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A70760 Bishop Overall's convocation-book, MDCVI concerning the government of God's catholick church, and the kingdoms of the whole world.; Bishop Overall's convocation book Overall, John, 1560-1619.; Sancroft, William, 1617-1693. 1690 (1690) Wing O607; ESTC R2082 200,463 346

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profession of Christ So as the preservation of the Gospel in these parts of the World may more truly be attributed to the working of the Spirit of God in them than to the Bishops of Rome who have been the chief Authors and occasions of many incredible mischiefs Now lastly and for conclusion of this point had not Satan with all Power and Signs and lying Wonders so inveigled and seduced the hearts and minds of the adherents to the See of Rome as that by degrees they leaving the love of the truth are therefore given over by God unto such strong delusions that they should believe lyes as the Apostle speaketh amongst many other of the gross errours maintained by them we might marvel at this that ever they durst take upon them in these times of so great light to write and defend it with such resolution and confidence that the Ecclesiastical Commonwealth as they term it cannot be perfect nor attain her Spiritual End except the Pope may have the said temporal Power and Authority to depose Kings considering how far the true nature of the Church which is the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ and the true Means and Armour that Christ our Spiritual King hath indeed ordained and appointed for the Edification and Defence of this his Spiritual Kingdom and for the attainment of the supernatural and right end and beauty of it are repugnant to these their Carnal and Worldly conceits Touching the true nature of the Church and Spiritual Kingdom of Christ we have before spoken and the true Spiritual End of the Church being by teaching the ways of truth to bring as many as possibly they can to the knowledge of their Salvation through Christ so as by Faith they may become true Members of his Spiritual Kingdom in the Life to come the means ordain'd for that purpose do contain the full duty and office of all Bishops and Ecclesiastical Ministers who are furnished by Christ neither with temporal Swords nor Imperial Authority to depose Kings and Soveraign Princes but ought to carry themselves toward all Men especially towards Kings and Princes if they be either Pagans or Enemies to Religion as Christ himself and his Apostles did by Preaching and Praying for them by Humility and Patience to endure whatsoever punishment shall be thought fit to be imposed upon them for doing of their duties and never to intermit such their pains and diligence to the end that if it please God to bless those their Ministerial so great labours their Auditors of all sorts private Persons Kings and Prince may be brought to the knowledge of the truth that so Satan being expelled out of their hearts Christ by Faith may raign in them To the effecting of which so great and so divine an alteration and change in Mens Souls there is no Worldly Force nor temporal Sword which will serve the turn And therefore the Apostle speaking of this matter doth write in this sort The Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal as if he should have said We do not come with Troops of Men to promote the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ but with Weapons of another nature with the glad ridings of the Gospel with the Doctrine of Salvation to all Believers and with the Furniture of the Holy Ghost which Weapons are not weak but mighty through God and able to cast down holds that is all the carnal Forces of Men all Principalities and Powers that shall presume to rise up against Christ And through the assurance and experience which both St. Paul and the rest of the Apostles had in the force of these Weapons he saith further that with them they overthrew Councils and every high thing that did exalt it self against the knowledge of God and that they brought into Captivity all imagination or understanding to the obedience of Christ away then with the Pope's Carnal Weapons and with all their Illusions and Juglings that seek to uphold them for such Weapons were never ordain'd by Christ for his Apostolical Warfare CAN. IX AND therefore if any Man shall affirm under colour of any thing that is in the Scriptures either that the external Callings in this World of those Men as Ministers and Schoolmasters that have to deal with the information of Mens Minds and Souls are superiour and to be preferr'd in Honour and Wordly Dignities before the Callings of Kings and Soveraign Princes or that because health is better and more to be desired in this Life than any Worldly Preferments therefore the Calling of Physicians who are ordain'd for the health of Mens Bodies ought to be superiour to all other Worldly Callings or that the Regal and Political Power of the King when it is part of a Christian Commonwealth is thereby brought into greater servitude