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A33984 Utrum horum, or, The nine and thirty articles of the Church of England, at large recited, and compared with the doctrines of those commonly called Presbyterians on the one side, and the tenets of the Church of Rome on the other both faithfully quoted from their own most approved authors / by Hen. Care. Care, Henry, 1646-1688. 1682 (1682) Wing C535; ESTC R2383 50,749 167

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Word of God The Presbyterians By the Decree of God for the manifestation of his own Glory some Men and Angels were predestinated unto everlasting Life and others fore-ordained to everlasting Death These Angels and Men predestinated and fore-ordain'd are particularly and unchangeably designed and their number so certain and definite that it cannot be either increased or diminished Those of Mankind that are predestinated unto Life God before the Foundation of the World was laid according to his Eternal and Immutable purpose and the secret Counsel and good pleasure of his Will hath chosen in Christ unto everlasting Glory out of his meer free Grace and Love without any foresight of Faith or Good Works or perseverance in either of them or any other thing in the Creature as Conditions and Causes moving him thereunto and all to the praise of his Glorious Grace As God hath appointed the Elect unto Glory so hath he by the Eternal and most free purpose of his Will fore-ordain'd all the means thereunto Wherefore they who are Elected being fallen in Adam are redeemed by Christ are effectually called unto Faith in Christ by his Spirit working in due season are Justified Adopted Sanctified and kept by his Power through Faith unto Salvation Neither are any other Redeemed by Christ effectually Called Justified Adopted Sanctified and Saved but the Elect only The Doctrine of this high Mystery of Predestination is to be handled with special Prudence and Care that Men attending the Will of God revealed in his Word and yielding Obedience thereunto may from the certainty of their effectual Vocation be assured of their Eternal Election so shall this Doctrine afford matter of Praise Reverence and Admiration of God and of Humility Diligence and abundant Consolation to all that sincerely obey the Gospel The Papists Though they own the Word Predestination sometimes yet they teach That the Cause thereof is not the meer good pleasure of God but that a Man doth make himself Eligible by his own good Works and Merits Thus they say The Kingdom of Heaven is prepared for them that are worthy of it and deserve it by their well doing Although from Gods Eternal Predestination Glory floweth to the Elect yet for all that it springeth not but from their own good Works Stella on Luke cap. 10. fol. 35. True Faith and Righteousness may be lost and the Faithful utterly fall from the Faith Bellarm. de Just l. 3. cap. 4. which is the same thing as if we should say That the Elect may become Reprobates and Election not to be immutable If any shall say That the Grace of Justification happens not to any but such as are Predestinate but that all the rest who are call'd are indeed call'd but receive not Grace as being by Divine Power Predestinated to Evil Let him be Accursed If any one shall say a Man Regenerated and Justified is bound to believe that he is certainly of the number of the Elect Let him be Anathema The eighteenth Article of the Church of England Of obtaining Eternal Salvation only by the Name of Christ THEY also are to be had Accursed that presume to say That every Man shall be saved by the Law or Sect which he professeth so that he be diligent to frame his Life according to that Law and the Light of Nature For Holy Scripture doth set out unto us only the Name of Jesus Christ whereby Men must be saved The Presbyterians Persons not Elected although they may be call'd by the Ministry of the Word and may have some common Operations of the Spirit yet they never truly come unto Christ and therefore cannot be saved Much less can men not professing the Christian Religion be saved in any other way whatsoever be they never so diligent to frame their Lives according to the Light of Nature and the Law of that Religion they profess And to assert that they may is very pernicious and detestable The Papists Own the Words of this Article but in effect deny the latter part thereof by trusting in the Mediation and Intercession of the Virgin Mary and other Saints and Angels and praying unto and worshipping them c. The nineteenth Article of the Church of England Of the Church THE Visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of Faithful Men in the which the pure Word of God is Preached and the Sacraments be duly ministred according to Christs Ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite to the same As the Church of Hierusalem Alexandria and Antioch have erred so also the Church of Rome hath erred not only