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A48310 Memoranda : touching the oath ex officio, pretended self-accusation, and canonical purgation together with some notes about the making of some new, and alteration and explanation of some old laws, all most humbly submitted to the consideration of this Parliament / by Edw. Lake ... Lake, Edward, Sir, 1596 or 7-1674. 1662 (1662) Wing L188; ESTC R14261 107,287 162

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Memoranda TOUCHING THE OATH Ex officio Pretended Self-Accusation and Canonical Purgation Together with some NOTES about the making of some New and alteration and explanation of some Old LAWS All most humbly submitted to the consideration of this PARLIAMENT By EDW. LAKE Philo-Monarcho-phil Justitia Reip. Basis LONDON Printed for R. Royston Bookseller to the Kings most Excellent Majesty at the Angel in Ivy-Lane 1662. To the Right Honourable WILLIAM EARL of STRAFFORD Viscount Wentworth Baron Wentworth of Wentworth Woodhouse Newmarch Oversley and Rabye Knight of the most Honourable Order of the GARTER MY LORD SUch hath been the power of Custom for many Ages that the Authors not onely of just Volumes but of small Treatises too have ever been desirous I know not whether I may say Ambitious to dedicate them to some person of eminent quality and condition as it were Clients to their Patrons for the protecting and crediting them Hereby the Authors have oftentimes gained their desires and the Patrons especially when the excellency of such Books did deservedly acquire it addition of honour and fame and also propagated the continuance thereof to all posterity Numerous instances hereof might be given but Mecaenas may be instar omnium which name of a Nobleman hath in a manner monopolized all noble Patrons as Patron 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My Lord I am far from having any such opinion of this small Treatise indeed not deserving that name being in great part but an epitomized Collection and the rest brief Memoranda's or Notes rather to excite others to proceed upon that Subject then to rest on this though if by this or any other Act of mine any accesse of Honour could accrue to your Lordship I hold my self justly obliged humbly to present and tender it But my Lord the full scope of my intention in this Model is to the best of my Judgment which I alwayes submit to better and of my skill and power to contribute something tending to the further happinesse and continuance of Truth and Peace with Justice and Honour in this Church and State now by Gods blessing to whom be all Honour and Praise ex post-liminio as it were freed from Slavery and Tyrannical Oppression and restored to a capacity of their pristine Beauty and Splendour by the most happy Restauration of our most Gracious SOVERAIGN whom God preserve This I am sure as my Heart prompts me to speak is my sole intention which aymes onely at the advancement of the Publick Good and is not tainted with any drachm of private Interest And my Lord knowing you do Patrizare that most honoured Father of yours whose Memory must never perish whose Losse this Church and State have too sadly felt but Quis talia fando c. and that I may say as Tertullian de Resurrectione carnis sayes of the Phoenix raised out of the ashes of his dead Sire Alter idem Justitiae Honoris cultor sincerus maximè as he was that emboldens me to desire your Lordships leave to prefix your Name that this may be as an Accessory to follow its desired Principal And knowing you to be such I cannot but as all that know you as well as I I am confident do wish for the common good that your Lordship were put in statum merendi into the sphere of your proper Activity that the Publick might reap the benefit thereof of and that your Talent might be no longer as it was whilest Rebellious Usurpation caused it and did obicem ponere now removed wrapt up in a Napkin nor your Candle hid under a Bushel So wishes so prayes MY LORD Your Lordships much bounden and most humble Servant EDWARD LAKE Westminster 11. Novemb. 1661. To the READER SOme account may perhaps be expected to be given of this small endeavour touching the passing that Act of clearing the doubt touching Coercive Power in Causes Ecclesiastical wherein is that Proviso that forbids all Ecclesiasticall Judges to tender or administer an Oath to any person Ex Officio or otherwise or Purgation whereby any person may confesse or accuse himself so as to make him or her liable to censure or punishment There were not a few persons unfriends at least to the Discipline of the Church of England that insulted much as is touched hereafter and clamoured of the oppression of the Ecclesiastical Courts that hath been say they all the time before the passing of that Act that took away that Oath It was suitable to their interest to call that oppression When Brutus had murdered Caesar he called him Tyrant