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A20683 A defence of church gouernment Dedicated to the high Court of Parliament. Wherein, the church gouernment established in England, is directly proued to be consonant to the word of God, and that subiects ought of dutie to conforme themselues to the state ecclesiasticall. Together with, a defence of the crosse in baptisme; as it is vsed in our Church, being not repugnant to the word: and by a consequent, the brethren which are silenced, ought to subscribe vnto it, rather then to burie their talents in the ground. By Iohn Doue, Doctour of Diuinity. Dove, John, 1560 or 61-1618. 1606 (1606) STC 7081; ESTC S110107 58,733 80

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as to him did appertaine as appeareth by the story of the Gospel But thus I prooue that Bishops ought to be Lords Our Sauiour being asked whether a man might put away his wife answereth negatiuely his argument of proofe being drawne from the law of nature saying Ab initio non fuit sic from the beginning it was not so Likewise the argument Mat. 19. followeth Bishops ought to be Lords and Ecclesiasticall persons to exercise ciuill authority quoniam ab initio fuit sic because frō the beginning it was so From Adam to Moses it was so from Moses to our Sauiour Christ the Apostles it was so with them it was so and from them it hath continued so vntill this time excepting onely the times of persecution when the course of the Gospel was interrupted and there was no setled state of a Church No meruaile though in time of persecution they were not held for Lords for then they were not allowed to be Citizens nor thought worthy to liue in a Common wealth The Pagan Emperours helde them for seditious persons troublers of the state and of all men most worthy of death Our question is not what then was of fact but what ought to haue beene of right It must not seeme strange that Saint Iohn or Saint Paul could not be in authority vnder Nero Domitian nor the godly Bishops vnder the ten persecutions sceing our Sauiour was not allowed any authority vnder Herod nor Pilat nor Augustus nor Tiberius No meruaile though Titus could not be held as a Lord in the Kingdome of Creete seeing that neither Iehoahaz being lawfully anoynted King of Iuda could not reigne 2. Reg. 25. 2. Rug. 24 as a King being taken captiue by Pharao nor Iehoiakim nor Sedechias being oppressed by Nebuchadnezer From Adam vnto Moses he that was the eldest of euery Gen. 1. 26 Gen. 2. 23 Gen. 4. 3. 4 familie was both the king and the priest ouer his own family among Gods people So Adam was a king because God gaue him absolute power ouer the whole world he was also a priest for hee offered sacrifice Caine and Abel brought to him their sacrifices that he might offer in their behalfe they are onely saide to haue offered as Asa the King and all the people are saide to haue offered when the Priest did offer in 2. Chr. 15 their behalfe Henoch seeing the children of God to fall daily from faith to infidelity which was the cause of the deluge published against them the sentence of excommunication saying The Lord commeth which is the most grieuous kinde of excōmunicatiō And S. Paul did borrow that form of him Iudae v. 14 where he writ Hee that loueth not the Lord Iesus let him be an athema marannatha cursed vntill the Lords comming And Moses 1. Cor. 16 did reckon vp so long a catalogue of all the eldest sonnes descended from Adam before the flood to this end that it Gen. 5. might appeare vnto whom from time to time the Lord committed the care of gouerning instructing the Church Noah a king was a preacher of righteousnesse one hundred and twenty yeares before the flood hee offered sacrifice after the flood That Iethro the father in law of Moses was both a 2. Pet. 2. 5 1. Pet. 2. 19 4. 16. Gen. 8. 20. Numb 3. 12. 12. 8. 16. 17. prince a priest likewise Iob in the land of Huz no learned man will deny And that none might offer sacrifices but the eldest and Princes of euery family it appeareth by the writings of Moses because God said he would take the tribe of Leui to be seperated for his seruice as a redemption of all the rest of the first borne of Israel In which words hee did but call to remembrance the time of nature wherein the eldest were all his that is they were consecrated for the offering of sacrifice vnto him When Melchisedech was King and Priest of Salem Ge. 14. 18 Abraham also was King and Priest ouer his own family It was saide of him Thou art a great Prince of God among vs Gen. 23. 6 Ge. 18. 19. Ge. 22. 10 Gen. 17. Ge. 26. 24 And he taught them Gods word he erected an altar and offered sacrifice To him first was committed the sacrament of circumcision and he circumcised his sonne Isaac Isaac his heire crected an altar and offered cacrifice for the exercise of his faith Iacob after him did the like taught purity of religion and how Idolls were to be abolished Ge. 35. 11. In the daies of Moses vnder the time of the law when priesthood was appropriated to one peculiar tribe of Leui and the Bishoprick to one certaine family Moses and Aaron both being priests Moses the yonger brother had the chiefe authority in ciuill businesses Aaron the elder in Ecclesiasticall causes but all supreame authority was committed to these two priests Moses and Aaron That Moses was a priest Exod. 24. 6. 7. 8. it is euident because all the whole tribe of Leui were then consecrated ●o holy priesthood whereof hee was one hee in particular offered sacrifice preached Gods word consecrated Exod. 40. Numb 20. Aaron to be an high priest and Eleazar in his place when he was dead consecrated the altar which none could doe without sacrilege but a priest Yet he was the supreame ciuil Magistrate And in his absence 40. daies he substituted Aaron the priest in his roome to heare ciuill causes and supply the place of a ciuill Magistrate Phinees the high priest Numb 25. was a Captaine in warre and busied himselfe with secular affaires and it pleased God so much that the priesthood was conferred not onely vpon him but also his posterity Samuel the Prophet who ministred before the Lord in a linnen Ephod was also the chiefe ciuil Magistrate and in his own person did ride his circuit as a Iudge euery yeare ouer all the 1. Sam 12. 18. 1. Sam. 7. 1. Sam. 8. land All the daies of the Iudges which was about two hundred ninety and nine yeares from the death of Iosua vnto Eli the priest there was no certaine supreame ciuill magistracie in any but in the high priests or Bishops among the people When the people desired a king of God they cōsulted with Samuel in that secular busines After those 299. yeares of the Iudges Eli the Bishop reigned as supreame ciuill Magistrate 40. yeares so did Samuel after him the space of 40. yeares Afterward when Saule was by him annointed King yet Samuel ruled ioyntly with Saule so long as he liued and indeed bore the greatest sway in the realme because Saule had little more then the title of a King during the life of Samuel and was to doe nothing without allowance from him How the Clergie among Gods people busied themselues with the affaires of the temporal●ie and howe much they pleased God in so doing it appeareth by these examples Numb 31 6. 26. Numb
A DEFENCE OF Church Gouernment Dedicated to the high Court of Parliament WHEREIN THE CHVRCH GOuernment established in England is directly proued to be consonant to the word of God and that subiects ought of dutie to conforme themselues to the state Ecclesiasticall Together with A DEFENCE OF THE CROSSE IN Baptisme as it is vsed in our Church being not repugnant to the word and by a consequent the brethren which are silenced ought to subscribe vnto it rather then to burie their Talents in the ground By IOHN DOVE Doctour of Diuinity AT LONDON Printed by T. C. for Henry Rockit and are to be sold by Iohn Hodgets in Pauls Church yeard 1606. THE CONTENTS OF THE first Booke Of conformitie to the state Ecclesiasticall Of Eldership Of Diocesan Bishops Of Cathedrall Churches Of Lord Bishops and ecclesiasticall persons exercising ciuill authoritie TO THE RIGHT HONOVRAble the Lords spirituall and temporall of the vpper house with the Knights and Burgesses of the lower house assembled in the high Court of Parliament Of conformitie to the state Ecclesiasticall MAy it please the wisedome of this honourable assembly to weigh our reasons not onely in the ballance of mans wit but also in the skales of the sancturarie why this conformiture is required The Apostle 1. Cor. 1. 10. beseeching vs as brethren in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that wee all speake one thing that there bee no dissentions among vs that wee bee knit together in one minde and iudgement commendeth it vnto vs as a necessary rule of Ecclesiasticall politie for the better establishing of this consent in doctrine the speedy cutting off of all iarres and discensions the fast knitting and vniting of mindes and iudgements vppon this ground and warrant other states haue vrged their Preachers to conforme themselues to the State vnder which they liued And seeing by this rule apostolicall it cannot stand with the peace and good estate of any Church whatsoeuer to permit such among them as are not of them and to tollerate such in their Ministerie as are aduersaries to their lawes and constitutions much more then is conformitie so grounded vpon Scripture and strengthened by example of other Churches deemed by the godliest and approued by the wisest to be no lesse needfull in this present scisme and rent of the Church of England then was pitch for the Arke of Noah floating vpon the water and morter for the ruines of the Temple exposed to the iniury of wind and weather without which the one could not but presently sinke and the other not long continue And for as much as some fewe among vs in their priuate opinions dissent from vs not onely godly politie teacheth and Christian humilitie requireth but also the Lawe of God which is of highest authority prescribeth and commandeth that these fewe should submit themselues to the wisedome of the State rather then the whole state should yeelde and giue place to the contradiction of those priuate spirits When certaine brethren at Antioch varied about circumscision Act. 15. 