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A40713 Leges AngliƦ, The lawfulness of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the Church of England asserted and vindicated in answer to Mr. Hickeringill's late pamphlet stiled, Naked truth, the 2d part by Fran. Fullwood ... Fullwood, Francis, d. 1693. 1681 (1681) Wing F2509; ESTC R18058 41,024 102

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Church but indeed establish'd them by Acts of Parliament as is plainly to be seen in the 37 Hen. 8. c. 16. Sect. 4. in these words May it therefore please your Highness that it may be Enacted that all singular persons which shall be made deputed to be any Chancellor Vicar-general Commissary Official Scribe or Register by your Majesty or any of your Heirs or Successors or by any Archbishop Bishop Archdeacon or other person whatsoever having Authority under your Majesty your Heirs and Successors to make any Chancellor Vicar-general Commissary Official or Register may lawfully execute all manner of Jurisdiction commonly called Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and all Censures and Coercions appertaining unto the same c. 2. 'T is acknowledged that in the Sect. 2. of this Statute it seems as if the Parliament concluded that by the 25 of Hen. 8. 19. the ancient Canons were abrogated which I wonder Mr. Hickeringill his sagacity had not discovered yet 't is plain enough that wise Parliament did not thereby reflect upon or intend all the Canons but such Canons as the present matter before them was concerned in that is such Canons as forbad Ecclesiastical Officers to marry as the words Sect. 1. are that no Lay or married man should or might exercise any Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction c. directly repugnant to your Majesty 's as Supream Head your Grace being a Lay-man then it follows in the next words And albeit the said Decrees viz. being contrary to the Royal prerogative as supream Head of the Church be in the 25 year of your most Noble Reign utterly abolished That this is the meaning of that clause is reasonable to believe because they take no further care to correct the matter but only by enacting persons lawfully deputed though they be Lay persons though married or unmarried shall have power and may exercise Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction notwithstanding any Law or Constitution to the contrary as the Statute is concluded 3. Besides we are assured that all the ancient Canons that were not repugnant to the Kings Prerogative or the Laws and Customs of this Realm were not abrogated but declared to be of force i. e. to be executed in the Spiritual Courts as was noted in the very letter of that Statute 25 Hen. 8. 19. and that this clause speaking only of such Canons as were abrogated by that Statute abrogates nothing that was not so by the Act referred to 4. And thus the Jurisdiction and Canons of the Church stood in force at the latter end of the Reign of Hen. 8. this Statute being made in the last year wherein any were made by that great Prince 5. Thus we have found in the time of King Hen. 8. an Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction exercis'd in England without any dependance on the Pope and other Authority for Canon-makers Synodical as Mr. Hickeringill cants besides the Statute for the High Commission 1 Eliz. upon which Statute of Eliz. Mr. Hickeringill very learnedly asserts the Authority of all Canon-makers Synodical was built qu. Naked Truth SECT III. NO more is needful under this Head but to shew my respect to Mr. Hickeringill his doughty and only Argument taken out of the Petition of the Clergy to Queen Mary whereby he would fain prove that the extinguishing Act of Hen. 8. took away all ordinary Jurisdiction from the Church of England and that there was no such thing till she revived it 2. The words of the Petition from whence he thus argues you shall have in his own Translation in this manner they pray that her Majesty would make such provision that those things which belong to our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and Liberties without which we cannot duly discharge c. and taken from us lately by the Iniquity of the times may be again restored and that all Laws which have taken away or do any ways hinder our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and liberties may be made null and void Hence he concludes that in the judgment of the Convocation at that time their Jurisdiction and Liberties were taken away Is this proof sufficient against all the laws and practice of the Kingdom during the Reign of Hen. 8. after the extinguishing Act or do they say that Hen. 8. took away the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction how can Mr. Hickeringill divine that it was not the renouncing the Pope as Head of their Jurisdiction and Liberties that was the very grievance that they complain'd of 3. This is certain that Queen Mary succeeded Edw. 6. that Edw. 6. did require more express Testimonies of the Clergie's Recognition of the Crown in the exercise of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction by the Statute of which we shall take more notice presently than Hen. 8. did and 't is past Mr. Hickeringill his skill to prove that the Convocation in their said Petition did not principally if not only intend that severe Act of Edw. 6. However that pass Mr. Hickeringill his argument deserves not the strength of a Convocation to confute it 4. I leave it to Mr. Hickeringill himself for if he think that that Convocation spake that which was not true he hath said nothing to the purpose but if he think they did speak truth then he thinks that the Jurisdiction of the Church of England as derived from the King according to the Statute of Edw. 6. or in Hen. 8's time was no lawful Jurisdiction that is Mr. Hickeringill thinks as the Papists think War Hawk again Mr. Hickeringill and a praemunire too But this brings us to consider the Statute of Edw. 6. CHAP. IV. Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction is lawfully exercis'd without the Kings Name or Stile in Processes c. notwithstanding the 1 Edw. 6. 2. THat all Ecclesiastical Processes should be in the Name and Stile of the King c. according to the Statute of 1 Edw. 6. 2. is the great and old Objection not only of Mr. Hickeringill but several others SECT I. Answ But first if this Statute were not repealed as indeed it is there are several things in the body of it very considerable against Mr. Hickeringill and to our advantage 1. The Statute observes in the very foundation of it that it 's justly acknowledged by the Clergy of the Realm that all Courts Ecclesiastical within the Realms of England and Ireland be kept by no other Power or Authority but by the Authority of the King which it seems was then known without the Testimonies thereof then to be required and indeed is so still by the Oaths which all Ecclesiastical persons chearfully take before their Instalment 2. That there was such a thing in practice before the making this Act as Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Church of England for the Statute saith that Archbishops c. do use to make and send out their Summons c. in their own names at that time who yet acknowledged all their Authority from the Crown Sect. 3. 3. The Statute allows the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction it self and that the Archbishops and Bishops shall make admit c. their Chancellors and
also it was that beyond all known time of Christianity in England our great Church-men have had no small hand in making all our Laws both Ecclesiastical and Civil and also sate many hundred years together with our Temporal Judges in all places of publick Judicature Primi igitur sedebant in omnibus Regni Comitiis Tribunalibus Episcopi In Regali quidem palatio cum Regni magnatibus in Comitatu unà cum Comite Justitiario Comitatus in Turno Vicecomitis cum Vicecomite in Hundredro cum Domino Hundredi So that in promoting Justice every where the sword might aid the sword nihil inconsulto Sacerdote qui velut suburra in Navi fuit ageretur Sp. Epis Conc. Yet we must remember and 't is carefully minded in our Statutes before mentioned that our Kings were the true and acknowledged fountains of the beginning and encrease of that wealth and honour and power which the Church and Church-men then enjoy'd and that the Kings of England were ever Supream over this Church and all its Ministers and not the Pope or any foreign power the Pope's Collector or Minister so say our ancient Books had no Jurisdiction in this Land Lord Coke of Courts p. 321. In our Law before the Conquest the King was the Vicar of the highest King ordained to this end that he should above all govern the Church Edw. Laws c. 19. and this hath been carefully maintained by our Laws ever since See Cawdries Case SECT I. Jurisdiction of the Church in Common Law THUS the power and Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical grew up with and received much perfection by and in Common Law By Common Law I mean long and general use in the whole Land for as I take it my Lord Coke saith That time and use make a Custom when that 's general in England it 's called Common Law that is my meaning whether my Notion be right I weigh not if the matter and Argument prove and express the manner of the Churches ancient Authority and Jurisdiction before the Statutes 'T is most evident William the Conqueror found the Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Ministers in great power and with large Jurisdiction which they had long enjoy'd according to the Law and Custom of the Realm Call that Law what you will by that they enjoy'd their ancient Rights and government and that 's enough 'T is true indeed William changed the ancient Custom we spake of and distinguish'd the Tribunals one from the other but saith Spelman Secrevit non diminuit Jurisdictionem Cleri he did not lessen the Jurisdiction of the Clergy Yea by swearing he confirm'd the Laws of holy Church Quoniam per eam Rex Regnum solidum subsistendi habent fundamentum Prooemium ll suarum ut Spel. Epis because by the Church both King and Kingdom have a solid foundation of subsisting Thus the Churches Rights in being before were confirm'd by the Conqueror My Lord Coke notes two excellent Rules of Common Law to our purpose 1. The Law doth appoint every thing to be done by those unto whose office it properly appertaineth 2. 'T is a Maxim of the Common Law that where the Right is Spiritual and the Remedy thereof only by the Ecclesiastical Law the Connusance thereof doth belong to the Spiritual Court Coke Instit p. 1. 