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A61555 Ecclesiastical cases relating to the duties and rights of the parochial clergy stated and resolved according to the principles of conscience and law / by the Right Reverend Father in God, Edward, Lord Bishop of Worcester. Stillingfleet, Edward, 1635-1699. 1698 (1698) Wing S5593; ESTC R33861 132,761 428

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their Consciences fly in their Faces and they condemn themselves for their evil Actions And then these very Instances are an Argument against Infidelity for we may justly presume that they would shake off their Fears of another World if they could But why should some Instances of this Nature signifie more against Religion than the many Remarkable Examples of a Godly Righteous and Sober Life among the Clergy to a stronger Confirmation of it For they have had greater Occasion of searching into all the Considerable Difficulties about Religion than others can pretend to and I do not know any that have imployed most Time and Pains about it but have had greater Satisfaction as to the Truth and Excellency of it Thus I have endeavoured to remove the most common Prejudices of our Times against our Profession It would now be proper for me to give some particular Directions to you but that is so much the business of the following Discourses that I shall refer you to them and commend you to the Grace and Blessing of Almighty God that you may so carefully discharge your Duties in this World that it may advance your Happiness in another I am Your Affectionate Friend and Brother EDW. WIGORN Hartlebury C. Apr. 23. 1698. ERRATA PReface pag. viii lin 7. read Birinus p. xii l. 7. r. Kington P. 26. l. 21. after fraudes add p. 126. l. 11. r. Birinus p. 129. l. 9. r. Wulstan p. 142. l. 7. r. Flocks they go to p. 157. l. 17. after but insert to perswade you p. 226. l. 5. for more r. meer p. 236. l. 9. for Titles r. Tithes p. 241. l. 9. r. A●b●rdus p. 254. l. 17. r. Guthrun p. 256. l. 17. for than r. as THE CONTENTS CASE I. THE Bishop of Worcester's Charge to the Clergy of his Diocess in his Primary Visitation c. p. 1. II. Of the Nature of the Trust committed to the Parochial Clergy c. p. 103. III. Of the particular Duties of the Parochial Clergy c. p. 175. IV. Of the Maintenance of the Parochial Clergy by Law p. 229. V. Of the Obligation to observe the Ecclesiastical Canons and Constitutions c. p. 325. To which is annexed a Discourse concerning Bonds of Resignation c. A Catalogue of Books published by the Right Reverend Father in God Edward Lord Bishop of Worcester and sold by Henry Mortlock at the Phoenix in St. Paul's Church-Yard A Rational Account of the Grounds of the Protestant Religion being a Vindication of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury's Relation of a Conference c. from the pretended Answer of T. C. The second Edition Folio Origines Britannicae or the Antiquities of the British Churches with a Preface concerning some pretended Antiquities relating to Britain in Vindication of the Bishop of St. Asaph Folio Irenicum A Weapon-Salve for the Churches Wounds Quarto Origines Sacrae or a Rational Account of the Grounds of Christian Faith as to the Truth and Divine Authority of the Scriptures and the Matters therein contained The Fifth Edition corrected and amended Quarto The Unreasonableness of Separation or an impartial Account of the History Nature and Pleas of the present Separation from the Communion of the Church of England Quarto A Discourse concerning the Idolatry practised in the Church of Rome and the hazard of Salvation in the Communion of it in Answer to some Papers of a revolted Protestant wherein a particular Account is given of the Fanaticism and Divisions of that Church Octavo An Answer to several late Treatises occasioned by a Book entitled A Discourse concerning the Idolatry practised of the Church of Rome and the hazard of Salvation in the Communion of it Part I. Octavo A Second Discourse in Vindication of the Protestant Grounds of Faith against the Pretence of Infallibility in the Church of Rome in answer to the Guide in Controversie by R. H. Protestancy without Principles and Reason and Religion or the certain Rule of Faith by E. W. With a particular Enquiry into the Miracles of the Roman Church Octavo An Answer to Mr. Cressy's Epistle Apologetical to a Person of Honour touching his Vindication of Dr. Stillingfleet Octavo A Defence of the Discourse concerning the Idolatry practised in the Church of Rome in Answer to a Book entitled Catholicks no Idolaters Octavo Several Conferences between a Romish Priest a Fanatick Chaplain and a Divine of the Church of England being a full Answer to the late Dialogues of T. G. Octavo The Council of Trent Examin'd and Disprov'd by Catholick Tradition in the main Points in Controversie between Us and the Church of Rome with a particular Account of the Times and Occasions of Introducing them A Discourse concerning the Doctrine of Christ's Satisfaction or the true Reasons of his Sufferings with an Answer to the Socinian Objections and a Preface concerning the true State of the Controversie about Christ's Satisfaction Octavo Second Edition A Discourse in Vindication of the Doctrine of the Trinity with an Answer to the late Socinian Objections against it from Scripture Antiquity and Reason And a Preface concerning the different Explication of the Trinity and the Tendency of the present Socinian Controversie Octavo Second Edition The Bishop of Worcester's Answer to Mr. Locke's Letter concerning some Passages relating to his Essay of Humane Understanding mention'd in the late Discourse in Vindication of the Trinity Octavo The Bishop of Worcester's Answer to Mr. Locke's Second Letter wherein his Notion of Idea's is proved to be inconsistent with it self and with