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A27494 Clavi trabales, or, Nailes fastned by some great masters of assemblyes confirming the Kings supremacy, the subjects duty, church government by bishops ... : unto which is added a sermon of regal power, and the novelty of the doctrine of resistance : also a preface by the right Reverend Father in God, the Lord Bishop of Lincolne / published by Nicholas Bernard ... Bernard, Nicholas, d. 1661. 1661 (1661) Wing B2007; ESTC R4475 99,985 198

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the English Reformation then will they make you leave the French Reformation You fail against wind and tyde you think that the Governors you shall have hereafter will be like Sir Tho. Layton you are deceived Though this day you had compassed your wish to morrow or the next day after at your Governors pleasure all shall be marred again Finally the Ecclesiasticall Government which you aske hath no ground at all upon Gods word 'T is altogether unknown to the Fathers who in matter of Christian Discipline and censure of manners were more zealous and precise then we are But you cannot of all the learned and pious antiquity shew one example of the Discipline or Ecclesiasticall order which you hold as your Bishop in his book of the perpetuall government of the Sonne of Gods Church doth learnedly teach I pass over what I have my self written concerning it in my book De diversis Ministrorum gradibus and in my Defence against the Answer of Mr. Beza and more largely in my Confutation of his book De triplicigenere Episcoporum I cannot wonder enough at the Scotchmen who could be perswaded to abolish and reject the state of Bishops by reasons so ill grounded partly false partly of no moment at all and altogether unworthy a man of such fame If the Scots had not more sought after the temporal means of Bishops then after true Reformation never had Mr. Beza's Book perswaded them to do what they have done And I assure you that your opinion concerning the government of the Church seems plausible unto great men but for two reasons the one is to prey upon the goods of the Church the other for to keep it under the Revenues and authority of Bishops being once taken away For the form of your discipline is such that it will never be approved of by a wise and discreet supreme Magistrate who knows how to govern Ye see not the faults you commit in your proceedings as well Consistoriall as Synodals men well versed in the Lawes and in government do observe them But they contemn them so long as they have the law in their own hands and that it is far easier for them to frustrate them regard neither Consistorie nor Synodes then for you to command and make Decrees Were your Discipline armed with power as the Inquisition of Spain is it would surpass it in tyranny The Episcopall authority is Canonical that is so limitted and enclosed within the bounds of the Statutes and Canons of the Church that it can command nothing without Law much less contrary to Law And the Bishop is but the Keeper of the Lawes to cause them to be observed and to punish the transgressors of your Consistories and Synodes For the present I will say no more only take notice of this that it is not likely the King who knows what Consistories and Synodes be will grant that to the Islands which doth displease him in Scotland This Gentlemen and Brethren have I thought good to write vnto you intreating you to take it well as comming from him that loves the Islands and the good and edification of the Church of Christ as much as you can doe Upon this occasion I have thought fit to add thus much concerning Dr. Hadrianus Saravia HIs learning is sufficiently known by his works his judgement in relation to the Liturgy and Discipline of the Church of England is declared by this Letter which doth further appear by his Subscriptions following 1. In Queen Elizabeth's time the form required was in these words We whose names are here underwritten do Declare and unfainedly Testify our assent to all and singular the Articles of Religion and the Confession of the true Christian Faith and the Doctrine of the Sacraments comprized in a book imprinted intituled Articles whereupon it was agreed by the Arch-bishops and Bishops of both Provinces and the whole Clergy in the Convocation holden at London in the year of our Lord God 1562. according to the computation of the Church of England for the avoiding of the diversities of opinions and for the establishing of Consent touching true Religion put forth by the Queens Authority And in testimony of such our Assents we have hereunto subscribed our names with our own proper hands as hereafter followeth Unto this Doctor Hadrianus de Saravia the sixth Prebend of the Church of Canterbury being conferred upon him subscribes in these words Per me Hadrianum de Saravia Sacrae Theologiae Professorem cui sexta Prebenda in Ecclesia Cathedrali Christi Cantuariens conferenda est sexto December is 1595. Wherein I find he did immediately succeed Doctor Whitaker whose Subscription is in these words viz. Per me Gulielmum Whitaker sacrae Theologiae Doctorem ejusdemque Professorem Regium in Academia Cantabrigiensi cui sexta Praebenda in Ecclesia Cathedrali Chrstl Cantuarens conferenda est Decimo Maii 1595. According unto which I find Mr. John Dod of Hanwell in Oxfordshire who wrot upon the Commandements to have subscribed in these words Per me Johannem Dod in Artibus Magistrum praesentatum ad Ecclesiam de Hanwell Oxon. Dioces 28. Julii 1585. unto whom abundance more and about that time might be added Mr. Richard Rogers Doctor Reynolds of Oxford c. among whom it pleased me to find the hand of the Reverend and Learned Mr. Hooker thus subscribing Per me Richardum Hooker Clericum in Artibus Magistrum praesentatum ad Canonicatum et Praebendam de Neather-haven in Ecclesia Cathedrali Sarum 17. Julii 1591. 2. In King Jame's time and since the form of the Subscription was thus To the three Articles mentioned in the 36. Chapter of the Book of Canons First that the Kings Majesty under God is the only supreme Governor of this Realm and of all other his Highness Dominions and Countries as well in all Spirituall or Ecclesiasticall things or Causes as Temporall and that no foraign Prince Person Prelate State or Potentate hath or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power Superiority Preheminence or Authority Ecclesiasticall or Spirituall within his Majesties said Realms Dominions and Territories That the Book of Common Prayer and of Ordering of Bishops Priests and Deacons containeth in it nothing contrary to the word of God and that it may lawfully so be used and that he himself will use the form in the said book prescribed in publick prayer and administration of the Sacraments and none other That he alloweth the book of Articles of Religion agreed upon by the Arch-bishops and Bishops of both Provinces and the Clergy in the Convocation holden at London in the year of our Lord One thousand five hundred sixty and two And that he acknowledgeth all and every the Articles therein contained being in number nine and thirty besides the Ratification to be agreeable to the word of God To these three Articles Doctor Hadrianus de Saravia being instituted unto the Rectory of Great Chart in the Diocess of Canterbury anno 1609. subscribes in these words Ego Hadrianus