in their Living and manner of Ceremonies but also in matters of Faith The Presbyterians Wherever we see the Word of God sincerely Preach'd and Heard and the Sacraments administred according to Christs Institution there is a Church of God For these two we assign as Marks whereby the Church may be known The Visible Church which is also Catholick or Vniversal under the Gospel not confin'd to one Nation as before under the Law consists of all those throughout the World that profess the true Religion and particular Churches which are Members thereof are more or less pure according as the Doctrine of the Gospel is taught and embrac'd Ordinances administred and publick Worship perform'd more or less pure in them The purest Churches under Heaven are subject both to mixture and error and some have so degenerated as to become no Churches of Christ but Synagogues of Satan Nevertheless there shall always be a Church on Earth to worship God according to his Will The Pope of Rome cannot in any sense be Head of the Church but is that Antichrist that Man of Sin and Son of Perdition that exalts himself in the Church against Christ and all that is called God The Papists As to the first part of the Article they deny the Preaching the Word and due Administration of the Sacraments to be the marks of Christs Visible Church See Bellarm. de notis Ecclesiae cap. 1. And instead thereof assign others which by the same Cardinal are there reckoned to be the fifteen following 1. The Name of the Catholick Church and Christians 2. Antiquity 3. Duration 4. Multitude 5. Succession of Bishops and Ordination 6. Agreement with the ancient Church 7. Vnion of the Members together amongst themselves and with their Head 8. Holiness of Doctrine 9. Efficacy of Doctrine 10. Holiness of Life 11. Miracles 12. Prophesies 13. Confession of Adversaries 14. The unhappy ends of those that have oppos'd it 15. The Temporal felicity of those that have desended it And as to the latter part of the Artiticle they with all Confidence assert the clean contrary other Churches have erred but the Church of Rome cannot Id Constanter Negamus we constantly deny saith Costerus the Jesuit that Christs Vicar Peters Successors the Bishops of Rome have either taught Heresies or propounded Errors God preserveth the Truth of Christian Religion in the Apostolick See of Rome
Utrum Horum OR THE Nine and Thirty Articles OF THE CHURCH of ENGLAND At large recited And compared with the DOCTRINES of those commonly called PRESBYTERIANS On the one side And the Tenets of the Church of Rome On the other Both faithfully quoted from their own most approved Authors By Hen. Care Rituum varietas Eccles●e unitatem non tollit Modò Fideles secundum candem Doctrinae Regulam ambulent D. Elis. in Libro cui Titulus Defensio Fidei p. 130. LONDON Printed for R. Janeway in Queens-Head-Alley in Paternoster-Row 1682. TO THE READER 'T IS obvious That the Popish Interest hath of late years regain'd much Ground and is not a little enlarg'd and strengthen'd in the World as well by the Indefatigable Industry of their Priests and Jesuits the unnecessary feuds amongst the Reform'd and the unhappy Wars between Protestant Princes and States as more especially by the growing greatness of the French Monarch who now at last would colour his Insatiate aims at Glory and Empire by pretentions of propagating the Roman Religion and hopes thereby not only to engage all the Pontificial Clergy in favour of his Designs but also to Atone for all the Blood and Desolation wherin he hath involv'd Christendom If the extirpation of what they call HERESIE may but be one of the Consequents attending the Success of his Arms In particular 't is no less notorious That these Kingdoms of Great Brittain and Ireland labour at present under a Popish Conspiracy which by Supreme Authority has more than once and sure not inconsiderately or in Jest been declar'd HORRID and DAMNABLE a main Branch and Master-wheel of which has been sufficiently prov'd to be a Design of dividing and embroiling us amongst our selves To effect which observing that the Body of the people of England though generally agreeing in all necessary points of Christian Doctrine do yet consist in another respect of two Sorts 1. Those that have a Veneration for the Ecclesiastical Rites and Ceremonies retain'd by our first Reformers rather perhaps for prudential Reasons suitable to that Juncture than for any Apprehensions they had that the same were always obliging as the Apostles in the first and possibly only unerring Council that ever was held thought fit to caution their new Converts for avoiding of scandal to the Jews and hindrance of propagating the Gospel to abstain from Blood and things strangled which yet few Christians at this day or for many hundred years past have thought necessary to observe 2. Those that commending and blessing God for the happy Labours of those our pious Ancestours who in their day went so far