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B20451 Justice vindicated from the false fucus [i.e. focus] put upon it, by [brace] Thomas White gent., Mr. Thomas Hobbs, and Hugo Grotius as also elements of power & subjection, wherein is demonstrated the cause of all humane, Christian, and legal society : and as a previous introduction to these, is shewed, the method by which men must necessarily attain arts & sciences / by Roger Coke.; Reports. Part 10. French Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1660 (1660) Wing C4979 450,561 399

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Plate Jewels and Treasure of the Churches and Religious Houses within the Realm and compelled the Clergy to give him the one half of one years value of all their Ecclesiastical promotions and dignities But such was the felicity of this Prince that neither Pope nor Clergy durst openly oppugne him but in the 27. year of his Reign at the request of Boniface 8. says Martin he set John Baliol adjudged by Edward before King of Scotland at liberty And having conquered Scotland in the 33. year of his Reign Robert Bruce procured an Instrument from the Pope that the Kingdom of Scotland was holden of the Church of Rome and therefore required the King to desist from the prosecution of his Wars there But how little King Edward regarded this Instrument and what answer he returned to the Pope you may read in our English Chronicles nor do I finde that ever more prosecution was made by the Pope in this Kings life-time 20. From this time until Henry the Eighth the Kings of England and In the reign of Hen. 4. the Popes kept so good correspondence that they never went so far as Excommunication or Interdiction on the Popes part and how far the Kings did restrain the Popes jurisdiction in their several reigns after the Conquest shall be shewed in Chap. 3. Yet I cannot pass over one thing of the whole Hierarchy of the Church of England except only the Bishop of Carlisle who all factiously and traiterously conspired or adhered to Henry the Fourth his unjust Usurpation and Deposition of their Soveraign Richard the Second CHAP. II. Of Ecclesiastical Laws made by the Saxon and Danish Kings before the Conquest I Inas by Gods gift King of the West-Saxons by the advice and instruction Inas began to reign in the year of Christ 712 died 727. of Cenredes my Father and Heddes my Bishop and Eorkenwoldes my Bishop and with all my * Counsellors Earls Ealdermen and them of best birth of the Wisest of my people and eke in a great Assembly of Gods Servants did religiously study as well for the health of my soul as for the common profit of our Kingdom that right Laws of Marriage and just Judgment be firmly established through every folk and that hereafter it shall not be lawful for any Ealderman or any under our rule to make void these our Dooms or Judgments Cap. 1. Of the Rule of Gods Servants First we command that Gods Servants have a right rule of living After that we command all folk to observe these Laws and Dooms or Judgments Cap. 2. Of Children A Child shall be baptized within thirty days after it be born if that be not done let thirty shillings be forfeited If that it die before it be baptized he shall forfeit all he hath Cap. 3. Of working upon Sunday If a Slave work on Sunday by his Masters command let him be free and the Master shall pay thirty shillings But if the Servant did his work without command of his Master beat his hide or make him to fear a hide-beating If a Free servant do any work without his Masters bidding let him forfeit his freedom or sixty shillings and a Priest double so much Cap. 4. Of First-fruits First-fruits shall be paid upon the Mass of S. Martin he who shall not then pay them shall forfeit forty shillings and pay twelvefold the value of the fruits Cap. 5. Of Church-Priviledge or Sanctuary If any man guilty of death flee to the Church let his life be spared and let right be done to him And if any man deserving stripes implores help of the Church let him be remitted his stripes Cap. 6. Of Fighting If a man strike in the Kings house he shall forfeit all he hath and let it depend upon the Kings judgment whether he shall lose his life If one strike in a * Cathedral Church Minster he shall pay one hundred and twenty shillings c. Cap. 62. Of First fruits Every man shall pay First-fruits for the Roof and Hearth where he shall be upon the day of the birth of our Saviour Cap. 75. Of the killing of Godfather or Godson If any one shall slay his Godson or his Godfather he shall compensate so much to his next of kin as the compensation due to his Lord had been And this payment to the value of him which is killed shall be increased or lessened accordingly as the payment to the Lord for the Servant killed should have been performed If it be the Kings Godson which is killed he shall satisfie the King and his kindred but if the next of kin kills him he shall pay to the Godfather so much as should have been paid to the Lord for the slaughter of his Servant If he be a Bishops son he shall pay half so much Ecclesiastical Laws made by King Alfred or Alured who began to reign in the Year 871. The Preface GOD did speak these words to Moses and thus said I am the Lord thy God I led thee out of