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A49780 Marriage by the morall law of God vindicated against all ceremonial laws of popes and bishops destructive to filiation aliment and succession and the government of familyes and kingdoms Lawrence, William, 1613 or 14-1681 or 2. 1680 (1680) Wing L690; ESTC R7113 397,315 448

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would not cause the poor Man to be paid for his shoulder of Mutton without all that ado but I after understood that were not the Forms mixt with so many such absurdities there would be little work for them at the Bar. Of the Law of Transubstantiation of the Children of the Wife into the Children of the Husband if he is within the four Seas at the time of their begetting and no probation admitted to the contrary And of Intails on Marriages Husband within the four Seas no probation admitted that the Children were not his Fiction and Falsity allowed against Truth That no probation is admitted to the contrary appears 18. E. 4.30 where Littleton says That if a Man marries a Woman great with Child by another Man whether he knows it or not knows it and within three days after she is delivered of the Child this Child is legitimate and the true Son of the Man that married her And this by a Fiction in Law and with this agrees Coke Com. 244. So here is a Father made not by god but by the Father of lies and a false Child made Legitimate and the true Child of a Father who never begot him and the true Child if he begot any before he was married without a Priest and Temple made illegitimate and a false yea no Child to him who begot him and all this held very good and sound Divinity If marriage of the great bellied Woman be in facie Ecclesiae a brazen facies Ecclesiae it must be where the Devil gives God the Fiction the truth the lie And Coke and Littleton hold it too for good Law I wonder whose Law they mean and so stiff they are in it that Coke Com. 244. saith No proof shall be admitted to the contrary so here 't is not stabitur praesumptione donec probetur in contrarium but it is the sin of Presumption from which the two Fathers of the Law do not pray as the Patriarch David did Psal 19.13 Keep thy Servant also from presumptuous Sins let them not have Dominion over me then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from the great transgression One of them at least defends the sin of Presumption so high that he saith 'T is presumption Juris de jure non admittitur probatio in contrarium and in fictione juris semper est equitas a meer repugnancy and contradiction which never came from the Law of God nor is consistent with it as appears Psal 96.13 For he cometh to judg the Earth he shall Judg the World with righteousness and the People with his truth And not with fictions and much less with lies so punctually forbidden James 3.14 Lie not against the truth and so severely threatned Revel 21.8 All liars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with Fire and Brimstone And Revel 19.20 The false Prophet is to be cast in amongst them who though he seems to be the greatest lier in the World yet in none greater then in this his lie of Legitimation against which must be admitted no proof to the contrary The Law of Legitimation is further That if a Woman Elope or run from her Husband with an Adulterer and live in Adultery with him and have a Child by the Adulterer if her Husband be within the four Seas when 't was begot this Child shall be Legitimate and shall be adjudged the Husband's Child and no probation shall be admitted to the contrary as appears 43. E. 3.19.7 H. 4 9.44 E. 3.10 1. H. 6.7.19 H. 6.17 Coke Com. 244. A further descant on the words of Littleton and Coke concerning the transubstantiation of Children of Parents within the four Seas And of the Law of Intails When a Common Lawyer hath for his Fees in a Deed of Jointure very formally settled Lands Messuages Houses Tenements and Hereditaments c. To have and to hold the said Messuages Houses Lands Tenements and Hereditaments with their and every their Appurtenances unto the said A. B. and C. D. and to the Heirs of their two Bodies lawfully begotten and the Priest on Banes or Licence as formally per verba de praesenti contracted the said A. B. and C. D. which he calls Marriage You shall next hear what Heirs the Priest and Lawyer confederated to do their Faeminine Client a good turn by their Fictions whereat they are both good one will expound by the Gospel and the other interpret by the Law to be lawfully begotten of the Body of this Woman aforesaid First Littleton 18. E. Fol. 30. hath said If a Man marry a Woman great with Child by another Man and within three days after she is delivered of the Child this Child he saith is a Mulier that is to say Legitimate that is to say lawfully begotten of the Body