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A91309 Truth triumphing over falshood, antiquity over novelty. Or, The first part of a just and seasonable vindication of the undoubted ecclesiasticall iurisdiction, right, legislative, coercive power of Christian emperors, kings, magistrates, parliaments, in all matters of religion, church-government, discipline, ceremonies, manners: summoning of, presiding, moderating in councells, synods; and ratifying their canons, determinations, decrees: as likewise of lay-mens right both to sit and vote in councells; ... In refutation of Mr. Iohn Goodwins Innocencies Triumph: my deare brother Burtons Vindication of churches, commonly called Independent: and of all anti-monarchicall, anti-Parliamentall, anti-synodicall, and anarchicall paradoxes of papists, prelates, Anabaptists, Arminians, Socinians, Brownists, or Independents: whose old and new objections to the contrary, are here fully answered. / By William Prynne, of Lincolnes Inne, Esquire. Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1645 (1645) Wing P4115; Thomason E259_1; ESTC R212479 202,789 171

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c. Levit. 8. 3 4 5 c. c. 19. 2. Deut. 29. 2 3. c. 31. 2 3 c. 28. 29. 30 c. Of Joshua c. 8. 33 35. c. 22. 11 to 34. c. 23. 2 to 16. c. 24. 1 to 29. Of the chiefe Magistrates of the Israelites Judg. 20. 1 to 12. Of David King of Israel 1 Chron. 13. 1 to 6. c. 28. 1 2 3. c. 29. 1. to 26. Of King Solomon 1 King 8. 1 2 3. c. 2 Chron. 5. 2. c. Of King Asa 2 Chron. 15. 8 to 16. Of Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20. 3 4 5. c. Of Jehojada 2 Chron. 23. 1 to 20. Of King Joash 2 Chron. 24. 4 to 15. Of King Hezekiah 2 Chron. 30. 1 to 27. c. 31 1 to 5. Of King Josiah 2 Chron. 34. 29 to the end c. 35. 1 to 20. Of Nehemiah c. 8. 1. to 18. c. 9. 1 c. Of Mordecai and Esther Esth 9. 17 to 32. And in defect of Christian Kings and Magistrates the Apostles and whole Church by mutuall consent assembled together in a Synod Acts 6. 15. as the high-Priests Scribes and Elders met together and assembled in their Sanhedrim by temporall authority Matth. 26. 57. c. 27. 1. Mark 14. 51. 55. c. 15. 1. Luk. 22. 66. Acts 4. 5 6 7. c. 5. 21. to 42. c. 6. 12. c. 22. 30. c. 23. 1. 2. For forraigne historicall authorities in all ages and Churches of note Socrates Scholasticus records That since the Emperours were first christian the State of the Church hath hanged on them and the greatest Councels have been and be kept by their advice yea by their summons writs and edicts The first famous generall Councell of Nice was called by Constantine the great the first Christian Emperour Eusebius writes that Constantine not the Pope gathered this generall Councell and by honourable Writs called together the Bishops on every side that they should hasten thither Theodoret This great and holy Councell was gathered to Nicaea by the grace of God and by the godly Emperour Constantine Cassiodore That the zeale of the Prince raised up that most famous Councell at Nicaea who commanded the Bishops and their attendants to come to the Synod on publike Asses Mules and Horses which he provided for them Nicephorus Callisthus That Constantine promulged that most famous Synod of Nice in Bithynia and by his Letters summoned thither the Bishops of all places by a set day and among the rest Pope Julius who by reason of his decrepite age sent Vitus his Presbyter for his Proxie The like writes Sozomen in the same words The Councell of Rome under Pope Meltiades was convented by the same Constantines Writ and here saith Eusebius is a copy of the Emperours Writ whereby he commanded a Councell of Bishops to be kept at Rome And Saint Hieroni To stay certaine Ecclesiasticall dissentions the Emperours writs caused as well the Bishops of the East as of the West to draw to Rome Yea the Councell of Orleance in France and that of Tyrus removed from thence to Ierusalem by the Emperours Letters were both summoned by Constantines Writs The second generall Councell of Constantinople was called by Theodosius the elder the Emperour write Theodoret Sozomen and Nicephorus commanded a Synod of Bishops to meet together in one place out of the provinces of his Empire to confirme the Decrees of the Nicene Councell and the Bishops therein wrote thus to the Emperour We are come to Constantinople by your Majesties commission The third generall Councell at Ephesus was congregated by the younger Theodosius Ex edicto pietatis studiosissimorum Imperatorum sanctum universale concilium Ephesi coactum writes Evagrius with Laurentius Surius and the Bishops themselves in the prologue thereof Cum ex pio edicto coacti essemus in Ephesiorum Metropoli And so farre was Pope Leo from conceiving the right of calling Councels to belong to him that he besought the Emperour Theodosius by an Epistle in these words We beseech your godly Majesty to grant our supplication that you would command a Councell of Bishops to be holden within Italy which Epistle not prevailing he writes another to him in these words All our Churches and all our Priests beseech your Clemencie with sobs and teares that you will command a generall Councell to be held within Italy which yet he denied to grant and summoned the same at Ephesus notwithstanding these intreaties After which this same Pope intreated the Emperour Martianus that it would please his Majestie to command a general Councell and writ to the Clergy and people of Constantinople to make suit with discreet and humble prayer that our most gracious Emperour would vouchsafe to grant our request in that we have desired a generall Councell Yea St Chrysostom being requested to do the like writes thus to Pope Innocent We went in and most humbly besought the most Christian Prince to call a Councell In like manner Sozomen records that the Arrians besought the