and thraldom than is the Regal and Political State of Ethnick Princes when the same are no parts of a Christian Kingdom or that to prefer the Ecclesiastical State for Worldly Authority before the State of Kings and Soveraign Princes is not in effect to prefer the humbled Estate of Christ as he was Man living here upon the Earth before his glorious Estate after his Ascension and before the glory and majesty of the Divine Nature or that any Ecclesiastical Authority which the Apostles ordained did either free them or any of their Successors from subjection to Kings and Princes and to their temporal Authority or that St. Peter being an Apostle and so subject to the civil Sword of Temporal Authority could lawfully by any indirect device challenge any temporal Power and Dominion over Kings and Princes for that had been to have extorted the temporal Sword out of their hands to whom it appertain'd and to have incurr'd again the commination of his Master when he told him how all that take the Sword shall perish with the Sword or that it is not a most profane impiety tending altogether to the discredit of the Scriptures for any Man to hold that St. Peter and St. Paul had so instructed the Christians in their times as that they knew if they had been able they might without offence to God have deposed Nero from his Empire or that the Christians in Tertullian's time when they professed that notwithstanding their numbers and forces were so great as they had been able to have distressed very greatly the Estate of the Emperours being then Persecutors they might not so do because Christ their Master had taught them otherwise ought not to be a sufficient Warrant for all true Christians to detest those Men in these days and for ever hereafter who contrary to the Example of the said Christians in the Primitive Church and the Doctrine of Christ which was then taught them do endeavour to perswade them when they shall have sufficient Forces to Rebel against such Kings and Emperours at the Pope's Commandment and to thrust them from their Kingdoms and Empires or that this Devilish Doctrine of animating Subjects to Rebellion when they are able against their
serve or as St. Luke hath Christ's words Ye shall not be so that is Ye shall not live as Kings upon the Earth nor have such worldly Estates as that thereby ye might have occasion to vaunt in the World what great Benefactors you have been in advancing your Followers to this or that Dukedom according as great Kings and Monarchs are accustomed to deal with their Servants and principal Subjects but let the greatest amongst you be as the least and the chiefest as he that serveth For who is greater he that sitteth at the table or he that serveth Is not he that sitteth at the table and I am among you as he that serveth By which words of our Saviour it is very manifest how far he was from challenging to himself any worldly Kingdom and how much his Apostles were deceived in apprehending what great Men they should become by being his Followers and Disciples To this purpose much more might be here alledged by us as also it would not be forgotten what we have before observed in the former Chapter tending to the same effect in as much as Christ having made himself subject to the Obedience of the Fifth Commandment which tied him as well to be a Subject unto the Emperour under whom he was born as to the obedience of his Parents did thereby shew himself to be no temporal Monarch Howbeit all this notwithstanding there are some so much addicted in these days unto the said erroneous opinion of the Jews as for the advancement of the glory of the Bishop of Rome they will needs have Christ to have been here upon the Earth a Temporal King Affirming that upon his Nativity all the Kings in the World lost their Regal Power and Authority all their Kingdoms being devolved unto him and that they could no longer possess them by any Right Interest or Title until they had again resum'd them from him as he was Man and forsaken their ancient Tenures whereby they had held them of him as he was God Insomuch as some of them say in effect that neither Augustus Caesar nor Tiberius his Successor were lawful Emperours from the time of Christ's Birth for above the space of thirty years until our Saviour had required the Jews to pay Tribute to Caesar as if in so doing Tiberius had again received thereby his former right to the Empire and that thereupon he was from that time forward to hold it of Christ as he was Man In which erroneous conceits these Men proceed further than ever the Jews or the Apostles in their weakness did For the Jews never imagin'd of their Messiah that when he came into the World he should abolish all civil Government amongst the Gentiles and be a temporal King to Rule all Nations or that as many Soveraign Kings and Princes as should from that time forward desire to rule their Subjects by any lawful Power and Authority must receive and hold the same from the said Jews their temporal Kings but did restrain their conceits within more narrow bounds thinking that