do yet in this Age of Light and when Compliances with Ceremonies that may but seem suspicious or unwarrantable are neither advantageous nor Convenient for advancing the great Ends of Christianity but rather the contrary decline to join therein and cannot as they alledge with a safe Conscience embrace them especially when imposed as Necessaries to Church Communion The crafty Romish Incendiaries hence take an opportunity to heat the one of these against the other that with greater ease they may destroy them both And so far prevail That some Church-Men instead of abating any thing do rather seek to screw up their Ceremonies higher and appropriating to themselves the Title of The Church of England do not only exclude all others that cannot keep pace with them though otherwise Orthodox in Faith pious towards God Loyal to the King and peaceable with their Neighbours but likewise Brand them with the odious Titles of Whigs Fanaticks Enemies to the Church Disloyal to His Majesty Disturbers of the Government Factious and in a word represent them in such hideous Characters as if they were altogether insufferable a People that ought to be utterly extirpated as being no less Opposite to our Religion and as dangerous as Papists even the worst of them the Jusuites themselves and therefore do both seek to turn the edge of those Penal Laws originally intended against Popish Recusants on these Non-Ceremony-Conforming Protestants but also are not ashamed to own they have more kindness for the former than the latter and a greater aversion to Presbyterians than to Papists or if they do not say so in Words yet the same is too apparent from their deportment For how many are there who call themselves of the Church of England That upon the Discovery of the Popish Plot though the KING and several Parliaments had declared it were yet mighty unwilling to believe it and ready to disesteem the Evidence and excuse the Persons accused or at least to lay it only on the Jesuites and shift off the Odium from the rest of the Papists c. Whereas on the contrary the very same Men on the first Buz of a Presbyterian Plot though no such thing has to this minute been prov'd but on the contrary several wicked Forgeries and Shammings of pretended Plots upon them wonderfully detected shew themselves not only most ready and willing to credit it and busie to spread the Rumour but triumph and are tickled with any Story though never so false and foolish that looks that way and in their drunken Confusions and horrid Curses load all Dissenters in general with the Guilt of this imaginary Conspiracy Now is it not plain to every Considerate man That all this tends to nothing more than to embroil us in uncharitable implacable and endless Animosities at Home and dis joint us from all affectionate Alliances with and assistance towards the Reformed Churches abroad They being generally of the same Stamp as to Discipline the great matter in Controversie with our Dissenters What remains then in such a Juncture but that we should truly inform our selves of the real differences between the Establish'd Doctrines of the Church of England and the Opinions of these Protestant-Dissenters so much clamoured against on the one side and the Tenets of the Church of Rome on the other That so we may upon an Impartial Survey judge which is most opposite and at greatest distance and accordingly Treat them with more or less Condescention and Affection And if upon a just scrutiny we shall find that there is none or very little Essential difference between our Church and those called Presbyterians or Calvinists either at home or abroad That then we may lay by our Fury and Rancour and embrace one another as Brethren and cordially Join against the common Enemy To facilitate this happy and desired Union if this small Work may be of any use I shall think my pains in collecting it abundantly rewarded However there were several Reasons which to me seem'd important that swayed me thereunto As 1. I had observ'd That abundance of People who account themselves of and talk loudest about the Church of England never seriously perused nay have not so much as read or seen her Articles of Faith publisht by Authority Now I conceive it may be no unuseful Service to such Persons to recommend to them those Articles That
