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spirit_n truth_n worship_n worship_v 19,034 5 9.4594 4 true
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A85746 Of the authority of the highest powers about sacred things. Or, The right of the state in the Church. Wherein are contained many judicious discourses, pertinent to our times, and of speciall use for the order and peace of all Christian churches. / Put into English by C.B. M.A. The method of every chapter is added in the margent, and collected at the end.; De imperio summarum potestarum circa sacra. English. Grotius, Hugo, 1583-1645.; Barksdale, Clement, 1609-1687, translator. 1651 (1651) Wing G2117; Thomason E1244_1; ESTC R202244 156,216 365

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Christian Magistrate as the true Deputy of God in his Dominion So the Basil Confess Yea the English Church denounces Excommunication against them that deny the King of England that Authority in Ecclesiasticall affaires which was used by the Hebrew Kings 'T would be tedious to transcribe what hath been written in defence hereof Besides the Divines all the writers of Politie that are worth the reading have given account of this not only as a part but as the principall and best part of the Imperiall Right Neither have only the antient Christians and late reformed but other Nations also deliver'd this with so great consent that 't is most manifestly the very voyce of right reason common to all man-kind and being derived from the most antient before the depravation of Religion by a long Succession hath been deliverd to their Posterity The first care in a Common-wealth is about things Divine thus Aristotle and Plutarch This is the first thing in making Lawes It is fit saith he the Best should be honour'd by the best and He that ruleth all by him that ruleth The most ancient Law-givers Charondas and Zaleucus approv'd the same by their own example and the twelve Tables the Fountain of the Roman Law derived from the Greeks contained sundry Precepts about Sacred things Justinian and Theodosius have Lawes concerning Religion in their Codes and Ulpian defines the wisdome of the Law to be the knowledge of things Divine as well as Humane Suarez himselfe confesseth It hath been alwayes observed among men though particular offices Civill and Ecclesiasticall were given to severall persons because the variety of actions required that distinction yet the Supreme Power of both especially as to making Lawes was seated in the Prince and so it appears by Histories that unto Kings and Emperours in the City of Rome and the Empire this Power was ever given The same is also probable of other Common-wealths Generall Custome saith the same Schoole-man declares the institution of Nature Indeed Thomas and Cajetan seem to have thought all the care of Law-givers in those Nations to have regarded only the publick Peace But this thus precisely taken is very hard to be proved and scarce credible For the Christian Fathers doe prove most evidently that the Greeks of old believed Rewards and Punishments after death to be reserved for men by divine Judgement That they thus believed and other Heathens too there are very many Testimonies of most faithfull Authors Why then may we not believe this end was look'd upon by some of their Law-givers especially when Austin saith 'T is not to be doubted very many beside Abrahams Family although the holy Scripture mention only Job and a few more did believe and hope in Christ to come But besides that end eternall happiness the prime and principall this also is a just cause for the Highest Powers to take Religion into their charge the great Consequence it hath to outward felicity and concord and that for two reasons the first in respect of Gods providence for piety hath the promises not only of the future but of the present life Seek first the kingdom of God and all other things shall be added unto you And in the old Law of the Hebrewes a prosperous Reigne fruitfulnesse of the earth victory over enemies are proposed to the godly to the ungodly are threatned most grievous curses Nor were the Gentiles ignorant of this no not after they had departed from the one true God unto their Idols Livy saith All things fall out luckily to those that worship the Gods unprosperously to the despisers of them In Plato there is much to this purpose For Christian writers take only that of Leo to Martian I rejoyce that you are studious of the Churches peace and this shall be your reward the peace you give to the Church your Empire shall partake of The other reason is from the nature and proper efficacy of Religion which is of force to make men quiet obedient lovers of their Country keepers of Justice and Equity and where the people are so well disposed the Common-wealth must needs be happy Hence Plato calls Religion the fortresse of Power the bond of Lawes and good Discipline Cicero The foundation of humane Society and Plutarch sayth the City may more easily be built without ground than the Citizens preserv'd without a persuasion of the deity Cyrus in Xenophon thought his houshold would be the further from any evill enterprize against him or one another the more they feared God and Aristotle notes that Subjects doe most esteem and trust the King whom they believe to stand in awe of the divine power Even false Religion conduces somewhat to outward peace and the nearer it comes to truth the more it prevails to that end but for Christian Religion to let passe the testimonies of her friends the adversaries have given it this praise That it binds men with a holy tye not to commit stealth or robbery not to break their word or faile in their trust as Pliny speaks That it teacheth nothing but what is just and gentle as Ammianus Marcellinus that it is a persuasion which destroyes all wickednesse as it is in Zosimus Nor is this the effect of Religion in that part only where it prescribes a rule for manners and strengthens it with threats and promises the Doctrines and Rites also have no small moment to the furthering of good life and advancing the publick happinesse Xenophon perhaps thought it was a witty conceit when he said T' was all one as to manners whether we believe God corporeall or incorporeall but Truth it self hath taught us otherwise when from this that God is a Spirit is inferr'd therefore He must be worshipped in spirit The most vertuous mind as Seneca also acknowledgeth is the best worship and most acceptable to God So doe even the Philosophers teach that no foul deed is to be committed because God is every where present and because God knowes all that shall come to passe they shew that nothing shall befall good men but what shall turne to their benefit Tiberius was the more negligent of religious duties as Suetonius hath it being perswaded all things were carryed by Fate and it was not in vaine that Plato said If you would have the State goe well you must not suffer any one to teach that God is the cause of Evill deeds which to say is impious and therefore to the Common-wealth most pernicious The same Plato shewes at large that it is of much concernment what rites are used and with what mind in the second Book of his Republick where he setteth down the harme those Ceremonious expiations doe by the use whereof without amendment of life men hoped for pardon of their wickednesse Other causes but lesse principall might be added for which the highest power cannot relinquish the command over sacred things without the very great hazard of the Common-wealth for some Priests are of