their Messiah should not have such intermedling with the Gentiles but only restore the Kingdom of Israel which had for a long time been miserably shaken and rent in pieces and live in that Country amongst them in a much more glorious form and state than any of their Kings before him had done And yet notwithstanding these the said Persons having inconsiderately so far overrun the Jews in their Follies are possessed nevertheless with some Imaginations no doubt that because the Pope doth either applaud or wink at their proceedings they may in time make it probable to the simpler sort who when force is to be used do bear the greatest sway that as all Emperours and Kings forsooth held their Kingdoms from Christ as he then was and still is Man so ought they now in these days to hold them of the Pope in that if Men might safely believe them our Saviour Christ did as they say after his Ascension bestow all such Worldly Dominions upon St. Peter and consequently upon his Successors the Bishops of Rome and that now all Worldly Principalities are theirs and must be held of them as they were before of Christ after his Incarnation by as many Kings and Princes as desire to hold their Kingdoms by any right title But these are Men not to be feared For to say the truth of them they are all of them in effect either but gross and unlearned Canonists or else but new upstart and sottish Nerians and of great affinity with the Canonists who meaning as it seemeth to outstrip the Jesuits do labour as much to make the Pope a Temporal Monarch as the Jesuits have done for his pretended Spiritual Soveraignty whose endeavours are altogether as we suppose to be contemned in that both the sorts of them as well Canonists as Nerians are more voluminous in their Writings than substantial filling them principally with very idle and ridiculous Canons and Decrees of the Pope's own making and having no true feeling or sense of Divinity do handle the Scriptures when they have leisure to come unto them with so foul and unwashed hands as that their Master either is or ought to be ashamed of them in that he permitteth their so absurd Books to come abroad into the World Besides it will not a little hinder their credit if it make them not a scorn to all Posterity even amongst such Men as have otherwise made themselves Vassals to the See of Rome because the said Jesuits and some others not to have been despis'd for their learning whilst they had strived to advance the Pope's Supremacy in Causes Ecclesiastical have themselves in a manner broken the Neck of his fondly-conceited temporal Monarchy Some of the chiefest among them affirming very peremptorily That our Saviour Christ as Man was never a temporal King upon Earth nor ever had any such temporal Authority or Government as doth appertain unto Kings and Soveraign Princes We will set down some words of one that is of especial Authority amongst them not because we intend to ground any thing upon them but for that they are true and may perhaps be of more force than ours are like to be with some kind of People the rectifying of whose hearts in the truth we tender as much as we do our own Christ saith he did not take Kingdoms from them whose they were for Christ came not to destroy those things that were well setled but to make them better Therefore when a King is become a Christian he doth not lose his Earthly Kingdom but procureth a new Interest to a Kingdom that is Eternal Otherwise the benefit of Christ should be hurtful to Kings and Grace should destroy Nature And again Christ as he was Man whilst he lived upon the Earth neither did nor would receive any Temporal Dominion And again I say that Christ was always as the Son of God a King and Lord of all Creatures in such sort as his Father
had been a lawful Form of Government whilst the Apostles lived but upon their Deaths it became presently to be unlawful It is very apparent and cannot be denied That in many Greek Copies of the New Testament Timothy and Titus are termed Bishops in the Directions or Subscriptions of two Epistles which St. Paul did write unto them These are the words of the said Directions The second Epistle written from Rome unto Timotheus the first Bishop elected of the Church of Ephesus And again To Titus elect the first Bishop of the Cretians written from Nicopolis in Macedonia Moreover agreeable to the said Subscriptions the ancient Fathers generally having no doubt upon their due searching the Scriptures fully considered of the Form of Ecclesiastical Government whilst the Apostles lived do with one consent whensoever they expound the Epistles of St. Paul to Timothy and Titus or have Occasion to speak of the Authority of those two Persons very resolutely affirm That they were by the Apostles made Bishops And the same also they do testifie of St. James the Apostle himself called the Lord's Brother that he was made by the rest of the Apostles his Colleagues Bishop of Hierusalem and so also of the Seven Angels of the Churches in Asia that they were so many Bishops of the Apostles Ordination Besides