Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n bishop_n king_n sir_n 11,216 5 5.9979 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A46343 The judgment and doctrine of the Church of England concerning one special branch of the King's prerogative, viz. in dispencing with the penall laws / asserted by the most reverend father in God, the lords Arch-Bishops Bancroft, Laud and Usher, the right reverend fathers in God, the lords Bishops Sanderson and Cartwright, the reverend doctors, Sir Thomas Ridley L.L.D., Dr. Hevlin, Dr. Barrow, Dr. Sherlock master of the temple, Dr. Hicks, Dr. Nalson and Dr. Puller ; and by the anonymus, author of The harmony of divinity and law : together with the concurring resolutions of our reverend judges, as most consonant and agreeable thereunto ; in a letter from a gentleman of Oxford, to his friend at London. Gentleman of Oxford. 1687 (1687) Wing J1172; ESTC R1415 16,661 48

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE JUDGMENT and DOCTRINE Of the Clergy of the Church of England CONCERNING One special Branch of the King's Prerogative Viz. In dispencing with the Penall Laws Asserted by The most Reverend Fathers in God The Lords arch-Arch-Bishops Bancroft Laud and Vsher The Right Reverend Fathers in God The Lords Bishops Sanderson and Cartwright The Reverend Doctors Sir Thomas Ridley L. L. D. Dr Heylin Dr Barrow Dr Sherlock Master of the Temple Dr Hicks Dr Nalson and Dr Puller And by the ANONYMVS Author of the Harmony of Divinity and Law. Together with the Concurring Resolutions of our Reverend Judges as most Consonant and Agreeable thereunto In a Letter from a Gentleman of Oxford to his Friend at London Licenced the 2d of May 1687. Upon whomsoever God is understood to bestow the Soveraign Authority he must also be understood to bestow upon him all the Jura Majestatis or Essential Rights of Soveraignty according to that Maxim Qui dat esse dat omnia pertinentia ad esse He that gives the Essence gives also the Properties belonging to the Essence Jovian or an Answer to Julian the Apostate chap. 11. London Printed for J. H. and T. S. and are to be had at most Book-sellers in London and Westminster SIR IN one of the late Conferences you were pleased to have with me you seemed to be somewhat disatisfied upon the subject we were discoursing of which was whither the King had by Law such a Supream Power inherent in and inseparably annexed to his Crown as to Dispence with Penal Laws I remember I then told you we could not resolve our selves of this Great Point but by these two wayes 1. To see how far the Judgment of our Church-men appearing in their Doctrines which are for our Edification doth Warrant this Prerogative to be in the King. II. To see how far the Judges Resolutions in declaring their sence of the Law of the Land in this doubtful Question do agree with such their Judgments and Doctrines And as for the First Sir I doubt not but to make it clear past all peradventure that our Reverend Clergy of the Church of England have unanimously concurred in this Point of Doctrine that it doth inseparably belong to the Kingly office to dispence with Penal Laws when ever such a Supremacy of Power shall be thought necessary to be exerted for the safety of the King and the Good and Ease of his People in general And if I can prove this undeniably to You I hope then that this nice Scruple of yours which by the way I suppose you will allow me to call your tender Conscience will easily be removed and consequently then it may be presumed I shall have less difficulty to Satisfie You in the other Point that this sence of the Law of the Land in the point in Question is no other than what is exactly Correspondent with the Judgment and Doctrine of the Clergy of the Church of England To begin then The Reverend Dean of Worcester in his so deservedly applauded Answer to Julian the Apostate declares that the English Realm is a perfect soveraignty or Empire and that the King of England by the Imperial Laws of it is a Compleat Imperial and Independant Soveraign And he quotes Coke in Cawdrye's Case who saith that by the antient Laws of this Realm England is an absolute Empire and Monarchy and that the King is furnished with plenary and Entire Power Prerogative and Jurisdiction and is supream Governour over all persons within this Realm Now it would be a contradiction to call this an Imperial Crown to acknowledge the King for supream over all Persons