the Articles of the Christian Faith Octavo Sermons preached upon several Occasions in three Volumes in Octavo The Effigies of the Right Reverend Father in God Edward Lord Bishop of Worcester Engraven on a Copper-Plate Price 6 d. THE BISHOP OF WORCESTER'S CHARGE TO THE CLERGY of his DIOCESE In his Primary Visitation begun at Worcester September 11 th 1690. My Brethren THIS being my Primary Visitation I thought it fitting to acquaint my self with the Ancient as well as Modern Practice of Episcopal Visitations and as near as I could to observe the Rules prescribed therein with respect to the Clergy who are now summoned to appear And I find there were two principal Parts in them a Charge and an Enquiry The Charge was given by the Bishop himself and was called Admonitio Episcopi or Allocutio wherein he informed them of their Duty and exhorted them to perform it The Enquiry was made according to certain Articles drawn out of the Canons which were generally the same according to which the Iuratores Synodi as the ancient Canonists call them or Testes Synodales were to give in their Answers upon Oath which was therefore called Iuramentum Synodale for the Bishop's Visitation was accounted an Episcopal Synod The former of these is my present business and I shall take leave to speak my Mind freely to you this first time concerning several things which I think most useful and fit to be
are fain to borrow from the old Stock and scarce any thing worth Answering hath been said by them but hath been often said and with more Force by their Masters And the best Philosophers of this Age have given up the Cause of Atheism as indefensible so that the Being of God and Providence seems to be established by a General Consent and if any secretly be of another Mind they think it not for their Reputation to own it The main Pretence now is against Revealed Religion but without offering to shew how so great and considerable a Part of Mankind as the Christian Church hath been made up of came to be so imposed upon as to a Doctrine which advances Morality to the greatest Height and gives Mankind the most assured Hopes of a Blessed Immortality when nothing like Interest and Design as to this World could be carried on by the First and Greatest Promoters of it But we are told in a late Complaint made abroad by a Friend of our Deists wherein I am particularly concerned That we make Objections for them which are most easie to answer and pass over their most considerable Difficulties Which is a very unjust Charge and cannot be made good but by producing those Considerable Difficulties which we have taken no Notice of For my part I know of none such and we make no Objections for them however we may think it our Duty to lay open the Weakness of them when we are importuned to do it which was my Case in the Treatise I suppose he refers to If they keep their Considerable Difficulties to themselves I know not how we should be able to answer them But it is the common way in a baffled Cause still to pretend that the main Difficulties were not produced But this is not a proper Occasion to insist lon●er on these Matters my present Business is to answer the Objection which immediately regards the Clergy and the Summ of it is That our Profession rather hinders than confirms the Belief of Religion because they who plead for what makes for their Interest are always suspected to be swayed more by Interest than by Reason To give a full and clear Answer to this we must consider That however Mankind are apt to be swayed by Interest yet the Truth and Reason of Things do not at all depend upon them for a Thing is not true or false in it self because it makes for or against a Man and the Measures of judging Truth and Falshood are quite of another Nature and so Mens Interests come not into Consideration So that in this Case they are not to examine whose Turn is served whether such a Thing be true or false but whether there be sufficient Evidence to convince an impartial Mind of the Truth of it for let the Reasons be produced by whom they please the Grounds of Conviction are the same If a Man in a Dispute about Surveying a piece of Land which he claimed a Right to should appeal to the Elements of Geometry in his Case would the Evidence be less because he was concerned in the Land But we proceed farther Suppose it be for the Interest of Religion in a Nation for an Order of Men to be set apart on purpose to attend the Services of it and that there should be great Incouragements for their Education and a Maintenance set apart for their Subsistence afterwards that they may not live in Dependance on the Humours and uncertain Fancies of the People how can such a Constitution take off from the Credibility of that Religion which they are to support Was it any lessening to the Authority of the Law of Moses that the Tribe of Levi was so plentifully provided for by God's own Appointment They were to teach the Law to the People in the Places where they were dispersed among the several Tribes And suppose it had been then said Why should we believe what you say when you live by it You have Cities and Lands and Tithes and Oblations and Dignities among you no wonder you set up this Law as Divine and Holy but we get nothing by it but part with a Share of our Profits to maintain you What then Was the Law therefore false and Moses an Impostor These are hard Consequences but they naturally follow from such a Supposition And if such an Inference were not reasonable then neither will it appear to be so now But we do not pretend that the Parochial Settlement of our Clergy is by such a Divine Law as the Levitical Priesthood was but this we do insist upon That the Christian Religion being owned and established in the Nation there was a necessary Reason from the Nature of it and the Obligation to Preserve