the said ancient Fathers did very well know that when St. Paul said to Timothy I charge thee in the sight of God and before Jesus Christ that thou keep this Commandment without spot and unrebukable until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ that it was impossible for Timothy to observe those things till the coming of Christ he being to die long before and that therefore the Precepts and Rules which St. Paul had given unto him to observe in his Episcopal Government did equally appertain as well to Bishops his Successors as to himself and were to be executed by them successively after his Death unto the Worlds End as carefully and diligently as he himself whilst he lived had put them in Practice One of the said Fathers doth write as followeth With great Vigilancy and Providence doth the Apostle give Precepts to the Ruler of the Church for in his Person doth the safety of the People consist He is not so circumspect as fearing Timothy's care but for his Successors that after Timothy's Example they should observe the Ordination of the Church and begin themselves to keep that Form which they were to deliver to those that came after them Again it is evident by the Ecclesiastical Histories that not only St. James Timothy and Titus were made Bishops by the Apostles but that likewise Peter himself was Bishop of Antioch so termed because of his long stay there and that the Apostles likewise made Evodius Bishop of Antioch after St. Peter and St. Mark Bishop of Alexandria and Polycarpus Bishop of Smyrna and that St. John returning from Patmos to Ephesus went to the Churches round about and made Bishops in those places where they were wanting and also that divers others of the Apostles Coadjutors besides Timothy and Titus were made by them Bishops and did govern the Cities and Provinces where they were placed according to the same rules that were prescribed to Timothy and Titus as Dionysius the Areopagite was the first Bishop of Athens Caius the first Bishop of Thessalonica Archippus the first Bishop of the Colossians and we doubt not but many more by diligent reading may be found that were in the Apostles times made Bishops Furthermore it is apparent by the testimonies of all Antiquity Fathers and Ecclesiastical Histories that all the Churches in Christendom that were planted and govern'd by the Apostles and by such their Coadjutors Apostolical Persons as unto whom the Apostles had to that end fully communicated their Apostolical Authority did think that after the Death either of any of the Apostles which ruled amongst them or of any other the said Bishops ordained by them it was the meaning of the Holy Ghost testified sufficiently by the practice of the Apostles that the same Order and Form of Ecclesiastical Government should continue in the Church for ever And therefore upon the death of any of them either Apostles or Bishops they the said Churches did always supply their places with others the most worthy and eminent Persons amongst them who with the like Power and Authority that their Predecessors had did ever succeed them Insomuch as in every City and Episcopal See where there were divers Priests and Ministers of the Word and Sacraments and but one Bishop only the Catalogues of the Names not of their Priests but of their Bishops were very carefully kept from time to time together with the Names of the Apostles or Apostolical Persons the Bishops their Predecessors from whom they derived their Succession Of which Succession of Bishops whilst the Succession of Truth continued with it the ancient Fathers made great account and use when any false Teachers did broach new Doctrine as if they had received the same from the Apostles choaking them with this that they were not able to shew any Apostolical Church that ever taught as they did Upon such an occasion Irenaeus Bishop of Lyons within 75. years or thereabout after St. John's Death doth write in this sort Habemus annumerare eos qui ab Apostolis instituti sunt Episcopi in Ecclesiis Successores eorum usque ad nos qui nihil tale docuerunt neque cognoverunt quale ab his deliratur And so likewise not long after him Tertullian to oppress some who as it seemeth drew Companies after them saith thus Edant Origines Ecclesiarum suarum Evolvant ordinem Episcoporum suorum ita per Successiones ab initio decurrentem ut primus ille Episcopus aliquem ex Apostolis aut Apostolicis viris qui tamen cum Apostolis perseveraverit habuerit autorem Antecessorem Hoc enim modo Ecclesiae Catholicae sensus suos deferunt And St. Augustin Radix Christianae Societatis per sedes Apostolorum Successores Episcoporum certâ per Orbem propagatione diffunditur Again forasmuch as it was thought by our Saviour Christ the best means for the building and continuing of his Church in the Apostles times to ordain sundry degrees of Ministers in Dignity and Authority one over another when such a kind of preheminence might have been thought not so necessary because the Apostles by working of Miracles might otherwise as it is probable have procured to themselves sufficient Authority How can it with any reason be imagined but that Christ much more did mean to have the same still to be continued after the Apostles days when the gifts of doing Miracles were to cease and when Mens Zeal was like to grow more cold than it was at the first It savoureth assuredly We know of what Faction Indiscretion or Affection for any Man either to think that Form of Church-Government to be unfit for our times