Emperour Constantius to command a Councell to be holden at Antioch and after this intreated him to summon another Councell at Millain and that the Catholikes sent Hypatianus their Ambassadour to intreat the Emperour that to redresse certaine errours they might have leave to meet together So farre were they from redressing new errours much more then from framing printing Articles Canons Constitutions Oaths and imposing new Rites and Ceremonies as our Bishops lately did in their Episcopall Visitations that they durst not attempt to decree any thing positively against them without the Emperours speciall licence first obtained no not in a publike Councell much lesse in a private Consistorie But to proceed with generall Councels the fourth generall Councell at Chalcedon was assembled by the Emperours Valentinian and Martian Facta est Synodus ex decreto piissimorum ac fidelium Imperatorum Martiani Valentiniani saith the first Action of that Councell This Councell was first summoned by these Emperours to be held at Nice by severall Writs sent by them both to Pope Leo himselfe who was cited thereunto and sent his Proxie thither and to Anatolius Bishop of Constantinople with other Writs to the holy Bishops in all places recorded by Surius where they appearing at the day prefixed they sent two other Writs unto them to remove them from thence to Chalcedon because they could not be present at Nicaea whereupon the holy and universall Councell came together at Chalcedon secundum sacram praeceptionem according to their sacred command The fifth generall Councell at Constantinople was called by the Emperour Justinian Imperator Justinianus sanctam quintam synodum Oecumenicam Episcopis ecclesiarum omnium evocatis coegit writes Nicephorus and Justinian himselfe in his Letters to that Synod recorded by Surius recites that the Councell of Nice was congregated by Constantine the first Councell of Constantinople by Theodosius the elder the
have else-where manifested In King Henry the 3. his Raign I finde these severall printed Acts of Parliament made concerning the Church Bishops Abbots Clergymen and Ecclesiasticall affaires which you may peruse at pleasure 9. H. 3. c. 1. 5. 18. 31. 33. 36 37. The Charter of the Forrest 9. H. 3. c. 4. 11. 16. 20. H. 3. c. 9. 51. H. 3. c. 10. 12. 28. besides those Recorded by Matthew Paris In King Edward the first his Raigne there were these Acts to like purpose 3 E. 1. which begins with this Prologue Because our Soveragine Lord the King had given power to redresse the State of the Realme c. for the common profit of holy Church and of the Realme And because the State of holy Church hath ever been kept c. c. 1 2. 46. 4 E. 1. c. 6. 7 E. 1. the Statute of Mor●main 13. E. 1. c. 5. 19. 29. 31 32 33. 41 42 43. 48. Circumspecte agatis 13 E. 1. commonly called a Statute though 19 E. 3. Fitz. Iurisdiction 28. it be adjudged none The Statute upon the Writ of Consultation 24 Ed. 1. The confirmation of the Charters of the Liberties of England 25 E. 3. c. 4. 6. The Statute concerning certain Liberties granted to the Commons The Statute of Carlisle 25. E. 1. See Cookes 5. Report of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Law f. 13. 34. E. 1. c. 6. In King Edward the seconds dayes I meet with the Statute of A●ticuli Cleri 19 E. 2. which wholly concernes the Clergy their Courts Tythes Rights The Statute de Prerogativa Regis c. 1. 8. 10. 14 15. and Articles against the Kings Prohibition In King Edward the third his Regency I finde very many Statutes concerning the Clergie and all kinde of Church affaires as namely 1 E. 3. Stat 2. c. 10 11. 4 E. 3. c. 6. 5 E. 3. c. 2. 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 1. 14 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. 17. and stat 3 made for the Clergy the Prologue and c. 1 2 3 4 5. 15 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. 6. Parl. 3. c. 6. 18 E. 3. stat 3. for the Clergie c. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7. 23 E. 3. c. 8. 25 E. 3. stat 3 for the Clergie c. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. 25 E. 3. stat 6. of Provisions 27 E. 3. stat 1. c. 1. of Provisions 28 E. 3. c. 14. 31 E. 3. stat 1. c. 4. 11. 13 14. 36 E. 3. c. 8 concerning Priests Salaries c. 38 E. 3. stat 2. against provisors and Appeales to Rome c. 1 2 3 4 5. 45 E. 3. c. 3. 50 E. 3. c. 1. 4 5. To which I shall adde only this observation That the prologues to the statutes of 1 E. 3. stat 2. 2 E. 3 stat 3. 28 E. 3. 38 E. 3. stat 1. and 50 E. 3. with others begin thus To the honour of God and of HOLY CHVRCH and redresse of the oppressions of the people c. these ensuing Acts were made granted to testifie that even in those dayes our Parliaments first began with matters of God and the Church and settled them by Lawes as there was occasion and then proceeded to temporall matters and grievances the very Statute of Magna Charta having the same prologue wherein you may discerne this method pursued and in most subsequent Parliaments I shall adde to these printed Acts 6 E. 3. num 5. prohibiting Bishops to meddle in matters of the peace 45 E. 3. num 15. removing Bishops from all temporall Offices 50 E. 3. num 99. 103. complaining against popish Cardinals 40 E. 3. num 7 8. a notable Record against the Popes claime to the Kingdome of England by vertue of K. Johns grant 17 E. 3. num 59 60. 18 E. 3. num 59 60. 38 E. 3. num 7. 50 E. 3. num 85. 