and Support it that there should be an Order of Men set apart for that End that they should instruct the People in it and perform the several Offices belonging to it and that a sufficient Maintenance be allowed them by the Law of the Land to support them in doing their Duties And I appeal to any Men of Sense or of common Vnderstanding whether on Supposition that our Religion is true these be not very just and reasonable Things How then can that make a Religion suspected to be false which are very reasonable supposing it to be true If it be true as most certainly it is are not they bound to maintain it to be true And can it be the less so because their Subsistence depends upon it Therefore all the Impertinent Talk of our Profession being a Trade can signifie nothing to any Men that understand the Difference between Scarron and Euclid or the way of Burlesquing and of Demonstration There is still one common Prejudice to be removed and that is That too many of those who preach up our Religion as true do not live as if they believed it to be so We are very sorry there should be any Occasion given for such a Reproach as this and we hope there are not so many Instances of it as some would have it believed Woe be to those by whom such Offences come But supposing the Instances true is there any Religion in the World considering the Follies and Infirmities of Mankind which can secure all the Professors of it from acting against the Rules of it But if such Instances are sufficiently proved there ought to be the greater Severity used in such Cases because Religion it self as well as the Honour of our Church suffers so much by them But it will still be said That these Persons are secret Infidels and believe nothing of what they profess This is another Point how far bad Lives are consistent with sound Opinions Some that think that Men act consistently will not allow that Bad Men can be any other than meer Infidels but others who consider the Prevalency of Mens Lusts and Passions over their Reasons are apt to think that they may retain their good Opinions even when they act contrary to them But then
License but if any one preached in other parts of the Diocess or were a Stranger in it then he was to be examined by the Diocesan and if he were found tam Moribus quam Scientia idoneus he might send him to preach to one or more Parishes as he thought meet and he was to shew his License to the Incumbent of the Place before he was to be permitted to preach under the Episcopal Seal And thus as far as I can find the Matter stood as to Preaching before the Reformation After it when the Office of Ordination was reviewed and brought nearer to the Primitive Form and instead of delivering the Chalice and Patten with these words Accipe potestatem offerre Deo Sacrificium c. the Bishop delivered the Bible with these words Take thou Authority to Preach the Word of God and to Minister the Holy Sacraments in the Congregation c. The Priests Exhortation was made agreeable thereto wherein he exhorts the Persons in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ to consider the Weight and Importance of the Office and Charge they are called to not barely to instruct those who are already of Christ's Flock but to endeavour the Salvation of those who are in the midst of this naughty World And therefore he perswades and charges them from a due regard to Christ who suffered for his Sheep and to the Church of Christ which is so dear to him to omit no Labor Care or Diligence in instructing and reforming those who are committed to their Charge And the better to enable them to perform these things there are some Duties especially recommended to them viz. Prayer and Study of the Holy Scriptures according to which they are to instruct others and to order their own Lives and of those who belong to them And that they might the better attend so great a Work they are required to forsake and set aside as much as they may all worldly Cares and Studies and apply themselves wholly to this one thing that they may save themselves and them that hear them After which follows the solemn Profession wherein they undertake to do these things This is that my Brethren which I earnestly desire of you that you would often consider You are not at liberty now whether you will do these things or not for you are under a most solemn Engagement to it You have put your Hands to the Plough and it is too late to think of looking back and you all know the Husbandman's Work is laborious and painful and continually returning It is possible after all his Pains the Harvest may not answer his Expectation but yet if he neither plows nor sows he can expect no Return if he be idle and careless and puts off the main of his Work to others can he reasonably look for the same Success Believe it all our Pains are little enough to awake the sleepy and secure Sinners to instruct the Ignorant to reclaim the Vitious to rebuke the Profane to convince the Erroneous to satisfie the Doubtful to confirm the Wavering to recover the Lapsed and to be useful to all according to their several Circumstances and Conditions It is not to preach a Sermon or two in a Weeks Time to your Parishioners that is the main of your Duty that is no such difficult Task if Men apply their minds as they ought to do to Divine Matters and do not spend their Retirements in useless Studies but the great Difficulty lies in Watching over your Flock i. e. knowing their Condition and applying your selves uitably to them He that is a Stranger to his Flock and only visits them now and then can never be said to watch over it he may watch over the Fleeces but he understands little of the State of his Flock viz. of the Distempers they are under and the Remedies proper for them The Casuists say That the Reason why there is no Command for Personal