Ita enim appellari Caesarem facto ejus expediebat saith Velleius Paterculus Histor lib. 2. From the time of passing that Act till within these few dayes I expected from abler pens some Vindication of the proceedings of Ecclesiasticall Courts as touching such Oath and Canonical Purgation and the lawful and expedient use thereof before that Act but none that I hear of attempting it I looked upon the cause as a Derelict took it up and though by the late iniquity of the times I being too much severall wayes unfurnished for such a Work yet if but to give some satisfaction to indifferent men and to wipe away at least in part causeless calumny and to stir up others to a further prosecution hereof I conceived I might adventure upon this little Modell or Plat-form and perhaps more fitly at this time then another till a more complete Structure may be raised upon this subject if more be needful being so learnedly and fully handled especially by Doctor Cosens sometimes Dean of the Arches and that late glory of our Church Doctor Andrewes late Lord Bishop of Winchester That I should escape from objections and censures too I can scarce suppose upon such a Subject as this is ingrateful to such men as are haeredes ex asse to the ancient opposers of it and are inveighers against it and those that executed it quos laeserint oderint alwayes excepting the Members of both Houses of Parliament out of that number Some too perhaps may dislike my Dedication of it though no Act more free then that as not to some of my own profession or rather to my own most Learned and Pious Diocesan the Reverend Father in God Doctor Robert Sanderson Lord Bishop of Lincoln having relation to him by Office of Trust To him and them I should rather have made my addresse then Dedication and have herein consulted with them had time and convenience served before I had attempted this and not carry Owles to Athens go about to give instruction to them from whom I should rather have received it But as to that most Noble Person to whom this is inscribed though according to his Birth and Education his motion hath alwayes been in an higher Orbe and Contemplation of affaires of greater moment more immediately enabling him to serve his King and Country But they by being somewhat more particularly concerned in a great part of the subject matter hereof therefore by some
that these Oaths Ex officio and Purgation should continue in proceeding at Common Law and not in the Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Courts or Courts Christian as at Common Law by the Laws of the Land they are styled a Title we like well and surely that Nick-name suitable to such debauched and dissolute persons that gave it because in these Courts their unclean crimes were punished and that did commovere bilem though they were punished there onely as before Medicinally to acknowledge their crimes to aske God and the congregation forgivenesse and to take away the evil and scandal and not mulcted or corporally punished by imprisonment or otherwise I say that Nick-name should it be given at all to any court as it ought not it would rather lean to such courts as inflict corporal punishments and mulcts upon such criminous persons by Imprisonment keeping the Bastard children whipping or otherwise corporally punishing them I wish and hope that as both the professions of both Robes sit as sisters under one Crown derive from one and the same head and draw from one and the same Fountain so each knowing their certain bounds and limits of Jurisdiction which if not clearly and explicitely settled I wish and hope will be may proceed christianly charitably and friendly in their several spheres of activity without clashing or the least dissention to Gods glory the good of this Church and Srate and the just distribution of Justice to the benefit and comfort of all the Subjects in His Majesties Dominions Let us all remember that not long since there was a generation of men then too much in power that had an equal tooth against both the Professions would gladly have seen the destruction of both and made too great a progresse in it The noble Professon and Professors of the common Law could then expect little more favour then Polyphemus promised Vlysses that he should be the last that should be devoured And probably enough some of them stirred up some of the lesse-considerable common Lawyers and such as favoured their side too much for in all Professions there is good and bad to be iustrumental in the abolition of the Civil Law and when that was done when the out-works were taken in then to have a bout with the Fort it self They have shewed their Method No Bishop no King But concord and peace it is to be hoped will duly and indissolubly cement these two Professions if amongst our selves we do not ponere obicem and dis-joyne the union Let us never forget St. Pauls good counsel and caution All the Law is