of the said Woman by the said Man that married her Yet he saith In putting the case he was begot by another man and makes a very great Fiction in the premises and contradiction in the conclusion of his Case but let it be what it will Coke Com. 244. seconds him and thinks Littleton hath spoken over conscionably or wasts time to allow three days for cannot a Woman of full and lawful Age though she sup a Virgin if she lie with the Law by her side that Night as well have a Child next Day by dinner as if she stayed three whole days he therefore takes off two of the unnnecessary days and says plainly reserving to the Case of Littleton on the Margent That if the Issue is born a Month or a Day after Marriage between Parties of full lawful Age the Child is Legitimate that is as aforesaid lawfully begot And the reason he gives is Quia filiatio non potest probari from which Premises he makes three Conclusions First Ergo probatio non admittitur in contrarium Secondly Ergo if a Man marry a Woman got with Child by another Man and he is born but one day after the Marriage this Child is lawfully begot by the married Man Thirdly Ergo if a man is on or within the four Seas that is within the Jurisdiction of the King of England and a Child in his absence is begot by another Man on the Body of his Mirmaid he left at home this was lawfully begot by the Man on the four Seas Let any Logician if he dare deny the Sequel for here are two Aristostles for the Law but he hath but one for his Logick And there is a greater Aristotle too for the Gospel the Bishop himself to second my Lord Coke Bishop's Certificate Form hath given his Certificate in his Book of Entries Fol. 181. And the foresaid Bishop by his Letters Patents and Close hath certified to the Justices here That he by virtue of the foresaid Writ to him directed Convocating before him such as of right are to be Convocated hath diligently enquired and certified the truth of the matter that in the Chappel of B. in the County of G. in the
Part. Fol. 584. saith And here is to be observed how the Statute of 35. E. 1. hath been dealt with since the 17th of E. 3. for in an Act that Year a branch of the Statute of 35. E. 1. was recited That forbad any thing should be attempted or brought into the Realm which should tend to blemish the King's Prerogative or in prejudice of his Lords and Commons which is now wholy omitted and Fol. 585. he saith Note in the Roll of Parliament of the Statute of 38. E. 3. Cap. 1. of Provisors there are more sharp and biting words against the Pope then in Print a Mystery often in use but not to be known of all men from which examples it is manifest that this came by the Fraud of the Bishops who before Printing were Masters of the Authentick Copies of the Laws appointed for promulgation and since Printing are Masters of the Press to interdict and publish what they will Accipe nunc horum insidias Crimine ab uno Disce omnes These few Frauds are discover'd in Print against the Interdictors of Printers which discovery they would likewise have interdicted if they had been able for these latter Books of my Lord Coke were prohibited to be Printed and got out in the late time of Troubles but by these it is clear which were only spoken obiter and without any inquisition after them that all they are guilty of are not discover'd and that to give either Spiritual or Temporal Judges Power to interdict the Press is to give them Power to have what Law what Gospel what Text what Translation what Canonical what Apocryphal what Scripture what Act of Parliament what Common Law what Statute what Religion what Justice what Liberty and what Slavery they please Besides which Power of Fraud and Forgery destructive to all Truth these further mischeifs follow all interdictions of the Press but I shall first answer such Objections as are made against the Liberty of it Object 1 First If Liberty of the Press should be permitted Enemies would have it equal with Friends Papists with Protestants Hereticks with Orthodox Secondly They would Print Blasphemy Idolatry Treason Rebellion Vncleanness Calumny Reviling Derision and all manner of Heresie Answ 1 To the First is answer'd 1. That it is impossible to exclude Enemies and Papists from Printing they being possess'd of so many Transmarine Presses whence they can with far greater advantage vent their matters then from any Presses in England 2. Admit they could be excluded yet in prudence they ought not but are more necessary to be admitted then Friends for those whom we use to call Friends are pessimum inimicorum genus Adulantes the worst kind of Enemies Flatterers who flatter and sooth us up in our Vices and destroy us but any truth of our Faults we shall never hear but from Enemies Plutarch therefore calls an Enemy a School-Master which costs us nothing 2. As to the