1. they were ouerswayed by the censure of the Councell helde at Ierusalem to whom the hearing of such differences and disciding of such coutrouersies did of right belong but the sētence of the Councel gaue no way at all to those brethrē And Saint Paule hauing spoken of the ceremonie deuised by 1. Cor. 11. the Church and vsed in his time in prayer and prophesie that men should be bare and women couered noteth them for contentious persons which oppose themselues against this ceremonie alledging that it once being approued and receiued into the Church ought not to bee called into question vel to nomine because the Church had receiued it when hee saith If any man list to bee contentious wee haue no such custome among vs nor the Church of God For the better inlarging of this point that I may not instance in the Turkish Gouernment which suffereth no question to be moued against Ecclesiasticall rises but endeth all such controuersies by the sword neither yet in the Lutheran Church which admitteth none to any place in the ministery without subscription and oath to the reformation of Angsburge nor in the Church of Rome which inioyneth their Clergie to maintaine the doctrine concluded in the councell of Trent the Church of Geneua whose lawes See the laws of the booke of Geneua Chap. 1. and gouernment our brethren would impose vpon vs as ●he onely paterne of holinesse and example of a true Christian reformation inioyneth all their Ministers before their admition not onely to make open protestation that they doe receiue and maintaine the doctrine approoued in Geneua but simply and absolutely to sweare that they will keepe the Ecclesiasticall ordinances which are passed and Chap. 2. in the forme of their oath ordeined by the small great and generall councells of that Citie By which law and practise of theirs it is a cleare case that with them there is no respect of priuate mens opinions no satisfaction to bee yeelded to particular persons no conference or disputation granted with men of contrary iudgements But it must be held pro concesso for a conclusion or principle already proued that all their ordinances are according to Gods word and of that vndoubted truth that they may not be argued sifted or controuerted Chap. 2. Finally if there arise any difference concerning doctrine which hath not beene already reconciled it is inacted by their lawes that the Ministers shall be called to a conference if then it cannot receiue an end the Magistrates shall interpose their authority and so proceede to a finall decision And for the better strengthening of their proceedings it is further inacted that all opposition against their ordinances shall be held for an hainous crime called by the title of rebellion against Ecclesiastical lawes it is set down as punishable among the notorious crimes of heresie scisme blasphemy simony bribery periury and drunkennesse The punishment to be inflicted vppon Ministers thus rebelling is deposition from their ministery and all contempt against Ecclesiasticall orders in what persons soeuer after three admonitions is censured by excommunication Yet I desire that no sinister or vncharitable construction should be made hereof as if a state should vrge them which feele any the smallest check in their tender consciences with shipwrack of conscience rashly to subscribe vnto that which they doe not approue or for worldly respects to allow of that whereof they cannot satisfie well informe themselues For albeit the state which is well aduised hath sufficient warrant to impose yet the bare authority of the state is no warrant vnto them to obey which be not yet resolued but stand in doubt because they must build vpon this ground of the Apostle that be the thing in it selfe neuer so lawfull without faith it is sinne But onely I exhort them better to instruct and informe their weake consciences which if they cannot or will not doe the imputation of this
had his calling from his Father Moses from God Aaron from Moses the Apostles from our Sauiour Timothy Titus from S. Paul so we must consider in whom this authority resteth to call men to the ministery for none of these of whom I haue spoken had any consent of the people This custome of popular election is borrowed out of the Turkes Alcaron and not of the Bible It is saide to the congregation concerning the election of Deacons Looke ye out 7. men of honest conuersation c by which it is iustified which our law doth require that they vpon whom the Bishoppe Act. 6. shall lay hands must bring with them sufficient testimony of their worthinesse but in the words following it is said whom we may appoint to this businesse And afterward verse 6. when they were found out they set them before the Apostles and the Apostles prayed and laide hands vpon them but not the people as our Bishops assisted with other ministers without the helpe of the people ordeine ministers with vs. Therefore in their obiection out of the Acts where they alleage these English words When they had ordeined Elders by Act. 14. election in euery Church c they doe but deceiue themselues For the Greeke word is cheirotoneo of cheir an hand and teino porrigo extendo noteleno to reach or stretch forth or lay on not to eleuate or lift vp so cheirotoneia is not eleuation but imposition of hands in Eccesiasticall writers These words then cheirotonesantes eautois presbuterous is manuum impositione consecrantes sibi ipsi● presbyteros when by imposition of hands they had consecrated Elders or Ministers as Moses by imposition of hands conferred the holy Ghost vpon Iosua and sanctified him to be a Magistrate and our Deut. 24. Matt. 19. Sauiour in the Gospel by laying hands on the children blessed them And th●● cheirotoneia is expressed more plainely by another Greeke word in the Acts of the Apostles concerning Act. 6. the consecration of Deacons to be epithesis ion cheiron imposition of hands where the text saith proseuxamenoi op●thecan autois tas cheiras when they had prayed they layed hands vpon them And Gual●er in his Commentary vpon that place of the Acts which before was alleaged when they had ordeined Elders by election in euery Citie after he hath iustified these popular elections vsed in the Church of Tigurie and dispraised our manner of ordination reuoketh himselfe and confesseth by the word cheirotonesantes magis verisimiliter hîc incelligi manuum impositionem non incerto populo rem tam seriam committendam that in that place imposition of hands is rather to be vnderstoode then any popular election and that a matter of so great importance as the ordination of Ministers is not to be committed to the rude and inconstant common people He commeth now to his ob Sol and obiecteth in our behalfe as we doe our selues commonly alleage that it cannot stand with the state of a Kingdome that there should be a popular gouernment of the Church And he answereth himselfe that it is not requisite that the gouernment of the Church should bee answerable to the gouernement of the Realme To which his answer I reply that if the gouernment of the Church be not answerable to the gouernment of the Realme then our assertion is true that this popular gouernment cannot stand with the state of a Kingdome because the King is by the people excluded out of the Church gouernment With vs Bishops are the Kings Lieutenants in Ecclesiasticall causes and all Ecclesiasticall Courts are the Kings Courts they be held immediately vnder the King his authority in causes Ecclesiasticall being subalternate and immediately subordinate vnto our Sauiour Christ Now for as much as they which hold with the lay Eldership and popular gouernment doe claime their authority immediately from God without the King they derogate from the Kings authority in Ecclesiasticall causes and in Church matters they hold him for no King Lastly whereas we obiect that popular gouernment with vs cannot be but tumultuous and hee answereth that no tumults can arise by their gouernment considering foure circumstances First that it is Gods ordinance Secondly that it is to be executed by no greater multitude then a parish Thirdly that the Church guides being seperated from the people determine the matter and prepare it onely the people consent with them Fourthly if any few be violent and vnruly the next Iustices are to keepe the peace among them It is but an answerlesse answer For first that popular gouernment is not Gods but mans ordinance as I haue shewed Secondly it is apparant that diuers parishes with vs be so populous that they consist of many thousands and are as large in compasse as some Diocesse in other places Thirdly for the guides of the Church priuately to agree vpon the matter and to vrge the people and constraine them by the authority of Iustices of peace to yeelde vnto that which they haue decreed is as much as to make it no popular election at all because then free consents are denied them and all authority resteth in the guides of the Church For if there be no tumult it is wholly in the power of the Church Magistrates to conclude and establish what they list and the people must agree to it if there be a tumult the Magistrates of the Church are to command the Iustices to execute what their selues would haue done so that the people are vsed but as ciphers and haue no liberty in themselues So this is as good as no election Of Lord Bishops and Ecclesiasticall persons exercising ciuill authoritie THe common obiection is that our Sauiour being the chiefe Bishop was not held for a Lord neither had hee any outward pompe or glory in this world To which I answer if so be they inferre this conclusion vpon that example therefore Bishops must not be Lords the weakenesse of that argument will appeare by the like for they may as well conclude against Kings that because our Sauiour being a King yet was no Lord had no pompe nor glorie-therefore Kings must not be Lords c. I could answer further Tit. 2. that he was a Lord and so the Apostle doth call him a great Lord and the head of the Church and the Prince of Eph. 4. 15. Apoc. 1. the kings of the earth and because he is head of the Church all Kings doe holde their Crownes vnder him That the world did not acknowledge him for a Lorde it was their blindnesse Hee came to be crucified and had the world knowne him non Dominum gloriae crucifixissent they had not crucified the Lord of glory And yet in his state of humility hee had an honourable retinew to attend vpon him to the number of eighty two his twelue Apostles and seuenty Disciples Matth. 1● Luk. 10. Iudas was his treasurer or pursbearer he sent Philip to the market to buy bread he imployed his Disciples in such seruices