of words used by the Bishop in the Ordination of the Church of England His sufferings for it The right sense of that gradual superiority of a Bishop above a Presbyter His confirmation of Books tending to the Preheminency of Episcopacy 3. Of the Liturgy His dayly observing of the Book of Common-prayer At Drogheda the Service sung upon Sundays before him as in Cathedrais of England His observing of the Ceremonies and causing them so to be His pains in reducing and satisfying the scrupulous His Constancy in the above-mentioned to the last The falsehood of some Pamphlets since his death Some specialties observed in him as to decency and Reverence in the Church at publick prayer c. 4. The Constitutions and Canons c. His subscription to the 3. Articles in the 36. cap. of the book of the Canons of England The severity put in with his own hand in the first Canon of Ireland against such as should refuse to subscribe to the Articles of England Observation of the annual Festivals Good-Friday c. Confirmation of Children Church Catechisme Canonical decency of Apparrel in the Clergie Consecration of Churches c. IV. Mr. Hookers Judgment confirmed by the Primate 1. The Kings power in matters of Religion 2. Of his Power in advancement of Bishops to their Rooms of Prelacy 3. The King exempt from Censure and other Iudicial power V. Bishop Andrews Judgment as it is conceived of Church Government before and after Christ c. confirmed and enlarged by the Primate In the Old Testament 1. Before the Law 2. Under Moses 3. Among the Priests 4. Under Joshua 5. Under David where is much added by the Primate 6. Under Nehemiah A Recapitulation of the whole c. with some new enlargements by the supposed Author answering the objections made against having the like government now and giving reasons why it may be now In the New Testament 1. In the time of our Sáviour 2. In the dayes of the Apostles and after Of Deacons Evangelists Priests and Bishops Of the persons executing those Offices Of the promiscuous use of their names The use of the Bishops office and the charge committed to him The choice of persons to their Callings VI. A Letter of Dr. Hadrianus de Saravia to the Island of Garnzay Of the first Reformation in the Island Subjection to Episcopal Iurisdiction Difference in the Case between them and France and the Low-Countries Their Synodicall meetings not justifiable The Kings Power in making of a Law Of Ordination otherwise then by Bishops Of the Scotch Reformation D. Hadr. Saravia with other learned mens Subscriptions to the Articles and Liturgy of the Church of England A Pamphlet printed under the name of the late Archbishop of Armagh coucerning the Liturgy and Church Government declared to be none of his As he hath been also injured and is still by another Book intituled a Method of Meditation or a Manual of Divine Duties which though by his own direction in his life time 1651. I did in his name declare to be none of his but falsly put upon him and have done so twice since his death yet is still reprinted and sold up and down as his to the great injury of him The late Lord Primate Ushers Iudgment of the signe of the Cross in Baptisme confirmed by the Bishop of Lincoln in his Preface VII The Contents of the Sermon Regal Power of Gods Ordination That of 1 Pet. 2. 13. Submit your selves to every Ordinance of man c. Answered Sauls Election not by the People Difference in Religion quits not the due of Obedience The Novelty of the Doctrine of Resistance The Pharisies the first among the Iews The Arguments for it taken out of Bellarmine and the Jesuites which many other Writers of the Church of Rome do contradict The Antient Fathers Loyalty to the worst of Emperors 1. Constantly praying for them Tertullian c. 2. Not giving the least Offence in word or writing St. Hillary Nazianzen c. 3. Not stirring up the people in their own defence St. Augustines Commendation of the Christians under Julian Tertullians under Severus St. Ambrose Athanasius and others That Evasion viz. That the Christians then wanted Power to resist cleared out of Eusebius Tertullian St. Ambross Theodoret Rebellion always found the Ruine of the Actors The Speech of Rodolphus upon his mortal wound in taking up Armes against the Emperor A Conclusive Application An Animadvertisement SUch of the Bishops and Clergy as by Gods Mercy escaped with their Lives to Dublin in that Bloody Rebellion in Ireland Anno 1641. and 1642. did conceive fitting at a so great though sad meeting to have somewhat like a Commencement in that University The Doctors part pro gradu was the Concio ad clerum The Text Rom. 13. 2. was taken out of the Epistle appointed for the day being the Tuesday after the Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany The day according to that account of the late Kings of Blessed Memory murder The Doctrine delivered was then so offensive to some potent persons newly landed that he was forced to send a Copy to the L. Primate Usher who gave his approbation of it And upon the Thirtieth of Ianuary last 1660. the day of Humiliation for the abovesaid Murder it was preached in English at the Honorable Society of Grayes-Inn London The Intention was to have published it in that Language it had its first being but by the Printers Experiment of the slowness of the Sale in that as the better suiting with these other Tracts and that the Profit intended would be of a farther extent the latter was resolved of ERRATA PAge 24. line 29. read the. p. 25. l. 8. r. 2. marg l. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 27. l. 3. r. him l. 4. thee p. 29. l. 19 r. thus p. 31. 10. Jehu p. 39. marg l. 1. r. Julianus l. 5. r iniquus p. 40. marg l. 27. r. fletibus l. 35. r. injuriam p. 45. marg l. 6. r. pontisicumque p. 43. l. 24. dele for marg l. 8. r. per regiam 52. l. 31. r. waited p. 56. l. 20. r. calls p. 60. l. 9. r. commendam p. 81. 6. r. consecratus l. 7. r. gratias p. 90. l. 9. r. scarce l. 10. r. inexcusablae p. 95. 11. r. Potiphera Job 1. 5. 42. 8. p. 96. l. 3. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 97. 16. r. fisties l. pen. Merari l. ult after these r. the. p. 100. l. 14 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 101. l. 5. r. camp l. 15. r. Asher p. 102. l. 12. r. Further. p. 103. l. 9. r. Gibethon p. 105. l. 2. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 107. l. 22. r. Gershon l. 23. r. Ethan l. ult 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 109. l. 12. r. Benaiah l. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 112. l. 7. r. Governors of the. p. 113. l. 25. r. Priest
were of greater scandal to the Church then that aptitude habitually attained unto by some could be of profit His Judgment of the Articles of Religion and practice of the Eeclesiastical Constitutions of the Church of England THe Articles of the Church of England as the Primat had long agon subscribed them so have I often heard him highly commending them The reception of which Articles in the First Canon of Ireland Anno 1634. He drew up himself with his own hand with an addition of a very severe punishment to such as should refuse to subscribe them as may appear in it Anno 1614. He was a principal person then appointed for the collecting and drawing up such Canons as might best concern the Discipline and Government of the Church of Ireland taken out of Queen Elizabeths Injunctions and the Canons of England to be treated upon by the Arch-Bishops and Bishops and Clergy of that Kingdom some of which I have which were written then with his own hand and presented by him The two first of them were these 1. That no other Form of Liturgy or Divine Service shall be used in any Church of this Realm but that which is established by Law and comprized in the Book of Common-Prayer and Administration of Sacraments c. 2. That no other Form of Ordination shall be used in this Nation but which is contain'd in the Book of ordering of Bishops Priests and Deacons allowed by Authority and hitherto practiced in the Churches of England and