fulfilled in one word even in this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self But if ye bite and devour one another take heed ye he not consumed one of another For the Civilians if they have many enemies and but few friends as was said by one that 't is hoped hath no disaffection to that profession or professors of it but rather in a just resentment of their oppression sutable to his birth and noble disposition if so I say they may comfort themselves in this that they were put to the test in the beginning of the Long Parliament when their factious Accusers were sufficiently numerous and virulent and had they been found guilty they had not then escaped punishment severe and infamous enough They could not easily have been highlier justified then that way which made it appear to all the world that that clamorous party through the sides of the Civilians intended to strike at and wound their Superiors and so serve turns and ends and compasse their long-weav'd design If the Civilians do their parts in their Functions uprightly and diligently which their own consciences doubtlesse will prompt them to and the vigilancy of their factious Adversaries over their actions may serve to keep them awake 't is to be hoped they will every way find comfort and encouragement However that peace at the last and the continual Feast in the interim will buoy them up above the greatest waves of envy or malice Good men will be their friends though the contrary be their enemies and one Cato is better then a Theaire And we cannot but be confident that we shall never have cause to say as some said in another case Non nos Resp. sed defuit nobis Respublica We have a gracious KING whom God protect blesse and prolong his dayes Et Spes Ratio studiorum in Caesare He we doubt not will as before him his Royal Father Charles the first King and Martyr and his Grandfather King James of blessed memory look upon us with a favourable eye according as he finds we endeavour faithfully and diligently to serve the Church and State that is to serve him they who faile therein deserve not to be remembred And besides the general His Sacred Majesty hath in particular demonstrated his gracious favour that way by the addition of honour and honourary revenue to the Masters of the Chancery Civilians for the most part an act that if possibly there can be an addition adds to the just obligation of duty service and gratitude which they owe his most excellent Majesty And all due thankfulnesse and honour the same Profession must ever acknowledge and render to the Right Honourable the Earl of Clarendon Lord Chancellor of England for his special favours to that Profession and Professors and for his mediation and being instrumental as none I believe can suppose otherwise in the obtaining that favour and bounty to the Masters of the Chancery and by furthering the continuance of His Majesties gracious inclination towards them We blesse God and His Majesty and his Lordship for it and are I hope and ever shall be most thankful for it and rejoyce and comfort our selves in it and Rumpatur quisquis rumpitur invidia Now as in the Preface I thought fit to subjoyn that little Manuscript touching the Oath ex officio with that Determination touching the same by that glory of our Church the late Lord Bishop Lancelot Andrews Bishop of Winchester A Manuscript treating of the Oath Ex officio said to be Doctor Davenants late Lord Bishop of Sarisbury 1. THat which the Commons House complained of is that the Commissioners Ecclesiastical proceed Ex officio that is say they without a known Accuser 2. And that they cause men to answer upon their oath that which they would have is this 1. That no man should be dealt with but an Accuser should stand forth and that no Oath should be ministred to a man in his own cause That which your Lordships have enjoyned me is to shew my opinion whether the courses complained of be warrantable by the Word of God or no. Two parts there are distinctly to be spoken to the one of proceeding without a known Accuser the other of proceeding by way of Oath I begin with them generally at large and after as they concern Ecclesiastical proceedings 1. The end of all Judgments in all Courts is to remove evil The