3. Hence it follows that there being many Cases in which there is no remedy Vid. Cawdries Case Answ to Object 4. any other way provided by Common Law they belong to the Spiritual Courts and the Common Law both impowers and requires those Courts to give Remedy in those Cases Thus stood Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England by Common Law before our Statutes took so much notice of it and our Statutes since whenever they mention it do generally mention it as a Government supposed upon grounds good and firm in Law to have existed before and also then to be in use and to flourish in its present exercise and proceedings in its proper course and Courts 'T is as idle a thing to look in the Statutebooks for the beginning of Ecclesiastical Power and its Courts as for the Beginning of Courts-Baron which are such by Common Law as Coke saith or the Court of Marshalsea which as Coke's words are hath its foundation in Common Law or Courts of Copyholders which are such by Custom And for the same reason to question the lawfulness of these Courts because in their original they were not Established by Act of Parliament as well as the legality of the Courts Spiritual these being equally founded in the Ancient usage Custom and Law of England and all taken care for in Magna Charta that ancient Authentick account of our Common Law And why are Ecclesiastical Judges I mean not Bishops only whom Mr. Hickeringill finds in Scripture but Archdeacons Chancellors Officials c. as well Establish'd in their proper power as Coroners High-Constables c. that have the Origine of their Offices before Statutes Have not Ecclesiastical Officers when lawfully invested power as well as they to Act in their proper Jurisdictions by the same Common Law by long ancient and establisht Custom or as the usual word in our Statutes in this very Case is secundum Consuetudines Leges Angliae My Lord Coke saith The Kings Prerogative is a principal part of the Common Law which also flourisheth in this part of it the Ecclesiastical Power and Jurisdiction as well as in the Civil State and Government Thus we acknowledge the Ecclesiastical State and External and Coercive Jurisdiction derives from and depends upon the Crown of England by Common Law And I am bold to add that the former cannot easily be Abolish'd and destroy'd I do not say altered without threatning the latter I mean the Crown at least some prejudice to it on which it depends Thus Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction stands by Common Law on which also most of our Civil Rights depend but we confess it is bounded as my Lord Coke by the same Common Law and in all reason it must be so it being subordinate to the King as Supream who is supposed to be personally or virtually present in his great Courts of Common Law and is so declared to be by Acts of Parliament Instit p. 1. pag. 344. of my Lord Coke SECT II. The Government Ecclesiastical is Established in the Statutes of this Realm THE Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction being thus found Establisht by Law before the Statute-books were made the Statutes do Establish it as much as any reasonable unprejudic'd man can expect or desire We shall begin with Magna Charta which is Statute as well as Common Law and seems to unite and tye them together This stands at the beginning of our Statutebook and the first thing in this is a grant and establishment for ever of the Rights and Liberties of the Church that must be understood of the Rights and Liberties then in being and among the rest sure the great Right and Liberty of the Churches Power and the free use
all which Notorious and publick Miscarriages I wish he thought it fit to do publick Penance in another new and cleaner Sheet I have to do with two Adversaries Mr. Hickeringill and Mr. Cary the first wisheth the Church of England had more power than it now hath the other that it had less I presume in the name of the true Sons of this Church that we are very thankful for the power we have by the favour of our gracious King and his good Laws And as we do and always shall acknowledge the Dependance of our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction upon the Imperial Crown of this Realm So whether it seem good to the King and his High Court of Parliament to augment or lessen it or to continue it as it is we shall still maintain our Loyalty and manifest our duty and chearfully submit our selves But Lord forgive our Enemies Persecutors and Slanderers and turn their hearts THE POSTSCRIPT I Have reserved a few Authorities for the satisfaction of such as have no mind or leisure to read the Book which alone are sufficient to oppose and expose my Adversaries Objections I. Episcopal Government in the Church of England is as Ancient as the Church and at first was subordinate under God only to our Kings without any relation to or dependance on the Pope and declared to be so with the grounds and reasons thereof very early by Edw. 1. and Edw. and so Established by Acts of Parliament Read 25 Edw. 3. the summ is thus Here we have a Recital of the first Statute against Provisors to this effect Whereas the Holy Church of England was founded in the Estate of Prelacy by the Grandfather of this King and his Progenitors c. and by them endowed with great Possessions c. for them to inform the People in the Law of God to keep Hospitality c. And whereas the King and other founders of the said Prelacies were the Rightful Adowers thereof and upon Avoidance of such Ecclesiastical Promotions had power to advance thereunto their Kinsmen Friends and other Learned men of the birth of this Realm which being so advanced became able and worthy to serve the King in Council and other places in the Common-wealth The Bishop of Rome Usurping the Seigniory of such Possessions and Benefices did give the same to Aliens as if he were Rightful Patron of those Benefices whereas by the Law of England he never had the Right Patronage thereof whereby in short time all the Spiritual Promotions in this Realm would be ingrossed into the hands of strangers Canonical Elections of Prelates would be abolished works of Charity would cease the Founders and true Patrons would be disinherited the Kings Council weakned and the whole Kingdom impoverished and the Laws and Rights of the Realm destroyed Upon this complaint it was resolved in Parliament That these Oppressions and grievances should not be suffered in any manner and therefore it was Enacted That the King and his Subjects should thenceforth enjoy their Rights of Patronage that free Elections of Archbishops and Bishops and other Prelates Elective should be made according to the Ancient Grants of the Kings Progenitors and their Founders and that No Provision from Rome should be put in Execution but that those Provisors should be Attached Fined and Ransom'd at the Kings Will and withal imprisoned till they have renounced the benefit of their Bulls satisfied the Party grieved and given sureties not to commit the like offence again II. Before this forementioned Act was made the Spiritual Courts were in Being and had Power by the Law of the Land to try such Causes as were not to be tried by Common Law so declared and Establish'd by Acts of Parliament Vid. in the time of Edw. 1. and Edw. 2. near four Hundred years since Circumspectè agatis 13 Edw. 1. An. 1285. The King to his Judges sendeth greeting Use your selves circumspectly in all matters concerning the Bishop of Norwich and his Clergy not punishing them if they hold Plea in things as be meer Spiritual as Penance enjoyned by Prelates Corporal or Pecuniary for Fornication Adultery or such like for Tithes and Oblations due and accustomed Reparations of the Church and Church-yard Mortuaries Pensions laying violent hands upon a Clerk Causes of Defamation Perjury All such demands are to be made in the Spiritual Courts and the Spiritual Judge shall have power to take knowledge of them notwithstanding the Kings Prohibition III. Hereupon a Consultation was to be granted 24 Edw. 1. as followeth Whereas Ecclesiastical Judges have often surceased to proceed by force of the Kings Writ of Prohibition in Cases whereas Remedy could not be had in the Kings Courts our Lord the King Willeth and Commandeth That where Ecclesiastical Judges do surcease in the aforesaid Cases by the Kings Prohibition that the Chancellor or the Chief Justice upon sight of the Libel at the instance of the Plaintiff if they can see that the Case cannot be redressed by Writ out of Chancery but that the Spiritual Court ought to determine the Matters shall write to the Ecclesiastical Judge that he proceed therein notwithstanding the Kings Prohibition More particularly Those Cases reserved by Law and Statute against which no Prohibition can be legally granted are enumerated in Articul Cleri 9 Edw. 2. IV. Thus the proceedings of the Spiritual Courts and the Causes belonging to them were supposed directed allowed and Establish'd by these Ancient Statutes And left those Causes have not been sufficiently specified no Prohibition shall be awarded out of Chancery but in Case where we have the connusance and of Right ought to have as it is in the 18 of Edw. 3. provided Whence 't is a general Rule both in Law and Statute That such cases as have no remedy provided in the other Law belong to the Spiritual Courts and indeed it hence appears they have ever done so because we no where find in our Laws that the Common Law did ever provide for them and because the Kingdom of England is an intire Empire where the King is furnish'd with a Temporalty and Spiritualty sufficient to administer Justice to all persons and in all Causes whatsoever And consequently what Causes are not in the connusance of the Common Law belong to the Spiritual Jurisdiction which is plainly implied in 24 Hen. 8. c. 12. and other Statutes Upon the same ground in Law depend three great truths 1. The Antiquity of Ecclesiastical Courts 2. Their dependance upon the Crown 3. The perfection of the Government to administer Justice in all cases to all persons from the Supream Power exercised in the Temporal and Spiritual Courts all which lie in the Preamble of that Statute according to our Ancient Laws For saith my Lord Coke in the conclusion of Cawdries Case it hath appeared as well by the ancient Common Laws of this Realm by the Resolution of the Judges and Sages of the Laws of England in all succession of Ages as by Authority of many Acts of Parliament
firm and unshaken upon the basis of our English Laws SECT II. Mr. Hickeringill's Reasoning Noted and Resolv'd Mr. Hickeringill is pleased to say that upon the Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. was built the High Commission Court and the Authority of all Canon-makers Synodical but down came the Fabrick when that Act was Repealed by 17 Car. 1. 11. and 13 Car. 2. 12. Where provision was made by striking at the foundation 1 Eliz. 1. that no more Commissions of that nature be granted any more only the Spiritual Courts by 13 Car. 2. 12. were to be in Statu quo wherein they were 1639. What state no great I 'le warrant you if the Basis on which their Star-Chamber and High-Commission-Court were built be taken away All Ecclesiastical Jurisdications till Hen. 8. were derived from the Pope as Supream of the Church this Head being beheaded the Supremacy was invested in the Crown But 1 Edw. 6. 2. Enacts that all Process Ecclesiastical should be in the Name and with the stile of the King c. So that if there be any Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England distinct from his Majesties Lay Courts all their Processes must be in the Kings Name c. 'T is true 1 Edw. 6. 2. is repealed by the 1 Mar. 2. but I care not for that for 't is revived by the Act of repeal 1 Jac. 25. The Clergy in Convocation acknowledged in their Petition that their Ecclesiastical power was at that time taken away So that their present Jurisdiction being not from God that 's certain 't is not from Man because his Majesty has promised 13 Car. 2. 12. never to empower them with any more Commissions to the worlds end But this I do not peremptorily assert I here protest I know not by what Authority we do these things considering the premises and the repealing of 1 Eliz. 1. By the Statute of Hen. 8. all these Ordinary Jurisdictions were cut off and were revived by 1 Edw. 6. upon Conditions only This is the very Naked Truth under his first Query and in his Conclufion and up and down this worthy Book that is such a shabbly lawless Logick such a rude and shatter'd way of reasoning as deserves to be reduc'd with a rod and lasht into method and sence and better manners Especially if you single out his false and sturdy begging Propositions fraught with a wretched design of robbing his own Mother in the Kings high way with which he challenges passage to cheat and abuse the Country My business is only to apprehend the Vagabonds and commit them to the justice of some more severe and smarter hand SECT III. The Propositions suggested by Mr. Hickeringill are these following I. That before Hen. 8. all Ecclesiastical Jurisdication in England was derived from the Pope as Mr. Cary p. 6. II. That Hen. 8. when he annex'd the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to the Crown he took it wholly away from our Ecclesiastical Ministers III. That the Church had no Jurisdiction after Hen. 8. had annex'd it to the Crown till 1 Edw. 6. 2. IV. That if there be any Ecclesiastical Power in our Church it cannot be executed but in the Name and with the Stile c. of the King according to 1 Edw. 6. 