Ireland c. And in his subscription in relation to the above mentioned it is in these words viz. I do acknowledge the Form of Gods Service prescribed in the book of Common-Prayer is good and godly and may lawfully be used and do promise that I my self will use the Form in the said Book prescribed in celebration of Divine Service and administration of the Sacraments and none other I do also acknowledge that such as are consecrated and ordered according to the form prescribed in the Book of Ordination set forth by Authority have truly received holy Orders and have Power given them to exercise all things belonging to that Sacred Function whereunto they are called c. For the now more perfect Canons of the Church of Ireland constituted Anno 1634. in the Convocation there whereof I was a Member most of them were taken out of these of England and he being then Primate had a principal hand in their collection and proposal to the reception of them the methodizing of all which into due order I have seen and have it by me written with his own hand throughout whereby 't is apparent what his Judgment was in relation to them The Annual Festivals of the Church he duly observed preaching upon their several Commemorations On Christmas-Day Easter Whitsunday he never fail'd of Communions that excellent Treatise of his Entituled The incarnation of the Son of God was the substance of two or three Sermons which I heard him preach in a Christmas time Good-Fryday he constantly kept very strictly preaching himself then upon the Passion beyond his ordinary time when we had the publick prayers in their utmost extent also and without any thought of a superstition he kept himself fasting till the Evening Confirmation of Children was often observed by him the first time he did it when a great number were presented to him by me he made a Speech to the Auditory to the satisfaction of all sorts of persons concerning the Antiquity and good use of it The publick Cathechism in the book of Common-Prayer was enjoyned by him to be only observed in the Church a part of which for a quarter or half an hour was constantly explained by me to the people every Sunday before evening Prayer himself being present which was also accordingly enjoyned throughout his Diocess He was much for that decent distinctive habit of the Clergy Cassocks Gowns Priests-Clokes c. according to the Canon in that behalf provided to be used by them in their walking or riding abroad which himself from his younger years always observed And in Anno 1634. that Canon of England of the decent Apparrel of Ministers was by his special approbation put in among those of Ireland Lastly though in our Constitutions there is no form appointed for the consecration of a Church or Chappel yet he was so ready to apply himself to what had been accustomed in England that at his consecration of a Chappel not far from Drogheda in Ireland he framed no new one of his own but took that which goes under Bishop Andrews name and used it with little variation which I have in my custody And thus I have endeavored by this Declaration of his Judgment and Practice in these particulars to give satisfaction to all such who by their misapprehensions have had their various censures and applications to the great injury of him I shall only wish that not only they but all others that hear this of him were both almost and altogether such as he was Mr. HOOKERS Judgment of Regal Power in matters of Religion and the advancement of Bishops wholy left out of the common Copies in his eighth Book here confirmed by the late Lord Primate USHER'S marginal notes and other Enlargements with his own hand THe service which we do unto the true God who made heaven and earth is far different from that which Heathens have done unto their supposed Gods though nothing else were respected but only the odds between their hope and ours The office of piety or true Religion sincerely performed have the promises both of this life and of the life to come the practices of Superstition have neither If notwithstanding the Heathens reckoning upon no other reward for all which they did but only protection and favour in the temporal estate and condition of this present life and perceiving how great good did hereby publickly grow as long as fear to displease they knew not what Divine power was some kind of bridle unto them did therefore provide that the highest degree of care for their Religion should be the principall charge of such as having otherwise also the greatest and chiefest power were by so much the more fit to have custody thereof Shall the like kind of provision be in us thought blame-worthy A gross error it is to think that Regal Power ought to serve for the good of the body and not of the soul for mens temporal peace and not their eternal safety as if God had ordained Kings for no other end and purpose but only to fat up men like hogs and to see that they have their Mast Indeed to lead men unto salvation by the hand of secret invisible and ghostly regiment or by the external administration of things belonging unto Priestly order such as the Word and Sacraments are this is denied unto Christian Kings no cause in the world to think them uncapable of supreme
government under which we live I consider the state of England and that of the Islands and the dignity of Bishops and the condition of the other Ministers of the Church such as it is at this day In Scotland for the time present the State hath otherwise provided but not in England and therefore ye ought not to take example by them as though your State were like theirs I hear that your Governor hath taken order about Wills and appointed one to prove them But I cannot conceive how that may be done without Episcopal Jurisdiction conferred by the Bishop Your Governour I know hath power to present to the Bishop a man proper to execute this authority of the Bishop in his name Likewise the Governor as Patron of the Churches and Parishes of his Government upon the vacancy of any living ought to present by such a time a man well qualified to succeed in the Office of a Pastour but the admission and induction of such a charge belongs to your Bishop and to no body else If I be well informed you observe nothing of all this which if it be so you 'l never be able to justifie it The example of the French Churches and of the Low-Countries doe you no good Your case is quite another They have Laws from their Soveraigns and particular places for themselves but all that you doe is contrary to the Laws and Ordinance of the King your Soveraign You hold Synodicall meetings wherein you make Statutes about the Government of the Church unto which you bind your selves and the rest that are naturall Subjects to the King wherein you unsensibly derogate from his authority The Synods of the Arch-bishops and Bishops together with the rest of the Clergy of this Realm dare not presume that which you doe nor attribute to their Canons and Statutes what you attribute to yours Yet the Assembly of Bishops and of their Clergie is of men far otherwise qualified then some dozen of the Ministers of your Islands to judge and discern what belongs to the edification of the Church their Decrees nevertheless are of no authority to tye unto them those of this Realm till the King yea in his own person have approved them and by Proclamation made them his There is no body in his Realm nor in any of his Dominions that hath power to enact Laws and Decrees but himself The Parliaments authority is great but without the Kings assent nothing takes the rigour of Law I know very vell that at the perswasion of the Ministers your Governours and others that were present to your Synods have subscribed