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A19461 A modest and reasonable examination, of some things in vse in the Church of England, sundrie times heretofore misliked and now lately, in a booke called the (Plea of the innocent:) and an assertion for true and Christian church policy, made for a full satisfaction to all those, that are of iudgement, and not possessed with a preiudice against this present church gouernment, wherein the principall poynts are fully, and peaceably aunswered, which seeme to bee offensiue in the ecclesiasticall state of this kingdome. The contentes whereof are set downe in the page following. Covell, William, d. 1614? 1604 (1604) STC 5882; ESTC S108881 174,201 234

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Euangelist Saint Marke sixe yeeres before Peter and Paul were martyred sixe and thirtie before the death of Saint Iohn in the which there is nothing that can or ought to be misliked This as it is true so it is warranted with much reason for vnlesse we suppose a thing surely not likely if possible all in a presbytery to be men without fault a power to doe harme vnto Christs Church must by this curcular reuolution fall into their hands whom wisedome of election would hardly haue called to that place Besides what men shall worthily suffer whilest they are inferiors there is some likelyhoode they will offer the like when they doe commaund Neither is this to quench ambition as they thinke but to kindle a farre greater in the whole clergie For what we giue vnto one experienced of yeeres tried in gouernment freed for the most part from the passions of young men these without difference propound to all And thus they cure this feuer of ambition by infecting many as if diseases were therefore lesse because moe were sicke For what cannot be inioyed without pride is not easily expected without sinne fruition and expectation of one and the same thing are so neere that neither can be vertu●●s where both are not Neither doe we giue vnto Archbis●ops or bishops power or honor by Gods law but what their people must needes yeeld vnto their pastors and presbyters if they will haue any We are not to limit Princes whom they shall vse in councell or to whom they shall commit the execution of their lawes especially such as are made for the Churches good seeing we finde that God hath blest those Princes and kingdomes most where vertuous Bishops haue been admitted to the Princes Councell wherein surely they haue brought a farre greater benefit to the peace and prosperitie of the Church then in reason they could by any other imployment besides Neither was it a meanes for to be idle either in Caluin or Beza both of them fit men for that place that they were both admitted as councellors of that state It cannot chuse but bee great intemperancie in them who haue so dishonorably laboured to deface that dignitie so auncient and of such vse in the Church of God as also to wound euen the best and the worthyest in that place with tearmes farre vnbeseeming as if their vngouerned humors had fully resolued to belch out poyson against all that were thought excellent It pleaseth one of them to censure them all thus Archbishops and Bishops are vnlawfull vnnaturall false and basterdly gouernors of the Church and the ordinances of the diuell Another saith they are in respect of their places enemies to God Much hath the vnwise and immodest dealings of sundrie in our Church labored to dishonor so honorable and so great an office experience hath taught vs the good of them and to these we onely make this answere that wee are sorrie to see them so skilfull and so willing to speake euill But doubtles it is loue to our present state which hath made them so zealous in this cause for saith one If we be sworne to her maiesties most lawfull supremacie ouer all persons and espie in our Church a lordly prelacie a thing brought into the Church by humane inuention by meanes weereof it is apparant that the Pope of Rome hath climed about all states both Ecclesiasticall and ciuill if now our desire extend it selfe that our lordly dignities and power of our Bishops might be examined by holy scripture and brought backe a degree or twaine neerer to the apostolike practise and Christs institution that so all occasions might be cut off hereafter that this climing vsurpation might neuer take holde vpon England any more are we troublers of the state Doubtles we are If it were not a thing possible to make a difference betwixt the clyming vsurpation of the Church of Rome and the lawfull prelacie how lordly so euer established in our Church I doubt not but all our Bishops would cast themselues at his Maiesties feete and intreate his highnes to vnburthen them of all that honour which hetherto they haue held iniurious to his supremacie and contrarie to the scriptures and the Apostles practise To men of vnderstanding things could not bee thus odiously compared that are moste vnlike The Pope challengeth authoritie ouer all christendome so doe not our Archbishops the Pope exalteth himselfe aboue Kings and Princes but our Archbishops with reuerence and humilitie acknowledg their subiection and more dutifully I doubt not then those who thus carefully are fearefull of their clyming The Pope saith that to bee subiect vnto him is of necessitie to saluation our Archbishops acknowledge no such thing and as their limits of gouernment are farre vnlike so the manner of their gonernment is farre more lawfull the one being an vsurpation which ambition sought out superstition and pollicie haue holden vp the other a necessarie authoritie which schismes and dissentions in the Church inuented the Apostles vsed all antiquitie followed and the peace of the Church did impose vpon them So that one of the most modest and most learned that seemeth to fauour the cause of discipline maketh it a principall point of the Ecclesiasticall gouernment that the inferior clergie in things honest bee obedient to the Bishop and the Bishop to the Metropolitan expressing the vse of that which others vehemently mislike and acknowledging the names and subordination of both But as it is an imputation in their opinion to the Archbishops that their place and authoritie is like the Popes so it is a blemish to our Bishops in the iudgement of these men that for learning and vertue they are not like vnto those holy fathers of the Church that haue gone before them We dare not take vpon vs to thinke that our times are better and more fruitefull in vertue then other were or that the Bishops of our land a thing to be wished are all of them without fault but seeing it pleaseth some to compare them thus I hope it shall neither be dishonour to the vertuous memories of those that are dead nor bee thought a flattery towards those that doe liue if we say considering we may say it with much truth that for soundnesse of doctrine honestie of life and the moderate vse of externall things they are not inferiour to the most reuerend of those Bishops that haue been before them For doctrine wee are loth to rippe vp the errors that the anncient Bishops were infected with Papias Bishop of Ierusalem who liued in Ignatius and Policarpus time held the error of a thousand yeere after the resurection wherein the kingdome of Christ should here remaine vpon earth Most of the auncient fathers were infected with this opinion Saint Cyprian that same clere fountaine as Saint Hierom calles him failed in the opinion of rebaptisation diuers both of the Greeke and Latin Church were spotted with the errors about freewill merits inuocation of
this Consistoriall Gouernment may take place the benefit whereof as they magnifie little weighing those yet vnexperienced Euils which must needes follow so the harmes of it are at large set downe by diuers others who with learning and iudgment haue labored in this point There is doublesse no Societie deerer vnto God than his Church in the gouernment whereof he hath made choice of two sorts of men to be imployed vnder him The first are Ministers of his word and Sacraments whose calling is perpetuall and necessary in the Church for so long as the Church is in this world it cānot possible be cōtinued without these of wihch we shall more fitly speake heereafter The other are Kings and Magistrats whom to the happy estate of the Church we hold with all reuerence of such vse that those are worst that mislike their gouernment that Church in all reason like to be most happy which God in his mercy hath blessed with the best King This appeareth in the Kings of Iuda who being vertuous Religion that was decaied was restored and what the Idolatry of others had corrupted the vprightnes of some which followed did purifie againe God in his loue performing that promise vnto his Church that Kings should be her Nursings-fathers and Queenes her Nursing-mothers In this respect more specially than others they are called Gods seruants not only because they serue him in the gouernmēt of the cōmonwealth a thing common with them and the worst Princes but because he vouchsafeth to vse their meanes as the fittest Instruments to aduance his Church vpō earth And surely a double seruice God expecteth from them the one Common with all Christians the other peculiar to serue him in that place as Kings Princes To haue performed the first is an action of praise and may giue great hope but to faile in the second is staynd with reproch vsually accompained with much daunger Euill Princes seruing oftentimes to Act but the ruines of that Kingdome by the fall of the Church in whose misery theselues for the most part doe perish In the first dutie as Christians they are not priuiledged aboue other men they are tyed to same obedience bound to as many vertues nay moe for exāple must in the end being called to the same account be iudged with as much seuerite as the meanest subiect Be wise now therfore O ye Kings be learned ye that are Iudges of the Earth Serue the lord with feare reioyce vnto him with Reuerence In the latter the seruice of Princes hath two parts the one concerning the Commonwealth the other Religion and the Church to the first they are tyed as Kings to the latter they are bound as they are vertuous and Religious Kings The first in dooing mercy and iudgment in defending the fatherlesse and poore in seeing that such as be in neede and necessitie haue right in bestowing duely punishment and reward and in all those other polliticke vertues they are happy Instruments to make a prosperous and flourishing Commonwealth The second concerneth his Religion a duty as it lyeth vpon all for all ought to be Religious so especielly vpon the Prince who must not only be but be the meanes to make all other to become Religious a thing though not euer true vnder vertuous Kings whose holy examples sometimes preuaile no farther but to make Hypocrits but seldome or neuer to be expected where the Princes thēselues delight to seeme opēly prophane If man had no other light but the light of Nature would not so willingly beleeue what were done with as without the Scripture yet euen this point will appeare to be most true being the practise of those men who had no other guide for their Actions than the vnchangeable directions of the light of Nature for whatsoeuer the Religion was as in most it was nothing but Idolatrous Superstition yet the transgression thereof was esteemed worthy to receaue punishment and the appointment of this punishment was thought to be peculiar to those who had principall authoritie to gouern the Comonwealth Thus the Athenian tooke vpon thē the power to condēne Socrates a man peraduenture wiser thā any of the rest but faulty as they thought in Religiō therefore to be censured by the Authoritie which they al had The like we read of the Romās Tyberius would make Christ a God without the authority of the Senat wher though the Act was needles to Christ little honor yet it sheweth that both the care of Religion belonged to the Roman Emperor that men euen Heathe●s were not hastily carried to performe any actiō of that nature without the aduice of others iudgmēt neither euer the Apostles or Prophets reprehēd this care in the Rulers in any age It was easie to erre what Religiō was but all men saw to whom the care did principally belong neither should any mā deserue cōmendation for performing that which were wholy exempted from the limits of his owne calling But al Antiquiti● hath giuē in this kind honorable Testimony to Cōstantine and Theodosius two Emperors of much vertue Nay Religi●n it selfe which giueth the best Rules to preserue Religion being contained in the Two Tables expresly commandeth who ought to be the ouerseer the keeper and preseruer of both Inwardly the strongest mōtiue is Religion and they are most for the most part Religious who are Religious for conscience but there is a feare from the hand of the Maiestrate able to restraine those at least from outwarde being euill whom neither Conscience nor Religion could make honest Christian Emperours haue with their Zeale gained much honor for this in the eye and Iudgement of Gods Church This made them when contentions arose to call Councells as that of Nice Constantinople Ephesus Chalcedon to purge the Temples both from Heathenish Idolatry and Christian superstition to make lawes the better to keepe men in obedience towardes God the irreligious contempt of whose worshippe though in the Subiects themselues haue brough a iust ruine euen for not forbidding both vpon the Prince and the Commonwealth Reason then which tyeth Princes to procure the prosperitie of that land ouer which they gouerne exacteth frō them a principall care of the Church and of Religion the decay and the contempt whereof are the originall causes of pestilence dearthes wares and such like For where humors are infected a little it is like that the maners are first distempered a great deale the most of the Fathers are plentifull in this point This made Saint Austine learnedly to confute the Donatists whose Haerecy was like the error of some in our days holding that Princes ought to permit euery man to enioy what Religion he likes and to persecute no man for Religion at all this serueth to confute the two great Errors of our time the one of the Anabaptists the other of the Church of Rome The first holding it vnlawfull for a Christian to be a Magistrate much lesse to vse his
