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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A05380 Heauen and earth, religion and policy. Or, The maine difference betweene religion and policy. Written by C.L. Lever, Christopher, fl. 1627. 1608 (1608) STC 15536; ESTC S108517 29,500 128

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Heauen and Earth Religion and Policy OR The maine difference betweene Religion and Policy Written by C. L. Printed by H.B. for Ieffrey Chorlton and are to be sold at his shop at the great North dore of Paules Church 1608. The Contents of the Chapters 1 Of Religion Pag. 1. 2 Of Policie 8. Of their diuers workings 3 In respect of the Cath. Church 16. 4 Of the Clergie 32. 5 Of State 48 6 Of the Soueraigne of State 56 7 Of State Gouernours 66 8 Of Subordinate Gouernors 75 9 Of Honour Military Of Honour Courtly 86 10 Of prosperous Fortune 100. TO THE MOST REVEREND FATHER in God RICHARD by divine prouidence Archbishop of Canterbury Primate and Metropolitane of all England Chancellor of the vniuersity of Oxford and one of his Maiesties most honorable priuie Counsell May it please your Grace I Humbly present you this Tract of Religion and Policy wherin I acknowledge the disproportion betweene the matter and the manner I giue it Yet because it is a seruice of duety it may therefore please your Grace to accept it The reason of my vndertaking it is the duety of Christian conscience which bindeth every man to some profitable performance And because God hath not yet beene pleased to giue me particular place of seruice wherein I might imploy his talent with more aduantage I therefore endeauour my selfe in such trauell wherein God may receiue his part of honour his seruants their parts of profit and my selfe the discharge of Christian duetie all which respects are the lawes restrictions of euery lawfull worke The reason of dedication is the reuerence your Grace doth merit from all them who professe learning In which number though I be the meanest in respect both of Nature and Fortune yet beeing bound with others I like them both declare and direct my selfe to your Grace in my labours of best performance Againe the fitnes of your place with this argument doth challenge the dedication because the execution of your high calling is a continuall exercise of Religion and Religious Policy the weapons and prouident armour whereby both Church and State are secured from vngodly practise the which as your Grace best knoweth hath bin that murthering gun-shot bent against the truth of Religion and the peace of Christian States For these respects I haue both writ and giuen this trauell to your Grace humbly acknowledging my duety and the meanenesse of my deseruing Your Graces In all duty and humble seruice Christopher Leuer To the Reader IT is the common custome to intreate fauour from courteous Readers the custome is not good and therfore I vse it not for if the matter merit or the men bee courteous the sute of fauour will bee easily granted if otherwise it is but a needelesse shame to beg a commendation where it is not And therefore I willingly leaue to euery man the liberty of his iudgement and expose this Tract to general censure Faults escaped are corrected in the last Page Heauen and Earth Religion and Policy OR The maine difference betweene Religion and Policie OF The vndiuided Nature of Religion CHAP. I. THE best Policie is Religion and the best Religion is not politique but simple pure without duplicitie For as the vniting of many persons in one Diuinitie is the highest vnderstanding of Gods Nature so in the seruice of God Religion vnitie is the best demonstration of the truth thereof There is but one way to heauen be-because but one Christ in heauen by whom and by whom onely there is happie passage This holy trauaile is called Religion in whose practise the choice of Gods creatures exercise their gifts of grace the induments of Gods sacred spirit 2 Religion then is the holy exercise of Gods sacred worship whose precise forme is appointed by God in the witnesse of holy Scripture It is an exercise for the pleasure and for continuall practise It is holy because God is the obiect the forme is precise for the singularitie and it is iudged by the Scripture because they are the best and the onely witnesses of the will of God 3 As God is so is Religion one and but one For as pluralitie of Gods so pluralitie of Religions is Idolatrie For God being aboue all in euerie sense of dignitie will haue his seruice speciall and peculiar to himselfe by himselfe appointed and distinguished from all other orders of seruice 4 The diuers names of Religions are but names and not Religions as the diuers names of Gods were not Gods but Idols And this is worthie of note that these fabulous gods of the heathen were all of them in their kinde seruants to the most supreme God the Lord Iehouah The Planets in their Spheres the Elements in their Nature and all heauenly and earthly powers were seruants to the will of God moouing at his pleasure who by their motion influence did faithfully execute their offices wherunto they were assigned 5 For there is a sense of Religion in the Nature of all creatures who though they want instructions wil by their naturall instinct apprehend the generall vnderstanding of a God and according to their discretions frame such seruice and ceremonies as may please that supposed Deitie And from hence doth arise the number of fabulous superstitions and strange Religions from the blind and vnlearned deuotion of men meerely naturall who being taught by the wisdome of Nature there was a God would by a consequence of Reason conclude there must be a Religion a seruing of that God which they not vnderstanding nor able to comprehend without diuiue teaching erred in their blind constructions and so beleeued and taught that for religion which was most irreligious and vngodly 6 Of all the creatures of God only man hath failed in the knowledge of this high mysterie who though his soule be of a substance most diuine and his vnderstanding more apprehensiue then many the rest of Gods creatures yet he and not they hath failed in this weightie performance and they and not he haue obserued the law of Nature which to them is the law of God and the exercise of their Religion The heauens cast their influence vpon earth for the generation of all creatures the Elements performe their assigned offices who though they haue disagreeing Natures the hot and cold the moist and drie interchangeably fighting yet in this seruice of their God they conspire and friendly conioyne and giue both their natures and substances to continue in the world a succession of liuing creatures In like maner the rest of Gods creatures euerie thing in his order and Nature performing the will of God who made them 7 The learning of Nature then can teach vs the necessitie and the vndiuided Nature of Religion For the naturall creatures denie all diuersitie in the order of holy Religion For in all the Creatures of God saue man their Nature is their Religion against which they are not moued but by violence 8 Againe vniformitie in the order of Religion is