Egypt land and of the house of bondage Thou shalt not choose other Gods before me Do not take my Name in idleness for I will not hold him innocent who on idleness taketh my Name Remember thou keep holy the Seventh day Do thy work on six days and on the Seventh rest thou and thy son and thy daughter thy servant and handmaid and thy work-cattel and the stranger that is within thy door For on six days Christ made heaven and earth sea and all things thereon were created by him and rested on the Seventh day and therefore the Lord hallowed it Honor thy Father and thy Mother whom the Lord gave thee that thou maist live long on earth Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not steal Thou shalt not commit adultery Nor report false witness of thy neighbor nor covet thou thy neighbors inheritance without right Nor work golden gods or silver Thou shalt constitute these Judgments If a man buy a Christian man he shall serve six years the seventh let him be free without cost With the same vestment he came in with the same let him go out if he have a wife let her go out with him if his Lord gave him his wife she and her * * Children bearns are the Lords But if the servant shall say I will not part from my Lord nor from my wife nor from my children nor from my work then let his Lord bring him to the door of the Temple and there let him bore his ear with an eal for a sign that ever after he is his servant If any man sell his daughter for an handmaid he shall not use her as an handmaid he shall use her courteously neither shall he sell her to other folk and if she be negligent let him be pacified let him set her free to stranger folk if he ally her to his son in marriage let him give a garment the reward of her modesty and endow
from the company of Tamar whenas he hated her because he had abused her but it was in Joseph that he refused to accompany his Mistress whenas he might have securely enjoyed her Nor is it any virtue for any man to do or forbear any thing for feare of punishment for so horses dogs and other irrational creatures will do or not do many things for feare of stripes which are commanded or forbidden by their Masters Nor is it any virtue in a Judg to pronounce true judgment if he be hired thereunto by any reward or bribe Where therefore neither worldly pleasure profit love feare hate nor any sublunary thing but it may be loss to all these do not move a man to the doing or not doing of what in conscience he ought to do or forbear there nothing less then Gods grace and power in such a man can be the true and efficient cause of such an action 6. It is a most admirable thing to consider how notwithstanding all Why only Man can do virtuous Actions the various natures dispositions and events of things this one Providence foresees and provides for all created things in the whole universe until she brings them all to their designed end Nor does this providence foresee and provide for all things from an eternal and fatal decree impelling all actions of all creatures For then there could be no such thing as good or bad men but God were the efficient cause of vice as well as virtue in men but by a mean foresight or knowledg does often determin necessary effects from contingent causes Which does not only plainly appear from very many places of Scripture as that the men of Keilah would have delivered David if he 1 Sam. 23. 12. had not escaped thence that God would have destroyed Niniveh within forty daies if the men had not repented that God would have gathered the children of Jerusalem together as a Hen gathereth her Chickens but Matth. 23. 27. they would not that if the mighty works had been done in Tire and Sidon which were done in Chorazin they had repented in dust and ashes c. Matth. 11. 21. but also all Gods promises and cursings upon men do depend upon their obedience or disobedience to what he commands And however this rigid opinion of Fate and the eternal determination of all things be asserted by the Stoicks yet do not I think that the most wicked man that ever was did ever attribute any wicked action to any such cause but pretended conscience pleasure profit or his own will never Gods It is true indeed that God hath made man in flesh and blood and so prone to desire many things which he ought not But though diverse men do naturally affect and desire things they ought not yet God hath so made every man a free Lord of all his actions that there is no man but may chuse whether he will do or not any thing to the attaining of his appetitions and affections And mans excellency above other creatures consists in this that his actions are not determined by his objects as other creatures are but he may freely do this action as it is moved in him from the appetition of pleasure profit pride c. or abstain from it as he apprehends it forbidden by him who may forbid And so may any man freely do or endeavor to do any thing which he ought to do though to his temporal disadvantage but this having no Temporal motive must proceed from Gods grace which no creature upon earth can do but only man only man therefore can do virtuous actions CHAP. III. Of Judgment 1. JUdgment is the definitive of him who by right commands permits What is Judgment or forbids a thing either by himself