other speciallitie to that which is sensiblie most eminent in the thing signified and therefore what better title could be giuen to all that w●re imployed in this worke then the reuerend name of presbyters or fatherly guides For a presbyter according to the proper meaning of the new testament is he vnto whom our sauiour Christ hath communicated the power of spirituall procreation Out of the twelue patriarchs issued the whole multitude of Israell according to the flesh and according to the ministerie of heauenly birth our Lords Apostles we all acknowledge to be the patriarches of his whole Church S. Iohn therefore beheld sitting about the throne of God in heauen foure and twentie presbyters the one halfe fathers of the old the other of the new Ierusalem in which respect the Apostles likewise gaue themselues the same title albeit that name were not proper but common vnto them with others For of presbiters some were greater some lesse in power and that by our Sauiours owne appointment the greater they which receiued fulnes of spirituall power the lesse they to whom lesse was graunted The Apostles peculiar charge was to publish the Gospell of Christ vnto all nations and to deliuer his ordinances receiued by immediat reuelation from himselfe which preeminence excepted to all other offices and duties incident vnto their order it was in them to ordaine and consecrate whomsoeuer they thought meete euen as our Sauiour did himselfe assigne seuentie disciples of his owne inferior presbyters whose commission notwithstanding to preach and baptise was the same which the Apostles had But when time and obseruation had made a difference in the Church of these two euery Bishop being a presbyter but not euery presbyter a Bishop the Church condemned it as the heresie of Acrius to hold that a presbyter and a Bishop were all one The Bishops as Epiphanius reasoneth begot fathers in the Church but the presbyters onely begot Sonnes For the priests did chose saith Saint Hier●● one amongst themselues whom they placing in a higher degree called a Bishop For vnlesse saith the same father the chiefe authoritie were giuen to one there would be as many schismes as priests So that their collection out of Saint Ambrose and Hierom is so much the more strange who thinke that bishops and presbyters did not differ in the Apostles time It must at least be an imitation of their pride who in former time haue troubled the Church with the like errors Cornelius Bishop and Martyre long before the Councell of Nice reporting to Fabius Bishop of Antioch the originall of Nouatus schisme saith this iolly inquisitor of the Gospell vnderstandeth not that there ought to be but one Bishop in that Catholike Church in which hee knoweth there are fourtie and sixe presbyters Neither haue there wanted rules whereby if it please them they might easily make a difference betwixt these two the presbyters were many in euery Church of whom the presbytery consisted Bishops were alwaies singular one in a citie and noe moe except an intrusion which made a schisme This singularitie descended from the Apostles and their schollers in all the famous Churches of the world by a chare of succession and continueth to this day where abomination or desolation that is heresie or violence haue not broake it off The second signe of Episcopall power was imposition of hands to ordaine presbyters and Bishops for as pastors had some to assist them in their charge which were presbyters so were they to haue others to succeede in their places which were Bishops And this right by imposing of hands to ordaine presbyters and Bishops was deriued at first from the Apostles not vnto presbyters but Bishops onely A thing continuing for this fifteene hundred yeare without example or instance to the contrarie and hath onely found resistance in our age which surely in my opinion cannot be ignorance so much in them as willingnes to oppugne the gouernment of our Church seeing there haue been few Churches of account through all christendome that had not as may be shewed Bishops and presbiters both at the same time But Austin is most plaine who writing to one that was but a presbyter saith Thou shalt be a presbyter as thou art and hereafter when God will thou shall be a Bishop This poynt is learnedly obserued by that reuerend and worthie Bishop whose labored defence may shorten our trauell in this poynt Now besides these many other things were peculiar to Bishops by the authoritie of the Canons and custome of the Church as reconciling of penitents confirmation of infan●s dedication of Churches and such like which were as Saint Hierom saith rather to the honor of priesthoode then to the necessitie of any law Now if any man thinke this office superfluous in the Church and of no vse let him well consider before he censure them what it is to see the Church continually stored with sound and able pastours to watch ouer their soules to take care that the flocke of Christ be rightly taught and soberly guided to keepe both presbyters and people from schisme heresie and impietie to direct in times of daunger to determine doubts without troubling the whole prouince and if he shall thinke either these needles to be done or lawfull and fit to be done by any other we could peraduenture thinke it more tollerable tha● an ordination so auncient and so much warranted neuer interrupted in the orderly gouernment of any Church since the Apostles time should notwithstanding be remooued as a calling tyrannous and antichristian onely to content the humorous fancies of these men But doubtles that which reasonably they mislike in this case is that men called to the office of the ministerie a function meerely spirituall and ordained to the dispensation of heauenly graces should so farre either forget the vertuous example of our Sauiour or the humilitie of such whom they desire to succeede that swelling with ambition they renew the contention long sincé controuled in the disciples of Christ which should bee the greatest and are content if not to affect yet to accept of those ciuill imployments which belong vnto the Princes counsell whereby not onely they are made idle and hindred from that dutie which the Church requireth but are puft vp with those Lordly titles which are directly vnlawfull and without warrant Now to preuent this we admit Synodes say they and some to gather and gouerne those assemblies but for feare of ambition we would haue that priuiledge to goe round by course to all the pastors of euery prouince Where men are irregular we will not aske them either for reason or example for that they doe but a chiefe man amongst them confesseth that this going round by course to gouerne the Church doth maintaine disorder and faction and ambition is not at all decreased by it and the choosing of one to continew chiefe for his life began at Alexandria from the
A Modest and reasonable examination of some things in vse in the Church of England sundrie times heretofore misliked and now lately in a Booke called the Plea of the Innocent and an Assertion for true and Christian Church policy made for a full satisfaction to all those that are of iudgement and not possessed with a preiudice against this present Church Gouernment wherein the principall poynts are fully and peaceably aunswered which seeme to bee offensiue in the Ecclesiasticall State of this Kingdome The Contentes whereof are set downe in the Page following By William Couell Doctor of Diuinitie Eccles. Chap. 3.1 The children of wisedome are the Church of the righteous and their ofspring is obedience and loue AT LONDON Printed by Humfrey Lownes for Clement Knight and are to be solde at his shop at the Signe of the holy Lambe in Saint Paules Churchyard 1604. The Contents of this Booke Chap. 1 KIngs and Princes haue authoritie and ought to haue care for the Church gouernment page 1 2 The Church visible of all other Societies is fittest to haue a Discipline but neuer the same that some men desire page 13 3 The Censure of a booke called The Plea of the Innocent pa. 25 4 The proceeding of the Reformers wholly vnlawfull pag. 32 5 Of Contention pag. 46 6 Of Ceremonies pag. 55 7 Of Subscription pag. 75 8 Of Discipline pag. 94 9 Of Archbishops and Bishops pag. 103 10 Of Ministers their Office and learning pag. 124 11 Of the maintenance of Ministers and of Tithes pag. 142 12 Of Non Residencie Pluralities and Dispensations pag. 159 13 Of publike prayer and of the defectes supposed to be in the Liturgie of the Church of England pag. 174 14 Of Tolleration of diuers Religions and how farre dissenting opinions from the true Christian faith may and ought to bee permitted in one and the same Kingdome pag. 196 15 An humble conclusion to his sacred Maiestie and the Right Honorable Lords of his Highnesse priuie Councill together with the rest whom it may concerne to defend this Church page 206 Deo omnis Potestas Gloria To the Right Honourable and most Reuerend father in God c. my verie good Lord the Lord Bishop of LONDON ⸫ THe word Right honorable is in great trauell with much euill when she shall be deliuered he onely knoweth who measureth al times with his hand and before whose eye lieth open that bottomlesse aeternitie it selfe The faces of Kingdomes and States according to the prosperitie and aduersitie of the Church amongest them sometimes looke heauily and sometimes chearfully as refreshed with more good Man whose Reason and Religion serueth to number these things feeleth in himselfe a true diuinitie manifested by that pure ambition of being greater than hee yet can bee whilest notwithstanding in the sence and feare of these things hee stoopeth as to a burthen that is too heau●e Religious and mature wisedome the safest builders of true greatnesse assureth men in prouidence to preuent the worst things or at least by foresight growing familiar with thē teacheth how to beare them with much patience fewe Kingdomes there are which haue not eyther more scarres in the Church not fully cured or else greater signes of greater insuing euils than our owne I am loth to be thought to flatter a fault whereunto I am not vsually subiect and a thing needlesse being the greatest hatred from the greatest loue which euerie beareth to himselfe but I may say truly and I doubt not but what I say the world thinketh the greatest part of this good next our dread Souereigne is now without enuie bee it spoken your owne The consideration whereof hath made me out of that infinite loue and duty which I owe to his Grace being dead and your Honour yet aliue to dedicate these labours to you both in the defence of that Church which truth experience her aduersaries haue proued for gouernment the most absolute since the Apostles time That it is vndertaken by me is the greatest disaduantage to this cause that it is continued and daily receiueth strength from authority is amongst infinite blessings the greatest and most vnspeakable of this Church I haue dealt as your Honour well knoweth in this cause with a threefolde disaduantage one that it hath so fully beene handled by so many of great learning heretofore so that at this time a defence was rather requisite to tell those that hope for alteration that our Church is still of the same iudgement and spake not heretofore onely to please that State a second is that the things disliked are not differences of any great learning seeing wee deale with aduersaries whose chiefest hope dependeth vpon the allowance of vnlearned followers so that Demonstrations of reason are more requisite than proofes from authoritie Last of all they are a generation apt and skilfull to speake euill I haue carefully and according to my naturall disposition auoided all occasion that might prouoke them to it yet I looke for no other neither by the grace of God so that this paines may benefit the Church do I much care the strongest tyrant of things and men is fancy the truest gouernour Religion hallowed follies when they are vnmasked are but at the best the weake opinions of simple men of whom notwithstanding if they had learned humilitie and obedience this Church might haue much vse your Lordship is besides that particular duty and thankefulnesse which I owe vnto you executor of his Testament and Inheritour of his vertues that was the true owner and possessor of these labours which if it please your Honour to accept with their vnworthie Author into your more priuate and inward affection It shall bee my happinesse to be your seruant and their credit by your Lordships meanes to doe seruice to this Church Thus in the assurance of this hope crauing pardon for my boldnesse I humbly take my leaue desiring God to blesse you with all Graces fit for so high a place and with contentment and long life to my singular comfort and the especiall benefit of this Church May 27. 