87 88. complaining against yea restraining the Popes exactions and usurpations as the cause of all plagues 50 E. 3. num 46 47. complaining against the Canons of the Clergy and 47 E. 3. num 24. against Ordinaries incroaching upon the civill Iurisdiction To proceed to King Richard the second the Statutes in the first yeare of his Raigne have this Preface Richard by the Grace of God c. Know that to the honour of God and reverence of holy Church for to nourish peace unity and concord in all the parts of the Realme c. We have ordained and established certain Statutes c. First it is agreed and established that holy Church shall haue and enjoy all her rights liberties and franchises wholly and without blemish c. The confirmation of Magna Charta with other temporall Laws next follow then c. 13 14 15. three Lawes for paying of Tythes and freeing Clergymen from arrests during their exercising of divine Service The second Parliament in ● Rich. 2. hath the like prologue To the honour of God and holy Church cap. 1 confirmes the franchises liberties of the Church 3. R. 2. C. 1 doth the like c. 3. is a Statute against Provisions from Rome to avoyd Nonresidency to provide for instruction of the people by preaching and reforme many abuses in the Church occasioned by provisions made at the complaints clamors and divers Petitions of the Kings Leige people delivered in divers Parliaments to reforme these abuses 5. R. 2. cap. 1. hath the like preface c. 1. confirmes the Churches liberties 5. R. 32. Parl. 2. c. 5. Is a Statute made at the Clergies motion to suppresse haresies and Errors contrary to the Christian faith and to imprison haeretickes and erronious Preachers till they justifie themselves according to the Law and reason of holy Church 6 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. hath the like prologue and c. 1. Ordaines and accords that our holy Mother the Church of England have all her Liberties whole and unhurt and the same fully enjoy and use 7 Rich. 2. hath the same prologue c. 8. the like confirmation of the Churches priviledges and c. 12. prohibits Provisions from Rome 8 Rich. 2. hath the like preface and enacts in the first chapter That holy Church have all her liberties 9. R. 2. c 4. 5. concerns Ordinaries Priors dative and perpetuall and Preists 10. R. 2. c. 1. saves pontificall dignity and priviledge of holy Church and cleares all in all things aforesaid 11. R. 2. c. 3. declares that Bishops ought not to be present or voting in Parliament in matters of blood 1. 2. R. 2. c. 1. confirmes the Churches liberties Chap. 7. exempts pilgrimes from the punishments of Vagrants and c. 15. prohibits Provisions from any forraign power 13. R. 2. recites That the acts therein passed were to the honour of God and holy Church c. and c. 13. prohibits hunting on holy-dayes and Priests to keepe Dogs who have not livings to a certaine value c. 18 concernes the Bishop and Deane of Lincolne and c. 29. Pilgrimes 13. R. 2. Parl. 2. c. 23. provides for the election of Bishops and all other ecclesiasticall
GHOST and Vs to lay upon you no other burthen then these necessary things Now Brother we challenge you to shew us ANY PARLIAMENT COVNCELL SYNOD EVER SINCE THE APOSTLES that could or can say thus It seemed good to the Holy Ghost and Vs to determine controversies of Religion to make and impose Lawes to bind all men c. Shew this to us at this time and we will obey But if you cannot AS YOV NEVER CAN never let any man presse upon us that Scripture that Synod WHICH HATH NO PARALELL in the whole world and so is NO PRESIDENT PATTERNE FOR ANY COVNCELL SYNOD PARLIAMENT Thus my Brother Burton concludes hence with abundance of confidence But sweet Brother let not him who putteth on his harnesse boast as he that puts it off receive your Answer first and then be as vainly confident as you will 〈◊〉 your obtuse Argument afterwards which I shall thus retort upon you First I suppose you will grant That the Apostles Preached as well a writ and determined by an infallible spirit and by the Holy Ghosts Divine inspiration when as neither your self nor any other Independent nor Presbiterial● Minister can infallibly thus Preach write or determine at this day Ergo Brother by your Argument neither you nor any other Minister must henceforth Preach unto nor determine any Controversies of Religion or Church-government at this day being not guided by any infallible Spirit and because you may possibly erre and cannot say as the Apostles did it seemes good to the Holy Ghost and to us and then Brother of what value are all your Sermons Books and confident asseverations of the Divinity of your Independent way your Disciples and congregation may make wast paper of them instead of reading them as the Oracles of God a some ignorants perchance esteem them 2. Christ and his Apostle when they ordained Elders and laid their hands upon them did usually give them the holy Ghost and gift of tongues who fel upon the parties ordained and those to whom they Preached and to those whom they Baptized as the marginall texts assure us which no Ministers nor Elders can do now Ergo no Ministers may or can now ordain any Ministers by imposition of hands nor baptize any children or men nor preach the Gospel to any because they cannot give them the gifts of Tongues nor cause the Holy Ghost to fall upon them as Christ and the Apostles did 3. Moses gave no civill nor judiciall Laws to the Israelites under the Law but such as he received immediately from God by an infallible Spirit Ergo Kings and Parliaments at this day can make no civill temporall Lawes to governe their people by because they receive them not immediately from God by an infallible spirit 4. Christ sent none to Preach the Gospel or administer the Sacraments but such whom himself immediatly called ordained furnished miraculously with gifts of tongues and with the Holy Ghost A priviledge peculier to the Apostles and some few others in their daies not communicable to any ordinary Ministers and made Elders and Bishops by the Holy Ghost Ergo No Ministers but such who are thus immediately enabled endued and ordained by the Holy Ghost may or ought to preach the Gospel And then where are all your Independent Ministers and Lay-preachers I hope Brother by this time you most renounce your