matters of Blasphemy Idolatry or Uncleanness neither Enemy or Friend will so far dishonour themselves or their Cause as to Print them openly for it is against their interest As to Treason or Rebellion who that hath an Enemy doth not desire to know before-hand wherein the strength of his Cause as well as of his Forces lies and to have the War Proclaimed in Print before it begin that he may the better provide against Besides if there were but a Law made that nothing shall be printed without the names of the Author and Printer with their Additions and Designations And that all Crimes against the publick committed by Printing should be punished by Indictment according to Law and all injuries to private persons should be reparable by the parties injured on their Actions according to Damage Who would dare make himself guilty of a publick Crime or private Injury in Print to which he had set his name 3. As to matters of Heresie such as by accident become dangerous to public safety the prudence of the Legislators may where they find cause prohibit them both Press and Pulpit but not in the Thoughts and Consciences of Men As in the end of the Wars of Germany between the Lutherans and Catholicks it was Enacted mutually on both sides on pain of death That no Catholick should Preach against the Lutheran Doctrine or Lutheran against the Catholick but both should enjoy the liberty of their own Consciences to themselves This agreement was here made otherwise those bloody Wars would never have ended without a total destruction of one of the Parties And likewise such a Law were here much more necessary between dissentient Protestants who were Brethren then it was between the Lutherans and Catholicks who were mortal Enemies That no dissentient Protestant should Print or Preach publickly on any point of Ceremonial dissentiency or other matter not necessary to Salvation except in such matters as are particularly allowed by Supream Authority to exclude Popery there being Field-room enough in the Moral Law of God to exercise gifts in Preaching and matters which have the promise of this life and of that to come and no cause for any to complain who have liberty likewise of Conscience to use what Protestant Ceremonies and Form of Worship they will to themselves though they have not power to compel the Consciences of others who are dissentients But if Protestants are tolerated to Print or Preach against one another this is the thing the Papist would have and knows will in the end make them both a prey to himself But though Protestants ought not to preach one against another yet the juncture of Affairs being not at present in great Britain as before mention'd in Germany and an appearance of War Plotted by the Papist rather to begin than end with the Protestant the Bishops ought not to be suffer'd to interdict either Press or Pulpit to the Protestants against them To come at length to the further mischiefs insuing the Interdiction of the Press any Interdiction of the Press except in Cases before mention'd either to Friend or Enemy is a dishonour to the Protestant Religion as if it dared not suffer it self to be disputed or to meet an Enemy in the open field whereas in truth it is not Protestancy but Episcopacy 'T is not the Moral Law which is the Protestant Law but the Ceremonial which is the Popish Law which dares not encounter the shock of an Enemy And 't is Fiction and not Truth Vice and not Vertue which fears either Press or Pasquil 2. The Foreign Presses being impossible to be interdicted to the Papist if the English are interdicted to the Protestant he is thereby silenced and prohibited to answer the Papist let him preach what he pleaseth 3. By Interdiction the profit of the English Protestant Print-houses will be transported to Foreign Papists which will be a great discouragement to so necessary a Trade in England and prejudice to the Protestant Religion and Policy 4. The Interdiction of the Press will multiply the greater evil
whole People is to be intended only where the Case is reduced to that necessity that either one or other must be but in this there is no necessity Trial should be by Certificate of a Bishop at all and though uno absurdo dato mille sequuntur were there a Thousand inconveniences followed if the Certificate of a Bishop should be question'd for falsity it being first granted it belongs to him to make Certificates yet there is no necessity that absurdity should be first granted that it should belong to him to make Certificates for there are ways enough wherein no Inconveniences follow of Trial of Truth without Certificates of Bishops 2. The supposition is repugnant and impossible that any Case should happen or be shewn in the World wherein Fiction or Falsity ought to be suffer'd in Judicial proceeding or where Probation ought not by the