2. V. That all our Ecclesiastical Power was lately founded in 1 Eliz. 1. as it establish'd the High-Commission-Court and that Act being Repeal'd all Ecclesiastical Power was taken away with the Power of that High Commission On a Rock consisting of these Sands stands our mighty Champion triumphing with his Naked Truth but we come now to sift them CHAP. II. Our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England was not derived from the Pope but from the Crown before the Reformation by Henry the Eighth DARE any Protestant stand to the contrary had the Pope really Authority here before Henry the Eighth did our Bishops indeed receive all their power exercised so many hundred years together originally from the Pope was not their Political Jurisdiction derived from and depending on the Crown Imperial and founded in our own Laws the Customs and Statutes of the Realm are these the Popes Laws and not the Kings was there not Ecclesiastical power in England both for Legislation and Execution ab origine before the Papal Vsurpation was not Popery at first and all along till Hen. 8. an illegal usurpation upon our more Ancient Government never own'd much less establish'd in the true Ancient Laws of England and under that very Notion rejected and expelled by him How then did our Bishops c. derive all their power from the Pope before Hen. 8. to say so is not more like an Hobbist than a Papist I thought I had caught an Hobby but War-Hawk Proof against this Popish principle SECT 1. From the root and branches of Ecclesiastical Power Donation Investiture Laws I. It was a known Law long before Hen. 8. that the Church of England was founded 25 Edw. 3. 25 Edw. 1. in Episcopacy by our Kings c. and not in the Papacy II. The Collation and Donation of Bishopricks and Nomination of Bishops did always belong to the King yea all the Bishopricks in this Realm are of the Kings Foundation and the full Right of Investiture was ever in the Crown Coke 1. Inst 2. S. 648. to deny it may be a praemunire III. When once the Bishops are legally invested their proper Jurisdiction came into 35 Hen. 8. 20. their hands by the Laws without any power derived from the Pope Who saith otherwise knows nothing or means ill IV. It was acknowledg'd That Convocations are always have been and ought to be Assembled by the Kings Writ only 't is Law 35 Hen. 8. 19. V. As the power to make Laws for the Church was ever in the King so the Laws themselves must be his and none other bind us This Realm Recognizing no Superiour 35 Hen. 8. 21. As 16 Rich. 2. 5. under God but the King hath been and is free from any Laws but such as have been devised within this Realm or at our Liberty have been consented to and made custom by use and not by any foreign power SECT II. Jurisdiction THUS our Ancient Ecclesiastical Governours and Laws depended upon the Crown and not upon the Pope by the Laws of England and in the Judgment of all the States of the Kingdom before Han. 8. and so did also the execution of those Laws by those Governours in the same publick Judgment a little better than Mr. Hickeringill's Popish opinion 2. In fundry old Authentick Histories and Chronicles it is manifest that this Realm is an Empire having an Imperial Crown to which belongs a body Politick compacted of Spiritualty and Temporalty furnished thus with Jurisdiction to yield Justice in all causes without restraint from any foreign Prince The body Spiritual having power when any Cause of Divine Law hapned to come in question the English Church called the Spiritualty which always hath been reputed and also found of that sort for knowledge c. without
other Officers and Substitutes which supposeth the Constitution of the Spiritual Courts under their own names and with their own Seals Sect. 6. 4. This Statute also allows that some things are limited by the Laws and Customs of this Realm and if such things are depending in the Kings Courts of Record at Common Law are to be remitted to the Spiritual Courts to try the same Sect. 7. 5. But what is the penalty if they do not use the Kings Name and Stile and put the Kings Arms into their Seals of Office This is considerable 'T is well the Statute provided Sect. 4. a better hand to punish the delinquents than Mr. Hickeringill and a milder punishment than he interprets the Law to do the punishment is the Kings displeasure and imprisonment during his pleasure not the voiding the Jurisdiction as Mr. Hickeringill would have it And while the King knows the Statute is repealed as shall next appear we fear not but his Majesty is pleased with and will defend our Jurisdictions while we humbly acknowledge their dependency on the Crown and exercise the same according to his Laws though we presume not to use his Name and Stile and Arms without the warrant of Law SECT II. 1. FOR that Statute of 1 Edw. 6. 2. was repealed by the first and second of Philip and Mary c. 8. wherein we have these plain words The Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Archbishops and Ordinaries are declared to be in the same state for process of suits punishment of crimes and execution of the Censures of the Church with knowledge of causes belonging to the same and as large in these points as the said Jurisdiction was the said twentieth year of Hen. 8. whereby that Statute is also revived as my L. Coke affirmeth Thus by Act of Parliament of which that Queen was the undoubted Head and by the power of the Crown of England and not the Pope the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of this Realm was established by our own Law in the same state wherein it stood before the twentieth of Hen. 8. and then we find that by our ancient Laws and Customes it was dependent on the Crown whatever some Church-men thought to the contrary 2. I have read that this same Queen Mary wore the Title of Head of the Church of England her self though in other points too too zealous for Popery and by this very Statute it is Enacted That nothing in this Act shall be construed to diminish the Liberties Prerogatives or Jurisdictions or any part thereof which were in the Imperial Crown of this Realm the twentieth year of Hen. 8. or any other the Queens progenitors before And we have found that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of this Kingdom was subject to and dependent on the Imperial Crown secundum consuetudinem legem Angliae in her Ancestors time We have found also that this was the undoubted Judgment of the whole Kingdom in the Statutes of Hen. 8. Edw. 6. Queen Eliz. King James c. Now let it be shewn that this clause of the Statute of Queen Mary is repealed which is so agreeable to the ancient Customs and Rights of the Crown let this be shewn and you do something This Statute of my Lord Coke's is not repealed by the 1 of Eliz. or King James though the 1 of Mary should be granted to be so Also the 25 Hen. 8. 20. being contrary to 1 Edw. 6. 2. is revived by 1 Eliz. and never repealed Rep. Coke 12. p. 9. I. Mr. Hickeringill indeed is bold enough but I find Mr. Cary timerous in the point though against the hair for though he toll on his weak and prejudic'd readers to their great hazard in putting their whole case upon this one point whether the Court can shew the broad Seal c. yet when he comes home to the matter he tells them that the aforesaid Statute of Edw. 6. not being mentioned by King James's Act of repeal and expresly revived is thought not to be of force so that a citation in the Bishops own name may at this day be good in Law Law of Engl. c. 2. p. 12. Mr. Hickeringill should have taken the advice of this his friend a great Lawyer certainly that entitles his minute and thin piece the Law of England SECT III. Mr. CARY indeed mistakes the Statute for it is the first of King James 25. not the fourth yet we have his learned opinion that Citations in the Bishops own name may at this day be good in Law and for ought I know his reason for it may be good too viz. because the Statute of Queen Mary especially that of the first and second of Phil. and Mar. c. 8. is not in the said Act of repeal expresly revived according to the express words of the Act vid. 1 Eliz. sect 13. But O Mr. Cary though we have here your opinion and your reason where was your Conscience where was your kindness to your beloved dissenting Clients when you dared to betray them to the Devil and the Gaoler to speak in Mr. Hickeringill's language a far heavier sentence than Curse ye Meroz and that upon no other ground that I can find in your English Law but this Statute only which yet for the reason aforesaid you say is thought not to be of force and though you say the Bishops may at this day send forth Citations in their own names by Law yet your grave advice to those friends is this When you are Cited appear and demand whether they have any Patent from the King for the same and under his great Seal or no if they will not shew you by what Authority protest against their proceedings and go your way i. e. the way of disobedience contempt the way to the Gaol and the Devil but that 's no matter he hath shewed his spite to Ecclesiastical Authority against his own Law and Conscience he was not to satisfie a doubt but a lust and his confidence is as able to secure the deluded people from the danger of contempt of the Kings Ecclesiastical Courts as his wise Notion of Magna Charta c. 14. from paying their Tithes See this point excellently and fully argued on both sides and the Judges c. Opinion and Reasons silencing this Objection in King James's time Coke Rep. 12. p. 7 8 9. SECT IV. 1 Edw. 6. 2. repeal'd appears from practice II. A further Argumeut that the Stat. 1 Edw. 6. 2. is repeal'd is taken from the uninterrupted practice both of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and the Kings of England and their own immediate Courts contrary to it and I think it is a rule in Law that in doubtful cases Lex currit cum praxi 1. The Ecclesiastical Judges have ever since the Repealing Act of Queen Mary before and since the Statute of Queen Eliz. and King James called Statutes of repeal uncontroulably proceeded in their own names and not expresly in the name or stile of the King let one instance be shewn to the contrary then
who can imagine without a fancy possest that the Crown and States of the Realm should intend so great an alteration in the Ecclesiastical government and that in the behalf of the supremacy and for the Rights of the Crown as is pretended by reviving that Act of 1 Edw. 6. and yet neither then nor ever since expect a conformity to and observance of it Were Queen Eliz. and King James so easie and careless of their Crowns as this would make them were all the Bishops who were concerned in making those Acts of Repeal and all Ecclesiastical Judges ever since so dull and stupid as not to know the force of those Acts not to mind either their duty or their safety in so great and hazardous a point as some would have it of a praemunire or so fool-hardy as to bear against the Crown it self on which alone they know they depend against plain Acts of Parliament in the midst of froward and watching enemies on every side them who can think it I must conclude that if it be possible that the Act of Queen Mary should be repeal'd in this point either by Queen Eliz. or King James 't is more than ever the Law-makers themselves thought of understood or intended 2. For secondly the practice of the Crown that was in the first place highly concern'd in that Stat. 1 Edw. 6. 2. hath been ever since the Act of Queen Mary that repeal'd it directly contrary to it and in a very great point or flower of the supremacy manag'd it self ever since just as it did before that Act of Edw. 6. and as I said directly contrary to it therefore 't is past all doubt but that the sence of the Queen and Kings of England and the sence of those great Lawyers and States-men that direct the Crown in such great affairs is evident that the Statute of Edw. 6. stands repealed and is not revived for in that Stat. 1 Edw. 6. 2. 