and acknowledged your Synodicall Acts they did it even in my time but their power doth not stretch so far That may bring a greater prejudice to themselves then give force of Ecclesiasticall Law to your Decrees I doe not think that his Majesty being well informed will grant unto your Ministers or Governours of your Islands such authority They will be more pernicious to you then youthink You 'l alledge me I know your Priviledges but I dare boldly answer you that you never had any such priviledges I have read them and have the copies of them and they say that in matters Civil you shall be governed by the ancient Coustumier of Normandy and that you are not subject to the Statutes of the Parliament in such matters nor to the Subsidies other charges and impositions that are raised in England except which God forbid ever should come to pass the King were detained Prisoner by the Enemy In matters Ecclesiasticall you are freed from the Bishop of Constance and under that of Winchester yea even of old by the Popes authority and consent of the two Kings from whom also in part your neutrality in times of warre is approved excommunicating all such as would molest you Ye cannot shew concerning your priviledges but only what is renewed as often as there is a new King And for the Patent which you say you have procured from his Majesty for matters of Religion First it is in generall terms and without any clause derogating from the authority of your Bishops Secondly if it be questioned it may be told you that it was surreptitious and granted you before the King was well informed of the business To conclude you must understand that in matters of Religion the Kings Majesty will doe nothing without the counsell and advice of the Arch-bishop and your Bishop of Winchester wherefore you may doe well to insinuate your selves in their favour and conform your selves to them as we have done in the beginning You may reduce the Decrees of the Church of England and the use of the book of prayers to a good and Christian Discipline farre more solid and better grounded then that for which ye so earnestly bestirre your selves I must addone word more which will be hard of digestion This is it that you may be upbraided that as many Ministers that are naturall of the Countrey being not made Ministers of the Church by your Bishop nor by his Demissories nor by any other according to the order of the English Church you are not true and lawfull Ministers Likewise that as many among you as have not taken institution and induction into your Parishes from the Bishop nor from his Substitute lawfully ordained and authorised so to doe ye are come in by intrusion and usurpation of cure of Souls which no body could give you but your Bishop that is in terms and words Evangelicall that you are not come into the Sheep-fold by the door but by elsewhere and that by the Ecclesiasiastical Laws you are excommunicants and Schismaticks I know well enough you do not regard such Laws and think that your Priviledges will exempt you from them wherein you greatly deceive your selves For a man may tell you who are yee that would have your Ecclesiastical Decrees made by Private Authority to have force of Laws and dare scorn and reject those of the English Church made by Publick Authority by farre honester men greater Scholars without comparison more learned and farre more in number then you are The Kings Majesty by his Royall authority hath approved them this Realm hath received them But what are your Synodall Decrees who be the Authors of them and who be they that have approved them 'T is winkt at and your ignorance is born with but think not that that which is born in you be any such thing as vertue Your Priviledges do not stretch so far as that you may make Ecclesiasticall Decrees Had it been so the Priests had retained Mass and Poperie In that you hold a contrary course to that of the English Church whereof you are and must be if you be Englishmen Members it proceeds from nothing else but from the connivence and indulgence of your Governors who have given too much credit to the French Ministers and partly in the beginning to the stubborness of the Papists of the Islands When your Governors shall have a liking to
Quod me um est i. e. sundum meum non refragarer si co pus petit occu●ram vultis in unicula rapere vultis in mortem voluptati est mihi non ego me vallabo circumfusione populorum nec altaria teneb● vitam obsecrans sed pro altaribus gratis immolabor ibid. q Bern Ep. 221. ad Ludon Reg. pro matre nostra Ecclesia Propugnabimus sed quibus armis non scutis non glad●s sed precibus fl●ctibusque ad deum r Religioni quam profi ebatur putavit magis consen●a neum patientia quam injusta seditione conjuriam imperatoris superare Apol. a Haec sola novitas ne dicam haeresi● nec dum in mundo emenserat Sigeb Chronol Ann. 1088. Object Necessita●i magic quam vi t●●● valun●ati ●a●ctorum Pat●um c. b Julianus Tyranide sua vi res omnes praeciderit quibus alids its contra Apostatam uti fas fuisses c Lib. 6 de regn c. 26. depo●est Papae d In Apol. B●ll a n. 249. usque ad u. 267. Answer e Fere om●e● mortales ●un● denrum cultu reli to Christianorum genit c. Euseb. l b. 9. c. 9. f Apol. Exter●●●umus vestra omnia in p●cvimus urbes insulas ca●●ella m●●n●ci p●a conciliaba la. castra ipsa decarias p●la ita sorum Se nals●● cui bello non 〈◊〉 non prem ●● suissexiu● ●●i tam 〈…〉 si nan apud discipliam nostram magis ctcid li●●re● quam 〈…〉 g Theod. lib. 3. cap. 17. Cum multi militum qui exer●ore thus adoleverunt imposturis Juliani decepti peregiam discurrences non tantum manus sed corpor a ad ignam offerent ut igne polluti igne repurgarentur h lib. 5. de Pontifice c. 7. i Helmold histor Sclau cap. 28 29 30. lib. 1. Spectate manum meam dextram de vulneie cauciam haec ego iuravi Domino Henrico ut non nocerem et nec insidtarer gloriae ejus sed jussio Apostolica Po●tificamus mandatum me ad id dedu●i● ut juramenti transgressor honorem mihi 〈◊〉 usorparem Videtis quod in manu unde jura menta violavi mortale hoc vi●lnus accepi Viderint ii qui nos ad 〈◊〉 instigave●unt qualiter nos duxerint ne forte deducti simus in praecipitium aeier●ae damnationis Praesat Apol. Apol. Occasion of writing that Book of the Power of the Princes c. His Speech of the Oath of Supremacy His Speech of supplying the Kings Necessiries Mr. Hookers judgment of Regal Power confirmed by the Primate His sufferings for it His Prayers joy and sorrow according to the success of his Majesties affairs His compassionate affection to such as had suffered for his Majesty His judgment His Practice The reduction of Episcopacy c. The occasion and end oft it Ordination of the Church of England Episcopal superiority over Presbyters As the Sun to the other Lights The dignity and power of the first-born A● the distance beween the High-Priest and the other inferiour Priests His approbation of books tending to the preheminence of Episcopacy The Liturgy The Service Song The Ceremonies His reducing the scrupulous 〈…〉 The falshood of some Pamphlets put out in his name since his death Some particulars observed by him The Articles of Religion of England The Canons of Ireland 1614. taken out of Q. Eliz. Injunct and Can of Engl. The Common Prayer Book of Ordination His Subscription Canons of Ireland Anno 1634. taken out of those of England The Festivals Good Friday Confirmation of Children Catechism Apparrel of the Clergy Consecration of Churches * This is wanting in the common books of Mr. Hookers M. S. Cor. 3. 7 8. Ad. 2. Ad. 3. Exod. 19. 1 Pet. 2. * Thom. in cum locum Revel 1. 6. * This is also wanting in the common copy * Euseb. l. 4. de vit Constant. * Dib ad Const. * Lib. 5. Epi. 33. * Ep. 166. 