AN ESSAY ON Ecclesiastical Authority:

In which the Pretence of an Independent Power in the CHURCH, to a Divine Right in the Election of Bishops;

To the Invalidity of Lay Deprivations;

To the Inseparable Relation of a BISHOP to his See;

To an Obligation of continuing Commu­nion with the Deprived Bishops;

And several other Things relating to the Nonjurors Separation from our CHURCH, are particularly and impartially Examined.

By JOHN TURNER, D. D. Vicar of Greenwich, and Chaplain to His Royal Highness the PRINCE.

LONDON: Printed for JOHN WYAT, at the Rose in St. Paul's Church-yard. 1617.

AN ESSAY ON Ecclesiastical Authority.

THE many irregular and dan­gerous Practices of the Romish Clergy under the Pretence of an exempt Jurisdiction, and an Authority Independent on the Civil Power; caused the Governors of our CHURCH to take that Doctrine into their serious Consideration, at the Beginning of our REFORMATION; and in our XXXVII th Article they have determined and settled it thus: That the Queen's Majesty, for this was done in Queen Elizabeth's Time, hath the chief Power in this Realm of England, and all other her Dominions; unto whom the chief [Page 2] Government of all Estates of this Realm whether they be Ecclesiastical or Civil, in all Causes doth appertain. And then to avoid Offence, and prevent Misconstructions, as the Queen had declared in her Injunctions, so the said Ar­ticle, thus explains the forementioned Doc­trine. We give not hereby to our Princes the mi­nistring either of God's Word, or of the Sacraments; but only that Prerogative which we see to have been given always to all godly Princes in Holy Scripture by God Himself; that they should rule all Estates and Degrees of Men committed to their Charge by God, whether they be Ecclesiasti­cal or Temporal. And this was so confirmed by the Canons in the Beginning of King James I's Reign, that if the Authority of our CHURCH might be admitted to be deci­sive in this Matter, we see plainly what that was, and is. But the giving so much Juris­diction to Princes over Ecclesiastical Persons in Ecclesiastical Causes and Affairs, is complain­ed of by some among us as an Encroachment, and a dangerous Compliance; an enslaving Principle, which controuls the Powers of the CHURCH, that, as they say, ought to be exempt and Independent.

THIS Point then, not being successfully enough determined by the declared Judgment of our CHURCH in Her Articles and Canons; [Page 3] must, it seems, be brought under a farther Examination. And it must be considered not only as a Subject of Debate and Speculation, but, at this Time, it is become a Matter of the greatest Moment and Importance to our Peace both in CHURCH and STATE. All the Enemies of the late happy REVOLU­TION, are gone into the Defence of that In­dependent Authority; to say no more. And all those other Notions and Opinions whereby the Non-jurors would vindicate their Separati­on from the Communion of our CHURCH, are built upon this Foundation. And it will not be easy to make them sensible, that this their Separation is Unjustifiable and Wrong, if this Claim be allowed good. On the other Hand, if it can be proved, That the CHURCH has no such exempt, and independent Autho­rity, as is pretended; we shall strike at the very Root of their untoward Principles and Proceedings. In our Inquiry into this Matter,

1. THE first Thing that occurs to our Observation, is, That the STATE is found in the actual and full Possession of Authority over all their Subjects, and in all Affairs whatsoever, antecedently to the CHURCH'S Claim. We are not born Priests, as we are [Page 4] born Subjects; but are made such upon a suf­ficient Maturity of Age; and are therefore to consider what Share of Authority the Prince loses over any of his Subjects upon their Admission into Holy Orders; and what is the Foundation of the pretended Change. And as to this, we shall soon be sensible,

2. THAT there is Nothing in natural Reli­gion to be pleaded as the Ground of such an Exemption or Independency. For accord­ing to that, Kings had a Right to the Priest­hood also, and were the undoubted supreme Judges and Determiners of all Affairs. Mel­chisedech and Jethro, we all know, were such. Nor does it appear, that there ever was any Separation of the Ecclesiastical Au­thority from the Temporal, before the Mo­saic Dispensation, which was a Type of the Evangelical; and consequently no Room for any Debates or Disputes of this Na­ture in the first Natural State of Mankind. It must therefore all be laid in Divine Re­velation and Institution. From whence I think it plainly follows,

3. Thirdly. THAT if the CHURCH has any Right to such an exempt and indepen­dent Authority as is now pleaded for, it [Page 5] must be founded on that Divine Commission which CHRIST gave to his Apostles and their Successors, and by them to his CHURCH to the End of the World. The Way then to know what there is to be said for such a Claim, is, to consider well the Contents of that Com­mission which must be looked on as the great Charter of the Gospel, upon which all Her appropriated Rights and Privileges, Her Au­thority and Powers, Her Immunities and Franchises are built. The Substance then of CHRIST'S Commission to his Apostles was, That they should make Proselytes of all Nations Matth. xxviii. 19, 20. Joh. xx. 21, &c. by Preaching God's Word; that they should Baptize them, and by that Sacrament admit them into Christ's Church; that they should afterwards instruct and train them up in the Pure Christian Worship and Holiness, and in that Worship commemorate CHRIST'S Death in the Eucharist, according to his Institution; bind Offenders, loose Penitents, and by Or­daining Ministers make an effectual Provision for the perpetual Continuance of this Mini­stry which CHRIST has thus committed to 'em, to the End of the World, according to his Ap­pointment. So that Preaching and Performing Divine Service in the Worship of GOD; Admi­nistring the Sacraments; inflicting Censures, and passing Sentence upon enormous Sin­ners; [Page 6] Absolving the Penitent from such Sen­tences and Ordaining Ministers. These and whatever other Particulars of Ministration in the Divine Offices of Religion, are by the special Commission of CHRIST in any Part of it appropriated to the Spiritual Governors of the CHURCH, become thereby, the Peculiar sacred Powers of the Christian Priesthood. Concerning all which it is allow'd and grant­ed, 1. That the CHURCH does not derive Her Authority to the Execution of them from any Temporal Powers or Potentates; but from JESUS CHRIST alone by the fore­mentioned Divine Commission. 2. That as they were not originally derived from, so neither can they be taken away, or made to cease by any secular Authorities whatsoever. 3. That neither can any secular Powers of themselves execute these Divine and Holy Offices. The very End and Reason of taking these Holy Offices out of the Hands of the secular Powers, who before had executed them, and of vesting them in a distinct Set or Order of Men, still requires that they should continue so separated. And consequently, all the Powers specify'd in CHRIST'S Com­mission, are the limitted and appropriated Pow­ers, which belong to the Spiritual Govern­ours of the CHURCH alone; and which no [Page 7] Temporal Potentates can take upon them to execute, without breaking in upon CHRIST'S Institution, and subverting the very Ends and Reasons of their original Separation. And therefore, if no more had been intended by the Independent Authority of CHRIST'S Church in the Execution of their Priestly Office than this, That they who derived not this Autho­rity from the State, could not have it taken away by them; and that the secular Pow­ers are by CHRIST'S Commission excluded from the Performance of all the Divine Of­fices specify'd in it: The Church of England has declared Her Judgment in Favour of such a Claim; and we should have entred into no Disputes against it.