't is expresly enacted that whereas elections of Bishops by Deans and Chapters upon a Writ of Congee d'eslire seeming derogatory and prejudicial to the Kings prerogative Royal for a due reformation thereof be it enacted that from henceforth no such Congee d'eslire be granted nor election made but c. yet ever since Congee d'eslires have been granted and such elections thereupon have been returned and accepted 3. The Kings immediate Courts so far as they have been concerned with Jurisdiction of the Church and the Kings Civil Judges therein have ever since own'd and as occasion hath required ratified fortified and made effectual all our Ecclesiastical proceedings ever since though not acted in the Kings name contrary to the said Statute though 't is a great part of their places and offices to secure the Prerogative against all Invasion especially of the Church thus by their constant practice it appears that they never understood that Statute of Edw. 6. to be in force since Queen Mary repealed it Was the whole Kingdom so long and in so deep a sleep to be awakened by such impertinent and little barkings SECT V. 1 Edw. 6. 2. Repealed in the Judgment of all the Judges the King and Council THE objection from the 1 Edw. 6. is no new light of Mr. Hickeringill's we find it busie in the time of King Charles the first Anno 1637. and by the Kings Proclamation it seems it had troubled the Kingdom before as indeed it had in the Fourth of King James In that year 1637. upon an order out of the Star-chamber the learned Judges were commanded to give their opinion in this matter and they all met together and deliberately and distinctly and fully declared that the 1 Edw. 6. 2. is repealed and is not in force and that the Ecclesiastical Judges did in all the points called in question act legally and as they ought to do hereupon the King and Council being satisfied issued forth the said Proclamation to silence and prevent all such objections against Ecclesiastical Judges Courts and proceedings for the future and the judgment of the Judges under their hands was inrolled in the Courts of Exchequer Kings Bench Common Pleas c. as Law where any one may find it that desires to be further satisfied in the truth of it 2. Hence I argue that that Statute of 1 Edw. 6. is repealed in Law at least that the subjects ought so to esteem it until they have the judgment of the Judges declared otherwise yea though those Judges which is profane to imagine did erre in that their Declaration through ignorance or fear of the High Comission as Mr. Hickeringill meekly insinuates p. ult For the Law is known to the subject either by the letter or by the Interpretation of it and if the letter of the Law be not plain or be doubtful we take the Interpretation of it from such as by law are of right to make the Interpretation to be the law and this I think is the Common Law of England and believe that Mr. Cary himself thinks so too 3. Now who is or can be thought to be the most proper Interpreter of a doubtful Law but the King with his Council by all the Judges of the Land especially if that law concern Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and the Ecclesiastical Supremacy of the Crown as the law in question plainly doth But the King himself with his Council by all the Judges of the Land hath solemnly declared that the 1 Edw. 6. 2. is repealed and not of force this is a legal interpretation of the law this is law and ought so to be taken rebus sic stantibus by all the subjects of England whatever little men that talk of the law in their own narrow and private sentiments presume to vent to the scandal of the people the trouble of the Kingdom and slander of the Church and Ecclesiastical proceedings and indeed it would be an insufferable sawciness to say no worse for any Ecclesiastical Judge to act by a law that is none against the so solemn declaration of the King the Council and all the Judges of the Land and this is the case I shall therefore trouble if not pleasure my reader with the Declaration of the Judges and the sence of the King and Council of it Primo Julii 1637. The Judges Certificate concerning Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction May it please your Lordships ACcording to your Lordships Order made in his Majesties Court of Star-Chamber the Twelfth of May last we have taken consideration of the particulars wherein our Opinions are required by the said Order and we have all agreed That Processes may issue out of the Ecclesiastical Courts and that a Patent under the great Seal is not necessary for the keeping of the said Ecclesiastical Courts or for the enabling of Citations Suspensions Excommunications or other Censures of the Church and that it is not necessary that Summons Citations or other Processes Ecclesiastical in the said Courts or Institutions or Inductions to Benefices or Correction of Ecclesiastical Offences by
Censure in those Courts be in the Name or with the Stile of the King or under the Kings Seal or that their Seals of Office have in them the Kings Arms. And that the Statute of primo Edvardi Sexti c. 2. which Enacted the Contrary is not now in force We are also of Opinion that the Bishops Archdeacons and other Ecclesiastical Persons may keep their Visitations as usually they have done without Commission under the great Seal of England so to do John Brampstone John Finch Humph. Davenport Will. Jones Jo. Dinham Ri. Hutton George Crooke Tho. Trevor George Vernon Ro. Berkley Fr. Crawly Ri. Weston Inrolled in the Courts of Exchequer Kings Bench Common Pleas and Register's in the Courts of High Commission and Star-Chamber Hereupon followed the Kings Proclamation declaring that the proceedings of his Majesties Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers are according to the Law of the Land as are the words of the Title I shall only transcribe the Conclusion of the Proclamation which you have faithfully in these words AND his Royal Majesty hath thought fit with the Advice of his Council that a publick Declaration of these Opinions and Resolutions of his Reverend and Learned Iudges being agreeable to the Judgment and Resolutions of former times should be made known to all his Subjects as well to Vindicate the legal proceedings of his Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers from the unjust and Scandalous imputation of invading or entrenching on his Royal Prerogative as to settle the minds and stop the mouths of all unquiet Spirits that for the future they presume not to censure his Ecclesiastical Courts and Ministers in these their Iust and Warranted proceedings And hereof his Majesty admonisheth all his Subjects to take Darning as they shall answer the Contrary at their Perils Given at the Court at Lindhurst Aug. 18. in the Thirteenth Year of his Majesties Reign God save the King You may see the Cafe fully the Reasons on both sides and the Judges determination the Fourth of King James to which this Proclamation may refer Coke Rep. 12. p. 7 8. Now I could almost submit it to Mr. Cary or Mr. Hickeringill himself whether it be fitter or safer for Ecclesiastical Judges to proceed in their Courts as they now do or alter their proceedings and presume upon the King by using his Royal Name and Stile and Arms contrary to all this Evidence and Reason and Law SECT VI. Mr. H. Cary's Reason to the contrary considered BUT Mr. Cary saith He seeth not a drachm of Reason why the Spiritual Courts should not make their Processe in the Kings name as well as the Temporal Courts since those as well as these are the Kings Courts He seems to talk Pothecary without so much as a drachm of Reason the usage of the Courts and the evidence aforesaid is better Law than his pitiful guesses Neither is there colour of Reason in what he saith if these two things appear 1. That the Ecclesiastical Ministers do sufficiently and openly acknowledge the dependance of their Courts upon the Crown without using his Majesties Name or Stile or Arms. 2. That there is not the same reason that the Spiritual Courts should use the Kings Name c. that there is for the Temporal 1. For the first the Ecclesiastical Judges accept their places thankfully as the Kings donation and not the Popes then they readily grant they depend upon the Crown even for the exercise of their Spiritual function and that they receive all coercive and external Jurisdiction immediately from the Crown and the Laws of the Land and not from the Pope Again they all take the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance before their Instalment which are the fence of the Crown against Popery And then in all their publick Prayers before their Sermons the Bishops and Archdeacons c. do Recognize the Kings Supremacy in all Ecclesiastical things and causes as well as Civil Again they Take the late Test and the same Oaths at the publick Sessions And lastly Mr. Cary himself confesseth that they acknowledge the said Supremacy in their publick Canons or Constitutions of the whole Church of England as he notes p. 2. in Can. 1 2. 1603. And are all these less significant to testifie their dependance on and acknowledgement of their derivation from the Crown than the Kings Name and Stile and Arms which may be far enough from the Conscience in a Processe 2. For the second that there is not the same reason to use the Kings name in Ecclesiastical as in Civil Courts is apparent from the true cause of using it in the Civil Courts which being not known or well heeded may be the cause of the exception for Bishop Sanderson hath well observed the true reason of using the Kings name in any Court is not thereby to acknowledge the Emanation of the power or Jurisdiction of that Court from or the subordination of that power unto the Kings power or Authority as the objector seems to suppose but rather to shew the same Court to be one of the Kings own immediate Courts wherein the King himself is supposed in the construction of the Law either by his personal or virtual power to be present and the not using the Kings name in other Courts doth not signifie that they do not Act by the Kings Authority but only that the Judges in them are no immediate representatives of the Kings person nor have consequently any allowance from him to use his Name in the execution of them 1. This difference is evident among the Common Law Courts of this Kingdom for though all the immediate Courts of the King do act expresly in his Name yet many other more distant Courts do not as all Courts-Baron Customary-Courts of Copyholders c. and such Courts as are held by the Kings grant by Charter to Corporations and the Universities in all which Summons are issued out and Judgments given and all Acts and proceedings made and done in the name of such persons as have chief Authority in the said Courts and not in the Name of the King thus their stiles run A. B. Major Civitatis Exon N. M. Cancellarius Vniversitatis Oxon. and the like and not Carolus Dei gratia 2. Once more a little nearer to our case there are other Courts that are guided by the Civil as distinguish'd from the Common Law as the Court-Marshal and the Court of Admiralty the Kings Name in these is no more used than it is in the Courts Spiritual but all Processes Sentences and Acts in these Courts are in the Name of the Constable Head Marshal or Admiral and not in the Kings Name 3. I shall conclude this with those grave and weighty words of the same most admirable Bishop Sanderson in his excellent Treatise shewing that Episcopacy as Established by Law in England is not prejudicial to Regal Power worthy of every Englishman's reading his words to our purpose are these Which manner of proceeding like that of the Spiritual Courts constantly used in