162. T. C. l. 1. p 193. This is in the common copies That is in the copies which the Primate then saw but not in that which is now printed Of their power in making Ecclesisticall Laws What Laws may be made for the affairs of the Church to whom the power of making them appettaineth Deut. 12. 32 4. 2. Jos. 1. 7. * Tho. 2. quaest 1 c 8. artic 2. Prov. 6. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Archit de le●e justit * This is wanting in the common books of Mr Hooker's M. S. In vit Cypy Nulla ratio Dist. 63. * Ep. Hono● Imp. ad Bonif. Concil Tom. 1. * 25 Ed. 3. * 25 Ed. 3. * 25 H. 8. c. 20 * C. Nullu● Dist. 63. * Tom. 1. Concil * Onuph in Pelag 2. * ●Rea in Dist. 63. * W●tthramu● Naumburgensis deinvestit Episcoporum per Imperat saciendâ * Cap. General de elect l. 6. * Adver Jovin l. 1. * L. 7. Epist 5. * Theod. lib. 5. cap. 27. * Sozom. lib. 8. cap. 2. * Marcel l. 15. * Socr. 2. c. 27. l. 4. c. 29. * Theod. l. 2. c. 15 16 17. * Sozom. lib. 4. c. 11. l. 6. c. 23. * In vit Cypr. * C. Sacrorum Canon dist 63. * C. Lectis Dist. 63. * This is in the common Copy of Mr. Ho●ke M. S. that is in the copies which the Primate then saw but not in the now printed ones * T. C. lib 3. Pag. 155. * Euseb. de vita Constant. lib. 4. * Epist. 162. 166. * Lib. ad Constant * Lib. 5. Ep 33 * Inclusa desunt in vul●atis exempl● ib. * Doctrin ●iccip lib 5. Cont. 2 cap. 18. * Apud Athanos in Epist. ad solit vit agentes * Suid. in verb. Leontius * Epist. 68. * See the Stature of Edward 1. and Edward 2. and Nat. Bren. touching Prohibition See also in Bract n these sentences l. 5. c. 2. Est jurisdictio quaedā ordinaria quaedam delegata quae pertinet ad Sacerdotium forum Ecclesiasticum sicut in causis spiritualibus spiritualitati annexis Est etiam alia jurisdictio ordinaria vel delegata quae pertinet ad Coronam dignitatem Regis ad Regnum in causis placitis rerum temporalium in so●o seculari Again Cum diversae sint binc inde jurisdictiones diversae judices diversae causae debet quilibet ipsorum inprimis aestimare an sua sit jurisdictio ne falcem videatur ponere in messem alienam Again Non pertinet ad Regem injungere poenitentias nec ad judicem secularem Nec etiam ad eos pertinet cognoscere de iis quae sunt spiritualibus annex asecut de decimis aliis Ecclesiae proventionibus Again Non est laicus conveuiendus coravs judice Ecclesiastico de aliquo quod in soro seculari terminari possit debeat * None of all this which follows is to be found in the common coppy of Mr Hookers MS * Antiquit. l. 4. c. 8. 2 Sam. 2 3. Nehem. 11. 25. All this is writ with the Lord Primat Ushers own hand 2 Sam. 17. 24. 1 Of Priests 2 Of Levites 1 Chron. 24. vers 26. 27. * IBRI The AUTHOR in his review and emendations hath in this place made this Querie Seeing the Courses were but 24. why should IBRI 25. be reckoned Jedeiah was chief Quer. Whether he was not to be connted one of the 24. because of his generall superintendency over the rest This Querie seems to be resolved by the PRIMATE and was the occasion of setting down the bove mentioned Genealogy * It seemeth the first of these Jedeiah is to be omitted in the reckoning as chief over them all in respect of his generall superintendency over the rest 3 Of Judges 4 of Officers 5 Of Singers 6. Of Porters Officers and Judges This answer I find ordered by the Author to be thus put instead of that which had been in a former copy This also the Author hath added to be put unto the former answer Exod. 14. 27. Numb 33. 9. The supposed Author in his advertisments concerning this passage saith This I know not well what way to make more clear The supposed Author in his Advertisments put this out here saying This I thought might better make a chapter of it self See infra the last chapter of all Acts 5. 5. 15. 13. 11. 19. 2. 1. 16. 46 Acts 14. 11. 8. 13. 5. 11. 13. Vid. Hierem. Epist. 4. ad rusticum c. 6. Et Epist. ad Eva● ium * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodorat a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 1. 6. This is added by the supposed Author There was one called Vox Hy berntae published in his name for the suppressing of which he had an Order from the House of Pe●rs
controll See pag. 60. They that betake themselves to these un worthy arts though they may please themselves for a while with an imagination that by this means the people will fall to them apace and thereout they shall suck no smal advantage to their Cause and Party yet as it mostly cometh to pass such their rejoycing is but short For the imposture once discovered nor is it often long before that be done for a lying tongue is but for a moment the Imposters are forced to lye down in sorrow and that if they could be found out with shame enough For such discovery once made wisemen fall off faster from them then ever fools came on concluding the Cause to be desperately crazy that must be beholding to such weak props as these to shore it up and support it How they that are guilty of such foul play will be able to make answer for their insincerity before the tribunal of the great Judge at that his day if yet they that do such things can really believe there is any such thing as a day of Judgment to come I leave to their own Judgments in this their day to consider As for us qui leges colimus severiores as we profess our utter abhorrency of all forgery and other like un worthy unchristian attempts in any person of whatsoever perswasion he be or for what soever end it be done so we hold our selves religiously obliged to use all faithfulness and sincerity in the publishing of other mens works by suffering every Author to speak his own sense in his own words nor taking the boldness to change a phrase or syllable therein at least not without giving the Reader both notice where and some good account also why we have so done Such faithfulness and ingenuity the learned publisher of these Treatises professeth himself to have used in setting them forth neither better nor worse but just as he found them in the Reverend Primate's Paper some perfect and some imperfect according as they were and still are in the Copies which are in his custody and which he is ready upon all occasions to shew if need shall require The Primates two Speeches and Dr. Saravia's Letter are set forth perfect according as they are in the Original Copies to be seen The Treatise of the Form of Church-Government heretofore published and very probably supposed to have been some Collections of the most Learned and Reverend Bishop Andrews but whereunto the Author had not put to his last hand is a piece though little in bulk yet of huge industry and such as neither could the materials thereof have been gathered without very frequent reading and attent observing of the sacred Text nor being gathered could they have been easily contrived or digested into any handsome Form so compendiously without the help of a methodical and mature judgment which doubtless had the Author polished and finished according to his own mind abilities and exactness in other things would have given very much satisfaction to the impartial Reader and done good service to the Church of God Yet rather then a Tract of so much usefulness should not be publickly known to the World the Publisher in order to the publick good thought fit notwithstanding whatsoever defects it may have for want of the Authors last hand thereunto to joyn it with the rest in this Edition especially the Learned Primate having had it under his File as by the Notes and other Additions written with the Primates own hand which I have seen and can testifie doth plainly appear The same also is to be said of the three pieces of the renowned Hooker and of what is written with the same hand