no longer they may remain in an Implicite Faith but read Consider and with understanding embrace what they before out of Compliance or Custom rather than Judgment seem'd to own and adhere to 2. There are many too That in words detest Popery yet not being throughly grounded in the Doctrines of the Church of England nor acquainted with those of the Church of Rome may be in danger of mistaking the one for the other and by Jacob's voice be deluded into Esau's hands and imbibe Poison unawares unless fortified against it by some such discriminating Antithesis 3. Hereby will appear the malice and falshood of these suggestions That the Dissenters stand at as great a distance from and are as much opposite to the legally Established Church of England as the Papists a mischievous conceit promoted by the Jesuites and other Factors for the See of Rome on purpose to divide and weaken us and consequently thereby to accomplish at last their own ends which are utterly to subvert and destroy all the Professors of the Reformed Religion whether Episcopal Presbyterial or under what ever other Denomination 4. I know not what could better tend to uniting us at least in affection amongst our selves than this demonstration That in the main and all essential Doctrinal points we are already agreed and since the other matters in Controversie are acknowledged to be indifferent what occasion is there for all this heat and violence unless the lesser our differences are the greater still must be our Animosities and Contentions about them 5. I do not despair but this small Treatise may be profitable to weak Capacities for instructing them in Fundamentals of Christian Religion since it contains a general Systeme of Faith rendered the more intelligible by the variety of Expressions though concurrent Sense of the Church-men and Protestant-Dissenters on the one side and the apparent Contradictions of the Papists on the other For Contraria juxta se posita magis Elucescunt contraries aptly compared illustrate each other Thus much for the End and general Intention of this Work As to the manner how it is perform'd I could indeed have wisht it might have come from some abler Hand whose Skill might have rendered it more useful and his Name more acceptable to the publick But rather a Mite than no Offering at all for the Churches Peace I have done what my small Reading and interrupted Leisure would permit and need only Advertise the Reader that here he shall find 1. The Nine and Thirty Articles of the Church of England agreed upon and Establisht Anno 1562. and never since altered but required by Law to be subscribed unto by all Ministers of our Church faithfully recited Verbatim and Printed in a different Letter 2. The Doctrines of those commonly called Presbyterians comprehending the Body of our Dissenters produc'd from the Confession of Faith agreed upon by the Assembly of Divines in the late Times and their Catechism and the Institutions of Mr. John Calvin 3. The Tenets of the Church of Rome delivered either in the Words of the Council of Trent or those of their great Champion Cardinal Bellarmine and the Annotations of their Colledge of Rhemes on the New Testament Other of their Authors sometimes but sparingly are Cited and never any but what are allowed by them and known to speak according to the common Dictates of that Church I knew not where to seek more Authentick Testimonies of each Parties Sentiments and can without Injury to Truth aver That I have not wilfully baulk'd added to detracted from or in any kind perverted the Sense of either side but fairly stated their Doctrines in their own words And generally without Reflections or Animadversions unless only where the matter is such that it could not justly be omitted Some may expect to have had added in a Fourth Comparison certain Notions advanc'd of late years by some Divines amongst us that seem to thwart these Articles of their Mother-Church which at their Ordination they solemnly subscribed But as the same have in part been already noted by others so my desire is rather to bring Balm than Vinegar to the too gaping wounds of the Church and without giving any such Exasperation shall hope That those Gentlemen will see and repent of such their Mistakes At least since Rectum est Index sui Obliqui A streight Line is the measure both of it self and of that too which is crooked I cannot despair but when once People are brought throughly to understand the Doctrines of the Church of England grounded on the Holy Scriptures without or contrary to which no Church in the World has any power to impose any Articles of Faith They will easily be able to discover such Aberrations and refuse them with a just Abhorrence though never so speciously obtruded But because there is such a noise raised and such heaps of Durt continually thrown on the memory of poor Mr. Calvin and those called Presbyterians whereby they would inflame us both to hardships towards dissenting Protestants at home and set us at odds with most of the Reformed Churches abroad I shall for the Information of the Vulgar Reader give a brief account here what esteem our Ancestors of the Church of England heretofore had both of John Calvin and those Neighbouring Churches and the Testimonies I shall avouch shall be of undoubted Authority both for Dignity and Learning The Reverend and Pious Dr. George Carleton Bishop of Chichester in a Book Intituled An Examination of those things wherein the Author of the late APPEAL holdeth the Doctrines of the Pelagians and Arminians to be the Doctrines of the Church of England