BUT then, he who himself has no Authori­ty to baptize, may yet be a competent Judge of the Care and Fidelity of those who do. And he who has no Power to administer the Sacra­ment of the Lord's-Supper, or to ordain Mi­nisters, may yet be capable of taking Cog­nizance of the Neglects, and of the Mis­carriages committed in those Performances. So that it is one Thing to minister in the Holy Offices and Service of the Church; and another to have Rule and Government, and a judicial Cognizance of the Care, Fidelity, and good or evil Conduct of those who do. This leads me to consider,

2. THAT besides the Ministration in Ho­ly Offices, the Power of the Keys and Or­dination, there are other Powers and Au­thorities claimed by the Church: Such are all the General Powers of Government, of As­sembling in Synods, of Consulting one ano­ther on important Occasions, of making Laws or Canons; of appointing to parti­cular Churches or Districts their proper Pa­stors; of determining religious Debates and Disputes; of prescribing Rules of Order and Discipline, &c. All which, as not being expressly mentioned in, or appropriated by CHRIST'S Commission as the other divine Of­fices of Religion are, can belong to the Church only of Common-Right, as it is a So­ciety; and as such Acts of Government are the constant and common Rights of every Esta­blished Community.

A SOCIETY cannot subsist without Go­vernment; as therefore the Christian Church is by CHRIST'S Commission constituted a spi­ritual Society there is no Doubt, but that it thereby obtains a certain Right to the Ex­ercise of all such Authority in Government as other Established Communities are usual­ly possess'd of.

THE Question then is, not whether the Church has a Right to the Exercise of such Authority, for it is undeniably evident that she has: But what is the Foundation of that Authority, and how far it will hold good to the Exclusion of the secular Powers. Now unless it could be made appear that these Po­wers of Government are by CHRIST'S Com­mission specify'd and appropriated to the Priesthood as the divine Offices of its Holy Ministration are: There can be no other Reason or Ground of this Claim than that of common Right and Necessity to the Support of this spiritual Community and to the Attain­ment of the great End for which it was or­dained.

WE see therefore that in this Controversy a great regard is to be had to the Distinction here made between the divine Offices of the Christian Priesthood and the more General Powers of Government. The former are allow'd to be appropriated to the Orders of the Bishops and Clergy only. The latter are those Powers and Authorities which our present Controversies and Dissentions are a­bout. And if I am right in Stating the CHURCH'S Claim and Title thereto, I shall certainly be Right in the Determination of this dispute. So far as they are Necessary to the [Page 10] due Execution of CHRIST'S Commission, the CHURCH has undoubted Right thereto. And if Dr. Hickes and his Friends had gone no far­ther in claiming a Right to the Exercise of Ecclesiastical Authority Independently on the secu­lar than as that shall be found necessary to the Propagation and Establishment of Christi­anity; I am apt to think that all Christians would have come into it. I for my Part, can make no Scruple to affirm, that by Vir­tue of Christs Commission to his Apostles and their Successors to Preach and Propagate the Gospel, and to gather Him a Church thereby: They have an undoubted Right and Autho­rity to do every Thing in the Exercise of their Spiritual Offices, which shall be found necessary to the Support of the Christian Faith and CHURCH. But if Men will not content themselves with this, without going farther; if they will claim an Universal Inherent Au­thority of doing every Thing in Matters of Religion, if they please, by themselves; and to be the sole Proper and Rightful Judges of all Ecclesiastical Causes, and Matters; with a divine Right to exclude the Secular Autho­rity at their Pleasure, and to make Null and Invalid every Thing that is done by the Tem­poral Powers in these Affairs without the Clergy's Approbation and Consent: This I [Page 11] think a most Unreasonable and Unrighteous Demand; and I have these six Things to plead against it.

I. SUCH a Claim seems contrary to the very Nature of the Powers that we are now reasoning about. They are not the peculiar appropriated Offices of the Priesthood, such as Ministring in the Divine Service, administring Sacraments, &c. which we have already owned Kings and Princes to be excluded from; But they are the CHURCH'S common Powers of Government which belong to Her only of common Right, and to the General Exercise of which other Societies are entitled as well as the CHURCH. Now these general Powers of Government are no otherwise to be exercis'd exclusive of and Independently on the Secular Authority, than the Necessity of Affairs requires them so to be. And that Authority which has no other Reason or Foundation then its Usefulness or Necessity as a Means to the attaining to such an End, certainly loses a great deal of its Force and Obligation in all those Instances in which it ceases to be useful or necessary, and where the End may be as effectually obtained without it. And this is the true Reason of all that Difference which is observable in History in [Page 12] the Practice of the Bishops and Governours of the Christian Church in the Exercise of these very Powers under Heathen and under Chri­stian Emperors and Governours. When their Heathen Governours cast them off and left them to themselves, they then manag'd all Things by themselves, the Necessity of their Affairs requiring that they should so do. But when the Christian Emperors took the Affairs of Christians into their Cogni­zance, and made Laws, and passed Senten­ces, and executed Judgment therein: The Christian Bishops and Clergy unanimously gave Way, and very readily submitted there­to.

IT may possibly have some weight with some of my Readers to observe, that even Dr. Hickes in the Collection of Papers late­ly Published by his Friends, and which were Written and Published on purpose to carry up the Powers of the Priesthood, and an Independent Authority as high as possibly he could: Yet comes in to this Distinction of the CHURCH'S Communicable and Un­communicable Authority. Whatever indi­rect Ends he might have to serve in his En­deavours to Support the Spiritual Authority of the Nonjuring Deprived Bishops: Yet he was too well acquainted with Primitive [Page 13] Church History to think, that all the Christian Churches Authorities are alike exclu­sive of the Secular Powers. And accordingly as I find him quoted p. 27. he allows; that the Church on valuable Considerations may in some Cases modify the Exercise of Her Just Po­wer, and make Grants and Concessions to the State. Pray mind that, for if Princes and States may on any Considerations be admitted to a share of the Churches Just Power: Then it is plain and evident that in such Cases it is not JESUS CHRIST, that by his Divine Laws excludes them, but these Church-Men them­selves. But let us see what Instances of this kind he mentions, and they are such as these; That the CHURCH shall consent not to call Sy­nods without acquainting the King, and obtaining his Leave if Possible; not to make Foreigners, or Clerks of a Foreign Allegiance Bishops; to make no Bishops but what shall be supposed worthy of the Kings Nomination; to give the Builders and Endowers of Churches the Honour and Privelege of presenting worthy Clerks to supply the Cure of them; and Noblemen to Erect Chapels, and to choose Chaplains for their Families. There are then it seems Cases and Considerations, in and upon which, notwithstanding all the sa­cred Powers of the CHURCH, Kings may have Authority, in calling Synods, in Nominating [Page 14] Bishops, and in the Presentation of Clerks to the Cure of Souls. Here I would ask in what Cases, and upon what Considerations any of these Kings or Nobles may be allowed to admini­ster Sacraments and Ordain Ministers? I know that this will not be allow'd at all by any Means, or on any Considerations what­ever. It seems then, that in Dr. Hickes's own Opinion, altho' some of the Powers of the CHURCH are Exclusive and Uncommunicable to Lay Hands: Yet others they may be ad­mitted to a share of, if the Consideration be but good, and the Authority not abused. Now I would willingly know, what is the true Foundation of this Difference, which Dr. Hickes himself admits of? I would have it o­penly declared, whether CHRIST'S Commissi­on has Appropriated these Powers to the CHURCH which may be so modified, and has Excluded Secular Potentates from them, or on what foot that Modifications stands. And at the same time let them add, why the Influence of the Civil Magistrates Authority to pre­serve the Peace and Safety, and good Order of a Kingdom, may not be allowed as just a Consideration and as good a Reason of his Exercising Authority in such affairs, as any munificent act of Beneficence or Protecti­on?

