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A34064 A discourse upon the form and manner of making, ordaining, and consecrating bishops, priests, and deacons, according to the order of the Church of England by Thomas Comber ... Comber, Thomas, 1645-1699. 1699 (1699) Wing C5464; ESTC R1808 281,164 522

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observable in this Paragraph Secondly What is the lawful Authority to admit Men into holy Orders which we affirm to be only Bishops and here I shall not content my self to prove this by the Statute Law of this Land that no Man can be a lawful Priest or Deacon unless he be ordained by a Bishop (p) Stat. 13. Eliz. cap. 12. §. 1. and Act of Uniformity 14 Car. 2. but further shew this Law is grounded upon holy Scripture and the Canons and Practice of the Universal Church First Our Lord as Supreme Ruler of his Church called and ordained his Apostles (q) Matth. x. 1 2. chap. xxviii 19 20. John xx 21 22 23. and they ordained Deacons Presbyters and Bishops (r) Act. vi 6. xiv 23. 2 Tim. i. 6. but they gave the power of admitting all others only to the Bishops to whom also they only gave Rules to choose Candidates by as was observed before The Canons of the Apostles are express that two or three Bishops are necessary to the Consecrating a Bishop and one to the Ordaining a Priest and Deacon (s) Can. Apostol 1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Bev. T. 1. p. 1. Neither of which as Dionysius observes can be initiated without the Bishops Prayer (t) Dionys Eccles hierar cap. 5. So Firmilianus affirms That the Presidents have the sole power of Baptizing Imposition of Hands and Ordination (u) Firmilian Ep. ad D. Cypr. numb 75. p. 237. which Testimony with others did so convince the learned Daillé the great Patron of Presbytery that he owns Ordination in St. Cyprian 's time was properly the Bishops right (w) Ordinationem Episcopalis juris 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuisse in Cyprianci seculi Ecclesiâ confitemur Daillé de cult Latin relig lib. 2. c. 13. p. 171. So that this confession of so great an Adversary may excuse any further proof for that Age and if it be considered that the Bishops down from the Apostles to Cyprian's days were very Poor and persecuted as well as very Pious it cannot be supposed they should within that period have usurped or monopolized any Authority that was not left them by the Apostles and thus this concession amounts to a grant that the Bishops had the sole right of Ordaining given them by the Apostles Afterwards that Bishops alone did Ordain is so plain it needs no proof And St. Hierom where he warmly attempts to equal Presbyters and Bishops in many things yet even there excepts the power of Ordination as the Bishops sole right (x) Quid facit Episcopus excepta Ordinatione quod Presbyter non facit Hier. ad Evagr. Ep. St. Chrysostom also makes the same exception as to Ordination (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chr. in 1 Tim. §. 11. T. 4. p. 287. And if this had not been the general belief of the Ancient Catholick Church Aerius would not have been reckoned an Heretick by Epiphanius and St. Augustine for denying this difference between a Bishop and a Presbyter (z) Epiphan haer 75. p. 404. Augustin de Haeres haer 53. Tom. vi p. 6. Where Epiphanius notes the Episcopal Order makes Fathers of the Church which the Order of Presbyters cannot do (a) Epiphan ut supra l. 3. T. 1. c. To which also the Ancient Canons agree Those of Ancyra ten years before the Nicene Council forbid both the Chorepiscopi and City Presbyters to Ordain (b) Synod Ancyran can 13. not Bev. T. ● p. 175. In the Council of Sardica those Clerks that were Ordained by Musaeus and Eutychianus who were not Bishops were only admitted to Lay-communion (c) Concil Sardic an 347. can 18 19. Bev. T. 1. p. 505. The like Decree also was made about the Ordinations of Maximus a pretended but no real Bishop that the Persons should be reputed no Clergy-men and all his Acts annulled (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Concil Const 2. can ● Bev. T. 1. p. 91. Soz. lib. 1. cap. 9. So it was determined in a Synod at Alexandria that Ischyras who was ordained by one Colluthus a meer Presbyter should be deprived of that degree to which he had falsly pretended (e) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Synod Alexand. ap Athanas Apol. 2. for say they since Colluthus died but a Presbyter his Ordinations are void (f) Epist Synodal ap Bin. Tom. i. p. 405. So in the Council of Antioch where the Chorepiscopi are forbid to Ordain Balsamon notes Presbyters are not mentioned because it was taken for granted they could not pretend to such a power (g) Balsam in 10 Can. Concil Antioch ap Bev. T. 1. p. 439. The Council of Hispalis degraded a Priest and two Deacons for this only Reason That the Bishop being ill in his Eyes suffered a Priest to say the Prayers over them contrary to the Ecclesiastical Custom and they say the Bishop should have been deprived also had he been alive (h) Concil Hispal 2 Can. 5. An. 619. Bin. T. 2. par 2. pag. 326. Whoever desires to see more instances may consult Baluzius his notes (i) Baluzij not in Capitular Reg. Franc. Tom. 2. p. 1246. where he gives other Examples of Clerks that were un-episcopally ordained who were to be re-ordained or reputed meer Lay-men It was upon this universally owned principle that Bishops only could Ordain that when the Emperors gave Rules for the qualifications of Candidates for holy Orders they directed them only to the Bishops (k) Collat. Authentic Tit. 6. Nov. Just 6. T. 2. p. 2 c. and the General Council of Chalcedon lays the Penalties for all Un-canonical Ordinations only upon the Bishops because they only could be Guilty of these Crimes (l) Concil Chalced. can 2. can 6. Bin. Tom. 2. p. 112. 118. The sixth General Council upon the same ground reckons up Ordinations as those things which peculiarly belong to the Office of a Bishop (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil in Trul. can 37. Bev. Tom. 1. p. 199. So that nothing can be clearer than the Bishops sole Right to Ordain if we consult the Canons or usage of the Church in all former Ages But some object this will deprive divers Foreign Churches where they have no Bishops of a lawful Ministry because their Ministers have no Ordination but by Presbyters To which I shall only say that the first Presbyter who presumed to Ordain had no such power given him and so could not rightly convey that which he never received There is no precedent in Scripture of meer Presbyters Ordaining alone and such Ordinations would have been declared null in the Primitive Ages yea for 1500 year together no such were allowed But the fairest plea is That some of these Churches were forced by dire necessity to this irregularity by the obstinate refusal of the Popish Bishops to ordain any that were for Reformation so that they must either have such a
A DISCOURSE UPON THE FORM and MANNER OF Making Ordaining and Consecrating BISHOPS PRIESTS and DEACONS According to the ORDER OF THE Church of ENGLAND By THOMAS COMBER D. D. Dean of Durham and Chaplain in Ordinary to His MAJESTY LONDON Printed by Samuel Roycroft for Robert Clavell at the Peacock in St. Paul's Church-Yard 1699. TO THE Most Reverend Father in GOD THOMAS Lord Arch-Bishop of CANTERBURY Primate of all ENGLAND And Metropolitan c. May it please your Grace BY the divine Mercy and assistance I have now finished my illustration of our Publick Offices which end with these Forms of Ordination By shewing how agreeable these as well as the rest are to Scripture to pure Antiquity and to the design of this important Duty I have also compared this with the Ordinals of other Churches Ancient and Modern and hope all impartial Judges will own that ours receives great advantage by the comparison But my principal care hath been to help the Candidates for Holy Orders not only to understand but consider the whole compass of their Duty and to persuade them to perform it strictly and exactly Being well assured that nothing will more effectually conduce to the Glory of God the Honour and Establishment of this Church to the growth of saving Knowledge and Piety and the suppression of Heresie Schism and Vice than a learned and devout an exemplary and industrious Clergy And certainly 't is great pity we should not have the best of Men to officiate since we are blest with the most excellent Forms for all Divine Administrations 'T is not possible more care should be taken of this than is here as far as Rules and Offices can go But 't is your Grace and the College of Bishops must give life to the Churches Orders and to my Endeavours Your Grace hath a Right to these Papers because you are the chief Governor in Ordinations under whose Hands most of the Right Reverend the Bishops receive their Character with power to admit others to the inferior Orders Wherefore from your Graces known zeal and exemplary care we cannot but expect such measures shall every where be taken in this Affair that none shall be received into this Holy Function but such as are like to be a lasting Honour to it Our Adversaries on both Hands seem now to despair of their baffled objections against our Forms but fail not to enlarge on the popular Theme of personal reflections upon some defaulters so that if those that are already Ordained and yet offend were reformed and the unqualified kept out for the future our Enemies ill will would want matter to work on and our Sion would be the Joy of the whole Christian World If both Clergy and People could be brought up to an adequate conformity to our incomparable Rules it would immediately be apparent what all these Discourses are intended to prove that there is nothing material to be reformed in our Constitution (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristot Polit. Cavendum ne si graviora inferremus vulnera dum minoribus mederi desideramus Ambr. de offic l. 2. c. 2. And therefore the one thing necessary in our Church whatever some would suggest to the contrary is to live up to our Engagements and to let care be had that our Lives be answerable to our most Holy Profession and our Practices agreeable to our Vows Which I am confident will be sincerely endeavoured by your Grace and that Heaven may prosper you and all our Governors in so just so pious and so laudable a design shall ever be the subject of his Prayers who desires on this and all occasions to approve himself My Lord Your Graces most humble and faithful Servant THO. COMBER Durham Octob. 8th 1699. ERRATA PAg. 19. Marg. at l. 31. r. R.R. expon de p. 22. l. 12. r. Druidten p. 65 l. 22. dele as p. 73. l. 10. r. a truer p. 90. l. 23. r. The person p. 93. l. 17. r. their hair p. 100. r. reverend l. 13. and p. p. Marg. r. praesident p. 104. l. 1. r. desiring them p. 117. l. 8. r. other Synods p. 133. Marg. at l. 21. r. Doctrinae p. 174. l. 11. r. Mission p. 181. l. 7. r. usage that is p. 227. Marg at l. 28. add after lectitabor Hieron p. 231. Title r. consequents p. 229. Marg. at l. 11. r. manu recenti p. 259. after the Title l. 3. r. it is a. p. 280. l. 19. r. he calleth p. 282. l. 11. r. out and coming p. 325. l. 25. r. this salutary p. 330. l. 33. r. Discipline p. 365. l. 32. r. as they ought p. 443. l. 1. r. in his name l 4. r. in my name Marg. l. 5. r. mittentis A DISCOURSE ON THE OFFICES OF ORDINATION CHAP. I. Of the Preface §. 1. IT hath been the constant use of this Church to take care pursuant to St. Paul's Rule (a) 1 Cor. XIV 26. that all her Offices may be done to Edification Which evidently appears here in premising this seasonable and instructing Preface concerning the Kinds and dignity of Holy Orders the solemn manner of being admitted to them and the Qualification of such as are to enter into any of them especially the first being the Gate to all the rest which is so proper an Introduction that we shall after our usual method first set out its several parts and then explain the whole The Analysis of the Preface This Preface shews concerning Holy Orders and Ordination these two Particulars 1st The Opinion and practice of all other regular Churches concerning 1. The distinction of the three Orders It is evident to all men diligently reading Holy Scripture and ancient Authors c. 2. The honour and respect paid to them all Which Offices were evermore had in such reverent estimation 3. The solemn manner of being admitted to them That no man might presume to execute any of the same except he were first called c. 2ly What is required by this Church in that case and therein 1. A general reason is premised And therefore that these orders may be continued and reverently c. 2ly Particular Rules laid down as to 1. All three Orders in respect of the 1. Examination No man shall be accounted or taken to be a lawful c. 2. Solemn Admission And admitted thereunto according to the Form c. 3. Ages of the Persons And none shall be admitted a Deacon except he be c. 2. That of a Deacon concerning 1. His Qualifications And the Bishop knowing either by himself or c. 2. His Admission May at the time appointed in the Canon c. §. 2. It is evident to all men diligently reading Holy Scripture and ancient Authors that from the Apostles time c. Being about to prescribe the several Forms for ordaining Deacons Priests and Bishops we studiously avoid the odious charge of Innovation and therefore appeal to Scripture and Antiquity as our Evidence that these three Orders have been in the Church
