. cap 40. Leu. 24. which mixeth falsehood with truth as a leprosie infecteth some parts of the flesh others remaining sound and infecting not only the bodie as that doth but euen the soule The blasphemer in the same law was by Gods owne mouth commanded to be cast out of the Camp and to be stoned of the people and shall the heretick in words commonlie blasphemous in deeds sacrilegious be permitted in the Church and not be cast out by Censure of excommunication Leis. 20● and by death also when that will not serue NADAD and ABIV though sonnes of AARON for vsing straunge fire in their Censors were deuoured with fire from heauen Nu. 16. CHORE DATHAN ABIRON and HON for arrogating vnto them Aarons office were swallowed vp by the Earth and shall the Heretick who inuenteth straunge doctrines and who commonly without right ordination or vocation arrogateth Priestlie Authoritie be free from all Temporall punishment he commonly contemning all spirituall Censures Matt. 7. Ioan. 10. No no an heretick is a woolf and consequentlie to be driuen from the fold with stones and clubbes he is a theefe and so to be hanged he is a Canker Ioau 10. ergo to be burned and seared he is a false Coyner that is a deprauer of Gods word ergo to be hang●● drawne 2. Tim. 2. Lib. 2. 3. de fals● moneta Mat. 13. Iudae 1. and quartered he is cockle ergo to be pluckt vp by the rootes least he hinder the growth of the good corne he is a tree of Autumne vnfruitfull twise dead being deuoid both of the life of faith and charitie ergo to be cast into the fire he is an euill humour ergo to be purged and expelled Mat. 7. he is a rotten and rotting member ergo to be cutt of least he infect the whole bodie 8. Thiralie I prooue this out of those verie wordes by which S. PETER was constituted supreame Pastour vnder Christ and vnder-Head of the Church Pasce oues meas Ioan. 21. Feed my sheep for to a Pastour it appertaineth to rule and gouerne his sheepe to feede them to cure them and to defend them from the woolfe or rauenous beast VVherfore S. PETER and his successour the Pope being the supreame visible Pastour of the Church is not onlie to rule and gouerne them by lawes nor onlie to feede them by the word and Sacraments nor only to cure and correct them by spirituall Censures but if they beinfected and infecting sheepe he may not only separate them from the Church by excommunication but also if they contemne that punishment by deposition and depriuation
affirme that in case of intolerable tyrannie against the Church the Pope may depose them But rather as they are content so to beare rule ouer their subiects as they will permitt God to beare rule ouer them so they should also be content to subiect them selues their Kingdomes Crownes and scepters to Christ and his Kingdome that raigning vnder him here for a time they may raigne with him hereafter for euer CHAPTER XV. An Explication of the late Oath of pretended Alleageance and of euery clause thereof deduced out of the former and some other grounds by which is prooued that it can neither be proposed nor ta●en without grieuous offence of Almighty God 1. Vide Alphonsum de Castro V. Iuramētum Gen. 21. Gen. 26. Gen. 31. Psal 17. Rom. 1.2 Cor 1. Philip. 1.1 Tim. 5 CAtholicks with common consent do confesse and hould against the Messalians Euchites Pelagians Waldenses Anabaptistes and Puritanes that it is lawfull in some cases to sweare as many of the greatest Sainctes haue done For ABRAHAM swore to Abimelech ISAAC to the same or another Abimelech IACOB to Laban MOYSES swore by Heauen and earth DAVID and others oftentimes vse this oath Viuit Deus as God liueth which is in effect to sweare by the life of God S. PAVL also did vse diuers oathes as Testis enim mihi est Deus for God is my witnesse and I call God to witnesse I testifie before God and such like Yea God him selfe knowing that we more easilie beleeue when a thing is sworne sweareth himselfe to winne credit at our hands Deut. 4. And in DEVTERONOMIE he commandeth vs to sweare saying Dominum Deum tuum timebis per nomen eius iurabis Thou shalt feare thy Lord God and shalt sweare by his name But as medicines are good yet not alwaies to be taken but onlie supposing a disease or sicknesse so oathes are not to be vsed but only supposing a necessitie as when we cannot otherwise be beleeued And therfore when there is no necessitie CHRIST sayth Mat. 5. Ego autem dicovobis non iurare omnino I say to you sweare not all to wit when there is