Residence in Scripture is because the Nature of the Duty requires it for if a Person be required to do such things which cannot be done without it Residence is implied As a Pilot to a Ship needs no Command to be in his Ship for how can he do the Office of a Pilot out of it Let none think to excuse themselves by saying that our Church only takes them for Curates and that the Bishops have the Pastoral Charge for by our old Provincial Constitutions which are still in force so far as they are not repugnant to the Law of the Land even those who have the smallest Cures are called Pastors and Lyndwood there notes that Parochialis Sacerdos dicitur Pastor and that not meerly by way of Allusion but in respect of the Care of Souls But we need not go so far back For what is it they are admitted to Is it not ad curam Animarum Did not they promise in their Ordination To teach the People committed to their Care and Charge The Casuists distinguish a threefold Cure of Souls 1. In foro interiori tantum and this they say is the Parochial Cure 2. In foro exteriori tantum where there is Authority to perform Ministerial Acts as to suspend excommunicate absolve sine Pastorali Curâ and this Archdeacons have by Virtue of their Office 3. In utroque simul where there is a special Care together with Jurisdiction this is the Bishops And every one of these say they secundum commune Ius Canonicum is obliged to Residence i. e. by the common Law Ecclesiastical of which more afterwards The Obligation is to perpetual Residence but as it is in other positive Duties there may other Duties intervene which may take away the present force of it as care of Health necessary Business publick Service of the King or Church c. But then we are to observe that no Dispensation can justifie a Man in point of Conscience unless there be a sufficient Cause and no Custom can be sufficient against the natural Equity of the Case whereby every one is bound from the Nature of the Office he hath undertaken I confess the case in Reason is different where there is a sufficient Provision by another fit Person and approved by those who are to take care that Places be well supplied and where there is not but yet this doth not take off the force of the Personal Obligation arising from undertaking the Cure themselves which the Ecclesiastical Law understands to be not meerly by Promise but cum effectu as the Canonists speak which implies personal Residence Not that they are never to be away Non sic amarè intelligi debet ut nunquam inde recedat saith Lyndwood but these Words are to be understood civili modo as he expresses it i. e. not without great Reason There must not be saith he callida Interpretatio sed talis ut cessent fraudes negligentiae i. e. There must be no Art used to evade the Law nor any gross Neglect of
with it since they let go so many Advantages over the People by the Reformation Thanks be to God we have Scripture and Reason and Antiquity of our side but these are dry and insipid things to the common People unless some Arts be used to recommend them But since our main Support lies in the Honesty and Justice of our Cause without Tricks and Devices we ought to look very well to that part of our Profession which keeps up any Reputation among the People and that is Preaching Those who are so weak or lazy as to be glad to have that laid aside too in a great measure never well considered the Design of our Profession or the way to support it It 's true for some time Preaching was an extraordinary thing in the Church and none but Great and Eloquent Men of Authority in the Church were permitted to preach and the greatest Bishops were then the Preachers as appears by the Sermons of S. Ambrose S. Chrysostom S. Augustin c. And even some of the Bishops of Rome whatever Sozomen saith were frequent Preachers as appears by Gregory's Homilies on Ezekiel and the Gospels And if it were not then practised he did very ill to complain of the Burden of it and the Danger of neglecting it But in other Churches while the Bishop and the Presbyters lived together before parochial Cures were settled the Presbyters had no constant Office of preaching but as the Bishops appointed them occasionally But afterwards when the Presbyters were fixed in their Cures they were required to be very diligent and careful in preaching or instructing the people committed to their Charge as may be seen in many early Canons of the Gallican Church and so it was here in England Council of Cloveshoo c. 8. 14. Egbert Can. 3. and that not only in the moving way in the Pulpit but in the familiar and instructing way which we call Catechizing Concil Cloveshoo c. 11. Can. Egbert 6. Both ought to be done because they are both very useful The Principles and Foundations of Religion must be well laid to make the people have any Taste or Relish of preaching otherwise it is like reading Mathematicks to those who understand not Numbers or Figures Erasmus observes that the Sense of Religion grows very cold without preaching and that the Countess of Richmond Mother to H. 7. had such a Sense of the Necessity of it in those times that she maintained many Preachers at her own Charges and imployed Bishop Fisher to find out the best qualified for it And since the Reformation the Church of Rome hath been more sensible of the Necessity of it as appears by the Council of Trent Cardinal Borromeo one of the most Celebrated Saints since that time frequently insists upon it gives Directions about it and speaks of it as a thing which tends very much to the Glory of God and the Salvation of Souls And to the same purpose other Great Men among them as Cardinal Palaeotus Godeau Bordenave and others Would it not then be a great Shame for us who pretend to a Zeal for Reformation and the true Religion to neglect or lessen the Reputation of those things which