from the Apostles time Whereby we make a distinction between these three truly Sacred Orders which were instituted by Christ and his Apostles and alone are retained by our Reformers as necessary for all Ages and those inferior Orders of Subdeacons Acolyths Exorcists Readers c. invented by men in later times and therefore laid aside in this Reformed Church 'T is true these were names of Offices used in some places very early but those who had these Titles had no solemn Ordination at first and were looked on rather as Candidates for than Persons in Holy Orders And therefore Alphonsus a Castro (b) Alf. a Castro adv haeres l. xi tit Ordo with very many other eminent Doctors of the Roman Church cited by the learned Chamier allow not these lesser Orders to be Sacraments nor truly Sacred as not being instituted by Christ (c) Cham. Panstrat l. iv c. 22. p. 212. But as to these three greater Orders our Preface modestly dates their use from the Apostles time for it might have been carried much higher since it is also evident that in the Jewish Oeconomy the first Church setled by a written Divine Law above 3000 years ago three Orders were appointed the High-Priest the Priests and the Levites answering to our Bishops Presbyters and Deacons and being the very Pattern to the Apostles in the institution of these three Christian Orders as divers of the Fathers have observed (d) Et ut sciamus Traditiones Apostolicas sumptas de Veteri Testamento Quod Aaron filii ejus atque Levitae in Templo fuerunt hoc sibi Episcopi Presbyteri atque Diaconi vendicent in Ecclesia Hieron ad Euagr. Ep. 85. T. 2. p. 511. Vide item Clem. Epist ad Corinth pag. 92. I may also add that our Saviour who loved not unnecessary alteration kept as nigh to this Form in his own time as the circumstances would bear for he sustained the place of High-Priest and Bishop by both which names he is called (e) Heb. iv 14. 1 Pet. ii 25. being the supream Ruler of his Church and under him the Apostles were then only as Priests having below them the LXX Disciples like to the Levites and Deacons (f) Luc. x. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in loc Out of whom after the Apostles succeeded their Master in the Government of the Church many were chosen into higher Orders and seven of them were fixed as Deacons in Jerusalem the Mother of all Churches (g) Vid. Chron. Alexand Bibl. Patr. T. 12. p. 60. Epiph. Panar T. 1. haer 20. After our Lord's ascension also Scripture mentions the like number of stated Orders First The Apostles who then held the place of Bishops though they could not be fixed to any one City Secondly The Evangelists who were sent to plant or to water newly converted Churches and these represented the Presbyters to which we may add the Deacons ordained not only in Judea but also among the Gentile Proselytes (h) Phil. i. 1. 1 Tim. iii. 8. as appears from the Title of some Epistles and the Rules given to Timothy about them The only Objection as to the Scripture-Period is about the seemingly promiscuous use of the words Bishop and Presbyter or Elder For which Objection it suffices to note 1st That in those Churches where any of the Apostles lived or commonly resided as Jerusalem and Corinth there St. James and St. Paul for a while kept the Government in their own hands and so long there was no occasion for any more than two Orders under the Apostles in those places viz. Presbyters and Deacons 2ly That in those Cities where few were converted there was no occasion for Presbyters at first and it seems reasonable to think there were no more fixed there than a Bishop and his Deacons which some make to be the case at Philippi that Epistle being directed only to the Bishops and Deacons though others will have Bishops there to signify Presbyters and think Epaphroditus his Title left out in the direction because he carried the Epistle (i) Cum Presbyteris Diaconis Syriac vers Ita Theoph. in loc and they observe St. Polycarp only mentions two Orders at Philippi Presbyters and Deacons (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ep. ad Philip. p. 18. but for their argument from the plural number Bishops it is sufficiently answered by observing Philippi was a Metropolis and had many Cities under it in that Province and so had many Bishops However we do not deny that in some Churches before a due settlement could be made there might be but two Orders besides the Apostles who as St. Clement says Preaching in Countries and Cities ordained the First-fruits of them proving them by the Spirit Bishops and Deacons of such as should believe (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ep. ad Corinth p. 96. But Epiphanius against Aerius the heretical Founder of the Presbyterian party gives a convincing reason for this viz. because while the Preaching was new all things could not be setled by the Apostles at once and where none were found worthy to be Priests they were content only with a Bishop who could not be without his Deacons for ministrations but the Church was not yet compleated in its Offices since nothing is perfect at first but in process of time all that it s needs required was fixed (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 paulo post 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiph. Panar contr Aer lib. 3. T. 1. haer 75. Whence we may infer that in perfect Churches there were then three Orders and I hope our Adversaries will not offer imperfect ones for our imitation especially since it is clear even in the Apostles days that they then being in the place of Bishops had power over Deacons and gave a mission to Presbyters (n) Act. vi 6. and xv 22. That Evangelists could not confirm the converted Samaritans without the Apostles (o) Act. viii 14 15 16 17. That the Bishops constituted by them were to charge the Pastors not to preach any strange Doctrine (p) 1 Tim. i. 3. and to see laborious Preachers well rewarded (q) 1 Tim. v. 17. to censure offending Elders (r) 1 Tim. v. 1. yea to examine and approve of Deacons (s) 1 Tim. iii. 8. and to admit both these by Imposition of Hands (t) Chap. v. 22. which place the Fathers generally explain of Ordination (u) Vid. Theoph. in loc Bern. de consid lib. 4. c. 4. p. 887. And the like superiority Titus had in Creet (w) Tit. i. 5. and Chap. iii. 10. From all which it appears there was an Order of Bishops above the Presbyters who must have jurisdiction over them or else they could not reprove and censure them as Epiphanius notes (x) Epiphan ut supra haer 75. contr Aer who also had then the only Power of Ordaining both the Presbyters and the Deacons and of confirming baptized
sought this high Dignity And the Emperors afterwards from Augustus his time not daring to trust so large an Authority in any other hand always were solemnly admitted High-Priests till Gratian's time (t) Sueton. vit August c. 31. p. 167. not Causab ibid. item Al. ab Alex. gen dier l. 2. c. 8. who refused it out of Conscience as a Pagan Office By all which it is most apparent that all Nations who owned any God or had any sort of Religion unanimously agreed to use his Priests and immediate Servants with all possible honour and respect But since the Preface speaks only of the Ministers of the Christian Church it is more to our purpose to enquire what esteem is due to them and what honours have been conferred on them and doubtless as their Office is more excellent and their Administrations more sublime than those of any other Religion so their dignity is not and their esteem should not be less Wherefore we will enquire what light we have from Scripture and what evidence from Antiquity in this matter When our Lord sent forth his newly ordained Apostles to preach he declares that such as despised them despised both him and his heavenly Father and that he would take all the respect and favour shewed to them as if it were to himself (u) Matt. x. 40 41. Luc. x. 16. Piissimus Dominus communem sibi cum servis suis honorem simul contumeliam facit Salv. de gub l. 8. and St Paul strictly charges that none presume to despise his lately constituted Bishops (w) 1 Tim. iv 12. Titus ii 15. and Orders that the Presbyters who were diligent in preaching should have double honour (x) 1 Tim. v. 17. he enjoyns the People over whom they are set to esteem them very highly in love for their work sake (y) 1 Thess v. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when he sent Epaphroditus the Bishop of Philippi to his See he commands the Christians to have a great honour for him and such as he was (z) Philip. ii 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for there is an high Authority lodged in the Episcopal Order who are not only to teach but to command (a) 1 Tim. iv 11. and rebuke with all Authority (b) Titus ii 15. And the People were not only to obey their commands but to submit also to their punishments (c) Hebr. xiii 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in loc Which clear places of Holy Writ do confer on them a power to Govern and a right to be Honoured by their Flock Hence the Apostles though very humble did not even in their persecuted estate refuse all expressions of honour for Cornelius fell down at St. Peter's feet so did the Jaylor before Paul and Silas and the Governor of Melita honoured St. Paul with many honours (d) Acts x. 25. xvi 29. xxviii 10. But besides these precepts and practices the very Names and Titles given to those in these Sacred Orders in the Scripture do imply that the Holy Ghost designed them to a very Honourable Employment The name Apostle imports a Messenger sent with Authority to act in his Masters name and therefore the Emperor's Praefects are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (e) 1 Pet. ii 14. and the Judges in France of old were stiled Missi Dominici (f) Capitular reg Franc. Tom. 1. p. 198. alibi Yea the Chief Officer under the Jewish Patriarch was called his Apostle (g) Cod. Theod. tit de Judaeis l. 16. Tit. 8. LL. 14. and 't is plain our Lord intended his Apostles should have Chief Authority in his Church because he promised them twelve Thrones and power to judge all Christians that is the true Israelites (h) Matt. xix 28. Their Successors who were fixed in the Churches they had planted are called Bishops which is a name importing Oversight and Rule for Eleazar who was Son to the High-Priest and a Chief over the Rulers of the Levites is called a Bishop by the Greek Interpreters and elsewhere a Prince of the Rulers (i) Numb iv 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui cap. iii. 32. dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the sense of a Governor that word is elsewhere used by them in the Old Testament (k) Nehem. xi 9 14. Isai lx 17. In the New Testament the place of an Apostle is called a Bishoprick (l) Act. i. 20. and our Saviour is stiled the Bishop of our Souls (m) 1 Pet. ii 25. At Athens this name was given to the Judges (n) Aristid orat de concur ad As civ At Rome the High-Priest was sometimes named the Bishop of the holy Virgins (o) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plut. vit Numae which perhaps might occasion Hesychius to explain it by the word King (p) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesych p. 364. So that every where it hath been reputed a Name importing Dignity and Rule So doth the Title of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which St. Paul gives to Bishops (q) Heb. xiii 7. signifie commonly chief Governors (r) Matt. ii 6. Act. vii 10. as doth also that other of Presidents which is applied to Bishops by very ancient Christian Writers (s) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Ma●t Apol. 2. p. 97. Dionys Cor. ap Euseb l. 6. c. 23. I shall only add that they also have the name of Angels as some Fathers expound that of the Apostle of Womens wearing a Covering because of the Angels (t) Sacerdotes Ministros altaris intellige Prim. in loc ita Ambros Euch. in 1 Cor. xi 10. and as all of them generally interpret that of the Revelations where the Angels are the Bishops of the seven Churches of Asia (u) Revel ii 1. Epiph. l. 1. T. 2. Panarii alii passim a Title sometimes given to the Jewish High-Priest as we noted before The name Presbyter which some will have originally belonging to the first but afterward commonly given to the second Order of the Clergy denotes also Authority and Rule and seems to confirm the old usage of the eldest Sons governing all the Family (w) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diod. Sic. l. 2. a custom retained in Arabia till Strabo's time (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Strab. Geog. l. 16. p. 530. The Ancients in Homer are put for the most Honourable as Eustathius notes (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not. Eustat ad Hom. Iliad 2. And it is not only in the Old Testament that a Presbyter or Elder signifies a Ruler and one in Authority (z) Numb xi 16. xxii 7. Josh xxiv 31. alibi But in all Languages some word of like signification is used for men in some Office or Honourable Post as Senators in Latin Seigneur in French Signore in Italian Sennor in Spanish and our Saxon Ealdorman are all Titles of Honour (a) Vide Seld. Syned l. 1.