force tooke from them all power of life death not onely from the Priests but also from the whole nation 40. yeares before that time as Maister Beza hath well obserued it was not lawfull for them to put any man to death Thirdly if the Iewes had had all their authoritie in their Beza in annot maiorib in Ioh 18. hands without controlment yet it appeareth by the 28. verse of that chapter that the Priests at that time would not be present at that iudgement where sētence of death was to be pronounced because the feast of Easter was at hand and so doing they should haue made themselues vncleane and by a consequent disinabled themselues from executing their office at that solemnitie Thus you haue heard proued out of the holy Scriptures that among Gods people in that kingdome which was gouerned according to Gods own lawes euen then when it was reformed by godly kings there was no bench of Iustice for hearing and ending of ciuill causes vpon which Priests and Leuites did not sit as Iudges and Iustices Therefore I demand other sound reasons or places of Sctipture to proue why it should not so continue among vs which are also Gods people especially our Ecclesiasticall persons being more honourable vnder the Gospel then they were vnder the law I confesse that the Popes lawes haue decreed the contrarie but Lancelelot iustitut iuris can l 1. Tit 4. Concil Lat 31. partis 1. can 12. it is not fit that wee which are a reformed Church and haue long since abandoned the Popes authoritie should nowe forsake God and the examples of the holy Bible to followe the Pope and his Canons The Popes lawe saith Laici sunt quibus licet temporalia prssidere vxere●● ducere causes agere intèr virum virum iudicare Clerici qui diuinis officijs mancipati sunt quos ab omni strepitu cessare conueuit Lay men are they to whom it is lawful to haue temporal possessions to marie wiues handle causes and controuersies in Law to iudge betweene man and man but as for Clergy men their state and condition is otherwise they are so deuoted and mancipated to the seruice of God that they must not intermeddle with such worldly troubles Some of our brethren giue this answerles answer that arguments drawen from the state of the Ministerie in the olde Testament to that which is vnder the Gospell doe not holde that we must not followe examples of the olde Testament in Church gouernment and that therefore the argument doth not followe that because Bishoppes in the olde Testament were Lords and of the Kings Counsell in the highest place and inferiour Ministers were ciuill Magistrates therefore vnder the Gospell it may be so although what should hinder they cannot shewe But that I may followe them in that course of disputation They say wee must not followe the examples of the olde Testament in Church gouernment and that therefore the argument doth not followe Bishops in the olde Testament were Lords and Kings Counsellers and inferiour Ministers were ciuill Magistrates therefore vnder the Gospel they must be so To whō I alledge that by the like reason these arguments which Bishop Iuell and the learned men of the reformed churches haue vrged against the Popes authoritie and for the vpholding of Princes cannot follow when they conclude in this manner Solomon deposed Abiathar the Priest for committing high Treason and placed Sadoc in his roome therefore vnder the Gospell Christian Kings may punish their Ministers for high Treason Ezechias reformed the Church Iosias reade the Lawe before the Priestes in the house of the Lord and commanded Helchias the high Priest and the Priests of the second order to bring forth of the Temple all the vessells made for Baall put downe Idolls 1. Reg 2. 2. Reg 18. slewe the idolatrous Priestes therefore Christian Kings may put downe idolatrie and reforme the Church You see thereforefore the weakenes and great vnsufficiency of this answere Againe why doe the Lawes of Geneua punish adulterie with death after the example of the olde Testament and why doe our brethren which stand for the reformation labour that the same punishment may bee inflicted vpon adulterers with vs vrging vs with the authoritie of that Law if so be that they will holde that the Lawes of the old Testament may not preuaile vnder the Gospell In their simplicitie and want of iudgement they shape this answere as if it were the Trumpet to blowe downe Iericho Dauids sling to kill Golias Sampsons iawe-bone to slay a thousand Philistines that the ceremoniall Lawe is abolished whereas before I haue shewed thal this is not ceremoniall but politicall and that the Priesthood is abolished whereas onely that which is ceremonicall concerning the Priests office is abolished but that which is moral indureth to the end And againe a Minister of the Gospell may with more conueniencie be a ciuill Magistrate then the Priests vnder the Lawe because now the daily sacrifices the great number of feasts and solemnities the infinite number of ceremonies do cease which then procured vnto them a whole world of businesses in their Ministery by which they had lesse vacant time to heare ciuill causes then our Ministers haue vnder the Gospell The answer to the common obiection Luk 22 25. they that beare rule ouer them are called gracious Lords but ye shall not be so FOr the opening of this text these things are to be examined First whether our Sauiour spake these wordes to his Apostles onely or in the name of the Apostles to al Christians For albeit the Apostles onely were personally present and his apostrophe was vnto thē yet many circumstances do proue that these words doe cōcerne al Christians For first we find else where another speech parallel vnto this The Scribes and Pharisies loue the chiefe places at feasts and to Mat 2. 3. haue the chiefe seates in the assemblies and greeting in the markets and to be called of men Rabbi Rabbi that is Lord Lord but be not yee called Rabbi for one is your Rabbi to wit Christ and all ye are brethren c. but he that is greatest among you let him be your seruant No man can iustly say this was spoken vnto Ecclesiasticall persons onely but also to lay men for so the text saith Then Iesus spake to the multitude and to his Disciples 2. In the same chapter it appeareth that our Sauiour did celebrate his last Supper immediately before he spake these wordes but that storie being set downe more plaine by the other Enangelist hee saide drinke you of this all Mat 26. which wordes were spoken onely to his Apostles and yet none but they of the Church of Rome will so conster them as if they were ment onely of Ecclesiasticall persons For euen as the Cuppe in the holy Communion did not appertaine onely vnto the Ministerie but also vnto the laitie so humilitie which is the Subiect of this speech is not
Caligula Nero Domitian and such tyrants it standeth with Paules doctrine that they may be punished for their offences For he disputeth onely of the lawful autoritie of the magistrates not of wicked magistrates which abuse their authoritie Neither according to Saint Paules doctrine are such Kings to be held for Magistrates Vt cunque negare non possunt aulici adulatoras carnificis functionem pariem esse muneris publici fortasse etiam regij vel ipsorum regum testimonio qui quoties aliquis è ministus publicis violatur se suamquè maiestatem corpus violari queruntur The flattering Courtiers cannot denie but that the office of the hangman doth belong to the King witnes the Kings themselues which when their Catchpoles and hangmen receiue any wrong doe complaine that their owne person is in them wronged and their princely Maiestie M. Quid tandē e scripturis profers cur liceat tyrannos impunè occidere B. Primùm id affero quod quùm diserte praeceptum sit de scelere sceleratis à medio tollendis sinè vllâ exceptione gradus aut ordinis nusquàm tamen in saeris literis tyrannis magis quàm priuatis est cautum Hauing a generall commandement out of Gods word to put to death wicked men without respect of any degree or order in particular tyrants haue no more priuiledge then priuate men and therefore according to his word it is lawfull to kill tyrants Rationem excogitarunt Canonistae quá scelera plecterentur Papa tamē sacro sanctus inuiolatus haberetur Aliud enim Papa aliud illius hominis qui Papa esset ius existimabant c. Wee may distinguish betweene the Kings person and his office to punish him as he is a man offending setting a side his place and so not the King but the malefactor is chastised Nos contendimus idem ius reges habere in multitudinem quod illi in singulos e multitudine habent The people haue ioyntly the same authoritie ouer the King which the King hath ouer euery seuerall person among the people The French Consistorians write in this manner Subditi Vindiciae contra tyrannos non tenentur regibus obedire siquid aduersùs legem Dei imperent Subiects are not bound to obey Kings if they command any thing contrary to Gods word In which assertion first they Quest 1 make the subiects to be both the plaintiues and the Iudges betweene their King and themselues whether he hath commanded any thing against Gods word or no so that it shall be an easie matter for them at their pleasure to discharge thēselues of all dutie and obedience to the King Secondly they deceiue the simple reader by a fallacie for the ambiguitie lyeth in these words Si quid aduersus legem dei imperant If they cōmand any thing contrary to Gods word For the question is whether