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A07822 Salomon or A treatise declaring the state of the kingdome of Israel, as it was in the daies of Salomon Whereunto is annexed another treatise, of the Church: or more particularly, of the right constitution of a Church. Morton, Thomas, of Berwick. 1596 (1596) STC 18197.7; ESTC S112936 159,289 238

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although more enioyed then considered as also for that they may in part be gathered of that which hath beene spoken Sect. III. THus we haue by the generall doctrine of magistracie an entrance made to the speciall doctrine of the kingdome of Israell wherein we haue many seueral points to consider which for order and memorie sake may be reduced to two heades whereof the first containeth the state of this kingdom in respect of n●en or of the people of Israel the second the state of it in respect of God The first head hath the greatest part of the difference of this kingdome from the former gouernment of Iudges consisting especially in two thinges the speciall power which it had ouer the people and the speciall maiestie of it both which were exceeding great in this state yea so great that in these respectes the gouernment of the iudges may seeme not onely a meane but almost a priuate estate Hence it is that this kingdome of Israel is by Iacob prophecying of it Gen. 49.9 compared to a Lion the which doth in strength and especially in a maiesticall statelinesse so farre exceede all other beastes that it is vsually called the king of them If we desire to knowe howe it came to passe that there was so greate power and maiestie giuen to this kingdome we must haue recourse to the originall of it The causes of the setting vppe of this estate were two The first is that which may be saide to bee the cause of all thinges in the worlde to witte the eternall counsell and decree of God by the which it was before al ages appointed that the king of Israell shoulde be a type of Christ and his temporarie gouernment a type of the spirituall and eternall kingdome of Christ as is afterwarde to be declared Nowe that this kingdome might be a fitte and liuely type it was needfull that it shoulde be endued with a greate measure of power and maiestie that so it might the more liuely represente the infinite power and authoritie which the Messias was to haue ouer all creatures in heauen and in earth and likewise his vnspeakable and incomprehensible maiesty and glorie filling the heauen of heauens The second cause of the greate power and maiesty of this kingdome was the desire or rather the will of the people who did so earnestly yea so eagerly and importunately call for this stately gouernment that they would take no denyall nor heare any thing which coulde be alledged to be contrarie For that the people did alwaies desire this state we may see Deutro 17.14 where God foretelleth this that when they were once possessed of the lande they woulde haue a King and Iudg. 8.22 where they offer to make Gedeon king and more plainely Iudges 9. where they like Abimeleches opinion saying that it was better for them to haue one then many to raigne ouer them Neyther did they desire to haue one sette ouer them with the bare name and title of a kinge or with anie meane authoritie but that hee shoulde haue power and maiestie in the highest degree For howsoeuer it might seeme that this their desire was in some respecte incommodious to themselues for that the greater power they gaue to the king the lesse libertie they lefte to themselues and the greater that his pompe and maiestie was the more heauie tributes must be imposed on them for the maintayning of it yet they did so vehementlie desire to be like to other nations in a stately monarchie that they thought no price too greate for it thinking belike as it is commonlye saide that it was greater honour for them to make a mightie and a glorious Kinge then to be kings thēselues as euery one was in the time of the Iudges wherein euery man did that which was good in his own eyes because they had no king to order them Iudg. 18.1.19.1 And yet we do not deny but that in ordaining so mighty maiestical an authority they thought it would be for their owne good howsoeuer it might seeme to derogate from their liberty and profitte and that the commodities would be moe and more waightie then the inconueniences of it wherein whether they did iudge right or no let others determine Sect. IIII. NOW we are to come to the particular declaration of these things First of the power of this kingdome and secondly of the maiestie of it The doctrine of the power hath in it these foure questions The first is whether the power of the king were whole or deuided The second whether it were generall ouer all persons and causes or restrained The third whether it were absolute or tied to lawes The last whether it were a milde or a peremptory power The power whereof we doe intreate is the full supreame and vniuersall authoritie for of any inferiour power we doe not speake of gouerning the people and of ordering all their publicke affaires the which before that this kingdome was set vp was not wholy in any one hand but deuided amongst many For it was partly in the handes of God partly in the handes of the iudge which was for the time partly in the handes of the elders or senat and partly in the handes of the bodie of the people For the first where we say that God had a part of this authoritie we doe not consider him simply as God for in that respect not a part only but the whole supreame power not of that country onely but of all the nations in the world yea of heauen and earth was and is in his handes but we consider him as he was after a speciall manner the king and ruler of this people so as he neuer was or will be to any other nation The actions of God which did proceede from this his regal authoritie were these First that he gaue to this people iudiciall lawes and constitutions which is part of the office not of God for then these iudiciall lawes should belong to the whole world seeing GOD is the God not of the Iewes only but also of the gentils But other nations are not tyed to these laws but only to the morall law and to these Iudicials so farre as they are morall to wit to the grounds and equitie of them but not to the lawes themselues The second thing which God did by vertue of this authoritie was the supreme administration of their battailes in cases of greate extremitie For as greate princes sende captaines to fight in their steade yet according to their direction and appointment so God did immediately either by his word or spirit stirre vp some man to fight the battailes of the people and did directe them in such actions And this Gedeon acknowledgeth Iudges 7.20 Where hee saith the sworde of the Lorde and of Gedeon In these respectes GOD was the kinge of this nation as Gedeon doth confesse Iudges 8.23 who so answereth the people going aboute to make him kinge that neyther hee nor anie of his posteritie shoulde
absolute power thinking that as that wine is most wholsome which is taken not in the full vigor and naturall strength but tempered and delayed with some colde liquor so that manarchie is most safe and acceptable the power whereof is moderated and yoked with some other power of positiue lawes or of parliamentes of the nobilitie or of the people whereby it may be restrained from iniurie iniustice and tyranny when it is needefull Thirdlye we answere that if we may as vnskilfull and ignorante men vse to doe iudge of the causes by the effectes and of counsels by the euent it should seeme that this people did not loose much by this bargaine for that the state of their common-wealth was much better vnder the gouernment of the kinges then before when as the administration of ciuil affaires was very dissolute and remisse yea often times wholly wanting for that the publike authoritie being as hath beene declared deuided amongest many to wit the iudge the high priest the elders the princes of the tribes and the people was eyther wholly or in p●rt neglected of all so that as it is written Iudg. 21.25 euery man did what him listed both in committing and also in redressing iniuries because there was no king in Israel but after that there was once a kinge made they neuer wanted gouernment yea they had it more strict and seuere then perhaps they desired Likewise for the other part of the gouernment which is in warlike affaires it is without question that their state was much bettered by this chaunge Before they were a common preie to the nations neere vnto them and so often subdued and captiuated eyght yeares to Chusan King of Syria Iudg. 3.7 to the King of Moab 18. to Iabin 20 yeares Iudg. 4.3 to the Madianites 7. yeares Iudg. 6.1 to the Ammonites 18. yeares Iudg. 10.8.9 to the Philistines 40. yeares Iudg. 13.2 that it might seeme true which many ages afterward was spoken of them that they were a nation borne to slauery but by their kings they were not onely freed from beeing so often subdued but also made conquerers and rulers of other nations The Iudges deliuered them from their enemies but their kings deliuered their enemies to them making them tributaries to the people before they were not pinched with heauie tributs so as afterwards by their kinges but they were much more often spoiled and their land cleane wasted by forraine inuasion before in the time of peace the common people did more abound with welth because they were free from publike burdens but the publike estate was verie meane when as it was at the best for the most part very beggerly and miserable vnder the kinges the commonalty was somewhat impouerished and yet they had as we say some thing for their money as namely a stately and glorious Monarchie which they did vehemently desire and whereof they were not a litle proud sumptuous palaces for their kings to dwel in and many faire buildinges for their princes and nobles especially in Ierusalem with all manner of prouision correspondent thereunto secondly they had a costly and famous temple wherein to worship God renowmed throughout the whole world for beautie and magnificencie Thirdly they had horses and chariots troupes of horsemen armies of common soldiers kept at the kinges or rather at the common expenses yea they had fensed and walled Cities and all such like force whereby to resist and subdue their enemies So we read 2. Chro. 1. that Salomon had a thousand and foure hundred chariots and twelue thousand horsmen yea he made siluer as plentifull as stones in Ierusalem and great summes of money were giuen to him for tribute of the kinges of Aegypt Syria and others there about and in one word they had a publike estate farre passing in glory any countrie of kingdome neare vnto them So that if it be as wise men doe thinke better to haue a hard gouernment then an anarchie and confusion to haue publike liberty from forraine power then popular licence from obedience of lawes to be pinched in their purses then to be slaine captiuated in their bodies wiues and children to suffer iniurie at home then slauerie abroad to maintaine their own naturall kinges then to enrich forraine nations to be priuately poore then publikely base to haue their Cities fenced then their houses t●immed and furnished Then this people was not so notoriously foolish in choosing this gouernment as diuers wise men haue thought Neyther had they a very euill penny-woorth tho they bought it with the price of their own liberty But we doe not take vpon vs to define any thing but leaue it to those who are seene and exercised in these matters Onely we say that the chiefe commoditie which they looked for by their king was safetie from their enemies abroad and execution of iustice at home as appeareth 1. Sam. 8.20 wherein they were not frustrate of their expectation Sect. IX THus we see that the power of the kingdom of Israell was wholly in the kings owne handes no other hauing part thereof In the next place we are to see how farre this power did stretch it selfe abroade The answere to this question is this that the power of this kinge did stretch it selfe as farre as the limittes of his kingdome or lande did so that there was not anie person or cause within the compasse of his dominions exempte from it For the persons of men there was no preheminence of office no nobilitie or royaltie of bloude no holinesse of calling or function neyther any other prerogatiue whatsoeuer that coulde giue vnto any man this priuiledge that he shoulde not be subiect to the iurisdiction and power of the king So Ioab was the grand-captayne in Israell placed in the highest office in the lande yea in such an office as doth vsually laugh at and contemne the power of the greatest princes such vnrulie spirites doth militarie licence breede in many men and so great a man as that Dauid durste not in the beginning of his raigne call him to account for murthering Abner but acknowledgeth that the sonnes of Seruiah were too harde for him as we may reade 2. Sam. 3.29 yet wee knowe that Salomon a peaceable kinge made him stoupe to his authoritie and lay downe his life at his feete Likewise Adonia was a man more noble in bloude then Kinge Salomon for he was his elder brother yet this royall prerogatiue coulde not saue his life and therefore he was put to death by the sentence of Salomon for aspyring nay for looking at or almost for thinking on the kingdome for the kinge perceiued by his asking of Abisage Kinge Dauids concubine that he still kept his firste minde But although both greate and noble men and all generallie which haue any place office or calling in the common-wealth be subiect to this authoritie yet it may seeme vnmeete that they who are endued with holy functions especially they who are placed in the highest authority in