LEGES ANGLIAE THE LAWFULNESS OF Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction IN THE CHURCH of ENGLAND Asserted and Vindicated In ANSWER to Mr HICKERINGILL's Late Pamphlet Stiled NAKED TRUTH the 2d Part. Gen. II. ult Naked but not ashamed By Fran. Fullwood D. D. Archdeacon of Totnes in Devon LONDON Printed for R. Royston Bookseller to the King 's most Excellent Majesty at the Sign of the Angel in Amen-Corner 1681. TO THE READER I MUST beg my Readers pardon that I have not chastified so spiteful an Adversary according to his merits and provocations for I verily want his Talent and dislike the Sport I confess that when a Divine of the Church of England who hath also a share in her Government when such a one shall be taken throwing dirt in the face of his Mother Fathers Brethren and his own Profession he cannot but expect to be lasht to purpose and to be told roundly that none but accursed Children and very fools would speak such Naked Truth Some Censors that observe his endeavours to make not only the Canons of the Church but the very Canon of Scripture it self to vail to the Law of the Land would charge him with the profaneness of Hobbs yea others that find him playing tricks and sporting according to his little wit with the very names of Canon Clergie Church and Church-men and scoffing at almost all that 's Sacred will take him to be at Hugh Peters's game and running his wretched race But while he damns the Presbyterians Independents and the Fifth-Monarchy together with the Church of England he tempts the Wits to produce thirty one reasons to prove he is something viz. a Papist notwithstanding his drollery and railery about Foppery and Popery Lastly For Pride Envy Wrath Malice Spite and Revenge some say he is a very Angel of Light and in somewhat more excellent for the Scriptures witness that the Devil himself spake many words both of truth and soberness and that he seldom or never speaks like an Atheist For my part I say nothing of him further than this That if others can find Truth in the man I cannot And though I am sure he lies open and naked enough yet I had never troubled my self to expose him had it not been to secure the Government and to preserve the Simple from being betray'd to the danger of the Laws by the insolent Rant of a pitiful Sophister THE PROEME The Contents of it 1. Power purely Spiritual of Divine Right 2. Emperors confirm'd Bishops-Canons 3. The force of our Canons not from Rome 4. Officers of our Courts 5. Magna Charta 6. The Authors Concessions 1. DIscoursing in the following Treatise of the Forensic Jurisdiction of this Church as Establish'd by the Law of the Land we had no direct or necessary occasion to speak of the Churches Power as purely Spiritual touching Preaching the Sacraments and Censures For this is certainly of Divine Right and was given to the Church by Christ himself with the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven and was accordingly exercised in the Apostles times and several hundred years after without the allowance of the Civil Magistrate and was also supposed allowed and admitted as such in our own Kingdom and by all the world even with their receiving Christianity without question or Alteration as is evident in all our Histories and indeed our own Laws exclude this purely Spiritual Power of the Keys from the Supremacy of our Kings except it be to see that Spiritual men do their duty therein 2. Neither doth it concern me to enquire what Power the Church had and exercised after the Empire became Christian only it seems very clear that Constantine and the other eminent Christian Emperors never made any Ecclesiastical Laws without the Counsel of Bishops but only in Confirmation or for the Execution of Ecclesiastical Canons Yet it cannot be denied but they called Councils they approved their Canons and afterwards enter'd them into the body of their Laws and still ratified the Sentences of Ecclesiastical Judges with Civil penalties 3. Nor yet is' t my present Province to recollect what Influence Imperial Christian Rome had upon the Tender Age and immature State of the new born Church of England though we do not deny but it might be considerable both as to the Form and Order of our External Jurisdiction in our inferiour Ministers and ancient Canons But how great soever it was it was at first only by way of Example and Direction and when afterwards it was by Command it was such Command as according to the Rights and Constitution of this Church had no Legal obligation upon us but by our own consent and as it became part of our own Establishment either by Custom or express Law upon such an occasion the ancient State of England cry out Nolumus mutare Leges Angliae This Realm hath been and is free from Subjection to any mans Laws but only to such as have been devised within this Realm or to such other as by sufferance of your Grace and your Progenitors the people of this Realm have taken at their free liberty by their own consent to be used amongst them and have bound themselves by long use and Custom to the observance thereof not as to the observance of the Laws of any foreign Prince 25 Hen. 8. 21. For as Coke declares in Cawdries Case as the Romans fetching diverse Laws from Athens yet being approved and allowed by the State there called them Jus Civile Romanorum and as the Normans borrowing all or most of their Laws from England yet baptized them by the name of the Laws or Customs of Normandy so albeit the Kings of England derived their Ecclesiastical Laws from others yet so many as be proved approved and allowed here by and with a general consent are aptly and rightly called The Kings Ecclesiastical Laws of England 4. As for the Inferior Ministers in the Ecclesiastical Courts that seem to be so offensive to weak people that they are not Popish or so slanderously to be reported there is this plain demonstration that these Courts are the Kings Courts and the Laws thereof are the Kings Laws and that notwithstanding all the severe Statutes especially since the Reformation against all foreign Jurisdiction and all such as act under or by vertue of any foreign Power within this Realm yet such Ministers are both permitted and required to execute their places in the said Courts by the Laws and Statutes of the Kingdom But grave Mr. Hickeringill saith there is not the least Specimen of Chancellors Registers Sumners Officials Commissaries Advocates Notaries Surrogates c. or any ejusdem farinae in holy Writ and hence 't is learnedly inferred by some that we have made so many new Officers in the Church of Christ But how witless and Quaker-like is this and how unlike Mr. Hickeringill I should suspect he would call for Scripture for an hour-Glass and for Clerks and Sextons were it not that he is so palpably in the service of a
proceed against the obstinate 2. 'T is yet very remarkable that for the form and manner of their Spiritual Courts and proceedings before the Conquest it was not here in England as it was at Rome and therefore our most Ancient Church-Government was not derived or Received from Rome This Law observes that before the Conqueror the Precepts of holy Canons as to distinct Jurisdictions were not observed in England that is the Canons of the Imperial Church for six or seven Hundred years before the Jurisdiction of that Church was divided from the Civil even by the Emperor Constantine himself but for so many hundred years before the Conquest our Jurisdictions were exercised together in Hundret as the Law acknowledgeth and is confessed 3. We here see a plain Establishment of our Spiritual Courts with power of Excommunication for non-appearance in the letter of this Ancient Law under the Kings defence and enforced with the Secular Arm and 't is observable that the distinction of the Ecclesiastical from the Civil Courts was made in the Kings own Name and not the Pope's by the Kings power and none other with the Counsel of his own Subjects only and not of Rome that we read of and only with respect and not in any obedience to the ancient Canons or foreign methods And thus the Jurisdiction in our Courts Ecclesiastical as distinct from the Civil is as far from being Popish in their Original as it was when they were conjoyned and therein so unlike to the distinct proceedings of the Spiritual power beyond the Seas so many hundred years before And thus our Spiritual Courts both before they were divided and when they came to be divided from our Civil Courts stand firm in the Ancient Laws of this Land 4. There are certain great Epoche's of the Legal Establishment of the Churches power which I shall but touch 1. It was received with Christianity and grew and flourished by our Ancient Laws before the Conquest 2. In the beginning of our Norman Constitution it was thus distinguished and establish'd by the Conqueror So it was in Magna Charta the first Statute 3. Vpon the Reformation in Hen. 8. it was re-establish'd 4. So it was upon the Return of Reformation after Queen Mary by Queen Eliz. And 5. so likewise upon the Return of our present gracious Soveraign King Charles II. 5. Further I hence observe that some Alterations in Ecclesiastical proceedings may be made by Law without any prejudice to the Churches power 'T is observed out of Spelman before that by this Law the Conqueror did not lessen the Churches power indeed some Inconveniences are usually consequent to publick changes and 't is thought by our Civilians that the many prohibitions which interrupt our Ecclesiastical Courts are occasioned by their being divided from the Temporal but may not that inconvenience be accidental to that Division Or if at any time there be just cause for the Church to complain in that respect is it not rather of the Judges than the Laws or the Constitution But to the matter before us admit for Instance that after Summary hearing and Sentence of the Judge in Cases of small Tithes Church rates and such trivial matters a Justice of the Peace or some other person being legally certified were impowered and obliged to grant Warrants of Distress It seems to me a greater inconvenience in exposing Excommunication in such light Causes would be hereby removed than any contracted by such an Alteration and methinks no one should disdain the new Office seeing the Superior Judge hath been ever bound to issue out the Writ de Excom Cap. and the Sheriff to imprison the party upon a Certificate from the Bishop But I must humbly leave such things to wiser Judges THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS and SECTIONS CHAP. I. THE general Proposition The Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction as now Exercised in the Church of England is Allow'd and Establish'd by the Laws of the Land Sect. 1. An Account of the Method Page 1. Sect. 2. Mr. Hickeringill ' s Reasoning Noted and Resolv'd p. 2. Sect. 3. The Propositions suggested by M. Hickeringill are these following p. 4 CHAP. II. Our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England was not derived from the Pope but from the Crown before the Reformation by Henry the Eighth p. 5. Proof against this Popish principle Sect. 1. From the root and branches of Ecclesiastical Power Donation Investiture Laws p. 6. Sect. 2. Jurisdiction p. 7. Sect. 3 4 5. p. 9 11 12. CHAP. III. King Hen. 8. did not by renouncing the Power pretended by the Pope make void the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction neither was it void before it was restored by Edw. 6. 2. p. 13. Sect. 2 3. p. 16 20. CHAP. IV. Ecclesiastical Jurisdictition is lawfully exercised without the King's Name or Stile in Processes c. notwithstanding the 1 Edw. 6. 2. p. 22. Sect. 1 2 3. p. 23 24 26. Sect. 4. 1 Edw. 6. 2. Repeal'd appears from practice p. 28. Sect. 5. 1 Edw. 6. 2. Repealed in the Judgment of all the Judges the King and Council p. 31. Sect. 6. Mr. H. Cary ' s Reason to the contrary considered p. 36. CHAP. V. The Act of 1 Eliz. 1. Establishing the High-Commission Court was not the foundation of Ordinary Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England against Mr. Hickeringill p. 41. CHAP. VI. How our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England came at first and is at present Establish'd by Law p. 46. Sect. 1. Jurisdiction of the Church in Common Law p. 51. Sect. 2. The Government Ecclesiastical is Establish'd in the Statutes of this Realm p. 54. CHAP. VII Of Canons and Convocations p. 60. The Conclusion p. 64. The Postscript p. 67. The Bookseller to the Reader THE absence of the Author and his inconvenient distance from London hath occasioned some small Errata's to escape the Press The Printer thinks it the best instance of pardon if his Escapes be not laid upon the Author and he hopes they are no greater than an ordinary understanding may amend and a little charity may forgive R. Royston CHAP. I. The General Proposition THE Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction As now Exercised in the Church of England is Allow'd and Establish'd by the Laws of the Land SECT 1. An Account of the Method AFTER so many hundred years confirmation both by Law and Practice 't is a marvellous thing this should be a question yet of late two worthy Gentlemen treading in the steps of some former Male-contents have ventured to make it one Mr. Edmond Hickeringill and Mr. H. Cary the first in his Book called Naked Truth the Second part the other in his modestly stiled The Law of England And it is to be observed they were both Printed very seasonably for the setling our distractions through the fears and danger of Popery I shall note what they say discover their gross and dangerous mistakes answer and remove their pitiful Objections and then endeavour to satisfie ordinary and honest enquirers both that and how our Ecclesiastical Jurisdication stands