c. 14. p. 335. Skinners Dictionary voce Signior alibi and so was Presbyter originally intended for the Verb from which it comes signifies to Rule (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesch p. 784. and it is used for a Superior Of which the word Priest which we commonly use is only a barbarous contraction but can by no means be supposed as some profanely apply it in their discourse to be any name of diminution or contempt There remains only the Title of Deacon now restrained to the lowest of these three Orders but it must be reckoned honourable in it self because it is applied to the chief Civil Magistrate in respect to his being subordinate to God (c) Rom. xiii 4. Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Bishops to the Apostles and to Christ himself (d) Rom. xv 8. 2 Cor. vi 4. Colos iv and though I would not infer from that use of the Name as a late Author doth that this Order was not in the Apostles time (e) Preface to the History of the Regalia p. 14. yet I may justly note that no dishonour can be cast upon our Deacons or Ministers from this appellation that will not reflect upon Magistrates and our Lord also To which I may add Mr. Mede's observation that 't is not said they are Ministers of the people but of God and of Christ (f) See Medes Diatrib on 1 Cor. iv 1. Wherefore all the names of these Sacred Orders in Scripture are honourable and so are also the Offices signified by them and this may suffice for the inspired Books As to the Opinion and Practice of the Christians afterwards they could not but value the Priesthood at an high rate since they reckoned it so necessary to Religion that there could be no Church where there were no Priests (g) Ecclesia non est quòd non habet Sacerdotes Hier. adv Lucif c. 8. ita Theod. Valent. l. 20. in append ad Cod. Theodos And the famous Justinian hath recorded it in his Laws That the Kingdom and the Priesthood are the greatest gifts that the Divine Goodness hath given unto men (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin praef ad Auth. coll 1. Tit. 6. p. 11. but to go back to the earliest times Epiphanius cites ancient Authors affirming That St. James Bishop of Jerusalem after the manner of the Jewish High-Priest (i) Exod. xxviii 36. wore a golden Plate as a Diadem on his Head in token of his Royal Priestood (k) Epiphan Panar l. 1. T. 1. haer 29. l. 3. T. 2. haer 78. The like Ornament as Polycrates Bishop of Ephesus reports was used by St. John (l) Euseb Hist l. 5. c. 23. p. 141. And Baronius gives instances of the same thing used by Primitive Bishops who could not be supposed to do it out of Pride but to express the dignity of their Order (m) Baron Annal. An. 34. p. 240. which in times of persecution when it had no outward lustre nor secular support was honoured by the faithful and those holy Bishops were revered as the representatives of God and Christ Jesus Yea St. Ignatius an humble Bishop and an eminent Martyr requires Christians to obey their Bishop as Christ did his Father to observe and reverence the Presbyters as the Apostles of Christ and to respect the Deacons as the Ordinance of God (n) Vid. loc citat à D.H. Ham. dissert 2. c. 25. which is no more than our Saviour and St. Paul had intimated before (o) Luk. x. 16. 1 Thes iv 8. And so it was no new Doctrine of his It were endless to give instances of the strict observance of these Precepts by the devout Converts of that Age so that one or two may suffice The blessed Martyr St. Polycarp was so highly honoured by the people of Smyrna where he was Bishop that until the day of his Martyrdom he had never pulled off his own shooes every one striving who should do that office for him (p) Euseb Hist l. 4. c. 15. p. 97. and those of Antioch kissed the Hands and embraced the Feet of Meletius their Bishop (q) Chrysost de S. Melet Antioch T. 5. p. 539. The old and famous St Anthony the Hermit who lived in the times of Persecution though he wrought Miracles yet being not in Orders he used to bow his Head and humbly receive the Benediction of Bishops and Priests nor would he pray if but a Deacon were present but made him go before him in the Office (r) Athanas in Vit. D. Ant. Tom. 5. p. 508. And this Custom of bowing to beg the blessing of the Clergy and other very holy Men was so usual among Christians that the very Gentiles did it to St. Anthonys's Scholar St. Hilarion as St. Hierom in his life reports (s) Vit. S. Hilarion apud Hieron Tom. 1. p. 329. and the usage continued for many Ages both in the Eastern and Western Church to kiss the Clergies hands and kneeling to receive their blessing (t) Vid. Haberti observ in Pontifical Graec. Obs 7. p. 139. But I proceed and shall add that when Constantine became a Christian he was exemplary for honouring the Clergy for comming to the Council of Nice and seeing the Bishops rise to receive him he would not sit down in that venerable Assembly till the Fathers desired him (u) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb in Vit. l. 3. cap. 10. p. 363. and when the Council was ended He feasted them all in his Palace making divers of them sit at his own Table (w) Id. ibid. c. 14. p. 364. In after times St. Martin was placed next to the Emperor Maximus and his Presbyter sat between the Emperors Uncle and Brother at a Feast where many Nobles were present (x) Sulpic. Sever. vit D. Martini §. 23. p. 466. And it was believed a Judgment of God fell upon Valentinian the elder for not rising to that Bishop when he came to him (y) Idem in Dialogo §. 6. p. 537. I might also note that if Bishops sollicited Princes for the pardon of Criminals or on other occasions of Charity they used not to deny them And St. Martin is said rather to command it than intreat in such cases (z) Et si pro aliquibus supplicandum regi fuit imperavit potius quam rogavit Sulpic. Sever. vit §. 23. p. 465. But I shall rather observe that before there were Christian Magistrates the Apostles put the power of judging all causes among beleivers into the Governors of the Church (a) 1 Cor. vi 1. and 1 Tim. v. 19 20. who exercised this Power during the times of Persecution (b) Nam judicatur magno cum pondere c. Tertul. Apol. cap. 39. But when the Emperors became Christian the Bishops were by Law made Judges of all Spiritual Matters and of all Causes among their own Clergy (c) Sozom. Histor Eccles l. 1. cap. 9. p. 206.
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Julian frag p. 556. The Druids who were Priests to our Heathen Ancestors trained up their Disciples twenty years together in their Discipline and then admitted them with a solemn Oath the Form of which is yet extant (a) Vettius Val. Antiochi ap Seld. Praef. de Diis Syris And when their chief Priest died a Successor was chosen by Merit only and the Common suffrage (b) Caesar de Bell. Gall. lib. 6. p. And Suetonius notes That the Emperor Claudius would admit none into the Colleges of Priests till they had first taken a solemn Oath (c) In cooptandis per Collegia sacerdotibus neminem nisi juratus nominavit Sueton. vit Claud. c. 22. which shews that all Mankind agreed to use great caution in the choosing and initiation of the Ministers about holy things But our previous care relies on a better Foundation than this for we have the command of God in Scripture and the Laws and Practice of the Primitive Church for it Our Lord no doubt chose his Apostles and lxx Disciples out of the very best of the Jews or else he made them so and because he knew their Hearts there was no need of Testimonials or Examination Yea the Apostles and their immediate Successors had the Gift of discerning Spirits (d) 1 Cor. xii 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophilac in loc that is of knowing by Inspiration who were fit for the Ministry So that they could foretel what proof they would make and such were the Prophecies that went before concerning Timothy (e) 1 Tim. iii. 18. Vide Chrys c. in loc apud Annot. Grotij ibid. This also was the meaning of St. Clement's saying The Apostles made Priests and Deacons of such as they had proved by the Spirit (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Ep. ad Corinth p. 96. and the same were such as St. John ordained in the lesser Asia Men that were marked out by the Spirit (g) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb Hist l. 3. c. 17. p. 67. But the Apostles foresaw that this temporary miraculous Gift would cease after the Church was setled whereupon having fixed Timothy Bishop at Ephesus and Titus in Creet who were to have a subordinate Clergy he gives them Rules to direct them in examining and approving the Candidates for holy Orders (h) 1 Tim. iii. 1. c. Titus i. 6. 11.2 and charges them to Ordain none hastily that is not till they had throughly tried them (i) 1 Tim. v. 22. i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ita Theophil in loc And it is very observable that no such Rules are given in any of St. Paul's Epistles written to whole Churches only in these two that are directed to two Superior Bishops Which is a demonstration that this Apostle intended not only the Ordination but the Scrutiny and Approbation of all Ecclesiasticks should be solely in the Bishops power Now these are Injunctions laid on these Governors of the Church by Divine Authority which they are bound in Conscience to obey and how exactly every one of them was observed by the Primitive Bishops shall be shewed more particularly afterwards It is sufficient here only in general to observe that the ancient Council of Sardis Decrees The Candidates shall be examined with all exactness and care and each of them must stay no little time in the inferior before they are admitted to the superior Orders since neither Prudence nor Piety allows that Men shall enter into these Orders rashly or suddenly and the Blessed Apostle the Doctor of the Gentiles forbids the making hasty Ordinations (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conc. Sard. Can. 10. Bever T. 1. p. 496. And before this the first General Council of Nice declares that a time and a trial is necessary to all before they can be made Clergy-men (l) Concil Nicaen 1. Can. ● Bev. T. 1. p. 60. Can. 9. ibid. p. 70. As to our Church we not only enquire after their inward Calling but try and examine their Qualifications before that which may be counterfeited as being secret is allowed and if the same care were taken to enquire into the fitness of all that are put into secular Offices of Trust and Power as there is into the Candidates for sacred Orders the Publick would be much better served for the Ecclesiasticks must bring Testimonials and pass one if not two Scrutinies before they can be accepted of which more hereafter §. 5. And also by Publick Prayer with imposition of Hands were approved and admitted thereto by lawful Authority It would make intolerable confusion in all Professions if every Man who judged himself qualified for an Eminent Station might thrust himself into it till he were solemnly admitted by lawful Authority For every Man thinks well of himself and at this rate every conceited Soldier would be a Captain and every Opinionative Lawyer a Judge wherefore there are two things here required 1st That the Clergy shall be solemnly admitted by Prayer and Imposition of Hands 2ly That they shall be admitted by lawful Authority which will give me occasion to discourse in general First Of their solemn Admission Secondly Of Episcopal Ordination for Bishops only with us have the sole lawful Authority to admit First No Clergy-man can enter into Orders but by a solemn Admission which is appointed in Conformity to the Divine directions under the Law concerning the Garments the Sacrifice the Anointing and the Washing in the Tabernacle Exod. chap. xxix before Aaron or his Sons might Officiate I might enlarge upon the solemn Forms of admitting the various sorts of Priests among the Gentiles but for brevity sake I will only refer to one or two Authors concerning the Creation of Flamins and Vestals (m) Rosin Antiqu. l. 3. cap. 15. p. 215. item Brisson de Formul lib. 1. p. 118. Nor shall I enlarge upon all the Christian Rites of Ordination in this place because the particulars will occur afterwards Only note in general that Fasting Prayer and Imposition of Hands were always used on these occasions Our Lord directed his Disciples to Pray immediately before he created them Apostles (n) Matt. ix 38. chap. x. 1. and both Deacons and others were ordained by Fasting Prayer and Imposition of Hands (o) Acts. vi 6. chap. xii 2 3. 1 Tim. iv 14. Which holy Custom was kept up in all Ages of the Church with great Reason since it was begun by our Saviour and his Apostles and because these Orders are of so great importance to the Church 'T is plainly the Sense of all Mankind that no Office of Trust or Power should be conveyed to any sort of Men Civil or Military without some solemn Creation Admission or Investiture to the same wherefore this is much more necessary with respect to such as are Officers under the King of Heaven and entrusted with the care of Souls This then being agreed on all hands we pass to the second thing