generall state of religion be permitted vnto him wee cannot exclude him from the making of lawes whereby the lawes of God are to be executed The humane lawes of this Church were very fewe because almost all the circumstances of the seruice of God were prescribed by the ceremoniall lawe yet there was alwaies necessary occasion of making some in the which worke the king had the chiefe stroke Thus did Dauid and Salomon make many ecclesiastical lawes which continued long after in the Church and are mentioned by Iosias saying 2. Chro. 35.4 Prepare your selues ye Leuites by your companies according to the writing of Dauid and the writing of Salomon yet these lawes were made by the aduise of others to wit eyther of the prophets as we may see 2. Chro. 33.15 or of the Church and people Thus did Ezechias hold a councel 2. Chro 30.2 wherin by the aduise of the whole Church the passeouer was held in the second month likewise verse 13 the whole assembly tooke counsell to keepe the feast other seauen daies so that although these ecclesiasticall constitutions were established by the sole authority of the king yet they were aduised by others that nothing should be done in the Church peremptorely by the absolute authority of the king or any other but rather by the counsel of others so with the good liking of al men Yea an errour cōmitted in the ordering of the church is more grieuous dangerous therfore was to be auoyded as by al other meanes so especially by taking the aduise of others in making lawes for this purpose Yet it did not belong to the king to take vppon him the office of the high priest as we may see in the example of Ozias 2. Chro. 26. or to meddle with the proper dueties of any other ecclesiasticall person or yet to change the ceremonial law but onely to order the publike state of religion to make by the aduise of others and to establishe by his own authority those lawes which serued for that purpose Sect. XI THere remaine two other properties of this regall power to wit that it was absolute and peremptorie the which we will propounde verie briefly For the first we doe not meane that this power was so loosed from lawes that the king might doe what him listed for he was tied to some lawes as namely first to the keeping of the morall law yea vpon paine of forfaiting and loosing his kingdome if he did wickedly transgresse the same and if at anie time he did commaund contrarie to this lawe he was not to be obeyed 1. King 18.13 1. Sam. 22.17 and secondly the fundamentall lawes of the kingdome the state whereof it was not in his power to alter Yea also he was tied to the ceremoniall lawe containing the outward manner of the worshippe of God But he was loosed first from the Iudiciall lawe of God and secondly from all possitiue lawes made by men By the Iudiciall lawes are vsually ment all those lawes of Moses which belong vnto the practise of the second table and of such dueties as we owe to our neighbour And it is as it were an addition to the seconde Table as the ceremoniall lawe is to the first But heere wee meane more specially onely so many of them as did belong to the publike administration of the common-wealth which may properly be called politicall iudiciall or forensicall concerning the manner of administring iustice and iudgement as namely in what order iudgement ought to beginne and proceede what punishmente ought to be inflicted for euerie seuerall offence and also howe they shoulde behaue themselues in battaile in all which the Iudges Elders and people had a prescript forme which they did follow and were bound by the commaundement of God so to doe But the kinges were freed from these lawes so that if they did execute iustice and iudgement it was free for them to doe it in what forme manner they thought best as for example the iudiciall lawe required that when any had committed any hainous trespasse there shoulde be two or three witnesses solemnely produced and that they shoulde beginne the execution and first throwe stones at the offendour But the kinges namely Saule Dauid and Salomon did put diuerse to death without obseruation of any of these circumstances Neyther heerein did they sinne against God and his lawe because they were freed from it Yea it belonged to the king to make these positiue lawes of the circumstances of executing iudgement and therefore to be a iudge a lawgiuer a kinge and a defender from forraine enemies are all ioyned together Isa. 23.22 the Lord is our iudge our law-giuer our kinge and he shall saue vs. Yea the power of this kingdome was such in this behalfe that the kinge might of himselfe without calling any to consultation make publishe establishe and execute lawes and edictes whereof there are manie examples yet it was more vsuall yea and conuenient in regard both of king and people that the aduise of the priests prophets rulers and elders of the people shoulde be taken Lastly this power of this kingdome herein differeth from the power of the Iudges Elders and of the people in that it was not so gentle and milde but after a sort a fierce and peremptorie power as may easelie be gathered by that which hath beene spoken of it for where there is a greate generall and absolute power wholly in any one hand it must needs be of this nature Hence it was that the people stood in farre greater awe of this authority then of any other insomuch that the lawes edictes and commaundementes of the kinges were like vnto the roaring of a Lyon whereat all the beastes in the forrest doe tremble and quake for feare Yea their whole behauiour was much more reuerent to the kinges then to their other rulers So we read Iudg. 8.1 and 12. that whenas Gedeon and Iephta had gotten notable victories of the enemie the Ephramites came vpon them very presumptuously to quarrell with them because for sooth they had not taken them with thē to the battaile but they did not vse to aske their kings any such questions or to require any reason of their doings but did readelie come when they called goe when they sent and do whatsoeuer thing was inioined by them Yea we may wel thinke that the cause why Rehoboam gaue the people such a strange answere was not for that he ment to increase their tributes for there was no cause why he shoulde so doe the temple and the kinges pallaces being builte and the king being furnished with all thinges requisite eyther for maiesty at home or strength abroade for the which purpose those gret tributes were imposed but rather because he and his young counsell were highly offended and inflamed with anger against the people for that they did offer to make him a conditionall king who should not raigne but vpon those conditions which they propounded To take one example of
looketh for another measure of knowledge and th●refore other meanes of attaining it are necessarily to be vsed Lastly this is to be noted that this Church-gouernment was neuer altered but by the expresse commaundemen● of God as it was ordained by him onely the changing of it being confirmed by miracles to be from God as we may see in the instituting of the legall gouernment by Moses and this vnder the gospell by the Apostles and that change 2. Chron. 8.26 and 35.15 was by speciall direction from God Yea the gouernment of the Church both typicall before the gospel and reall in the time of it was instituted by extraordinary prophets to wit Adam Moses and Christs apostles and so left to ordinary ministers name ly to the first borne then to the Leuits and lastly to the ministers of the word in the time of the gospell Thus much in generall of Church-gouernment and of the three diuers states of it whereof order requireth that we shoulde heere entreate in particular But we cannot in this short treatise enter into this wide and large field and therefore supposing for orders sake this argument to be here handled we goe on to that which followeth CHAP. VI. Of ecclesiasticall humane lawes Sect. 1. How they differ from the lawes of God THus much of the lawes which God hath appointed for the ordering of his church Now we are to come to the humane lawes of the Church the which we will consider first by comparing them with the aforesaid lawes of God and secondly as they are in themselues For the first both kindes agree in name being both called ecclesiasticall and in the end which is the good order of the Church and also in the generall subiect which is the publicke seruice of God together with those actions which belong vnto it Yet they differ in many respectes First and especially in the author or efficient the former kind being made by God himselfe the other by men whereof it commeth that the first kinde is farre more excellent then the other the one consisting wholly and meerely of the wisedome of God the other hauing in them much weaknesse and ignorance the one absolute and perfect the other continually hauing wantes and imperfections And therefore the one kinde is temporarie and mutable the other perpetuall and constant although when the appointed time of them is expired they are changed by God but they admit no alteration from man Further the lawes of God belong to the whole visible Church and to euery particular Church but the other onely to some one or a few of them For as a king who hath dominion o●er many cities doth vse himselfe to make the chiefe lawes by ●he which al and each one of those cities are to be gouerned yet he leaueth to them this power to take vp and retaine customes fashions and orders proper to themselues yea to make particular lawes of matters of lesse moment as may best agree to their seuerall states and conditions so hath Christ the king of his Church himselfe made the chiefe orders but left the rest for the Church to make Lastly the first kinde is about the substance very forme of the seruice of God the other about the circumstances of it And therefore the adding of this latter kinde to the former doth not adde any thing to the substance of Church-gouernment but onely doth establish it and maketh that it may conueniently be vsed Euen as we doe often see that the whole and perfect frame of a house in the full proportion of it is set vp not wanting eyther foundation walles or roofe but afterward there are added to it nailes and pinnes to keep the frame fast together yea dore● windowes and whatsoeuer is requisite to make the said frame a cōmodious dwelling place for the builder of it euen so the gouernment of the Church as it is appointed by God and hath in some part beene described is the perfect frame of the house of God the lawes of men are the other implementes which are added thereunto Sect. 2. Of the matter of ecclesiasticall humane lawe● and how they ought to be taken out of the word of God THus much bri●fly of these lawes by way of comparison with the other now we are to consider the nature of them more plainely and distinctly First for the matter of these lawes we see that they are of the circumstances of the gouernment of the Church to wit at what time in what place yea and howe often it ought to be vsed all which are vsually called rites or ceremonies and are as it were the fashions of the Church As for example the law● of God is that there shoulde be ministers in the Church to teach the people but howe often they shoulde teach at what speciall times where and with what gesture these thinges are not determined in the worde of God but left to the ecclesiasticall lawes of men If it be asked why it hath pleased God to decke and beautifie his Church vnder the law not onely with the substance of gouernment but also with so many ceremoniall lawes that scarse any circumstance of any action was left vnappointed by himselfe and to suffer his Church nowe in the time of the gospell to be naked and destitute almost of all ceremoniall lawes but such as are made by men we answere rendering three causes thereof The first is for that the Church vnder the lawe was without that ripenesse of knowledge wherevnto she hath come in the time of the gospell and therefore had neede to haue all the particulars of euerie action prescribed But now the Church being endued with more knowledge hath these thinges lefte to her discretion euen as we see men vse to deale who if they commit any buisinesse to one whome they thinke to be endued with wisedome and experience they doe not tell him the particular manner of doing but onely thus much in generall that they woulde haue such a thing done otherwise if he wante this knowledge then they leaue nothing arbitrarie to him but set downe euerie pointe and the speciall circumstances thereof The second cause is this in the making of these Church-lawes there must be greate regarde had as we afterwarde are to shew of the nature manners behauiour and state of that people for whome they are to be made Nowe vnder the law the visible Church did consist of one nation onely to wit of the Iewes but vnder the gospell all the nations of the worlde are at one time or other of the Church So that lawes agreeable to each people would haue beene so infinite that they coulde not haue beene written neyther doth the worde of God nowe belong in any part to any one nation but generally and equally to all Thirdlie the Church being bound in regarde of her infancy to the obseruation of the legall ceremonies nowe the Church is set in full libertie by the comming of Christ and no further tyed to such outward
is called the visible Church by relation had to the catholik Church the which by reason of the dispersed members of it is inuisible as hath bene declared whenas euery particular Church yea euen priuate Churches and so consequently the visible Church consisting thereof doth make a publick profession of the fayth This visible Church doth continually existe in the world forsomuch as GOD hath appointed that his name shoulde continually as longe as the worlde endureth be called vpon and worshipped in one place or other as the story of the Ch. doth witnes We confesse that it hath often lurcked in secret places and often been so ouer-shadowed with errours superstition and idolatrie that it could hardly be discerned and so hath been euen as the sunne is in the eclipse yet neuer wholly taken away for whenas there was but one particular Ch. in the world yea this particular church was not publick but priuate within one mans family and secret lurking in a corner so that they who liued at that time or in the ages following could not define where the Church was at such a time yet that Church made the visible Church For their profession was visible and open among themselues and also to others although it were not seen at that instant for a thing which is not actually seen may be visible Secondly this is to be noted that in the first ages of the world before the time of the Gospell the visible Ch. did often consist of one only particular church there being no moe in the world but since the publishing of the gospel it hath hitherto shall alwaies consist of many Lastly as touching the place of this visible Ch. although it be not tyed to any certaine place yet it hath alwaies bene cheifly in some one parte of the world So we knowe that first it was wholly in the east partes in the countries of Mesopotania Syria Iurie and others adioyning vnto these Afterwards in the first time of the gospell it was cheifly in Asia And in these last ages we see that it hath been almost wholly in Europe and whether God will change the dwelling place of it again or no euen transporte it to the fourth parte of the world lately found out or to any other place it is knowne to himselfe onely Diuers ●ther points should be added for the full declaration of ●he nature and state of the visible Church But many of them a●● common with the catholick Church and therefore are handled in the first Chapter where they may be considered The rest we cut off for breuities sake because this treatise is already growen beyond our purpose and expectation So then to conclude if to this visible Church we do adde the dispersed members of the catholick Church we haue the catholick Church And so the end of this treatise is brought to the beginning FINIS Why the people desired an alteration of the state The occasion of this alteration Magistracie Gods ordinance The church hath neuer beene without magistracie How God erecteth magistracie among infidels Why God appointed magistracie In what respect the magistrate beareth the image of God The kingdome of Israel a type of Christes kingdome How God was the king of Israel The iudicial law in part abrogated by the erecting of this kingdome God put from his kingdome What authoritie the people had before the time of the Kinges No authoritie in Israel but in the hands of the king The king to his subiects as a father to his children The prophets neuer reproue the people for not resisting the idolatrous kings Vnlawfull to vse violeēe against the ki●g in the maintenance of religion The people could not resume their liberty giuen into the handes of the kings It belonged not to the people but to God to nominate the king Saul remained the lawfull king of Israell after that Dauid was annointed and appointed to the kingdome The rebellion of Ieroboam of the tenne tribes vnlawfull Hazaels rebellion foretold by God but not permitted God would not take the kingdome from Dauids posterity The kingdome so annexed to the house of Dauid that it could not be taken from it God neuer approued any conspiracy made against any of the kings With what weapons this people might fight against their kinges Why absolute monarchies were more in vse in the first ages of the world The gouernment of the kings compared with the former Ecclesiasticall persons subiect to the authoritie and iurisdiction of the king God deferred the building of the Temple till that the kingdome were erected The Church with the common welth make but one bodie Resisting of wicked kings weakeneth the authority of good kings Ecclesiastical constitutions made by the authority of the kinges The kings exempted from the Iudiciall lawes Great power bringeth with it great maiesty The diuine original of this kingdome made it maiesticall The annointing of these kinges signified the holinesse of their persons and functions Long continuance of hereditarie succession made this kingdome strong and maiesticall What made the gouernment of the Iudges to be contemned The statelinesse of this kingdome in the daies of Salomon The maiesty of this kingdome increase and decrease as did the sinceritie of religion The kinge might lawfully exact of the people not only for necessarie vses but for pompe pleasure An absolute Monarchie is a chargeable and costly gouernment The people had this gouernment in great reuerence and estimation This kingdome standeth yet in Christ. The people account the kinges better then ten thousand of themselues This gouernment doth more resemble the authority of God then any other kind doth Why God was offended with the people asking a king God did alwaies like this gouernment and purpose to establish it God the author of kingdomes and the setter vp of kinges The kinge held his kingdome as from God and was subiect to his will and worde This example of Samuel teaching the people the state of the kingdome is to be followed by the ministers of Gods word Nothing better beseeming Christians then due subiection to magistates A compendious abstract of the state of the kingdome of Israel Care to be had of posterity Alteration of gouernment in any common wealth troublesome and dangerous The worde Catholicke not vsed in the scripture The catholicke Church was twise contained in one familie The profession of the true religion maketh one a member of the catholicke Church Infantes are members of the catholike Church Hypocritical professours are members of the catholicke Church Excommunication doth not separate from the catholicke but only frō the visible Church Heretikes as Arians and papistes are to be counted members of the catholicke Church The papist holdeth the foundation of Christian religion Whole Churches haue held grieuous errours The state of the Church before the comming of Christ. Faith and fundamentall errours together The same errour more pernitious at one time thē at another Greater hope of the saluation of an ignorant then of a learned