Argument as absurd or else your Preaching Church Ministery at least your writings will be little valued which now you see are not infallible 2. A possibility of erring or some actuall errours in Councells Synods Parliaments are no good grounds of rejecting all their determinations Lawes Edicts but only such as are apparently erronious and repugnant to the Scripture Such indeed you may disobey but to all others you must submit even in point of conscience as I have formerly proved If you deny this then marke the consequence of your deniall Ministers may and sometimes actually doe erre both in their preaching and writing and I doubt Brother it is or may be your own case Ergo people must neither obey nor believe any thing they preach or write but contemne all Parliaments Princes Magistrates Elders Parents Masters Tutors of all sorts may and oft-times actually doe swerve from truth and Iustice in some of their Lawes Orders Precepts commands and Iudgements Ergo their subjects wives children husbands schollars pupills must receive no Lawes Orders Commands or instructions from them nor yet obey them in any thing which they shall prescribe Brother you may as rationally argue in many things we offend all Ergo we must not endeavour to doe any thing that is good Or conclude in many things and in making Lawes we erre all Therefore we must obey no humane Ecclesiasticall or civill Laws in which we can discern no apparent error Brother will you drink no wine at all as the Apostle gives Timothy advise to do because some have dranke poyson in it and you perchance may doe so to Or shall none adventure to marry a good wife or husband because so many have met with bad Answer me these questions and then you need no other answer to what you object but your own reply to them 3. Admit Synods Councells Parliaments have sometimes erred out of humane frailty yet this is a most certaine truth that they are not so apt or prone to erre having more helpes meanes assistances to keep them from erring when they are met together in the Name and feare of God as private men or Conventi●les of persons lesse learned lesse experienced they being more able to discover and bolt out truthes by debate then they This is the ground why Solomon concludes That two are better then on● that in the multitude of Councellors there is safety why the greatest points of Religion and State have in all ages been debated resolved not in Conclaves Conventicles Chambers Closets but in generall or nationall Councell● Assemblies Parliaments as the most effectuall meanes to discover suppresse errours heresies and resolve doubts for which we have an unanswerable pregnant president in the Old Testament 2 Chron. 30. 1. to the end where King Hezechiah with all the Princes and Congregation of Israel and Iudah assembled in full Parliament at Ierusalem upon solemn debate resolved AND ESTABLISHED A DECREE to keep the Passeover in the second moneth because they could not keepe it in the first the Priests and people being not sufficiently sanctified And another in the New in the Chapter objected Acts 15. where the Apostles themselves assemble a full Synod to debate and resolve the great contr●versie raised in the Church concerning the necessity of Circumcision This then being an indubitable Verity it is most certaine that Parliaments Generall or Nationall Synods and Councells are the fittest of all others to make Lawes and Canons for all civill and Ecclesiasticall matters in State or Church because they are least subject to errour And therefore there is great
by Parliament only THirdly As Bishops and Clergy-men have no power at all to summon Councells Synods or Convocations nor yet to treat or conclude of any Ecclesiasticall Canons or Constitutions in them c. without the speciall licences of Kings under their Great Seals authorizing them so I shall next manifest that when Councells or Synods have by vertue of their license agreed on and composed any such Articles Canons Constitutions Orders Ceremonies c. they cannot print publish promulge impose execute or put them in ure nor are they of any binding force or authority till they are approved ratified confirmed by Kings and Christian Princes Subscriptions Imperiall Edicts Patents Acts of State and Parliament and that most ancient Councells Synods were but Parliaments wherein Kings Nobles and Lay-men were present as well as Clergy-men This I shall manifest by some Presidents both abroad and at home in all ages To begin with Scripture Testimonies When all the whole Congregation of Israel assembled by the summons of Joshua had in their Convocation at Shechem made a Covenant Ordinance and Statute that they would serve the Lord and obey his voyce Joshua being then their chiefe Governour confirmed the same by writing it in the Book of the Law of God and erecting a great stone in the place for a witnesse thereof When the Princes and all the Congregation in Jerusalem assembled by King Hezechiah had took counsell together and concluded to keep the Passeover in the second Moneth because they could not doe it on the first the King established their Decree by his Proclamation and Letters When the Jewes upon Mordecai his Letter to them had in a publike Convocation ordained and took upon them and their seed to keep the feast of Purim throughout every generation family province and city in remembrance of their great deliverance from Hamans conspiracy against them Queene Esther and Mordecai wrote with all authority and confirmed this Feast and Decree by their Letters the Decree of Esther Yea we read that when the Presidents Governours Princes Counsellours and Captains of King Darius to entrap Daniel moved him to establish a royall Statute and make a firme Decree that whosoever should aske a petition of any god or man for thirty dayes save of the King hee should bee cast into the Lyons