also the just privileges of Parliament explicitely have been made known that the Subject might not then have sworn or promised or protested to have maintained and observed them and yet could not possibly know what they were That due care should have been taken that they might have been observed and kept inviolable on all sides neither diminished nor scrued too high and both the Members of the Houses and the People to have had their just rights entire and for this purpose that that Protestation then put in by the The Bishops Protestation Lords Spiritual the Bishops with their Petition to have the force removed that kept them from the Lords House should have been well consider'd on and the right of Protestation in Parliament declared and maintained being a great privilege And whether after a just Protestation unjustly rejected and the Members kept out of the House by force that so protested and petitioned whether the other Members could then have proceeded further in the House In the late Kings time in the beginning of his Reign when the Earl of Arundel was imprisoned in the Tower about his sons marriage of the Duke of Lenox's daughter being of the Bloud Royal without the Kings consent the Lords would do nothing in their House till he was restored in regard he was committed onely for a misdemeanour and neither for Treason Felony nor breach of peace in which cases they then confessed a Member of Parliament in Parliament time might be kept prisoner The King none of the three Estates And the Lords Spiritual being one of the three Estates as 1 Eliz. 3. and elsewhere and the King being none of the three Estates the contrary whereof hath been falsly held but the Head and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons being but Members and further the Lords Spiritual being one of the greatest Estates of the Realm as 8 Eliz. 1. Some doubted whether one of the Estates can destroy another and whether that come not near the contradicting that Axiom that the Parliament cannot be Felo de se whether that concerns not the Lords Temporal and Commons as well as the Lords Spiritual As for His late Majesties assent 't is known how far the prevalent power in both Houses then carried that and other things too to the misery of the Kingdom Who knows not in what condition the King then was forced to flye by reason of the tumults from Westminster to remoter places And as touching that Act of Parliament for their expulsion out of the Lords House it is not to be forgotten that when it was first brought into the Lords House it was rejected and ought not to have been brought in again that Session yet afterwards it was contrary to the order and course of Parliament brought in again when a great part of the Lords were absent if not upon just fears frighted out of the House and it being scarce safe for the King to deny them any thing in that dangerous condition he was then in As also that such Concessions or Acts as then contrary to the Kings free will were wrested from the King were not to be accounted legal or good or valid whereof several instances may be given heretofore of such and amongst the rest one 15 E. 3. the King then yielded to and granted certain Articles pretended at least to have the form of an Act or Statute of Parliament expresly contrary to the Laws of the Realm and his own Prerogative to which he had assented to eschew the dangers which by denying the same were like to follow in the same Parliament it was repealed in these very words following It seemed good to the said Earls Barons and other wise men that since the Statute did not proceed of our good will the same be void and ought not to have the name or strength of a Statute and therefore by their counsel and assent we have decreed the said Statute to be void c. And perhaps it deserves to be thought of how far in this case that Act of 42 E. 3. c. 1. reaches where it is set down that the great Charter should be kept in all points and if any Statute be made to the contrary it shall be holden for none And one especial Law in that Charter is for the preservation of the rights and liberties of the Church whereof this of the Lords Spiritual their liberty of sitting and voting in the Lords House is a known special liberty and privilege and most ancient Proceedings of the House of Commons If we look back to the Long Parliament was it not fit that that House of Commons should have been justly regulated to act no further or otherwise then according to their just power and the Commission and Summons by which they were called which Commission or Writ of Summons is the foundation of all power in Parliaments as it is well expressed by the Lords and Commons assembled at Oxford Declaration of the Treaty p. 15. What fearful exorbitances have been that way the more sad it is to remember the more care ought to be taken to prevent it for the future The House of Commons in former times being desired by the Lords Honse to consult with them de arduis regni negotiis to which the Lords are called and the House of Commons remembring their call and commission ad consentiendū hiis quae tunc ibidem c. as in their Writ of Summons humbly referred it back to the Lords as matters too high for them And it may seem against the honour and gravity of Parliaments or either House as also to the grievance of the Subject for both or either House or the Committees of either of them as in the Long Parliament to trouble themselves with matters of very small or inferiour nature much below them and in cases where the Law hath sufficiently provided remedy and is still