Printed anno 1626 and Dedicated to King Charles the First p. 217 hath these Words Though the Church of England be the best Reformed Church yet it is not the only Reformed Church and it might seem no good Providence in us to stand so by our selves as to reject and disdain the Consent of other Churches though they do not agree with us in Discipline It is observed by Eusebius That Polycrates and Irenaeus did both reprove Victor because for matters of Ceremonies he was too much offended with other Churches which otherwise agreed with him in Doctrine Irenaeus doth admonish him That the ancient Bishops of Rome before Victor did keep Unity and Consent with the Eastern Bishops though in Ceremonies there was difference between them Omnes isti cum in Observantia vararierent inter semetipsos nobiscum semper pacifici fuerant Euseb l. 5. cap. 24. All those that varied in Observances yet were always peaceable both amongst themselves and with us He saith there also That the Dissonance in Ceremonies need not break the Consonance in Faith with those Churches which do not agree with us in Ceremonies if we seek the peace of the Churches that profess the same Doctrine or strugling as more like one sleeping than dying leaving with that noble Roman Aemilius Poverty with Honour to his Friends his Library and
and it is not possible that Church can err or hath erred at any time in any point Rhem. Annot. on Mat. 23. 2. The twentieth Article of the Church of England Of the Authority of the Church THE Church hath Power to decree Rites and Ceremonies and Authority in Controversies of Faith And yet it is not lawful for the Church to ordain any thing that is contrary to Gods Word written neither may it so expound one place of Scripture that it be repugnant to another wherefore although the Church be a Witness and a Keeper of Holy Writ yet as it ought not to decree any thing against the same so besides the same ought it not to inforce any thing to be believed for necessity of Salvation The Presbyterians The Church has no Power to make any new Articles of Faith but ought simply to adhere to the Doctrine to which God has subjected all without exception It belongeth to Synods and Councils Ministerially to determine Controversies of Faith and Cases of Conscience to set down Rules and Directions for the better ordering of the publick Worship of God and Government of his Church To Receive complaints in Cases of male administration and Authoritatively to determine the same which Decrees and Determinations if consonant to the Word of God are to be receiv'd with Reverence and Submission not only for their Agreement with the Word but also for the power wherewith they are made as being an Ordinance of God appointed thereunto in his Word The Papists Hold that the Church hath Power to change the Sacraments ordain'd even by Christ himself as appears by this Decree of the Council of Trent This Holy Synod declares That the Church hath always had Power in dispensing the Sacraments their Substance being safe to appoint or change according to the variety of times and places such things as may most tend to the profit of the Receivers and greater Veneration of the Sacraments themselves and therefore though from the beginning of the Christian Religion the use of the receiving the Sacrament in both kinds was not unfrequent yet for certain grave and just Causes has approved the receiving only in one kind and decreed the same to be a Law The Church is to judge the Scriptures and not the Scriptures the Church The one and twentieth Article of the Church of England Of the Authority of general Councils GEneral Councils ought not to be gathered together without the Commandement and Will of Princes and when they be gathered together forasmuch as they be an Assembly of Men where of all be not governed with the Spirit Word of God they may err sometime have erred even in things pertaining to God wherefore things ordained by them as necessary to Salvation have neither Strength nor Authority unless it may be declared that they be taken out of Holy Scripture The Presbyterians For the better Government and further Edification of the Church there ought to be such Assemblies as are commonly call'd Synods or Councils As Magistrates may lawfully call a Synod of Ministers and other fit Persons to consult and advise with about matters of Religion so if Magistrates be open Enemies to the Church the Ministers of Christ of themselves by vertue of their Office or they with other fit Persons upon Delegation from their Churches may meet together in such Assemblies All Synods or Councils since the Apostles times whether general or particular may err and many have erred Therefore they are not to be made the Rule of Faith or Practice but to be used as an help in both Synods and Councils are to handle or conclude nothing but that which is Ecclesiastical and are not to intermeddle with Civil Affairs which concern the Common-Wealth unless