with Rods. I was once stoned I suffered thrice Shipwrack Night and day have I been in the deep Sea In Journying I was often in perils of Water in perils of Robbers in perils of mine own Nation in perils amongst the Gentiles in perils in the Wilderness in perils in the Sea in perils amongst false Brethren In weariness and painfulness in watching often in hunger and thirst in fastings often in cold and nakedness Besides these things which are outward I am cumber'd daily and have the care of all the Churches Much is not written of St. Peter by the Evangelist St. Luke but it is not to be doubted that his Case was as bad as any of his Fellows When he began to Preach he was call'd in question with great eagerness and vehemently threatned Also with some other of the Apostles he was cast into Prison and beaten Likewise when James was killed by Herod's Commandment Peter was again Imprisoned and loaden with Irons and had assuredly in all likelyhood escaped hardly with his Life but that the Angel of the Lord delivered him In a word after many Afflictions Injuries Calamities and Miseries endured by the Apostles whilst they lived in this World they were in the end as well St. Peter as almost all the rest most spitefully and cruelly by the Enemies of Christ and of their own Salvation put to Death During the course of whose lives in so great dangers and manifold distresses out of question they would greatly have marvelled their hard Estates consider'd but especially St. Peter if he had known himself to be the sole Monarch under Christ over all the World and that the Emperour and all other Kings had been at that time his Vassals and that likewise they the rest of the Apostles had been under St. Peter so many Soveraign and Temporal Princes to have commanded and ruled amongst them throughout the whole World Neither do we see any true cause that might have moved St. Peter to have concealed that his so eminent temporal Power and Authority if he had thought it to have been the Ordinance of God or at least if he for modesty would have been silent why the rest of the Apostles should not have published it that the civil and temporal States in those times who knew no such Ordination made by Christ might have been left inexcusable Besides the concealing of a truth of so great importance was an injury offered to all the faithful in those days who had they been truly taught in these Mens conceits ought to have left their Obedience to the Emperour in all temporal Causes and for the dignity of the Gospel to have adher'd unto St. Peter to have been directed in them by him their temporal Monarch The consideration of all which inconveniences and consequents doth perswade us to think that none of the Apostles ever dreamed of any such temporal Soveraignty notwithstanding that they knew well the Scriptures how Christ told them That All Power in Heaven and Earth was given unto him how St. Peter had two Swords and how Ananias and Sapphira for lying to the Holy Ghost were stricken suddenly from Heaven with Death Touching the two first of which places the same being notoriously abused and wrested by the Canonists and their Adherents to prove the Popes temporal Monarchy the said Cardinal doth very resolutely reject the Arguments which are thence by them deduced And to the first he answereth Potestatem de quâ hic loquitur Dominus non esse potestatem temporalem ut Regnum terrenorum sed vel tantùm spiritualem ut B. Hieronymus B. Anselmus exponunt qui hunc esse volunt sensum eorum verborum Data est mihi omnis potestas in coelo in terrâ i.e. ut sicut in coelo Rex sum Angelorum ità per fidem regnem in cordibus hominum vel ut addit Theophylactus esse potestatem quandam summam in omnes creaturas non temporalem sed divinam vel divinae simillimam quae non potest communicari homini mortali That the Power whereof the Lord here speaketh is not a temporal Power like the Power of terrene Kings but it is either a spiritual Power as St. Hierom and St. Anselm do expound the said place who will have this to be the sense of those words All Power is given me in Heaven and Earth which is to say that as in Heaven I am King of Angels so by Faith I do reign in the hearts of Men or as Theophylact addeth it is a certain supream Power not temporal but divine or most like to the Divine Power which cannot be communicated to any mortal Man And for the second Argument drawn from St. Peter 's two Swords the same is set down by our said Cardinal in these words Secundò objiciunt Scripturam Luc. 22. Vbi Dominus duos gladios Petro concedit Cùm enim Discipuli dicerent Ecce duo gladii hic Dominus non ait nimis est sed satis est Quare B. Bernardus 4. 