BUT to bring this Debate with Dr. Hickes and his Friends to a Short Issue; Either JESUS CHRIST by his Gospel, and his Divine Com­mission to his Apostles has Appropriated all Ecclesiastical Authoritty to the Clergy only, and Excluded the Secular Power from it, or he has not. If he has, and the Certainty of that be made appear, then they ought on no Con­sideration whatsoever to be allowed any Share therein, because that is acting contrary to CHRIST'S Commission and Laws. But if he has not, then the CHURCH has no Divine Right at all of Excluding their Authority and acting Independently. The Consequence of this is plain and undeniable. For to Exclude the Jurisdiction of the Secular Powers where CHRIST by his Divine Commission has not Excluded them, is to do it without Reason and contrary to Justice.

But that which Dr. Hickes and his Friends lay the greatest Stress upon is; 1. The Na­ture of the Society; and, 2. The Powers by which it Subsisted in the Beginning.

1. As to the Nature of the Society they tell us that it is CHRIST'S Spiritual Kingdom or Vindica­tion Non-Juring Church. prop. I. II. Incorporation, which had a Being Independent on the Secular Power for above three hundred years before the Government of it was interwoven with [Page 16] the secular Government and Laws. I grant all this to be true; but because there seems to be great Stress laid on this Independency so much talked of; I desire that it may be considered what it means. For in a Christian Country, the CHURCH and STATE are not two Distinct Societies like the Kingdoms of France and Spain, made up of different People and Sub­jects inhabiting different Territories: but are One and the same Body of Men considered in two different Relations and Capacities. The same Persons are at once Members of the Church and Subjects of the State, and so constitute but One Society of Men under two capacities of Government.

AND Even in this twofold Capacity their Affairs, their Duties and Obligations are so mixt and interwoven, that in a Christian State it is scarce Practicable for the Church to Govern and Manage her spiritual Affairs without influencing and affecting the State. Nay in the Extent of spiritual Power now claimed, it is absolutely impossible so to do. So that this Contest for an Independent Au­thority in the Government of the Church, is nothing else but a Struggle to take the Ma­nagement of Religion and all religious Affairs out of the Hands of Kings and Princes. And if they once do this, the STATE must be [Page 17] brought to depend upon the CHURCH, because the CHURCH will be independent on the STATE; and so it would be in a very fine Condition. In short, while such a Power is contended for, the CHURCH and STATE must inevitably clash and disagree, and there is no Way to consult and secure the publick Peace, without a Subordination of the one to the other in their Administration of Govern­ment.

AND as to the CHURCH'S having a Being independent on the secular Power for the first three hundred Years: it proceeded only from the Necessity of her Circumstances and Affairs at that Time, that She acted independently on the secular Potentates. It was when Chri­stianity was in a State of Persecution, and the secular Powers refused to intermeddle in Her Government. Then, it is very true, that She subsisted of Herself; and this proves undeni­ably, that the CHURCH has a Capacity so to do when Need requires. But it does not prove, that it is a desirable Thing for Her to be in such a Case; or that She has a Divine Right and Power to exclude the secular Po­tentates, if they think fit to interpose their Authority. But I shall speak more particu­larly to this hereafter. I am now only shew­ing what weak and insufficient Reasons Men [Page 18] allege for an Independent Authority in the Church; of which, I think, this is a very great Instance; that because She did once so subsist out of Necessity, therefore She must always do so, out of Choice, or has a Divine Right so to do, when ever She pleases.

2. BUT they tell us, That this Spiritual Kingdom of CHRIST, is also a Royal Priest­hood, a Kingdom of Priests, the chief Priests of which are Regal Priests, or Kings, as well as 1 Pet. ii. 9. Prop. 18. 21. Priests unto God. That their Government in their several Dioceses or Districts, is Monarchi­cal; and the Bishops are therein the supreme Re­presentatives of CHRIST, his Legates, or Vice­gerents, in regard to whom, Christian Emperors and Kings are their spiritual Subjects and Infe­riors, and ought to be obedient to them. All these high Titles, and big Words, are evi­dently intended to possess the People with a Notion, that Kings and Princes must have Nothing to do with Bishops, unless it be when the CHURCH, in Consideration of some valuable Advantages and temporal Endow­ments, will modify Her Power, and indulge them in a Share in Government on their good Behaviour. In any other Case, it is sacred; favete linguis, ite Profani, say not a Word of Jurisdiction or Authority; be gone, it is the Ark of GOD, touch it not, lest you [Page 19] die. Now in answer to all these high Strains, for the Satisfaction of modest, sober, chri­stian Minds, let us enquire,

1. WHAT St. Peter means, when he tells us of all Christians; for he does not speak of the Governors of the Church alone, but of the whole Community of Christian Be­lievers; when he says, Ye are a Royal Priest­hood. 1 Pet. ii. 9. In the fourth Verse of that Chapter, he vindicates CHRIST himself from the Con­tempt that Unbelievers had poured out upon Him; and he calls Him, a living Stone, dis­allowed indeed of Men, but chosen of GOD, and precious. And then, for their farther Con­solation under the Reproaches that were thrown upon themselves for Believing in Him, he adds. Verse 6. Ye also, as living Stones are built up a spiritual House, an holy Priesthood, to offer up spiritual Sacrifices, accepta­ble to God by Jesus Christ. And again, ver. 9. Ye are a chosen Generation, a ROYAL PRIESTHOOD, an holy Nation, a PECULIAR PEOPLE, that ye should shew forth the Praises of Him, who hath called you out of Darkness into his marvellous Light. Whatever, therefore, might be intend­ed by that Expression under the Jewish Dis­pensation when it was first used, it is plain, that St. Peter intended no more by it, than [Page 20] to set forth how honourable and favourable a State all Christian People are in with GOD, whom He loves and esteems, and counts dear to Him, even as the Priests of His Congrega­tion. And what is all this to the making Bishops Kings and Princes, and Lords of the Flock of CHRIST, with a Supremacy of Power? Not but that I readily allow, that the Autho­rity which CHRIST first committed to his Apostles, was by them put into the Hands of Bishops; and by them is convey'd down to us; and that they are under CHRIST the su­preme Governours of this spiritual Commu­nity, whenever the secular Potentates refuse to concern themselves therein. And very great Deference, Regard, Honour and Sub­mission ought to be paid to them all on that Account.