our Adversaries have learnt from us and glory in them and those are Diligence in Preaching and Catechizing Which none can despise who value Religion none can neglect who have any Regard to the Interest or Honour of their Profession 3. The next Duty is the solemn Administration of the Sacraments which ought to be done in the publick Assemblies where there is not a great Reason to the contrary The Saxon Canons are express That Baptism unless in Case of Necessity should be administred only in due Times and Places Egber Can. 10 11. While the Ancient Discipline was kept up and Baptism only celebrated at the great Festivals there was a Necessity of its being publick and the Catechumens underwent several Scrutinies which lasted several days in the Face of the Church as S. Augustin observes after they had been kept under private Examination for some time before But when whole Nations were not only converted but Infants generally baptized the former Method of Discipline was changed But yet the Church retained her Right as to Satisfaction about the due Admission of her Members And that is the true Reason why after private Baptism the Child is required to be brought to the publick Congregation For Baptism is not intended to be done before a select Number of Witnesses but in the Face of the Church which is the regular and solemn Way however the Bishop may dispense in some particular Cases which he judges reasonable At first Baptism was administred publickly as Occasion served by Rivers as Bede saith Paulinus baptized many in the Rivers before Oratories or Churches were built Afterwards the Baptistery was built at the Entrance of the Church or very near it which is mentioned by Athanasius S. Chrysostom S. Ambrose S. Augustin c. The Baptistery then had a large Bason in it which held the Persons to be baptized and they went down by Steps into it Afterwards when Immersion came to be disused Fonts were set up at the Entrance of Churches But still the place was publick But in Case of Necessity there is a Form prescribed and I do not see how any without leave can use the Form of Publick Baptism in private Houses which is against both our Ancient and Modern Canons In the Greek Church it is Deprivation to do it and the Synod under Photius confirms it both as to the Eucharist and Baptism because publick Order is to be preserved But it is there understood to be done in Opposition to the Bishop's Authority whose Consent may make the Case different if they judge it reasonable But Ministerial Officers are not Judges in an equitable Case against a standing Rule 4. Another Duty of the parochial Clergy is to be able and ready to resolve Penitential Cases which relate to the Internal Court of Conscience and not the External and Judiciary Court which respects the Honour of the Church as to scandalous Offences committed by the Members of it And this takes in the Private and Occasional Duties of the parochial Clergy for they ought to inform themselves of the Spiritual Condition of their People that they may be able to give suitable Advice and Directions to them both in Health and Sickness But chiefly to be able to give them safe and seasonable Advice under Troubles of Conscience by reason of wilful Sins Duarenus a very considerable Lawyer thinks the main Business of the Clergy as to the Cure of Souls lies in the Power of Binding and Loosing i. e. in dealing aright with the Consciences of Men as to the Guilt of their Sins And the Rules of the Penitential Court are different from those of the Ecclesiastical Court as well as the End is different In the
looked on Tithes in general as due to the Church as appears by very many of their Ancient Charters but they thought they did very well when they appropriated them to Monasteries of their own Erection or others as they thought fit But this Humour took so much among the Norman Nobility and served so many Purposes of Honour and Devotion as they thought besides Reason of State that the parochial Clergy were reduced to so poor a Condition that Alexander IV. complained of it as the Bane of Religion and Destruction of the Church and as a Poison which had spread over the whole Nation And it must be very scandalous indeed when the Pope complained of it For the Monks that were able generally got their Appropriations confirmed in the Court of Rome 2. There was a Competency to be settled on the parochial Clergy by the Bishops Consent which was required in order to the confirming an Appropriation as may be seen in Multitudes of them in the Monasticon besides those which are preserved in the Churches Registers Sometimes the Endowment is expressed and at other times it is reserved in the Bishop's power to do it as he sees Cause But the Bishops were either so remiss in those Times or the Monks so powerful at Rome that the poor Vicars fared so hardly that in the time of H. 2. Alexander III. sent a Reprimand to the Bishops for favouring the Monks too much and the Clergy too little and therefore requires the Bishops to take care that the Vicar had a competent Subsistence so as to be able to bear the Burden of his Place and to keep Hospitality This was directed to the Bishop of Worcester for it seems so long since the poor Vicars here were hardly provided for And yet I have seen several Forms of Appropriations made by the Bishops here after the Conquest wherein there is a twofold Salvo one for the Bishop's Right and another for a sufficient Maintenance for the Curate although the Church were appropriated ad communem usum Monachorum as of Wolstan Roger and of William in the time of Hen. II. when Alexander III. lived and of Walter de Grey Sylvester c. But it seems where a competent Subsistence had been decreed the Monks took the first Opportunity to lessen it which occasioned another Decretal in the Canon Law wherein any such