and that he is furnished with Plenary and entire Power unless He have all Those Rights which are involved in the very Notion of his Imperial Soveraignty By the Rights of Soveraign saith He I understand Those Prerogatives and Preeminences of Power and Greatness which are involved in the Formal Conception of Soveraignty and are inseparably annexed to the Soveraign He hath no sharers or Co-partners in the Soveraignty None Co-ordinate with him in Government no Equal nor Superiour but only God to whom Alone He is subject All Power and Jurisdiction Spiritual and Temporal is derived and deducted from Him as supream Head of These Churches and Realms There are some Essential Rights of the Crown which the Subjects cannot obtain from their Soveraign by any Grant or prescription without destroying the essential and individual Rights of Monarchy These Rights called the Flowers of the Crown are Regalia Suprema or Summa Jura Imperij regno tuendo servientia inherent to his Royal Function and politick Capacity and serve for the strength and support thereof such are the Rights of making War and Peace of having the last Appeal unto him or his Great Council and supream Court and of making Leagues and of Dispensing with Penal Laws granting pardons and such like Now if the King hath a perfection and fulness of Imperial Power in him as Dr Hicks hath clearly made out and This Power of dispensing with Penal Laws be as it must be or nothing one of those Prerogatives and Pre-eminencies of power and Greatness which are involved in the Formal Conception of Soveraignty Then certainly it is very plain that This is an Essential Right inseparably annexed to our Imperial Soveraign and to go about to deprive him of such an inherent Right it would tend to the disinherison of the King and his Crown This Phrase he saith of the disinherison of the King and the Crown in other Acts of Parliament is called The Destruction of the King's Soveraignty his Crown his Regality and things that tend thereunto things that are openly against the King's Crown in Derogation of this Regality And Sir to convince You that the King hath this Perfection and fulness of Power more especially in matters of Religion in his sacred Person you may please to be informed that that Great Metropolitan of All England Arch-bishop Bancroft when Question was made of what matters the Ecclesiastical judges have cognisance either upon the exposition of the Statutes concerning Tythes or any other thing Ecclesiastical or upon the Statute 1 Eliz. concerning the High Commission or in any other case in which there is not express Authority in Law declared That the King himself may decide it in his Royal Person and that the Judges are but the Delegates of the King and that the King may take what causes he shall please to determine from the Determination of the Judges and may determine them himself And the Archbishop said that this was clear in Divinity that such Authority belongs to the King by the word of God in the Scripture So that Eminent Prelate For as it is well observed by that Learned Knight and Doctor in the Civil Law Sir Thomas Ridley His Majesty by communicating his Authority to the Judges to expound his Laws doth not thereby abdicate the same from himself but that he may
may see what his Opinion is in this matter But before I give you his Words let me beg your favour to hear what the Modest and Holy Writer of his Life Dr Isaac Walton says of that Book from whence I produce them How much the Learned World stands obliged to Him for his Lectures de Conscientia I shall not attempt to declare as being very sensible that the Best Pens must needs fall short in the commendation of them So that I shall only add that they continue unto this day and will do for ever as a Compleat Standard for the Resolution of the most material doubts in Casuistical Divinity And now Sir pray observe what the Bishop says Vpon a Doubt how may that be understood which so commonly is spoken Salus Populi est Suprema Lex the safety of the People is the Supream Law he among other things thus declares There is no sober man will deny that the Safety of the People that is of the whole Commonalty as that word comprehends the King together with the Subjects is the Supream Law but that the Safety of the People that is of the Subjects the King being excluded is the Supream Law there is no man will affirm it unless he be a Fool or an Imposter a Fool if he doth believe what