by way of humble Petition in cases extraordinary or by way of advice for satisfaction of Conscience if they be thereunto required by the Civil Magistrate The Papists To the Popes it belongs to Appoint and direct general Councils Bulla Julii 3. Resumptionis Conc. Trid. A Diocesan Council is to be called by the Bishop a Provincial by the Archbishop a National one by a Patriarch or Primate but a general one the Pope can only call not the Emperour or any without the Popes Consent and approbation The Popes of Rome and not Christian Princes have the Authority and Power of making Laws Ecclesiastical and of calling Councils General Councils confirm'd by the Pope cannot err The two and twentieth Article of the Church of England Of Purgatory THE Romish Doctrine concerning Purgatory Pardons Worshipping and Adoration as well of Images as of Reliques and also Invocation of Saints is a fond thing vainly invented and grounded upon no warrantry of Scripture but rather Repugnant to the Word of God The Presbyterians Purgatory is a mischievous Invention of Satan making void the Cross of Christ intollerably contumelious unto the Mercy of God and which shaketh and overthroweth our Faith The Bodies of Men after Death return to Dust and see Corruption but their Souls which neither dye nor sleep having an immortal subsistance return to God immediately who gave them the Souls of the Righteous being then made perfect in Holiness are received into the highest Heavens where they behold the Face of God in Light and Glory waiting for the full Redemption of their Bodies and the Souls of the Wicked are cast into Hell where they remain in Torments and utter Darkness reserv'd for the Judgment of the last day Besides these two places for Souls separated from their Bodies the Scripture acknowledgeth none The Papists Whereas the Catholick Church guided by the Holy Ghost out of the Holy Scriptures the ancient Tradition of the Fathers and lately in this Vniversal Synod hath taught that there is a Purgatory and the Souls there detained are help'd by the Suffrages of the Faithful especially by the acceptable Sacrifice of the Altar Therefore this Synod commands Bishops that they diligently study and use their endeavours that the sound Doctrine of Purgatory delivered from the Holy Fathers and Sacred Councils be believ'd and heard of the Faithful of Christ and every where Taught and Preached And that the Suffrages of the Faithful living viz. Sacrifices of the Mass Prayers Alms and other works of Piety which are wont to be made by the Faithful for other Faithful People Deceased be piously and devoutly performed according to the Institution of the Church And that what is due for the same by any Persons Wills or otherwise shall not perfunctorily but diligently and accurately be paid and performed by the Priests and Ministers of the Church who are bound to do the same Seeing the power of bestowing Indulgences is by Christ bestowed on the Church and she even in the most ancient times hath used such Power given to her of God The most Holy Synod teacheth and commandeth that the use of Indulgences so wholesom for Christian People and approved by the Authority of Sacred
Heresies be suppressed all Corruptions and Abuses in Worship and Discipline prevented or reformed and all the Ordinances of God duly settled administred and observed For the better effecting whereof he hath Power to call Synods to be present at them and to provide that whatsoever is transacted in them be according to the mind of God It is the duty of People to pray for Magistrates to honour their Persons to pay them Tribute and other dues to obey their Lawful Commands and to be subject to their Authority for Conscience sake Infidelity or Indifference in Religion doth not make void the Magistrates Just and Legal Authority nor free the People from their due Obedience to him from which Ecclesiastical Persons are not exempted much less hath the Pope any Power or Jurisdiction over them in their Dominions or over any of their People and least of all to deprive them of their Dominions or Lives if he shall judge them to be Hereticks or upon any other pretence whatsoever If we look into the Word of God it enjoins us not only to be Subject to those Princes who rule Righteonsly and as they ought do discharge their Office towards us But also to all those in whom the Supream Power is vested Though they perform nothing less than that which truly is their Duty For as God has Establisht Magistracy as a principal gift of his Beneficence for the Commodity of Mankind and prescribes to Rulers their Duties so like wise he declares That whatsoever they are they still have their Dominion from him making those who Rule for the publick good true Examples of his Goodness and those who exercise their Authority unjustly and wickedly his Instruments to punish the Iniquities of his People but both of them still endowed with that Majesty wherewith he hath armed all