or instrument whether any thing be done conformable to a Law commanding permitting or forbidding it 2. Herein judgment differs from a Law A Law is the declared will of How it differs from a Law him who by right commands permits or forbids a thing together with a penalty annext for not observance after some reasonable time fixt whereby the obliged may take notice of such declaration Judgment is the sencence of him who so commands forbids or permits whether such an act were an omission or transgression of any Law so declared 3. Justice is the upright doing of any just or legal action conformable to the Law of him who by right commands Judgment is the discerning of How Judgment differs from Justice a good or bad action 4. All judgment must necessarily be the act of three persons at least What persons are necessary in Judgment viz. the Judge the accuser and the party accused or as we say the Judge the Plaintiff and Defendant 5. The end or ratio finalis of Judgment is either to determine differences The end of Judgment or punish offenders CHAP. IV. Of Equity 1. EQuity is twofold either a remission or moderation of the Laws How manifold is Equity when the execution of Laws will rather kill then cure a distemper in the Subject as when many Subjects either upon passion or being seduced have so far transgressed Laws that they have forfeited by Law their lives and estates yet in such case are not supream powers rigidly to exact all which the Law gives them but it is equity so to punish the principal Authors and other Subjects that others may be deterred from the like and the generality offending preserved So where the Law commands upon penalty and it becomes impossible for the Subject to perform as it ever was and will be there it is equity to remit the penalty Where therefore the Law obliges a Tenant to pay his Landlord such a Rent yet if by inundation of waters sterility of the season c. it comes to pass that the Tenant by no fault of his either cannot or it will be the ruine of himself and family to pay it there it is equity in the Landlord to remit or moderate what by Law he might justly exact Or secondly a supplement of the Law in cases wherein things in conscience ought to be done yet for want of some formalities or niceties they cannot in strictness of Law be exacted 2. Equity is when with a sincere intention men although it be to How Equity differs from Judgment their prejudice endeavor to please God Judgment a giving sentence according to Laws 3. In Courts of Judicature the Judges proceed according to the declared The necessity of Courts of Equity Laws and ought not in judgment to vary or swerve from them but proceed as they are impowred by Law and their Commission and Laws are made usually ad terrorem rather to affright men then to punish all offenders which Laws were they not moderated it were impossible for all men to subsist under the burden of them nor is there any man but has need of Gods mercy and the Kings Courts of Equity therefore are as necessary
in himself from the seed of the Devil And if he hath misled any one out of the way that he might make any gain thereof let him carefully reduce him to the right way This is that which I will If he shall have provoked any one to sin let him do to him what is necessary viz. Let him reclaim him from his sins and again lead him in the right way He who diligently dehorts another from his sins renders his own the lighter 17. This judgment every one by the councel of his Confessor may give himself who with a constant mind will break off his sins and correct them viz. Let him distribute for Gods love all he hath let him leave with them lands country and all the desirable things of this world and serve the Lord day and night and endeavor by all the power he can against his worldly desires all the daies of his life What then is left that by exhorting others he gathers to him for the study of godliness by all possible means he can Here in these following shall be said how any Sick man may redeem his declared Fast 18. Every man may redeem the fast of one day with one penny and any one may redeem the fast of one day with two hundred and twenty Psalms and any one may redeem the fast of twelve moneths with 30s. or by setting free any one of that price And for one daies fast let him sing six times Beati and also six times Pater noster and for the fast of one day let that man bend his knee and bow himself to the ground sixty times saying Pater noster And also a man may absolve the fast of one day if in his prayers to God he through all his members lift up himself to God by true confession and right faith and fifteen times sing Miserere mei Deus and also Pater noster fifteen times Then is a lightening of the sins of the whole day granted to him 19. Any man may absolve a seven Winters fast in one year if he daily shall sing the Psalms of the Psalter and do the same at night and fifty on the evening one Mass may absolve the fast of twelve daies and with ten Masses the fast of four moneths may be bought off and with thirty Masses the fast of a whole year may be bought off if any man will out of true love to God intercede for himself and confess his sins to his Confessor and amend those things as he is bidden and alwaies afterward