in force to be executed by the proper Judges Were it in making new Laws thereabouts that ought to be so but I mean in making orders about the execution of such Laws which properly belong to the ordinary Judges thereof and are usnally executed by them especially touching inferiour matters it look'd then in that Long Parliament as though they would have swallowed up all other courts and made a kind of Justitium in them during the time of their Session such as medling with the appointing of Churchwardens and such like petty matters The late Long Parliament deviated much especially the pretended House of Commons then to omit as being too notoriously deplorable the Iliads of miseries this poor Nation hath thereby undergone besides that horrid one of the murther of our late King of ever blessed memory King Charles the first acted by a pretended House of Commons Was not that then too frequently practised worthy then of reformation that is the judiciary power being in the Lords House and the Commons House having power onely over their own Members in some cases and not having power so
pretended afterwards to excuse him and that he spoke but according to the words in the Statute of 21 H. 8.21 where it is said We are free from any subjection to any mans Laws but onely to such as have been devised made and ordeined within this Realm for the wealth of the same c. which words are intended against the Papal Usurpation imposing Laws upon us The illegal Preface to the Propositions at the Isle of Wight As also if it be thought fitting that that Preface to the Propositions sent by the House to the late King at the Isle of Wight which seem to strike at if not to take away the Kings Negative voice in Parliament expresly contrary to many Acts of Parliament the Kings most known Prerogative and the most known Custom and Law of the Land be declared illegal and derogatory to His Majesties Prerogative and just right Rectifying of translation of some words As also if it shall be thought fitting that the translation of the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Rom. 13.1 to higher powers altered to the supreme powers for so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2.13 is translated whether to the King as supreme The two Houses and Powers inferior many degrees to them have by some been interpreted to be meant by higher powers and strangely hath it been wrested if not exclusive of the King As also if it shall be thought fitting that that expression Illegal Declaration about the time of His Majesties coming over in one of the Declarations or Remonstrances that the Government was by the King Lords and Commons being derogatory to His Majesties Prerogative and Legislative power and the Government being in him radically and but derivatively and subordinately in any others for and under him Therefore to be considered of altered and amended The Printing-press As also if it shall be thought fit that the Presse be carefully looked into that no seditious Books or Pamphlets be vented to poyson the people or to confirm any in their bad principles The want of this care hath grown into a great Seminary of mischief which if nothing but our sad experience of it should make us more wary for the future A body of the Law to be framed As also if it shall be thought fit that according as was begun by the late Lord Chancellor the Lord Viscount St. Albanes which as 't is said King James put him upon a Body of the Laws should be digested and compiled and then by authority of Parliament be ratified Further touching Ecclesiastical matters Ecclesiastical Courts to be Courts of Record The Ecclesiastical Courts proceeding according to His Majesties Ecclesiastical Laws sitting under the same Crown with all other Laws some advise if it shall be thought fit that to all intents and purposes of Law they should be Courts of Record as well as any other Courts Reading the Articles of Religion By the Statute 31 Eliz. c. 12. the Incumbent is to read the Articles of Religion within two moneths after his Induction and 't is said some have not taken Induction at all because they would not read the Articles Had the Statute limited it within that time after Institution it had met with that fallacy Signing with the Cross in Baptism In the form for Private Baptism when the child privately baptised is afterwards brought to the Church to have the Baptism published at the receiving the child then into the Congregation there is no Interrogatory whether in the private Baptisme it had been signed with the sign of the Crosse as commonly if not altogether they are not neither is there any mention then at the publishing of the Baptisme of so signing it And it hath been found that some persons have pretended weaknesse in the Infant when it was not so onely to avoid the signing of it with the Crosse Churching of women privately There being no Law that allowes private Churching