this people shoulde earnestly desire and seeke after wishing rather that euerie one be content with that gouernment which is already established in the place where he liueth not thinking of any alteration which is verie dangerous and bringeth with it as alwaies great troubles so often a finall ouerthrow to the people But we leaue it to them who professe knowledge and experience in these matters to determine what kinde of gouernment is eyther most excellent in the owne nature and in contemplation or most conuenient to be put in practise Onely we purpose to make a bare and historical narration of the state of this kingdome the which we trust is not vnprofitable but will serue for the good of the reader in diuers respectes especially in those which haue bene already mentioned The former treatise hath these Sections SEction 1. Of the occasion meaning and diuision of the wordes of the text Pag. 1 Sect. 2. Of magistracie in generall Pag. 4 Sect. 3. Of the state of this kingdome in generall Pag. 9 Sect. 4. That the authoritie of the land was wholly in the handes of the king all other being priuate persons in respecte of him Pag. 12 Sect. 5. That it was n●t lawfull to vse any violence against the persons or the proceedinges no not of the wicked kinges Pag. 17 Sect. 6. Of the obiections which are made against the former position Pag. 22 Sect. 7. What was the behauio●r of the subiectes in regarde of iniuries offered by their ki●ges Pag. 28 Sect. 8. Whether the setting vp of this monarchicall estate were commodious or hurtful to the people Pag. 30 Sect. 9. That no person whatsoeuer was exempted from this power Pag. 34 Sect. 10. What was the power of this kingdome in ecclesiasticall causes Pag. 39 Sect. 11. That the power of this kingdome was free from positiue lawes and a peremptorie power Pag. 46 Sect. 12. Of the causes of the great maiestie of this kingdome Pag. 50 Sect. 13. Of the particulars in the said Maiesty Pag. 54 Sect. 14. That this kingdome was a lawfull kinde of gouernement and how it was subiect to God Pag. 61 Sect. 15. Of the actions of Samuel Pag. 67 The Argument of the latter treatise is the Church militant considered in general in the first chapter of the catholiick Church sections 8. particular in the members of the catholicke Church dispersed abroad in the second chap. sections 3. ioyned together in a particular Church whereof we are to entreate seuerally declaring in generall the definitiō of a particular Ch. in the attributes chapter 3. Sections 3. the building of it to wit the laying the foundation Ch. 4. Sect. 4. the setting vp the frame by establishing lawes ecclesiasticall diuine Ch. 5. Sect. 2. humane C. 6. of ecclesiasticall constitutions sect 5. of the diuers states of it Ch. 7. Sect. 11 In particular the diuerse kindes of a Church which is eyther priuate Ch. 8. Sect. 3. or publicke Chap. 9. Sections 9. Ioyntly in the coniunction of some particular Churches Chap. 10. Sect. 4. all the which make the visible Church Chap. 11. The Argument Chapter 1. Of the catholicke Church SEction 1. Of the name and definition of the catholicke Church pag. 1 Sect. 2. Of the place of the catholicke Church pag. 3 Sect. 3. That hypocrites are members of the catholicke Church pag. 4 Sect. 4. That heretickes are members of the catholicke Church pag. 8 Sect. 5. Of those who dissemble their profession pag. 16 Sect. 6. Who are without the catholicke Church pag. 17 Sect. 7. Of the attributes of the catholicke Church pag. 18 Sect. 8. Of the distribution of the catholicke Church pag. 21 Chapter 2. Of the dispersed members of the Church Sect. 1. For what cause men are separated from the Church pag. 22 Sect. 2. How they serue God pag. 25 Sect. 3. What to thinke of their saluation pag. 26 Chapter 3. Of a particular church Sect. 1. Of the originall of it pag. 29 Sect. 2. Of the definition of it pag. 30 Se●● 3. Of the number of i● pag. 32 Chapter 4. Of the planting of a particular church Sect. 1. Of what people a Church may consist pag. 35 Sect. 2. By whom a church ought to be planted pag. 37 Sect. 3. How the word should be preached to infidels pag. 39 Sect. 4. How men conuerted ought to be ordered pag. 44 Chapter 5. Of ecclesiasticall gouernment Sect. 1. Of church gouernment in generall pag. 48 Sect. 2. Of the diuers kindes of church gouernment pag. 53 Chapter 6. Of ecclesiasticall humane lavves Sect. 1. How these lawes diff●r from the lawes of God pag. 57 Sect. 2. 3. Of the matter of these lawes pag. 58 Sect. 4. After what rules they are to be made pag. 62 Sect. 5. Of the number of them psg 66 Chapter 7. Of the diuers states of a particular church Sect. 1. Of a state vnestablished pag. 67 Sect. 2. Of a pure and perfect state of a church pag. 70 Sect. 3. Of a flourishing state pag. 71 Sect. 4. Of that state wherein the building of the ch is hindred pag. 74 Sect. 5. Of professed hinderers pag. 78 Sect. 6. Of the ch hindred by the ciuil ruler being a professed enemie pa. 79 Sect. 7. Of the church hindred by the ciuill ruler being a member of it p. 83 Sect. 8. Of the church hindered by the ministers of the word pag. 87 Sect. 9. Of an imperfect state of a chur●h pag. 88 Sect. 10. Of a currupt state of a church namely of idolatrie pag. 90 Sect. 11. Of a church corrupt in doctrine pag. 93 Chapter 8 Of a priuate Church Sect. 1. What a priuate Church is Pag. 95 Sect. 2. Of the specials in planting a priuate Church pag. 120 Sect. 3. Of the state of it being planted pag. 99 Chapter 9. Of a publicke or nationall Church Sect. 1. Of the obiections which are made against publick Ch. pag. 102 Sect. 2. Of the coniunction of the church and the commonwealth p. 106 Sect. 3. That a publicke Church with the commonwealth make but one bodie vnder one head pag. 107 Sect. 4. That ciuill and ecclesiastical functions may be together in the same persons pag. 114 Sect. 5. Of the chaunges which happen eyther ●o the Church or common wealth by this coniunction pag. 116 Sect. 6. Of the first mouer in the planting of a publicke Church pag. 118 Sect. 7. Of the special manner of planting a publicke Church pa. 120 Sect 8. Of the establishing of it pag. 123 Sect. 9. To whom the authorizing and aduising of ecclesiastical lawes belongeth in a publicke Church pag. 125 Chapter 10. Of the coniunction of particular Churches Sect. 1. Of the voluntarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of councels pag. 131 Sect. 2. Of whom counsels may and ought to consist pag. 133 Sect. 3. Of the necessarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of the same ciuill power pag. 134 Sect. 4. How the seuerall prouinces of a national church are to be
from the safety of the people of states and commonwealthes the ground square and end of all good pollicie carieth with it such a faire shew of equitie and necessitie that like vnto a violent streame it hath caried many headlong in heate to condemne and reiect vtterly these absolute Monarchies as tyrannicall and barbarous kindes of gouernment pernitious to men yea altogether vnlawful and vnmeete for the Church of God But we ought not to suffer our selues to be deceiued by any appearance or pretence whatsoeuer or in respect of any inconueniences although neuer so great to iudge that to be vnlawfull and prophane which God by establishing it in his Church hath shewed to be holy and lawfull But for the further resoluing of this question it is requisite that we againe put you in minde that we doe not heere speake eyther what ought to be the state of al kingdomes in this behalfe or that this is the best kinde of gouernment but only doe shew what was the state of this kingdome of Israell In the which it seemeth that the whole power of ruling the lande was giuen by God and by the people into the handes of the king without any exception whatsoeuer insomuch that the people did not reserue to themselues any power whereby they might lawfully resist his authoritie or oppose themselues to his proceedings although vnlawfull and vniust much lesse take from him the kingdome or to offer any manner of violence vnto his person For the authoritie of this king ouer his people was no lesse then is the authoritie of a father in his familie in respect of his children who if he doe iniuriously intreat any of them or not carefully keep his own goods or liue any way disorderly it is the duety of his children if not with silence to suffer it yet with great modesty to admonish him of it But if they should ioyne themselues together and offer any violence vnto him especially if they should throw him out of his house all men woulde count them rebellious and vngratious children But if they shoulde take his life from him they were to be esteemed notoriously wicked ye rather as monsters worthy to be abhorred of all men So it seemeth that the state of this kingdome was such as that no subiect of what place soeuer no not the whol people iointly could lawfully vse any violence against the kings person or proceedinges and that the king might although not lawfully in respect of the lawe of God of men or of nature yet safely and freely in respect of his subiectes doe whatsoeuer pleased him according as Iacob foretelleth Gen. 49.9 that Iuda the king of his brethren should be as the great Lion who when he laieth himselfe downe who shall raise him vppe or disquiet him The trueth heereof appeareth in the whole course of the story of the kings who praesuming vpon this whole and vndeuided authority did neuer feare or doubt to doe whatsoeuer they listed without asking leaue eyther at nobles elders or people Hence came that foolish and tyrannicall answer which Rehoboā made to the people threatning them 1. King 12.12 in this manner My least part shal be heauier then my fathers loynes whereby he meant that he would encrease those heauie burdens of tributes which his father had laide vpon them For but that he knewe verie well the state of his kingdome to be such as that he might both say and doe what he listed without controlement he had beene more then mad to make such an answere And hence it came that the idolatrous kinges did neuer sticke by their sole authoritie to set vp open idolatrie not once minding who would be offended therewith and likewise the continuall practise of the people doth declare that they did not violētly oppose thēselues to the doings eyther of the good or of the wicked kinges but suffered religion to stand and fall according to their pleasure Yea the dealing of God himselfe doth prooue the same who when he purposed to preserue Dauid against the fury of Saule would neuer suffer him to oppose Ceila or any other of Saules cit●es against him but made him fly first into the mountains and deserts and afterwardes out of the land to the Philistines Yea Dauid although he were appointed by the expresse worde of God to s●cceede Saule in the kingdome yet he was so farre from laying violent handes vpon him that as we reade 1. Sam. 24.6 his heart smote him that is his conscience did accuse him that he had behaued himselfe disloyally against the king in that he had offered violence to the kings garment because that was as a threatning of death vnto him and a greate disgrace Yea further we doe not reade that God did euer by any of his prophets stirre vp the people to maintaine his true wo●shippe by violence against the kinges or euer reproue them because they had suffered them to set vppe idolatrie which is an euident proofe of this point For if it had beene lawfull to resist in any case then surely in the maintenance of the true worshippe of God and of his glorie But heereof there is a great question made for although this king had power in ciuill matters to doe not onely right iustice without the helpe of any other power but also wrong without resistance shall we therefore giue vnto him this power in the cause of religion that he may deface the worshippe of God at his pleasure It may seeme much better that not onely kings should be throwen downe from their thrones but also that heauen and earth shoulde goe togither then that God should be dishonoured and detestable idolatrie erected We confesse that it is a most fearefull thing that the king of Israell who hath his authority from God should vse the same to dishonor God and thrust not only men out of their houses landes but also the great God of heauen earth out of his tēple and Church yea in trueth in some sort out of the world for God had tyed his visible Church to this land And therefore we answere that as it is vsually saide Si ius violandum regni causâ violandum so Si ius regni sit violandum religionis causa est violandum that if it be lawfull for the people of Israell for any cause to resist their lawfull king it is lawfull in the defence of the true religion and Gods glory But as hath beene said it seemeth that the state of this kingdome would not beare any resistance no not in this case much lesse in any other No man yea no company of men could for any offence committed by the king eyther against God or man the first or second table call him to account summon him to appeare in iudgement or vse any manner of violence eyther in word or deede against him Now we are to answere those thinges which may be obiected against this assertion Sect. VI. FIrst it may seeme agreeable to reason that