Law of God to be admitted against such Fiction and Falsity notwithstanding the corrupt practice of Courts to the contrary and such suffering of a private mischief of that kind to a private Person is so far from preventing a publick Inconvenience that it will bring both a private and publick mischief and destroy both for it is as impossible to separate Truth from Justice as the Light from the Sun 3. That which is alledged for an inconvenience to the publick That one Bishop would make a Certificate contrary to another this is no more publick inconvenience than if Thieves should fall out and true men come by their Goods 4. As to what is said That the Certificate of the Bishop is in this Case the highest Trial in the Law we must distinguish the Law for it was then the Law of Popery was Predominant which gave Supremacy in Causes of Marriage Filiation and Succession to the Bishops above Kings and to the Sentences in Bishops Courts and made them above Appeal to the Kings Courts and the Foundation of that their Supremacy was That then by that Law Marriage was a Sacrament and Penance was a Sacrament but the Law being now changed from Popish to Protestant and the Supremacy being now given by the Protestant Law to the King above the Bishop as well in Causes Matrimonial as in all other Ecclesiastical Causes and the Protestant Religion taking away the two Popish Sacraments of Marriage and Penance which were the only Roots whence the Episcopal Jurisdiction of Marriage and the incidents to the same pretended to sprout Cessante Causa ratione legis cessat Lex the pretended Causes of the Jurisdiction ceasing the Jurisdiction it self ceases whereby now the Certificate of the Bishop is so far from being the highest Trial that it ought to be no Trial at all for the Sacraments ceasing the Jurisdiction ceaseth and the Jurisdiction ceasing the Power of Trial ought likewise to cease 5. For Councel to advise his Client to maintain a false Certificate of the Bishops knowing it to be false is as wicked as for the Bishop to make a false Certificate knowing it to be false or which is impossible for him to know to be true as all relating to Filiation are it being their own Rule Filiatio non potest probari except by the Parents wherefore ex Ore Suo they condemn themselves of false Judgment and are not therefore fit to be Judges 11. They Judg by Ceremonies and not by Circumstances As to the word Ceremonia some will have it derived à Cerere because they used divers Formalities in the Worship of the Goddess Ceres But this is not proper seeing all the Heathen Gods and Goddesses had as many Formalities in their Worship as she others derive it from Cerete a Latine Town whither as saith Valerius Maximus the Flamen Quirinalis and the Vestal Virgins fled with their Trinkets while the Gauls besieged Rome others derive it à Cereis from Torches and Tapers lighted made of Wax which amongst the old Pagans was a great Ceremony used in the Temples of their Gods and at their Marriages but this is likewise improper and only figurative to take species famosior pro toto genere and not natural so it appears the Etymology of it is either unknown or it is it self an Original not derived from any Rites which is a word usually joined with Ceremonies and much of the same Signification some will have derived à Ritualibus now the Rituales were old Magical and Superstitious Books of the Hetruscan Priests by help of which they either conjur'd their Gods or made the People believe so and they had all the Formalities written in them which were to be used at making Marriages at laying the Foundations of a City and how Altars Temples and Houses were to be Consecrated and how their Courts of Justice and Counties and Hundreds were to be divided for in all these the old Pagans used to Consult their Augurs Aruspices Bishops and Priests and were like our Books of Ecclesiastical Canons But it seems rather these ritual Books had their names derived from the Rites whereof they were made a written Collection and not the Rites from the Rituals and so Rites as well as Ceremonies may be words which none knows whence they came or whether they will But to come from the Etymology of the word Ceremony to the thing usually signified by it and the difference between a Ceremony and a Circumstance it seems A Ceremony is an Act accessary joined to a Principal not affecting the Principal Act with Good or Evil by the Law of God A Circumstance is an Act accessary joined with a Principal affecting the same Principal Act with Good or Evil by the Law of God Ceremonies are infinite but Circumstances are usually drawn to Seven Heads 1. The Cause of doing the Act which is divided into four kinds The Efficient Final Material Formal and these again subdivided into others 2. The Person by or with whom the Act was done 3. The Place