he himself saith and an Imposter if he doth not believe it But if any man will seriously look into the Original of this Aphorism I do believe he will more easily grant that it ought more precisely to be understood of the Safety of the Prince than of the Safety of the Subjects This Saying so tossed up and down in the Mouthes of all Men came to us from the Romans and was then used by them when their Republick did flourish most of all under a Popular State And there is no great Reason that any man should wonder that the People's Safety was the Supream Law with them with whom the People themselves were the Supream Power In the Judgment therefore of those wise Antients who were the first Authors of this Aphorism the Safety of the Supream Power was the Supream Law of the People indeed in a Democracy but of a King in Monarchy But I say it being admitted but not granted that this Aphorism is properly understood of the Safety of the People that is of the Subjects it is nevertheless perversly wrested to the Prejudice of Regal Dignity which even so doth render its Power more Ample and Illustrious in this sence A King that gives Laws and Statutes to his People will not be so bound up by his Laws that it shall not be lawful for him the safety of the Common-wealth being in an apparent danger to provide for the safety of Kingdom and People committed to him by God even against the words of the Law not that it is lawful for Subjects under the pretence of the defence of their Liberty to break all the bonds of Laws and Fidelity and by an intollerable presumption to trample on the Authority of their King but that it is lawful for the Prince in the Preservation of his own and his Subjects Safety to lay aside for a while all strict observance of the Laws and to make use a little of an Arbitrary Right least by too unseasonable and superstitious Reverence of the Laws he may suffer both his own Person and his People that are subject to him and even the Laws themselves to fall into the Power of his Enemies I will close up this Christian Doctrine of our Bishops with one Authority more and that is of our Present Right Reverend Father in God Thomas Lord Bishop of Chester in his Sermon on the 6th of Feb. 1685 6 in the Collegiate Church of Rippon where you will find him thus to inform you and all other good Subjects So that the King may it seems make use of his Prerogative as God does of his Omnipotence upon some extraordinary occasions For as my Lord Hobart well observes The Statute Laws are made to ease him of his Labour not to deprive him of his Power and that he may make a Grant with a Non-obstante to them And indeed the Power of dispensing with particular Laws in some Emergencies is such a Lex Coronae such a Prerogative without which no Kingdom can be well governed but Justice will be turned into Wormwood For there never was yet nor ever will be any human Law framed with such exact Skill and Policy that it might not on some occasion or other be burthensome to the Subject and obstructive to the publick good of the Common-wealth There being particular Cases and Exigencies so infinitely various that 't is impossible for the wit of man to foresee or prevent them And therefore in all Government there must be a Power Paramount to the written Law and we have good reason to bless God that this is lodged but in One and in him whom he hath set over us to be his Vice-gerent by whose Authority they who break the Letter of the Law in pure Zeal and Loyalty to serve the ends of Government and to uphold the Crown on the Right Head that does and ought to wear it may be relieved and pardoned and rewarded too Thus Sir have I given you in short the Sence and Judgment of our Spiritual Guides the Great Fathers of the Church of England in the Point in Question between us I will now discend to men of less degree in the Church but they shall be men of great and eminent Learning sober Understandings and of examplary Piety and Gravity and you shall hear how they All concur in the same Judgment as concerning this Point of Regal Soveraignty The First shall be the Reverend Dr Peter Heylin whose knowledge was extensive as the Earth and who had a parfect familiarity with the present State of all the Countries in the World as the Ingenious Author of his Life informs us and one who is honoured by all true Sons of the Church of England with a due veneration for his Learned and Elabourate Works And He speaks thus He