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A30255 No sacrilege nor sin to alienate or purchase cathedral lands, as such: or, A vindication of, not onely the late purchasers; but, of the antient nobility and gentry; yea, of the Crown it self, all deeply wounded by the false charge of sacrilege upon new purchasers. By C. Burges, D.D.; Case concerning the buying of bishops lands. Burges, Cornelius, 1589?-1665. 1660 (1660) Wing B5676; ESTC R202286 78,792 78

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indeed there is not to found any Title of such Lands upon But one hath found out a gallant passage of Moses to prove that very Heathens by light of natural reason found and held it requisite that their Priests should have a setled maintenance in Lands The place is in Gen. 47. 22. where it is said that when Joseph in the extremity of the seven years famine bought all the Lands of the people of Egypt for bread to keep them alive Onely the Land of the Priests bought he not which shews they had Lands and that oseph would not meddle with the buying of them But why what because they were hallowed or consecrated to the Egyptian Gods and therefore Holy No such matter but because Pharaoh provided a portion of meat for them and they did eat the portion which Pharaoh gave them Wherefore they sold not their Lands Indeed Nature may teach that God is to be worshipped that he is to have Priests for his worship and that they are to be maintained but out of Lands where did Nature ever teach that If the Heathens that were most civilized made any standing provisions for their Priests it was in Tithes and Offerings This the Reverend Dr. Carlton hath industriously noted out of Plutarch Herodotus Macrobius Diodorous Siculus Xenophon and others But for making such provisions of Lands none of those Authors are alleged And whereas the Apostle saith that the things which the Gentiles sacrificed they sacrifice unto Devils it ill becomes a Bishop to urge that Act of the Kings of Egypt in setting out Lands for such Priests as done by the light of nature which was done out of ignorance and corruption of nature as a warrant for Christians to give Lands to Cathedrals 2. Come we from the Law to the Gospel from the Old Testament to the New Neither here can we finde one silhable that countenanceth much less requireth the endowment of Cathedrals with Lands as holy to the Lord. It is true that the Learned Knight Sir Henry Spelman in his Treatise de non temer andis Ecclesiis hath Learnedly proved it to be Sacrilege to rob Churches of the maintenance by Divine right due unto them but that is not spoken of Lands given by men but of Tithes setled by God as the standing maintenance of Ministers of the Gospel as is obvious to every eye that carefully heedeth the body of that Book There are indeed some wyre-drawn Arguments produced by a great D. in his Answer to the Letter to Dr. Turner to make out Gods acceptance of and propriety in such lands But these have been examined before and therefore shall be here passed over In the New Testament there is recorded 1. Matter of fact 2. Matter of Ordinance for the providing of maintenance for Ministers so soon as that Ordinance could be put in execution 1. The matter of fact will appear by what Christ himself and afterwards his Apostles had for their maintenance in those times As for Christ himself although he were of the bloud Royal of the lineage of David both by his mothers side and his supposed fathers side too he prosesseth that very foxes and birds of the air were better provided for then himself for the one had holes theother nests but he had not so much as whereon to lay his head neither room nor pillow It is true there was a common purse or bag with which Judas was trusted and thereupon tempted to become a thief And it is manifest that out of that Cash contributed by well-disposed Converts both he and his Disciples furnished themselves with necessary food and gave to the poor besides But as for any House or Land for a standing or setled maintenance or abode it is clear he had none although Heir of all things Nor was that provision which he had any dainty or costly fare but only some loaves of bread and a few fishes not above five barley loaves and two stshes at a time which a boy might carry for Christ and his twelve Apostles And whatever Judas did in purloyning for himself the rest of the Apostles were content to observe their Masters Injunctions not onely when he first sent them out at what time he charged them to provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in their purses nor scrip for their journey neither two coats c. but even long after when he had left the earth and ascended heaven and the multitude of believers dayly encreased Even then Peter professed to the lame man that lay at the Gate of the Temple and asked an Alms of him Silver and Gold have I none Yea a good while after that blessed Paul laboured working with his own hands as a Tent-maker and that night and day not for recreation or out of covetousness but to minister to the necessities not onely of himself but of those that were with him not as having no right to maintenance but that he might not be chargeable unto such as being yet unconverted or not fully satisfied touching this matter might take offence at his requiring of present maintenance Therefore sometimes he would take maintenance of one Church convinced of their duty in administring to him to supply his wants while he preached to another more disaffected unsatisfied covetous or quarrelsome Thus he preached the Gospel of God freely to the rich voluptuous and quarrelling Corimbians robbing other Churches by taking wages of them to do service to the Corinthians Where by the way take notice that he that taketh wages where he doth not or hath not done service is a Church-robber It is true if he work faithfully elsewhere and no maintenance is there without scandal to be had and another place where he hath industriously laboured is willing to afford contribution upon that account it is not such a robbery as is sin in him but rather in them who put him upon it as Quakers and others would now do the Ministers of the Gospel for they refusing to maintain him do what in them lies to put him upon robbing others Let no man hence conclude I. That Christ meant to starve his Apostles when he sent them out to preach or took not sufficient care for their provision For by their Ministry He so wrought upon those to whom he preached if sons of peace that his Apostles wanted nothing and that upon this account That the labourer is worthy of his meat saith Matthew of his hire saith Luke This is then allowed to those who are commissionated by Christ to preach the Gospel but not to usurpers and false Prophets that run before they be sent supposing gain to be godliness Unto such Priests that so teach for hire and to such Prophets as so divine for money a wo is due which will be accomplished on them Nor Secondly That it is hereby intended that it is unlawful now for Ministers of the Gospel to have more or better