where it was done 4. The Time when it was done 5. The Quantity continued or discrete 6. The Quality which is manifold 7. The Seventh and last Circumstance is the Event of the Act the Civilians expound very improperly and instance whether the Act is done by Fear Force Error Deceit Fault Chance or the like for how can these which are precedent Causes of the Act and therefore ought to be refer'd to the Cirstumstance of the Causes be said to be the Event of an Act which is always subsequent and not precedent to the Principal Act and in that sense is always used by the best Latinists as Cicero in Rhetor. Things are often judged from the Event than which there is nothing more unjust and the Poets agree in the same Careat Successibus opto Quisquis ab Eventu facta notanda putat Eventus Belli incertus wherein it is used for the Fortune and Success following the Battel and not the Fortune or Chance which began or occasion'd it So the Common Law in punishing the Event as the death of any Man within a Day or
either Party both on matters principal and incident till there be a Contumacy to return Answer or a Litiscontestation made and a Commission desired to examine Witnesses and the Parties for Probation this would cause all those little Shreds of Sheeps-skins which so unnecessarily torment the Countrey and the dead Pots to be laid aside as the Popish Agnusses Dei or rather Agnusses Diaboli were and so the Successors to the Popish Clerks would lose their Fees in the one as well as the other to the great joy of all the Protestants 2. What is worse they would lose their Eight pence per Sheet for but Eight words in a Line and Fifteen Lines in a Sheet in Chancery and for Six half words in a Line with a Dash and Twelve Lines in a Sheet at Common Law all which a Boy would far better transcribe for a Peny per Sheet for want of which Oblatio Libelli by the Plaintiff a Rich man will of purpose draw his Bill in Chancery and stuff it with nothing but Falsi i●s so long to multiply the Sheets against a Poor man that it will cost him many times Three or Four Pounds for a Transcript for which he must send an Hundred Miles besides before he shall know what he must Answer So that the Rich need do nothing else to undo the Poor but suggest and throw him into the Lions Dens of Chancery Common Law and Checquer-Clerks for Copies of those Legends of Lies they themselves invented whereas if these rich and vexatious Plaintiffs were compell'd to serve Defendants by sending them from their Pallaces but a Copy to their poor dwelling Houses or Cottages what their wills and pleasures are to have right or wrong they would pay as far as they were able rather than if they told them they should first go so far to Clerks to buy Copies of their Will and Pleasure before they would vouchsafe to reveal the same and after be less able to pay than before 3. They would lose all the Gains of those unnecessary and hurtful Entries and Inrollments of the Bills Declarations and Pleas of the Parties in those huge heaps of Mouldy Rolls wherein it is easie for them to forge what they please for no Averment is allowed against Clerks and their Records which should be far better and more Authentick were the Copies delivered Signed by the Parties themselves and only filed orderly as received from the Parties and not Enter'd nor Inroll'd by the Clerks but kept by Filazers 4. They would lose all the Gains de Temere Litigantibus which is more than they have from ●uitors which Sue of necessity and for just Cause and would not have one Suit in Ten which they now have before them for the Countrey-man where the Writ is served before the Bill or Declaration think they shall Conquer presently their Adversary if they but Arrest Outlaw or have a Commission of Rebellion against him whereby they are encouraged by Attornies to rush blindly into unwarrantable Suits which many times undo them Whereas if the Law were as it ought to be by the Precept of Christ That every Plaintiff should first send a Copy of his Bill to the Defendant and heir his Exceptions against it or sind his Contumacy before he Summon'd him before a Judg he would before he would rashly en angle himself in Law-Suits consult Councel and have his Bill or Declaration drawn by them and hear the Exceptions of his Adver●ary against it after which there would not one of Twenty dare run headlong on a wrong Suit except P●●sons extreamly Litigious and shameless Whereas now on Summons and Arrests tolerated before a Copy of the Bill or Declaration given the Defendant vexations Contentions both in Chancery and Common Law are infinite and endless Of giving a Copy before an Oath of Calumny That he who gives it believes the same true and just The Oath of Calumny may by the Civil Law be required not only of the Parties Litigant but of their Advocates and Procurators