whereof I refer the Reader to a very learnned Author who hath taken pains to compare their Offices for Ordination with ours and those of the Primitive Church and proved that we have rejected nothing but needless and late inventions in this piece of Service So that ours is much to be preferred before theirs (c) Collationem vide ap Mas ibid. cap. 17. p. 227 c. The Lutheran Churches have Forms something more agreeable to Antiquity and proper for this Occasion yet they are not full enough in some substantial Parts and cannot compare with our Office (d) Formula ordinationis ad sacr ministerium Lipsiae usitat Impres Ibid. 1624. Much less can the old Scotch Form said to be drawn up by Mr. John Knox which is very defective in the election of ordinary Ministers (e) Scotch Psalter cap. 2. p. 8. edit Middleburgh 1594. and not much better in the Form of electing a Superintendent An. 1560 (f) Ibid. p. 16. But out of all these we shall sometimes make proper Observations concerning their Agreement with our Offices Concluding this general Discourse with observing that since no one intire form of Ordination is left on Record in holy Scripture every Church hath power to compose a Form for its own use to which all the Members of it must adhere provided there be nothing contained therein contrary to God's word As for ours it is drawn up by the Rules of Scripture and is not only Orthodox but so instructing so pious and so very proper to the occasion that I do recommend it First To all that are to enter into holy Orders to read that Form over which belongs to the Order he is about to receive that he may prepare himself for it by understanding his Duty and considering his Vows before he make them (g) Eccles v. 2. Secondly Because we must perform our Vows and practise our Duty all our lives long it is convenient if not necessary for every Clergy-man once a year at least seriously to read the same Office over to keep him mindful of his engagements The pious Cardinal Borromaeo enjoyned every Priest to keep the day of his Ordination yearly remembring it in his Prayers (h) Concil Mediol 3. Anno 1573. ap Bin. T. 4. par 2. p. 421. And our Clergy would find it very much conduce to mind them of their Duty and excite them to do it with zeal and diligence if they did spend annually the day of their admission in Fasting Prayer and Reading attentively these useful and incomparable Forms §. 7. And none shall be admitted a Deacon except he be Twenty three years of Age unless he have a Faculty A Priest shall be full Four and twenty years old A Bishop shall be full Thirty years of Age. Because the Scripture hath not determined the exact time when Men shall enter into these several Orders every Church hath fixed the Ages by the Rules of Prudence as they saw most fit St. Paul 't is true forbids a Novice to be made a Bishop but that is to be understood not of a person young in years but newly converted (i) 1 Tim. iii. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 è D. Chrysost Theophil But all Churches have agreed not to admit Men very young into these weighty Offices for God himself fixed the Ages of Thirty and Twenty-five for the Levites entring on their Ministration (k) Numb viii 24. iv 3.23 ubi lxx ubique habent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and our Saviour was Thirty years old when he began to Preach (l) Luk. iii. 23. Which is the reason given by the Council of Neocaesarea Why none though otherwise worthy shall be admitted Priest till he be Thirty years of Age (m) Concil Neocaes An. 315. Can. 11. Bev. T. 1. p. 411. The Council of Agde decreed the same Age for a Priest and appointed a Deacon should be Twenty five year Old (n) Concil Agathen An. 506. Can. 16 17. Bin. T. 2. par 1. pag. 555. and these were the common ages in those eldest times For St. Hierom vindicates his Brother's Ordination because he was then Thirty years Old and he supposes Timothy was no older when he was made a Bishop (o) Hierom. Epist 62. ad Theoph. Tom. 2. p. 273. I know some have carried this higher for Caesarius Bishop of Arles would not ordain a Deacon till he were Thirty years of Age (p) Cypr. vita Caesarij ap Mabillon Lit. Gal. p. 170. And Justinian made a Law that none should be a Presbyter untill he were Thirty five year Old (q) Authent Coll. 9. Tit. 6. Novel 123. c. 13. But the Sixth General Council of Constantinople reduced it to the old period and appointed Thirty for a Priest and Twenty five for a Deacon (r) Concil 6. Constant in Trul. An. 681. Can. 14. Bev. T. 1. p. 173. Which Ages to name no more were fixed in the Saxon Church above a Thousand years ago as appears by Egbert's Collection of the Canons then in force here (s) Excerpt Egbert Can. 91 95. An. 750. Spelm. Tom. 1. p. 267. Yet as our Preface notes in case of great and early merit or an extraordinary occasion this may be dispensed with For Pope Zachary allows Boniface Bishop of Mentz to ordain Priests as well as Deacons at Twenty five years of Age because he wanted assistants among the newly converted Germans (t) Si autem tales non reperiuntur necessitas exposcit à 25 An. supra Levitae Sacerdotes Ordinentur Zach. ep 12. Bin. T. 3. par 1. p. 374. and it was upon the extraordinary merit of Epiphanius afterwards Bishop of Pavy that he was ordained Deacon at Twenty years of Age (u) Ennodius in vit Epiphan Ticinens and that it is likely was the cause why St. Remigius was made an Arch-Bishop when he was but Twenty two (w) Vide Hincmar in vit Remigij yea in the Greek Church one Eleutherius was not above Twenty year old when he was consecrated a Bishop in Illyricum (x) Niceph. Callist Hist Eccl. l. 3. c. 29. No doubt there are some persons of early parts and extraordinary Learning and Wisdom though they be very young (y) Antevenit sortem meritis virtutibus Annos and in such cases they are to be regarded rather according to their Discretion and Knowledge than their Ages (z) Levit. xix 32. Hebr. Sen. Chal. Par. ejus qui Doctus est in lege unde RR. dicunt Senex est qui Sapiens est I could instance in divers of those who entred very young into the Ministry and have proved very Eminent but I need name no more than the most famously learned Bishop Usher ordained before he was Twenty one (a) See his Life p. 561. and the pious and eloquent Bishop Jer. Taylor who entred into Orders younger than he (b) See his fun Sermon wherefore 't is fit there should be a
power of dispensing being necessary in some Cases and commendable in others (c) Ubi necessitas urget excusabilis est dispensatio ubi utilitas provocat laudabilis Bern. de consid l. 3. c. 10. I shall only add that the Canon Law fixes the Age of Twenty five for undertaking a Cure of Souls (d) Decret Gregor l. 1. tit 6. c. 7. §. 3. col 129. and our Statute Law allows none under Twenty four to be instituted to a Living (e) Stat. Eliz. 13. c. 21. §. 3. 5. because it is fit they should be of steddy minds who undertake so great a Charge If any shall object that we in this Church admit Men something younger than was done of old I think two sufficient Reasons may be assigned for that practice First That the methods of Learning are now more compendious than in former Ages so that experience shews Men arrive at much greater degrees of skill in Languages and Sciences in Twenty four than formerly they could do in Thirty years Secondly Our Clergy are not now obliged to Vow celibacy and that is a Reason given in some later Councils why they bound them to stay to so confirmed an Age that they might upon trial of their inclinations better know whether they were able to keep such a Vow or no. §. 8. And the Bishop knowing either by himself or by sufficient testimony any Person to be a Man of vertuous conversation and without crime The Age being determined for all Orders the Preface concludes with describing the Qualifications of a Deacon the times place and publick manner of admitting one to that Order And 't is but Reason since Bishops have the sole power of Ordaining that they should use very great caution in admitting Candidates wherefore this Preface requires that they shall be well assured either by their own knowledge or by the testimonial of credible Persons that they are Men of good Lives and free from all noted Crimes and herein chiefly lies the use of Testimonials the Bishop may easily judge of their Learning but it cannot be supposed he can know how most of them have lived before their entrance into holy Orders and yet if he do admit any that have been scandalous he will not escape blame and ought to repent of it afterwards (f) Curae sit tibi maxime introducere tales quos postmodum introduxisse non poeniteat Bern. de consid l. 4. c. 4. p. 887. Wherefore our Canon wisely enjoyns they shall bring sufficient testimonials of their sober Life from such as have known and lived near them for three years before (g) Can. 34. Eccles Anglic which also foreign Canons have required (h) Nemo fiat Clericus nisi qui bonum testimonium habet Capit. Reg. Fran. lib. 6. c. 126. Now these Laws are grounded on St. Paul who makes it necessary for a Bishop to have a good testimony of those without that is of Heathens (i) 1 Tim. iii. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophil in loc and if that were requisite when most were Pagans much more is it necessary now that this part of the World is Christian The Pagans might accuse maliciously but those of our Faith should have no ends to serve but the glory of God and the interest of the true Religion so that it is justly hoped what such Men say is very true because they must wish the Church to which they belong may be as well served with good Priests and not be scandalized with bad ones And such as sign these Testimonials have it put into their Power to discover evil Men and commend only those that are worthy wherefore since so great a Trust is reposed in them they ought never to sign any Testimonial which they know to be false yea which they do not know to be true least they become guilty of bearing Falsewitness and mislead the Bishop who cannot see all things with his own Eyes nor hear all with his own Ears and so must rely on others to direct his choice (k) Miser est imperator apud quem vera reticentur qui cum ipse publice ambulare non possit necesse est ut audiat vel audita vel à pluribus roborata confirmet Capitol vit Gordian p. 668. And let him be never so desirous to keep out wicked Pastors an Hypocrite commended by eminent Hands may deceive him and then the dishonour of God and mischief to Souls which are the sad consequences of such misinformation are to be charged only upon those who for fear favour or negligence signed the false Certificate who deserve a severe Punishment in this World if our Law as the Indian did allow it (l) Apud Indos extremi digiti eorum qui falsum testimonium consignassent decurtantur Strab. Geogr. l. 15. However they shall certainly answer for it in the next World and I heard a most Reverend and Worthy Prelate now with God (m) Ar. Bp. Dolben who died April 11. 1686. charge his Clergy not to impose upon him by signing Testimonials which they did not know to be true as they would answer it to him at the dreadful day of Judgment Which being duly considered will I hope prevent that evil Custom of giving Mens hands out of Custom or Complement to mere Strangers or to oblige a Friend that we know doth not deserve it Since most of those infamous Persons that are in Orders generally crept in at this Door But as to the particulars it is necessary that the Bishop be satisfied First as to his Life and Secondly as to his Knowledge The first enquiry is into their lives (n) Ante vita quam doctrina quaerenda est Ambros in Psal cxviii 1. T. 1. p. 873. for that is over and over repeated by St. Paul that they must be blameless (o) 1 Tim. iii. 2. Titus i. 6 7. and if they be never so learned or ingenious and be not virtuous their example will do more harm than their preaching can do good they discourage the pious and harden sinners dishonour our Lord Jesus disgrace his Church and not only destroy their own but others souls also So that if men be vitious and criminal no other qualifications ought to recommend them they must by all means be kept from Holy Orders but of this more hereafter §. 9. And after examination and tryal finding him Learned in the Latine tongue and sufficiently instructed in Holy Scripture The next care of the Bishop is to examine and try the understandings of such as come to offer themselves to be ordained of which he and his Chaplains are competent Judges So that if he ordain any illiterate Person that fault must lie upon the Ordainer only since Virtue may but learning cannot be counterfeited before a learned and diligent Examiner 'T is St. Paul's injunction and so indispensible that He be apt or as the word imports able to teach (p) 1 Tim. iii. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor can
Impediment be objected the Bishop shall surcease from ordering that Person until such time as the Party accused shall be found clear of that Crime That the people had of old a liberty to object in order to discover to the Bishops such as were unworthy hath been shewed already and if it be prudently managed 't is an excellent method to prevent his mistake who hath the sole power to approve But we find by St. Chrysostom that in his time these Accusations were too many and proceeded from prejudice rather than honest zeal Go saith he and behold the publick Festivals where according to Law they usually elect Ecclesiastical Governors and you shall see a Priest loaded with as many faults as there are numbers of people to be governed so that they who have Power to give the honour are also divided into many parties and the Assembly of the Clergy scarce can agree with one another or the Candidate (q) Chrysost de sacerd lib. 3. Tom. 6. Edit Sav. p. 23. To correct this one of the ancient Apostolical Canons decrees that nothing but proving the Accusation can stop a Man from being ordained (r) Can. Apostol 61. Bev. T. 1. p. 40. Zonaras in loc for as Julian the Emperor said well if to accuse be sufficient who can be innocent (s) Si accusasse sufficiat quis erit innocens Martin in vita coram oper And further least any out of evil will or ill principles should be prompted to invent false stories of the Clergy especially the higher Order A general Council and other Synod did forbid Hereticks and those under censure or excommunicate Persons to be admitted to accuse and the like was ordered as to Schismaticks (t) Concil Gen. 2. ap Const can 6. Bev. T. 1. p. 93. Concil Chalc. can 21. Apost can 75. Cypr. ep 42. 55. because it might justly be presumed that such as were Enemies to the Church were moved by malice or revenge to bring in false accusations But if the accuser be a credible Person then the Candidate must clear himself before he can be admitted to holy Orders Which is so great a disgrace loss and injury to the Party accused that he who charges a Man in these circumstances had need be very sure he can prove the Crime so that of old it was determined the accuser should be bound in an Obligation to pay or suffer an equivalent to the damages of the accused if he did not make good his charge (u) Nam inscriptio primo semper fiat ut talionem calumniator recipiat Damas Ep. 4. ad Steph. cap. 7. ita Concil Constant can 6 ut supra which is so very rational that it is decreed both in the Civil and Canon Law in all other cases (w) Leg. Honor. Theod. LL. 10. c. de calumn Gratian decret par 2. caus 2. qu. 3. cap. 3. and there is as good grounds for it in this case as in any other because it takes away both a Mans Lively-hood and also his good Name But if no such Obligation be required by our Church yet Men should do as they would be done by none would have their little faults aggravated nor suspected crimes published and solemnly averred and since more or less all are faulty the consideration of our own frailty should make us not very forward to accuse others to which end some ancient Ordinals when they invite the people to declare pray them to be mindful of their own Condition (x) Cum fiduciâ exeat dicat veruntamen memor sit conditionis suae Codex Corbei apud Morin p. 272. ita Pontif. Rom. p. 31. 