AND yet, methinks, this high Style, and lofty Language, does not mighty well suit the meek, modest Temper of the Gospel, in that there is not much of this grand Strain in the New Testament. The Royal Priesthood, we have seen, will do them but little Service, in that it respects every private Christian, as well as the spiritual Governors of the CHURCH. And altho' we are call'd Ambassadours of Christ, and Stewards of the Mysteries of God; yet this 2 Cor. i. 24. our Christian Embassy must be managed with [Page 21] all imaginable Meekness and Humility. St. Paul after a very small degree of Authority in threat'ning the Corinthians corrects himself thus; Not that we have Dominion over your Faith. And St. Peter very affectionately exhorts 1 Pet. v. 3. the Clergy, not to carry themselves as being Lords over Gods Heritage, but Examples to the Flock. But Dr. Hickes, and his Non-juring Friends, are for lording it over Emperors and Kings, their spiritual Inferiors and Subjects, who ought to be obedient to the Bishops and Clergy in what concerns Religion. Not so the Meek, the Blessed, and Humble JESUS, who teaches his Apostles thus: The Kings of Luke xxii. 26. the Gentiles exercise Lordship over them; but it shall not be so with you. But he that is greatest among you, let him be as the younger; and he that is chief, as he that doth serve. We may see in the Style we use, what Manner of Spi­rit we are of; and how far we are degene­rated from the Original Meekness of our Ho­ly Religion. And yet at last, after all this great Talk, if it does not infect the Minds of the ignorant, common People, it is nothing to the Purpose. For when all is said, that can be said this Way, the main Question still remains to be argu'd; which is,

[Page 22] 2. WHETHER all the Fullness of the Pow­er which the Clergy can be supposed to have in the spiritual Affairs of the CHURCH, does amount to an Exclusion of the supreme Juris­diction and Authority of the STATE? Whe­ther CHRIST ever intended that the Govern­ment of the Church should be so managed by spiritual Men alone, the Bishops and Pastors of it, as that the supreme secular Powers should have no Right or Title to any Judicial Au­thority therein; but be excluded from that, as well as from the Divine Offices of the Priesthood? And the Determination of this Matter, must not be made by any high Strains of Rhetoric, or lofty, metaphorical Titles that may be used; but from the Juris­diction and Authority that are really given and appropriated to them in Holy Scriptures. So that unless it could be proved from thence, that the general Powers of governing the Church, are by CHRIST'S Commission appropriated to the Priesthood as the Ministration in Holy Offices is; all the rest that can be said, will be to no Purpose. For it must be un­reasonable and unjust to exclude the Autho­rity of secular Powers, where GOD and CHRIST have not excluded them. To this Argument, let me add,

II. THAT such an exempt, independent, exclusive Authority in the CHURCH, where it is not highly necessary to the Support of Religion, is indeed very absurd. It has Some­thing worse in it than erecting Imperium in Imperio; it is actually setting up the Kingdom of God the SON, in Opposition to that of the FATHER, and in Derogation of His su­preme Authority and Power.

DR. Hickes and his Friends tell us, That the Christian CHURCH is the spiritual King­dom and Body of Christ. I grant this to be ve­ry true; and so is the Government of the whole World, by the temporal Powers of it, the Temporal Kingdom of God the FATHER, Who is Lord of all the Earth, the only Potentate, Josh. iii. 11, 13. the King Eternal; whose Kingdom is an ever­lasting Kingdom, and ruleth over all. In this Kingdom the Civil Powers are the Ordinance of God, for the Good of Mankind; they are the Ministers of God for Good, to whom all 1 Tim. vi. 15, & i. 17. Psal. cxlv. 13.—ciii. 19. Rom. xiii. 2, &c. must needs be subject for Conscience Sake. And therefore for the Ministers of CHRIST to op­pose and lord it over the Ministers of GOD the FATHER, is to invert the sacred Order of Things, and to forget the Subordination of the SON to the FATHER.

GOD, for the Honour of the ever blessed Redeemer, was pleased to grant Him a King­dom [Page 24] within his own Dominions, with Rule and Power over all Mankind in order to our Salvation; and to the effectual Establishment of it, to appoint Him Powers and Ministers of his own; and to take away from tempo­ral Governours the Ministration of those di­vine, and sacred Offices which they before performed. But as it does not appear by CHRIST'S Commission, that He has appro­priated all the Powers of Government in his CHURCH, to the Bishops and Clergy only, together with the Authority of those sacred Ministrations; it is certainly very wrong in them to assume a Power of excluding uni­versally the Authority of the FATHER'S Mi­nistry. The Dispensation of the SON, how­ever Excellent and Glorious, as blessed be GOD, it is, ought yet certainly to be admi­nistred in Subordination to that of the FA­THER. And to pretend the contrary, must needs be very absutd and displeasing to Them both.

AND yet this Absurdity, as great as it is, is carry'd still farther; and the Abettors of it not content with the Claim of an independent Power only, plead for a superior Authority in the Church; because that is spiritual and extends to the Souls of Men. This is not only in Effect to deny the Civil Magistrates [Page 25] Concern in Matters of Religion, and where the Souls of Men are affected: But more­over, it is to set up the SON above the FA­THER, by making the Ministry of the SON superior to that of the FATHER. This is what I cannot but think unreasonable, and contra­ry to the Design and Intention of Them both. It is under the Favour and Protection of the SON, to reject the Authority and Supremacy of the FATHER; than which scarce any thing can be more offensive to him. To this let me add,

III. THAT the true Kingdom of GOD, and the Religion of JESUS CHRIST established therein do not appear to be at all more strong and safe, and secure from Corruptions by such an Independent Authority than they would be otherwise.

REMEMBER we are here disputing only about an independent Power in the Government of the Church, and the Management of its Affairs for the Success of Religion. It would therefore, methinks, be much in Favour of such a Pretension, if it could be made ap­pear by long Experience throughout all Ages, that the Purity of this Holy Religion had al­ways been better secured that Way than the other. And that it had as constantly suf­fered [Page 26] when ever it was brought under the Direction and Jurisdiction of the STATE. But alas! this was true only in the first Ages of Christianity, when the Governors of the Church had more extraordinary and miraculous Assistances from the Holy Ghost. Then indeed, the Purity of Religion was effectually preserved, and the Word of GOD mightily grew and prevailed. But when the essential Principles and Laws of Christianity were committed to Writing, and the Clergy were to gain spiritual Knowledge by Reading them; when the extraordinary Powers of the Holy Ghost began to be removed, and Men were asisted, as they are now, only by the ordinary Influences thereof; and in Conse­quence of this, the spiritual Governors of the Church were subject to the same Pas­sions, and Infirmities, and Temptations as other Men now a-days are: Religion soon felt the Fruits of this, and its genuine Pu­rity, soon began to decay, and declined apace. Till by Degrees it grew so corrupt that to use St. Paul's Words, on a like Occa­sion, The whole Creation groaned and travailed Rom. viii. 21, 22. in Pain together, waiting to be delivered from this Bondage of Corruption, into the glorious Li­berty of the Children of God.