who are in our Language their Councellors and Attornies and the same is appointed by an Act of Parliament of Scotland the Practice of the Courts there and the same is done not only to the Bill but to all parts of Process alledged either by Plaintiff or Defendant and is of excellent Use to clear those Contagious Plagues and Pests of Judicial Proceedings Fictions and Falsities and to restore Truth which is impossible to be kept alive in Religion or Justice without abolishing the other The Causes which introduce Fictions and Falsities into Judicial Proceeding are Four One the not using the Oath of Calumny The Second the not admitting Averment or Probation to the contrary The Third the not giving the Adverse Party notice of the time and place the Swearer is appointed to be Sworn and liberty to be there present himself or by his Commissioners to except against him if he have cause The Fourth is denial of Travers and Contrary Probation to all that is doubted to be false In the Civil Law there was but one Fiction which was Fictio Postliminii the occasion whereof was the Romans to incite their Soldiers to Conquer or Die which is to take no Quarter toucht by Virgil Jaciat si quem fati sors dura peremit and Horace p. 75. Si non perit immiserabilis captiva pubes If Captive Youth should not be suffer'd to perish without Pity and Redemption it would saith he be a pernitious Example to Posterity had this Cruel Law or Custom That who was a Captive lost the Rights of a Citizen and who died a Captive in the Power of the Enemy his Estate should be confiscated to the Publick Treasury and he should have no Heir to succeed him ff de Captiv postlimin To abate the rigor and severity of this Law the Judges helped the Captive by a Fiction feigning that he was never taken Captive but always remained in the City and the Legislative in imitation of the Judges that they might the less be taken notice of to derogate from their Military Discipline stretched the former Fiction a little further and enacted by their Lex Cornelia in favour of the Heir whose Father happen'd to die Captive to the Enemy a Charitable Fiction not to punish the Child for the Fathers offence that the Father died the next hour before he was supposed to have been taken Captive L. Si is qui pro Emptore in addit marg de Vsucapio And like that of the Midwives of Aegypt to preserve young Children from Destruction seems excusable if it was not possible to do it any way else but these Episcopal Fictions That Marriage is of Souls not Bodies of Spouses not Wives begetting of Children is by Husbands absent within the four Seas not by Adulterers within the Spouses Bed That Sons are not of the blood or kin to the Father who begot them but of him of whom the Bishop will please to certifie them these are not Mendacia Officiosa but
are to be warned that they hold him to be cast out of the Communion of the Church and to shun all Communion with him nevertheless Excommunication dissolves not the Bonds of Civil or Natural Relations nor exempteth from the Duties belonging to them If the Party after Excommunication shew Signs of Repentance then the Form of Absolution is appointed to be this or the like Whereas thou N. hast for thy Sin been shut out from the Communion of the Faithful and hast now manifested thy Repentance wherein the Church resteth satisfied In the name of Jesus Christ before this Congregation I Pronounce and Declare Thee Absolved from the Sentence of Excommunication formerly Denounced against Thee and do receive Thee into the Communion of the Church and the free Vse of all the Ordinances of Jesus Christ that thou mayest be partaker of all his Benefits to thy Eternal Salvation The old Episcopal Forms of Evcommunication being so gross as if publish'd not able to clear off the Charge of Exceptions in that furious time of Contest made against them the Anti-Power in the Forms before mention'd screwed their Wits to the highest that they might so refine them as if possible no Exception might be took against them for it matter'd not how the Form was so they might obtain the effect of commanding the Temporal Sword by the Excommunicato capiendo and continue to possess thereby the great Power and Profits incident which have been before mention'd to belong to Marriage and all other points of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction yet there is always such a Repugnancy in the mixture of Truth and Falsity that never so artificially gilded over the Flaws of the one will be visible and lie open to Exception from the Solidity of the other Against these Forms therefore as well as the former may be the following Exceptions taken 1. It is excepted against the Form of Excommunication That it is in the name of Jesus Christ without shewing a Sign of Mission from Jesus Christ for Jer. 14.14 It is