denne they brought this Decree to Darius to establish and signe that it should not bee changed requesting him to signe it who did it accordingly else it had not been obligatory And wee likewise find in Scripture that when as the King of Nineveh and his great men upon Jonah his preaching had made a Decree for a publike Fast the King confirmed and published it to bee observed by his Proclamation To come to Councells under Christian Princes and Emperours The first famous Synod of Nice with the Constitutions Canons and Decrees therein compiled were confirmed by the Imperiall Edicts of Constantine the Great who sate President in it Edictum quod quidem pondus habebat autoritatem cum hac Epistola Imperator in singulas misit Civitates writes Eusebius Who records further of him That hee confirmed and consigned by his authority the Canons made by Bishops in publike Councells that so it might not bee lawfull for the Princes of other Nations to abrogate the things which were decreed by them Which had been invalid without his Imperiall confirmation The Councell kept at Rome under Pope Sylvester was confirmed by the subscription of Constantine and Helena his mother The second generall Councell of Constantinople after they had finished their Decrees and Canons sent them with this Epistle to Theodosius the Elder desiring him to ratifie them In the beginning verily of our writing to your Piety wee give thanks to God who hath constituted the government of your Majesty for the common peace of the Churches and the CONFIRMATION of the true Faith But giving God due thanks wee likewise referre to your Majesty those necessary things which are acted in the sacred Councell to wit that from the time wee assembled at Constantinople by your Majesties command wee have first of all renued our mutuall concord between us and after this we have prescribed and pronounced as it were certaine Conclusions or Canons in which we have confirmed and approved the faith of the Fathers assembled at Nice and have rejected with extreme execration and detestation the preverse heresies and wicked opinions which have sprung up against it Moreover also for the right setling and ordering of the state and discipline of the Churches wee have enacted and prescribed certaine Canons all which wee have annexed to this our Writing Wee therefore beseech your Clemency VT PER LITERAS TVAE PIET ATIS RATVM ESSE IVBEAS CONFIRMES QVE CONCILII DECRETVM that by your Majesties Letters you would command the Decree of the Councell to bee ratified and confirme the same and as you have honoured the Church with those Letters by which you have called us together so you would likewise CORROBORATE WITH YOVR DECREE AND SEALE THE SVMME AND CONCLVSION OF THOSE THINGS WHICH ARE DECREED And hereupon writes Nicephorus CONSTITVTIONE QVO QVE IMPERATOR SANXIT the Emperour enacted by his Constitution that the authority of the Nicene Creed should bee firme and perpetuall and that all Churches in all places should bee committed to those who professed one Divinity of the Father Son and holy Ghost in the subsistence of three Persons of the same honour and glory And likewise made a Law that those who abhered from the profession of this faith should not keep any Ecclesiasticall assemblies nor should not presume thenceforth to preach concerning the Faith nor have power to elect or consecrate any one that they should bee banished out of the City and Country fined and have no communion with other Citizens c. Which Edicts of his are Registred verbatim by Justinian The Synod of Ancyra sent Legates to Constantius informing him that Eudoxius did study to deprave the Faith requesting him TO CONFIRME THOSE THINGS which were decreed at Sardice Syrnium and in other Synods So the Catholike Bishops in the Councell of Ariminum write to the same Constantius beseeching him to heare their Orators who should declare unto him the Sentence of that their Councell in writing and not to permit any innovation or change but to suffer them to rest in those things which were lawfully defined and decreed by their Ancestors and that nothing might be added to or detracted from their Constitutions but that they all might remaine untouched and intire as they were preserved by the piety of his Father till that time The Councell of Africk Can. 25. to 32 34 42 51 59 60. and the Bishops therein assembled make divers petitions and requests to the Emperor Honorius and the temporall Judges and Magistrates to reforme Idolatry suppresse the Donatists and reform many abuses by them complained of by their Lawes and
Edward the 6. his Reigne are most punctuall and pegnant evidences hereof as namely 1. Edw. 6. ch 11. For administring the Sacrament in both kindes therein proved necessary by sundry Texts of Scripture and punishing such persons as shall unreverently speake against the Sacrament with Temporall and Ecclesiasticall censures ch 2. concerning the election and creation of Bishops by the Kings Letters Patents and what Processe and Seales they shall use declaring that they have no Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction but meerely from the King ch 9. For uniting certaine Churches within the City of Yorke ch 12. which abolisheth Sanctuaries and Clergy in some cases 2. and 3. E. 6. ch 1. For the Vniformity of service and the administration of the Sacraments throughout the Realme ch 13. For the true payment of Tythes ch 19. For abstinence from flesh ch 20. Concerning Recusants ch 23. For positive Lawes made against the Mariage of Priests ch 23. The repeale of a Statute touching Precontracts of Mariage 3. and 4. E. 6. ch 10. For the abolishing and putting away of diverse superstitious Popish Books and Images chap. 11. That the Kings Majesty may nominate and appoint 32. persons halfe Clergy-men and halfe Laymen to peruse and make Ecclesiasticall Lawes ch 12. For