no necessitie Iacob 1. And S. IAMES Nolite iur are quodcunque iur amentum Do not sweare any oath Deut. 6. But when there is necessitie God commandeth it Psal 62. as wee haue seene And Dauid commendeth it saying Laudabuntur omnes qui iurant in eo They all shall be praised who swearein him God Fot to sweare when necessitie vrgeth is an Acte of Religion and worship of God whome we acknowledge to be so true that he will not fauour a lye and of such a maiestie that none will dare to sweare by him vnlesse the thing be true which is the reason why oathes are easilie credited 2. D. Thom. 2.2 q. 89. art 3. But if we will haue our oathes free from all sinne we must ioyne to them these three companions● or conditions Iudgement Veritie and Iustice according to that of HIEREMIE Hierem. 4 Iur obis in veritate in iudicio in iustitia Thou shalt sweare in Veritie Iudgement and Iustice. Iudgement is necessarie in the sweater Veritie in the thing he sweareth Iustice in the cause For want of Iudgement the oath is rash as when we sweare for euerie trifle for want of Veritie the oath is false and periurie as when we sweare a lye for want of Iustice it is vnlawfull as if one should sweare he would committ a sinne And if a man sweareth with out Iudgement he taketh Gods name in vaine if without Veritie he committeth periurie and makes God to patronize a lie if without Iustice he makes God a patron of sinne Wherfore he that would knowe whether the Oath which latelie is proposed to Catholickes be lawfull must marke whether it want not some one of these three companions or conditions to wit Iudgement Veritie and Iustice for if it want but one it is vnlawfull much more if it want all And because there may be difficultie as well about the proposer as the taker of this Oath let vs see first whether in the proposer may be found Iudgement Iustice and Veritie 3. As touching the first it may seeme not to be wanting in the Magistrate that proposeth and that for two reasons First because the Prince being of another religion then the Pope and knowing that Catholickes giue him power to depose Princes may seeme iustlie to feare least he will exercise this Authoritie vpon him Secondlie the late Gunpowder-plot may seeme to proceed from such an opinion and so the Magistrate to secure the Prince seemeth to haue reason to vrge the Catholicke subiects vnto such an Oath 4. But yet on the other side it seemeth most certaine that the Magistrate hath no iust cause to propose such an Oath consequentlie that in proposing it he obserueth not the first condition For first although the Magistrate may haue some cause to feare the Kings deposition supposing that he persecuteth the Catholicke faith and depriueth Catholicks of liuings libertie Rom. 13. and sometime life also yet as S. PAVL sayth Vis non timere potestatem bonum fac habebis laudem ex illa Dei enim Minister est tibi in bonum Si autem malum feceris time non enim sine causa gladium portat c. VVilt thou not feare the power do good and thou shalt haue praise of the same for he is Gods Minister vnto thee for good But if thou doe euill feare for he beareth not the sword without cause for he is Gods Minister a reuenger vnto wrath to him that doth euill So say I if Princes wil be free from all feare of the Popes power let them do good and they shall haue praise before God and men for the Pope is appointed Pastour vnto thē for their good But if they will do euill if they will persecute the Church her faith faithfull children then let them feare for he is Gods Minister hath the spirituall glaiue put into his hand to chastize correct all rebellious Christians And therefore as he that taketh a mans purse from him by violence hath no iust cause to compell him to sweare that he will not bewray him because he might and should haue abstayned from the iniurie and then an oath had not bene necessarie so the Prince or Magistrate hath no vrgent cause to propose this Oath to the Cath olicke subiectes because if he abstaine from persecutiō as he ought to do he needeth not feare the Popes power and so hath no sufficient cause to vrge his subiects by oath to abiure the Popes Authoritie that he in the meane while may persecute impunè 5. As for the Gunpowder plot it could not proceed from this opinion for it doth not follow that because the Pope cā depose the Prince therefore his subiects by priuate Authoritie may endeuour to kill him because the Pope is superiour the subiectes are inferiours he