40. since they also may fall or as some Books have it mindful of their own Communion (y) Communionis suae Morin ibid. p. 267. 284. viz. that he is a Brother who is thus charged by them whose faults if they be not mischievous and notorious Charity obliges those of the same Communion to excuse and cover Yet after all if the people know any great crimes of which these Candidates are guilty it is much better to declare them now when by such a discovery they may keep ill Men out than to accuse them and divulge their faults afterwards when the accusation tends only to the dishonour of Religion and the hindring the success of their Ministery and it will be supposed to proceed rather from malice than a zeal for Gods glory or love to the Church unless the complaint be made in private to their Superiors who have power to reform these Offenders Finally if any of these Candidates know any great Enormities they have committed though no Man accuse them yet God and their own Consciences know they are unworthy of so high and holy a Calling and will be a blemish to it whenever they are discovered So that without a long Repentance and such a change of Heart and Manners as may secure them from relapsing I must advise these Persons not to presume to offer themselves for if the Bishop do not God in whose place he stands will punish this presumption And I know some Conscientious Persons yet alive who were otherways extraordinarily qualified for holy Orders that meerly by reflecting on some of their too common juvenile extravagancies durst not take the Ministry upon them but applied themselves to Callings less grateful to them §. 7. Rubr. iv Then the Bishop commending such as shall be found meet to be ordered to the Prayers of the Congregation shall with the Clergy and People present sing or say the Litany c. If there be no Objection the Office proceeds and first the Bishop commends those who are found fit to the Prayers of the People and if any Priests are ordained that being the more weighty Office a space is allowed for the Congregations private Devotions for some of them may be Friends or Relations to the Candidate or be such as are to be under their charge and then they will desire time to put up particular requests for them for which this vacant time gives them an opportunity but even they who have no such special ties are obliged as Christians and Members of that Church wherein these Men are to officiate to pray heartily that its Clergy may be rightly chosen and replenished with grace since that is a common blessing to all good Christians in every part of the Nation The ancient Western Offices referring to the peoples crying Worthy Worthy do immediately order them all to joyn in their Prayers to God as they have done in their testimony of these Men saying let your common prayer follow your common consent (z) Commune votum Communis prosequatur Oratio c. Ver. Ordin ap Morin p. 263. Liturg. Gallic ap Mabillon lib. 3. p. 305. Pontif Rom. p. 32. and as now the whole Congregation hath at least by their silence consented to their admission So they are concern'd for the general good earnestly to pray for them 'T is a
these Seven who were all qualified as the Apostles required First Steven (s) Qui vocatur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Menol. Anthol Graec. the chief and most eminent among them a Man full of Faith and zeal and inspired with extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost above the rest who all had such degrees of these gifts and graces as fitted them for this Office and therefore they elected Philip (t) Vide Act. viii 5 26 cap. xxi 8. and Procorus and Nicanor and Timon and Parmenas and Nicholas (u) Vid. Apoc. ii 7. Ab eo orti sunt Nicolaitae Epiphan haer 25. Hieron ep 48. At ipsum inculpa●um asserunt Clem. Alex. Strom. 3. Euseb l. 3. c. 23. Theod. haeret Fab. l. 3. who was of Gentile Extraction a Proselyte converted first to the Jewish Religion and formerly of Antioch all which had deserved a good testimony and were then well known in the Apostolical College and divers of them afterward proved eminent in the Church Ver. vi These Seven are the Men whom they of the Synod elected and set before the Apostles who as Supream Rulers of the Church had the sole power of delegating a right to any that were to officiate therein And since the Office of Deacons was sacred necessary and to continue in the Church they solemnly admitted them in such manner as all others afterwards were to be admitted therefore when they had prayed earnestly to God for them they laid their hands upon them as the Jews were wont to do in their solemn Designations of any to Offices of Dignity and trust (w) Numb xxvii 18. and from this Precedent set by the Apostles here and afterwards all Ordinations in the Christian Church were made by Prayer and Imposition of Hands (x) Ordinatio Clericorum non solum ad imprecationem vocis sed ad impositionem impletur manus Hieron in Isai 58. Tom. 4. p. 421. And these two have been ever since accounted so necessary that no regular Ordination could be without them Ver. vii And God who directed the setting up this New Order gave it a good effect the Apostles having more leisure to make Converts and being sometimes assisted by the Deacons in these higher Ministries divers became Christians And the word of God was preached so frequently that the knowledge thereof encreased and the number of the Disciples by the accession of new Converts multiplied in that Church of Ierusalem greatly notwithstanding the malice and menaces of the Jewish Rulers So that abundance of the common people and a great company of the Priests (y) Male Beza dubitat de hoc loco cum omnes MSS. Graec. ita legunt themselves not only professed but were obedient to the Faith of Christ believing the Principles and practising the Duties of Christianity §. 9. Of the Oath of Supremacy Though the Form of this Oath in our Nation be no older than the dawning of our Reformation under King Henry 8. (z) Sub Henrico 8. primo introductum est juramentum primatûs Reg. Jacobi Apol. log p. 53. yet the thing is as old as Scripture History for the right of Kings which this Oath declares is set forth in God's Word where David and Solomon Hezekiah and Jehosaphat (a) 1 Chron. xxviii 21. 1 King ii 27. 2 Chron. viii 14 15. chap. xx 21. as Supream in the Ecclesiastical as well as in Civil Affairs made Laws in matters of Religion and the Priests as well as the People were subject unto them As to the putting it into the Ordination Office we will shew 1st The reasonableness thereof in general 2ly The particular reasons for giving it to the Clergy 3ly The occasion of introducing it here 1st That it is reasonable in general will appear from the consent of all mankind the modern Papists excepted that Kings are Supream in all sorts of Causes the Jews thought so as was shewed before and so did the Gentiles as the great Philosopher sufficiently declares in saying the King is Lord of all things that relate to the Gods (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Pol. l. 3. of which opinion also was a good old Pope who did not foresee the unjust claim of his Successors but owned that God had given the Emperor dominion over all Priests as well as Soldiers (c) Deus qui ei omnia tribuit dominari eum non solum Militibus sed etiam Sacerdotibus concessit Greg. l. 2. ep 64. a Doctrine taught long before by St. Chrysostom who says the Emperor was the Supream and Head of all things upon Earth (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Orat. de Stat. 2. p. 463. To which agree all those Titles that the Clergy gave Christian Princes or they claimed as their due Pope Eleutherius calls Lucius King of Britain The Vicar of God in his Kingdom (e) Epist Eleuther ad Luc. Spelm. Tom. 1. p. 34. King Edgar is called The Vicar of Christ in the Laws promulgated in his time (f) Leg. Hydens ibid. p. 438. and he stiles himself Pastor of the Pastors (g) Charta ejus apud Seld. notis in Eadmer p. 146. and in much later times before the Pope pretended to give the Kings of England this Title for defending the Roman Errors our Princes claimed it as a right inherent in their Crown to be the Defenders of the Faith (h) Fidei defensores sumus esse volumus Brev. Ric. 2. Reg. Eliens fol. 1384. and 't is very remarkable that the General Councils of Constantinople and Chalcedon used that very same stile as of right belonging to the Emperors Theodosius and Marcian (i) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conc. Constant Bin. Tom. 2. Par. 1. p. 89. ita Concil Chalced. Act. 6. Bin. ibid. p. 269. and Leo Magnus Bishop of Rome calls the latter of these the Defender or Preserver of the Faith (k) Custos Fidei Leo M. ep 71. ad Anastas p. 415. Agreeably to which Pope Anastasius calls the Emperor of the same Name God's Vicar appointed in his stead to preside in the Earth (l) Epist Anastas Pap. ad Imperator Anastas Bin. ut supr p. 507. The like Titles were given by the Bishops in Councils to the Western Emperors for Charlemaign is stiled Ruler of the true Religion and Governor of God's holy Church (m) Concil Mogunt An. 813. in Praef. Bin. T. 3. Par. 1. §. 2. p. 196. his Son Lewis is also called The strenuous Ruler of the true Religion (n) Vid. ibid. An. 847. p. 372. But if any should object these are only Complements and do not prove that Princes were really Supream in all Causes I shall observe that they really exercised this Supream Authority for the Codes and Novels of Justinian Theodosius and other Emperors in the East the Capitulars of Charles the Great and his Successors in the West the Laws of our Saxon Danish and first Norman Kings abound with Statutes and Edicts concerning
Candidate first by a visible Sign viz. Laying his Hands on the Persons Head which is one of the most ancient Rites in the World for conferring any Blessing Dignity or Power For thus it was used before the Law (s) Gen. xlviii 14. and under the Law also (t) Numb xxvii 18 23. Deut. xxxiv 9. And from the constant use of the Jews the Apostles brought it into the Ordinations of the Christian Church and used it so constantly (u) Acts vi 6. xiii 3. 1 Tim. iv 14 ver 22. 2 Tim. i. 6. that the word even in Scripture is put for the Act of Ordination (w) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. xiv 23. and all Ecclesiastical Writers Fathers Historians and Collectors of Councils use the Laying on of Hands for conferring Holy Orders as might be proved if it were necessary by innumerable instances but in a matter so very plain we will content our selves with a few which will suffice to shew this was an Apostolical and Primitive Rite and an Essential Part of Ordination The ancient Author under the name of Dionysius saith the Imposition of Hands gives the Priestly Character and Power (x) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccles Hier. c. 5. and St. Basil saith by Laying on of Hands they receive the Spiritual Gift (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil ad Amphil. Can. 1. Bev. Tom. 2. p. 48. A Priest is made as another hath it by the Power of the Holy Ghost by the Bishops Voice and Laying on of his Right Hand (z) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jov. Monach. ap Phot. The Ordination of the Clergy as St. Hierom speaks is compleated by two things Laying on of Hands and a Prayer of the Lips (a) Hieron lib. 16. in Jesai The same is also affirmed by all the Schoolmen who generally make this Imposition of Hands necessary to the conferring of Holy Orders (b) Durand Ration fol. 21. D. Tho. 3. p. qu. 84. art 4. Bonavent in 4. sent dist 24. art 2. qu. 1. and the Canon Law decrees if it have been omitted it must be supplied cautiously afterward without repeating the whole Office (c) Greg. de decret l. 1. Tit. 16. de Sacram. non iterand c. 3. p. 310. Remarkable is the Story of Marcianus an holy Bishop who having ordained an evil Man wished his Hands had rather been thrust into an heap of Thorns than laid on the Head of Sabbatius at his Ordination (d) Socrat. Hist lib. 5. cap. 20. and we read of some Orthodox Priests who with indignation thrust away the Hands of Arrian Bishops when they would have laid them on their Heads (e) Theod. Hist l. 4. c. 14. And as to the mystical meaning of this Ceremony I find it variously explained some will have it signifie the taking them into God's special protection (f) Ita Dionys Eccl. Hier. cap. 5. Et Simeon Thessal in Eucholog pag. 257. others the granting them power to act because the Hand is the instrument of action (g) Cyril in Jesai l. 5. Manum Dei potestatem Dei dixit Aug. Com. in Psal lxxii T. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ita Pachymer Schol. in Dionys others the plentiful imparting to them the Gifts of the Spirit for Gifts are distributed by the hand (h) D. Tho. Aquin. ubi supr But the most natural signification of it seems to be the Bishops delivering them a power to officiate in the Church and to administer holy things but because he doth this in God's Name and by Authority from him the Candidate should lift up his Heart to Heaven and pray for grace to fit him for this weighty Charge There is only to be further observed as to this Rite The difference between the two Orders for at the Ordination of a Deacon the Bishop alone lays his Hands on the Head of the Candidate but when a Priest is ordained the Priests that are present do all lay on their hands with the Bishop which some would derive from Timothy's being ordained with the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery but the Greek Fathers and Ethiopick Version expound that of the Bishops who joyned with St. Paul in making Timothy a Bishop (i) 1 Tim. iv 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 〈◊〉 Theoph. in loc Impositione Manuum Episcoporum Vers Aethiop And in the Greek Church none but the Bishop lays on his Hand at the Ordination of a Priest as well as of a Deacon (k) Euchol in Ordin Diac. p. 250. in Ord. Presbyteri p. 293. So that it is an ancient usage only of the Western Church mentioned as early as the 4th Council of Carthage An. 398. where it is said when a Priest is Ordained all the Presbyters that are present shall joyn with the Bishop in laying on Hands But at a Deacons Ordination only the Bishop lays on his Hands (l) Omnes Presbyteri qui praesentes sunt manus suas juxta manum Episcopi super caput ejus tenent Concil 4. Carthag Can. 3. Solus Episcopus qui eum benedicit manum super caput illius ponat ibid. Can. 4. Bin. T. 1. p. 588. and from that Council it hath been taken into the Rubrick of the Roman Pontifical (m) Pontif. Roman p. 36. postea in Ord. Presbyt vid. Morin de Ord. Latin p. 269. and ours as well as other Reformed Churches (n) Liturg Belgic pag. 261. Formul Lutheran Lips 1624. but I do not think the import of it to be any more than to do some greater Honour to the higher Order of Priests and so to distinguish it from that of a Deacon unless it be in token of the College of Presbyters consenting to the Bishops ordaining one into their Body for of old they were his Council and the Bishop was not to ordain any without their advice (o) Episcopus absque Concilio Presbyterorum Clericos non ordinet Excerp Egbert Can. 44. An. 750. Spelm. T. 1. p. 263. So that the Presbyters laying on of Hands only and always with a Bishop cannot imply their having any direct power in Ordination but only their agreeing to the election testified by their publick joyning in this Act of their Solemn Admission But a Priest being a very Honourable Order in the Church of Christ it is very fit the Bishop should advise with his Clergy of that Degree concerning the Qualifications of those who offer themselves for this Sacred Order and it may be of good use that all the Priests present being fully satisfied as to every particular mans endowments may the more heartily joyn with the Bishop in praying to God to give them grace suitable to this undertaking § 2. Rubr. Humbly kneeling before him This Posture of receiving Holy Orders kneeling was so well known and so constantly practised in the Pure Ages of the Primitive Church that when Gregory Nazianzen's Father being then but a Youth was sent to be publickly Catechized by Leontius Bishop of