4. de Consid Bonifacius octavus in Extravag Vnam sanctam de Majoritate Obedientiâ ex hoc loco deducunt Pontisicem duos gladios ex Christi institutione habere that is Secondly they object the Scriptures Luc. 22. Where the Lord doth grant two Swords to Peter For when the Disciples said Behold here are two Swords the Lord answered not they are too many but they are sufficient Therefore St. Bernard and Boniface the eighth do hence deduce that the Bishop of Rome by Christ's Institution hath two Swords Unto which objection our Cardinal saith thus Respondeo ad Literam nullam fieri mentionem in eo loco Evangelii de gladio spirituali vel temporali Pontificis sed solum Dominum illis verbis monere voluisse Discipulos tempore Passionis suae in iis angustiis metu ipsos futuros fuisse in quibus esse solent qui tunicam vendunt ut emant gladium ut ex Theophylacto aliisque Patribus colligitur I answer that according to the Letter there is no mention made in that place of the Gospel either of the spiritual or temporal Sword of the Bishop of Rome but that Christ meant only in those words to admonish his Disciples how they should be in the time of his Passion in those straights and fear wherein Men are accustomed to be who sell their Coat to buy them a Sword as it is to be collected out of Theophylact and other Fathers And for Bernard and Boniface he saith They did expound the said place mystically and meant not to have their words so far extended as the Objector would have them Which answer it is likely Bernard if he were now alive would take in good part but assuredly if any Cardinal in Bonifacius 's days had made it he would have smarted for it and might perhaps have tried the depth of Tiber. Neither do we suppose that the now Pope will give him any great thanks for it nor
had left Mankind created by himself without the regiment of one Person And Mr. Harding one of our own Countrymen doth wholly concur with this profound Canonist saving that he dealeth more civilly with Christ in using the word Providence instead of the Canonist's Discretion Thus he writeth Except we should wickedly grant that God's Providence doth lack to his Church reason may soon induce us to believe that to one Man the chief and highest of all Bishops the Successor of Peter the Rule and Government of the Church by God hath been deferred And he further doth express his opinion to this effect That if God had not ordain'd such a Monarchical Church-Government he should have brought in amongst his faithful People that unruly confusion and destruction of all Commonwealths so much abhorred of Princes which the Grecians call an Anarchy which is a state for lack of order in Governours without any Government at all That our Saviour Christ is the sole Governour Head and Archbishop of his Catholick Church as he is the only Governour Ruler and Monarch over all the World and that his Discretion and Divine Providence is no more to be blemished or impeached by the Cavils of any Impostors in that he hath appointed no one Priest Archbishop or Pope to be his Vicar-General over the whole Catholick Church than for that he hath not assigned any one King Emperour or Monarch to rule the whole World under him this is the point that here we purpose to make good taking it in this place for granted that there was never any one Man in the World to whom our Saviour Christ did commit the Government of it after the time that it was Peopled and throughly inhabited that is from Noah's Flood at the least hitherto They that labour to prove that the Bishop of Rome is Head of the Universal Church and that Christ should have shewed little Discretion or Providence if he had not so ordain'd it do insist very much upon the grounds of natural reason and philosophy telling us out of Plato Aristotle Plutarch Isocrates Stobaeus Hesiodus Euripides Homer Herodotus and divers others That of all the kinds of Government that are the Monarchical Government is the best That in a great Host consisting of Souldiers of divers Nations and Countries and perhaps of many Soveraign Princes and Kings there must be one General to govern them all That all things naturally have a propension and aptness to Monarchical Government That Bees of every Hive have their King That in every Flock of Sheep there is a principal Ram That in every Herd of Cattel hath a Leader That Cranes do not fly promiscuously and in heaps but have one whom they do all very orderly follow That amongst Coelestial Spheres there is but one Primum Mobile That in the number of the lights of the World one is greater than the rest That there is a certain Principality in the Elements That the Fountain is but one from whence divers times there flow sundry Streams That into one Sea all Rivers do run and return That the thing which is most one is less easily divided That it is rather one which is simply one than a multitude conspiring in one And that for these and many other like reasons seeing the Monarchical Government is best and that we may be sure that Christ would have his Church governed