they meane onely in that particular thing which is against Gods word the King is not to be obeyed or else that in nothing he is to be obeyed because he hath commanded some one thing repugnant to the law of God In this last sense it is by them vnderstood as appeareth by the words following which are these Vassallus se Domino superiori iuramento diuincit sic Rex ex legis diuinae precepto se imperaturum iurat Vassallus deniquè nisi iusiurandum seruat feedum committit ipsoque iure se omni praerogatiuâ priuat Rex quoque si deum negligat c. ipso iure regnum committit èx facto plerumque amittit Duplex autem foedus in regum inaugurations legimus primum inter De●m regem populum vt esset populus Dei populus secundum vero inter regem populum vt bene obtemperanti benè obtemperaretur The vassall is bound to his Lord by an oath and the King sweareth that hee will rule according to Gods word if the vassal keepeth not his oath he forfeiteth his estate so if the King breake his oath hee forfeiteth his Crowne There is a double couenant at a Kings Coronation the first betweene God on the one side and the King with the people on the other side that the people shall be Gods people the second betweene the King and the people that the people shall be faithfull subiects no longer then the King shal continue a good King Populus si regem non coercet culpâ tenebitur quià correi sunt Licet Isràels si Rex legem Dei Ecclesiamne euertat resistere nèc id Vindicïae contra tyrannos modo verum nifecerit eiusdem criminis tonebitur eandem poenā luet Resistat vero verbo si verbo oppugnabitur vi si vi arte inquàm marte quin et dolo bono si bono cùm nihilintersit vbi iustum bellū Qust 2 susceperis vtrum aperte pugues an èx insidijs It is lawfull for the people to resist the King which impugneth Gods law or his Church and vnles they doe resist him they shall be accessarie as he is principall and incurre the same punishment which is due vnto him If he deale by sword or word they must oppose themselues against him with the same weapons For as much as the warre which in that cause they doe wage against him is iust it maketh no matter whether they vse open warre and hostilitie or secret slight and politie Nemo rex nascitur nemo per se rex est nemo absqùe populo regnare Vindic●oe contra tyrannos potest populus per sè esse potest c. No man is borne to a kingdome no man is of himselfe à King no man can raigne but by the fauour of the people but the people are absolute Quest 3 of themselues the people is in time before the king therefore all Kings are ordained authorized by the people and in such kingdomes as are haereditarie the child may not succeed his Father vnles he haue the approbation of the people Quùm reges a populo constituantur vniuersus populus rege prior est c Seeing kings are appointed by the people the whole people is aboue the king his authoritie being deriued from them he is vnder them as Ioseph was vnder Putifer Daniel vnder Nabuchadnazer The king is but a seruāt to the cōmonwealth as a shipmaster to the honour of the ship Whatsoeuer accrueth to the king by wars or by his Exchequor he must be accountable for it to the people as a Merchants factour is to his Mr Let the people forsake their king he wil be a contēptible person in the eyes of all men when they shall put him from his dominion ouer men he will be glad to be some paedanticall fellow and to vse his paedagogical authoritie ouer boyes As for our English Consistorians they haue these words T. C. lib 2. pag. 15. 7. T. C. lib. 2. pag. 165. Admonit 2. No ciuil Magistrate hath preheminence by ordinary authoritie to determine of Church causes
And no ciuil magistrate in Councels assemblies for Church causes can be chief moderatour Iudge or gouernour And no ciuil magistrate hath such authoritie as that without his consent it should not be lawful for Ecclesiasticall persons to make any Church orders or ceremonies For as much therfore as God hath established kingdomes but a presbytery and a kingdome cannot both stand together because one standing the other falleth They are enemies not onely to Gods ordinance but also to the state of Kings which goe about to establish this Eldership in a kingdome Of Diocesan Bishops MAister Iacob in his Booke of reformation obiecteth against the state of Bishops and Cathedrall Churches that of right there are no Diocesan but onely parochiall Bishops that the authoritie iurisdiction and rites of a Bishop are no other then belongeth to all parsons of parish Churches and consequently that euery parson is a Bishop That there is no visible Church ministeriall besides the parish Churches and that they as depending vpon no other nor subiect to any other nor parts or members of any other haue absolute authoritie and power as wel of gouernment as of teaching within themselues and so consequently there are no cathederal Churches And as one absurditie being granted a thousand will followe so vpon these proemises which without proofe he taketh for granted he inferreth these fiue conclusions to the slander of our state as absord as the proemises were That the case standing thus 1. Our Bishops be no Christians for saith he euery Christian is a pastour or one of the people of the people they denye themselues to be and pastours they are not 2. Being not lawfull Diocesan Bishops much lesse may they be Lord Bishops 3. Hauing no lawfull authoritie nor calling their selues they cannot conferre Ecclesiasticall orders and lay handes vpon others and so consequently our ministers by them ordered haue no lawefull ministerie 4. That by their meanes wee are defrauded of a mayne point of our ordinarie meanes of saluation which is the true Ecclesiesticall discipline 5. That in our state Christ is robbed and spoiled of some parts of his kingly and propheticall office his kingly office being to appoint vs and his prophetical office being to teach vs solely of himselfe the true Ecclesiasticall gouernmēt which our Bishops take from him and ascribe vnto men altering that discipline and gouernment which he alone as king hath appointed and as a Prophet hath taught in his holy word which cōclusions because they are inferred vpō false groūds the grounds being shaken the conclusions will fall of themselues Therefore let vs come to the examination of these grounds to shewe how weake and vnsufficient a foundation they be to build vpon He impugneth the Church state of Bishops first by shew of argument secondly by his own idle conceits vaine coniectures and imaginations He maketh shew of two arguments the first is this that the state of Bishops is a breach of the 2. commandement and by a consequent idolatrie For in this cōmandement Thou shalt not make to thy selfe any grauen image thou shalt not bow down to it nor worship it saith he are forbidden all meanes being humane inuentiōs wherby men would giue honour to the true God But one of these meanes of diuine worship being an humane inuention he saith to be the state of Bishops our Diocesan prouincial Churches vsing gouernment with the ministeries offices proper to them For answer to which argument I denie the MINOR proposition which consisteth of 2. parts meanes of diuine worship humane inuention And because he bringeth no proofe of his MINOR being the subiect of his disputation which all opponents ought to doe I will disproue it and each part of it And first Diocesan prouinciall Churches vsing gouernment and their ministeries which are of Archbishops Bishops were neuer intended by the founders of them nor vsed by the officers ministers of them nor held by the defendours maintainers of them nor conceiued by men of vnderstanding to be any meanes of diuine worship but of gouernment God can be and is worshipped without these and was worshipped as sincerely as now hee is when they were not but the Ecclesissticall state vnder a kingdome cannot be peaceably gouerned without these God is worshipped alike in Geneua and in England though this gouernment and these offices are not in Geneua which are in England And God is worshipped as sincerely and as fully and amplely in our parish Churches as in our cathederal churches and by ordinarie pastors as by Bishops so that their ministeries and high callings doe not afforde them any greater or other meanes to worship God then they had when they were first admitted to be priuate ministers But their places and high callings do strengthen and arme them with authoritie for the better gouerning of the churches which are committed to them wheras being but priuate ministers they had no such charge of gouernment These things therefore are not morall or doctrinall therefore belong not vnto worship but politicall and therefore belong vnto gouernment And according to the course of the holy Bible that which is politicall that which is morall being of sundrie natures are to be distinguished the one from the other God in his word established 3. lawes among his people one politicall which did bind the Iewes to the obseruation of it but it was not imposed vpon other nations that they should be bound to receiue it further then that it might stand with the peace and good of the state The other ceremoniall which was to abide in force till the cōming of our Sauiour and by his death to be abolished so that now ceremonies vnder the Gospell doe cease excepting those only which serue not for worship but decensie comlinesse and good order and so the primitiue Church did in the dayes of the Apostles and the Church of Geneua now doth deuise ceremonies witnes their owne Booke of Lawes and that all 1. Cor. 11. Churches may doe the like witnes Caluin Beza Vrsinus their owne Doctors The third morall which containeth rules of Gods worship which was from the beginning and must continue as a patterne of holines to the ende and bindeth all to the obseruation of it But this is no part of that lawe and all these three Lawes differ in nature one from the other Secondly that such Churches and Church offices are not humane inuentions I proue by euident demonstration For the first Church ministeriall that euer was had ordination from God which was the Church of the Iewes vnder Aaron and his successours and that Church was both Diocesan and prouinciall and also nationall hauing all rites and iurisdiction which a Diocesan or prouinciall or nationall church euer had or coulde haue Also vnder the Gospell Saint Paul by warrant from the holy Ghost appointed Timothy a prouinciall Bishop of Ephesus hauing many Bishops vnder him and Titus a nationall Bishop ouer all the kingdome of