So that whatever Advantages Christiani­ty received by the pure Faith, and constant Patience, by the great Integrity and Piety of the Primitive Christians in the three first Cen­turies; it suffered at least as much in after-Ages, by the evil Conduct of those who were in Possession of those Spiritual Powers. To give one notorious Instance of this; I would desire these learned Gentlemen to read the History and Acts of the second Council of Nice, and there to consider by whose Over-bearing Authority the Idolatry of Image-worship was first brought into the Church of CHRIST. Such Instances shew too plainly that the true Advancement of CHRIST'S Spiritual Kingdom, depends more upon the Fidelity and Piety of its Ministers, than upon the regal, independent, Authority.

IF therefore the Non-jurors, in Vindica­tion of their Schism, had not contracted an Habit of Writing Paradoxes, One would won­der mightily to hear them impute the Atheism Deism, Heresy, Schisms, Infidelity, Profaneness, Dr. Hick. Collect. pag. 29. and Immorality, that are found in this Land, to the taking away of this supreme, inde­pendent Power of the Church. Let any Man look Abroad into Italy, Spain or Por­tugal, there he will find the Government of the Church in the Hands of those very Men, [Page 28] whose Right to it Dr. Hickes contends for; and that too, with greater Immunities and Exemptions than he has pleaded for. And yet in all these Kingdoms, he will find as much Infidelity and Irreligion, as scanda­lous Vice, and Immorality, and Profaneness, as in any Part of Christendom. Only per­haps with a little more Reserve for Fear of an Inquisition.

IN short, That our Discipline is too much lost, we all complain, as well as the Non-jurors. But that the Matter would cer­tainly be mended, by putting it wholly into the Hands of the Clergy with an independent and unrestrained Authority, is what cannot be allowed: Because where the Church has that Power, Religion is more infamously corrupted than in any other Places of the Christian World.

LET us but reflect what Opposition the Reformation of it met with here at Home, from those very Men whose independent Power is now pleaded for. And with how much Difficulty it was rescued out of their Hands, that it might be restored to its ori­ginal Purity. The Church of England with all its great Excellencies, and valuable Consti­tutions, was thus Reformed; the Spiritual Powers being ruled and governed by the [Page 29] Secular in the Exercise of their Ecclesiastical Authority. And has the CHURCH yet a Di­vine Right to take the Judicial Cognizance of Religion wholly out of the Hands of those Men, by whom it has been preserved from Destruction? What Reason or Necessity can there be for that? If by these Means the Go­vernment of the CHURCH should once again fall into ill Hands, as it has done in former Times; it may in the unhappy Event be found setting up for Authority to corrupt Re­ligion, instead of preserving it. And that too without leaving the Secular Potentates a suf­ficient Authority to retrieve and reform it a second time. And this also is a just Excep­tion to the Reasonableness, and Righteous­ness of such a Claim.

IV. SUCH an Exempt Independent Authority in the Church, seems wholly Inconsistent with that Interest and Care and Concern for Religion which Christian Kings and Princes are alway supposed to have; and the Regu­lation and Defence of which is one great End and Purpose of all their Authority. Till I see farther Reason against it than what has yet been shewn, I cannot but believe that the Civil Government in their Way, and by a due Exercise of their Power, is concerned [Page 30] for the Good of Mens Souls, to promote Virtue and true Religion as well as the Bi­shops and Pastors of Christ's Flock. And if they are, then, to exclude their Jurisdicti­on in all Ecclesiastical Causes and Matters, is to rob them of one great Part of their Sovereignty. It is in effect to confine all the Authority of Princes only to the Preser­vation of Peace, and Order, and Justice in Human Societies without any Regard to GOD and Religion. And I know of no good Reason that can be given for this. For al­tho' GOD the FATHER, for the Honour of our Blessed Redeemer, and the more effectu­al Accomplishing our Redemption, has given him a Church and a Kingdom within his own Dominions, and allowed Him his Pro­per Ministers and Governors of this CHURCH under his own Divine Authority: Yet I hope these Gentlemen will not say that this carries along with it a Devolution of all Power and Authority in religious Affairs from Princes to Bishops, from the Governors of the State to those of the Church. And if it does not, then the Secular Powers ought not in any such Affairs to have their Authority and Jurisdiction excluded. That would be to subvert one of the main Ends of their In­stitution, which was, That under them we might [Page 31] live peaceable and quiet Lives in Godliness as 1 Tim. ii. 2. well as in common Honesty. These Gentlemen I know will allow Kings and Princes to exer­cise all their Authority in the Defence of the Church, and for the Protection of its Powers, and the Support of it in the Execution of its Laws, altho' nothing to its Disadvantage. And is it so then at last, that by virtue of Christ's Commission, Kings and Princes have no more to do with Religious Matters, than only un­der the Directions of the Church to minister to the Support of the Spiritual Jurisdiction, when ever they think sit so to Modify their Power? I hope that all Christian Empe­rors and Kings will be sensible what Ho­nours and Favours such Churchmen intend them, in admitting them to so great a Pri­vilege? And must they in all other Cases be discharg'd of all Regard and Concern for GOD and RELIGION in the Government of their People? Sure I am, that it was not so under the Jewish Dispensation, when this Separation of the Priesthood from the Secular Powers first began. Kings did then inter­meddle in Ecclesiastical Causes, and regulate the Affairs of Religion, and had Jurisdiction in the Government of the Church.

The Ark of the Covenant which none might look into, or so much as touch it, but [Page 32] the Priests alone: Was yet so far under the 2 Sam. vi. Government and Authority of King David, 2 Sam. xv. that he commanded it to be removed first to this Place and then to that. He also distri­buted the several Courses both of the Priests 2 Chron. xxiii, xxiv.—xxiv. and Levites, and gave the Levites a new Law for their Offices, that they who before began not their Attendance till the Thirtieth Year of their Age should now begin it at the Twen­tieth. He took the Ark from the Taberna­cle 2 Chron. i. 3, 5. of the Congregation, and leaving that behind at Gibeon, he built a new Tent for it at Jerusalem. How came he to meddle so much with that which was in the Peculiar Custody of the Priests? The like was after­wards 2 Chron. xxiv.—xxiii. 4. done by Hezekiah, who also by his Royal Decree appointed the Passover to be kept, and called all the Ten Tribes of Israel to Jerusalem to the Celebration of it, who had been hindred from it for a long time be­fore. Solomon thrust out Abiathar from being 1 Kings ii. 27, 35. Priest unto the Lord. Which, let the Adver­saries say what they will to evade it, was as much a Deprivation as any one of those they now complain of; and when he had done this, he put Zadock the Priest in the Room of Abiathar. The Altar of Bethel was destroy'd by King Josiah; Idolatry was frequently pu­nished and suppressed by their Kings, and the [Page 33] suffering Religion to be corrupted by intro­ducing Evil and Idolatrous Novelties into the Worship of GOD, is often charged as a Crime and a Blemish in the Administration of their Government. Now as the Instances menti­oned in which they did exert their Power, were undeniable Acts of Church Govern­ment and Ecclesiastical Authority: So the Charge and Imputation of Guilt upon them in their Neglects of this kind, plainly shew that they had a just Authority and a rightful Jurisdiction therein. And if the Jewish Kings were allowed to have Power and Authority in Ecclesiastical Matters, and the Priesthood claimed no Independent Power in Church Government, under that Dispensation in which the Administration of Divine Offices was as much separated from the Secular Ma­gistrates as it is now under the Gospel: Some very good Reason, some strong Proof, some very bright and clear Evidence should be produced to convince one, that the Jurisdic­tion which Kings exercised under one Dis­pensation is quite taken away by the other.