the manner of Ordaining Ecclesiasticall Ministers and Consecrating Bishops ch 15. Against fond and phantasticall Prophecies 5. and 6. E. 6. ch 1. For the uniformity of Common Prayer and administration of the Sacraments ch 3. For the keeping of Holy-dayes and Fasting dayes ch 4. Against fighting and quarelling in Churches and Church-Yards ch 12. For the lawfulnesse of Priests Mariage and legitimation of their children chap. 13. Touching Religious persons and c. 23. Against Vsurie All these are clearely Ecclesiasticall Acts yet made by Parliament The Statutes in Queene Maries Reigne though of a different Religion from her brother and a zealous Pontifician sufficiently evidence the jurisdiction of our Princes and Parliaments in matters of the Church and Religion witnesse 1. Mar. Parl. 1. Ses 2. Chap. 2. Repealing diverse acts-made touching Religion in King Edward the 6. his Raigne and setting up Masse and the old Lyturgies againe chap. 2. Against Offendors of Preachers and other Ministers in the Church or Church-Yard or interrupting them in their Sermons or saying Masse under paine of imprisonment fines and Ecclesiasticall censures chap. 15. For re-edifying the parish Church of Saint Ellins in Stangate 1. Mariae Par. 2. c. 1. Declaring That the Regall power of this Realme is in the Queenes Majesty as fully and absolutely as ever it was in any of her most Noble Progenitors Kings of this Realme chap. 3. Being an Act of Repeale of two severall acts in the 7. yeare of King Edward the 6. touching the dissolution of the Bishoprick of Durham Chap. 9. Touching Ordinances Rules c. in Cathedrall Churches and Schooles c. 10. Repealing a statute for the uniting of the parish Churches of Onger and Greensted in the County of Essex 1. and 2. Phil. and Mary chap. 6. For the reviving of three Statutes made for the punishment Of Heresies and that with forseiture of Lands imprisonment and death in some cases chap. 8. Intituled an Act repealing all Statutes Articles and provisions made against the See Apostolike of Rome since the 20. yeare of King H. 8. and restoring the Bishops with their Courts offices the Pope himselfe to their former usurped jurisdictions in England ratifying this Popes very Bulles and dispensations to make them valid and setling the whole affaires of the Church of England chap. 9. 20. For the punishing of traiterous Sermons and Prayers against the Queene chap. 17. Concerning leases of some spirituall persons and 2. and 3. Phil. and Mary chap. 4. For the extinguishment of first fruits c. All Ecclesiasticall Statutes In Queen Elizabeths happy Raigne there are sundry Statutes abundantly manifesting her own and the Parliaments supreame Iurisdictions and Legislative power in matters of Religion Church-government Discipline c. as namely 1 Eliz. c. 1. An Act restoring to the Crowne the ancient Jurisdiction OVER THE STATE ECCLESIASTICALL SPIRITVALL and abolishing all fortaigne power repugnant to the same which gives the Queen her heires and successors all manner of Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction in and over all Ecclesiasticall persons and causes and power to correct redresse and reform all manner of HERESIE SCHISME ERRORS ABVSES OFFENCES ECCLESIASTICALL prescribes the oath of Supremacy which all are to take and most Independents have formerly taken wherein they do utterly testifie and declare in their consciences that the Queen and her Successours are the onely supreame Governours of this Realme and other their Dommions as well IN ALL SPIRITVALL OR ECCLESIASTICALL THINGS OR CAVSES as temporall c. which jurisdiction of theirs they sweare to their power to assist and defend Which oath if any refuse to take hee shall forseit all his Ecclesiasticall promotions and temporall offices This Act likewise abolisheth the Popes jurisdiction under pain of a praemunire and other mulcts against the maintainers of it It determines what shall be adjudged HERESIE and what not namely Only such matter and cause as heretofore hath been determined ordered and adjudged to be heresie by the authority of the Canonicall Scriptures o● by the first foure generall-Councels or any of them or by any other generall Councell wherein the same was declared heresie by the expresse and plain words of the Canonicall Scripture or such as hereafter shall be ordered IVDGED OR DETERMINED TO BE HERESIE BY THE HIGH COVRT OF PARLIAMENT OF THIS REALME with the assent of the Clergy in their Convocation to wit by way of assistance and advice cumulatively not negatively as if their assent were simply necessary So as by this Act the Parliament is made the sole proper Iudge what is or shal be reputed punished as heresie what not how it shal be punished the highest point of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction Ch. 2. For the uniformity of Common prayer and service in the Church and administration of the Sacraments enjoyning conformity under temporall and Ecclesiasticall punishments is an irrefragable proofe of the Parliaments Ecclesiasticall power in all Church matters and 1 Eliz. c. 3. 4. 6. 5 Eliz. c. 1. For the assurance of the Queens royall power over all States and Subjects within her Highnesse Dominions ch 23. For the due executing of Writs de Excommunicato capiendo ch 28. For translating of the Bible and divine Service into the Welch tongue 8 Eliz. c. 1. Declaring the manner of making and Corsecrating the Archbishops Bishops and Ministers of this Realm to be good lawfull and perfect ratifying the Booke of common Prayer and of Ordination together with the Queens Soveraigne Ecclesiasticall Authority 13 Eliz. c. 2. Against the bringing in and putting in execution of Bulls and other instruments of the See of Rome chap. 8. Against Usury ch 19. concerning Dilapidations c. 12. To reforme certain disorders touching Ministers of the Church ratifying the 39.