of women it is wished it might be alwayes publick in the Church and with a Vail and if within the moneth the woman be not able to come to Church to defer it till the recovery of her health Touching Absolution In Cathedral and Collegiate Churches usually one of the Singing-men though in orders gives the Absolution and the Blessing at the end of Service which some wish might be done by the Bishop if present or Dean or some Dignitary or more eminent person present And that the Anthems and other parts of the Service which are performed singing or in a singing tone may be made more intelligible to all the Auditors who many of them are scandalized by the contrary which might be helped by some small alteration in the composure so that as sometimes was practised and that without any hinderance to the harmony first one of the Singing-men to declare out of what Chapter and Verses or part of the Scripture that Anthem is taken or what Hymn or Spiritual Song it is and then immediately before the singing each Verse with a clear audible voice to read it This would help much but the best way were that the Singing-men and Choristers were taught exactly to sing most articulately clearly and plainly and not to drown the words in their mouths that they cannot be understood but openly and distinctly sound forth every syllable that they might be as well or better understood then when they onely read them And this hath been most commendably done by some expert Artists that way and might by all Mr. John Frost late Westminster and one of the Gentlemen of His Majesties Chappel Royal gave a most clear and most deservedly worthy to be imitated precedent hereof then whom never any man read more plain and clear and yet what he sung was if possible more plain and clear then what he read Touching the Writ De excommunicato capiendo By the Statute for the tryal De Excommunicato capiendo the person excommunicate is to be published in his Parish Church which sometimes the Minister refuses or there is no Minister In which case 't is wished it might serve to have it fixed upon the Church dore upon the Lords day or a copy left at his dwelling house and the forty dayes to commence from that time FINIS A Table of the Particulars contained in the Notes touching alteration of some Laws TOuching Parliament proceedings Page 97 Ordinance of Paerliament ibid. Privilege of Parliament ibid. The Bishops Protestation Page 98 The King none of the three Estates ibid. Proceedings of the House of Commons Page 99 Age of Parliament-men Page 102 Election of Parliament-men Page 103 The great number of Boroughs and Corporations ibid. Touching the manner of proceeding in Parliament Page 104 A competent number of Parliament-men to be at every debate Page 107 The manner how it may be constantly observed ibid. Fees of the Officers of Parliament Page 108 Touching new Laws ibid. Acts of Oblivion c. Page 109 Restitution of some goods where the property is not altered Page 110 Reparation to persons spoyled Page 111 Touching the Long Parliament ibid. The keeping the Records of the Tower Page 113 The Militia ibid. Oaths of Allegeance and Supremacy explained ibid. Robbery the Law to be altered Page 114 Against condemnation upon a single testimony Page 115 Touching Juries Page 116 New Laws to be made upon new accidents Page 117 Making of Eunuchs ibid. Stealing of Winding-sheets ibid. Stealing of men Page 118 Against delayes in Courts ibid. Fees in all Courts ibid. About examination of witnesses in defence ibid. Against the examination of witnesses in the hearing of one another Page 119 Reparation to persons wrong fully accused Page 120 The Act touching the Court of Wards and Tenures to be repeated Page 120 Rates to be set for buying commodities Page 121 About dignity and precedency ibid. Against the Act for limitation of Actions Page 122 Against multiplicity of Statutes upon the same subject ibid. The Clergies Proctors in the House of Commons Page 123 About augmentation of Vicaridges ibid. Against Mensals Page 124 Touching the bounds of Jurisdictions Page 125 The Ordinaries power about distribution of portions ibid. Against concurrence of Jurisdictions ibid. Wills to be transmitted into the several Counties Page 126 Degrees of Marriage prohibited ibid. About the suppression of seditious books Page 127 Spensers Treason ibid. Goodwins book ibid. Bucks book ibid. Sir Edward Cooks writings Page 128 Illegal and seditious Speeches ibid. The illegal Preface to the Propositions at the Isle of Wight Page 129 Rectifying the Translation of some words ibid. Illegal Declarations Page 130 The Printing-press ibid. A body of the Law to be framed ibid. Ecclesiastical Courts to be Courts of Record ibid. Reading the Articles of Religion ibid. Signing with the Cross in Baptism ibid. Churching of women privately Page 131 Touching Absolution ibid. Touching the Writ De excommunicato capiendo Page 132 FINIS