ESPECIALLY too, when this claimed Au­thority is not to be limitted to Articles of Faith, and Matters of Divine Revelation on­ly; but is extended to a Judicial Cognizance in all our moral Actions, as well as in those [Page 34] that are purely religious. And for the Kings and Potentates of the World not to submit to the Sanctions and Determinations of such Men in all Cases of Morality; is arrogant­ly called Disobedience to their spiritual Supe­riors, Vindic. Prop. 21. and Rehellion against the Legates and Vicegerents of Christ. And to restrain ecclesi­astical Persons in any extravagant Proceed­ings of this Kind, is represented by some Men as downright Persecution.

WHAT an Original Piece of spiritual Pride is this? I would desire any Reader seriously to consider, that if such Doctrines as these had been preached by the Apostles and Pri­mitive Christians, Whether it would not have been the greatest Disadvantage imagi­nable to the Propagation of the Gospel. And whether it would not have given all the Secular Potentates of the World a great and invincible Prejudice against it? What Heathen Emperor or King would have em­braced this Religion, or given any Counte­nance at all to the Profession of it, who should have been told, That in the very Mi­nute that this Religion was professed by him, and became established in his Dominions, he was to lose one half of his Authority over his People? That he was no longer to have that Fullness of Jurisdiction and Power [Page 35] which he had before, and which other Kings and Emperors enjoy'd round about him; but was now to give up his Sovereign­ty and Supremacy in all Spiritual, Ecclesiasti­cal Causes, and in all Moral Actions, into the Hands of his spiritual Governors of that Church, of which he was now becoming a Member? He is now no longer to claim an universal Supremacy in his Dominions, but himself becomes a Subject to his Subjects, and their spiritual Inferior; the Bishops in his King­dom, being as so many Kings, and spiritual Monarchs, who have a Divine Right to tye up his Hands from having any thing to do in the Government of the Church, or in Matters of Religion? Would not all the Secular Potentates in the World have spurn'd at, and despised the Preachers of so sense­less a Religion, as an Imposture and a Cheat, that under a Pretence of Godliness, was con­trived to wrest one great Part of their Au­thority out of their Hands? And would not such an Attempt as this too deservedly have caused the Word of Truth to be evil spoken of? Most assuredly it would. And yet this is the very Thing that an Independent Authority in Church Government naturally, and uni­versally tends to.

DR. Hickes is pleased to say, Constit. p. 76. That the Governors of the Church lose Nothing of their Power, Authority, or Jurisdiction by ad­mitting Sovereign Princes into the Church. I beg leave to ask then, Whether it is not al­together as reasonable, both for the Honour and Interest of Christianity, that Christian Princes should lose Nothing of their Temporal Authority by embracing this our Holy Reli­gion? And if it be, I am sure that the Schemes which are now laid out for Kings and Princes to rule by, under the Church's independent Power, cannot be of GOD; be­cause they make Spoil and Havock of the secular Powers, and rob them of one en­tire Branch of their Sovereignty and Domi­nion. And yet this is not the worst Evil that attends this Claim. For,

V. IT not only robs Kings of all Sove­reignty in religious and spiritual Affairs; but is extended also to their Administration of the Temporal. I have already observed, That these Gentlemen bring all the moral Actions of humane Life, under the peculiar Cogni­zance of the spiritual Government of the CHURCH. Every Thing in which the Con­sciences of Men are concern'd, they claim, as falling wholly within this spiritual Juris­diction. [Page] [Page] [Page] so much as a Judge between two private Luke xii. 14. Men in the Division of a small Estate. But our Modern Independents in Church Government, make themselves Judges of Kings, and of their Titles to their Thrones. They, in effect, divide the Kingdoms of the Earth according to their Decisions and De­terminations. By a pretended Supremacy from CHRIST, they put a Check upon the Legislature in the Laws that they provide for the Security of the Nation, and labour to controul the States of the Realm in the Administration of their secular Affairs. They sanctify even Sedition and Rebellion by their spiritual Authority, and take upon them to absolve the Subjects from all the strictest Oaths whereby they have sworn Allegiance to their King, They endeavour to bind it upon the Consciences of Men, to set up one King, and to dethrone another, according to their personal Sentiments and Opinions. Now I would willingly be informed by them what Part of CHRIST'S Commission it is that gives them this Authority; or that in any dis­putable Titles to the Throne makes them the Judges of it? And yet the Modern Indepen­dents in Church Goverment, do not only assume all this to themselves; but they also lay as much Stress on their own Notions and [Page 40] Assertions of this Kind, as tho' they had a Spirit of Infallibility, or an immediate Re­velation from Heaven. What less than this, could induce them to charge all the Great Men of our Church, however learned, and equally pious with themselves, as Teach­ing, and Acting, and Praying, contrary to the essential Righteousness of GOD, only be­cause they teach, and act, and pray, con­trary to their particular Sentiments and Schemes in Civil Government? What is this, but to arrogate to themselves a Spirit of In­fallibility in the Interpretation of those Scrip­tures on which they build their Notions and Opinions? Will not the Reader stand still here and Pause a little, and Question the Truth of what I say? Will he not think it incredible that spiritual Men should ap­proach so near to Blasphemy, as to set up their own political Principles, as the infalli­ble Tests of Truth and Righteousness? Cer­tain it is, that CHRIST'S Commission is of another Nature, and never was intended to authorize the Governors of the Church to frame the Government of Nations too ac­cording to their disputable Models and con­troverted Schemes; and to damn all Man­kind as Hereticks, and Schismaticks, and Rebels, who will not come in to them, and [Page 41] desert the legal Constitutions of their Coun­try. This is foreign to the Business of the Gospel; the Propagation of the Christian Faith, by Preaching, and Baptizing, and Administring Sacraments, and Training up Christians in Holiness and Devotion, is a Sphere at so great a Distance from all this of Secular Government and Political Controver­sies, that GOD certainly never gave the Go­vernors of the Church any Divine Authority therein. And therefore an Independent Authori­ty in Church Governors, which is industrious­ly set up to this End; must be an Imposture and a Cheat, and contrary to the Will of CHRIST and of GOD. And Bishops and Clergymen by Virtue of CHRIST'S Commis­sion may as well claim a Right to go into Westminster-Hall and turn out the Judges, as giving Judgment contrary to the essential Righte­ousness of God; as to teach the People, that it is a Sin to be subject to the Laws and Con­stitutions of the Kingdom where they live. This brings me to my

VI. LAST Argument, which is, That this Independent Authority in the Government of the CHURCH., is utterly inconsistent with the Supremacy and Sovereignty of all Secular Potentates. Two such Independent Au­thorities [Page 42] in the Government of the same Body of Men, appear utterly incompatible. They so frequently interfere, and thereby bring such Mischiefs and Distractions into the World, that they cannot possibly be both of them from GOD. He, who is a God of Peace and Order, and not of Confusion, must not be supposed to have intended any two such Powers without a Subordination of the one to the other.