1604. Your Lordships in all dutie WILLIAM COVELL To the Christian Reader IF the immoderate desire of reformation in some men had not extended it selfe further than eyther Religion or reason would wel permit and especially at that time when thankfulnesse exacted from vs all something like a Sabbath for that blessed Rest continued to this Church by the meanes of our dread Souereigne this cause and some others not yet published had with their vnworthy authors slept in a long and a charitable silence and whereas the miraculous blessings bestowed and continued vpon this land could no otherwise rightly be vnderstood than the true effectes of that Church which was planted in it seeing as S. Ambrose saith That is Charitie to be expected that is Charitie greater than the Empire if that faith bee inuiolate which preserueth the Empire I thought it vnfit to let these men vnderstand that
the peace of this Church was litle beholding to their paines who in the middest of an vniuersall ioy sounded a seditious Alarum to a second warre which as it could be no lesse than inconsiderate Zeale in some of the Tribe of Leui to drawe their swords against their Reuerend Religious Fathers as if with Aaron they had beene guiltie of erecting a Golden Calfe so we hope in the opinion of the most seuere our defence shall neither be thought needlesse nor out of season wherein peraduenture our labour is of lesse vse because we encounter in particular men of no greate authoritie in this Church whom our directions were first to haue answered in another manner but finding that to follow their steps had beene onely but to tread often in the same pathes which were wearisome in themselues and could haue brought little aduantage to this publike cause we rather resolued hauing the approbation of authoritie to giue allowance to defend a necessary weighty ●ighteous and publike Church gouernment than onely to reproue and confute some particular obscure and priuate men for accusing gaineth not that admittance in the eares of indifferent Readers which defending doth and herein I may safely protest I looked at no other scope in the labour and cost of this vnpleasing imployment than the discharge of my particular dutie and the performance of that seruice which I owed vnto this Church yet if I had known which I vnderstand since that some more of Master Hookers works had bene recouered from the iniurie of men and time once againe to speake in the defence of this truth I woul● most willingly haue obserued the praecept of the Sonne of Sirach Thou that art yong speake if need be and yet scarcely when thou art twice asked for the same things but who is able to speake the same things that he did being spoken by diuers are not the same and for my selfe if any man thinke this defence a presumption I may boldly say as E●●u did Behold I did wait vpon the words of the auncient and hearkened to their knowledge But seeing wee are children of that Church whose prosperitie was enuied and peace hindered by the aduersaries of this cause wee could not but let them vnderstand that the voyces of Angels of men and of time and all against them and if wee were in the comparison of them as they bo●st of number but like the children of Ruben and the children of Gad and the Tribe of Manasses in respect of all Israell besides yet if they will needes send vs a message by Phyneas the sonne of Eleazar and ten Princes with him saying What transgression is this that ye haue transgressed against the God of Israell to turne away this day from the Lord in that ye haue built you an Altar for to rebell this day against the Lord Haue wee too little for the wickednesse of Peor whereof wee are not cleansed this day though a plague came vpon the congregation of the Lord Wee must aunswere them as they did The Lord God of Gods the Lord God of Gods he knoweth and Israell himselfe shall know if by rebellion or by transgression against the Lord we haue done it saue thou vs not this day If wee haue built vs an Altar to returne away from the Lord eyther to offer burnt offerings or meat offerings or to offer peace offerings thereon let the Lord himselfe require it And if wee haue not rather done it for feare of this thing c. vnto vers 30. Wee hope they will giue vs leaue if their Zeale make them iealous of any thing vsed or admitted in our Church to tell them that these are witnesses betwixt them and vs. c. Betweene our forefathers and our generations after vs to execute the seruice of the Lord before him in our Lyturgie in our prayers in our Sacraments and that neither their children nor the children of any Idolatrous Church should say to our children in time to come Yee haue no part in the Lord and if for all this they cease not the heape reproaches vpon that Church whose absolute gouernment they ought with thankfulnesse to imbrace and with loue to honour we must tell them as Saint Hierom doth that amongest Christiās not he that suffereth but he that offereth reproach is wretched Wherein surely of all that euer laboured in this cause he endured most with most patience whom vertue crownd with much Honour in this life and according to his owne propheticall word ouercame whilest he suffered and now triumpheth And for my selfe Gentle Reader I resolue humbly to endure whatsoeuer it pleaseth the vsuall impatience of their furie to lay vpon mee saying with Saint Austen In a good conscience I speake it Hee that willingly doth detract from my good name vnwillingly doth add to my reward For I lay with Saint Ambrose Let no man thinke that there is more weight in the slaunder of another than in the testimonie of his owne conscience Farewell CHAP. 1. Kings and Princes haue Authoritie and ought to haue care for the Church gouernment WWhere right hath no other aduantage but Fortune and Weaknesse hath got strength from opinion of Zeale there it is no lesse safe to maintaine error than amongst better dispositions to defend a trueth The Circle of time the best discouerer of mens secret ends and not the least nor the least violent circumstance ouer the means must at length make knowen to the weakest eye that is able to discerne least who haue beene thought wicked and prophane in humilitie for maintayning a truth and who proudly haue beene opposites to this end that being ignorant and vnhonest they might bee thought to bee learned and seeme righteous As there is not any one action since the time that this Land first embraced true Religion wherein more violent and vnnaturall dispositions haue discouered themselues than in and for the Church gouernment so is there nothing wherein the Wisedome Vertue and Souereigntie of Kings doth and ought more to appeare than in the well ordering of that Societie where vnto the most vsuall and greatest harmes haue commonly proceeded from too much Zeale For that which man once apprehendeth as vertuous to bee done without great iudgement and moderation hee seldome tempereth himselfe from doing it eyther ouer-eagerly or ouermuch This as it swayeth with Inferior persons who for the most part haue no easier and speedier meanes to become eminent so it is hardly tempered in those Princes being eminent alreadie whose vertuous education hath made them religious this being in one action to the people the best assurance they can expect for themselues the best testimony of a good conscience and toward God a demeanour least vnthankfull for any straunge or miraculous deliuerance that they haue receiued All these being made stronger when a new people are become subiects when all men are disposed to giue strength to their hopes and make collection from Signes and when deliuerances are
and people and would deuide all liuings among their Elders Decons whom they appoint to be paymasters of their Pastors if either I charge them with vntruth or any indifferent vnderstanding can thinke this not danngerous to the Church and the Commonwealth let their petitions haue successe their complaints haue audience their cause finde fauor and in that one Act let Religion the Prince peace and all vtterly perish I omitt first fruites Tenthes subsides cōtributions of Ecclesiasticall persons all which are graunted by the lawes vnto the Prince of this Land all which by thē are accounted sacriledge and robberie and left wholy to the disposition of their polliticke Consistorie and where as as wee shall haue occasion to handle heareafter some special men in particular cases both in equitie and conscience are to be exemted by priuiledge from those lawes that doe binde all a power only reserued to the Prince himselfe These hould all dispensations vnlawfull and howsoeuer they fauour it in themselues no lesse than superstitious and Antichristian in others A thing doubtlesse of much vse and great necessitie in all kingdomes and of no daunger at all where the King is vertuous Whilst the true consequēts of their false opinions haue taught the world that these and such like derogations of the Kings authoritie haue beene maintained in that vnlearned Schoole they labour to make all men beleeue that Princes haue not more honest Religious and loyall Subiects than they are A thing surely by experience neuer to be found so longe as they haue entered vnder pretence of Religion to become abbaters and disposers of the Kings Reuenewes as if he that were gouernor of the Church and the Commonwealth were bound in dutie by power and reuenewe but to haue care of the Church only a Diminution of all greatnesse is affected by thē that by the disposition of that which they esteeme to be the superfluitie of all States necessarie defences and moderate Ornaments may all faile to make them rich CHAP. II. The Church visible of all other Societies is fittest to haue a Discipline but neuer the same that some men desire TO thinke that either the Church how putrified soeuer the Religion be be in so good a case for gouernment that nothing can either be added or taken away to make it better or that the same societie how much soeuer disordered be to be altered by priuate warrāt is very daungerously and apparantly to erre in both The first being the effect of too much flattery and self loue the latter the daungerous attempt of an insolent presumption both hazardous to that holy Societie whom either they thinke for gouernment to be absolute or absolutely to be gouerned by their owne fancies In these two Errors the difference is this that they first may easily erre in thinking that to be best which Experiēce hath taught them to be good in the latter there is lesse excuse because they mislike all whatsoeuer may not be esteemed to proceede from their owne deuice that there is a gouernment requisite for that Societie which we call the Church the wisdome of God hath made knowen vnto vs both by proportion of those naturall and Ciuill Societies to which the Church is compared and by the perfection of that fellowshippe which the Saints in all ages and places where the true worship of GOD hath preuailed haue had from the foundation of the worlde amongst themselues The first roote of humane Societie as being impossible to continue