any exteriour person to declare and determine all such doubts and to administer all such offices as appertain to them for the due administration whereof the Kings of this Realm have endowed the said Church both with honour and possessions both these Authorities and Jurisdictions do conjoyn in the due Administration of Justice the one to help the other And whereas the King his most noble Progenitors and the Nobility and Commons of this Realm at divers and sundry Parliaments as well in the time of King Edw. 1. Edw. 3. Rich. 2. Hen. 4. all which were certainly before Hen. 8. and other noble Kings made sundry Ordinances Laws Statutes and provisions for the entire and sure preservation of the Prerogatives and Jurisdiction Spiritual and Temporal of the said Imperial Crown from the annoyance and Authority of the See of Rome from time to time as often as any such attempt might be known or espied Vid. 25 Hen. 8. 12. These things plainly shew that the whole State in Hen. 8's time was not of Mr. Hickeringill's mind but that before that time the whole power of the Church was independent on the Pope and not derived from him but originally inherent in the Crown and Laws of England whatever he blatters to the contrary Vid. 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 4. cap. 22. pag. 123. Sect. 3. 27 Edw. 3. cap. 1. 38 Edw. 3. c. 4. Stat. 2. c. 1. 2 Rich. 2. cap. 6. 3 Rich. 2. c. 3. S. 2. 12 Rich. 2. c. 15. 13 Rich. 2. Stat. 2. c. 2. 16 Rich. 2. c. 5. 2 Hen. 4. c. 3 4. 7 Hen. 4. c. 6. 9. Hen. 4. c. 8. 1 Hen. 5. 7. 3 Hen. 5. Stat. 2. c. 4. Adde to these Mr. Cawdries Case in my Lord Coke and he must be unreasonably ill affected to the Church of England that is not more than satisfied that the chief and Supream Governours thereof were the Kings of England and not the Pope before the Reign of Hen. 8. 3. Also it was the sence of the whole Kingdom that the Pope's power and Jurisdiction here was usurped and illegal contrary to Gods Laws the Laws and Statutes of this Realm and in derogation of the IMperial Crown thereof and that it was timorously and ignorantly submitted unto before Hen. 8. as the words of that Statute are 28 Hen. 8. cap. 16. SECT III. BUT if our Gentleman be wiser than to believe their words the matter is evident in our ancient Laws and constant practice accordingly before Hen. 8. his time Indeed all the Statutes of provision against foreign powers are to own and defend the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction at home under this Crown Yea all the Statutes made on purpose to restrain and limit the Spiritual Jurisdiction in certain cases and respects do allow and establish it in others exceptio confirmat Regulam in non exceptis 2. Much plainer all the Statutes that prohibit the Kings Civil Courts to interrupt the Ecclesiastical proceedings but in such cases and the Statutes granting consultations in such cases and the Statutes directing appeals in the Spiritual Courts and appeals to the Chancery it self and the Laws ratifying and effectually binding their Sentence by the Writ de exc cap. much more plainly do these establish the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the laws of the Land before Hen. 8. 3. By this time 't is vain to mention the Statutes which of old did specifie and allow particular matters to be tried only in the Ecclesiastical Courts such as Tithes 18 Edw. 3. 7. the offences of Ecclesiastical persons 1 Hen. 7. c. 4. causes Testamentary 18 Edw. 3. 6. Synodals and procurations and pensions c. 15 Hen. 8. 19. Defamations 9 Edw. 2. 3. 1 Edw. 3. c. 11 c. all which are clear evidences that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was establish'd by the Statutelaws of this Realm and consequently did not depend upon was not derived from any foreign power before the 20 of Hen. 8. SECT IV. TO seek for the Original of our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and Courts in the Statute-book is more than ridiculous seeing they both stood in a flourishing estate long before the beginning of that book and are among the number of the great things which were then secundum consuetudinem leges Angliae and are plainly establish'd in the Common Law of the Land by which they have stood and been practis'd ever since as we shall prove more fully anon 2. Magna Charta which is found first in the book of Statutes and is said by Lawyers to be Common Law i. e. shews us what is Common Law in this Kingdom begins thus We have granted and confirmed for us and our Heirs for ever that the Church of England shall be free and shall have all her whole Rights and Liberties Inviolable Reserving to all Archbishops and Bishops and all persons as well Spiritual as Temporal all their Free Liberties and free Customs which they have had in times past and which we have granted to be holden within this Realm and all men of this Realm as well Spiritual as Temporal shall observe the same against all persons 3. Now what can any man that knows the practice of the Spiritual Courts before that time at that time and ever since imagine what is meant by the Liberties and Customs of the Church i. e. in the sence of Mr. Hickeringill and the words of Magna Charta Archbishops Bishops and all Spiritual men but the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical in the first and chief place And these by the great Charter are confirm'd for ever and the like confirmation hath been made by the many succeeding Kings and Parliaments in their confirmation of Magna Charta 4. Therefore I cannot but conclude that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction being founded in the Common Law Magna Charta and the Statutes by so long practice beyond all Records is in the very Constitution of the Kingdom The great men of the Church having always had authority in the very making of Laws as they had before Magna Charta and been reputed as in the Statute of Eliz. one of the three States in Parliament and the Execution also of the Ecclesiastical Laws of the Church of England SECT V. LASTLY All this is plainly confirm'd by ancient Ecclesiastical Canons which seems to be an Argument of great weight with Mr. Hickeringill as well as by the Ancient Laws and Customs of the Land In the Apostles Canons 't is ordained that every National Church should have its own chief or head and thence derive all Power under the Crown 'T is acknowledged against the Papists that we had our Archbishops and Bishops before the Vsurpation of the Pope We were anciently a Patriarchate independent upon Rome The four first Councils confirm'd the Apostles Canons and establish'd our ancient Cyprian priviledge Let after encroachments of the Pope be accordingly renounced as lawless Vsurpations Let us quietly enjoy our restored ancient priviledges and let ancient Custom prevail according to the Sentence of the ancient Councils in spight of
those several Courts before mentioned sith no man hath hitherto been found to interpret as any diminution at all or disacknowledgment of the Kings Soveraignty over the said Courts it were not possible the same manner of proceeding in the Ecclesiastical Courts should be so confidently charged with so hainous a crime did not the intervention of some wicked lust or other prevail with men of corrupt minds to become partial judges of evil thoughts p. 68 69. Mr. Hickeringill is one of those whom the Bishop describes i. e. that so confidently chargeth the Ecclesiastical Courts with that hainous crime and foundeth that confidence in the Statute of the 1 Eliz. 1. In charity to him I shall give him such words out of that Statute as do not only secure the Act of Queen Mary that repealed the Act of 1 Edw. 6. 2. requiring the use of the Kings Name in our proceedings from repeal in that particular but directly and expresly ratifies and confirms the same and our contrary proceedings accordingly So that our proceedings in the Ecclesiastical Courts without using the Kings Name or Stile or Arms according to 1 Edw. 6. 2. are allow'd and established by this very Act of Queen Eliz. thus Further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid that all other Laws and branches of any Act repealed by the said Act of repeal of Mar. and not in this Act specially mention'd and revived shall stand and be repealed in such manner and form as they were before the making of this Act any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding 1 Eliz. 1. 13. but the Act of 2 Phil. and Mar. was not specially mentioned in this Act of Repeal nor any other And the Learned Judges in 4 Jac. observe that this Act of 1 Eliz. revives an Act of Hen. 8. repealed by Queen Mary and in both these Statutes 1 Edw. 6. 2. is made void and the present proceeding of Spiritual Courts without the Kings Name c. plainly confirm'd but vid. Coke Rep. 12. p. 7. CHAP. V. The Act of 1 Eliz. 1. Establishing the High-Commission Court was not the foundation of ordinary Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England against Mr. Hickeringill THE worthy Gentleman though he useth much Modesty and will not peremptorily assert and hath only fitted the matter for the consideration of wiser men if he can think there be any such reasons wonderfully after this new and unheard of manner or to this purpose if at all The Statute of Eliz. for the High-Commission Court was the only Basis of all Ecclesiastical power this continued indeed during her time and King James's but being repealed by 17 Car. 1. 11. and 13 Car. 2. 12. down came the Fabrick their great foundation thus torn up now they have neither power from God nor man nor ever shall for his Majesty hath by Statute Enacted never to empower them with any more Commissions to the worlds end Now their basis is taken away I cannot discern where their Authority lies Nak T. q. 1. p. 4 5 6. This is the Spirit of his Reason which he confesseth is not infallible for he saith as before he doth not peremptorily assert it But can a man have the face to write this first and then to say he is not peremptory Would a man in his wits expose himself in this manner in Print and blunder out so much prejudice envy spite and wrath against Government and talk such pitiful unadvised stuff about Law and think to shake the Fabrick of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction that hath stood firm so long in the midst of all its enemies with shadows of straws Had he advised with the learned Sage his Friend Mr. Cary who is the Author of the Law of England certainly he could never have talk'd so idly and impertinently but would have put some colours at least upon his honest designs as Mr. Cary himself hath done But what if this wise Mr. Hickeringill erre fundamentally all this while and the clause of 1 Eliz. and consequently the Stat. of Car. 1. and 2. touch not concern not the ordinary Jurisdiction of the Church at all as certainly they do not and the only wonder is so wise a man should not see it A man of so great and long experience and practice in the Jurisdiction and Laws of the Church So diligent and accurate in his writings and especially of Naked Truth wherein he assures us nothing is presented crude or immature but well digested as a few of those things that his head and heart that is his stomach have been long full of as he saith if you will believe him p. ult But doth not that clause that establisheth the High-Commission affect our ordinary Jurisdictions at all what pity 't is that so excellent a Book as this second part of Naked Truth is should miscarry in its main project and in the very foundation too the fundamental supposition on which all its strength is built and in a maxim peculiar to the Authors invention and singularly his own for ought I know and wherein he seems to place his glory especially seeing as he tells us p. ult he has no pique private interest or revenge to gratifie and writes only to cure old Vlcers and with such hearty wishes that Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction which is his Interest as well as others were of force strength and vertue and not so disorderly uncertain and precarious as he proves it to be without one Argument if this beloved one taken from the High-Commission fail him And yet alas it will fail him do what we can for the clause in the Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. 