THE Supporters of that Claim, being aware of this Argument, would evade it by saying, That the Mischiefs complained of, proceed not from the Inconsistency of two such Pow­ers, but from the Encroachments of the two contending Parties. And that all this would be prevented effectually, if each would keep within their proper Limits, and neither of 'em put their Sickle into the other's Harvest. This is Regale & Pontiff. p. 15. smoothly and finely said indeed, but Nothing to the Purpose; because it is Arguing against plain Matter of Fact. For they both of them claim a Right to the same Harvest; and who then shall judge between them to preserve the Peace and Quiet of the Christian World? Are not all our present Contentions and Feuds about the uncontroulable Supremacy of the Governors of the Church in all Religious and Spiritual Causes? And is it not apparent [Page 43] undeniably, that the very End of Claiming such a Power, is, to protect some Men from the Authority of the STATE? How then is it possible that two such Contending su­preme Sovereigns should exercise their seve­ral Powers, one to remove, and the other to support those Men; and yet the Subjects be bound to obey them both? How can two such Supremacies subsist in the same Body of Men, when almost every Act of the one in­fluences the other? When in some Cases al­most every Exercise of Spiritual Authority, one Way or other influences, and either weakens or controuls the Temporal? A cer­tain Defender of this Spiritual, Ecclesiastical Independency, saw the Necessity of grant­ing, That CHRIST gave the Church no Au­thority Regal. & Pontif. p. 17. that could possibly interfere with the Civil Powers. This Assertion I own to be very true; and therefore if the Non-jurors will but grant me that, which I think no reasonable Man can deny, viz. That GOD has given to Secular Powers as full an Authority for the Support and Security of the STATE, as He has to the Spiritual for the Defence of the CHURCH; and consequently, that every Act of Independent Power of the Church, that interferes with the Civil Powers, is contrary to the Will of GOD, and to the Intention of [Page 44] CHRIST'S Commission: I readily join Issue with them upon this Cause, and am very willing to try the Force of this Principle in those particular Cases that are made the Oc­casion of our present Disputes. And they are, 1. The Election. 2. The Deprivation of Bishops and Clergymen.

1. As to the Election of Bishops and Cler­gymen, it is granted, That as the CHURCH has the sole Authority of Ordaining them, so with that they have of Necessity a common natural Right to take Care of the Qualifica­tions of the Persons to be ordained, and em­ployed in Divine Service. But then, it is indeed reasonable, that the CHURCH in the Exercise of this Power, should not claim a Divine Authority to thrust and force upon a Christian State such Bishops and Clergy­men as are avowed Enemies to the Govern­ment and National Constitution where they live. For this is actually to interfere with the Civil Powers. It's highly reasonable that Kings and Princes should be well-assured of the Fidelity and Allegiance of their Clergy; seeing that They and their Government, have an Interest therein; and both the Peace and Safety of their Secular Affairs may be very much influenced by their good or evil Con­duct. [Page 45] If therefore on this Account the Laws of the Land give to our Kings the Nomination of the Persons that are to be made Bishops; it is indisputably interfering with the Civil Powers, to say that they have no Right there to; and that every such Nomination is an In­vasion of the CHURCH'S Power. If the Mea­sure of that Power be at all to be judged of by its Consistency with the Peace and Safety of the STATE, it is then as clear as any Demonstration in the Mathematicks, that CHRIST'S Commission has given no such In­dependent Power in the Choice of Bishops; because that actually breaks in upon the tem­poral Power of Kings and Princes, even in the Administration of their National Govern­ment: For let us reflect, Is it not by Virtue of this pretended Divine Right, and Indepen­dent Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, that we see such vile and scandalous Practices in our Days, as the Primitive Christians were wholly Strangers to; and would have Protested a­gainst with the utmost Abhorrence and De­testation? By Virtue of this pretended Inde­pendent Authority, the Non-jurors take upon them to consecrate Bishops, and ordain Priests, not only in Opposition to the STATE, but with a direct Intention, if it be possible, to overturn it. For the first Thing that such [Page 46] Bishops and Clergymen have to do, is to re­nounce all Allegiance to the KING upon the Throne, and all Regard to the Present Con­stitution of the Kingdom. To treat the KING as an Usurper, to teach a Nullity in all the Oaths that are taken to Him, tho' by most solemn Sanctions of the Law. To set up an Ecclesiastical Community, and gather Congregations against Him, and therein to pray for another pretended King, whom the Nation has solemnly abjured, and proclaim­ed a Traitor. Will not all this be called In­terfering with the Civil Powers? If it be; I think then, it must be granted, that all this is directly contrary to CHRIST'S Commission, and to the whole Design of it? If there be a Dispute about the Title to the Crown, most certainly the States of the Realm are the pro­per Judges and Determiners of the Matter: And CHRIST by his Commission, has given the Bishops and Pastors of his CHURCH no Divine Authority or Jurisdiction in such De­terminations. If therefore the Governors of the Church, instead of taking Care, accord­ing to their Trust, that the Bishops and Cler­gy of the CHURCH, be Men of sober Lives, and sound Religion, will go so much farther as to claim a Divine Right in the Choice of all the Bishops exclusive of the Nomination of [Page 47] the Prince, only to embarrass his Govern­ment, and embroil his Affairs: It is as cer­tain that such a Spiritual Power cannot be of GOD, as it is that all Secular Powers are of GOD. Because two such Independent Au­thorities in or over the same Body of Men, cannot possibly consist together. The one will inevitably interfere with, and be de­structive of the other; and such inevita­ble Opposition, Confusion and Distraction in humane Society, could never be designed or intended by Almighty GOD. The like may be said

2. AS to the Deprivation of Bishops and Clergymen.

I COULD heartily wish, there had been no Occasion for the unhappy Debate that I am now upon. And what I shall say upon it, I intend with all Deference to the unhappy Persons who were deprived. But seeing a pretended Invalidity in their Deprivation is made the Occasion of a Schism from our CHURCH, and of great Confusions in the Na­tion; Doubtless, common Justice ought to be done to the lawful Secular Powers we live under.

NOW, if it be indeed true, that CHRIST has given no Power to his Church that interferes [Page 48] with the Civil Powers; and most true it is, and necessary for the due Government of the World that it should be so; the Conse­quence of it is, That CHRIST by His Com­mission has given no such Authority to His CHURCH, as to keep Bishops and Clergy­men in their respective Sees, when the STATE finds it necessary for the Safety of a Nation to turn them out. For this also is to set up Powers that are incompatible; both whose Commands cannot be obey'd, because they command contrary and inconsistent Things.