avoid them Of the Penance of Mighty men 1. Thus a mighty man and having many friends may by the help of his friends mitigate his penance First in the name of God and by the testimony of his Confessor let him manifest a right faith and forgive all who may have sinned against him and make his confession without any omission of his sins and endeavour to repent and take his penance with much grief 2. Then let him lay down his Arms and unprofitable things and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and taking his staff in his hand let him go diligently barefoot and let him use hair-shirts nor come on a bed but lie in a cottage and do this the number of seven years and prepare himself three years on this manner and take to his aid twelve of his companions let them fast three daies with bread crude pottage and water and let him get as well as he can to finish the work seven times an hundred and twenty men who may every one of them fast for his sake three daies so the number of these Fasts will amount to so many Fasts as there are daies in the seven years 3. When any one fasts let him distribute the dishes wherein his meat was to all the poor men of God and in the three daies of his Fast let him lay aside all worldly business and day and night as often as he can go to Church and diligently watch there in Alms light and cry to God and beg remission of sins with a sorrowful spirit and bended knees Also let him often stretch himself upon the sign of the Cross now standing upright now prostrate upon the ground and let every mighty man learn sincerely to weep and deplore his sins and also on those three daies feed as many poor men as he can upon the fourth let him stoop down to wash their feet and let there upon the same day be celebrated for the Penitent so many Masses as any one can by any means perform and on the time of the Masses let him be absolved and then let him take the Eucharist unless that through too much guilt he be so hindred that he dares not take it Yet let him promise for the future as much as in him lies alwaies to do well and whilst he lives by Gods help to avoid injustice so as he may alwaies and rightly hold his Christendom and renounce Heathenism Minde O ye Ministers of God his words and diligently correct his works that so he may set up all Justice and by the help of God as much as in him lies destroy Injustice It is very necessary he should perform that to God even in the least thing which he hath promised 4. This is the lightening of the penance of Great men who abound in many friends But it is not granted to an Indigent man to proceed so It is therefore expedient more strongly to exact this of him and that as is meet that every one should wash away his sins and undergo himself his correction Scriptum est enim Quia unusquisque onus suum portabit These Canons are set out in the Original by Abraham VVheelock and by him translated into Latine in his Addition to the History of Bede between the Laws of King Edgar and Ethelred pag. 65. until 88. Ecclesiastical Laws made by Canutus who began to reign in the year of our Lord 1016. THis is the Decree which Canutus King of England of Denmark and Norway by the counsel of the wise men to the glory of the Immortal God the ornament of the Royal Majesty and the utility of the people hath ordained at Winchester upon * * Christmas day Midwintertide 1. First of all let all men devoutly and holily worship only one God and strictly hold themselves to one rule of Christian religion and obey with all faith and observance King Canutus 2. And protect Gods Church and defend it and frequent it as well for the health of our soul as the commodity of others It is meet that one peace be comprehended in all Christian Churches and also that all Christian men have it in great veneration For Gods peace is to be wished for before other things next after that the Kings peace is to be kept It is therefore very meet that the peace of the Church of God and the tranquillity delivered into the Kings hand be alwaies kept inviolable If any man shall violate either let him be fined and suffer death
right faith to him Christ himself first sang the Lords Prayer and taught it his Disciples And that godly Prayer is made up of seven petitions which whosoever shall not counterfeitly but from his heart speak speaks with God himself of all those things which are necessary to this life and the life to come How then can any man with any reason pray to God from his soul unless he believes on God and inwardly hath a right faith For he that will not learn these things after death shall neither partake of any part of rest with Christians neither alive shall he be admitted to the Eucharist nor lastly shall be deemed worthy the name of a Christian man Nay it shall not be lawful for him to answer for any one in Baptism or before the Bishop in Confirmation unless he shall learn these and throughly con them That deadly sins be avoided 23. And we teach that every man does alwaies and carefully avoid all dangerous and deadly sins and if he by chance offend by the impulse of the Devil let him make amends therefore by the instruction of the Priest And among these Avoutery Cap. 24. And we teach that every one as long as he lives does avoid all Avoutry and