Crete hauing many Churches and Bishops vnder him witnesse Tit. 1. 5. 1 Tim. 1. 3 Eeseb hist l. 3. c. 4. not onely the Scriptures but also Eusebius his wordes being these Timotheus sanè primus Ephesinae paraechiae sicut Titus Cretensium Ecclesiarum Episcopatum sortitus scribitur Timothy was the first Bishop of the whole praecinct of Ephesus in as ample manner as Titus of all the Churches of Creete Thus haue I freed our Church Gouernment vnder Diocesan and Prouinciall Bishops from that slanderous imputation of idolatry seeing their institution is of God and no way opposite to his commandement In his second argument he defineth that onely to be a visible Church which is indued with outward spirituall gouernment And so concludeth that there can be no Diocesan or Prouinciall or Nationall Church nor by a consequent any such Bishop but onely parish Churches and by the like consequent parish Bishops The reason of this sequell he produceth onely this Because if there might be such Diocesan or Prouinciall or Nationall Churches ministeriall or indued with Church gouernment then also would it follow that there might be a Catholike or vniuersall Church visible ministeriall and so by a consequent the Papists might lawfully inforce a Catholike gouernment and so establish the Papacie againe To the sequell of which sequell I answer it is no good consequence that it being granted one may be a Bishop ouer one Diocesse Prouince or Nation therefore one may bee a Bishoppe ouer the world For first one Bishoppe cannot gouerne the whole worlde consisting of manie Kingdomes Oligarchies and Democraticall states and subiect to seuerall Princes and temporall gouernours as he can one Diocesse Prouince or Nation subiect to one secular Prince And secondly we haue no example of any vniuersall Bishoppe that euer was since the beginning of the world not the Pope himselfe which chalengeth that title For the east part of the world which is the Greeke Church was neuer yet subiect vnto him neither could be induced to vse the same rites ceremonies leitourgie which he vseth But of prouinciall and nationall Bishops wee haue examples out of the Scriptures the high Priestes among the Iewes were so ordained of God that office not only ceremoniall but also politicall which office so farre as it was politicall might as well continew and be executed in the same Temple by Saint Iames the first Archbishop of Ierusalem vnder the Gospel as it was by the high Priests vnder the Law that which was ceremoniall being abolished euen as the obseruation of the Sabaoth beeing partly ceremoniall partly morall the ceremony being out of date that which is morall doth abide Our Sauiour in the Gospel reformed the Temple but he did not plucke it downe to shew that it Ioh. 2. 15. might continue still being lawfully vsed Hauing answered his arguments we will come to his suppositions and bare coniectures which without shew of argument he bringeth in defence of his assertion Hee distinguisheth Bishops into sixe sorts two lawfull a parishionall Bishop or ordinary Pastour and a Diocesan titular Bishop who hath a bare title aboue others but no Episcopall iurisdiction at all these two sortes it pleaseth him to allow A Diocesan ruling Bishop which hath more power than Parsons of parish Churches yet not sole power to rule in his Diocesse a Diocesan Lord Bishop ' which ruleth by his sole authoritie a Patriarke and a Pope which foure sorts he condemneth as repugnant to the lawes of the Scriptures To speake therefore of the first which is but a Parson of a parish what example can he alledge to proue that euer there was or place of Scripture to proue that there ought to be such a Bishop His bare opinion without proofe can be no satisfaction to perswade others howsoeuer in his owne conceit he may please himselfe He alledgeth that all Bishops mentioned in the new Testament and in the Ecclesiasticall writers which were within 200. yeares after our Sauiour Christ were such Bishops But that is his owne assertion without proofe neither doth hee instance in any author which doth affirme the same To disproue him besides that neither parish Churches nor parishes were erected or instituted vntill 260. yeares after our Sauiour Christ in the Platina dvitis pontiofi●um Charion Monarch 4. daies of Dionysius Bishoppe of Rome and that they had their institution not from God but from the Pope whereas wee haue examples of Diocesan Churches out of Gods word as before I haue proued that all the Bishoppes mentioned in Ecclesiasticall writers within 200. yeares after our Sauiour Christ were not parish Bishops wee haue for instance Iulian the tenth Bishop of Alexandria in the yeare of our Lord 181. which was Bishop of many Churches For Eusebius Euseb hist l. ● c. 9. writeth Alexandrinarum Ecclesiarum Episcopatum accepit he tooke vpon him the Bishopricke of the Churches of Alexandria And againe Eusebius writeth of a Bishop which was set ouer many Bishops long before that time in the daies of Saint Iohn the Euangelist and by the appointment of St. Iohn himselfe His words are these Post mortuo tyranno quùm Easeb hist l. 3. c. ●0 ex insu●â Pathmo Ephesum reuersus esset abijt etiam rogatus ad vicina gentium loca vt partim constitueret Episcopos partim totas Ecclesias componeret partim clerum ex his quos spiritus sanctus indica●a● sorte deligeret Quùm ergò ad ciuitatem quandam haud procul dissitam cuiui etiam nomen nonnulli dicunt venisset verso ad cum vultu qui supèr cunctos Episcopos erat constitutus adolescentem corpore valido facie eleganti animoque feruenti conspicatus hunc inquit tibi summo studio testibus Christo Ecclesiâ commendo When the Tyran meaning Domitian was dead hee returned out of Pathmos to Ephesus at the request of others he visited the places bordering there vpon that he might ordaine Bishops constitute Churches and elect clergy men by lots whom the holy Goost had assigned And comming to a Citie not farre of which by many other writers is expressy named hee cast his eye vpon that Bishop which was set ouer all the rest and committed to his tuition a young Gentleman proper in body and faire in face youthfull in courage saying I doe earnestly commend vnto you this young man witnesses Christ and his Church Such pregnant examples all making against him and none for him that ye may know what motiue hath induced him to write that all Bishoppes within 200. yeares mentioned in Eusebius were but parish Bishops surely he suffered himselfe willingly to be deceiued by the fallacye called fallacia figurae dictionis For Eusebius saith he sheweth that the Churches of most famous Cities were but parishes onely as the parish of Ierusalem the parish of Ephesus of Alexandria Assert 2. Euseb hist l. 3 c. 11. l. 3. c. 28. l. 2. c. 13. l. 4. c. 11. c. 22. Hierapolis c.
the Apostles in other places and so continued by succession from them vntill these daies vnlesse when their succession was interrupted by warres or schisme or persecution But to come to a Diocesan Lord Bishop ruling by his sole power which is indeed the chiefe matter now in question Such a Bishop saith hee seemeth not to haue beene established in Ambrose Ierom and Augustines time It may be it seemeth not so to Maister Iacob but it seemed so to Zozomene that Saint Ambrose himselfe did rule like a Lord Bishoppe Sozom. l. 7. ca. 24. by his sole authority when meeting the Emperour Theodosius as hee went to Church without any consent or consultation had with other Priests on a suddaine took him by the gowne in the sight of the people interdicted him both from the holy communion the Church for the offence he had committed and the Emperour obeyed his authority His wordes are these Imperator quum Mediolanum venisset ad Ecclesiam processit vt oraret Sed quùm ad ostium iam pernenisset occurrit et Ambrosius eius ciuitatis Episcopus apprehensâ illius purpû-â in prae●entiâ populi siste gradum inquit homini enim ob peccata prophano manus innoxio sanguine comaculatas habēti fa● non est antequā poenitentiā egerit vel sacrum ingredi solium vel ad diuinorū mysteriorum communionem admitti Imperator libertatem sacerdotis admiratu● cogitationibus conscientiam accusantibus regressus est poenitentia compunctus The Emperour when he came to Millanie went towards the church to pray whē he was but at the doore Ambrose the Bishop of that citie ran to him caught him by his purple robe in the presence of the people cōmanded him to stay there shewing that it was not permitted him hauing defiled his hands with innocent blood to goe into the Church nor to be partaker of the Sacrament before he had shewed himselfe penitent The Emperour meruailed at the great spirit of the Bishop his conscience pricked him vpon his remorse hee went backe and repented And afterward more plainly he saith Ambrosius Imperatorem insimulans vt consentaneum est ab Ecclesiâ arcuit à communione seclusit Ambrose laying to the Emperour his charge his crime which he committed as it did behooue him thrust him out of the Church secluded him from the communion In this Story that action is ascribed solely vnto the Bishop no mention is made of any other whose consent was required Though soone after we doubt not saith Maister Iacob it tooke place in the Church Therefore by his owne confession the office of Lord Bishop ruling by his sole authoritie is of great antiquitie and therefore to be preferred before the Eldership which is but a nouelty and neuer preuailed vntill our age and that but in some few Churches And that I may speake something for the iustification of Bishoppes ruling by their sole authority Timothy and Titus were such Bishops Maister Iacob replieth two manner of waies First he saith the Apostles did not ordeine Ministers nor censure offenders by their sole authority much lesse then Timothy and Titus which were inferiour to the Apostles For answer to his reply which consisteth of nothing but manifest vntruthes I do instance in S. Peter which by his sole authority censured Ananias Suphira when they lied to the holy Ghost smiting them with present death St. Paul which alone censured Elymas the sorcerer whē he smote him Acts. 5. Act. 13. 