Authority on which score it is that if the publick Power happen to fall into the hands of a Wicked Man and one that in himself appears altogether unworthy of Honour yet we must acknowledge the same Eminent and Divine Power to reside in him which the Lord hath conferr'd by his Word on the Ministers of his Justice and the same Reverence and Honour is to be paid him by his Subjects as to outward Obedience as they ought to pay to the best of Kings If they were so happy as to enjoy him And having proved this by several Instances from Holy Writ especially from that of Jeremy 27. He Concludes thus Let us therefore never entertain such Seditious Thoughts as these that a King ought to be treated according to his Personal Merits or Demerits or that we need not be obedient Subjects to a King that does not again justly discharge his Office towards us Wherefore if by a cruel Prince we are grievously afflicted if by a Covetous or luxurious one we are fleec'd to the Skin and abused If by a slothful voluptuous one the grand Interests of the publick be neglected Nay more if meerly for Righteousness sake by an Ungodly Sacrilegious Tyrant we are persecuted and slaughtered it ought first to put us in mind of our Sins which by such scourges of God are undoubtedly punished In the next place let Humility restrain our Impatience And in the last place Let us consider that it is not our part to Redress these Evils all that we can do is to implore the help of God in whose hands are the Hearts of Kings and the Revolutions of Empires Thus far Calvin And we appeal to Envy it self whether the Doctrine of Loyalty and Obedience can be more expresly or fully delivered by any The Papists Exempt all Clergy-Men from obeying the Laws or submitting to the Jndgments of Temporal Magistrates or to pay them Tribute The Canon Law hath utterly exempted them from it saith Bellarmine de Cler. cap. 1. That the Civil Magistrate hath no Cognizance over the Clergy is Decreed by several Councils as Conc. Later 3. cap. 14. and Conc. Later 2. Can. 15. Because some Lay-Men constrain Ecclesiasticks yea and Bishops themselves to appear before them and to stand to their Judgments Those that henceforth shall presume to do so we Decree That they shall be Excommunicated Pope Gregory the 7th in a Synod at Rome made this Decree We observing the Decrees of our Holy Predecessors by our Aposlolical Authority do Absolve these from their Oath who are bound by their Fealty and Oath to persons Excommunicated and we forbid them by all means That they yield them Obedience The Jurisdiction of the Pope is Vniversal even over the whole World Rhem. Annot. Him upon pain of Damnation all Christians are to obey Bonif. 8th in Extrav The eight and thirtieth Article of the Church of England Of Christian Mens Goods which are not Common THE Riches and Goods of Christians are not Common as touching the Right Title and Profession of the same as certain Anabaptists do falsly boast Notwithstanding every Man ought of such as he possesseth liberally to give Alms to the Poor according to his Ability The Presbyterians The Communion which Christians have one with another as Saints doth not take away or infringe the Title or Propreity which each Man hath in his Goods and Possessions The Papists Do not deny this Article yet conceit their Monasticks who have all things in Common to be in a State of greater perfection than other Christians The nine and thirtieth Article of the Church of England Of a Christian Mans Oath AS we confess That vain and rash swearing is forbidden Christian Men by our Lord Jesus Christ and James his Apostle so we Judge that Christian Religion doth not prohibite but that a man may swear when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of Faith and Charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in Justice Judgment and Truth The Presbyterians A Lawful Oaths is a part of Religious Worship wherein upon just occasion the Person swearing solemnly calleth God to Witness what he asserteth or promiseth and to judge him according to the Truth or Falshood of what he sweareth The name of God only is that by which Men ought to swear and therein is to be used with all Holy Fear and Reverence Therefore to swear vainly and rashly by that glorious and dreadful Name or by any other thing is sinful and to be abhorred Yet as in matters of weight and Moment an Oath is Warranted by the Word of God under the New Testament as well as under the Old so that a Lawful Oath being imposed by Lawful Authority in such matters ought to be taken Whosoever taketh an Oath ought duly to consider the weightiness of so solemn an Act and therein to avouch nothing but what he is fully perswaded is Truth Neither may any Man bind himself by Oath to any thing but what is good and Just and what he believeth so to be and what he is able and resolved to perform yet it is a Sin to refuse an Oath touching any thing that is Good and Just being impos'd