thing is forbidden without the Bishop's Consent In other Places they pleaded Custom for it thence came another Decree of the Lateran Council to void all such Customs by whomsoever introduced where there was not a competent Subsistence for him that served the Cure The Monks were still refractary in this matter and because the Bishops had Power to refuse any person presented by the Monks unless they did consent to such a reasonable Allowance as the Bishop thought fit therefore they grew sullen and would not present in which Case another Decretal was made to give the Bishop Power to present And after all Clement V. De Iure Patron c. 1. reinforced the former Decretals and injoyned the Diocesans in the strictest manner not to admit any person presented to a Cure where the Church was appropriated unless sufficient Allowance were made by the Bishop's Consent and Approbation and all Custom and Privileges to the contrary are declared to be void But how far doth this hold among us now since the Appropriations are become Lay-Fees and the Bishop's Power is not mentioned in the Statute of Dissolution To this I shall give a clear Answer but I doubt not satisfactory to all Parties concerned For as Necessity and Power so some Mens Interest and Reason live very near one another 1. The Statute of Dissolution leaves all matters of Right as to persons interested just as they were before For by the Surrender the King was to have the Monasteries and Tithes in as large and ample a manner as the Abbots then had them in Right of their Houses and in the same State and Condition as they then were or of Right ought to have been And so res transit cum suo onere But this is not all For there is an Express Salvo for all Rights Claims Interests c. of all Persons and Bodies Politick So that if by the Law of England there was such an Antecedent Right in the Vicar to his Allowance and in the Bishop to assign it it is not taken away by this Statute nor any other 2. By the Law of England the Bishop had a Right to provide a competent Maintenance for supplying the Cure upon an Appropriation We are told by an unquestionable Authority in point of Law that 9 Car. 1. this Point was brought before the Kings Bench in the Case of Thornburgh and Hitchcot The Vicar complained that the Church was appropriated and that he wanted a competent Maintenance a Prohibition was prayed but denied upon this Reason That the Vicar had Reason for his Suit and that the Ordinary might compel the Impropriator to make it greater because in all Appropriations that Power was reserved to the Ordinary And so in the Year-Books it is allowed That the Ordinary may increase or diminish the Vicar's Portion 40 E. 3. Cas. 15. f. 28. By our Provincial Constitutions the Bishop is to take care that the Vicar have a competent Allowance which at that time was set at Five Marks but Lyndwood observes that as the Price of things rose so the Allowance was increased and in Stipendiaries it was then advanced to Eight or Ten Marks which according to Sir H. Spelman's Computation comes to above Sixty Pounds per Annum But some have told us That by some old Statutes even beneficed Persons were not by Law to have above Six Marks per Annum for this was the Sum allowed to Parish Priests which is so gross a Mistake in any that pretend to Law or Antiquity that it is to be wondred how they could fall into it The Truth of the Case was this the parochial Chaplains or Priests were complained of 36 E. 3. n. 23. that they could not be gotten to attend after the Plague but at excessive Rates upon this a Provincial Constitution was made extant in the Parliament Rolls wherein they are obliged to demand no more than Six Marks But who were these Parish-Priests Not such as had the legal Endowments but those who depended on the Good-Will of the Parson or People and were hired to officiate in Chapels of Ease or to perform Offices for the Dead which were so frequent at that time And these were called Annual Chaplains or Masse Chaplains and were distinguished from Domestick Chaplains who officiated in great Mens Houses in their private Oratories and from Beneficed Persons as appears by many Constitutions But whatever was understood by the Act of Parliament then it was repealed 21 Iac. 1. 28. 3. The Law of England as to a competent Subsistence for the Vicars or
Curates in appropriated Churches is founded on very good Reason For the Tithes were originally given for the Service of the Church and not for the Use of Monasteries And this was a hard Point for the Monks to get over since the Tithes were given for the Maintenance of the Clergy and they were none of the Clergy how they came to have a Right to the Tithes It is certain that the State of the Clergy and the Monastick State were different and the Offices of the Clergy and of the Monks were inconsistent if they held to their Rules how then came the Monks to take the Maintenance which belonged to the Clergy for other Offices as though they were originally intended for them For which there is no Colour or Pretence This Point was debated between two Great Men of their times S. Bernard and Petrus Cluniacensis The former a Cistertian Monk declared himself unsatisfied with the Monks taking the Maintenance of the parochial Clergy from them which was given on purpose to attend the Cure of Souls But said Petrus Cluniacensis do we not pray for their Souls But the Cure of Souls is another thing and by the Canons of the Church the Monks were forbidden to meddle in parochial Offices of Preaching Baptizing Visiting the Sick So that it might bear a Question in Law Whether a Monastery were capable of an Appropriation since by the Ecclesiastical Law they are not an Ecclesiastical Body and for that Reason Hobart saith a Nunnery is not and the same Reason will hold for the other The Cistertian Order