11 with blindnes for seeking to peruert the deputy frō the faith And both these censures were then in the place of excommunicatiō Vide Bucerum dè clauibus 1. Cor. 16. 22. anathema marannatha Politiae Iudaicae c. 2. which is now the ordinarie censure of the church And besides that Saint Paule by his sole authoritie excommunicated in general all that loued not the Lord Iesus euen vnder the time of nature Henoch as Cornelius Ber●ram writeth in his booke Printed at Geneua and allowed of by that church did alone anathema illud solenne suoe aetatis hominibus proponere quod extat Iudae ver 14 15. pronounce that solemne sentence of excommunication against the men of his time of which mention is made in S. Iude ver 14. 15. Behold the Lord commeth with thousands of his Saints to giue iudgement c. And so did Saint Ambrose by their examples And as for making Ministers our Bishops doe not conferre orders alone but assisted with other ministers which ioyne with them in prayer imposition of hands Yet still the chiefest authoritie resteth in Bishops as S. Paule writeth to Titus For this cause I left thee in Creete that thou shouldest ordaine Elders in euery citie And to Timothy Tit 1 5. lay hands sodainly on no man by which words it appeareth that ordination imposition of hands belong to the Bishops 1. Tit 5. 22. principally and to the inferiour Ministers but as assistants to the Bishop But that it belonged to the same men to censure offenders rule by their sole authoritie the places of Scripture doe make it so plaine that ir may not be denied Rebuke 1. Tim ● v. 1. 9. 11. 17. 19. 21. not an Elder but exhort him as a Father Let not a widdow be taken into the number vnder 60 yeares old Refuse the yonger widdowes The elders that rule wel let thē be had in doble honor Obserue these things without preferring one before another doe nothing partially Receiue no accusatiō against an elder but vnder 2. or 3 witnesses Secondly he saith that if these things were granted that Timothy Titus ruled by their sole anthoritie it would not follow that therefore our Bishops might do the like his reason is this For saith he they are not to be reckoned in the catalogue of Bishops neither were they properly called Bishops because they were not affixed to certaine places but often remoued to other churches as the Apostles did Which reason I refute by manifest text for as much as Timothy was affixed to Ephesus as his proper charge and so Titus to Creete as to his peculiar place witnesseth the Apostle I besougbt thee to abide still in Ephesus For this cause haue I left 1. Tim. 1. 3. Tit. 1. 5. thee in Creete that thou shouldest continue there to redresse the things that remaine But what then though they afterward remoued and were called to other places so are our Bishops also and priuate pastours oftentimes called from one congregation to another I cannot deny but the cannon Lawe hath determined that Bishops shal not remoue from one Bishopricke to another without some vrgent cause as when they are required by another Church their gifts beeing thought fitter for a greater charge and the lawe is grounded vpon the decrees of the first generall councell of Nice which so concludeth Episcopus Presbyter aut diaconus non aebet transferri ab vnâ ciuitate ad a●iam quia id est contrà regulas
34. 17. Iosua 22. 13. Numb 26. 63. 64. 2. Chron 13. Iosua 6. 1. Pet 23. 4. Phinees the Sonne of Eleazar the Bishoppe was a Captaine against the Midianites and Eleazar his selfe ioyntly with Moses diuided the spoyles among the Souldiers Eleazar with Iosua diuided the land of promise among the Tribes Phineas the Bishop was sent Ambassador to proclaime warre against Gad Ruben and halfe Manasses Moses and Eleazar numbred the people in the plaine of Moab and Moses and Aaron in the wildernes of Sina The Priests and Leuites sounded their Trumpets and bid the battell in the warre of Abias against Ieroboam The Priests ouerthrewe the citie Iericho And the godly King Dauid setting the Kingdome in better order then it was before appointed 6000. Leuites to be Iudges and Magistrates ouer the people Likewise beyond Iordan towardes the West 1700. both to serue God in the place of Leuites and also to serue the King in ciuill offices pertaining to the common wealth and also 2700. he set ouer Ruben Gad and Manasses to heare and determine all causes both ecclesiasticall and ciuill concerning God in the Church and the King in the common wealth The Kings were annointed and confirmed in their kingdomes by the hands of the Bishops ecclesiasticall persons 1. Sam 10. 1. Sam 16. 1. Reg 1. So Samuel annointed Saule Dauid Sadoc annointed Solomon when Adoniah had proclaimed himselfe King by help of Abiathar the Priest Nathan the Prophet said to Dauid me thy seruant Sadoc the Priest haue they not called nor Benoiah the son of Ichoiada Then Dauid said Call me Sadoch the Priest and Nathan the Prophet and let them annoint and proclaime Solomon Ier 26. Exod 32. King Ieremy was condemned to death by the Priests and the Prophets The Leuites by the commandement of Moses slewe with the sword 3000. that committed idolatry It was commanded by God that when they went to warre Ex 32. Deut 20. Deut 21. 19. 1. Sam. 15 the Priests should go before them exhort them to be couragious and valiant That if there were inquisition after murther the Priests should come forth and by their word the cause should be tryed Samuel valiantly slewe Agag the King of the Amalakites whom Saule the King for foolish pittie could not find in his heart to smite Godly Iosephat in his reformation of the Church and common 2. Chron wealth appointed Iudges in euey citie throughout the land as it appeareth verse 5. And what kinde of men these Iudges were it appeareth in the 8. verse following In Ierusalem as also in other cities he appointed Iuges out of the Princes of euery family and the Priests and Leuites which were to heare both ciuil and Ecclesiastical causes and so doth Tremelius expound it according to the truth of the Hebrew text and at Ierusalem which was the chamber of the Kingdome there was established by him the highest bench of iustice vnto which as vnto the highest court it was lawfull to appeale from all inferiour Courts and Iudges euen as it is now with the Kings Bench and the high commission Court at London And among these Iudges who were to take place before other it is explaned in the 11. verse of that chapter namely in ecclesiasticall causes ecclesiasticall men in temporall causes temporal men but so that in euery ciuil court of Iustice there should be some Priests and Leuites in Commission Moreouer the Lord saith If there arise a matter too hard for thee in iudgement betweene blood and blood plea and plea plague Deut 17. 8. and plague in the matters of controuersie within thy gates then shalt thou arise and goe vnto the place which the Lord thy God shal choose and thou shalt come to the Priests of the Leuites and to the Iudge that shal be in those dayes and aske and they shal shew thee the sentence of iudgement thou shalt doe according to the thing which they of that place which the Lord hath chosen shal shewe thee c. and that man which wil doe presumptuously not hearkening to the Priest which standeth before the Lord thy God to minister there and the Iudge that man shal dye and thou shalt take eway euill from Israel so all the people shal heare and feare and doe no more presumptuously As for Ezra the Priest he had authoritie from Artaxerxes the King of Persia to order all matters whatsoeuer spiritual Ezra 7. and temporall concerning the returne of the people out of captiuitie he ordered both the Princes and the people Priests and Leuites he appointed al the Iudges in the land that whosoeuer would not doe according to the Lawe of God and the Kings Lawe should haue iudgement without delay whether it were vnto death or banishment or confiscation of goods or imprisonment And there was by Ezra set down the whole Ezra 8. platforme of the ciuill estate of the common wealth Againe he gathered together the Princes and all the Clergy proclaimed a fast humbled them before God that hee would guide them in their iourney beeing ashamed to aske of Artaxerxes an Army of horsemen to helpe them because he had saide before that their trust was in God alone In the 10 Chapter hee causeth all as well temporall as spirituall to sweare that they would put away their strange wiues caused a proclamation to goe out through Iuda and Ierusalem to assemble in Ierusalem within three dayes in paine of confiscation of their goods How afterward the Maccabes being Gods seruants held both the Priesthood and the Kingdome among the Iewes being Gods people and that without impeachmenr the learned know very well and that they continued both high Priests and also Kings vntil the land was conquered by the Romans and the ciuill gouernment committed vnto the family of the Herods vntil the comming of our Sauiour Christ who translated both the kingdome and the Priesthood of right vnto himselfe And whereas some men doe obiect against these examples Ioh. 18. by me alledged for confirmation of spirituall mens authoritie in temporal causes among Gods people That when our Sauiour Christ was to bee arrayned they brought him from the high Priest to the iudgement seate of Pilate a temporall Iudge and saide to Pilate verse 31. It is not lawful for vs to put any man to death I answere first the Priest in particular did not say these wordes It is not lawfull for vs to put any man to death but the Iewes in generall not to the preiudice of Priests onely but of the whole nation of the Iewes Secondly they speake not these wordes as if the Iewes had of right from God no authoritie to put mē to death For Pilate himself doth confesse that they had right in themselues where he saith Take him and iudge him according to your owne lawe But these wordes are to be vnderstood that according to the Lawes of Herod a stranger and of the Romans which made them tributary and by