forbidden lust and breach of wedlock That men be fearful of the dreadful Judgment 25. And we teach that the fear of God may alwaies so sink into the souls of men that days and nights they may fear punishments for their sins and dread the day of Judgment and be affrighted for the torments of Hell continually think of the last day of their life That Bishops and Priests faithfully perform their duties 26. Truly Bishops are Gods proclaimers and Interpreters of Gods law It is their part openly to set forth the benefit of Divine things and expose themselves by well living an example to imitate and they who will may give their ears and mind to these things He is a bad Keeper who will not defend his Flock at least with his voice if he can do no more against him who shall go about to spoil it And there is one most hurtful Devil of all other who alwaies mightily endeavors to bring destruction upon the souls of men Wherefore it will be expedient that Pastors watch ward and proclaim to the people what dangers hang over them from their mighty adversaries and that they be provided against them We call Bishops and Priests Pastors to whom it belongs by teaching and doctrine to look to and defend the flock of the Lord lest at any time the Wolf enflamed by rage and wickedness should bite and tear them with his teeth But yet if any one will shut his ears against the Divine precepts and admonitions be it between God and himself and let the Name of God be alwaies praised To whom be all praise glory and honor world without end Amen Among the Humane Laws so stiled of Canutus I find these inserted Of Casting out of Witches and Sorcerers 4. And we command that this our Dition be every where purged and cleansed from all deadly wickedness And if Witches Fortune-tellers secret Murderers or any Common Bawds be any where taken in our Kingdom let them be banished out of the confines of it or in the Kingdom unless they become of a better mind and mend their manners let them be put to a vile death Who will not obey right and Divine and Humane Laws unless they repent and make abundant satisfaction be commanded to be banished c. Of abolishing the Superstition of the Gentiles 5. We plainly forbid all Heathenish Adoration It is barbarous Worship whether any one worship Idols viz. the Gods of the Gentiles the Sun the Moon Fire or Running water Fountains or Stones or any kind of Trees or Wood or hath observed the superstition of Witches c. Although at any time no leave is given for Injustice yet without doubt Iniquity is most forbidden upon Holy daies and in Holy places and by how much a man is richer and placed in dignity above other men by so much more abundantly shall he make amends to God and men for wrong done And how he shall compensate to God we refer to the precepts out of Scripture and to Men as is set down in Humane laws Of killing a Minister of the Altar Cap. 36. If any of them who serve at the Altar be killed of any man let that man be excluded out of the patronage of all Divine and Humane laws unless together with banishment he make abundant satisfaction for that wickedness and give satisfaction to the Kindred of him who was killed or at least together with sufficient men who may be sworne wash out all suspition of the crime And this satisfaction ought to be made to God and men within thirty daies upon the penalty of the forfeiture of all he hath Vide Para. 9. of the antecedent Chap. 37. Vide Para. 10. of the antecedent Chap. 38. Of Arresting or beating one in Orders 39. 39. If any one shall imprison beat or use a man bound to God ignominiously let him make amends as is meet Let him pay to the Bishop for the dignity of his order a mulct by the name of * * Cleansing the Altar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to the Lord or King full satisfaction for breach of the Peace or at least wash out the crime with a full and perfect excuse Of a man Ordained guilty of Death 40. If any one in Holy Orders be guilty of Death let him be taken and held to what punishment shall be inflicted upon him by the Bishop Of a man condemned who desires a Confessor 41. If any man condemned to death freely desires a Confessor to confess his sins let it be granted him But if any one shall deny it him let him pay the King an hundred and twenty shillings or at least purge himself from the crime and have five men joined with him and be himself the sixth Of observing Sunday and Festivals 42. No man as much as possible can be condemned for any crime unless he did resist or flee shall be put to death upon a Sunday but shall be kept bound until the feast be passed If any Freeman work upon a Holy day then let him stand in the pillory and give satisfaction to God as it shall be commanded him If a Servant do any work let him be beaten or be put into fear of beating for it If a Master command his Servant unwilling to work upon a Festival let him be fined to his Servant and the Servant free for the time to come And if the Master be a Dane let him pay the mulct of the Law-breaking An Englishman shall be fined according to the nature of the fact or excuse it That men observe Lent and Festivals 44. If a man break Lent by Fighting Marriage Rapine or by committing any other wickedness let his compensation be double The