in the Margent of the Manuscript Copie whereof some account is given pag. 47. Great pity it is if it could be holpen that any thing which fell from the Pen of any of these Four Worthies should be lost But where the entire Work cannot be retrived it is pity but as in a Shipwrack at Sea or Scath-fire by land so much of it should be saved as can be saved be it more or lesse Those men have been always thought to have deserved well of the Commonwealth of Learning that have bestowed their pains in collecting out of the Scholiasts Grammarians Lexicons and other antient Authors the Fragments of Ennius Lucilius Cicero the Dramatike Poets and of other learned though but Heathen Writers whether Greek or Latine How much more then ought the very imperfest Fragments and Relikes so they be genuine of such excellent persons that tend so much to the advancement not of the knowledge only but of the Power also of Christianity and of Godliness as well as Truth be acceptable to all those that are true Lovers of either Of Gold quaevis bracteola the very smalest filings are precious and our Blessed Saviour when there was no want of provision yet gave it in charge to his Disciples the off-fall should not be lost The more commendable therefore is and the more acceptable to the men of this Generation should be the care of the Reverend Preserver and Publisher of these small but precious Relikes of so many eminent persons men of exquisite learning sober understandings and of exemplary piety and gravity all concurring in the same judgment as concerning those points Factious Spirits in these latter times so much opposed of Regal Soveraignty Episcopal Government and Obedience in Ceremonialls What the Reverend Doctor hath added of his own as touching the Learned Primates Judgment in the Premises and confirmed the same by instancing in sundry particulars under those three Generall Heads and that from his own personal knowledge and long experience having for divers years lived under or near him is in the general very well known to my self and many others who have sundry times heard him as occasion was given deliver his opinion clearly in every of the aforesaid points which were then grown to be the whole Subject in a manner of the common discourse of the times But one particular I shall mention which above the rest I perfectly remember as taking more special notice of it when it was spoken then of the rest because I had never heard it observed by any before and having my self oftentimes since spoken of it to others upon several occasions which for that it hath given satisfaction to some I think it my duty to make it known to as many others as I can by acquainting the Reader with it and it concerneth the Ceremony of the Cross after Baptisme as it is enjoyned by Law and practised in the Church of England The use of this Ceremony had been so fully declared and as to the point of Superstition where with some had charged it so abundantly vindicated both in the Canons of the Church and other writings of Learned men that before the beginning of the Long Parliament and the unhappy Divisions that followed thereupon there were very few in the whole Nation scarce here and there
one either of the Ministers that made scruple to use it or of the People that took offence at it But after that some leading men of the House of Commons in that Parliament for the better driving on the design they had upon the King had let all loose in the Church whilst some few stood fast to their honest Principles and were most of them undone by it the greatest part of the Clergy to their shame be it spoken many for fear of loosing their own more in hope to get other mens livings and some possibly out of their simplicity beguiled with the specious name of Reformation in a short space became either such perfect Time-Servers as to cry down or such tame Complyers with the stronger Side as to lay down ere they needed the use of the whole Liturgy and of all the Rites and Ceremonies therein prescribed But among them ail none in the whole bunch so bitterly inveighed against nor with such severity anathematized as this of the Cross as smelling ranker of Popery Superstition then any of the rest as it is even at this day by the Managers of the Presbyterian Interest represented as of all other the greatest Stone of offence to tender Consciences and the removal of it more insisted upon then of all the other Ceremonies by such men as having engaged to plead in the behalf of other mens tender Consciences do wisely consider withall that it will not be so much for their own Credit now to become Time-Servers with the Laws as it was some years past for their profit to become Time-Servers against the Laws These out-cries against a poor Ceremony to us who were not able to discerne in it any thing of harme or Superstition worthy of so much noise afforded sometimes when two or three of us chanced to meet together matter of discourse It hapned upon a time that falling occasionally upon this Theme the Learned Primate among other things said to us that were then casually present with him that in his opinion the Sign of the Cross after Baptisme as it is appointed in the Service-Book and taken together with the words used there withall was so far from being a Relike of Popery that he verily believ'd the same to have been retained in the Church of England at the Reformation of purpose to shew that the custom used in the Church of Rome of giving the Chrisme to Infants immediately after their Baptisme was in their Judgments neither necessary to be continued in all Churches nor expedient to be observed in ours Which his opinion as it is most certainly true in the former so to me it seemeth very probable in the latter branch thereof For first how can that be with any truth affirmed or but with the least colour of reason suspected to be a Popish Custom or a Rag or Relike of Rome that hath been for above a hundred years used and that use by Law established in the Protestant Church of England but is not at all used nor for ought I can learn ever was used by the Papists in their Churches nor is it by any Order or Authority of the Church of Rome enjoyned to be used in any Church in the world that professeth subjection thereunto True it is that in the Office of Baptisme according to the Romane Ritual the signe of the Cross is very often used from first to last at least twenty times viz. in the Benediction of the Salt in the Exorcismes in the formal words of Administration and otherwise yet as luck would have it that signe is not made nor by the Ritual appointed to be made upon the Childs Forehead as with us is used Nor are those very words therewithal used nor other words to the like purpose by the said Ritual appointed to be so used shewing what the intent meaning and signification of that Sign is as in our Service Book is done And true it is also for I wil not as I think Iought not dissemble any thing that I can imagine might be advantagiously objected by an Adversary that according to the Romane Order the Minister as soon as he hath finished the Baptisme Ego baptizo te c. is in the next place to annoint the Infant cross-wise with a certain Prayer or Benediction rather to be said at the same time as by the Ritual printed at Antwerp An. Dom. MDCLII pag. 23. may appear But so far distant is that Rite of theirs from this of ours in many respects as may also by comparing their Ritual with our Service Book appear that ours cannot with any congruity be thought to have been drawen by that patterne or to have been borrowed or taken from their practice For first 1. Theirs is actus immanens a material annointing and so leaveth a real effect behind it the visible Form or Figure of a Cross to be seen upon the Childs head after the act is done But ours is a meer transient act an immaterial sign of a Cross made in the aire without any sensible either impression or expression remaining when the act is over 2. Theirs is done upon the Top or Crown of the head in summitate capitis Ritual p. 23. which is else where expressed by Vertex see pag. 49. 