commended onely to the Apostles but to all men So that if the title of Lord belong not to the Apostles neither doth it belong vnto ony other because these wordes doe indifferently concerne all The second question is whether in these wordes of our Sauiour any mention is made concerning the title of Lord or no Surely whosoeuer shall say that the title of Lord is here forbidden hee hath as litle iudgement in the Greeke tongue as the man in the Gospell which was not able to discerne men from trees For the Greeke which is authenticall because it was written by the holy Ghost hath no such words as gracious Lords but euergetai bountifull or benefactors or doers of good they which bare rule ouer them are called well doers but yee shall not be so There cannot be one place of Scripture alledged betweene the first of Genesis and the last of The Apocalips to proue that Gods Ministers may not be called Lords but some places may bee alledged to proue that they are Lords Our Sauiour his selfe doth accept of that titile Ioh 3 2. of Lord giuen him by Nicod●mus when hee called him Rabbi that is my Lord. For Rabbi as Pagnin sheweth in his Lexicon signifieth Magistrum honorabilem inclytum ob multiplices quibus po●let dignitates a Maister an honourable Ioh. 13. 13. person a man that is eminent by reason of his manifold dignities and places of honour which he holdeth And in another place he saith the name Kurios Lord doth of right belong vnto him Vmeis phoneite me o didascales caio Kurios cai calos legete eimigar You call me Doctor and Lord and ye say wel for so I am Furthermore Saint Paule and Silas accepted of the same ●itle of Curios Lord when it was giuen them by the keeper of the prison when hee fell downe before them and saide Kur●oi Lords what must I doe to be saued to whom they Act. 16. 30 answered beleeue in the Lord Iesus and thou shalt be saued And a greater title then Lord is giuen to Gods Ministers in his owne word they are called Gods For that of the Prophet Psal 82. 6. Ioh 10. 33. God standeth in the assemblie of Gods and I haue saide ye are Gods meaning of Princes and Iudges our Sauiour his selfe expoundeth of Ministers For when the Iewes saide to him For thy good worke wee stone thee not but for blasphemie and that thou being a man makest thy selfe God Iesus answered them Is it not written in your Lawe I saide yee are Gods if hee call them Gods vnto whom the word of God is giuen and the Scripture cannot be broken say yee of him whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world thou blasphemest because I sayd I am the Sonne of God You see how in the whole course of the Scripture the Minister and the Magistrate goe together both of them are Gods annointed both called Gods because they represent the person of God vpon earth both Lords because they be the deputies and Leiftenants of him that is the Lord of Lords to the ciuill Magistrate is especially committed the temporall sword to the Minister the dispensation of the word And you see here the reason plainly expressed why our Sauiour calleth Ministers Gods because vnto them the word of God was giuen and the same word which was committed to the ministers vnder the law is cōmitted more abundantly to the ministers of the Gospel and must continue with them to the worldes end The king is called Poimen shepheard so is the minister in the originall tongues pascere Psal 2. regere to feede and to gouerne is all one And that the English translation is corrupt where it hath ye shall not be called gratious Lords it appeareth not onely by the originall but also by the analogy of faith because according to faith Bishops may be Lords as I haue shewed and then much more gratious Lords for else they were gracelesse Lords For this word grace according to the Scriptures is taken actiuely for the loue and fauour of the superiour which hee vouchsafeth the inferiour So the Apostle saith By the grace of God I am 1. Cor. 15. Luk. 1. Luk 2. Luk. 4. Rom. 3. Tit. 3. Eph. 4. 1. Tim. 4. that I am or else passiuely for any good parts gifts in the inferiour by which he is respected of his superiour So the Virgin Mary was ful of grace the child Iesus grew in grace they all meruailed at the wordes of grace which proceeded out of his mouth wee are freely iustified through his grace if of grace then not of works we are saued by grace through faith To euery one of vs is giuen grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Do not neglect the grace which is conferred on thee by imposition of hands Let euery man 1. Pet 4. Eph. 2. as hee hath receiued grace minister the same one to another Thirdly that wee may come to the true exposition of these wordes There arose a controuersie among them who should seeme to be the greatest c. In which story are two things to be obserued their example of ambition which did striue for superiority and our Sauiour his doctrine of humility teaching that such ambition is found among the Gentiles and ought not to bee among Christians The Kings of the Nations saith hee reigne ouer them that is ouer the Nations which are vnder them and that by oppression as Saint Chrysostome and Musculus haue ezpounded it not according to iustice as Gods word willeth them to doe but after their own sensuall lusts and fleshly desires and they are called euergetai doers of good as the Ptolomes King of Aegypt two of them did sername their own selues albeit they were not doers of good but of euill and oppressors of their subiect Cōcerning the applicatiō of this to christiās he saith you shal not be called so that is you shall not reign as kings but gouerne as subiects not tyrannically but iustly you shall not be called doers of good but cacoergoi euill doers and malefactours although ye doe good as the Apostle speaketh Wee are reuiled and yet we blesse wee are persecuted and wee suffer 1. Cor. 4. 12. 13. Act. 10. 38 we are euill spoken of and we pray It is your dutie to doe good as it is said of our Sauiour dielthen euergeton he went about doing good yet you shall not haue the due praise of your well doing as our Sauiour himselfe was called Belzebub a glutton a drunkard Iohn the Baptist an hypocrit all the Apostles seditious men c notwithstanding they were all doers of good So then in this place is not forbidden honour and authority but ambitious seeking of it as when they stroue and vniust vsing of it as the Kings of the Nations did as when he saith The Scribes and Pharisies loue the chiefest places c and to be called Rabb c Maister Beza vpon that
Prophets haue foretolde and especialle Esay where he saith Esa 60. Thine heart shall be astonished and inlarged because the multude of the Sea shall be conuerted vnto thee and the riches of the Gentiles shall come vnto thee the multitude of Camel●s shall couer thee the Dromedaries of Midian and of Ephah they of Sheba shall bring gold and incense and shew forth the praise of the Lord c. Surely the Isles shall wayte for me and the Shippes of Tha●sis as at the beginning that they may bring thy sonnes from farre and their siluer and their gold with them to the name of the Lord and to the holy one of Israel because he hath glorified thee The sonnes of strangers shall build vp thy walls and their Kings shall minister vnto thee c. The Nation of the Kingdome that will not serue thee shall perish and those Nations shall be vtterly destroyed the glory of Lebanon shall come vnto thee the firre the elme the boxe to beautifie the place of my sanctuarie for I will glorifie the place of my feete The sonnes of them that afflicted thee shall come and bowe vnto thee all they that despised thee shall fall downe at the soules of thy feete c Thou shalt sucke the milke of the Gentiles thou shalt sucke the breastes of Kings c. That the Reader may be yet better satisfied Flacius Iilyricus In claui scripturae diuideth glory to be two folde the one of God the other of men and as for the glory of God it cannot be vnderstood in this place but of men onely because hee speaketh onely of the glory of the Ministers of the olde and new Testaments which were onely men Againe hee diuideth the glory of men either into that which is eternall in heauen or temporall vpon the earth but the latter onely is vnderstood because it is the glory of the ministery which ministery is temporall and must cease after this life euen as also then faith and hope must cease onely loue must indure Thirdly he diuideth this temporall glory of men into gloriam fame 1. Cor. 13 bonitatis rei the glory of wordes and of matter and substance the glory of wordes or fame which consisteth in the fame and good report of other men which is chiefly in them which doe glorifie vs and not in our selues which are glorified and magnified but the glory which is not in wordes but substance which indeed is the cause why men doe praise and magnifie vs is our riches honour authority all outward ornaments which stirre vp the outward senses and mens affections to admiration of our persons places and calling is onely to be vnderstood in this place as appeareth by these reasons First the glory of fame is defined by Illyricus and also by Melancthon in his common places to be Approbatio conscientiae nostrae rectè iudicantis al●crum rectè iudicantium The testimony of a good conscience approuing vs that we haue walked sincerely and the report of other men consenting in iudgement with vs that wee haue so walked But in that sense wee cannot be more glorious then Aaron and Moses and the Priestes of the old Testament because they were men of as holy life as wee and walked euery way as sincerely in their calling as wee doe in our vocation and were as pleasing to God and as well approoued of Gods people as we be Secondly it were vnworthy of the Maiesty of the holy Ghost to play the so phister in this place and to vse aequiuocation of the word