of the Gospel for Kings are Pastors too and that of the Lords flock yea Pastors of the Pastors as a Bishop once call'd King Edgar though distinct yet agree in this that the same which is the Pastors only care is the principall care of the Highest Powers namely that Divine things may be rightly ordered and the Salvation of men procured we need not wonder if the Highest Powers for the community of the matter and the end receive sometimes the title of the other Function Hence it was that Constantine call'd himselfe a Bishop and other Emperours had the title of Renowned Pontifs or Priests In the Emperour Martianus the Roman Bishop extolls his Priestly mind and Apostolicall affection and Theodoret mentions the Apostolicall cares of Theodosius As the names so the privilege of the Function hath been given to Emperours The sixt generall Synod forbiddeth Laicks to approach the Altar i.e. the Table of the Lord but the Emperour is excepted Upon which place Balsamo Bishop of Antioch observes how the Emperours were wont to Seale with Wax as the Bishops of that time did and to instruct the people in Religion Now if the Emperours were called as we have shewed they were Bishops and Pontifs and Priests there was then no cause of upbraiding some English writers for attributing to their King a certaine spirituall power seeing the name is often imposed not from the manner of working but from the matter as we call the Laws military nauticall rurall Wherefore the Kings power is also spirituall as it is conversant about Religion which is a spirituall thing CHAP. III. How far sacred and profane actions agree as to the right of having Command over them FIrst let us see what kind of actions for about them Authority is properly conversant may be the matter of command and then what effect the command may have in the severall kinds Actions are first divided into externall and internall The externall are the primary matter under humane power the internall are the secondary nor for themselves but by reason of the externall and therefore about the internall which are wholly separated from the externall and respect them not humane commands are not given Hence is that of Seneca He erres who thinks the whole man can be subdued for the better part is excepted and that common saying Thought is free The reason is because Government re-requires some matter which may fall under the Governours knowledge but God alone is the searcher of hearts and hath the sole Empire of them Unto men the internall acts of others are uknown by their own nature by their own nature I therefore adde because the externall that are done in secret are under Government for by their nature they may be known I said internall acts are subject to command secondarily that comes to passe two wayes either by the intention of the Ruler or by a kind of repercussion in the first manner where the inward act is joyned with the outward and hath influence upon it for the mind is esteemed in offences either perfected or begun in the latter when because any act is made unlawfull by the interdiction of the Ruler for we must be subject not only for wrath but for conscience sake by thought to intend that action is unlawfull not as if humane Law were properly made for the thought but because no man can honestly will that which is dishonest to be done Another partition of Actions is this that before any thing is by men ordain'd concerning them they are either morally defin'd or indefinite Morally defin'd I call those which are either due or unlawfull those may be said to be morally necssary those morally impossible as in the Law dishonest things are all expressed by that word This determining of Actions before any Act of humane Authority ariseth either from their own nature as to worship God is due to lye unlawfull of it self or from the Positive divine Law Those of the former sort are referred to the Law naturall but lest any be deceived by the ambiguity of the word naturall not only those Action are called naturall which flow from principles known by nature but those also which come from naturall principles certainly and determinatly For naturall in this argument is opposed not to Supernaturall but to Arbitrary So when as it is certaine God the Father Son and Holy Spirit are one true God that the same God be worshipped is a point of naturall Law Actions of the latter sort that is determined or defin'd by divine Positive Law are such as were prescrib'd by God some to all men some to one people some to single persons namely to Abraham Isaac Jacob Moses and other servants of God Among all people to Israel alone God prescribed many Positive Lawes pertaining to Religion and other things To all mankind some things were commanded for a time as the Law of the Sabbath presently upon the Creation as some think the Law of not eating bloud or the strangled after the floud Other things to last for ever as the Institutions of Christ concerning Excommunication Baptisme the Supper and if there be any more of that kind These things being understood it may seeme that such Actions only are the just matter about which Humane Authority is exercised which by Divine are left indefinite and free either way For Aristotle describes that which is legally just to be that which from the beginning was indifferent thus or thus but after the Law made ceaseth to be so And this is true if we only look upon such an act of Authority which intrinsecally changeth the action for when as the things that ought to be done and the things unlawfull are determined and therefore immutable as to morall good or evill it follows that indefinite actions are left as the only matter of such a change Neverthelesse when the things that ought to be done and those that ought not are capable of a change extrinsecall and may receive it from humane Authority it is manifest they are Subject to the same Authority unlesse they be actions mecrely internall Hither it pert●ins to assigne the time place manner and per●●ns for performing of due actions so f●r as the circumstances are undefin'd by the nature of the thing and the Law of God also to take away impediments and sometimes to adde rewards and to restraine unlawfull actions by such punishments as are in the Rulers power or else to inflict no punishments which is call'd permission of the fact and is sometimes no fault To him that looks more narrowly into these things it will appeare that by humane command there ariseth a new Obligation even in Conscience though of lesse degree in the things which men were before bound to doe or leave undone For the divine Law of the Decalogue saying to the Jew Thou shalt not kill Thou shall not steale and the rest not only declar'd what was of the Law naturall but by the precept