the people should haue power to depose their king as well as they had to set him vppe Whereunto we answere that although it were at the first free vnto the people whether they would haue permitted themselues wholly to the power of the king or no yet when as they had once refigned vp their liberty and authority it was not in their power to call that their voluntarie graunt backe againe Secondly we answere that the people neuer had this power in their handes to make whome they would king they did indeede voluntarilie choose this kinde of gouernment but God gaue them a king whome they coulde neyther refuse at the first nor afterwardes depose to wit Saule with his posteritie and they being by God reiected Dauid with his seede for God kept in his hand the power of nominating the king as the expresse wordes of the scripture doe witnesse Deutro 17.15 Onely thou shalt make him king ouer them whom the Lord thy God shall giue vnto thee Againe it may be obiected forsomuch as not onely kings but also all other magistrates are set vp for the glorie of God and the good of the people that if they doe not not onely not further but also hinder these respectes they do break the condition of the bargain betwixt them the people and so do forfait their kingdomes into their hands as Saul did forfait his and Salomon by his idolatrie the gouernment of the ten tribes we answer confessing this to be true that the kings of Israel had the kingdome vpon the foresaid condition but yet neyther the kingdome was giuen nor the condition imposed to them by man but by God therefore they could not forfait their kingdom to man but only to God neither coul● any man exact this forfaiture at their handes without an extraordinarie and speciall commission from God So that vntil such time as God did either immediatly by his own hand or by the means of some man made the executioner of his will by extraordinarie reuelation depriue them of their kingdome euen the wicked and idolatrous kinges did remaine to the people in the full estate and right of the kingdome So after that both Saule had by his disobedience forfeited his kingdome of God and also Dauid was now both appointed by God and annointed by Samuel king in his steade yet Saul remained to the people the onely lawfull king of Israell yea no lesse lawfull then he was before or any other afterwardes vntill such time as God did take from him both his life and kingdome together This doth Dauid ingenuously confesse 1. Sam. 26.10.11 saying that it was not lawfull for himselfe or any other to touch Saule beeing Gods annointed for that he could be dispossessed by none but by God onely wherein he rested not doubting but that God would take him away eyther by naturall death or by the force of the enemie or immediately by his owne hand 1. Sam. 26.10 Likewise Salomon did forfaite his kingdome to God but yet th● ten tribes with al their kings made of themselues did vnlawfully and impiouslie rebell against Rehoboam for so speaketh Abiam 2. Chro. 13·6 7 You ought to haue acknowledged that God gaue the kingdome of Israel to Dauid and his sonnes for euer but Ieroboam the sonne of Nebat rose vp and rebelled against his Lord and naughtie men gathered themselues to him and strengthened themselues against Rehoboam So that although the defection came from the Lord as appeareth 2. Chro. 11.4 and was good in that respect beeing a iust punishment of idolatrie yet the action of the people rebelling against their lawfull and naturall king was altogether vnlawfull If it be obiected that Ieroboam was called to be king of the ten tribes by the word of God sent by the ministery of the prophet Achijah King 11.31 where God saith to Ieroboam by the prophet that he had ●iuen to him ten tribes of Israell to this we make two answeres First that although this defection as it came from God was good yet as it was practised by Ieroboam and the people it was vnlawful rebellion For there is in God a secret wil the which when it is contrarie to his reue●led will and worde cannot be executed by man without sinne vnlesse it be by an extraordinarie dispensation and therefore although God did make this his secret will knowen to Ieroboam to make his vnthankfulnesse in erecting idolatrie the more inexcusable yet he did not bid him rebell against Salomon neyther did he annointe him king as he did Iehu 2. King 9.6.7 who had the expresse commaundement of God to roote out kinge Achabs house Thus God foretolde Hazael that hee shoulde be kinge of Syria 2. King 8.13 yet he did not approue his detestable murthering of the kinge his master So did Zimri 1. King 16.12 although he also did execute the sentence which God had pronounced against the house of Bahasa king of the ten tribes yet because he was not appointed by God so to do his action was vnlawfull Secondly we answere that if that foretelling of Ieroboam were an extraordinarie dispensation yet his example doth not iustifie the rebellion of the people or of any other who haue not this warrant for their actions But Dauid did lawfully rebell against the posteritie of Saul and so did Iehu against Ioram 2. King 9. because they had the expresse word of God so to doe But heere this is to be noted that although this kingdome were at the first so instituted that all the kinges should by their disobedience forfait their kingdome to God ●nd so be deposed when he thought good yet Dauid and his posteritie were in a manner freede from this condition and from forfaiting their kingdome to God For Dauid a man according to the heart of God found such fauour in his sight that he made this solemne lawe oath and promise that although his children did forsake him yet he would not take the kingdom from them as he did from Saul but onely chastice them for their sinnes And therefore the seede of Dauid kept the crowne yea tho many of them were open idolatours til the whole nation of the Iewes was destroyed and caried away captiue into Babel for their idolatrie and other sinnes Therefore God is saide 2. Chro. 13.5 to haue giuen this kingdome to Dauid by a couenant of salt that is by a perpetuall and inuiolable couenant for so it was needfull that the promises of the Messias shoulde be annexed to some stocke or linage that out of it hee might cotinually be expected But to returne to the matter in hand if it be heere asked how God did punish the notorius sins mis●emenors of these kings we answer that he did it either immediatly by his own hand as he did smite Ozias with leprosie for his intollerable presumption 2. Chr. 26 19. or else by some forraine nation or king as by the Philistines Aegyptians Chaldaeaens Assyriaens or some other
nation and prince whō he vsed as scourges for the misdemeanor of these kings wherof more hereafter Now we are to answer to the examples which may seeme to be contrary to this rule the which if they be indeed contrary to it yet they do not take away this truth for a few wrong actions cānot preiu●ice a law yea a long practise and custome of right But let vs see what they are First the people do seem to haue resisted Saul in that they saued Ionathan from death wherunto he was euen deuoted by the kings solemne oth promise we answere that they did perswade the king by reason not resist him by force as doth appeare by their words 1. Sā 14.45 but the example of Libna is more plaine the which rebelled against Iehorā because he did forsake the Lord. 2. Chr. 21.10 but this one example is not sufficient for it is not approued but only barely mentioned by the writer of the story yea many actions in the scripture are cōmended as proceding from a godly mind which in straight examinatiō would be found vnlawful Thirdly the deposing of Athalia 2. Chro. 23. maketh not against vs. For we do heere speak of a lawful king but she was a meer vsurper because she was not of Dauids seed Lastly as touching the cōspiracies made against Ioas for killing Zacharias the son of Iehoida 2. Chr. 24.25 against Amasia for forsaking the lord 2. Chr. 25.27 the writer of the story doth not meane that the conspirators were moued by those reasons or had any purpose of reuenging those offences moued by other sinister respects not mentioned but that God brought those feareful iudgments vpon these kings for the foresaid sins Sect. VII IT may heere be asked what shoulde then be the issue of the violence and tyranny which any of these kinges might perhaps vse what ord●● was taken and what was the behauiour of loyal subiectes in such cases we answere that the weapons which God gaue vnto his people wherewith to defend themselues against the tyrannie of their lawf●ll kinges were these The first is wisedome carefully to auoyde all occasions of the kinges anger and iniurie and because that they who are disposed to be iniurious to their subiectes neuer want occasions which they take where none is offered therefore the next remedie is to auoyde and decline from the violence or iniury it self Thus did Dauid by flying into dens caues and mountaines keepe himselfe from the rage of Saule The thirde remedie where the second is wanting is patience to suffer with a quiet minde the violence or iniustice of the king which could not be by wisedom eyther preuented or auoyded The last remedie is to appeale from the vniust sentence of the king not to any man or to any court heere on earth but to the king of kinges euen to God himselfe whose eares are alwaies open to heare those who are oppressed this remedie is the last and therfore not to be vsed but in cases of greatest extremitie when as the violence is too too grieuous shamefull and to mans infirmity altogether intollerable This meanes did Samuell commend vnto the people whereby they shoulde ease themselues of those intollerable burdens of tributes which their king would lay vpon them 1. Sam. 8.18 saying then you beeing thus oppressed by your king shall not rebell against him but shall cry vnto the Lord. Where it is added that God wil not heare them when they c●y this is m●nt that they could not afterwards put down their kings neyther be freed from their tyranny which by their own wilfulnes they had brought vpon themselues otherwise God doth heare those who being intollerably iniured by their kinges do appeale vnto him So we read 2. Chro. 4.22 that when as Zacharias was stoned by the commaundement of king Ioas hee appealed to God and commended his cause to him Where the spirit of God hath carefully noted that God receiued his appeale so that within one yeare he sent the Armies of the Syrians who destroyed his princes and spoyled Ierusalem Yea the seruants of the king by the iust iudgement of God although vnlawfully cōspired against him killed him for the death of Zacharias Yea this was the vsuall meanes wherby God did punish the sinne and represse the rage of idolatrous kings euen the power of forraine princes into whose handes he did often giue these kings of Iuda with their people and kingdome but did neuer by his word arme any of their subiects against them therin as in al other his actions obseruing decorum which is the rule of seemlines or ciuil order honesty vnto the which it is agreeable that kings should be chastened controlled not by their subiectes and inferiours but by other kings which are their equals Sect. VIII LAstly it may be obiected that it is a verie vnlike matter that this people with their wise elders and senatours were or could be so farre ouerseen●s that liuing vnder a moderate gouerment in the which either they neuer had any iniury offered vnto them by their rulers or if they had might easely haue it redressed by some other lawful authority would permit themselues their wiues and children landes and libertie to any such authority vnder the which they were subiect to iniury yea in such sort as that they had no refuge to fly vnto in any extremitie no superiour authority to appeale vnto no stronger power to oppose and finally which both might easely be come tyrannicall and beeing so could not by any meanes which they could vse be eyther ended or amended Whereunto we answere first as before that heere we doe onely make a bare narration what was done leauing it to those who professe skill in these matters to iudge whether it were wisely done or no. Secondly that we may giue some reason hereof that this was done according to the simplicitie of the first ages of the world wherein men were much more innocent then they are in these daies and did not so easely inferre iniury to others and therfore not feare to receiue hurt from others Whereby it came to passe that men did both safely and securely permi●●hemselues into th● handes of others ey●her kinges Lordes or masters or any other rulers without making couenantes with them and taking caution of them for their security But the state of the worlde is much altered for nowe men are growen to that hight and ripenes of craft deceit dissimulation violence and all other kindes of wickednesse that almost euerie man feareth and suspecteth each other neyther will haue any dealinges with any other without greate pledges of securitie Heereof it hath come to passe that these greate monarchies endued with absolute power were farre more vs●d in the first ages of the worlde then in the times following wherein wee see that although a monarchicall state be thought more excellent and commodious then any other kinde of gouernment yet men dare not giue vnto it this ample and
the Church should be at the call and commaundement of the secular power whereby they might be eyther wholly dispossessed of their places or continually troubled interrupted in ordering the affaires of the Church and the matters of God and finally iniuriously and contumeliously handled which thing the holines of their places and persons wil in no wise suffer For the answere of this doubt it is plaine in the word of God that all ecclesiasticall persons whatsoeuer yea the chiefe priestes in them the high priest himself the prince and head of the priestes who was the type of Christ the Oracle of God and on whom the whole glory and maiesty of the priesthood was bestowed was no lesse subiect to the iurisdiction of the kinge then he which had the basest place and calling in the common-wealth The trueth heereof appeareth by the lamentable tragedie of Abimelech 1. Sam. 2. who being summoned by Saule to appeare came with all the priestes that were with him and being come acknowledged Saul● to be his Lord Verse 12. and did not appeale frō his vniust sentence of death to any other power The same end befel his son Abiather who for that he tooke part with Adonia was by Salomon put out of his office and condemned to die 1. King 2.26 And likewise Zachariah the son of Ieh●ida 2. Chro. 24.21 Now although two of these kinges did impiously and tyrannically abuse their authority yet it doth appeare that they had authority ouer them yea not onely these examples but the course of the whole scripture and equitie it selfe doth shew that it ought to be so We knowe that euen Christ himselfe more holy in person and office then all the priestes men or angels in the world did throughout the whole course of his life submit himselfe to the ciuill power and at the end of it did suffer himselfe to be violently apprehended contu●eliously entreated yea vniustly cōdemned by the deputy of a heathen Emperour Likewise the Apostle Paule did appeale and subiect himselfe to the authority of Caesar. Neyther is there any cause or reason why it should be otherwise For howsoeuer the Romish prelates haue not only drawen out their neckes from the subiection of princes but also haue inuaded their thrones and subdued them vnder their feete and the whole cleargie say to the ciuill power come not near nor yet once touch me because I am holier then thou and think themselues too good to be iudged by any but by their owne ordinarie yet the trueth is that all persons as well ciuill as ecclesiasticall are and ought to be by the word of God equally subiect to the ciuill power For shall Christ himselfe and in him God himselfe stand before the iudgement seat of princes and shall sinfull men nay shall wretched wormes thinke them too prophane to be competent iudges in their causes no no the seruant is not aboue the master nor the creature aboue the creator and therefore we say with the Apostle that al soules that is euery man that hath a soule that none shoulde thinke himselfe exempted