glory as if by their glory and ours he did not vnderstand one and the same thing for then it were no iust comparison For the things which be compared together must agree in that thing in which they be cōpared therfore being cōpared in glory they must agree in the same glory only they must differ secundū magis minus being compared not in the positiue but in the comparatiue degreee one must be more glorious then another So then the glory of one being outward in pompe and state the glory of the other must also be so but in a greater measure Thirdly if some men should be so ignorant as to say that the glory of our ministery consisteth in this that it is the ministery of the spirit of life of righteousnesse and of that which must remaine I answer that cannot be for then the glory of the ministery of the olde Testament should consist in letters death condemnation c but that is disproued by the text it selfe which sheweth that these things were the subiect of that ministery but the glory consisted in the brightnesse of Moses his face therefore I say spirit life righteousnesse are the subiect of our ministery and not the glory of it the cause why it ought to be so much the more glorious then the old priesthood was Fourthly if we consider the scope and drift of Saint Paul in that place it was to magnifie himselfe and credit his calling that so it might not be brought into contempt as poore and beggarly which were inglorious For saith thee Doe wee beginne to praise our selues Neede we as some other an epistle of commendation Hee answereth that hee needeth not to commend himselfe hee needeth not mans commendation to credite his ministery for as much as his calling is of sufficient credite of it selfe and his owne person credited by it three manner of waies First by the Corinthians themselues to whom hee did minister Secondly by that which was inward in his ministery as spirit life righteousnesse Thirdly by that which was outward and apparent to the eye and that was glorie Now lest any man should obiect out of Saint Chrysostome Theophilactus Aquinas and others that in their interpretation of that place of Saint Paul they affirme that the glory of his ministery was no such glory as was visible and subiect to outward senses I confesse that when Saint Paul wrote that epistle it was not so of fact although it was so of right It could not be then outwardly glorious by reason of the present persecution the ministery of the Gospel being not established by Princes Therefore the Apostle spake not so much of the glory which then was as of that which in the peace and prosperity of the Church should afterward be when the world was conuerted For his words are these P●s o●ch● mallon e diaconia tou pneumatos estai en doxe how shall not the ministration of the spirit bee more glorious where hee speaketh in the future tence as of a thing in due time to be performed and not present And therefore where he speaketh in the present tence in the next verse Pollo mallon perisseu●i e diaconia tes dicaiosunes en doxe much more doth the ministration of righteousnesse exceede in glory as it is a figure called enalloge temporis where one tense is vsed for another as it appeared by the euent which is the best interpreter of all
But all the cunning resteth in the proofe therof to shew that Eusebius did call them parishes Eusebius indeed writeth that Celedion and Agrippa were Bishops in Alexandrinâ paraechia and so that Dionysius in paraechia Corinthiorum Episcopatum tenuit But can Maister Iacob be so simple as to take that weake aduantage of the word and so to interpret that Latine word paraechia parish in the English tongue and to restraine that word in Eusebius to as small limits and confines as a parish is with vs that all the Christians in it might meete together in one place to heare Diuine seruice as with vs for the most part they doe though in some places they cannot doe so Can hee thinke this a good argument that the praecincts of their Bishoprickes were called by this generall name paraechiae bounds or borders containing and including some set compasse of ground and place and this generall name paraechia may also include the small circuit of a parish as well as a larger iurisdiction therefore they were but parish Bishops that the precincts of their Bishoprickes were no larger then the praecincts of a parish and that their Episcopall authoritie was no more then the iurisdiction of euery priuate Pastour In like sort may I as well conclude that paraechia doth also signifie a larger iurisdiction so as it haue confines and a certaine limitation as a Diocesse a Prouince a whole Kingdome therefore that they were Diocesan Prouinciall and Nationall Bishops It is well knowne that Alexandria conteined many Churches as appeareth by Eusebius whom I haue alreadie cited where he saith that Inlian the tenth had Alexandrinarum Ecclesiarum Episcopatum Euseb lib. 5. hist c. 9. the Bishopricke of the Churches of Alexandria And againe where we writeth Primus post Marcum Apostolvm Euangelistam Eeseb hist l 4. ca. 24. Anianus paraechiae Alexandrinae administrationem suscepit Anianus immediately succeeded Marke the Apostle and Euangelist in the gouernment of the paraechia of Alexandria That this parechia was such a limitation as contained in it many Churches it is manifest by the confession of Eusebius where he hath these words that Saint Marke did primuus Ecclesias Alexandriae constituere first institute the Churches of Hist l. 2. c. 16. Alexandria So then if because of the word paraechia Ananias Bishop of Alexandria should be held onely for a parish Bishop by the like absurditie Saint Marke which was an Euangelist and did first conuert the Citizens of Alexandria and instituted many Churches there should not haue authority ouer his owne Churches which his selfe instituted but onely pastorall authority ouer one of them because hee was Alexandrinae Ecclesiae administrator gouernour of the Church of Alexandria as Eusebius writeth And that being an Euangelist and of higher authority which founded many churches should not be Bishoppe ouer as many as Iulian his successour which was no Euangelist nor founded none and therefore was of lesse dignitie and authority because the argument must follow being deriued from the word in the singular number hee did Alexandrinam Ecclesiam administrare gouerne the Church of Alexandria And what is the true grammaticall signification of this Greeke word paroicia of whom paraechia the Latine is deriued no better witnesse then Scapula himselfe which in his Lexicon writeth That it signifieth any iurisdiction which is limitted or any Church bee it great or small or manie Churches His wordes are these paroicia incolam esse item accolarum conuentus accolatus sacraqúe vicinia prò Ecclesiâ vsurpari dicitur Can 18. Concilij Ancyrani And to speake of the Bishoppe without a Bishopricke whom hee calleth Titular Diocesan I would gladly haue for instance when and where there was anie such Bishoppe For proofe thereof hee alleageth nothing else but his owne doubtfull coniecture saying Perhaps Iulian the tenth Bishop of Alexandria was the first of that sort And againe It seemeth to me that this was Ieroms meaning that the first ruling Bishop was Diony sius the thirteenth Bishop of Alexandria And againe At Heracles it is probable there was a period of one sort of Bishops and with Diony sius began another That priority of order of one Bishop ouer a parish seemeth to haue cōtinued from Marcus to Iulianus And againe Nothing letteth vs but that we may thinke c. To which I answer his bare naked coniectures and idle surmises grounded vpon no reason nor authoritie or proofe but onely vpon perhaps it seemeth it is probable nothing letteth but that we may thinke are no warrant to the state to disturbe the peace and discipline of our Church so long established and to ouerthrow the gouernment of Bishops which hath continued among vs since Christian religion was first planted and the land conuerted to the faith And therefore to him may fitly be applied the saying of St. Paul They would be Doctours of the law and vnderstand not what they 1. Tim. 1. 7 speake neither whereof they affirme It is more safe to beleeue with the Church that Iulian the 10. was not the first Bishop which had many Churches vnder him in title and name but that all his nine predecessours Marcus Anianus Albialus Cerdon Pius lustus and the rest had the same praeheminence which hee had and especially Saint Marke being an Euangelist and the first conuerter of that people and founder of those Churches And that in other places Bishoppes were set ouer many Churches before his time because I haue instanced out of Eusebius alreadie in a Bishop in Saint Iohns daies which was suprà cunctes Episcopos constitutus set ouer all the Bishops in that place And it is far safer to beleeue the wordes of Eusebius Alexandrinarum Ecclesiarum Episcopatum accepit suprà omnes Episcopos constitutus est hee was Bishoppe of the Churches of Alexandria and hee was set ouer all the Bishoppes to bee vnderstoode of both title and iurisdiction according to the interpretation vse and practise of all Churches and not of bare title without iurisdiction rather then to subscribe to Maister Iacob his opinion which hath nothing to ground vpon but his owne opinion which hath no better proofe then teste me ipso witnesse my owne selfe And not to passe ouer with silence those foure sorts of Bishoppes whom hee condemneth as vnlawfull Maiority saith he of ruling Bishoppes in the Diocesse seemeth to haue begun with Dionysius the next successour after Heraclas To which I answere as before Quaedam videntur non sunt many things seeme to be otherwise then they are among which this his supposition is one Againe Quoedam videntur paucioribus indoctioribus quaedam pluribus san oribus that may seeme so to the fewest and vnlearnedest but to the most and soundest of iudgement it seemeth otherwise that this maiority of ruling in the Diocesse began in Alexandria not with Dionysius which was the fourteenth but with S. Marke which was the first Bishop of that place and with