without order is distinguisht by God himselfe into seuerall degrees and prerogatiues of Husbands Parents Maisters aboue Wife Children and Seruants and yet all linked in the mutuall agreement of like dueties The greater Branches that rise out of these rootes Cities countries and kingdomes are neither destitute of lawes to prescribe nor Magistrats to execute for the common good all receiuing dignitie and strength from this fountaine that by the benefit of Good lawes they are well gouerned If men were of themselues either willing or constant in that which were good It were needles to haue a discipline for all where euery mans vertue were a lawe to himselfe but seeing our corruption is such that we are easily deceiued by our selues more easily seduced by others but most and most daungerously peruerted through feare and desire the one to spurn vs that we goe not too flowe the other to bridle vs that we runne not too fast there is a line both to direct and to amend necessarily limited to all sorts and this in due season lest disorder indured bread confusion the fore-runner of all ruine Seeing then the Church of Christ is the house of God the Citty of the liuing God the kingdome of his beloued Sonne can wee thinke that he is careful for others and carelesse or negligent for his owne or that disorder is lesse daungerous or lesse to be feared in the Church than in the Common-wealth surely hee that in all places is the Author not of confusion but of peace will haue all thinges performed decently and in order for the Gouernment of his Church To this ende hee appointed Stewardes oouer his houshold Watchmen and leaders ouer his flocke laborers in his haruest Husbandmen in his Tyllage and being proportioned to a bodie maketh some to bee Eyes Eares Tongues Handes that is principall members for directing and assistance of the whole without which in all reason it must needes be vnable to prouide for the safetie and securitie of it selfe so that the Honour or happinesse had beene small to haue made it a Church vnlesse this likewise had beene added To haue made it a Church that is well Gouerned for the vnitie of of the Spirit is not kept but in the bande of peace This Regiment of the Church is as well Extelternall as Internall The latter is that gouernment which God hath by his holy Spirit and truth in the hearts of the faithfull which as it is neuer varied so it is not questioned amongest vs in the Church of Englande By this which is the Kingdome of his Sonne all men confesse that GOD inwardly and effectually worketh in his Saintes the Faith of his truth the feeling of his grace and other spirituall blessinges according to the purpose of his will for the praise of his owne Glorie in which no earthly creature is able to ioyne or to concurre with him sauing only in this that the Word and the Sacraments being left as externall meanes there must be fitte persons for both and a power in them to admitte and reiect lest happily holy thinges be defiled whilst Pearles are cast vnto Dogges and Swine From hence ariseth a necessitie of externall Gouernment in Gods Church which respecteth the appointing of meete men and the due approbation of such as are to be credited with the free dispensation of such inestimable Treasures committed to their Charge In this whilst all men agree that it ought and many that are religious are desirous that
not alwaies in the same state it laboureth sometimes seeming to decay vnder the Crosse sometimes it flourisheth in the aboundance of much peace sometimes it is gouerned by these who are Nurses of it and sometimes by such whose hands are readiest to pull it downe now where the affection of Princes that gouerne is not all one the condition and state of the Church must needes alter besides euen the chiefe officers erected by our Sauiour of the Apostles Prophets and Euangelistes in that kinde notwithstanding are all ceased for although Apostolicall Iurisdiction doo now continue in Bishops yet no man is ordayned to bee an Apostle that which is aunswered of ordinarie and extraordinarie ouerthroweth the cause for if these bee extraordinarie and all offices that are reckoned vp by the Apostle bee not ordinarie then the Gouernours of the Church ceasing no man can say with reason that forme of the Church gouernment is all one To holde that all that was diuers at diuers times was the same gouernment is to make things continuing and ceasing distinguisht and confounded to bee all one And if wee looke further to that which seemed to bee most solemne the Senedrin and great Councell at Ierusalem is no where extant And if they allow the forme at Geneua they are popular but surely though in this no man could looke for other than difference to arise where trueth hath not laid the foundation of what they holde yet this is most straunge that they are so firme for Doctors to bee distinguisht from Pastors for seuerall Consistories for euerie parish widowes and such like whereas Geneua hath but one Consistorie for diuers Parishes no Doctors distinct from Pastors no widowes and in Fraunce onely Pastors and Elders are thought necessarie yea besides this there were many things commendably in vse in the former times which as the Church hath power to remooue so likewise hath she authoritie to appoint new our Sauiour instituted a Ceremonie which hee inioyned his Disciples to obserue of washing of feete the same continued long in the Church as may appeare by a Treatise attributed to Saint Cyprian but now out of vse and vtterly ceased The Apostles decreed that all should abstaine from bloud and from things strangled the Apostle willeth the Romans to greete one another with a holy kisse yet both these discontinued amongst vs euery man praying or prophecying with his head couered dishonoreth his head a thing at this day not of that strict obseruance but that it may bee done without breach of humility or the Apostles precept That all the lawes and orders in the Church are not durable appeareth by ceasing of the Ceremoniall law and the Iewish pollicie so that the obseruation of the Morall and whatsoeuer hath dependance vpon that is the true rule of discipline for maners other things are but the violent fancies of some weak men who haue abused their Zeale to doe much hurt Neither neede wee stand to prooue much the alteration of this gouernment seeing themselues haue varied in the demanding of it In the yeare 1572. the first admonition which the late most Reuerend Lord Archbishop of Canterbury did after confute was offered to the Parliament as contayning a perfect platforme of the discipline they desired to be established in this Realme Within fewe yeares after they altered it againe In the yeare 1584. an other which seemed to haue receiued as much perfection as they could desire but presently after the Parliament this was found amongst them to haue some thing amisse and the correcting being referred to one who had trauersed the matter a new it came out more perfect in the yeare 1586 an other in the yeare 1588 and it is like as most of these were against Parliaments so some thing now is to bee performed for this if their cause can haue patrons or the patrons can finde hope but I hope by this time our Gouernours are more wise and hee who is able to discerne these plots hath found by experience their desires to bee too proud and in reason not likely to benefit this Church with a better peace so that wee may safely conclude this point That though the Church of all Societies bee fittest to bee Gouerned with an auncient and veriuous discipline yet that discipline is farre differing from the same that they doo require CHAP. III. The Censure of a Booke called the Plea of the Innocent WHere the persons of men haue so neere affinitie with the actions performed by them it will require great moderation and care so to censure the one as that we may not iustly bee suspected to disgrace the other the neglect of this a fault which is too common both in the times before vs and in our age hath turned the confutation of errors to personall reproofes and hath made the defendors weaknes or Indiscretion the greatest aduersary to a good cause and howsoeuer some partiall men are caried with as much loue to all they doo as they are to themselues that doo it and with like disposition are impatient to bee toucht in eyther yet no man of wisedom or vnderstanding can thinke it to bee all one to haue his action or his person censured some Actions I confesse there are of that nature which are the defectes of our ordinary weakenesse and therein though not Excusable yet carry some reason to challenge a fauourable compassion extending either to forgiuenes or to concealments which both doubtlesse are the effects of men that are truly vertuous where as some others as it were by couenant are performed to that end that they rest amongest all men and in all ages lyable to that censure which time shall giue them And they merit Of the first sort are our sinnes in which kinde our profession hath had some euill Confessours of the Latter are Bookes which as they are actes performed with the best of our iudgement voluntarie with deliberation and with a resolution by couenaunt eyther to aunswere or indure what Censures shall light vpon them it cannot bee any breach of Charity or modesty where the opinions misliked are defended to censure the Bookes which are made in defence of them And although euerie man in reason is tyed to bee cerefull of his good name yet seeing that both euerie harde Censure is not a proofe to continue errour nor euerie errour an imputation to a man that deserues well It is not all one to say such a Booke is euill written and to say such a one is not an honest man The first is allowed in the warrantable liberty of all learning but the latter Charitie and Humilitie do both forbid as being but the daungerous effect of too much pride Things that are euill in manners are euill in that they are done and are a iust imputation to the partie in that they are knowne but writings that are Censured carry not euer that sentence among them which some ignorant or partiall opposite shall impose vpon them nor euer doo men censure as
if we finde both the words and the deedes of the best amongst them to haue been such as no man hath reason to allow it cannot choose but seeme strange that any one carefull of what he vttereth should become a patron to that proceeding which is no sooner barely rehearsed but must vnto all men of necessitie appeare to be without warrant For iffailing in Cmilitie of tearmes their actions had beene more milde or if ouer seene in their Actions their words had beene of a better temper some colorable snow might haue been their excuse which now is wanting seeing they doe faile in both and therefore euen to discouer their proceedings is to ouerthrow thē As few Societies are or can be hoped to be without some euill so the principall remedies in the iudgement of wise men haue been thought to be three First that all things corrupted by time should with discretion be brought to their first Institution Secōdly if this were not to be hoped for they might vtterly be abolished Thirdly that no Innocatiōs were permitted to begin and being begun immediatly by the hand of Authoritie to be cut of The first of these was called Reformation which is a repetion or Restitution of the auncient deede So that to Reform is not to make new but to restore to his former well being what time and corruption by continuance had made euill Now as authoritie and wisedome are both requisite to performe this so must it needs be a disorder in those that would reforme and doe want both And it cannot bee but a great ouersight in them Who hauing thus erred ought to bee silent and craue pardon dare aduenture notwithstanding to plead this cause and to publish Apologies in there owne defence Wee will not touch the first Authors and Originalles of this euill being deriued from those who then both for scituation and gouernment were straungers to our state But only make it appeare that since the beginning of our last Soueriegnes reigne what holinesses so euer was pretended the whole proceeding in matters of Reformation both in worde and deede was altogether vnlawfull and without warrant A thing howsoeuer obserued by diuers heeretofore yet not vnfit to be handled in this place and at this time The ground of that euill which followed was layd in Queene Maries time in whose Zealous gouernment a Zeale in others of our Countrie from other forreigne places in both peraduenture a like euill sowed the vncleane seede of those immoderat growing tares which since haue daungered our whole Church Neither can the goodnesse of Religion bee any warrant for euill doeing seeing what is lawfull where true Religion