ought to be subiect to the higher powers Rom. 13.1 The ground of the contrary errour is an arrogant opinion which presumptuous men bearing function in the Church haue of their own holin●sse in respect of others whereas in the Church of God men who haue ciuil callings are no lesse holy then they who haue ecclesiastica● yea somtimes much more holy they who haue ecclesiastical holy callings being otherwise wicked prophane for it is truly said althoug● impiously applied by the rebellious company of Corah Numb 16.3 That not only Moses Aaron but euen the whole multitude of the common people much more the Lords annoynted is holy In the next place we are to search whether that as al persons so likewise al causes belonged to the authority of the King of Israell First of ciuill then of ecclesiasticall causes in the first kinde it is not needful that we should insist forsomuch as all men euen they who are most sparing and wary in giuing power to these kinges doe acknowledge that all ciuill causes did properly belong to their iurisdiction And so it was indeede For the king had authoritie to appointe all the publike officers of his kingdome who should be his counsellers at home or his Captaines abroad who shoulde be the iudges of the people and who of the chiefe senate in Ierusalem and good reason it was that he shoulde haue this power in these causes For seeing that his office was especially to iudge the causes of the people and to fight their battailes for the which purpose the people desired a king it could not be denied vnto him to appointe those to be his deputies whom he thought most able to discharge these dueties Yea further it belonged to him to call all publike assemblies and to order them to make peace with whom he would and to goe to battaile against whome ●e when 〈◊〉 thought good The trueth of this pointe doth 〈◊〉 plainely appeare throughout the whole storie that we need not insist in it Sect. X. NOwe we are to enquire what was the authoritie of the kinge in the matters of the Church to wit in ordering the state of religion and of the seruice of God Whereof there is greate question made whilest some doe wholly exclude him out of the Church not permitting him to intermeddle with any affaires belonging vnto it others suffer him to deale in these causes yet not to beare any great sway or to ouerrule in them and the third sort giueth vnto him the greatest part of that ecclesiasticall authoritie which belongeth to man The which distinction is necessarely to be considered for God hath not giuen to any man such ful and absolute authoritie in the Church as in the common-wealth for he hath made Christ the soueraign Lord and King of the Church to rule it by his owne lawes and worde Yet one parte of ecclesiasticall iurisdiction belongeth to men who are to establish the diuine lawes of the worship of God and to make ecclesiastical constitutions for that purpose But who hath authoritie to doe this there is all the controuersie In the first opinion or rather grosse and palpable errour are the Bishops of Rome with their adherentes who that they might through the Church enter into the common-wealth inuade the riches preferments and pleasures of kinges and vsurpe their states and crownes haue thrust out of the Church this king of Israell least that by his example other magistrates shoulde challenge to themselues ●uthoritie in causes ecclesiasticall In the second opinion are men otherwise syncere in iudgement who in a good meaning affection to the Church thinke it not safe or conuenient to permitte her wholly to the ciuill power and in a reuerent opinion of her iudge it vnmeete that ciuill rulers should order diuine matters and so make the Church say vnto the magistrate touch me not for I am more holy then thou
But we follow the thirde opinion thinking that the ecclesiasticall authoritie of this land was chiefely yea in a manner wholly in the handes of the king and that by his authority the state of religion in generall was wholly set vp maintained repaired and ordered yea ecclesiastical lawes for this purpose established howsoeuer in making them the aduise and consent of others were for diuers necessarie causes to be required The trueth heereof will easely appeare if we marke that God did deferre the building of his Temple the inlarging and beautifying of his worshippe vntill the time of the kinges of whome Dauid and Salomon which are in this respect to be counted the first Saule being reiected did make the state of religion most glorious established new orders and lawes and that by their owne authoritie although they had the worde of God both in themselues and from other prophets for their direction Yea the generall practise of all the kinges of Israel of whome euery one by his sole authority did either set vp or pul downe religion doth declare how much they had to doe in the gouerning of the Church and to passe ouer with silence the rest of the kinges let vs onely see how far Ezechia did meddle with Church affaires of whome we read 2. Chro. 29.3 That he opened the doores of the temple brought the priestes into it made a solemne oration vnto them teaching them their dueties and stirring them vp to the carefull perfourmance thereof then when the priestes had according to his direction clensed the temple before they doe any seruice in it they returne to the king to know what he would haue further done Verse 18. Then the king with the nobles came and brought a sinne-offering which the priest offered at the commaundement of the king verse 24. then verse 27. the king commaundeth that the whole burnt-offering should be offered Againe verse 31. he commaundeth that the peoples offeringes shoulde be brought in Further in the 30. chapter he held a councel sent his postes for the keeping of a passeouer yea which is worthy to be noted when as the people being vncleane did receiue the passouer Ezechias himselfe did publikely pray for them and so made them cleane verse 20. likewise chap 31. verse 2. Ezechia appointed sundry companies of the priestes and leuites after the diuersity of the ministrations to serue in the temple and commaunded the people to make prouision of all thinges needfull for them and verse 8. and 9. he came and viewed their prouision and questioned with the priestes about it And vers 11 He bad prepare the chambers in the Temple for store yea it is added verse 20. that according to this manner he did throughout all Iuda and that all the workes about the seruice of God were begunne and prosperously ended by him The same manner of ordering the state of the Church appeareth in the storie of Iosias and other Kinges wherein this may plainely be seene that whatsoeuer was done in Church matters was done by the commaundement and authoritie of the kinge The occasions of the contrary opinions whereby the authoritie of this kingdome in this behalfe is abridged and cut short eyther in whole or in part are these First for that it is thought that as ciuill and diuine temporall and eternall matters do not onely greately differ but also are opposite to each oother so that the common-wealth and the Church are two distinct yea contrary bodies gouerned and ordered by their seuerall heades as in this state they make the king to be the chiefe gouernour of the common-wealth and the high priest of the Church But it is farre otherwise for the Church is not heere a perfect bodie by it selfe but maketh the ciuil body more excellent happie For euen as when any people being rude and barbarous are brought to learning and all kinde of humanitie there is not a new state or body added vnto them but the former estate becommeth better so it is whenas any nation of infidels becommeth religious they haue not one head in respect of their religion and another in ciuill matters but one and the same for both But heereof more at large in the treatise of the publike Church Neyther ought we to thinke that eyther the office authoritie or person of this King was any way prophane or vnholy or in any respect vnfitte to intermeddle with diuine matters for he was and that by the institution of God more holy then o●hers As for the hurt which came to the Church by beeing permitted to wicked kinges to be ordered at their pleasure we confesse that it was very greate for many of them did cleane ouerthrow the true worshippe of God Yet there was no remedie for it in the handes of any saue onely of God who is and was able to turne the hearts of kings as the riuers of waters yea to shorten their daies if they continued obstinate in their wickednesse and to raise vppe in their places good and godlie kinges zealous of his glorie who abolishing all idolatrie and establishing the true religion by their soueraigne and absolute authoritie in ecclesiasticall causes did recompence the losse and comfort the griefe which the Church had by the wicked Kinges for if the peoele had resisted the wicked and idolatrous kinges in their proceedinges they shoulde haue diminished the authoritie of godlie kinges and by vsing violence against the wickednesse of the one shoulde haue bounde the hands and hindred the godly indeuours of the other And this is the cause why men vnto whome the good estate of the Church hath beene deare and pretious haue beene loth to permitte the ordering of Churche-causes to ciuill rulers because many of them haue beene open enemies to all religion and godlines and authors of all disorders Yea Emperours Kinges and Princes haue so horribly stained themselues and beene drunke with the blood of the seruantes of God which they ought to haue cherished and preserued and haue so often ouerthowen the Church which they shoulde haue built and maintained that many are afraide to commit the Church to their hands who haue oftner shewed themselues cruel wolues then careful sheepherds And therefore it hath beene said by many that princes should looke to their palaces and leaue the whole care of the Church to the ministers of the worde but we see the contrary in this example And therfore we ought not to speake vntruethes no not in the cause of God or to maintaine the state of religion in Israel by spoyling the king of that power which god hath giuen vnto him Lastly as touching ecclesiastical lawes which were to be made by men for the putting in practise of the worship of God it may seem that although the setting vp and pulling downe the reforming and deforming of religion were in the hands of the king yet to be very vnmeete that he should meddle in the making of them whereunto we answere that if the whole ordering of the
many and so to conclude this point and specially the first edict which the first king made and that by the immediate motion of the spirit of God because this is most for the purpose of the matter in hand We read 1. Sam. 11.17 that whenas Saule was to call the people together to battaile he gaue foorth such a peremptorie commaundement as neuer any of the Iudges or Elders did For taking a couple of oxen and deuiding them into peeces he sent them to all partes of the land with this message that whosoeuer did not follow him to battaile so shoulde it be done to his oxen Whereupon the people came roundly as one man for that as the text noteth the feare of the Lord that is of this greate power which the Lord had giuen to the king fell vpon them Saule might haue said with Dauid I am yet a tender and newe king and haue many enemies wherefore it is not meete that I shoulde exasperate the people by threarning them but it was the will of God that the people shoulde see in the beginning to what a kinde of power they had ●●●mitted themselues Sect. XII THus much of the power or authority of this kingdome the second part of the doctrine of it is the maiesty of it the fundamental lawes of the kingdom belonging therunto The maiesty of the kingdom is the great glorie and excellency wherein it far passeth other kindes of gouernment and for the which it is much more highly esteemed It was procured by these meanes First by that exceeding great power wherof we haue spoken for whereas the whole administration of all thinges is in the handes of one there the good estate of all men publikely and of euery one particularly doth depend on him whereby it commeth to passe that all mens eyes are set on him yea all men doe honour praise and admire him in whom they see great authoritie and riches and whose wisedome is more conspicuous then any others besides Secondly this kingdome was maiesticall by the first originall of it which it had not from man but from God This law is written Deut. 17.14 When thou hast possessed the land and sayest I will haue a king to raigne ouer me thou shalt make him king whome the Lord thy God shall choose and so the euent proued for the state of this kingdome in generall came from the people to whome also it belonged solemnly to acknowledge him whom God did appoint but the nomination of the particular man on whom this honour should be bestowed came from God who appointed first Saul with his posterity and afterwardes Saul being reiected Dauid and his seed By the which meanes God did choose all the kinges in Israel although he did immediately by his owne voyce onely appoint the first three to wit Saule Dauid and Salomon For euen as the fire wherewith the sacrifices were burnt although it were nourished euerie day by the priest putting fresh wood vnto it and so preserued by the same meanes wherby other fire is kept yet be cause at the first it came downe from heauen miraculously was therfore counted holy and wonderfull euen so was this kingdom because at the first it came from God although afterwardes it were continued by naturall and ordinarie propagation Hence it is that this kingdom is called the kingdome of Iehoua 2. Chro. 13.8 The badge and seale of this diuine originall of this kingdome was that holie vnction whereby these kinges were by the prophets of God solemnly in the name of God inaugurated and therefore the signe being put for the thing signified this annointing betokeneth the holinesse of it insomuch that when the king of Israell is as it were to be painted forth in the natiue colours of his maiestie he is called the annointed of the Lorde Thus 1. Sam. 24.7 God forbid saith Dauid that I should lay my handes on Saule seeing he is the annoynted one of GOD. And 2. Samuell 1.14 hee saith to him who had helpt kinge Saule to kill himselfe Howe was it that thou diddest not feare to put out thy hande to kill the Lordes annoynted The third lawe tending to the maiestie of this kingdome was that it was not any vncertaine and moueable state but constant and fixed in one place it was tyed first to one tribe namely to the tribe of Iuda that by God speaking by the mouth of Iacob the first founder of this nation for in his sonnes it began to be deuided into many tribes and families and so came into the forme of a people the prophesie i● written Gen. 49. The rod shall not depart from Iuda nor a law giuer c. Secondly it was tyed to one and the same familie to wit to the house of Dauid for euer and went by hereditarie right and succession in lineall discent so that continually the sonne succeeded the father The which lawe although it was established in the like gouernementes in other places yet it coulde seldome take place for any long time by reason of the want of right successours But it was heere kept in continuall force and that by the marueilous prouidence of God who as he promised did alwaies giue to Dauid his seruaunt a sonne of his owne loynes to sitte vpon his throne The which prouidence of GOD may especially be noted in the straunge preseruation of Ioas from the cruell handes of that monster Athalia 2. King 11.3 By this meanes it came to passe that this kingdom was both naturall and in processe of time ancient yea after a sort immortall For the first we need not doubt but that there was an exceeding great loue and reuerence of this king wrought in the mindes of the people whenas they sawe that he had not obtained that place by ambition faction force of armes or any other sinister or violent meanes but was euen borne vnto them and by nature or rather by God the ruler and desposer of all naturall causes appointed and distinated to that calling Yea also in time by this hereditarie succession the kingdome became of great antiquitie which addeth much to the maiestie of meane thinges much more to those which in many other respectes are excellent Euen as men doe ascribe a kinde no● onely of reuerence but euen of religion to okes and other trees which haue a long time kept their standing for so in continuance of time they take so deepe roote and gather such strength as that they cannot be moued whereas at the first they may easely be shaken downe so kingdoms continuing long in the same stocke become firme and maiesticall whereas being often transplanted they are weake and contemptible and doe often fall euen in the beginning Thus fell Abimelech his kingdome and euen this kingdome was sore shaken in the defection of the ten tribes because the memory of Ierobaal grandfather to Abimelech a priuate and base man and of Isai the father of Dauid was not cleane worne away and therefore they said