Common State before all controversies of Religion and causes Ecclesiasticall had beene concluded King Canute in his Parliament holden at Winchester upon Christmas day after sundry Lawes and Orders made touching the faith the keeping of holy Dayes publike prayers learning of the Lords Prayer receiving of the Communion thrice in the yeare the manner and forme of Baptisme fasting and other like matters of Religion in the end thereof saith thus Iam sequitur institutum Legum secularium Now followeth an Order for temporall Lawes Thirdly we see that the Godly Catholique Princes in old times thought is their duty before all other offices of the Common weale first to determine matters of Religion and that even BY THE PARLIAMENTS OF THIS REALME In a Parliament holden by King William the Conquerer it is written thus The King for as much as he is the Vicar of the highest King is therefore appointed for this purpose that he should Rule and defend the Kingdome and People of the Lord and above all things the holy Church c. Hereby it appeareth that Kings and Princes are specially and of purpose appointed by God not only to defend but also to Governe and Rule the holy Churh How be it if any imperfection shall appeare in the former Parliaments we give God thankes for the same that is and trust that for his owne names sake he will confirme what he hath begun The hearts of Princes and determinations of Parliaments are in his hands If any thing want the arme of the Lord is not Shorted he is able to supply the same So our incomperable Iewell enough to satisfie and silence all our Opposites Thomas Bilson Warden and afterwards Bish of Winchester bringing in the Prelates and Iesui●s objecting against our reformed Protestant Religion that it was brought in and ratified not by a Councell and Synod of the Clergy but by the Prince Queene Elizabeth and the Parliament who say they had no power to determine or deliberate of those matters returnes this answer May not the Prince command for truth within hee Realme except your consents be first required and had● May not her Highnes serve Christ in making laws for Christ without your likeing Claime you this interest and prerogative that without you nothing shall be done in matters of Religion by the Laws of God or by the liberties of this Realme By the Lawes of the land you have no such priviledges Parliaments have beene kept by the King and his Barons the. Clergy wholy excluded and their Acts and statutes good And when the Bishops were present their votes from the Conquest to this day were never negative By Gods Law you have nothing to do with making Lawes of Kingdoms or Common wealthes You may teach you may not command persuasion is your part compulsion is the Princes If Princes imbrace the truth you must obey them If they pursue truth you must abide them By what authority then claim you this Dominion over Princes that their laws for Religion shall be voyde unles you consent seeing they are the maintainers establishers and upholders of the faith with publique power and positive Lawes which they and their Parliaments may make without a precedent councel of Clergy men to guid them as he there proves at large by sundry presidents If any Concurre not with me in this undoubted Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction of Christian Princes and Parliaments after all these pregnant testimonies I must tell them in plaine english they directly violate their late vow and Covenant and symbol●e herein with Jesuites and Popish Prelates whose doctrines they have abjured by their Nationall Covenant and therefore cannot may not ever hereafter emb●ace without the highest Perjury and plaine Apostacy unto Popery I shall finish this Section of the Authority and power of Parliaments in matters of Religion Church-government Discipline and enacting Lawes in all and every of these particulars with some forraigne presidents in the Parliaments Diers Assemblyes of Estats in other Realme republikes Should I now relate unto you the many ecclesiasticall Laws of all sorts made in them I might swell this Treatise into many folio volumes I shal therefore only give you a brief touch catalogue of some few which the Studious may peruse make use of at their leisure For FRANCE you may survey the Decrees of King Childebert debated and agreed by him and his people in a Parliament de quibuscunque conditionibus una cum Optimatibus nostris c. 2. 4. c. 15. For sanctifying the Lords Day prohibiting the dressing of any but necessary food on it all Bodily labour under pecuniary mulcts The ecclesiasticall laws of Charles the great Ludovicus pius Charles the Bald collected into one volum by Abbot Ansegisus Benedictus Levita Lindebrogus others printed with some pettinent additions Parisijs 1640. stiled Capitula Regum Episcoporum Maximeque OMNIVM NOBILIVM FRANCORVM were made GENERALI CONSENSV PIDPLIVM SKORVM ET GENERALI CONSVLTV ET COMMVNI CONCILIO by generall consent of the King Bishops and especially of the Nobles and states of France in Common Councells Parliaments and Assemblies of the estates Who had so great a power in making rejecting Canons ecclesiasticall Lawes that when in the yeare 846. the Bishops of France and their suffragans had in their Synods compiled certaine Canons by the command of Charles the Bald and tendered them to him as he had commanded in Sparna● a Village of the Church of Rhaemes to peruse and approve the King Dissidentibus regni sui PRIMORIBVS ab eorundem episcoporum admonition● by reason that the Nobles and other men of his Realme differed from the Bishops in opinion in most of those Canons the King and Nobles out of all their Canons or Chapters haec tantum observanda complacenda sibi colligerunt Episcopis scripto tradiderunt dicentes NON AMPLIVS DE FORVM CAPJTVLIS ACCEPTASSE QVAM ISTA ET ISTASE VELLECVM PRINCIPE OBSERVARE which were Stiled Captule Regis CAROLI not the Bishops Canons By which it is evident that no ecclesiasticall lawes or Canons could be made in France to bind either Clergy or Laity but such at the King Nobles Parliament and three estates approved and confirmed I shall add to this that Anno 1307. King Philip the 4. of France assembled a Parliament at Paris wherein the Laity of France exhibited 65. Articles against the Clergy to regulate their jurisdiction and abuses which were there largely handled and debated as you may read at leisure in Masters Fox who records the passages very fully in the French Histories What the Parliament Estates in France have done enacted in matters of Religion Church-Government and discipline of ancient and latter times you may read at large in Liurentius Bochellus his Decreta Ecclesiae Gallicaiae in Carolus Molinaeus Contra parvas Datas c. in William Ranchin his Survay of the Councel of Trent but above all in Antonie Fontanon