51. 56. which sure must needs have some other signification if it have any then ours hath Which is done upon the Childs Forehead the proper seat by the common judgment of the world and according to the grounds of Phisiognomy of shamefastness and boldness and so holdeth a perfect analogy with that which the Church intended to signifie by it in token that he shall not be ashamed c. 3. Their Cross belongeth precisely to the annointing with the Chrisme whereunto it relateth and hath such a dependance thereupon that supposing there were no such Chrisme used in the Church of Rome there would be no place left for the Cross in all that part of the Office that followeth after the formal words of Baptisme as from the frame and order of their Ritual is most evident It cannot therefore be the same with the Cross used in our Church where the Chrisme is not at all used but thought fit rather at the Reformation to be I dare not say condemned as unlawful and superstitious but laid aside as at least unnecessary and useless as many other Ceremonies still retained in the Church of Rome were because though some of them were guiltless yet they were grown so burdensome by reason of their multitude that it was fit the number of them should be abated And yet secondly there might be and in the Primates judgment probably there was a more peculiar Reason why after Baptisme our Church did substitute the signe of the Cross with the words thereto appertaining in stead of the Chrisme and the Cross attending it used in the Church of Rome The Ceremony of giveing the chrisme to Infants in all likelihood came into the church about the same time when through the misunderstanding
noted by the Primate throughout and some passages which the learned Author desired to be farther inquired into are at large perfected under the Primats own hand and I know no book more full for the preheminency of Episcopacy so that what he did or was willing to have yielded unto out of a calme temper of Moderation in such times of extremity to preserve the unity and peace of the Church then in great hazard to be shattered ought not in reason so to be stretched as to inferre it was his Absolute desire or free choice but only upon the present distress to keep the Chariot upon its wheels from a Precipice of a total overturning So much for Episcopacy 3. His Judgement and Practice of the Liturgy of the Church of England FOr the Liturgy of the Church of England he was a constant Assertor and observer of to the last At Drogheda in Ireland where I had the happiness for many years to live under him he had the Common-Prayer read twice every day in his Chappel from which nothing but sickness excused his absence And in the Church it was by his approbation as duly observed by my self we had there an Organ and a Quire on Sundayes the Service was sung before him as is used in Cathedrals in England Anthems were sung very frequenly and often instead of a Psalm before Sermon He came constantly to the Church in his Episcopal habit and preacht in it and for my self by his approbation when I officiated I wore my Surplice and Hood administred the Communion and at such occasions preached in them also The Surplice was accordingly observed constantly by the Reader and some of the Quire every Sunday And for all other Administrations they were fully observed in each Rite and Ceremony according to the Rubrick or Rule of the Book of Common-prayer which many years after his leaving of Ireland was according to his trust committed to me continued till my Church in that bloody storm of Drogheda 1649. was blown up with Gun-powder and for my refusing to obey the command of his Nephew Colonel Michael Jones sent by an Officer unto me in writing to forbear the use of the Common-prayer I had much thanks from the Primate being much displeased at his presumption in it though thereupon the little means I had remaining there was by the Colonels order taken from me and in the storme of the Town he did not forget it in his designing my death as I was assured by an Ear-witness And indeed while the Primate continued in Drogheda I doe not remember there were any Protestant Inhabitants there that so much as scrupled at the Crosse in Baptism or kneeling at the Communion with the like but in all things conformed and submitted to what they saw was approved by him and for such as were refractory in the Northern parts of Ireland where the Scotch had mingled themselves with the English he did his utmost to reclaim them in his Provincial Visitation which I was a witness of and imployed by his directions among them for that end Wherein craving leave for this short digression I have observed that such who had so geat a prejudice to the Liturgy as to run out of the Church when it was offered to be read out of the Book when I used the very same form in several Administrations by heart without the book Baptism Communion Matrimony Burial and the like they have highly commended it as conceiving they had been my own present conceptions the younger sort having never heard it and the other almost forgotten it which guile both at Drogheda when several Parliament Regiments were sent thither successively to suppress it like the Messengers of Saul to destroy David at Ramah they have accordingly Prophesied with us and in other places since my coming over I have continued who at first being praeingaged without the Book in the commendation of it the next time upon the use of it finding it to be the same they have confessed their former delusion and have been fully satisfied And what the Primates Practice had been in Ireland he continued in England to his last which in the Countess of Peterboroughs house where he lived and died I have been often a witness of And upon a false rumour raised of his remisseness that way he shewed me not long before his death what he then had written to an Eminent person who had told him of it signifying his high approbation and commendation of the said Book of Common-prayer And when after his being destroyed in Ireland the late King of blessed memory had for his subsistence given him the Bishoprick of Carlile in Commerdam He did at a Visitation of the Diocess unto which the remoteness of the place did not permit himself to travel writ a Letter unto the Ministers thereof charging them to use constantly the Book of Common-prayer and the publick Catechism in their several Churches Some Pamphlets which of late years have been published in his name containing as they pretended his opinion for the omission and change of divers things in it as I did at their first comming forth protest against them to be fictitious papers so I doe here confirm it and whatsoever he might now have yeilded unto for the peace and unity of the Church that we might all speak the same thing I can assure it if he were alive in these late disputes of it he would have been for the Defendant And for some other particulars observed by me of him at Drogheda may not be impertinent herewith to relate At the Creed he stood up constantly repeated it with the Minister alwayes received the Communion kneeling At the publick prayers he kneeled also At his entrance into the Pulpit he addressed himself with some short prayer unto God for his assistance not steping in irreverently with a rude confident boldnes as the manen of some is but rather with some fear and trembling At his entrance into his Seat both in the Church and in his Chappel he kneeled down with some short Prayer also and as he always came reverently into the Church and went out of it uncovered so did he continue all the time of Divine Service And though he had as great an ability as the chief Pretenders to an extemporary expression yet he constant ly used a set form of Player before his Sermon and that with a decent brevity which in private Families as most profitable he commended accordingly and even at their Tables which was his own practice also when he did not omit to pray according to the usuall Form for the Kings Majesty and Royal issue now commonly omitted In a wotd this was his often assertion that as the affecting and imposing of a daily sudden conception at Prayer was a Novelty and a singularity not being practised in any other Reformed Church so the immethodical impertinencies and other indiscreet extravagancies both for measure and matter frequently occasioned by it