was at first very scrupulous in this matter when they came hither and pretended to live only on their own Lands and disliked Appropriations as great Injuries to the Clergy and called it Sacrilege to take their Tithes away from them This was wisely done of them at first to ingratiate themselves with the Clergy and to get as good Lands as they could But after a while they abated their Zeal and then they pretended to do nothing without the Bishops Consent till at last they were as ready as any and got as large Privileges to exempt their Lands from Payment of Tithes under which the Clergy suffer to this day But to return to the Beginning of Appropriations among us After the Normans coming they stood upon no Niceties of Law or Original Grants but they took Possessions of the Tithes of their Manors and disposed them as they pleased The poor parochial Clergy were English whom they hated and cared not how poor they were the Bishops were Normans as fast as they could make them and the business of the Great Men was to incourage the Norman Monks that came over and to build and endow Monasteries for them to pray for their Souls which they minded so little themselves and this I take to be the true Account of the Beginning and Increase of Appropriations in England which at first were only permitted but are confirmed by the Law since the Statute of Dissolution II. In some Appropriations there were Vicarages endowed and here the Difficulty lies in distinguishing the Tithes which belong to one from the other Before the Statutes for Endowment of Vicarages in case of Appropriations 15 R. 2. 6. 4 H. 4. 12. there were Endowments made where the Bishops took care of it but they were generally so remiss in it that those Statutes were thought very necessary and one it● seems was not sufficient For they eluded the former by appointing Vicars out of their own Body but the latter Statute requires That the Vicar shall be a Secular Person and made Spiritual Vicar and have such an Endowment as the Ordinary should think fit otherwise the Appropriation to be void The Scandal of the Appropriations was made so great by the Greediness of the Monks and Easiness of the Bishops that I find in the Parliament Rolls 2 H. 4. 51. a Petition of the Commons that no Appropriations should be made for the future but afterwards they came to that Temper which is expressed in the Statute 4 H. 4. And that before those Statutes there was no Necessity of the Endowment of a Vicarage is plain from the Occasion of making them and so it hath been agreed in the Courts of Law in the Case of Britton and Ward But the main Difficulty is to state the Tithes which belonged to the Vicarage and to the Appropriation because there was no certain Limitation either as to Quantity or Kind although generally the great Tithes of Corn and Hay went with the Parsonage and the small Tithes and Obventions and Altarage with the Vicarage The best Rules I can find to be satisfied in this matter are the Endowment or Prescription And where the Endowment is found yet there may be a Prescription for Tithes not mentioned because the Bishop had a Power reserved to increase the Allowance As in the Case of the Vicar of Gillingham who sued for customary Tithes not mentioned in the Endowment and he recovered them on this Presumption That the Vicarage might be augmented with those Tithes and in case of long Possession it is there said to have been often so held and ruled Sometimes there is a Difficulty in the Sense of the Words of the Endowment as in the Case of Barksdale and Smith whether Decima Garbarum in W. implied Tithe-Hay but it was resolved that although Garba seems to relate to Corn de omni Annonâ decima Garba Deo reddenda est L. Edw. Confess c. 8. at least to something bound up and so Lyndwood applies it to Faggots yet the Custom was thought sufficient to extend it to Tithe-Hay and for Tithe-Wood in Renoulds and Green's Case But the greatest Difficulty hath been about small Tithes which is the common Endowment of Vicarages In the Case of Ward and Britton one Point was Whether Lambs were small Tithes or not Noy pleaded Custom for it The Councel on the other side said That small Tithes were such as grew in Gardens but Lambs were a sort of Praedial Tithes however it was yielded that Custom might bring them under small Tithes Another Point about small Tithes was about Saffron growing in a Corn-Field in the Case of Bedingfield and Freak and it was resolved to be small Tithes But the Ground of that Resolution was questioned in the Case of Udal and Tyndal some said it was because Saffron was small Tithes where-ever it grew Others That by the Endowment the Parson had only reserved the Tithe of Corn and Hay But suppose whole Fields be planted with Woad which grows in the Nature of an Herb is this to be reckoned among small Tithes Crook seems to deliver the Sense of the Court so in the former Case but Hutton reports it that it might come to be majores Decimae and Praedial if it came to be the main Profits of the Place And the like may hold as to Hemp Hops Wooll and Lambs It