by the best manner of Government except we should think him to have dealt absurdly as a Person void both of good Discretion and Providence It followeth therefore that Christ committed the Government of it unto one first to St. Peter and then to his Successor the Bishop of Rome for the time being If this one Jesuit and his Fellows would upon the said Philosophical premises have concluded thus That it therefore had followed that Christ himself doth not only retain in his own hands the sole Government of his Catholick Church as he is the only Redeemer of it but likewise the sole Government of the whole World as he is the Creator of it the Conclusion had been true although the premises had not enforced it But how stifly soever they meant to insist upon the said Conclusion without any regard of truth so they may blear the Eyes of the simpler sort with such their vain Illusions We may be bold as we hope resolutely to defend and maintain it that the said natural reasons are of as great strength to prove That there ought of necessity to be one temporal Monarch over all the World as one Ecclesiastical Monarch over the whole Catholick Church although in very deed they are far too feeble and weak to prove either the one or the other For who knoweth not that when the Philosophers did write in commendation of the Monarchical Government they only had Relation to particular Nations and Countries endeavouring to prove that it was better for them severally to be ruled by that Form of Government which is called Monarchical than by any of the rest Aristocratical Democratical or any other And it was so far from their meaning to have their said reasons wrested to prove that one mortal Man ought to have the Government of the Catholick Church the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ as they never dreamed for ought that appeareth that one Man in their Judgment was fit or able to take upon him the Temporal Government of the whole World To which purpose a principal Lawyer amongst our Adversaries doth write in this sort Naturâ ipsâ institutum non est quòd universus Orbis uni Principi subditus sit It is not ordain'd by nature that the whole World should be subject to one Prince If then it be an idle vanity for any Man to go about by natural reason to prove that one Man ought to be the temporal Monarch of all the World which nature her self did never intend it is then certainly a kind of madness or phrenzy to rely upon such proofs for the Popes spiritual Authority over the whole Catholick Church neither of them both being comprehensible or subject to the apprehensions of nature Again these Patrons for the Pope and his Primacy over the whole Catholick Church have not only such Arguments as we have heard drawn from natural reason but some likewise deduced from sundry similitudes and those out of the Scriptures upon which they rely with some more confidence as reason is they should saying that God made all Mankind ex uno Adamo of one Adam to signify thereby that he would have all Men to depend ab uno of one but the Old Testament was a figure of the new and that therefore as there was but one High-Priest amongst the Jews to govern that one Church so now there must be but one Pope to govern all the Churches in the World that Aaron was not only a figure of Christ but likewise of St. Peter that the Church is compared to an Host well order'd to a humane Body to a Kingdom to a Fold
had not a place where to lay his head But now they are as we see become Caesars Emperours and Lords of all the World It was long since said by a good Friend of that See Excellentia Romani Imperii extulit Papatum Romani Pontisicis supra alias Ecclesias The Excellency of the Roman Empire did lift up the Papacy above other Churches Which Exaltation and Advancement of those Bishops He might well have added hath been as elsewhere we have said the very Bane and Cankerworm of the Empire it self by their sucking out of it for the strengthning of themselves the Juice and those Vital Spirits whereby formerly the Vigour and Glory of it did subsist and all by Rebellion and Treason under the pretence of Religion and through their false Glosses Applications and violent Inforcements to a wrong Sense of the Sacred Scriptures Wherein altho' they had an especial Faculty yet they could never have so greatly prevail'd as they did against such an Estate as the Empire was nor against so many great Kings and other Princes that were not subject unto it if they had not been upheld in all their said wicked Courses by sundry their Flatterers and Parasites who imitating their Examples in perverting and wresting the Scriptures did take upon them to make good and to justifie whatsoever the said Popes had either done or said were it never so Impious Treacherous or Traiterous as by that which followeth it will plainly appear About the Year 1140 which was upon the point of Fifty eight years after Gregory the Seventh's Death Theologia Scholastica sive Disputatrix The Scholastical or brabling Divinity as One calleth it began to peep into the