of a passage in John 6. 53. the opinion of the necessity of administring the Lords Supper to Infants had obtained in the christian church And that as it seemeth to supply in some sort the want of confirmation wherein the like Ceremony of annointing with the chrisme was used of which young children were not capable and which yet was in all reason to precede the receiving of the Lords Supper That opinion in time vanished as an Error and with it the practise of communicating Infants ceased But still the custom of giving them the chrisme continued as a kind of initial confirmation if I may so call it as if by it were conferred some degree of that grace which in their account is the proper effect of the Sacrament of confirmation to wit the grace of Spiritual Strength to fight against the Spiritual Enemie of the Soul the flesh the world and the Divel Now to prevent the imagination of any such efficacious vertue in the chrisme and to shew that by Baptisme alone which is sacramentum militare without the addition of the chrisme the person baptized receiveth all that benefite of grace and strength whatsoever it be which he should do if the chrisme were joyned with it for by Baptisme he is not only received into the church as a Member of Christ but matriculated also into the Militia as a Soldier of Christ it might very well be thought convenient laying aside the annointing with the chrisme per modum crucis cross-wise that the Minister as soon as he hath baptized the child should in express words signifie to the Congregation that he is now become the Soldier of Jesus Christ as well as a Member of his Church with the sign of the cross also used there withall as a significant ceremony in token that the person so baptized being now the Soldier of Christ should not be ashamed of his profession nor behave himself cowardly therein This is the substance of what the Learned Primate declared to us to be his Judgment concerning the use of this Ceremony and the place it hath in our Liturgy In the setting down whereof if for the Readers fuller satisfaction I have allowed my self a good liberty of enlargement either for the farther confirming or the better clearing of ●is opinion I hope none will therefore charge me to have misrepresented it having gone all along upon his grounds and perfectly to his sense This Story of what discourse we had with the Primate at that time as I had to others heretofore so I told very lately to the Reverend Doctor the Publisher of these Treatises who told me back again that himself had also heard him declare his opinion to the same effect as aforesaid and remembreth particularly which I here publish having the Doctors Warrant so to do that he so declared it in a publick Speech mentioned pag. 63. before a great Auditory at Drogheda in Ireland when he first confirmed children there I am unwilling having gone thus far already to weary the Reader or my Self with proceeding any farther nor indeed is it needful I should For since only by pride commeth contention Prov. 13. 10. if all men that pretend to be wise and honest would be humble and truly he that is not so is neither honest nor wise and make that their business which is certainly their Duty That is to say if they would study quietness more and Parties less bear a just reverence to Antiquity and to their betters allow as favorable a construction to things established as they are capable of suspect their own judgment wherein it differeth from the publick submit to reason and yield when they are convinced obey cheerfully where they may and where they dare not suffer without noise a little saying and writing would serve the turn But when men are once grown to this to make it their Glory to head or hold up a Party To study wayes how to evade when they are called to obey To resolve to erre because they have erred and to hold their conclusion in despite of all Premises To preferre their private opinions before wiser mens judgments and their reputation with the vulgar before Obedience to Superiors In a word to suffer themselves to be swayed with Passions Parties or Interests all the writing and saying in the World as to such men untill it shall please God to put their hearts into another Frame is to no more purpose then if a man should go about to fill a Seive with Water or to wash a Blackamore white When we have tried all the ways and conclusions we can we shall in the end find the best expedient for Peace and the best Service we can do the Church our Selves and our Brethren to be our constant and instant Prayers to Almighty God with our subservient Endeavors that he would give to every one of us a discerning judgment to see the Truth and a willing mind to embrace it conscience to do what we ought and Patience to suffer what wee must Humility to acknowledge our own and Charity to bear with other mens infirmities that so we may keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace and fulfil the Law of Christ which is the unfeigned hearty Wish of London Aug. 10. MDCLXI The unworthy Servant of JESUS CHRIST Ro. Lincoln The Contents of each Treatise I. Of the Oath of Supremacy THe distinct Power of the Sword and Keys That the Sword is not restrained to Temporal Causes only That there is a Civil Government in Causes Spiritual and a Spiritual Government in Causes Civil The Right Sense of the Oath Four Arguments against the Bishop of Romes Title to an universal Supremaey King James His gracious Thanks to the Primate for it II. Of the Duty of Subjects to supply the Kings Necessities The Pretensions of Spain to the Kingdom of Ireland The Distinction in point of Loyalty between those of the ancient English Race and the meer Irish. The hatred shewn by the latter to the former in the Colledges abroad The moderating and answering Objections on both sides for and against the Contribution propounded Divers Records produced as presidents for it His Iudgment as a Divine in the ●ase not to be an Arbitrary Act but a matter of Duty and Conscience That the denying of the King what is necessary for the support of his Kingdom is no less a Robery of him then a Subtracting of Tithes and Oblations is called a Robbery of God by the Prophet III. Of the late Lord Primate Ushers Judgment and Practice 1. In point of Loyalty The Occasion of his writing of that book of the Power of the Prince c. His joy or sorrow according to the success of his Majesties affairs His compassionate affection to such as had suffered for his Majesty 2. In point of Episcopacy His writing for it Exercise of the Iurisdiction of it The occasion and end of those Proposals concerning it An. 1641. His censure upon the Omission of the form