the Saxon times viz. That the Iewish Sabbath doth not oblige us but however to observe the like Proportion of time and devote it to the Service of God Mr. Hooker saith That we are to account the Sanctification of one day in Seven a Duty which God's immutable Law doth exact for ever But what is meant by this Sanctification of One day in Seven If it be understood according to the old Canons it will fill scrupulous Minds with more Doubts and Fears about the right Observation of it Origen saith The Observation of the Christian Sabbath lies in these things 1. A Forbearance of worldly Business 2. Attendance on the Publick Worship 3. Divine Meditation on Things invisible and future Haec est observatio Sabbati Christiani And in another place he requires besides Publick Worship private Meditation and Reading the Holy Scriptures S. Chrysostom insists very much upon the same in several places and on different Occasions And altho' it be in his popular Sermons yet he would certainly not put them upon any thing but what he thought very fit to be done And they must have a mean Opinion of him who think his Eloquence carried him too far in this matter I shall conclude with the Opinion of Lyndwood a Learned and Judicious Canonist and he observes a Threefold Sanctification of the Lord's day 1. By Abstinence from Sin which is necessary at all times 2. By Abstinence from such bodily Labours as hinder the Mind's Attendance upon God's Service 3. By the whole Imployment of our Minds in Divine Matters and this he calls the perfect Observation of it These things I have the more largely insisted upon to shew That the Religious Observation of the Lord's day is no Novelty started by some late Sects and Parties among us but that it hath been the general Sense of the best part of the Christian World and is particularly inforced upon us of the Church of England not only by the Homilies but by the most ancient Ecclesiastical Law among us But this is not all for the Ancient as well as Modern Canons require the Observation of Holy-days likewise The Canons of Egbert require not only Prayers but Preaching then Can. 1. 3. The Council of Cloveshoo Can. 13. distinguishes the Holy-days relating to our Saviour from the rest and saith They are to be observed in a solemn and uniform Manner and the rest according to the Roman Martyrology Which I suppose were those repeated then in the Diptychs of the Church which Custom continued longer at Rome than in other Churches but it was generally disused before the time of Charles the Great The Custom in Rome in Gregory's time was to observe the Saints Days with the solemn Service at one Church as appears by his Homilies on the Evangelists which were many of them preached on those Occasions as of S. Felicitas Hom 3. S. Agnes Hom. 11 12. S. Felix Hom. 13. S. Pancrace Hom. 27. c. and of others who were Roman Martyrs and therefore had a particular Solemnity appointed for them But as to other Saints Days it appears by the Antiphonarius and Sacramentary of Gregory I. that they had particular Anthems and Collects proper for them in the Offices of the Day but I do not find that the Generality of the People were so strictly tied up when the Offices were over as they were on the Lord's days and the greater Festivals relating to our Saviour In the Council of Cloveshoo Can. 13. I observe that the Natalitia Sanctorum i.e. the Anniversary Saints Days were observed with particular Psalmody and Anthems and Can. 17. the Days of Gregory and Augustin the Two great Instruments of converting the Nation were only to be kept as Holy-days by the Clergy without any particular Obligation on all the People So that the Holy-days of strict Observation then seem to have been no other than those which relate to our Saviour called Dominicae Dispensationis in carne Festivitates the rest had some proper Offices which were performed on their Days but the People were to attend them as well as they could but after there was not this strictness required as upon the greater Holy-days and as it was in the Church of Rome afterwards when they made the Obligation of Conscience to extend to all Holy-days appointed by the Church But it is observable 1. That this Obligation is taken from those Canons which mention only the Lord's day as appears by Bellarmin 2. That they kept up the Distinction of greater and lesser Holy-days 3. That they allow the Bishop to dispense as to some Works on Holy-days Lyndwood observes that the Abstinence from Work is not alike but as the Church hath required it and that if a Bishop's Licence cannot be had a less will serve Our Church Can. 13. requires Holy-days to be observed with Works of Piety Charity and Sobriety but gives no Rule as to Abstinence from Works or the strict Obligation of Conscience 2. I now come to the particular Duties of the Clergy on the Days which are solemnly devoted to the Service of God 1. The constant and devout Attendance upon and solemn Reading the Prayers of the Church as they are appointed In the old Saxon Canons the Presbyters are required to officiate constantly at Prayers in their Churches so in the Council at Cloveshoo Can. 8. the Canons of Egbert Can. 2. Canons of Edgar Can. 45. But how if the People will not come to the Prayers You ought what lies in you to remove the Causes of such Neglect which arises generally from these things either a gross Stupidity and Regardlesness of Religion which is too common in the World or from Prejudice and Principles of Education or the Interest of a Party or from not Reading the Prayers with that Attention and Devotion which is fit to raise an Esteem of them The other two you ought to do what you can to remove but this is your own Fault if you do it not We are not to please the Fancies of People by an affected Variety of Expressions in Prayers but we ought to do what we can to excite their Affections which is done as much by the due manner of Reading as by Figures in Speaking And the People are uneasie at staying when they see the Minister read them so fast as though he minded nothing so much as to be at the end of them or when he mangles them so as if he had a mind to make the People out of love with them 2. The next Duty is Preaching and truly that need to be looked after when the Esteem of our Profession depends so much upon it We have none of those Methods which those on both sides make so much use of we can neither comply with the People in Gestures and Phrases and Enthusiastick Heats nor with the Superstitious Devotions and Priest-craft of others Of all Churches ours hath the least Reason to be charged