Caesarea in Cappadocia he kneeled all the time which the whole Congregation interpreted as an Omen he would become a Priest afterwards because that was the Posture of a Candidate for Orders not of a Catechumen (p) Greg. Naz. Orat. 19. de Patre suo Vide item Baron Anno 325. n. 30. p. 284. Now a Rite so well known then could be of little less than Apostolical original The Author of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy mentions it and notes that a Deacon kneeled but upon one Knee a Priest on both before the Altar while the Bishop laid his Hand on his Head (q) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Eccl. Hier. c. 5. which is also enjoyned in the Greek Rubrick (r) Eucholog Graec. pag. 256. pag. 297. But we according to the Custom of the Western Church require Deacons as well as Priests to kneel humbly upon both knees (s) Pontifical Roman p. 32. and the Lutheran Form requires them to kneel before the Altar as soon as the Questions are proposed to them (t) Ad ordinandos procumbentes coram Altari Creditisne Fidem c. Form Luth. Lips 1624. The reasons for which ancient usage are principally two First In respect to the Bishop who in this Sacred Action represents our Lord Jesus himself and executes a Power delegated to him from his and our Great Master and this Posture of Adoration is principally due to him only it is paid to the Embassador for the King of Heavens sake Secondly We must observe that though the Bishop pronounces the Words yet Christ gives the Grace and confers the Gifts which therefore the Candidate must receive with the profoundest humility and no Posture so fit as that of Prayer for he must all the time humbly and earnestly beg of Jesus to confirm the Words of his Servant the Bishop and that he would give all those good Qualities to him which are requisite for a just and conscientious discharge of this Office We put up our Petitions to Mortal Princes upon our Knees and whoever is advanced to Secular Dignity receives his Investiture from the Royal Hands kneeling how much more reasonable is it we should kneel to the King of Heaven when He is about to endue us with his Grace and invest us with an Office in his Courts §. 3. The Solemn Words Take thou Authority to execute the Office of a Deacon in the Church of God committed to thee in the Name c. There are generally certain Forms used in the admissions to all Offices Civil and Military and so it ought to be in these that are Ecclesiastical But because there are no Forms prescribed in Scripture every Church hath taken the liberty to compose its own Formularies It would suffice saith Pope Innocent if the Ordainer only said be thou a Priest or a Deacon but now Forms are made by the Church they must be used (u) Innocent de Sacram. non iterandis That of the Roman Church indeed is a very odd Form (w) Accipe Spiritum Sanctum ad robur ad resistendum Diabolo c. Pont. Rom. p. 36. and belongs no more to a Deacon than to any other Christian for they pretend to give him the Holy Spirit to enable him to resist the Devil and his Temptations The Form of the Greek Church is much better where because of that ancient error of those who did attribute the efficacy of Sacramentals to the vertue of him that Ministers them as the Ancients note (x) 1 Cor. iii. 4. Vide D. Chrys Hom 50. in Matth. Aug. Tract 6. in Jonah The Bishop humbly ascribes the whole Act to God and says The Divine Grace which always heals that which is weak and fills up that which is defective promotes N. to be a Deacon (y) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chol p. 250. And to the same effect they speak in the Ordaining of a Priest As to our Form it is owing to our Reformation and is as it ought to be a clear explication of the Ceremony of Laying on of Hands which signifies as was noted collation of Power and delegating Authority and therefore the Bishop says Take thou Authority c. It seems by St. Ambrose there were in his time some mystical words used at Imposition of Hands which were believed to convey authority (z) Manus vero impositiones verba sunt mystica quibus confirmatur ad hoc opus electus accipiens Authoritatem Ambr. in 1 Tim. 4. And here the Bishop in whom the Supream Power is lodged grants Authority to the Candidate to execute the Office of a Deacon which is his Commission and lawful Call giving him a right to perform all the Duties annexed to that Order Yet according to the example of the Eastern Church the Bishop declares he doth not this purely of himself but by a Power granted him from God and therefore he adds In the Name of the Father of the Son c. to intimate that the Holy and ever Blessed Trinity doth confer this Order on him We are commanded by St. Paul to do all in the Name of the Lord Jesus (a) Coloss iii. 17. Quicquid agis in nomine Dei agas R. D. Kimch in Psal 1. ver 2. from whence the Christians generally begin all their Solemn Instruments with this Form In Nomine Domini and sometimes the whole Trinity is expressed especially in Religious Ministrations such as Absolution Marriage and Holy Orders where each Person of the Trinity concurs the Father by his Providence guides the Choice the Son by his Supream Authority over the Church grants the Power the Holy Ghost by his Gifts and Graces qualifies and fits the Person now chosen One of the Greek Ritualists makes this a calling the whole Trinity to witness this Present Act (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. Thessai de Sacr. but I take the former to be the true sence because to do a thing in the Name of God c. is to do it as his Representative and by his Authority and so the Person is promoted to be a Deacon Ministerially by the Bishop but Originally and Principally by God himself from whom he receives this Honour humbly kneeling on his Knees and he should remember that to him he must one day give an account how he hath performed his Duty which cannot but strike his Mind with reverence and holy fear while these Solemn Words are repeated §. 4. Rubr. Delivering the New Testament Take thou Authority to read the Gospel in the Church of God and to Preach c. This is the second significant Rite used in our Ordination concerning which we shall observe That the Deacons in the Christian Church are made after the pattern of those Ministers among the Jews whose Office was to keep the Book of the Law and upon occasion to read it publickly in their Synagogues in whose stead our Saviour himself did once Minister (c) Luke vi 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphan Minister stat recitat de Lege Lib. Massech Suc. So that the place was honourable though inferiour to that of the Ruler of the Synagogue In like manner the Deacons proper Office was to read the Holy Scripture in the Christian Assemblies as divers of the Ancients have particularly noted (d) Evangelium Christi quasi Diaconus lectitabor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. constit l. 2. c. 57. and Sozomen recites it as a Custom peculiar to Alexandria that only the Arch-Deacon read the Gospel there whereas the ordinary Deacons read it elsewhere (e) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sozom Hist l. 7. cap. 19. At Carthage where they had a peculiar order of Lectors the Bible was delivered not to the Deacons but to the Reader with these words Take this Book and be thou a Reader of God's word and if thou art faithful and useful in this Office thou shalt have a part with them who have ministred the word of God (f) Concil 4. Carthag can 8. Bin. Tom. 1. pag. 588. But we having laid aside this Office properly deliver it to the Deacon wherein we are conformable to the ancient Churches In the Syrian Formularies it is peculiar that the Bishop delivers to every one of the Deacons a Book of the Epistles and to the Priests a Book of the Gospels g (h) Ordinat Syror. ap Morin p. 451. p. 458. The words spoken at the delivery of the Holy Book have been varied in the Western Church For in one of their ancient Ordinals supposed to be 800 years old and taken out of a Saxon or English Book The Bishop said unto the Deacon Take this volume of the Gospel read and understand it and do thou both deliver it to others and fulfil it in thy Works (h) Accipe istud volumen Evangelij lege intellige aliis trade tu opere ad imple Form ver ap Morin de Ord. Lat. p. 286. But in the modern Roman Church the Bishop absurdly says Take thou power to read the Gospel in the Church of God as well for the living as for the dead in the name of God Amen (i) Accipe potestatem legendi Evangelium in Ecclesia Dei tam pro vivis quam pro defunctis in nomine Domini Amen Pontif Rom. p. 17. But that we may be assured this Botch was added in the blind Ages Morinus (k) Post haec verba Ecclesia Dei in inferiori margine Scriptura recenti atramento planè alio Tam pro vivis quam pro defunctiis c. Morin de ord Latin p. 337. hath discovered these words as well for the living as the dead were put into the Margin of an Ordinal of near 600 years old in a modern hand and later Ink So that this corruption hath been designed since their false Doctrine of Purgatory was set up however 't is impossible to reconcile the words either to Truth or good Sence The Gospel may profit the living who can hear it but the dead cannot exercise that Sense and so can have no benefit by anothers reading thereof The Spirit therefore calls upon living Men and saith We must hear God's Voice to day (l) Hebr. iii. 17. And the Orthodox Fathers teach us there is no more hopes of finding any comfort in the next World for them who are not cleansed from their Sins in this (m) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys in Gen. Hom. 5. T. 1. p. 26. Vid. Aug. de temp Ser. 66. fol. 159. If Men die without Faith and Repentance neither Prayers nor Reading can work these Graces in them Unless they fansie as some Charmers of old did That there is a Magical power in the words of Holy Scripture that can operate upon disembodied Spirits which is a wickedness severely condemned especially in Clergy-men by an ancient Council (n) Concil Laod. can 36. Balsam Zon ibid. Bev. Tom. 1. p. 469. Not. T. 2. p. 196. and is one sort of conjuration which by abusing God's word borders upon Blasphemy (o) Vid. Camerar Oper. subseciv Tom. 3. cap. 30. pag. 104. So that this Addition makes the Roman Form more like the creation of a Necromancer than a Christian Deacon and therefore our Reformers justly cast out this late corruption and restored the Form to its ancient Purity Giving our Deacon a Power and Right to Read the Scripture which being the Word and Will of God and the Means of our Salvation should be Read plainly and deliberately with affectionate Devotion and fervent Charity to the living because this is their only day of Grace and unless it work upon them now while it is called to day they shall never see or hear these Holy Books more till they be opened to their Condemnation at the last Judgment As to the Deacons duty in Reading and Preaching also by License from the Bishop I have spoken before and shall only add this caution That it is not safe for young Preachers to meddle with nice Points and high Speculations in their Sermons plain truths and practical matters being easier and safer for them to Preach and far more profitable for their People to hear or in the words of Seneca (p) Senec. de benef l. 7. cap. 1. There are no things hard to be found out but only such as afford no other advantage to the finder but that he hath found them whatever will make us better and happier lies open and is near at hand CHAP. V. Of the Consequence after Ordination §. 1. OF the Gospel In our usual Service the Epistle and Gospel stand together but in this Office they are separated and the Ordination it self intervenes and did so of old for in an Ordinal writ above 800 years ago we have this Rubrick That the greater Orders shall be conferred before the Gospel the lesser after the Communion (q) Majores gradus ante Evangelium minores vero post Communionem dantur Vid. Morin de ordin Latin par 2. p. 270. Now the Deacon is the first of the greater Orders and the Reason of setting the Gospel immediately after his Ordination was that the new ordained Person might immediately exercise his Authority and give proof of his fitness for this part of his Office in solemnly reading the Gospel for by our Church as well as the Roman it is ordered That one of them appointed by the Bishop shall read the Gospel (r) See our Rubrick here Aliquis de noviter ordinatis dalmaticâ indutus Evangelium dicit Pontif. Rom. p. 39. The Portions chosen for this occasion have been divers One of the ancient Gallican Forms had Luk. ix from ver 57 to ver 62 (s) Liturg. Gallican ap Mabillon l. 2. p. 170. which is not so proper by much as this Gospel out of St. Luke xii from to ver 35. to ver 38. appointed by our Reformers under King Edw. the sixth (t) Vid. Sparrow's Coll. p.