18. granted a power to the Crown to establish the High-Commission Court as a Court extraordinary consisting of extraordinary and choice Ministers not restrained to ordinary Ecclesiastical Officers and the ordinary Jurisdiction did never derive from it was never disturbed or altered by it but was ever from the beginning of it consistent with and subordinate to it therefore was it call'd the High-Commission This is evident as from the concurrence of both Jurisdictions all a long so from the letter of the Statute it self and clearly declared to be so by my Lord Coke This clause saith he divideth it self into two branches the first concerning the Visitation of the Ecclesiastical state and persons this branch was Enacted out of necessity for that all Bishops and most of the Clergy of England being then Popish it was Necessary to raise a Commission to deprive them that would not deprive themselves and in case of Restitution of Religion to have a more Summary proceeding than by the ordinary and prolix course of Law is required This branch concerns only Ecclesiastical persons so that as Necessity did cause this Commission so it should be exercis'd but upon Necessity for it was never intended that it should be a continual standing Commission for that should prejudice all the Bishops in their Ecclesiastical Jurisdictions and be grievous to the Subject to be drawn up from all the remote parts of the
Realm where before their own Diocesan they might receive Justice at their own doors So that this power of the High-Commission neither granted any new power to the ordinary Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction nor took away any of the old Yea it plainly supposeth the prae-existence and exercise of the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in an ordinary way and meddles no further with it than to take its measures from it which by consequence allows it in it self as well as for a Rule of its own proceedings as my Lord Coke observes in these words That your Highness shall name to execute under your Highness all manner of Jurisdiction c. and to visit and reform c. all errors c. which by any manner Spiritual or Ecclesiastical power can or may lawfully be reformed c. Now if the ordinary Jurisdiction by Bishops c. did not derive from or depend on that High-Commission the repealing the Statute I mean the clause that impowred the High-Commission can no wise affect much less destroy that ordinary Jurisdiction and Mr. Hickeringill's foot is gone from his ground and the ordinary Jurisdiction of the Church of England stands fix'd upon its ancient Bottom on which it stood before the High-Commission and ever since notwithstanding the High-Commission is taken away and should never be granted more Now I cannot but observe that Mr. Hickeringill hath the ill luck to cut his own fingers with every tool he meddles with The Stat. of 13 Car. 2. 12. which continues the repeal of the clause in 1 Eliz. for the High-Commission by the 17 of Car. 1. which also took away our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction I say this Stat. 13 Car. 2. 12. restores the ordinary Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and excludes the power of the High-Commission Whence it is plain that the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction does not Essentially depend on but may and doth now stand by Act of Parliament without the High-Commission Again whereas 't is provided that the Jurisdiction so restored shall not exceed in power what it was in 1639. it is clear that the Church had a lawful Jurisdiction before the Wars otherwise nothing is restored yea 't is non-sence or a delusion unworthy of a Parliament if they that made that Act did not suppose and allow that the ordinary exercise of Jurisdiction in the Spiritual Courts in 1639. was according to Law and I am sure that was just such as is now exercised CHAP. VI. How our Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in England came at first and is at present Establish'd by Law TO shew how the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction came at first to be Establish'd by Law is a point not so difficult as much desir'd 'T is agreed I hope that all Kindreds Tongues and Nations owe their Obedience to the Gospel when and wheresoever it comes and that England was one of the first of the Nations that embrac'd it and became a Church of Christ then we were a rude unpolish'd and Barbarous people and knew little of Civil Policy or order of Government but by the gracious Ministery of Holy men sent from God our manners began to be softned and our minds sweetned and enlightned and our Princes became early nourishers and honourers of Religion and Religious persons and good nursing Fathers and nursing Mothers to the Church then planting among us and began to endow it with wealth and power Arviragus Marius Coilus as the three Kings in Malmesh are named by Capgravius entertain'd Christians exploded from all parts of the World in this Kingdom and gave them peace and provided them a Country to dwell in and first gave liberty to build and defend Churches in publick Lucius the first Christian King built Churches at his own charge first constituted Bishops Seats and built dwellings for Priests and much enriched all things of that nature and that Religious men might with more safety enjoy what they had given them amplis munivit privilegiis fortified them with large priviledges Here was born also as Baronius confesseth Constantine the Great who brought peace to the whole Church who was the first Christian Emperor and likewise the first Christian Queen his Mother Helen If we come to the Kings of the Ages following quis non stupeat as Spelman saith who can chuse but be astonish'd at the eximious Piety incredible Zeal Ardorem extraordinary Insignes Alms manifold works of mercy munificence towards Gods Ministers and their magnificent and wonderful profusionem liberality and expence in building adorning inriching Churches insomuch as one saith Mirum tunc fuerat Regem videre non sanctum And as another There were more holy Kings found in England than in any one though the most populous Province in the World The day would fail that worthy Antiquary adds in his most excellent Epistle before his Councils enough to enflame the coldest Age with zeal for Religion The day would fail me saith he should I speak of Edwin Ina Offa Ethered Edmund Ethelstan Canute Edward the Confessor and many others seeing among all the Illustrious Kings who were West-Saxons the third is scarce found qui Ecclesiam Dei in Aliquibus non Ornaverit Auxerit Ditaverit who did not Adorn Augment and Inrich the Church of God In these early times of Zeal and Piety among the Kings of England the Jurisdiction and Authority of the Church took root and began and proceeded to flourish now no doubt but Religion sincerely managed by good and meek Church-men was a great mean to move the Nation towards a better Order in the Civil State both in Government and Law Now I say to use Spelman's words when Os Sacerdotis Oraculum esset plehis Os Episcopi Oraculum Regis Reipublicae The mouth of the Priest was an Oracle to the People and the mouth of the Bishop was an Oracle to the King and the Commonwealth In the time of Ethelbert the first Christian King of the Saxons we find a Convention at Canterbury of Bishops and Lords to settle the affairs of Church and State In the time of the Heptarchy Summons was Ad Episcopos Principes c. Decrees were made afterward Cum Concilio Episcoporum thus during the time of the Saxons c. and until the Pope got footing here by the Conqueror Ecclesiastical Authority went on apace Yea 't is evident that it went on step by step with the progress of the Civil and was gradually own'd enlarged and establish'd in the very Essence and degrees and together with the Establishment of the Civil State Insomuch that Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction was so twisted and Interwoven and as it were wrapt in the very Bowels of the Civil and the Ecclesiastical Law so concern'd and intimately wrought into the Temporal Law and Government that 't was hard to make the separation or indeed clearly to assign the distinction betwixt them which hath taken up the care both of Lawyers and Statutes to do it effectually and throughly and perhaps may be in some measure a Reason of many Prohibitions against Ecclesiastical Prohibitions to this day Hence
ancient and of latter times That the Kingdom of England is an absolute Monarchy and that the King is the only Supream Governour as well over Ecclesiastical persons and in Ecclesiastical Causes as Temporal To the due observation of which Laws both the King and the Subject are sworn V. IF you desire a more full and particular account of such Cases as being not provided for at Common Law are therefore and have been ever under the Spiritual power take this excellent Enumeration of my Lord Cawdri●s Case Coke Observe good Reader seeing that the determination of Heresies Schisms and Errors in Religion Ordering Examination Admission Institution and Deprivation of men of the Church which do concern God's true Religion and Service of right of Matrimony Diverces and general Bastardy whereupon depend the strength of mens Descents and Inheritances of Probate of Testaments and Letters of Administration without which no debt or duty due to any dead man can be recovered by the Common Law Mortuaries Pensions Procurations Reparations of Churches Simony Incest Adultery Fornication and Incontinency and some others doth not belong to the Common Law how necessary it was for administration of Justice that his Majestie 's Progenitors Kings of this Realm did by publick Authority authorize Ecclesiastical Courts under them to determine those great and important Causes Ecclesiastical exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Common Law by the Kings Laws Ecclesiastical which was done originally for two causes 1. That Justice should be administred under the Kings of this Realm within their own Kingdom to all their Subjects and in all causes 2. That the Kings of England should be furnished upon all occasions either foreign or domestical with Learned Professors as well of the Ecclesiastical as Temporal Laws VI. Ecclesiastical Laws are the Kings Laws though Processe be not in the Kings Name Now albeit the proceedings and Processe Coke Cawdr Case latter end of the Ecclesiastical Courts be in the Name of the Bishops c. it followeth not therefore that either the Court is not the Kings or the Law whereby they proceed is not the King's Law For taking one example for many every Leet or View of Frank-pledge holden by a Subject is kept in the Lords Name and yet it is the Kings Court and all the proceedings therein are directed by the Kings Laws VII Spiritual Causes secured from Prohibitions notwithstanding by Acts of Parliament Lord Coke Cawdries Case in Edw. 2. Albeit by the Ordinance of Circumspeete N. B. agatis made in the 13 year of Edw. 1. and by general allowance and usage the Ecclesiastical Court held Plea of Tithes Obventions Oblations Mortuaries Redemptions of Penance laying of violent hands upon a Clerk Defamations c. yet did not the Clergie think themselves assured nor quiet from Prohibitions purchased by Subjects until that King Edw. the Second by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal in and by consent of Parliament upon the Petitions of the Clergie had granted unto them to have Jurisdiction in those Cases The King in a Parliament holden in the Ninth year of his Reign after particular Answers made to their Petitions concerning the matters abovesaid doth grant and give his Royal assent in these words We desiring as much of right as we may to provide for