things to make good his Argument 1. That if there were no other particular Church in the world then one as that of Abrahams family should it not be a compleat Church untill there were other Churches on whose jurisdiction it should depend I answer yes But this is not the case nor question We in our Realme blessed be God have in all parts not only one particular christian family church but many thousand Parochiall Churches Congregations as our very Almanacks as well as Cosmographers will informe you What then Brother will you inferre from this sole Church in Abrahams family to our Churches now Will you argue Abraham in his dayes had a compleat absolute Independent Church in his own family onely Ergo now there ought to be such an Independent absolute Church in every family at least where there is a sufficient number requisite to make up a ministeriall body as you interpret it what then will become of your congregationall Churches and our Parochial consisting of many great families they must by this new Doctrine divide themselves presently into so many families or Independent Churches as there are great families in them and then I hope the Master of the family onely not an Independent Minister must be their Paster and Ruler as Abraham was in his and then farewell the office of Minister which some of your Lay Elders exercise without scruple denying the very calling of Ministers and all our Churches too Brother will you argue thus Adam was a compleat and absolute man alone therefore he needed not a helper or wife or family to be joyned to him Suppose you should take a single person who formerly lived alone by and of himselfe without relation to or communion with any other men like a Popish Hermite or Anchorite into your family Church or incorporate him into this City or any company in it will you say that because this man was absolute and under no command at first Ergo he must continue so still in your family Church this City and his company and neither you nor any of them may or can of right enact any thing to controle him I trow not When there were only single Families living remote from others in the world they were absolute and compleate Churches Republikes of themselves but when these single families multiplyed and combined themselves into Villages Cities Provinces Republikes Kingdomes they thereby lost their pristine liberty absolutenesse independencie compleatnesse and of intire small bodies Churches Republikes became onely parts and members of those larger ones to which they were thus combined So it is with particular Mother Churches when there was but one particular Church in the world or in one State or Kingdome the case of all the first Churches planted by the Apostles without any Neighbour Churches to combine with this Church being under no superiour Christian Magistrates was absolute and independent in it selfe there being no other Church to joyne with But if this one Church through the encrease of Christians shall swell so great as to spread it selfe over all the City or Republike wherein it is and so upon necessity must divide it selfe into sundry particular Congregations then all these Churches being under one and the selfe-same Republike and united together under one supreame Civill Magistrate as members of the same Nation Kingdom City Republike and of the self-same nationall or Provinciall Church doe thereupon lose their absolutenes and Independency and become subject to the Power Lawes Canons Determinations Government and Discipline of the whole Nationall Church and Kingdome of which they are but members which to preserve publike peace unity order amity ought constantly to be governed by the self-same generall Ecclesiasticall Lawes setled by the common consent of all their severall National Synods and Parliaments as Civill Lawes are which oblige all But this saith my Brother in the second place takes away the lawfull Jurisdiction and rights of particular Churches Ergo it is not to be admitted I answer first By the like reason you may argue the joyning of many particular persons into one family of divers families into one Parish of sundry Parishes into one City of divers Citie into one State of sundry States and Kingdomes into one Monarchy or Empire of divers Companies and Regiments into one Army of sundry Knights Citizens Burgess●● and Peeres into one Parliament and many Ministers into one Synod deprives them of their Independency their particular Rights Interests and subjects them to a new superiour power Iurisdiction command and to their publicke Lawes and Ordinances Ergo it is unlawfull intollerable and such Corporations Republicks Kingdomes Empires Parliaments Synods ought not to be If this be a good consequence you will subvert all humane Societies Corporations Republicks Synods Parliaments Independent Churches and Families to by like reason ● This takes not away the lawfull rights of particular Congregations but rather improves them for their owne particular and the publick good for Brother I pray informe me which is best of the two for a particular Church or Corporation to be subject only to such Lawes Rules Government and Discipline as shall be made decreed declared most agreeable to the Word of God and fit to be generally received in all Churches by an whole Parliament and Assembly of the most wise ablest and best experienced Christians Nobles Divines after long debate and consideration or by the private rash Opinions and perchance passions humours of two or three private persons perhaps directed swayed by particuler interests relations ends Which is justest safest or most remote from Tyrannicall Arbitrary and Papall Government for Churches States Persons to be all confined to certaine publicke Lawes and Canons enacted by common consent in Parliament limiting who shall be admitted to who secluded from the Congregation Sacrament communion of Saints c. and for what causes offences in certaine c. then to be left Arbitrary to the meer mercy wills determinations of the Ministers and Elders of every particular Congregation or to the pleasures of Princes or some few temporall Magistrates without any Lawes or limits to restrain them We all hold it the greatest happinesse freedome of our Kingdom and the chiefest part of our Priviledge which we enjoy as free-men of England That we neither may nor can be legally bound by any Lawes Canons Taxes or Commands but only such as are made and imposed on us by full consent in Parliament and not subject to the meere Arbitrary Lawes Ordinances wills commands of our Princes Magistrates Iudges Prelates or any other private men And shall it be then held the slavery injury and not rather the liberty or priviledge of particular Churches and their members to be subject only to such Ecclesiasticall Rules Canons Orders Covenants Government and Discipline as shall be publickly agreed on consented to and setled in Parliament to which all Churches Christians shall be equally obliged without exemption then to be left at six and