of the one Iudg. 28. Who is Abimelech that we should serue him is not he the sonne of Ierobaal and of the other in like manner what part haue we with Dauid the sonne of Isai 2. Chro. 10.16 2. Sam. 20.1 yea thus the kingdome is made after a sort immortall when as the father doth rise againe in the sonne and so continueth for euer For hence it was that the gouernment of the iudges was so contemned of the people because it was a newe vp-start gouernment the iudge being lately taken from a base estate As Gedeon Saul confesse of themselues that their kinred family and birth was of the meanest of the people and that therefore they were the vnfittest to beare rule Iudg. 6.15 1. Sam. 9.21 The last and the greatest cause of the maiestie of these kings was this that they were the progenitors yea and the predecessors of that great Messias which was to come of the linage of Dauid to gouern not that land onely but the whole world Luke 1.32.33 the very expectation of whom made this kingdome glorious aboue measure for that they according to the ignorance of the times and the infancie of the Church dreaming of a temporal king thought that in him all the power riches renowne and glory of the world should be brought to their kingdome Sect. XIII THus we see the causes of the maiesty of this kingdome now we are to consider the meanes whereby this maiesty did shew foorth it selfe It appeared in the glorious stately pompe and magnificence of the whole life and behauiour yea of all the actions of the king and generally of all things appertaining to the kingdome For the apparrell of the king it was such as might not onely distinguish him from his subiectes but also serue to expresse the maiesty of his state Likewise for his whole house the statelinesse of his palaces the daintinesse of his fare the number of his seruantes and retinue that all were correspondent euen in the time of Dauid we may gather 2. Sam. 19.35 where old Barzelli refuseth the kinges offer who woulde haue kept him in his house because hee coulde not taste the daintie meates nor be delighted with the voyce● of singing men and women which were vsed in the king● palace Hitherto also is to be referred the whole storie of Salomon in whose time this glorie of the kingdome was euen in the full the infinite prouision of his house the glorious houses which he built for GOD and for himselfe with incredible magnificence all which it shall not be irkesome to rehearse as they are described in the story for so wee reade 1. King 4. verse 20.22.23.26 and Chapter 10. ver 11.12 c. And Salomons breade for one daie was thirtie quarters of manchette flower and threescore quarters of meale tenne stalled oxen and twentie out of the pastures and a hundred sheepe beside hartes buckes wilde goates and capons and hee had fortie stalles of horses for chariotes and twelue thousande horsemen The waight of golde that came to him in one yeare was sixe hundred threescore and sixe talentes of golde beside that he had of marchantes and of the marchandize of the spices and of all the kinges of Arabia and of the Lordes of the countrie Also he made two hundred targets of beaten goulde sixe hundred sicles of goulde wente to a target And hee made three hundred shieldes of beaten golde the pounde waight of golde went to one shielde and the king put them in the house of the woode of Libanon and the king made a greate seate of Iuory and couered it with the best gold and the seate had six steppes and the top of the seate was round behinde and there were pummels on eyther side of the seate and two Lyons stoode beside the pummels and there stoode twelue Lyons on the steppes six on one side There was no like worke seene in any kingdome and all kinge Salomons drinking vessels were of golde and likewise all the vessels of the house of the woode of Libanon were of pure golde As for siluer it was nothing woorth in the daies of Salomon for the kinges nauy of shippes went on the sea vnto Tharsis with the nauy of Hirams shippes euen once in three yeares went the nauy to Tharsis and brought golde and siluer Elephantes teeth Apes and Peacockes And so king Salomon exceeded all the kinges of the earth both in riches wisedome thus farre the text After the time of Salomō together with the sincerity of religion this maiesty of the kingdome did decrease for in the raigne of Rehoboam both the ten tribes fell away from this kingdome and Ierusalem was spoyled by the king of Aegypt so that the targets of gold were turned into brasse but vnder Iehosophat both religion and the kingdome recouered part of the ancient glorie for it is said 2. Par. 18.1 that Iehophat had great riches and glory And likewise in the raigne of Ezechi● we reade 2. Chro. 32.27 that he had exceeding much riches and honour and he gat himselfe treasures of siluer and gold precious stones and spices shieldes and all manner of pleasant iewels Likewise this maiesty required that the kinges whole behauiour should haue in it that stately grauity which beseemeth so high a place that he should take no meane or base action in hand but such as the perfourmance whereof might be for his glory and renowne By this argument Dauid disswadeth Saule from persecuting him any further saying 1. Sam. 26.20 To whome is the king of Israel come foorth and what is this that he doth Doth he not behaue himselfe as one who chaseth a Partridge vppe and downe in the mountaines And for the behauiour of the kinges person Michol Saules daughter requiteth Dauid with the like noting in him such lightnesse which was as she thought vnbeseeming the maiesty of the king for when she had seene Dauid daunce for ioy before the Arke she saide O howe glorious was the king of Israel this day whenas he vncouered himselfe before the maydens of his seruantes as foolish or mad men vse to doe 2. Sam. 6.20 An finally this part of the iudgement of the kingdome and of the booke which Samuel wrote of this matter is extant 1. Sam. 8. vers 11. c. where it is said that the king will haue horsemen and chariots yea Eunuches and women bakers and cookes and of his magnificence in giuing vineyardes and landes to his seruantes the which place is not to be vnderstood of a tyrannie but of the naturall state of this kingdome as may appeare 1. Sam. 9.20 where when Saule was carefull for his fathers asses which were lost Samuel telleth him that he neede not minde them seeing whatsoeuer was good pretious and to be desired in all Israell it did belong in some sort to him and to all his fathers house The which wordes are not so to be vnderstood as if the propertie of mens goods did belong to the
euils was in their owne wickednesse and idolatrie in that they did forsake the true worship of God and therefore God did forsake them and tooke from them their iudges in whose daies they liued in religious order and peaceable estate And so the people according to that which is written Iudg. 9.13.14.15 forsooke the vine the figtree and the oliue tree euen God the fountaine of all blessinges and saide to the brier come and raigne ouer vs and we will trust in thy shadowe For to haue a king and to trust in his power doe vsually goe together Rom. 15.12 He shal raigne ouer them and they shall trust in him Thirdly the people in the pride of their heartes did despise the gouernment of the iudges as base and contemptible for that howsoeuer it was mightie in the power of the spiritte of GOD yet it had not that outwarde shew of glorie and maiestie which the stately Monarchies of other nations did carie with them The last sinne which they committed in this action we call by the generall name of disobedience for that contrarie to the expresse commaundement of God they had a crooked and peruerse desire to be transformed into all the fashions of the prophane nations amongest whome they dwelt as in all other respectes so also in their gouernment and therefore they ●id affect a kingdome which was the most vsuall kinde of gouernment Thus we see why God was offended with this alteration of the state as for the gouernment it selfe he did neuer mislike it for although he suffered it to be brought in by this cooked meanes yet he did alwaies purpose that it shoulde be established as may plainlie appeare by these reasons First for that he promised Abraham Gen. 17.6 That of his seede should come kings and nations the which is to be vnderstood chiefly of this faithfull nation of the Iewes although beside them others came of Abraham Secondly Moses did foretell this Deut. 17. That assoone as the people were quietly possessed of the lande of Chanaan they would haue a king to raigne ouer them But this doth most euidently apppeare by the prophesie of Iacob who saith Genesis 49. That the rodde shall not departe from Iuda nor a Lawe-giuer cease to be of his ofspringe till Silo come and vnto him shall be the obedience of the people Nowe this cannot be vnderstoode of the iudges for of them all onely Othoniell was of the tribe of Iuda Yea GOD did alwaies purpose that Christe shoulde succeede the kinges of Israell in the kingdome for the wordes are plaine and the euente hath shewed it to be true that of the tribe of Iuda should come the Lion and the Lions whelpe that is the stately kingdome of Israell and the continual discent thereof yea the great lion the little lion that is the Messias the great eterna●l king of glory and the temporall and earthly kings of Israel For this cause the most plaine and euident promises which God made of the messias were deferred vntil the time of the kings were made to Dauid who in this respect is to be counted the first king and therefore is called Math. 16. Dauid the King that is the first king of the forefathers of Christ as hath beene alreadie touched And lastly this gouernment may seeme in some sort to be the more acceptable to God because it doth most liuelely represent the power and maiesty of God for although all magistrates doe beare the image of God yet they chiefely doe it whose authoritie being absolute and their glorie great come nearest to the infinite power and glorie of God As touching the lawfulnes of this kinde of gouernement although it be inferred of the former point for whatsoeuer is acceptable to God ought to be accounted lawful for vs yet it may briefly be considered by these reasons for that this gouernment was set vp by the appointment of God and that by Samuel a faithful prophet and so accounted of al Israel yea for that it was practised by Dauid a man according to Gods owne hearte by Salomon the glorie of the worlde by Asa Iehosophat and other religious kinges by good Ezechias and by zealous Iosias who would neuer haue born this office if the kinde of gouernment had beene in any respect vnlawfull the exception which is vsually taken against this kinde of Monarchie is as touching the greatnesse of the power maiesty of it in this manner that howsoeuer the prophane nations of the world doe suffer tyrantes to spoyle them of their liberty and whatsoeuer they haue yea and doe foolishly in the pride of their heartes desire such a loftie gouernment yet that in the Church of God it is a thing both intollerable altogether vnlawfull that one should so haue all the power in his owne hands that he may at his pleasure ouerthrowe all or that a great part of the substance of the land should be imployed to maintaine him in his iolitie vpon sumptuous buildings costly attyre dainty fare great rewardes and other thinges of the same kinde which would serue for many necessarie vses both of the Church and of the commonwealth For answere heereof we are farre from going about to perswade any people which liue vnder a moderate gouernment by this wicked example of this people to affect or desire this estate yea we leaue it to others to determine whether it be the most conuenient kinde of gouernment in respect of the Church of God and the safe constance and good estate of it yet we doe not doubt to affirme that it was a lawful kinde of gouernment among the Iewes and may lawfully be practised amongest Christians at this day For howsoeuer some kindes of gouernment and magistracy are conuenient or inconuenient safe or dangerous yet this and all other kindes are to be accounted lawfull For there is no power but from God and all the powers which are haue beene instituted by God Rom. 13.2 and especially of this gouernment now in question we may see Daniel 5.18.19 that God doth professe himselfe to be the author and giuer of it for there it is saide O King God gaue Nabuchadnezzer thy father a kingdome then followeth a description of the nature of a kingdom euen maiesty honour and glorie he slewe w●ome he woulde and smote whome he would he aduanced and debased whom he pleased Now that we see that this kinde of gouernment was acceptable vnto God we are in the second place to consider how farre it was subiect vnto him For the which point it shal be sufficient that we know that as al other powers authorities principalities and dominions whatsoeuer they be whether in heauen or in earth so also this kingdome was wholy absolutely subiect to God and to his power and bound to obey his will and commaundementes and to set forth his glory in all things as it is written in the 17. of Deutronomie that the king whensoeuer he were made shoulde take an excript of the