Tradition or New Revelations to make us wise to Salvation through faith in Christ Jesus (z) 2 Tim. iii. 15. that there is enough written in it to make us capable of Eternal Life through believing (a) Joh. xx 30 31. and that being received with meekness and a due submission to its Doctrines and Precepts it is able to save our Souls (b) James i. 21. Finally That it is so perfect a Rule That nothing can be added to it or taken from it (c) Deut. iv 2. Rev. xxii 18. Wherefore unless we can be so impious to imagine that the God of Truth designed to deceive us we must give credit to his Character of Holy Scripture and believe it contains all necessary Truths And this was the constant opinion of the Catholick Church in all Ages as I have proved elsewhere I will only note here that the Fathers declared Nothing was fundamental in Religion which was not attested by God's word (d) Nullum fundamentum aut firmitatem possunt habere quae nullis divinarum vocum fulciuntur oraculis Lact. l. 7. c. 2. and that a compleat Systeme of Divine Mysteries was only to be drawn from this Fountain (e) Universa divinarum rerum Mysteria non nisi ex ipsis fontibus hauriri queant Sulp. Sever. Hist Sacr. l. 1. Yea this of old was the Doctrine of the Roman Church for Pope Celestine's Letter to Nestorius affirms That he deserves an Anathema who adds to or takes from that Faith which being fully and plainly delivered by the Apostles needs no encrease and must have no diminution from us (f) Celestin Epist in Concil Ephes Bin. Tom. 1. Par. 2. p. 136. but this was before they had brought in so many New Doctrines and Practices grounded on Tradition only that they were forced to decree at Trent That Traditions were to be received with the same pious Affection and Veneration that they received the Scriptures (g) Omnes Libres tam V. quam N. Testamenti nec non traditiones pari pietatis affectu ac reverentia suscipit c. Concil Trid. Sess 4. Decr. 1. But in the Primitive Ages nothing but the Word of God was allowed to decide controversies of Faith and therefore the Holy Bible alone was placed on a Throne in Christian Councils as the only Judge in all such cases (h) Vid. Concil Aquil. ap Bin. T. 1. Par. 1. p. 545. Concil Ephes ibid. Par. 2. p. 214. Wherefore 't is very necessary every Priest should declare his belief of the perfection of Scripture and Secondly That he should promise to teach no Doctrines but what may be proved by it For this is the greatest security of his being Orthodox which the Church can have since no man can be an Heretick who takes his Faith from the plain Words of Scripture and proves it by necessary Consequences drawn from thence And it is of such importance to the Church that those She admits for Guides to others be not in a wrong way themselves that all the Reformed Churches ask the same Question of their Candidates The Lutherans say Do you believe the Faith which the whole Christian Church believes c. And do you condemn all Errors and Heresies that are condemned by Scripture and by the genuine Christian Councils (i) Creditisne fidem quam Universa Christiana Ecclesia credit c. Damnatis omnes errores haereses per S. Scripturam Christiana probata Concilia damnatas Form Luth. Ord. Lips 1624. item Form Belg. Eccl. p. 261. Scotch Psalter J. Knox p. 19. The Belgick and Scottish Churches ask the like Questions upon the same occasion For this is sufficient evidence that they who answer this Question sincerely do not hold nor will they teach any Heresie whatsoever but more particularly this excludes all Papists and Enthusiasts from Holy Orders because the former pretend Traditions and the latter New Revelations for the proof of their False Doctrines and though they seem very different yet both agree in denying the perfection of Holy Scripture and both do this with the same design viz. that they may Coin new Articles of Faith as often as they please which false Principles and dangerous Design would make our Faith changeable and uncertain and nothing fixes our fundamentals in Religion like binding all Priests to a written and unalterable Rule It is thought an excellent means to preserve Mens civil Rights to bind the Judges to decide all Causes according to the Written Laws of the Kingdom (k) Ut Judices secundum Scriptam Legem judicent non secundum Arbitrium suum Capitul Reg. Franc. Tom. 1. p. 370. And it is equally prudent and more necessary to use this Caution in Divine Truths of which the Bible is the only Collection and that Standard from which no private Man may vary he may hold some pious Opinions and urge some innocent Practices from Reason and Antiquity but these must not be pressed as necessary to Salvation for nothing is so but what is contained in or can be proved by the Holy Scripture and so long as we keep close to that Rule no dangerous Heresie nor notorious Corruption can come in §. 2. Quest 3. Will you then give your faithful diligence c. This Question shews the matter and manner of their Duty in Divine Administrations A Minister is often compared to a Shepherd whose Office it is to feed his Flock in Green Pastures and to lead them forth besides the Waters of Comfort and with his Shepherds Staff to drive in such as wander into the Valleys of Death and Destruction (l) Psal xxiii 2 4. So our Spiritual Pastor is to feed and nourish his People that are regular by the Word and Sacraments those that are irregular he is to fetch back to the Fold by Holy Discipline privately labouring to convince them of their Errors and convert them from their Sins and if that be not sufficient giving them up to the censures of the Church for their Reformation and Amendment This is the matter of their Duty As to the manner they are to administer Doctrine Sacraments and Discipline so as the Lord hath commanded in his word and so as the Ecclesiastical Laws of this Realm do appoint which are not blessed be God two different ways here in this pure Church because we have declared that we have no power to make any Laws in these matters contrary to God's word (m) Non licet Ecclesiae quicquam constituere quod verbo Dei scripto adversetur Reformat Leg. Eccles c. 11. p. 5. The Scripture teaches the manner of our Ministrations as to the main and our Offices and Canons for Discipline are drawn up by those Divine Directions the rest is supplied out of Primitive Antiquity as to Ceremonies and things not Essential and both are finally confirmed by our Laws Thus we have accurately prescribed Forms for all our Ministrations from which if any private Minister might vary and follow his
Spain were become Christians Baronius owns that long before the XII Council of Toledo viz. An. 681. those Princes had challenged a right to nominate their Bishops to a Synod who were to consecrate them (b) Baron Annal. in An. 681. num 60. And he observes that this method causing delaies by Reason Synods could not be so often convened as vacancies happened therefore that Council of Toledo made this Canon That it shall be lawful for the Bishop of Toledo the Metropolitan to consecrate such Bishops into vacant Sees as the King had chosen and he did approve as worthy (c) Quoscunque regalis Potestas elegerit jam dicti Episcopi judicio dignos esse probaverit c. Concil Tolet. xii can 6. Bin. Tom. 3. pag. 274. And in another Council there we have an instance of a regal Election for a Bishop named Sisebutus being there deprived for Treason the Council confirmed Foelix whom the King had before appointed for his Successor and he was then acknowledged the lawful Bishop of that See (d) Alio tamen principali Electione ibidem instituto Concil Tolet. XVI praefat ibid. p. 318. An. 693. Which Prerogative the succeding Kings of Spain enjoyed and used for many Ages So they did also in France as appears from Gregory of Tours who writ his History about the year 590. And he generally speaks of all Bishops as chosen by the Kings from the days of Clovis the first Christian King An. 490. until his own time out of whom many instances are collected to my hand (e) Vide Exempl Collect. per Bilson de perpet gub Eccles cap. 15. p. 352. c. And whereas some very unfit persons were sometimes advanced by the Court without the consent of the Metropolitan A Synod at Paris An. 559. decreed That such as were made Bishops by the King without the Metropolitans consent should not be received by the People (f) Concil 3. Paris Can. 8. Bin. Tom. 2. par 2. p. 247. But when by vertue of this Canon the Bishops degraded one so nominated and sent a Petition to the King to choose another he was so enraged that he used the Messenger very badly and took upon him to restore the ejected Bishop (g) Vide Gregor Turon lib. 4. cap. 26. p. 147. Bin. Tom. 2. par 2. p. 215. Now since all the Predecessors of Charles the great had exercised this Power while they were only Kings of France no doubt he did not lose it by being made Emperor as to his own Kingdom and if he had any grant of such a Power from Pope Adrian it must only be understood as a confirmation of those Rights in his new Conquests which the Eastern Emperors and other Princes before had there enjoyed and so I understand that Speech of Gregory the Sixth Circ A. 1046. recorded in one of our old Historians who on his Death-bed said Our Predecessor Adrian of famous Memory is commended for granting the investiture of Churches to Charles the Great so that a Bishop elect could not be consecrated till he was first invested by the Kings delivering to him a Ring and a Staff (h) Malmsbur de gest regum lib. 2. p. 47. b. 'T is certain this Emperor did nominate his Bishops Which was a point so well setled in the days of his grandchild Charles the Bald that the Bishops in a Synod say to him speaking of this matter Bishops are given us by God and regularly appointed by you (i) Episcopi à Deo dati à vobis i. e. Regibus regularitèr designati Synod ap Theod. Vill. cap. 2. An. 845. Capit. Tom. 2. pag. 9. So that for the King to appoint Bishops was then thought a regular way which also appears by the Testimony of Pope John the eighth An. 872. who saith The assent of the Emperor is to be expected in the promotion of Bishops (k) Johan 8. Ep. 34. ap Bin. Tom. 3. par 2. p. 13. and he calls him a lawful Bishop who was chosen by the Clergy and People and confirmed by the Emperor (l) Idem Ep. 70. ibid. p. 24. The same Pope desires Caroloman to make Gospert the Deacon Bishop of Vercelles (m) Idem Ep. 71. ibid. pag. 49. and he affirms in another Epistle that this Prince gave him that Church after the manner used by his Predecessors (n) More praecessorum suorum regum imperatorum Id. Epist 223. p. 69. 'T is needless to proceed lower where instances are without number especially since the Kings of France still claim this power though some of later Ages have allowed the Popes to confirm such as they had named to some of the greater Sees That which is most directly to our purpose is to shew the grounds on which our own Kings of England claim this Royal Prerogative to name their Bishops Which are first ancient usage for our eldest Historians speak of the Saxon Kings even from their first conversion as chosing and appointing Bishops So Bede tells us soon after Christianity was setled here that Ecbert and Oswy two Saxon Princes named Wighard to be Arch-bishop of Canterbury with the consent of the Holy Church of England (o) Bed Histor lib. 3. cap. 30. p. 248. lib. 4. cap. 1. p. 253. cir An. 666. And the History of S. Wilfrid alone is sufficient proof that the Election of the Clergy and People confirmed by the Pope was not able to make a Bishop without the Kings allowance (p) Malmsbur de gest Pontif. l. 3. in Wilfrid King Alfred named Denewolf to be made Bishop of Winchester (q) Idem ibid. p. 138. and he chose Asserius Bishop of Schireburn (r) Id. de gest regum lib. 2. cap. 4. p. 24. Robert was preferred to the Arch-bishoprick of Canterbury upon the nomination of King Edward the Confessor (s) Id. ibid. cap. 13. pag. 45. And Ingulphus speaking of that Princes time saith for many years before that the Elections of Prelates had not been free and Canonical that is made by the Clergy but the Court conferred all Dignities of Abbots and Bishops as they thought fit (t) A multis annis retroactis nulla electio Praelatorum erat libera canonica sed omnes dignitates tam Episcoporium quam Abbatum Regis Curia conferebat Ingulph fol. 509. b. Which plainly looks back to the usage in the times of the old Saxon Kings So that Eadmerus need not have represented it as a new thing in William the Conqueror to appoint Bishops (u) Eadmer Histor nov lib. 1. p. 6. 'T is true he did nominate Remigius to the See of Dorchester (w) Matth. Paris An. 1085. p. 12. And he is said to have chosen Lanfranc to be Bishop of Canterbury (x) Malmsbur de gest Pontif. p. 116. b. but so had all his Ancestors done And so did his Successors For King William Rufus on his sick Bed named Anselm for the See of Canterbury then void
had been crucified and now was risen again as he had promised Ver. 21. When therefore their Faith was thus confirmed and their Minds composed Then said Iesus to them I salute you again most heartily wishing Peace and all Happiness may now and ever be unto you For I now come to enlarge your Character by making you my Deputies and Vicegerents in the Ruling and Feeding my Church And that your Authority and Power may be equal to your Trust Behold As my Father hath sent me with his Spirit and in this Name to be the supreme Pastor of this Flock even so send I you with my Spirit and in may name (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sig. mittere cum potestate mittenti 1 Peter ii 14. Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et missi Dominici pro judicibus Capitular Franc. passim to gather together instruct and preside over the Church in my absence as my Delegates and Representatives till I come again at the end of the World and I expect that all who believe in me shall receive and obey you as such for my sake who send you Ver. 22. And when he had said this to instate them into this Office he also made use of a visible significant sign And to shew the ability to execute it aright came originally from the Holy Spirit which he as the eternal Son of God had power to communicate he breathed on them for breath is an emblem of the Spirit called in Hebrew by the same name and was used by God when at the first Creation he put the Soul and Spirit into Man therefore when Spiritual power and Energy was to be put into these newly created Officers Jesus used the same Symbol and said unto them to explain the meaning of the sign Receive every one of ye the Holy Ghost and all his gifts that are ordinarily necessary for the discharge of this your Pastoral Office unto which I now admit you Ver. 23. And leaving you my Embassadors resident upon Earth I do commit to you and your Successors the Ministry of reconciling Sinners unto me upon the Conditions of the Covenant of Grace which I have established in the Gospel and no otherwise So that you shall not only have Authority by these Rules to declare what things are lawful and what unlawful but to judge of Persons and their Actions and if any have Sinned who truly Repent of it you may not only pray to God for them and according to the Gospel promises give them hopes of a Pardon But if you think their Repentance sincere you may Pronounce it and I will confirm it For whose soever Sins you remit in my Name and on my Conditions they are remitted and I will forgive them according to the tenor of my Gospel And on the otherside whose soever Sins ye judge are not sufficiently repented of and so you retain your power of Absolution and declare their guilt remains upon them such Men are liable to my final sentence for as to the Sins of these impenitent Wretches they are retained and I will not forgive them till they give better Testimonies of their unfeigned Repentance (g) Non praejudicamus Domino judicaturo quo minus si Poenitentiam plenam invenerit tunc ratum facit quod à nobis fuerat hic statutum Cypr. ad Anton. Ep. 52. You know I am appointed the great Judge of all and I who alone have the original power to Forgive or Condemn invest you with this Prerogative of loosing the Penitent and binding the Ostinate both to enable you the better to deal with all sorts of Offenders and to bring all Christian People highly to Reverence (h) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. in loc your Office and greatly to regard your Censures and Absolutions A Paraphrase on the third Gospel §. 