doth seeme to giue leaue must of necessitie bee as Lawfull being permitted by a Religion or don for a Religion though it be false So that it was no more fit for priuat and Inferiour persons at that time by violence to remoue Idolatrie the contrarie whereof was their Doctrine than in times much purer which haue since followed it was or could be lawfull for any of the Church of Rome by inuasion or treason to establish the Doctrine of that Sea This euer remaining a true rule That good then deserueth the name of euill when being good it ceaseth to bee well done and no Religion can warrant to pull downe Kings when true Religion doth commaund that whatsoeuer their Religion is wee must obay them either in suffering with patience what they impose or in dooing with obedience what they doe commaund So that the iust hatred of Idolatrie seruing to giue warrant to what they did then in times when the Church was much polluted hath been not the least occasiō since to attempt the like and farre worse when by many degrees the times the Religion was more pure And I am sorie so good a man by name should publish to the world a Doctrine so false and daungerous that it should be lawfull to kill wicked Kings and Tyrants Neither had this being but the priuat error of one been in all respectes so daungerous if an other for his place a Deane and not meanely esteemed had in not his preface to that Booke affirmed it to be the doctrine of the best and most learned in those partes meaning as I thinke Caluin and the rest So that all thinges being duely weighed the practise of those in that time for religion was neither more honest nor lawfull than the late practises of those of the Church of Rome neither let any man thinke that Religion can be a warrant for that deed which must remaine an euerlasting blemish to that Religion that caused it to bee doone Others our countrie had at that time men of famous and worthie memorie which liued in Zuriech Bas●ll and Franckefort these discretly obserued without Innouation the reformation established in King Edwardes dayes Nowe when those that had liued in Geneua and obserued with what policie Caluin and others swayed the whole gouernment a thing peraduenture neither much contradict seeing the worthinesse of the man nor Difficult to effect considering the forme of that state they began sayling in both repects being equal only in a violēt Zeale to attempt the like discipline in their owne Countrey A thing so much the lesse sufferable by how much the parties were meaner the gouernment of their Countrie farre better and the alteration not safe in so great a Kingdome And yet at that time the Zeale of these contented it selfe little to meddle in shew with the matters of disciplie but rather was busied about the apparell of Ministers Cerimonies prescribed and amendment as they thought of the Communion booke But after so hardly are those things limited which are but the workes of a strong fancie those that succeeded made their discipline an essentiall Note of the true Church were as ready as they said to become Martyrs in that quarell as for the defence of any Article of the Christian faith of whom I may say as Saint Austine doth of some such they were Martyrs if they had died of a foolish Philosophy Out of this strong and vehement perswasion of well doing and from a desire of goodnes peraduenture in some although it is like that those who were most earnest had not the best conscience were published sundrie Dialogues able to haue iniured a good cause complaints petitions to her Maiestie and the Parliament in the name of the Comunaltie their appellations their exhortations fiue or six seuerall supplications to the Parliament Martyns vnhallowed Imitations of Passauantius The humble motion to the Lords of the Councill and diuers other of the like nature in manner of Register collected into one volume These many such for it were infinit and of small vse to reckon all were the chiefe and the best meanes their learning wisedome and holinesse thought fit for the gaining of Authoritie to this new discipline but if these immodest libelles had beene the worst fruites
vs But for any Prince to commaund the wearing of Aarons grrments in that manner and to that end that Aaron ware them were to erect that priesthood which is abolished and those ceremonies which were types and ended at the passiō of Christ in despight of his passion to call againe Neither can there be a comparison more inconsiderately made then betwixt these two seeing for the one not to be vsed their reasons are neither many nor of great waight and for the other to be vsed there is none at all For if the lawe be taken away whose priestly apparrell and garments were onely a figure and shadowe of Christ to come he then which doth vse such garments of Aaron doth heretically with the Iewes confesse that Christ is not yet come and doth as much as in him lyeth renew the shadowes by him abolished and receiuing againe his schoolemaster Moses doth forsake Christ. Therefore stand in the libertie wherewith Christ hath deliuered you and be not wrapped againe in the yoake of bondage wherefore seeing these ceremonies are neither the dregges of poperie nor cannot in reason offend the weake nor haue any religion actually placed in them we see no cause as yet why they may not be continued in our Church CHAP. VII Of Subscription AS there is little hope of peace in the outward gouernment of that Church where the leaders of others are not willing or thinke it not lawfull to be obedient so there is no one act in the obseruation of al wise mā more auaileable and in reason more likely to procure this then that which tyeth the tongue and hands from any way resisting these lawfull ordinances that preserue peace A thing doubtles if it had been well wayed by those holy disturbers of the Churches rest who notwithstanding all this are desirous to seeme innocent surely themselues would haue been formost both to haue done and suffered whatsoeuer would haue serued to haue furthered the offices of deuotion and to haue blessed the Church with so much happinesse Neither can they be excused in this as men wholie ignorant seeing all know that the best times for performing religious duties is when the Church is at vnitie in it selfe and the meanes to attaine this is for inferiours to be subiect to those reasonable directions that others giue Both because submission in them is a part of dutie and few that haue authoritie to commaund if they want reason for that they doe a thing not to be thought in men of that wisedome and in a matter of so great importance yet seldome they want resolution seuerely to exact dutifull obedience where they doe commaund Mildnes which in some other cases may be a vertue being in this a vice opposite to that courage required in those who are to rale ouer vs. So that whilest some men haue published to the world what others haue done and they suffered in this kinde a hard censure of reproch for willfull resistance will blemish them to the worlds end and a memorable testimonie of the others courage shall follow amongst all posterities their blessed names euen from the writings of such as doe most dispraise them The frute of their righteousnes being the Churches peace whilest the peeuish refusall in others serued onely but to make a schisme And as the glorious Saints in heauen those blessed spirits freed from the troubles of this life enioy in Gods presence an eternall peace who before in their flesh were comforted with the peace of the holy Ghost so if against outward enemies both at home and abroade they might haue obtained peacefull dayes and nights this threefould cable should be hardly broken and the Church might sing as we haue cause and more might haue had if these men would that God hath done great things for vs alreadie whereof we reioyce for that blessing which is the happinesse of all other societies cannot in reason but be a singular aduantage for the better performance of our religious duties in Gods seruice This being the principall end of that great benefit of peace that all men inioying those particular things without daunger which God hath giuen them haue stronger motions to giue him praise and better meanes without disturbance to glorifie that name which is great wonderfull and holy And surely if it had not been for the ouerheadie disobedience of some men wee might haue giuen this glorious testimonie of the happines of this land that peace was within our walles and plentiousnes within our pallaces and that all the daies of Queene Elizabeth the Church had rest A blessing doubtles so long continued such as our fathers neuer sawe the like and when it shall be tould to our childrens children that are to come they will not beleeue it I haue euer in my weake opinion so farre honored the holy instruments of peace that I did alwaies thinke that their could not be a surer argument of an euill cause then in a Church reformed to resist authoritie and to disobey those that should rule ouer vs. All other things obserue that law which their maker appointed for them for he hath giuen them a law which shall not be broken This must needes bee the reproofe of man saith Saint Ambrose but most of all unto such who being the children of the Church nay which is more ministers to serue in it are notwithstanding disobedient vnto those lawes which in great wisedome for her owne safetie the Church hath made As if she now might complaine as Saint Bernard did out of the Prophet Esay behold for felicitie I had bitter griefe bitter before in the death of Martyres more bitter after in the conflict with heretikes but most of all now with my owne house Vnlike in this to that maister whose schollers they desire to seeme who chose rather to loose his life then to disobey We had rather all of vs inuent and teach then heare and follow for our reason is but an euill lackey but our will is worse Seeing we want not reasons as we think to warrant vs in that we do accounting the commaundements of others to be against right and what wee will our selues that to be most holy Whereas true obedience hath nothing of his owne but is wholy anothers it is daungerous when we say desperately surely we will walke after our owne imaginations and doe euery man after the stubbornes of his wicked heart This vertue of obedience maketh good things vnlawfull as the eating of the forbidden tree to Adam and euill things to be good and lawfull as to smite the Prophet the one because he did what he was forbidden was punished with death and the other was deuoured of a Lyon because he did it not That which at another time ought to haue been omitted and could not be done without a great sin now being commaunded without a great sinne could not be omitted Neither is the fault much lesse though the parties be diuers
as Antichristian from amongst vs only because it is the pleasure of those men to admit no superiors For if the name of Archbishop be not to be found in scripture considering the thing it selfe is of necessarie vse in Gods Church they haue as little reason to except against it as if Homonsion were not warrantable because Arius gaue occasion that the Nicen councell did first inuent it Many names are inuented since the Apostles time and yet both lawfully and necessarily vsed for these men haue been told long since that the authoritie and the thing whereof the Archbishop hath his name was in Saint Paules time and therefore the name lawfull and if it were not yet both might bee lawfull seeing they appertaine to the externall pollicie and regiment of the Church which according to time place persons and other circumstances is not tyed of necessitie to be alwaies one And surely those that mislike this ouer proude title as they tearme it haue least cause seeing they of the Discipline challenge as great iurisdiction ouer their Parishes and as lofty dominion ouer Prince and Nobles as euer any Pope did ouer the whole Church And if Clement whom Polydore alledgeth to that end said that Peter in euery Prouince appoynted one Archbishop whom all other Bishops of the same Prouince should obey I see no reason why any man for that should so farre forget both modestie and charitie as some haue done to call him a hell hound a naturall sonne of Satan surely naturall he was not and the sworne souldier of Antichrist I wish these to remember that the slaunder of authors is no good answere when better reasons can be alledged then onely to say that they say it But if they thinke the title vnlawfull as some of them write because the Scripture doth appropriate it to our Sauiour Christ I wish them to remember that if Archshepheard and Archbishop be all one then the name is to bee found in Scriptures and that names proper vnto God