the state of the Church of England and the tranquillity and quiet of the Prelates of the said Clergie to the honour of God and the amendment of the state of the said Church and of the Prelates and Clergie ratifying and approving all and singular the said Answers which appear in the said Act and all and singular things in the said Answers contained We do for Vs and Our Heirs grant and command that the said be inviolably kept for ever willing and granting for Vs and Our Heirs that the said Prelates and Clergie and their Successors for ever do exercise Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in the Premises according to the tenour of the said Answer VIII The Ecclesiaestical Jurisdiction is a branch of the Kings Supremacy and he that denieth it denieth the King to be a compleat Monarch Cawdries Case and Head of the whole intire body of the Realm as my Lord Coke assures us both from the Common Law and many Statutes in all Ages made on purpose from time to time to vindicate the Crown and secure our own Church and its Jurisdiction under the Crown from the Pope and his illegal Encroachments and Vsurpations before and more especially by Hen. 8. and since the Reformation as is very amply proved by my Lord Coke in his most excellent discourse on Cawdrie's Case and since very learnedly and fully by Sir John Davis Atturny General in Ireland in his Case of Praemunire called Labor's Case both which should be well read by all that desire satisfaction in this weighty point Thus the Jurisdiction of this Church in subordination to the Supream Head of it hath proceeded through all time in the Laws and Statutes of our own Kingdom and was never legally interrupted till the 17 of Car. 1. but that Act repeal'd by the 13 of our present gracious King it stands firm again according to the letter of the said last Act upon its ancient legal Basis IX The old Objection that the Spiritual Courts do not Act in the Kings Name c. is fully Answered in the Book but because it is only mentioned there that the Case was resolved by the Judges in L. Coke Rep. 12. p. 7. King James's time I shall here set it down as abridg'd for brevity out of 〈◊〉 Lord Coke by Manly Pasch 4. Jac. Regis At this Parliament it was strongly urg'd at a grand Committee of the Lords and Commons in the Painted Chamber that such Bishops as were made after the first day of the Session were not lawful Bishops 1. Admitting them Bishops yet the Manner and Form of their Seals Stiles Processe and proceedings in their Ecclesiastical Courts were not consonant to Law because by the Stat. 1 Edw. 6. 2. it is provided that thenceforth Bishops should not be Elective but Donative by Letters Patents of the King and for that at this day all Bishops were made by Election not Donation of the King therefore the said Bishops are not lawful 2. By the same Act it is provided that all Summons c. and Processe in Ecclesiastical Courts shall be made in the Kings Name and Stile and their Seals engraven with the Kings Arms and Certificates made in the Kings Name it was therefore concluded that the said Statute being still in force by consequence all the Bishops made after the Act of 1 Jac. were not lawful Bishops and the proceedings being in the Name of the Bishop makes them unlawful quia non observata forma infertur adnullatio Actus Upon consideration of these Objections by the Kings Commandment it was Resolved by Popham Chief Justice of England and Coke Atturny of the King and after affirmed by the Chief Baron and the other Justices attendant to the Parliament that the said Act of 1 Edw. 6. 2. is not now in force being Repealed Annulled and Annihilated by three several Acts of Parliament any whereof being in force it makes that Act of 1 Edw. 6. that it cannot stand quia Leges posteriores priores contrarias abrogant And by the Act of the 25 Hen. 8. c. 20. is set forth the manner of Election and Consecration of Archbishops and Bishops and also for the making and Execution of all things which belong to their Authority with which words the Stile and Seal of their Courts and the manner of their proceedings are included which Act of 25 Hen. 8. is Revived by 1 Eliz. c. 1. and consequently that of 1 Edw. 6. c. 2. is Repealed I advise the Reader to see it as more at large expressed and the repealing Statutes particularly mentioned and argued in my Lord Coke 12 Rep. p. 7 8 9. and bid him farewel and not be wiser than the Law FINIS A Catalogue of some Books lately Printed for Richard Royston ROma Ruit The Pillars of Rome broken wherein all the several Pleas for the Pope's Authority in England with all the Material Defences of them as they have been urged by Romanists from the beginning of our Reformation to this day are Revised and Answered By Fr. Fullwood D. D. Archdeacon of Totnes in Devon The New Distemper Or the Dissenters Usual Pleas for Comprehension Toleration and the Renouncing the Covenant Consider'd and Discuss'd with some Reflections upon Mr. Baxter's and Mr. Alsop's late Pamphlets published in Answer to the Reverend Dean of S. Paul's Sermon concerning Separation The Lively Picture of Lewis du Moulin drawn by an incomparable Hand Together with his Last Words Being his Retractation of all the Personal Reflections he had made on the Divines of the Church of England in several Books of his Signed by himself on the Fifth and the Seventeenth of October 1680. Christ's Counsel to his Church In Two Sermons preached at the two last Fasts By S. Patrick Dean of Peterburgh and Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty THE END
if in like cases it had not been lawful before this Act for the Spiritual Courts so to proceed why are the former Laws and use to be followed by these directions Or if this Act cannot impower us give us reason or Law against it Or if any thing be a greater grievance to you in the Spiritual Courts than the punishment provided for the crimes mentioned in this Act say what it is or say nothing But if these cases be not sufficient Mr. Cary can tell you of at least ten particular matters upon which the Law is to grant the Writ de Excommunicato capiendo and according to a known Act of Parliament made after this viz. 5 Eliz. 23. which sufficiently allows and confirms our Ecclesiastical proceedings to the sences of too many as some complain CHAP. VII Of Canons and Convocations WE see what Reason Mr. Hickeringill had to keep such a pother about the force of Ecclesiastical Canons and the Authority of Convocations Especially 1. Seeing the late mentioned Act of 1 Eliz. supposeth the Ecclesiastical Laws i. e. the Canons to be her own Laws and requires Ecclesiastical Judges so severely to put them in execution 2. Seeing since the Reformation most of the matters of Canons are expressed and enjoyned in Acts of Parliament insomuch that Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction might stand and proceed well enough had we no other Canon but Acts of Parliament as Mr. Hickeringill insinuates and 't is worthy his observation that the greatest complaints of Dissenters since the Kings happy return have been upon the execution of Acts of Parliament and that not so much by Ecclesiastical as Civil Ministers Indeed the Statute of Car. 2. that restored the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction hath a Proviso That by vertue of that Act the Canons of 1640. shall not be of force and that no Canons are made of force by that Act that were not formerly confirm'd by Acts of Parliament or by the establish'd Laws of the Land as they stood in Ann. 1639. But 't is evident enough that by the 25 Hen. 8. c. 19. the old Canons not against Law or Prerogative are of force and that the King with the Convocation may make new ones with the same Conditions and indeed while the Convocation is so limited by that Act their power seems not very formidable My Lord Coke who was not a Bigot for Spiritual Power declares the Law in both those Cases and tells us That it was resolved by the Judges at a Committee of Lords these restraints of the Convocation were grounded on that Statute 1. They cannot Assemble without the assent of the King 2. They cannot Constitute any Canons without his licence 3. Nor execute them without his Royal assent 4. Nor after his assent but with these four limitations 1. That they be not against the Kings Prerogative 2. Nor against Common Law 3. Nor against Statute Law 4. Nor against any Custom of the Kingdom Rep. 12. p. 720. And my Lord Coke adds That these restraints put upon the Convocation by the 25 Hen. 8. are but an affirmance of what was before the Statute and as he saith in his book of Courts are but declaratory of the old Common Law Pag. 323. consequently the Courts of Common Law are to bound and over-rule all Ecclesiastical executions of Canons and secure the Crown and the Laws against them But what Acts of Parliament have abrogated the Authority of the Synod 1603. and quite annihilated the very beings of Convocations I am yet to learn though Mr. Hickeringill so boldly after his own way vents so wild a notion p. 3. 12. or when that of 25 Hen. 8. 19. was repealed or how they are made less than nothing at this day than they were before since that Statute of limitations as he is pleased to insult He saith They are far from being the Representative Church of England for that the people have not the least Vote in their Election Pray when was it otherwise than 't is now If the Law by Institution make the Clerk a guide to his flock in Spirituals if the people do expresly make choice of him for such or virtually consent in Law he should be so and thereupon the Law allows this Clerk to elect members for the Convocation and also reckons the Convocation to be the Representative Church of England how comes it that Mr. Hickeringill who is so great a stickler for a Legal Religion should be so much wiser than the Law and to scoff at its Constitutions I wish Mr. Hickeringill to beware of touching Foundations with his rude and bold Fancies and disturbing the frame of Government I am sure he will not abide by his own Rule if he be well advised of the manner of Electing the great Representative of the people of England 't is our duty to study to be quiet but some study to be otherwise The wisest word in his Naked Truth is this If men once come to dispute Authority and the wisdom of the Laws and Law-makers the next step is Confusion and Rebellion p. 11. The Conclusion THUS you have a Taste of the Spirit and Sence that runs through the Book called Naked Truth his other little gross mistakes are not worthy observing much less insisting on such as these 1. First That all Archdeaconries have Corpses annex'd which is certainly otherwise in most Archdeaconries in some Dioceses 2. Then that Archdeacons require Procurations when they do not Visit which is not done in some and I hope in no Diocese 3. Lastly That Procurations and Synodals are against Law and not to be recovered by Law or Conscience when he himself confesseth that they are due by ancient Composition That provision notwithstanding his old Canons in Visitations is due for which the money paid for Procurations is paid for them by vertue of that Composition and whereas they are due by undoubted and long possession and Custom which is as Law in England And to conclude are not only expresly allow'd as due but declared to be recoverable in the Ecclesiastical Courts by the Statute of 34 Hen. 8. 19. I have at this time done with his Materials and for the Manner of his Writing let the Sentence of every Reader reproach and shame him I like not the office of Raking Kennels or emptying Jakes and all the harm I return him is to pray heartily for him That God would give him Grace soberly to read over his own Books and with tears to wash these dirty sheets wherein he hath plai'd the wanton and indeed defiled himself more than his own Nest whatever the unlucky Bird intended and that with such a barbarous wit and vile Railery as is justly offensive to God and Man with such wild triumphs of scorn and contempt of his own Order and Office his Betters and Superiors with such a profligate neglect of Government and Peace and of his own Conscience and Law against which he confesseth he still acts yea against his own Interest Safety and his very Reputation For