4. Matth. xxviii 18. After our Lord had often manifested himself to be risen again at Jerusalem the eleven Disciples by his direction went into Galilee to a Mountain probably Tabor where being assembled Iesus came as he had promised to take his final leave and spake unto them to this effect Having now gone through all the Stages of my Humiliation and perfected the work of your Redemption Now by vertue of the eternal Covenant between me and my Father All power and Authority is (i) Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lat. potestas given to me to Order Rule and Govern all things both in Heaven the Triumphant and also in Earth the Militant part of my Church Saints and Angels there and all Mankind here being subjected to me as their sole supreme Head Ver. 19. As to the upper and glorious part of my Kingdom whither I am now returning to be your Mediator there I will manage that in Person But you shall be my Delegates here on Earth Go ye therefore as my Apostles in my name and Teach the first Principles of my Religion unto all Nations in the World So as to convert both Jews and Gentiles to be my Disciples And when they believe my Doctrine and will promise to live by my Rules you shall solemnly admit them by Baptizing them with Water for remission of all their Sins using this Form I Baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost declaring thou art a Believer of the Doctrine of the Holy Trinity and by that distinguishing Article receiving thee into Christ's Holy Church of which thou art now made a Member Ver. 20. As for those whom you have thus baptized you must take care that they understand and keep their Baptismal Vow by frequently Preaching to them and Teaching them conscientiously and strictly to observe all things whatsoever I have revealed to be a Duty and all that I have commanded you already while I was with you upon Earth or shall hereafter by my Spirit further enjoyn to you and them for keeping these my Commandments is the only way to eternal Life I foresee you will meet with many difficulties and much opposition in doing this and perhaps you may be troubled that I must leave you but go on courageously for lo though I am to remain in Heaven as to my Bodily presence yet as God I am Omnipresent and by my constant assistance and support you shall find that I am with you as long as you live and will be with your Successors always even unto the end of the World then I will come again in Glory to reward you and them for all your Labours in my Vineyard and all your Sufferings upon the account of me and mine Amen CHAP. V. Of the Arch-Bishop and the Oath of Canonical Obedience to him §. 1. RUbr And then shall be also ministred unto them the Oath of due Obedience to the Arch-Bishop as followeth It hath been fully proved by divers learned Writers That as soon as the Christian Religion began to spread over the Provinces of the Roman Empire the Bishops of lesser Cities were subordinate to those of
received by the Church for which end they promise upon the third Question to exercise themselves in Study and Prayer to gain a complete understanding of the Holy Scripture And if a Bishop be throughly inlightned with this Divine knowledge the bright beams thereof will banish all Erroneous Opinions and make them disperse as the Mists before the Rays of the resplendent Sun The inferior Clergy may confute false Doctrines but Bishops being supposed to have more Skill and Experience as well as more Age and Authority they must drive them away They are set in the Watch-towers to discover Heresies and like wise and valiant Generals one of which is worth a whole Army (e) 2 Sam. xviii 3. Solent plus reponere in duce quam exercitu Tacit. de Morib Germ. p. 663. must not only Fight against them themselves but must advise manage and encourage all the Under-officers and Soldiers Hence the ancient Canons lay great stress upon the Bishops care in this matter And order That if any Bishop let the Hereticks alone in any part of his Diocess and another Bishop shall convert them that Town shall be given to the latter Bishop (f) Concil Carthag can 122. ap Ber. T. 1. p. 655. And the former Bishop is to be admonished of this neglect so as if he persist in this negligence six Months after such Admonition he shall be Excommunicated (g) Ibid. Can. 124. apud eund pag. 658. Wherefore when Riparius complained to St. Hierom that Vigilantius spread his Heresie in that Diocess where he was a Priest the Holy Father wonders that the Bishop should not restrain such fury (h) Miror sanctum Episcopum in cujus Parochia esse Presbyter dicitur acquiescere furori ejus c. Hieron ad Ripar Ep 53. T. 2. p. 152. And besides this promise our Bishops are obliged frequently to confer with Recusants and to do their utmost to reclaim them As our Canons enjoyn (i) Canon 66. of the Church of England And here I could give many instances of divers of our learned and zealous Bishops who have not only secured their own People from Heresie and Schism but converted divers Recusants of all sorts And if all our right reverend Fathers remembring this solemn promise would apply themselves to this necessary Duty with a Zeal suitable to the occasion their Dignity and Station would give great weight to their Arguments and their Example would also quicken the inferior Clergy to do their parts in the places that are under their several charges And multitudes of poor Souls bought with the most precious Blood of Christ now wandring in the dangerous and destructive Paths of Popery and Fanaticism would every were be happily reclaimed and brought over to the Church To which pious and charitable design I shall humbly and briefly offer two or three motives First That the present Toleration as to Protestant Dissenters having suspended the Bishops exercise of their Authority in this Matter there is no way left to reduce this sort of Recusants but by Arguments and Persuasion and as to Papists those always were and are the fairest ways of convincing them nor if we had power ought we to imitate that unchristian Rigour which we condemn them for using to foreign Protestants (k) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dict. Marciani Aug in Concil Chaled Bin. T. 2. p. 361. so contrary to the practice of the Primitive Church (l) Socrat. Hist l. 7. c. 3. pag. 733. as well as to the Spirit of the Gospel (m) Luke ix 55. Secondly Let the goodness of our Cause be considered Our Doctrines are so plainly contained in Holy Scripture our Offices and Rites so proper Pious and Primitive and have been so clearly justified against all opposers by many eminent Writers of this Church That if we can but win its deluded Adversaries to hear us Reason or Read our Books there is little doubt of success and their Priests and Teachers know this which makes them hinder them as much as in them lies from hearing or reading what we say or write Lastly Let the vigilance and strangely busie zeal of Seducers be duly considered who like their ancestors the Pharisees compass Sea and Land to make one Proselyte and ply those they find doubting wavering or discontented night and day by Discourses Books and fair Promises and shall not we take as much pains to save Mens Souls as they do to destroy them to propagate Gods Holy and Eternal Truth as they to disseminate their pernicious Errors I shall add no more because I hope a word is sufficient to our worthy Bishops who generally use their utmost endeavours in this kind And merit praise rather than need Exhortation §. 4. Qu. VI. Will you maintain and set forward as much as shall lie in you quietness love and peace among all Men c. There is no more expected from a Priest but only to promote Peace and Charity and that is also the Duty of a Bishop as the former part of this Question shews but since the Canons of our own and the ancient Church as well as the Laws of this Land have put the Ecclesiastical Discipline into none but the Bishops hands who also have by God's word a just right to Administer the same Therefore it is required that they shall further promise To correct and punish the unquiet disobedient and criminous according to that Authority which they have both by God's Word and the Ordinance of this Realm I need not repeat that which I have proved in a peculiar tract viz. The Bishops having this Authority vested in them both by Scripture and the Laws Ecclesiastical and Civil (n) See my Discourse of Excommunication printed at London 1685. But I shall rather briefly shew here the manifold benefits that will arise from their due Execution of this power as to regulating the manners of those within the Church who only can be a scandal or an honour to it There are many faults among these for the purest Principles and Holyest Rules will not always secure the innocence of such as profess to believe and follow them But if the Rulers of the Church upon the discovery of them zealously and prudently labour to punish the offence and reform the Offender they not only save the honour of the Church but probably the Soul of the Criminal also which should be the great end of Church censures being a Power that is given for Edification and not for Destruction as the Apostle declares (o) See ch 8. §. 2. 2 Corinth xiii 10. Now since Bishops cannot amend the Evils they do not know Therefore the ancient Canons require That they shall personally visit their whole Diocess once every year (p) Unusquisque Episcopus Parochiam suam omni anno semel circumeat Concil Calcuth Can. 3. An. 857. Spelm. T. 1. p. 193. and the present usage is for them to do this annually by their Arch-Deacons and once in three years by themselves
to gain the Profits of them as a Right to their Crown which he saith threatned Ruine to the Gallican Church because Bishops had the sole power to constitute Successors to supply the Ministrations proper to the lower Orders (f) Summis Sacerdotibus morte truncatis nec ullis deinceps Episcopis in defunctorum Officia suffectis per quos utique minorum Ordinum Ministeria subrogabantur ruinam imminere Ecclesiis Sidon l. 7. ep 6. Since therefore they have this sole Privilege doubtless it is very necessary strictly to require a Promise from them at their Consecration that they will faithfully perform this great trust of Ordaining and sending out fit Persons to execute the Priestly and Episcopal Offices For if they promote any that are Heterodox or Schismatical in their Opinions Weak and Unripe in their Judgments or Vicious and Debauched in their Lives either by negligence in due examining them before or which is worse by fear or favour be imposed upon it is the greatest Sin they can possibly commit and they are answerable for all the ill effects of admitting such Persons into so Holy an Employment The Roman Writers record of their famous Pope Leo the Great that for forty days together he fasted and prayed for Pardon of all his Transgressions and that at last St. Peter appeared to him and told him all should be forgiven him but the Sins of his Ordinations (g) Dimissa sunt tibi omnia peccata tua praeterquam impositionis manuum Pratum Spir. c. 149. ap Bin. not in Vit. S. Leonis And there is thus much moral in the Story that if a Bishop be of never so holy a Life and hath few Sins of his own by this means as St. Paul speaks he becomes partaker of other mens Sins (h) 1 Tim. v. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theop. in lo. because he is the occasion of all the ill consequences of putting an ill man into Sacred Orders And therefore many pious Bishops have opposed the Commands and Menaces of Princes and those of the highest Quality who have urged them to Ordain such as were evil and unfit and have therein shewed a commendable Zeal for God's Glory and the Good of the Church In the ignorant and wretched Ages before our Reformation this neglect had brought the Clergy into extream contempt which I chuse to express in the words of an honest Romish Author then living who says of the Bishops of his time They thrust men into Holy Orders that are like a company of Jack-daws Infamous Boys and Illiterate such as are not fit for any thing else and are not called by God contrary to the Rules of our Forefathers yet if any suffer a repulse he flies to Rome where the most holy Fathers admit Hostlers Cooks and Ideots to the Altars of the Great God yea such as in Germany would not be allowed to communicate among the Laity to the shame and grief of all good Men till they have made the Name of Priest to be a reproach surely they must have evil thoughts of Religion and themselves or design to abuse Christian People who do such things the Work shews the Artificer the Tree is known by its Fruit may Christ save us St. Peter is asleep and the other Simon not to say Antichrist hath got the Dominion (i) Aventini Annal. l. 2. p. 118. qui scripsit circ An. 1500. Thus alas it was then and no doubt it hastned the Reformation and since that in our Church though some few do creep in that prove very unworthy by fair Certificates gained by favour yet generally our Bishops and their Arch-Deacons are very careful to keep out ignorant and scandalous Men for which they deserve the highest applause and the general good Character of most of the Clergy shews that all due caution was taken in their Admission §. 6. Quest VIII Will you shew your self gentle and be merciful for Christ's sake to the poor and needy People and to all Strangers c. As Bishops succeeded the Apostles in all the ordinary parts of their Office so they did in the Primitive Times in their being Supream Treasurers of all the Oblations of the Faithful and by their Order they were distributed to the Poor and Needy of all sorts as I have shewed at large elsewhere (k) Act. iv 35. See the Divine Right of Tithes Par. I. c. 4. p. 60. Par. II. c. 15. p. 117. In those Ages therefore the care of the indigent lay almost wholly upon them So that the Ancient Author of the Apostolical Constitutions tells us they were to be addressed to at their admission in this Form O ye Bishops be careful to maintain all the Poor so as none may want Give to Orphans of the Gifts of their Parents to Widows those of their Husbands make Marriages for such as are grown up get Work for the Artificer shew Mercy to the Weak provide Meat for the Hungry Drink for the Thirsty Cloaths for the Naked Medicines for the Sick and Relief for the Prisoners (l) Constit Apostol l. 4. c. 2. fol. 60. In after times the case was altered in some measure since the building of Parochial Churches in all parts of the Diocesses to which the Bishops granted or confirmed all the Profits and Oblations formerly payed and presented at the Cathedral arising within those Precincts enjoyning the Parish Priest to take care of his own Poor And since that our Secular Laws have provided for the residence and relief of the Poor in every Parish yet still there are very many and great Objects of Charity especially in great Cities Decayed and Aged Labourers and Tradesmen Orphans and Widows Sick and Lame Blind and Maimed many undone by Fire and Water Thieves and Robbers many poor Strangers and Travellers and many confined to loathsom Prisons To which the Bishop is hereby obliged to be courteous and bountiful for Christ Jesus sake who takes that which is given them as lent to himself and will reward such Charity with a Crown of Glory (m) Prov. xix 17. Matth. xxv 34 35. His compassion interests him so far in their wants that he seems to beg in them and will be pleased by our giving them relief (n) Egestuosus pro se tantum in se eget Solus Christus est qui in omnium pauperuw universitate mendicat Salv. de gub l. 4. Now if all desire to hear those comfortable words of our Lord saith St. Hierom come ye blessed of my Father c. for I was Hungry and ye gave me meat c. how much more should a a Bishop his Steward desire to hear them whose House should be ready to receive all the necessitous (o) Matt. xxv 35 c. Cujus domus commune debet esse omnium hospitium Hieron in Tit. 1.8 'T is certain the Apostle's Rule That a Bishop must be given to Hospitality (p) 1 Tim. iii. 2. Titus i. 8. doth oblige in all Ages and