as Shepheard light of the world and such like may be in a diuers sence and are often communicated with other men Hereunto we may adde that the famous Councell of Nice which by all men of wisdome is reuerenced esteemed and imbraced as the soundest and best testimony next the Scriptures doth not onely allowe of the name but also of the office of Metropolitane and Archbishop determining him to be no Bishop which is made without the consent of the Metropolitane and to shew that this name and office was more auncient than that famous Councell the Canon saith Let that olde custome be obserued alluding peraduenture to those Canons which passe vnder the Apostles names Neither was this name or title so strange imediatly after the Apostles time that Volusianus was affeard to say that Diomysius Areopagita was by S. Paul made Archbishop of Athens or Erasmus to call Titus Archbishop of Crete and Eusebius giueth the authoritie to Iohn the Euangelist whose suruiuing the rest brought this benefit vnto the Church that for consecrating of Bishops and other vses he was as Archbishop or Metropolitane to the whole Church For in Saint Cyprians iudgement heresies and schismes haue risen from no other occasion then from this that the Priest of God is not obeyed neither one Priest for the time in the Church and one Iudge for the time in stead of Christ thought vpon to whom if the whole brotherhoode would be obedient according to Gods teaching no man would moue any thing against the Colledge of Priests This speech of that auncient Father was to comfort Cornelius shewing that faintnes in that case was to betray the Church and that sects and schismes must needes arise where the authoritie of Bishops is despised For this place was not to confirme the authoritie of the Church of Rome but as the best expounde him that hee would haue an Archbishop in euery Prouince to beare rule ouer the rest of the Cleargy For hee that attempteth any thing in the Church without the Bishop breaketh peace and confoundeth good order and Cyprian being Bishop of Carthage had the charge and ouersight of all the Churches in Africke in Numidia and in both the Mauritanes and not only these but as Gregorie Nazianzene saith the whole East parts for the which cause Illiricus doth call him Metropolitane So that if herein wise men had onely inuented what was fit and not followed what was before them their action had not been without warrant seeing in the outward pollicie of gouerning the Church where precepts and examples are wanting it is not forbidden for those that come after as well to be examples to others as to follow the examples of such as haue gone before them But if in the first planters of the Church which both in comparison of the rest were fewe and blessed with graces farre more excellent than any in our time inequalitie was allowed and that allowance without fault it must needes in all reason follow that the authoritie of Archbishop was not thought so dangerous as now to the gouerning of Christs Church wherein if either their maintenance bee greater or their outward honor more in these Christian times of peace then could be expected amongst Pagans and they tyrants no man can in reason or ought with out blame to oppugne these who will not be thought an enemie to the former seeing the times and names being diuers the authoritie notwithstanding is all one But it is the vnnaturall fault of this age through the sides of those whom peraduenture in some priuate respects we mislike to wound euen our fathers in religion whom we ought to honor But seeing these men doubtles are much wiser who take vpon them to be the reformers of our Church then that they should be offended with the names where the things are lawfull it is surely to be thought in all reason that the superioritie of Bishops is not by them accounted so great a fault as that any amongst the clergie whose office and ministerie is all one should by a speciall name aboue the rest of theirbrethren be called Bishops As if to ouer see that flocke committed to their charge were a dutie belonging and by our Sauiour imposed vpon them onely But because the names of things haue so many artificers by whom they wore first made but moe who after haue vsed them to an other sence it shall not so much concerne vs to inquire what in the beginning was the difference betwixt Bishop and presbyter as to learne afterward what the Church ment when these names expressed those persons which for office and ministerie of word and sacraments not for order and iurisdiction were all one The clergie of the Gospell were at the first after the Apostles time either Presbyters or Deacons for those who aduisedly at the first did impose names vnto things had either regarde vnto that which naturally was most proper or if peraduenture to some
Saints many things might bee alleadged in this kinde if it were any vertue to rippe vp their faults whom we ought to honor where as I hope the aduersaries to our Bishops will confesse that neuer any companie of Bishops since the Apostles time taught and held such sound doctrine in all points as the Bishops of England at this day For the second which is honestie of life euery age hath some imperfections amongst all conditions the most worthie are not free from the slanderers tongue In the councell of Nice in the presence of the Emperor the Bishops libeld one against another contentions ouer eager bitter were betwixt Epiphanius and Chrisostome both very worthy and very reuerend Bishops betwixt S. Austin and S. Hierom whereas doubtles if some zealous for discipline had held their peace the Church of England had beene as Hierusalem a Citie built at vnitie in it selfe Now for the last which is the moderate Imployment of externall things vve recken it amongst the greatest felicityes of our time that when the expectation of greedy cormorants was big with hope of the deuouring the riches and reuenews that the Church had that euen then the conscionable zeale of the prince by vertuous and wise lawes manacled their hands whose desires were vnsatiat and their harts vnhallowed and left vnto the church a rich and honorable patrimony for Indowment whereby worthy rulers may not want double honor labour may haue her merit and religion may bee able to releeue the poore Heerein if any couetously doe retaine or riotously mispend what vertuous authority confirmed vnto better vses a thing which I hope no man can accuse in the Bishops of our church let them amend their faults and not their offence be made a cloke to those monsters that thirst with desire for to robbe the church More perticulerly amongst the rest of him who being the worthiest amongst the clergie and worthylie in the highest place is by an vntemperate spirit with vnholy sacriledge said of all the Bishops in the sea of Canterburie to haue done most harme and that none had so ambitious and aspiring a minde as hee no not Cardinall Wolsey none so proud as he no not Stephen Gardiner none so Tyrannicall as hee no not Bonner I may say truely of him that if the church gouernment of this land which he defended with great Iudgement with his pen hee had not with as great authority protected for the space of this twenty yeres in the place of an Archbishop which God graunt for the good of his church may continew still doubtles Contention Ignorance and Atheisme long since had ouer-runne the Church Of whom because it is neither honour to him to bee commended by mee nor disgrace to bee reproched by them I will say considering his iustice in gouernment his care in prouiding for the Clergie his wisedome in Counselling his Integritie in preferring his Diligence in Preaching his grauitie in behauiour his humilitie in conuersing his care to the Church his zeale to religion his courage to the truth as Theodosius spake of S. Ambrose I know onelie Ambrose who is most worthy to be● called a Bishop But not to labour any further in this cause which hath had so many of singuler worthy men ab●e to defend it much better wee say this calling so much misliked serueth to a greater perfection to a fitnes in action and to a singuler ornament in gouerning the Church For the first the fulnes of grace which is in the heads of the Church distilleth as by seuerall wayes to the singuler benefit of all parts whilst hee hath giuen some to be Apostles some to bee Prophets some to bee Euangelists some to bee Pastors and Doctors for the consummation and Perfection of his Church for the fitnes in action the Church hauing diuers Imployments as well for gouernment as doctrine requireth and alloweth seuerall ordinations to serue these Let no man therefore presume to vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand but that he vnderstand according to sobrietie as God hath delt to euery man the measure of faith For as wee haue many members in one bodie and all members haue not one office so wee being many are one bodie in Christ and euery one anothers members Last of all for Ornament that Atheists vnbeleeuers may wonder and bee in loue with the comely and beautifull gouernment of Christs Church as the Queene of Saba was with the order of Salomons house for in a great house are not onely vessels of gold and ●f siluer but of wood and earth some for honour and some vnto dishonor vnitie and varietie are the ornaments of the church of Christ Vnitie of Faith Charitie and Peace Varietie of Offices and degrees and these saith the Apostle for the repairing of the Saints for the work of the Ministrie for the edification of the body of Christ for if the whole body were ancare wher were the seeing if the whole were an eie where were the heating but now hath God disposed the members euery one of them in the body at his owne pleasure for if they were all one member where were the body And who are these that they should mislike what Example Authoritie and Experience haue found sufficient CHAP. X. Of Ministers their office and learning IF the passage from earth to heauen were either not needefull at all or possible to bee performed ordinarilie by any other meanes then a vertuous meditation betwixt God and man then peraduenture Instruments of best vse for the defects of this life were wholly to bee regarded and the vtter want of the Clergies seruice were as lawfull in the best kingdomes as the contempt of their persons is vsuall and common with the worst subiects But seeing vniuersall Corruption is the truest inscription of mankinde and holinesse to the Lord is the great title that God hath that man by that power may bee made like vnto him that did first make him hee hath appointed for the performance of this worke holy times holy places holy things and holy persons all chiefely to this end that as hee is himselfe so man likewise by these might bee made holie As if the same puritie which could not endure those blessed spirits once stained to continew in a place of blisse but cast them down did lesse reasonablie allow that creature whose greatest happines peraduenture was but vpon earth to be carried vp to heauen into those ioyes vnles redeemed by his Son and sanctified by his holy spirit and by both these by the seruice and ministerie of men and not Angels darkenesse were made light rebellion obedience the children of wrath the sonnes of an infinit loue enmitie reconsiled and made peace and lastly sinfull men were become holy So that the summe of their dutie whose labours are imployed in this kinde is onely to honour God and to saue m●n And their difference from all the world besides is principally this that being