said The Prophets prophesie Lies in my Name I sent him not neither have I commanded them neither spake unto them And Jer. 27.15 I have not sent them saith the Lord yet they Prophesie a Lie in my Name that I might drive you out and that he might perish ye and the Prophets that prophesie unto you And 29.9 For they Prophesie falsely unto you in my Name I have not sent them saith the Lord. So may a Priest of Baal or a Papist Priest say he Excommunicates in the name of the Lord or in the name of Jesus Christ as well as a Presbyter if he be not put to his Sign of Mission 2. Here is a Civil or Temporal punishment of Excommunication or Banishment from Society Sentenced or adjudged by this Form without a Commission shewn from the Magistrate or Tempor ●●●●●ver which if suffer'd that any without Commission should be a Judg then every man would Judg in his own Case which would be a confusion of all Government 3. This Form Excommunicates from Communion with the Faithful and declares not who are the Faithful or how they may be known 4. This Form Excommunicates from the Church but doth not say whether a Particular Church or the Catholick Church or a National or a Parochial Church or Congregational Church and being only Formed to be Pronounced by the Rector of a Parochial or Congregational Church it is as improper to extend his Spiritual Jurisdiction to a National Church as the Temporal Authority of a Petty Constable to a Kingdom The Form Excluding from Communion declares not whether from Spiritual or Temporal Communion or both if Spiritual it declares not whether from the Word Preached or Prayer or Sacrament if from either or all the Interdiction of a Carnal man from Spiritual Communion is no Punishment but he will rather rejoice in it than Repent and had rather take the pleasures of Earth than of Heaven if it intend from Temporal Communion then the Spiritual Person exceeds his Bounds to Judg of things Temporal and besides the Comment destroys the Teut for it declares That Excommunication dissolves not the Bonds of Civil or Natural Relations Now all Temporal things are under Bonds of Civil or Natural Relations therefore it cannot intend Excluding from Communion in Temporal Things but indeed it is such a Linsie-Woolsie of Spiritual and Temporal that neither it self nor any other knows what it intends and such an Amphibion of Flesh and Spirit none knows in what Element to place it 6. Excommunication a word insensible Excluding from Communion or Excommunication is a word insensible the old Pagans Interdiction from Fire and Water the Druydes Interdiction from the Sacrifices the great and lesser Curse of the Jews the Pharisees casting out of the Synagogue the delivery by Paul to Satan were all Words Sensible and Intelligible but Excommunication is a Word without Sense Signification or Intelligence no Wonder therefore if there is not such a word in the whole Scripture not that men could never draw the Form of a Chimaera without incongruity which hath no Being in Nature but in the vertiginous Notions of a Phrenzy 7. The same Ordinance of the long Parliament in the Prayer appointed to be used with this Form of Excommunication calls it the Ordinance of God which is the same which is before-mention'd Jerem. 14.14 The Prophets prophesie Lies in my Name I sent them not neither have I commanded them neither spake I unto them How can that be an Ordinance of God or Christ which they never so much as spake nor is the word to be found in the whole Scripture 8. This Form brings in Popish Confession of Sins to the Priest and Penance and Commutation-Money and Punishment of one Sin Twice first by the Magistrate and then by the Priest 1. Of the Effects of Excommunication of the Greek Bishops either by Witchcraft or Cheat on the Bodies of the Excommunicated and of the Apples Grapes and Nuts found in their Graves after Burial 2. Of the Ghosts called Catechanae returning into their Bodies after Death in manner as into the Excommunicated 3. Of Excommunication of Locusts Flyes Fishes and Dead Bodies 4. The Effects of Excommunication on the Soul ought to be contemned by all who fear God more than the Devil 5. Of Excommunication of the Devil Mr. Ricant amongst many other his rare Observations Relates page 277. That the Greek Christians believe If any Person die Excommunicate by the Bishop and not Absolved some Evil Spirit enters into the Body in the Grave which Actuates and preserves him from Corruption in the same manner as the Soul informs and animates a living Body and that they feed in the Night walk digest and are nourished and have been found Ruddy in complexion and their Veins after Forty days Burial extended with Blood and when open'd with a Launcet have yeilded Blood as plentiful fresh and quick as that which issues from young and Sanguine Persons And it was informed