viz. the King hath Authority by his Prerogative Royal to dispence with the Rigor of the Laws and sometimes to pass by a Statute with a Non-obstante The Learned and Judicious Dr Isaac Barrow late Master of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge in his Treatise concerning the Popes Supremacy affirms thus It is indeed a proper Indowment of an absolute Soveraignty immediately and immutably constituted by God with no Terms or Rules limitting it that its will declared in way of Precept Proclamations concerning the Sanction of Laws the Abrogation of them the Dispensation with them should be observed And says he a few Leaves futher The Power of enacting and dispencing with Ecclesiastical Laws touching exteriour Discipline did of old belong to the Emperor And it was reasonable that it should because old Lawss might not conveniently sute with the Present State of things and the publick welfare because new Laws
ever the Practice of Moderation as well as any Discourse thereof were seasonable it may be supposed now when for ought we know the lasting happiness of the Kingdom and Church may depend immediately upon this rare and desirable Temper acknowledged of all most excellent I will conclude all with that Admirable Sentence of Dr Barrow in his forementioned Treatise that Relief of the Oppressed or Clemency to the distressed are noble Flowers in every Soveraign Crown Thus Sir You see how ready I am as far as my Abilities will extend to contribute to the Satisfaction of Your Judgment I shall be as zealous still to go on in so pious a Duty if there be any remaining doubts and Scruples you will make known to SIR Your humble Servant c. FINIS Dr Hick's Jovian chap. 10. Sir Robert Pointz Knight of the Bath his vindication of Monarchy chap. 8. Dr. Hicks ut Sup. 4. Inst p 14. Suprema Jurisdictio potestas Regia et si Princeps velit se seperari non possunt sunt enim ipsa forma et Substantialis Essentia Majestatis ergo manente Rege ab eo abdicari non possunt Cavedo Pract. observ p. 2. decis 40. n. 8. * Stat. of Praemunire 16. R. 2. cap. 5. Dr. Richard Bancroft made Lord Arch-Bishop of Cant. 1604. 12. Co. fo 64. 5. Jac. Ridley's View of the Civil and Ecclesiastical Law dedicated to King James 1. 3d Edition part 4. chap. 1. Sect. 1. Id. part 2. ch 1. sect 7. 1 Pet. 2. 13. Cyprianus Anglicus by Dr Heylin D. D. and Chaplain to Charles the 1st and Charles the 2d 2 part Epist Dedicat. Arch-Bishop Laud against Fisher Printed 1673. Vid Epis dedicat to King Charles 2. by James Tyrr●●l Esq Plutarch in Comparat Flaminij et Philopoemen a Marcian in l. si de re sua de recept arbit vid. et Vlpian in l. ille a quo Sect. Tempestivum D. ad Senat Trebel et in l. Quod autem Sec. Vxori quis D. de donat inter viz. b Hermog in l. si quis Sect. 1. D. deleg 3. c Thom. 112. quest 93. artic 5. a Cynus in l. rescript Cod. de precib Imper offerend Thom. in 1. 2. quest 96. artic 5. ad 3. Aeneas Silvius de Ortu Authoribus Imperii cap. 20. 21. a Justin Junior Imp. in praefatione conseit 3. b Symmach l. 10. Ep. ult c In his Preface and Life by Dr Isaac Walton Bishop Sanderson's Cases of Conscience translated by Robert Codrington Master of Arts Printed 1660. ninth Lecture Sermon preached upon the aniversary solemnity of the happy Inauguration of our dread Soveraign Lord King James 2. by Thomas Cartwright D. D. Dean of Rippon and Chaplain in Ordinary to his Majesty Colt and Glover against the Bishop of Litchfield In the Account of Dr Heylin's Life Dr Sherelock's Case of Resistance chap. 6. Dr Nalson's Common Interest of King People chap. 6. Case of Resistance De jure Uniformitatis Ecclesiasticae by Hugh Davis L. L. B. lib. 3. chap. 15. Chap. 1. Davia's ut sup lib. 2. chap. 6. Dr Puller's Moderation of the Church of England chap. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Eth. l. 5. chap. 14. Est Scriptum Legis angustum inter pretatio diffusa Senec. l. 4. controv 27. The Harmony of Divinity and Law in a discourse about not resisting of Soveraign Princes Townsend's Collect. pag. 234. Co. 2 Inst f. 496. 1. Inst 64. b. Lane. 26. N. Bendl. 117. Sheph. tit Prerog 2 Ro. rep 508. Royallists defence chap. 5. pag. 49. Jovian chap. 12. His Majesties most Gratious Declaration c. Bishop of Chesters Sermon ut sup Jovian ut sup Bishop of Chesters Serm. ut sup Grotius Luke 9. 54. Math. 26. 53. Chap. de Act. Imp. f. 139. 2 Cor. 1. 24. Langbain's Review of the Covenant Printed 1661. Puller's Moderation To the Reader