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A42925 Repertorium canonicum, or, An abridgment of the ecclesiastical laws of this realm, consistent with the temporal wherein the most material points relating to such persons and things, as come within the cognizance thereof, are succinctly treated / by John Godolphin ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1678 (1678) Wing G949; ESTC R7471 745,019 782

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Adrian in the time of Offa King of Mereia during Englands Heptarchy in An. 786. Answ Possibly it might be so what follows thence does a thing lawful in it self become unlawful because a Pope enjoyns it what if he had commanded Alms to be given instead of Tithes must we therefore be neither honest in payment of the one nor charitable in giving the other because there was a Command of a Pope in the case 4. That AEthelstane Edmond Edgar Canutus and AEthelwolfe Kings of England Ordained the payment of Tithes meerly to pacifie their Consciences and thereby to make Atonement for their Blood-guilty Souls Answ Admit it were Historically true yet the final Cause of any Action or the End for which a thing is done alters not that quality that is inherent naturally in the thing A thing lawful in it self commanded for a wrong End perverts the Action not the thing if a man gives Alms that the Poor may be drunk though that be no Alms yet it doth not render Alms as unlawful nor alter that quality of Charity which is inseparable from Alms. 4. Tithes Anciently were Fourfold as 1 That which the People paid to the Levites 2 That which the Levites thence paid to the Priests 3 That which the Jews reserved for Expence in their Solemn Feasts when they went to the Tabernacle or Temple 4 A Third years Tenth which was then laid up for the Levite and the Poor The first of these is held a Natural Moral and Divine Tribute the second and third Ceremonial the fourth Judicial The Jews had also their Theruma which was not properly Tithe but a second kind of First-Fruits There were two kinds hereof the one called the Great Theruma the exact quantity whereof was not defined by Moses but the Ancient Lawyers determin'd that it might not be less than the fourtieth fiftieth or at least the sixtieth part of the kinds already dress'd and prepared as Wheat Fann'd Oyl and Wine Corn in the Ear taken from the heap and given to the Priests The other was the Lesser Theruma which was that when the former was taken away for the Priests the rest of the Heap was Tithed for the Levite the tenth part whereof the Levites gave to the Priests which was called the Tithe of the Tithe or the Theruma of the Tithe 5. Because the Law of Moses hath been divided into Three parts viz. Moral Judicial and Ceremonial some of the Schoolmen have thence conceived That Tithes admit the like division whereof the Moral part was only a necessary Maintenance for the Minister and therefore natural and perpetual The Judicial part was the number of Ten as fit only for the Jews and therefore positive and remotive The Ceremonial part was the Mystery contained in this Number of Ten which being as they taught but a shadow only was vanish'd and abolish'd with the Law it self and thence inferr'd that the Quotity or precise number of Ten being taken away by reason of the Ceremony a competency now only remains for the Minister out of the Tithes This Conceit hath occasioned no small prejudice to the Church although it hath no more probability of truth in it than that whereon it is grounded viz. That the Number of Ten is a type of Christ and that the inferiour Digits do signifie the People Levi himself paid Tithes to the first Priest we ever read of that is he paid them in Abraham which being urged by the Apostle against the Levitical Ceremonies argues that they are more than meerly Levitical and Ceremonial indeed if we consider their assignment to Levi's Tribe they are such but not otherwise The Sabbath and Tithes were both before the Law in their very Numbers respectively and were but repeated by Moses under the Law because they had been approved of God before the Law in the self-same Numbers The Sabbath is said to have a Moral and a Ceremonial part The Moral is perpetual and unalterable which is that God should have a Seventh day the Ceremonial being Typical of our Rest in Heaven is only positive and not so unalterable but that it might be as it is changed from the Seventh day of the Creation to the Seventh after our Saviours Resurrection So Tithes they also have a Natural and a Positive part the Natural is permanent and unalterable which is that God hath reserved to himself a Tenth of the increase c. for the Maintenance of his Ministers in which sense immediately after the dissolution of the Jews policy the Christians of the Primitive Church as soon as they could get any outward form of a Church and peace from Persecution received it in the very Quotity the Positive is That the Lord annexed those Tithes by Moses to the Priests and Levites for their maintenance during the dispensation of the Mysteries under the Law and th●refore changed by the Christians in the Primitive Church to the Christian Ecclesiasticks so that how this Quotity can be changed into a Competency s●●ms neither demonstrable nor warrantable by the Word of God but that the Quotity ought to remain as a perpetual Right due to God and his Church And if any shall argue that Tithes are not to be paid or required in a Protestant Church because they have been ever so upheld in the Church of Rome such may as well argue they ought not to be paid in a Christian Church because they are paid to Mahumetan Princes for so they are and that because they were Priests for every Husbandman is bound to pay for Tribute the Tenth part of all his Corn to the Patriarch for the use of the Prince the relief of Impotent people and Widows and for maintenance of War against the Enemy Purch Pilgr lib. 6. cap. 1. § 3. p. 803. nu 10. 6. Tithes which anciently were meerly Ecclesiastical are now made Temporal Inheritances therefore are they Assets in the hands of the Heir the Wife endowed of them and the Tenant by the Courtesie shall hold them They are not grantable for life or years or for a longer term than one year but by Deed They cannot be extinguished by a F●offment of the Land nor pass by a Devise of Lands with all profits and commodities thereto belonging and yet may be exchanged for Temporal Inheritances Anciently and at the Common Law there were none qualified to receive them but either an Ecclesiastical person or a mixt person as the King They are not extinct by their coming into any hands but of the Parson himself And that which is given in lieu of them is turned into a Spiritual Fee It is not paid more than once for one and the same thing in one and the same year and that only for the neat and clear profit of the thing Tithable It must be paid in kind if there be Corn now where Wood grew before or Wood planted now where Woodlands formerly were And the Law allows the Parson a convenient time to