one as commonly in this case they pretend number If no other way may be found then haue the Bishops and Cathedrall Churches Temporalties enough to redeeme those liuings that be impropriated other counsel the same author giueth which haue bene all answered another saith the same which the Lord B. B. and the Cathedral Churches doe possesse if it be taken in time beefore it be to much scambled how well would it serue to redeeme Impropriations and augment the smaller things with the ouerplus to serue to other good vses for his Maiesties wars and increase of learning and a litle after as if his counsell were worthie twise to be repeated he addeth the same nay he wisheth all to be taken from the Bishops Yet still they must remaine to the Ministerie and the common wealth onely to change the order and manner of the applying that wheras before they serued to vphold a Lordly pompe Idlenes and brauerie in some few they might now by a wise godly distribution bee communicated vnto many for the benefit of many Churches and if Bishops liuings be to litle a free beneuolence and as it were an offering of all sorts of people young and ould through this land ought to bee Heereunto I might ad the counsell which others giue all tending to this end that whatsoeuer the church hath and is not bestowed according to the fancie of these men should presently be altered and vndoubtedly by many degrees lamentably be imployed to worse vse It pleased that wisdome and Maiestie which then ruled ouer vs to discerne the cruell purpose of these men to hold it vnsafe to aduenture a worse maintenance for the clergie by a worse meanes And surely wee doubt not but this great vnderstanding to whome God for our happinesse hath committed the gouernment of the church and the common wealth whose dayes wee desire may continue as the dayes of heauen will throughly vnderstand that a maintenance thus procured can bring litle aduantage vnto Gods church when by this meanes colledges Bishops or cathedrall churches are puld downe For if the fountaines be dryed vp a generall thirst must be the disease of our whole land If the clergie want gouernours better to be without maintenance then without order And last of all if recompence be taken away wherwith the clergie maintained may take rest not ease for the time to come benefiting the church peraduenture in another manner lamentable experience must needs tell vs that in short space the number of diuines wil be very few In tymes past there was in euery citie a Colledge of Ministers ouer whome the Bishop bate rule the which Sainct Hierom termeth the Senat of the Church and with vs it is called a Collegiat or Cathedrall church wherein for the most part for wee cannot excuse all after their labour in the vniuersitie in the Kings house in Bishops pallaces in their painefull imployment either by writing or teaching in other places are plentifully maintained as it is most fit the best the wisest and the most learned of the clergie in this land which not onely as that most reuerend Archbishop worthy of all honor sometimes said in respect of their soundnesse in religion profoundnesse in learning diligence in preaching but wisdome also experience and dexteritie in gouerning are not onely a singuler ornament to the Realme profitable to the church an honor to the prince but also a stay frō barbarisme a bridle to sects and heresies and a bulwark against confusion From whence I doubt not next vnto those two famous noursing places of learning the Vniuersities but when our kingdome shall haue cause to send to the greatest councell that the church shall haue men of wisest moderation best liues and deepest iudgements that these places shal be able to furnish them with much honor therfore as it is a bold presumption in those men who without degrees for some commendable paines in preaching think it merit enough to aduance them to that honor so the sacrilegious impietie of those is without excuse who wish desire all places of that nature to be pulled downe or their reuenues to bee altered to some other vse make them O Lord and their Princes like Oreb and Zeb yea all their princes like Zeba and Zalmana which haue said let vs take the houses of God in possession O my God make them lyke vnto a wheel as the stubble before the winde To conclude then this point as wee hartely wish the Ministerie of England to be learned so wee hope the wisdome vertue of those whome it doth concerne without iniurie of any person state or condition wil in due time think of conuenient allowance for them and this not by selling or changing of any thing to a stock of money which was the manner of the maintenance in the primatiue Church seeing wee are taught by experience that things of that nature are vncertaine and are not so likely to carrie to those that come after a perpetuitie with them it may bee that if any age were so prophane or authority were carried away with the violence of these spirits by the wounds of the Church to cure the Wants of some few and meane persons a thing God bee thanked not much to bee feared in this religious and vnderstanding age vnder the gouernment of so vertuous and so wise a King the Church paraduenture might keepe a Festiuall day of solemnitie plentie and all aboundance for some few yeeres and for euer after Lament her desolation and ruin in want Penurie Ignorance and Contempt vnto the worlds end And whereas the ages before vs gaue this deserued honor to some few These were those holie and religious men that did build vs Temples Colledges Cathedrall Churches and gaue ample reueneues vnto them all for the continuall supply of a learned Ministrie our posterity in the vnfortunat times of fasting and mourning after so vnhallowed a feast and so prophane a surfet should haue cause to bemoane their losse and lament the times where vnto they were reserued cursing these sacrilegious Reformers that haue spoild the Churches the riches whereof being put to saile haue serued but to satisfie the couetous pollicie of some few those neither of much worth not for long time it wil be a most vertuous consideration wherein his Maiestie shall giue perfection to the happie beginnings of our late Queene Elizabeth the nursing mother of our Church whose memorie shal be sacred to all posterities by prouiding that the allowance for the Clergie may be good conuenient and that those onelie bee suffered to enter into and to execute that function who haue learned themselues and will teach others in thankfull obedience to be gouerned by those whom reason and religion haue placed ouer them the other course must needs breed confusion contempt of authoritie needlesse discontentments indiscret reprehensions ignorant teachers and the disorder of all states whereas the wisedome and counsell of those
not let thee goe except thou blesse mee Yet let not our importunitie exclude humilitie but that still wee pray as if the smallest grashopper vpon earth a worme and no man were to speake with feare and reuerence before the maiestie of God himselfe Seeing then praier is that name which expresseth all that seruice that our religion can performe beeing the best meanes both to testifie our dutifull affection and most effectuall to obtaine what soeuer wee wanting can desire at Gods hands seeing it is the easiest and most comfortable almes which all men haue power to giue and no man to refuse seeing it is that office from performance whereof neither time nor place violent circumstances in other things are able to hinder vs seeing it is and ought to be the first dutie wherewith a religious soule beginneth his life and the last wherwith hee endeth it seeing it is the seruice of all Saints aswell those that Triumph in heauen as that are Militant on earth the one praising God for their glorie the other praying for their victorie and seeing amongst all praiers those are most powerfull and effectuall which hauing the feruour of manie and the promise of presence are rather powred out in the Temple then our priuate chambers for in a congregation a house of praiers there may bee amongst manie some Moses or Samuell which shall bee heard both for themselues and others one righteous in the middest of a froward and crooked generation let from henceforth all impietie stop her mouth which heeretofore hath blasphemed a holy ordination of so much vse thrusting it out of our Churches vnder pretence of preaching and that open prophanes by seueritie of lawes bee taught obedience which either in puritie or superstition haue refused in our Temples to offer vp their Praiers as the rest doe It is no small blessing to haue the libertie of the sonnes of God to enter into the house of the Lord the house of prayer the place where his Honour dwelleth for in his temple doth euery man speake of his honour yet we denie not but in the most desolate and solitariest place more voide of resort then the ransackt sanctuarie of Hierusalem in the vncomfortablest vault that euer was entred his eares shall bee open vnto our Praiers that goe not out of fained lippes but euen praier it selfe as one noteth when it hath not the comforts of many voices to strengthen it is not it selfe So that wheras secret neglect of our dutie in this kinde is but onely our owne hurt one mans contempt of the Common prayer of the Church of God may bee and often times is preiudiciall hurtfull vnto many thousands and doubtlesse in time of persecution when wee are in exile the principall griefe to any Christian soule must bee this euen the vncomfortable absence from the house of God that wee cannot praise God in the great Congregation that euen in this respect the Sparrow and the Swallow are in better case then wee are That all our Melodie is buried in this one euill for how should wee sing the Lords song in a strange land For if there be in the Lords Sanctuary in the Courts of the house of our God the holy Angels mix● amongst vs it ought surely to be our care euen for praier to refort thether with ioy aboue all other places whatsoeuer ther to powre out our praiers with that solemnitie deuotion as those vertuous humble requests which the Church appointeth the Saints vpon earth powre out the almightie sitteth to heare the Angels attend to further Now for the religious performance of this dutie no wise man can doubt but that solemnitie of place is a circumstance neither indifferent nor of small force the authoritie of their calling whome the Church imployeth to offer vp the praiers for the whole people is no small assurance of obtaining what is presented by their meanes in whom if zeale and feruencie of spirit concur with a vertuous lyfe they are no small aduantages to make the rest of the multitude to bee more holy and to teach all the people of God both what reuerence they owe vnto such whom God vouchsafeth to bee mediatours beetwixt him and them and with what deuotion and reuerence they are to esteeme and frequent those holy places for the performance of those duties which out of all circumstāces rightly are termed by the Church holy and deuine Seruice Heerevnto if wee ad the strongest motiue vnto a minde sober and humble that these prayers are not the voluntarie suddaine extemporal supplications of one man who though zealous and honest yet may easily faile in asking what is behoueful for the whole Church for wee know not how to pray as wee ought but that they are those holy sacrifices of our lippes made and allowed by the considerate deliberation of men vertuous and duely proportioned with the sacred and solemne Lyturgies of the Church in all ages he must needs think the iniurie offered by some men to bee vnsufferable who esteeme all corners equall to the church for this vse all persons as conuenient as those who are elected and appointed to this end and sencelesse effusions of idle reiterated vnhallowed indigested prayers as auaileable in the eares of God as the best either places persons or order that the Church hath This beeing the dangerous pollicie of sathan to frustrate the Church of so great a benefit and beecause no man d●●st bee so impious as absolutely to condemne publick prayer to stir vp those who should draw the people both by example and precept to a contempt of that forme which taken from the puritie of all times is worthely thought by the Church a Lyturgie most reformed whereby wee must serue God and doubtlesse not to lay vpon them a greater burden then the weight of this sinne doth necessarilie impose vpon the consciences of such who are and haue bene the authors of this contempt wee cannot easily be perswaded otherwise But what prophanes hath crept into our church what vnhallowing of the Sabboth what want of reuerence in diuine Seruice what loathing of praiers without Sermons in one word what Athisme or Hippocresie is in al states in this kingdome hath originally proceded frō this fountain the bould and vnhallowed despising of the Communion Booke whilst in the meane time they haue offred vnto the Parliament in the dayes of our late Soueraigne a Booke of the forme of Common prayers of which wee dare not as yet giue that testimonie which truth compelleth them to giue of ours That grose errors manifest impieties is taken from it But seeing all of vs agree in this that a Prescript forme of praier is conuenient and necessarie for the Church they onely permitting a greater libertie for vs then wee doe both because it bringeth much aduantage to haue the people familiar with those praiers which concerne all and that they may not say Amen to any thing that is vnsound a