World when Peter Lombard writ his Books of Distinctions and did not only himself thereby trouble the Truth as Another saith with the Mudd of Questions and Streams of Opinions but also set many men after him on work in writing long Commentaries upon his said Distinctions to the hatching of infinite Oppositions and difficult Perplexities In which number Thomas of Aquine bare the greatest sway who entring into this Course about Forty years after Innocentius the Third's days and finding how Gregory the Seventh Paschal the Second Innocentius the Second Adrian the Fourth Alexander the Third and the said Innocentius the Third with divers other Popes had ruffled with the Emperours and what a hand they had gotten over the Scriptures became the chiefest Champion of a Schoolman that Rome ever had Out of these words Of his fulness we have all received he was able to collect that there is in the Bishop of Rome the Fulness of all Graces Again because Christ whom he maketh Bishop of Rome may be called as He saith A King and a Priest He therefore inferreth it not to be inconvenient that his Successors should be so styled Also we know not how but He hath found it out that when God said to Jeremy I have set thee over Nations and Kingdoms He spoke so unto him In personâ Vicarii Christi In the person of Christ's Vicar Furthermore in that Aristotle saith That the Body hath his Vertue and Operation by the Soul He supposeth it must needs follow that the Jurisdiction of Princes hath her Being Vertue and Operation from St. Peter and his Successors For further Proof whereof as fearing it would be thought insufficient that he had said before he buckleth himself to certain Facts of the Popes and Emperours saying That Constantine did give the Empire to Sylvester that Pope Adrian made Charles the Great Emperour and that likewise Otho the First was created Emperour by Pope Leo But at the last He striketh this Point dead because saith He it is manifest that Pope Zachary deposed the King of France and absolved all his Barons from their Oath of Fidelity that Innocentius the Third took the Empire from Otho the IV th and that Honorius his next Successor dealt in like sort with Frederick the Second And as it were to make up all speaking of the Emperour's Crowns and the Custom as it seemeth then in use He saith That the Emperour did receive a Crown of Gold from the Bishop of Rome and that the Pope deliver'd it to him with his Foot In signum subjectionis suae fidelitatis ad Romanam Ecclesiam Thereby to teach him his Subjection and Loyalty to the Church of Rome But hitherto we have heard this great Schoolman by way of Discourse wherein peradventure he is more remiss and dissolute than when he presseth his Points Logically as the manner is in the Schools We will therefore trace him a little in that Path if first we shall observe that it is his custom when He handleth a Question that doth concern the Church of Rome as soon as He hath propounded it He first proceedeth with his Videtur quòd non and bringeth sometimes both Scriptures and Fathers for the Negative part his purpose still being to encounter them with his Sed contrà est but such or such a Pope holdeth the contrary And then He cometh in first with his Conclusion and secondly with his Dicendum est wherein He so laboureth and bestirreth himself as that always the said Scriptures and Fathers are wrung and enforced to yield to the Pope As for example Having propounded this Question Whether for Apostasie from the Faith a Prince doth lose his Dominion over his Subjects and so consequently if he be Excommunicated there being the same Reason for the one as there is for the other as two great Cardinals do affirm He falleth upon his Videtur saying It seemeth that a Prince for Apostasie from the Faith doth not lose his Dominion over his Subjects but that they are still bound to obey him For St. Ambrose saith That Julian the Emperour though he were an Apostata yet had under him Christian Soldiers to whom when he said Bring forth your Army for Defence of the Commonwealth they obeyed him Therefore for the Apostasie of the Prince their Subjects are not absolved from his Dominion Moreover an Apostata from the Faith is an Infidel but some holy men are found faithfully to have served Infidel-Masters as Joseph did Pharaoh Daniel Nebuchadnezzar and Mardochee Assuerus Therefore for Apostasie from the Faith it is not to be yielded but that such a Prince must be obeyed by his Subjects Sed contra est quod Gregorius septimus dicit But Gregory the Seventh is of a contrary Opinion where he saith We keeping the Statutes of our holy Predecessors do by our Apostolick Authority absolve from their Oath those who are bound to excommunicate persons by Fealty or the Sacrament of an Oath and do by all means prohibit them that they keep not their Fidelity unto them until they come to satisfaction Whereupon Thomas concludeth That all Apostata's are Excommunicated sicut Haeretici As all Hereticks are and that therefore their Subjects are delivered from their Obedience and Oaths of Fidelity unto