law of God from the priest and meditate thereon day and night that he may keepe it without declining to the right hand or to the left Yea the state of this kingdome did depend wholly vppon God and was helde by condition of obeying him so that as a tenant or vassall doth holde his landes and liuing of his liege Lorde or King vpon this condition that he shall doe him seruice and homage and to be at his commaunde the which if he doe not he doth forthwith forfaite his title and dispossesse himselfe of all in like manner this kingdome did holde of God by condition of obeying him This lawe of the kingdome Samuel doth diligently teach 1. Sam. 12.23 if ye doe wickedly then shall you perish both you and your king The which punishment was executed vpon Saul Salomon and the whole race of Idolatrous kinges in the destruction of the kingdome and nation Sect. XV. HItherto we haue declared the doctrine of the kingdome of Israell the which was the first thing we tooke to speake of Nowe we come to the actions of Samuel mentioned in the wordes of the text Whereof the first is that he speake this doctrine of the people and that no doubt for this end that they might knowe the state of that gouernment what dueties they were to performe to their kinges in what manner they were to be subiect to obey him In whose example al the ministers of the worde may marke their duetie that they ought with all care and diligence to teach the people to obey the ciuill power to honor loue fear it to be ready to impart that which God hath bestowed vpō thē on the maintenance of it and finally to performe al those dueties which the law of God or of man doth require at their hands Thus Paul writeth to Titus Chap. 3.2 Warne and put al Christiās in mind that they be subiect to rule to obey the magistrats to be ready to euery good work for there is nothing that doth better beseem a Christiā mā or people then harty loue ready obedience to the magistrate comming not of constraint and feare of punishment but of conscience neyther is there any thing that doth more disgrace the profession of Christ and lay it open to the reproches of infidels and wicked men then disloyall behauiour to magistrates especially to kinges and great princes to whome all lawes both diuine and humane require that a g●●at measure of honour obedience and maintenance be performed T●e second action of Samuel is that he wrote this doctrine of the kingdome in a booke and that for perpetuity that it might be preserued safe in time to come and so serue for the instruction of the ages following As touching this booke it perished with many others written by the prophets and holy men of God and that by the negligence of the priestes and people yet there is a summe or compendious abstract of it saued from the iniurie of the times and the publike calamities which befalling this nation did bury many notable monumentes The which we haue recorded 1. Sam. 8. verse 10. and so forth to the 19. out of the which place this doctrine which hath beene deliuered in this short treatise of the power and maiesty of the kingdom may be gathered the words are these Now therefore hearken vnto their voyce howbeit yet testifie vnto them and shew them the manner of the king that shall raigne ouer them Hee will take your sonnes and put them to his chariots and make them Captaines ouer thousandes and ouer fifties and will set them to care his ground and to gather in his haruest and to make instruments of warre and thinges that serue for his chariots And he wil take your daughters and make them apoticaries cookes and bakers and he shall take your fieldes and your vineyardes and your best oliue trees and giue them to his seruantes and he shall tak● the tenth of your seede and of your vineyardes and giue to his Eunuches and to his seruantes and he shall take your men-seruantes and maid-seruantes and the chiefe of your young men and your asses and put them to his worke he will take the tenth of you● sheepe and ye shal be his seruantes The second action giueth vs this instruction that according to the example of Samuell a●l Christians ought to desire and they to whome God hath giuen giftes fitte for this purpose by all meanes to endeauour that they may profit the Church not onely whilest they l●●e but also after their death by leauing behinde them those thinges which may further the edification of it Thus haue the p●ophets Apostles and holy men of God done from time to time whose writinges doe testifie their care diligence and paines taken in this behalfe The which as we doe now inioy to our vnspeakeable profite and comfort so ought we to be stirred vp by their example to performe the like duetie to others euen as we commend the carefull foresight of those men who as they eate the fruite of the trees which their forefathers did plant so they plant other trees which may serue for the vse of their posterity For although no man can hope that his labours should be in any me●sure so profitable to the Church as the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles are who had the extraordinarie giftes of prophecie and reuelation and were directed by the continuall assistance of Gods spirit yet the ordinarie gifts of knowledge and wisedom which God hath giuen to be perpetuall in his Church wil helpe forward the building of it chiefly in the ministerie of the word and also by the meanes of writing whereof there will be a necessarie vse as long as the Church endureth not onely for the interpretation of the word of God but also for the scanning of controuersies the confuting of heresies the reproouing of vices the which will continually be new and fresh in the Church The last action of Samuel is that he laid this booke before the face of the Lorde that is in the place of Gods worship where he was so present that he might as it were be knowen and discerned there euen as one man is knowen from an other by his face This Samuell did for this end that God might be both a witnesse of his faithfulnesse in teaching the people their due●ie in this behalfe and also a maintainer of that ●state the which was established by the will of God yea a reuenger of all disorders and of all disloyalty which should be any way committed against the state And so we neede not doubt but that God doth watch with the eye of his prouidence ouer kings and princes after a speciall manner vouchsafing to them who are faithfull and Godly a great measure of wisedome and of all graces of the spirit meete for so high a calling yea and doth seuerely punish the resistance c●ntempt disgrace offered to those princes which are so
affection and indeauour doe helpe it forwarde as they who doe builde out of order or not in due time a●d season But there is another k●●d of hin●erers who a●e t●uly and properly so called and these doe of set purpose ●●nder the building of it The which no doubte is not onely a strange thing although it be most vsuall in the world that any man should be giuen vp to such a reprobate and senslesse minde as to labour by all meanes to ouerthrow and deface that wherein his cheife felicitie doth consist but also a most fearefull case for as the Apostle witnesseth 1. Cor. 3.17 Who so destroyeth the temple of God which is holy him shall GOD destroy And Philip 1.28 to be an aduersarie to the Church is a signe of perdition howsoeuer the Lorde may chaunge the hart of the most fierce enimie which his Church hath and make him become a fauourer of it as we see in the example of Paule Sect. 5. Howe the Church is to be built against professed hinderers THey who doe of set purpose hinder the building of the Church are of two sortes to wit professed or hypocritical Of both these kindes the Apostle fore-warneth the elders of the Church which was at Ephesus Act. 20.29 saying I knowe that after my departure fierce wolues shall come in vppon you not sparing the flocke The other kinde followeth And of your selues there shall arise men speaking peruerse things to drawe disciples after them And so doth Christ his disciples Math. 24.9.10 open persecutors shall kill you and yee shal be hated of all men yea many that beleeue shall be offended and one shall betray an other and many false prophets shall arise and deceaue many These hinderers as they are diuers so they are diuersly to be dealt withall yet this belongeth vnto them all that whenas they are obstinately and desperatly malitious in hindering the building of the Church they are subiect to the imprecations of the said Church Neh. 6.14 and 2. Timo. 4.14 professed hinderers are such as are not members of the Church for no man can professe himselfe to be both a seruant to Christ and a hinderer and defacer of his glory which shineth only in the Church and is obscured by hindering the building of it more then by any other meanes but they who hating Christian religion doe by all meanes labour to hinder the propagation of it and that most commonly by open violence These may lawfully be resisted by violence as they doe oppugne the truth as we read that the people of the Iewes did who did build with the one hand and hold their weapons with the other Neh. 4.17 therefore these are called the Lordes battails And hereof we need not doubte but that the force of open enimies labouring to ouerthrow the Church may and ought to be resisted by force There is no cause of warre so iust as is the defence of the Church neither any wherein we may be more bolde to looke euen for the extraordinary helpe and blessing of God in fighting for vs for the good and safety whereof al the creatures in heauen and in earth doe serue Thus Ioah incourageth his brother 2. Sam. 10.12 quite thee like a man and let vs be valiant for our people and for the cities of our God Sect. 6. How the Church is to be built whenas the ciuill magistrate is a professed enimie to the Gospell IT commeth often to passe that the building of the Church is hindered by the ciuill rulers who ought to be the cheife furtherers of it being placed by God in authoritie for this end that by their meanes the people might liue a quiet life in all godlines and honestie 1. Timo. 2.2 But the people by their sinnes doe often pull vpon themselues as diuerse other iudgments so also prophane and Godlesse rulers so much abhorring frō the true worship of God that they do not onely not imbrace it themselues but also hinder their subiects from vsing it The which is a lamētable case euen a horrible cōfusiō of all things whenas the sword of the magistrate is stretched out against the Church the members and builders of it which was appointed cheifly for the maintaining of it yet we haue many examples hereof in all ages of kings princes Emperours all kindes of rulers who haue opposed their whole power and authority to the building of the church This was the state of the church for the space of diuerse hundred yeares in the first time of the Gospell the which did miserably labour vnder the crosse of persecuting Emperours the like may be seene in euerie age And therefore it belongeth to all Christians to knowe howe farre they may go in building the Church in this state of things and whether that it be lawfull as before to build the Church and to maintaine the same being built by force against the violence of the ciuil power The answere to this question is diuerse according to the diuersitie of rule and of subiection for some magistrates doe so rule a● that they themselues are in some sort to be ouerruled by others yea they are subiect to lawes as other men are so as if they doe transgresse either in their priuate life or in publick administration they are to be called to account and to be brought into order by the people or by the ch●ife and noblest of them in the name of the rest These may lawfully by the aforesaid power of ●he people but not by any priuate man or companie of men be compelled to suffer the building of the Church to goe forward But this is no answere to the question for here subiects doe not resist a higher power but the ciuill power being deuided betwixt the people and the rulers one part of it resisteth the other in the which combat the lower power ought to giue place to the higher and therefore the magistrates to the whole body of the people by the which they were put in office to rule them seuerally and ioyntly in the name and by the authoritie of all For this kinde of magistrates is to be accounpted as deputies or substitutes to the people and may lawfully be deposed by them when the common good doth so require Yea if any people haue submitted themselues to any authoritie with condition of hauing the true worshippe of God and the free vse of it they are not bound to obey if the said condition be broken But there is another kind of gouernment wherin the ruler for vsually he is but one hath greater authoritie and a more sure standing in his place in that he is not chosen or appointed by the people to rule neither doth take his authoritie at their handes as their giftes but hath it from God from his predecessors and from himselfe These rulers are for the most part great kinges and Monarches who doe obtaine kingdomes by hereditarie succession from their auncestours hauing either by force conquered the dominion of
those places or by the fauour and consent of the people obtained that great authotitie for themselues and their posteritie Yea often a temperate and meane power being graunted doth incre●se to this immoderate and absolute authoritie whereof we speake The which although it were at the first conquered by violence and vniust dealing yet if afterwardes it be by the generall and continuall consent of the people admitted acknowledged and obeyed it is to be accounted a lawfull authority Now in many of those kingdomes the rulers are not tied to any couenants or conditions by the which they shoulde rule but onely so farre forth as they doe voluntarilie submit themselues for the more quiet obtaining enioying of their kingdoms Yea they haue the full and absolute authority of the land in their owne handes and inherēt in their own persons insomuch that al others within their dominions ioyntly and seuerally considered are in respect of them priuate men Of this kinde was the kingdome of Israell as hath beene shewed in the former treatise and many other in the which that we may apply this to our purpose it was not lawfull for any of the people to resist the ciuill authority by open force no not in the cause of setting vp or maintaining the Church as appeareth by the historie and examples of the saide kinges Yea this is agreeable to the word of God which teacheth that we ought not to doe that which is good but by good lawful and ordinarie meanes but to resist the ciuill power is euill and greatly displeasing in the eyes of God Yet we ought to vse all lawfull meanes for the setting forward of this worke when it is hindered by these magistrates as first to solicite the cause of the Church at their hands yea euen with our owne danger as did Hester Est. 4.14.16 Nehemias Neh. ● 4 and to labour to bring them to the knowledge of the truth Yea further if it be so needfull to redeeme the freedome of religion with our goods by paying to our rulers great tributes that the Church may be established Also by shewing our faithfull obedience loyal submission and duetifull seruice euen to the vnbeleeuing rulers as did Daniel Nehemias and many other godly men By the which meanes and such like the Lord working together in whose handes the heartes of kinges are to turne at his pleasure it may happely come to passe that they will become louers and furtherers yea members of the Church or at the least not haters and hinderers of it but if they doe continue obstinate and as it vsually commeth to passe become persecutours of the Church Then in the first kinde of gouernment the people may vse eyther that secret authoritie which as yet remaineth in their owne handes or else the libertie and benefit of conditionall obedience and so notwithstanding the ciuil ruler build the Church as they ought to doe But in the other kind of gouermēt we may not build with the one hand hold our weapons with the other against that g●eat absolute and maiesticall authoritie for here God giueth no other weapons where withall to fight saue onely patience to suffer their vngodly dealing and if they become malitious and bloudy persecutours of the Church winges to flie For that in time of persecution moued eyther by our owne magistrates or by any other power we may fly for our safetie we are taught euen by the light of nature which moueth euery one to preserue his life by all good meanes But nature is an euill counseller in cases of religion and therefore we haue a more sure ground whereon to rest in this behalfe euen the worde of God whereunto we are to hearken giuing vs this libertie yea this counsell that when we are persecuted in one place we should fly to another as the primitiue Church was dispersed except the Apostles Act. 8.1 yea this is good not onely for our selues but also for the Church for by this meanes we preserue the Church which otherwise would be destroyed in vs. Besides those who are weake and doubt of their constancy ought not to tempt God by vndergoing extreame daunger Yea the Lord vseth thi● meanes for the inlarging of his Church Act. 8.4 yet sometimes God doth not graunt vnto vs this libertie of flying