which wicked men haue abused howsoeuer vngodlie 2 It is vnlike the Reformed If they meane Geneua we cannot but acknowledge both the great mercies of God toward them and the singuler benefit from them to the whole Church But wherin wee differ as there may bee reasons in respect of place and people warrantable for both and without offence so if difference were a fault it may bee as well in them not to follow vs as in vs not to follow them but the strife for preheminence of example is a weake contention wheras for Antiquitie there is no great difference wee thanke God for them and reuerence that truth which is taught amongst them but it is saith Maister Caluin a pestilent mischiefe when wee will haue the manner of one Church to bee in place of an Vniuersall law And doubtlesse if we were as willing to giue them our reasons why wee cannot conforme our selues to the orders of that Church as some amongst vs haue be● violentlie bold for to vrge vs to it suretie the world woulde thinck wee had rather a desire to reproue them then to amend our selues an Vniformitie in all Churches were to bee wished but it is not euer absolutelie necessary wher the forme of the common wealth is not all one in this case all being lawfull that is best that is fittest for vs. 3 The reading of Epistles and Gospels so cut and mangld That we read them at all is that which they do mislike but seeing men are easilie wearied in those duties that are best and Praier making vs apt to fall into Speculations concerning God both that our wearinesse may bee lesse and our thoughts more sound and more agreeable to the present businesse those wise men that haue beene before vs haue chosen lessons for the Church as also Epistles and Gospells sutable to the present time and occasion that as Praier maketh vs fitter to heare so the hearing of these may make vs likewise fitter to pray To read Scriptures in the time of diuine Seruice wee hope being auncient and of such vse their wisdome will not much mislike and if the name of Epistle and Gospell doe offend they cannot but know that the originall of this both for the name and the thing was from Paul himselfe commaunding the same Epistle which hee sent vnto the Collossians to bee read in the Church of the Laoditians And of that to the Thessalonians he saith I charge you in the Lord that this Epistle bee read vnto all the Brethren the Saints From which custome the Church hauing appointed that portion of Scripture which circumstances being weighed is then fittest to be read vnto the people as if it were directlie sent vnto them thereby procuring their attention is not vnfitlie tearmed by the name of Epistle to these as S. Chrisostome noteth the Minister stood vp and with a loud voice cried let vs attend In one word the originall of this custome which so much offends them hath better likelihood of warrant from the Hebrewes then their Sanadrin seeing it was the custome amongst them euerie Sabboth which continueth yet in their Sinagogues that some thing is read out of Moses or the Prophets And we hope the name of the Gospell shall not displease them vnlesse they be offended with Glad tidings and if to read onelie so much as fitteth with the present occasion bee to cut and mangle their wisdome can tell that diuision of Chapters is not so auncient that it may not bee altered and their practise is vsuallie to read sometime but a part of a chapter sometimes two as the matter it selfe hath dependance with it 4 It maintaineth an vnpreaching Ministerie by banishing preaching vnder the coulour of long prayer To accuse vs of long prayer will litle beeseeme them who are long and tedious If we esteeme not of Sermons as wee ought it is our fault And doubtlesse if there had but bene that respect in them which was in vs to a thing of so great vse surely many of their sermons would bee shorter and much better wee are content that they shall extoll either them or themselues but withall let them remember that the Church of God hath as much neede sensibly and orderly to pray as to heare a Sermon wherein if it shall bee onely ouer-short beeing a dutie solemne and publick the world will learne to think that we make litle account of that wherevnto wee allow so litle tyme words surely how few soeuer are then long and paraduenture tedious when they benefit not the hearer but whosoeuer speaketh much and by much speaking doth much edifie doubtlesse is vndeseruedly blamed for much speaking It is likely that they who labour for much time to bee long in preaching are of more singular abilitie then other men or intend to trouble their hearers with impertinent discourses or else that they cannot expresse in few words which themselues beefore doe not rightly vnderstand But seeing the generall fault is that wee are swift to speake and had rather that the people should heare vs then God himself the time which wee think ouerlong for deuine seruice is accounted ouershort for to vtter our own fancies but such Sermons are farre lesse then praiers to the Edification of Gods Church 5 That wee praye without faith hauing no promise that wee may euermore bee defended from all aduersitie If either wee know some aduersitie against which wee may not lawfully praye or that there bee some aduersitie which is not euill in it owne nature or some euill that is not to bee shunned by vs or what wee would shun that prayer is not a meanes for to escape it if all these or any of these can bee proued wee refuse not to forbeare to aske That wee may bee defended from all aduersities But seeing that the same things which when they happen both wee indure with patience and God is able to turne them to our great aduantage yet because we neither know our strength vnable of it selfe to ouercome the least tryall and that God hath promised that no euill shall come nigh our dwelling wee pray but deliuer vs from euill that is defend vs from all aduersitie to think we may pray for nothing for which wee haue not warrant in Scripture is paraduenture an errour 6 Which for our vnworthinesse wee dare not aske a note of a seruile feare There is no vertue that better beeseemeth suters then humilitie no humilitie better beeseemeth suters to God then the vnfaigned acknowledgement of our owne vnworthinesse wherein if wee should rest it were needlesse to aske seeing there must bee a hope to receiue aswell as a sence of our want so that whilst wee haue confidence to obtaine that in Christs name which for our owne vnworthinesse wee dare not aske wee rather expresse the louing humilitie of Sonnes then the feare of seruāts but it is maruell how they can say think That there is
lament for them because they are with God This stoicall age need not this doctrine it is sinne to forget that wee are friends and christians 20 The Priest praieth for the Prince and the people answere of another matter That praier which wee offer vp for that power vpon earth which doth rule ouer vs if the people answere with this voice and mercifully heare vs when wee call vpon thee is no fault to bee done and peraduenture were a fault not to bee done Litle things will offend them who can bee so curious to mislike this 21 Crossing in Baptisme Popish And yet to Baptise vsing the signe of the Crosse is not popish Wee are not of their mind who thinke the crosse whereupon Christ suffered was like Pithagoras letter neither is this crossing a sacrament though it put vs in mind of our manfull fight vnder the banner of Christ crucified wee vse it not as bestowing a grace vpon vs but thankfullie remembring what was done for vs a Signe that may be vsed amisse wee can forbeare if it please the Church but in the meane time wee can and doe vse it with obedience beecause wee doe know how 22 That all may bee saued all trauailing by land or by water It were pittie but their mouthes were stopt who forbid vs to pray that all men may bee saued It is the reuealed will of God and although wee know that all are not yet beecause wee know not exactly who are and that our desire is extended without exclusion equally to all in that sence as our sauiour willeth so wee wish and desire that all men may bee saued for those that trauell if a blessing come vpon them whilst they trauel to good ends by land or by water and this for our prayer the church hath an interest by the communion of Saints if they trauel to euil ends and finde successe this mercie serueth to make them better and therfore as wee pray that God would strike through the loynes of those who rise vp against him and against his annoynted so whilst wee know not definitiuely who are such Indeffinitly wee pray for his defence to all those which trauell by land or by water where politick respects or Gods reuealed will particularly forbid not ther Charitie commandeth for to pray for all 23 Bells and Organs are from Popes To refuse them for that reason were rather mallice then wisdome for seeing the one calleth by the sound the people to the Temple the other by sounding furthereth the prayse of God in the temple it is not their author that can be a reason to make vs mislike either they ayme at some other end whom so harmelesse inuentions can so much displease That wee worthely lamenting our sinnes may obtaine of thee perfect remission they tell vs not in this what they doe mislike and therefore wee will accept of their gentle allowance wherein they say this requireth a fauorable exposition that the words were well ment as they were appointed for vs. 24 On Christmas day it is said thou hast giuen vs thy Sonne this day to bee borne of a Virgin the same words wee vse all the weeke after as if Christ vpon euery day had bene borne a new I hope it is not the memorie of his Natiuitie that doth displease them If this day when perhaps it was not be that which in this they do mislike the Church tyeth no man to so strict an acception of this day as if it were ment this verie particuler day but that it may without offence bee vnderstood of the solemnitie of that feast if they haue learned to think and to speake otherwise wee haue no such custome neither the Church of God 25 Scripture openly abased to shew a necessitie of Baptisme from that place except a man be borne againe of water and of the Spirit Wee hope a necessitie they will not deny of Baptisme and if this place bee not sufficient to proue it wee will be readie to afford them other if this be that which offends them our interpretation of it other haue told them concerning this wherein their negatiue is all that is alledged that in expositions of Sacred Scripture where a litterall construstion will stand the farthest from the letter is commonly the worst 26 That wee pray for the dead when wee say remember not O Lord our offences nor the offences of our forefathers No but because God punisheth temporallie sonnes euen for the iniquities and transgressions of their fathers as the infants in the flood in Sodome which they well knew who asked our Sauiour who had sinned this man or his father and that wee goe on for the most part to fill vp the measure of our fathers sinnes which must fall heauie vpon vs when it commeth with a double force therefore not for them but our selues wee say Remember not O Lord our offences nor the offences of our forefathers 27 Out of the Collect vpon Sainct Michaels day prayer is made for the help of Angells And why not doth any man think that they doe not help vs beeing ministring spirits and seeing he hath giuen his Angells charge ouer vs may not wee pray to haue their assistance wee onely aske them as Christ thinkst thou that I cannot pray to my father and hee will giue moe then twelue legions of Angells If any thing bee misliked beesides these these being but small occasions of so great a difference our Church doubtlesse hath many which are able and wil be willing to giue them what satisfaction they can demaund but if it offend them beecause it is auncient or solemne or sober or charitable wee are sory for their weaknesse but wee had rather offend them then the whole Church of God CHAP. XIIII ¶ Of Tolleration of diuers Religions and how far discenting opinions from the true Christian faith may and ought to bee permitted in one and the same kingdome THere are few kingdomes in the world which haue not at some times diuersities of religion nourished and brought vp in the bosome of them for the enuious man whilst others sleep is watchfull and diligent to sow Tares these vsually either in mercie or for their nearenesse to that which is good are suffered to grow till the time of haruest If naturall bodies of men either had no diseases or that rest were not sometimes auaileable to procure their health Wisdome were a vertue in Phisitions of litle vse and vndoubtedly patience would bee thought Sloth But seeing the eyes of councell in all euills that are looke not so much what they be as what they may bee and that the best perfection which humane indeuours doe or can receiue is from that leysurable maturitie that times affoord moments and instants being onely fit either for powres infinit or for weaknesse that is furthest from them all men haue as much reason not ouer hastely to censure what the wisest doe as the wisest haue warrant and example not ouer hastelie to performe