but giueth the persecutour power ouer vs that by this meanes he may try our soundnesse and constancy in the profession of his trueth Yea sometimes it is also expedient for the Church that we doe not vse this liberty though we may as if our suffering be like to bring many to the profession of the trueth or to confirme the weake or to auoyd the slaunder of the enemy obiecting to vs fearefulnesse hypocrisie want of faith and of the hope of eternall life Sect. 7. Of the building of the Church hindered by the ciuill ruler being a christian THus much of professed hinderers being open enemies to the Church Nowe we come to those who although they professe themselues members of the Church and such as do by all meanes labour to build it yet in trueth they doe hinder the same yea often more then the opē enemy doth And to let others passe the greatest hurt is done by those who are publicke in the Church vnto whome the building and furthering of this worke doth belong as namely the ciuill ruler being a member of the Church and the ecclesiasticall gouernour or the minister of the worde For as when the light of the body is darkenesse how greate is that darkenesse so when the builders of the Church are the hinderers of it how great is that hurt For the first the ciuill ruler for so we speake as of one because that kinde of gouerment is most vsuall may greatly hinder the building of the Church although he doe in part further the same as namely if together with the profession of the true worship of God he doe retaine some part of some false worship or the reliques and memorials of it whereby many are offended and hindered Secondly if he hinder the establishing of any part of the gouernment of the Church commaunded in the worde or else the function of any office and finally if he doe by any meanes hinder the course of the gospell and the building of Gods Church in that place Heere we haue other meanes to vse the ciuill ruler being a member of the Church For first we may be more bolde in mouing him to regard the building of the Church the which doth as much concerne his owne good and saluation as the good of any other We may also haue greate hope that he will be moued by the aduise of them who are godlie wise and learned in his realme Yea those that are the ministers of the worde of GOD by whose meanes the Church is built may deale more plainely with him and exhort yea charge him in the name of God who will one day take an accounte of him howe he hath discharged his duetie to
God teacheth vs that the ciuil power is a holy ordinance of God instituted by God chiefly for this end to intermeddle with ecclesiasticall matters and not onely to suffer and tolerate religion as it doth in a priuate Church but also to set vp and maintaine it yea wholly to effect it although by the meanes ministerie of others in al places whither the said power doth stretch it self As for the distinction of the ciuil ecclesiastical state although it may be vsed to put a difference betwixt ciuil ecclesiasticall matters yet if therby we meane that in a publicke Church there is added to the ciuill state another full and perfect bodie endued with full authoritie to begin and effect all matters belonging to it self not relying vpon the other but only vsing the help of it against outward violence as whē two distinct nations do ioine themselues in league together for their greater safetie then we thinke farre otherwise of these thinges then the worde of God doth permit according to the which the politicall bodie together with a publicke Church are but one body moued and ordered by one and the same head For as when any people being barbarous rude vnexpert in feates of warre and altogether destitute of humane knowledge and all good litterature become ciuill courteous warlicke wise and learned there are not so many newe estates or bodies added to the common-wealth but onely the first state of it is made so many waies better so it is whenas a people of pagans and infidels become the worshippers of the true God For there is not a newe bodie or state but onely the qualitie of religion is added to the ciuill bodie or rather idolatrie is chaunged into the true worshippe of God The which doth no more make a distinct body then idolatrie doth in a heathenish common-wealth As for the people they can no more be said to be another bodie because they are religious then for that they are a learned and warlicke people but for the ministers and rulers of the Church it may seeme necessarie to be graunted that they doe eyther make a distinct and perfect bodie or that the ministerie is a member of the ciuill bodie Whereunto we answere that the ministerie is not a bodie in it selfe neither is it the head of the body of the Church but onely is a member of the bodie of the commonwealth distinguished from the reste in nature vse and obiecte and excelling the other by a diuine holinesse which it hath more then any other part or function of this body The trueth hereof is to be laide open by declaring first that this whole state consisting of a politicall bodie and of a publicke Church hath but one heade wherby the whole bodie is ordered and euerie member of it moued in their seuerall functions And secondly the offices of these two states may agree together in the same subiect The heade is the ciuill power whereof we speake rather then of the ciuill magistrate for that in many places the power is not wholly in the handes of the magistrate but diuided among the senate the nobilitie and the people But here we speake of the whole power the which wee call the hande of this body by ● vsuall metaphore taken from the naturall bodies wherein we see that the whole motion commeth from the head without the which none of the members can moue it selfe or doe any function Thus all men doe graunt that the ciuill power is the head of this body in regard of ciuill and worldly affaires but that it may be so called in respect of the Church and of ecclesiasticall matters many do doubt or rather flatly deny without any doubting thinking that neither the ciuill power doth stretch it selfe to Church affaires neither if it do in some respect that it ought therefore or may lawfully be called the head of the Church As touching this point we are to consider howe both the function and also the name of a head agreeth to the ciuill power for the first in the building of the Church it pleaseth God to vse the helpe and the ministerie of men and that two diuerse waies according to the two diuerse kindes of building his Church whereof the one is inward secrete and spirituall whenas by the ministerie of the word and the sacremenes the Church is edified in knowledge faith loue obedience and in all manner of spirituall graces in this parte of the building Christ is the first and cheife mouer yea the head of his Church vnto the which he giueth spirituall motion by his ministers as by instruments vnto whom he giueth spirituall graces fit for this purpose Ephe. 4.11 He gaue some to be Apostles some Euangelistes some Pastors and doctours for the gathering of his saintes and for the building of the body of Christ. Thus Christ onlie is the head of the whole visible church for no creature can either appoint ecclesiasticall functions or giue spirituall graces either to the ministers or to the people But whenas the Church commeth to be built in any particular place there must be added an other parte of this building more outward apparant and sensible then the other to wit whenas this spirituall building together with the ministerie of the word which is the meanes of it is not onely receaued whē as it is offered but also diligently sought after when it is wan●●ng and carefully preserued after that it is gotten This kinde of building also is to be performed by the ministerie of man but yet it doth not come from the same head or fountaine For that spirituall building commeth from Christ as he is Lord and king of his Church but this commeth from God the father the maker and preseruer of mankinde who in great mercie and wisdome hath not left men in vtter confusion but hath giuen vnto them the meanes of hauing a Church and his true worshippe This meanes is his owne power and authority communicated to certaine men for the good of the rest to whome he hath giuen this charge that they do as by all other meanes so cheifly by building his church in those places which are within the compas of their authority procure the good of men so that all whosoeuer haue the rule of any place whether it be kingdome or countrie prouince or citie towne or family are bound by the word of God and namely by the generall lawes of magistracie to build the Church in the said places the which thing if they doe neglect as most of all the magistats in the world in all ages haue done then they do sinne against God no lesse then the minister being lawfully called to the function who doth neglect the inward and spirituall edifying of the Church This the prophet foretolde saing that kinges and Queenes should be nourse fathers and nurse mothers to the Ch. Not that they should be the ministers of the word and of the spirituall nourishment vnto them but onely that they should
Yea this course did Esra take in a like case by the counsell and commaundement of king Artaxarxes as we reade in the seauenth of that booke Vers. 25. And thou Ezra according to the wisedome of thy God which is in thee appoint Iudges euen all that knowe the lawes of thy God And if it were obiected but there a●e not a sufficient number of men which k●ow how to iudge instruct and order the people therefore he addeth and those that knowe not make them to know how they ought to doe these thinges So that by the good direction and counsell of those who are the chiefe worke-men in this planting of a Church men otherwise ignorant and vnexpert may become able to teach gouerne others Neyther ought this to seeme straunge vnto vs considering the weake and simple state of the people at the first is such as that although in some respect they had neede of most expert master-builders yet they may be helped and taught by those who doe themselues neede to be instructed And according to the meane estate both of the teachers and also of the people we must be content as no doubt the Lord in mercy doth accept it with a smale measure both of knowledg and also of obedience in the waies of God and if it here be obiected that which the Apostle forbiddeth Timothy to wit that none newly conuerted from paganisme should be a Bishop or elder we answere that if that be his meaning yet this commandement must giue place to the necessity of the Church yea many such may be knowen to be very sound in the faith so that we need not feare any apostasie in them And forasmuch as it may be well thought that these men cannot so soone be endued with such a measure of knowledge in the gouernment of the Church and in the teaching and ordering of the people but that they will be wanting in many things and oftentimes erre in administration it being of it selfe so hard and difficult as that euen they who haue all their life time laboured in this worke and beene teachers and gouernours in the Church shall find themselues in many respectes insufficient yea ignorant and vnexpert in many cases which do often fall out among the people therefore they by whose meanes and ministerie the Church was first founded euen as by most wise maister-builders must still haue an eye to the seuerall congregations and set those things in order which are amisse resolue the doubtes which are risen among them strengthen confirme and encourage both the people in their profession and obedience which they performe both to God and to his ministers which are set ouer them and especially they are to str●ngthen the teachers themselues least they faint vnder the waight of this most painfull and troublesome calling wherein they finde so many offences in the people so many infirmities and wantes in themselues yea so many l●ts and hinderances of their minis●ery laid by the malice of sathan and the meanes of wicked men Thus did the Apostle Paule exhort confirme and encourage the elders of the Church at Ephesus Act. 20. whose example is to be followed of all in this case who are endued with more excellent gifts of knowledge and wisdome in gouerning the Church of God then these are to whom in the want of men fully sufficient the congregations of the people are committed Sect. 9. To whom the enacting of ecclesiasticall lawes in a publick Church doth belong IT remaineth that we consider to whom it belongeth to make ecclesiasticall lawes in a publick Church In priuate Churches this ought to be done as hath bene said by the whole body of the Church consisting of the rulers and the people for these churches are as it w●re free cities exempted in regard of diuine matters from the iurisdiction of all superiour power saue only of Christ howsoeuer they be subiect to magistrates as touching ciuill obedience But it is farre otherwise in publick Churc●es the which comming into the common-wealth come within the dominion and iurisdiction of the ciuill magistrate not to spoile him of his power either in whole as when the ciuill state is ruled by any in the name of the Church or in part as when the Church taketh to her selfe full and supreame authority in the ordering of her own matters and so exempting hir selfe from the ciuill power doth restraine it from medling with all matters within that dominion But the Church becomming publick doth subiect her selfe to the said power as to a superiour or he●d and suffereth her selfe to be ordered by it in great part For euen as a man as long as he liueth in a desert place or keepeth himselfe within his owne house may liue according to his owne will but as soone as he ioyneth himselfe to a common-wealth and commeth into a publick place he must square his actions according to the commaundement of the magistrate so standeth the case with the Church The which is free as long as she is priuate but being publick is ouerruled by the ciuill power yea euen in making ecclesiasticall lawes this ciuill power hath place where by ecclesiasticall lawes we doe not meane those which prescribe the manner of the worshippe of God and the substance of Church-gouernment for these are appointed by God in the word and cannot be changed by any creature but we meane lawes made onely of the circumstances of Gods worshippe being things indifferent neither commanded forbidden nor expressed in the scripture There is an other kinde of lawes which also may be called ecclesiasticall for that they concerne the Church made to allowe commaund and authorise the publick building of it such were the edictes of Cyrus Darius and Artaxerxes for the reedifying of the temple at Ierusalem likewise the lawes of the good kings of Iuda for the ouerthrowing of idolatrie and the publick establishing of the true worshippe of God These lawes are to be made by the sole authoritie of the ciuill ruler or at the least by that authority whereby ciuill lawes are made neither can there any question be made hereof For it is plaine that no man can make the building of a publick Church either peaceable or lawfull but they who haue the ruling of that place wherein it is to be built But as touching the giuer or maker of the other lawes there is great question for it seemeth to many very vnmeete that the ciuil power should enter so farre into the Church as to haue to doe with the making of the lawes whereby it is to be ordered Yea that it is without the compasse of the magistrates calling to meddle with these matters But it seemeth that we ought to be so farre from excluding the ciuill ruler from the making of these lawes which were in some sorte to take the scepter out of his hand forasmuch as where there is a Church publickly sette vp in any realme there the state of the Church and the common-wealth doe verie much depend of