THIS was the Case of those unhappy Bi­shops and Clergy, who were deprived for not giving the usual Oaths of Fidelity to the Civil Government of King William. Their Principles and Practices, as to that Government, were such, that it was be­come impossible for them to execute their Spiritual Offices in the CHURCH, with any Security to the Peace and Safety of the STATE. They could not perform Divine-Service in Publick, because they would not own the Authority of the King, who was to be prayed for therein; The Bishops could not ordain other Clergymen, for the same Reason; They could not do it with­out obliging them, by the Laws of the Land, [Page 49] to own those Secular Powers, whom they themselves did not own. They could not go­vern the Clergy, as Bishops by the Laws of the Land are bound to govern them, with­out Teaching them, and Instructing them to teach their People the Duty of Obedience to that King, whom they themselves looked on as an unlawful King. Neither could they an­swer the Ends, or do the Business of the Go­vernment by sitting in Parliament, as the Law expects and requires, that all the Bishops of the Kingdom should do. Nay, in all their Exercise of Divine Offices, they must undeniably lie under a strong Byass and Temptation of instilling dangerous Doctrines, and Principles inconsistent with the Peace and Security of the Kingdom. Can it be supposed then, that any National Govern­ment wants a sufficient and competent Au­thority of removing such Bishops from their Sees, and of putting other Orthodox Bi­shops in their Room? And must They ask the Clergy's Leave to do this? Or must they borrow a competent Authority from the CHURCH to do this effectually? Miserable are the Princes who are in such a Case! Wretched is the Kingdom that wants a com­petent Authority to do any Thing which ap­pears necessary to be done with any of its [Page 50] Subjects, of what Order soever, to support it self, and preserve its own Authority. Who then can believe that Almighty GOD ever intended this? Those who object against the Validity of such a Deprivation, should consi­der two Things:

1. THAT there is no Persecution of Christianity in it. Had those Bishops been de­prived for any Doctrines or Articles of the Christian Faith, it would have looked more plausibly on their Side, and might with more Reason have been called Persecution. Or, if upon their Deprivation, their Districts and Sees had been left destitute of Orthodox Bi­shops regularly consecrated to perform the Divine Offices, as others had done before them: This would have made a great Alte­ration in the Case. But when it is for an avowed Disaffection to the established Civil Government, and judged necessary for the Security of it; that Necessity proves it lawful, and answers all Objections that can possibly be brought against it. And therefore, to pre­tend that such a Deprivation is not valid, as to the People living within their Districts of such deprived Bishops, because it is not Ca­nonical; is in effect saying nothing at all. For Deprivation signifies nothing to the [Page 51] Purpose, if it does not in the Effects of it, bind all the Consciences of the Subjects to disown the Authority of the Persons so deprived; and discharge them from all Obligations of future Submission to, and Communion with them. This is a Power without which Civil Government cannot stand: and therefore Secular Powers must be granted to have a competent Authority to all such Purposes; or else they are not only Subjects and Inferiors, but even Slaves to their spiritual Sovereigns, and must depend preca­riously on the Good-will and Favour of their Clergy, whether they shall sit easy and safe on their Thrones, or no. And all the Laws, and Canons, and Constitutions of the CHURCH, if they be wise, and good, and christian, must be made with a due Regard and Subserviency to this End, or else they lose all their Validity, and are to be looked upon as Nothing. For this is a sure Principle never to be disputed, That all National Governments have as suf­ficient and competent an Authority to do every Thing which is necessary to preserve the STATE, as the Bishops and Clergy can have for the Support of RELIGION and the CHURCH.

AND if this Authority will extend to the valid Deprivation of the disaffected, and dis­loyal [Page 52] Governors of the Church, the plain Consequence of it is, That all the Subjects of the Kingdom are in Duty and Conscience discharged from any farther spiritual Rela­tion to, or Communion with the Persons so deprived. What is it then that our Non-jurors mean by Exclaiming against this, even as tho' it were a Sin against the Holy Ghost? To tell the World, That all other Bishops, who will not adhere to the deprived ones, can perform no valid Acts of Priesthood; their Pray­ers Dr. Hickes. Collect. p 32. are Sin, and their Sacraments, no Sacraments, and their Absolution, Null, and of no Force. That all other Christians, who are not in the Communion of the deprived Bishops, are cut off from the Church of Christ, can have no Benefit by His Promises, no Assistance of His Grace, no Mercy thro' His Blood. Nay, that altho' they die Martyrs for Christ, yet Martyrdom it self cannot make amends for this Sin. If a Stran­ger to our Gospel were to hear this, he would certainly conclude, that Christianity aimed at Nothing more than the Exaltation of the CHURCH'S Power; and that Nothing greater was required to Salvation, than to own these deprived Bishops to be the Heads of it. Whereas, in Truth, the Commission given, is only to preach the Gospel, to administer the Sacraments, and to exercise such Offices, [Page 53] and such Powers, as shall be necessary to the Propagation of the Christian Religion: Without any Check upon Secular Potentates in their Administration of Civil Government, or any Exemption from their Jurisdiction. They have no Authority that interferes with Civil Powers. To confirm all which, it must not be forgotten,

2. THAT in this Deprivation the STATE took away no Power which the CHURCH truly and properly speaking gives. Dr. Hickes indeed, insinuates, p. 24. That as only Bishops have from Christ a Right to ordain; so they only have a Right to deprive one another. But this Ar­gument is formed with more Cunning than Ingenuity, and the Opposition is not fairly put. It should not have been between Ordaining and Depriving; but Ordaining and Deposing from the Sacred Order of the Priesthood. In the one the CHURCH gives, in the other She takes away Her spiritual Authority. But De­priving is of another Nature; it leaves the Persons all the Catholick Authority which the CHURCH gave, if they can find Places where they may lawfully Exercise it; and only restrains them from doing so in such and such Dominions. It is chiefly Remo­ving them from the Districts and Sees which they held of the Secular Powers, and there­by [Page 54] from all Right to the Exercise of their Spiritual Offices among any of the King's Subjects. And if Kings and Princes have not a competent Authority to do this, they are too weak to stand, and consequently, much weaker than GOD and CHRIST ever in­tended that Civil Government should be.

THE chief Objections to what is here de­livered, are these three.

I. IT is pleaded, That there is such a Divine Relation between a Bishop and the People of his District, as no Secular Powers can take away.

II. THAT the Authority in spiritual Affairs, here allowed to Kings and Princes, is contrary to the Practice and Principles of the first three Hundred Years.

III. THAT this is bringing the Church and its Clergy into Slavery.

I. As to the Divine Relation pretended to be between a Bishop and the People of his See or District: Pray, how comes that about? It is compared, I know, by some Reg. & Pont. p. 3. Men to Marriage. But who made that Match, or gave the divine Sanction to the Contract? Or if that were true, how comes [Page 55] there to be so many common Causes of Di­vorce? In short, this is the Notion of those only, who make every Thing that has been occasionally done by the Governors of the Church, to have been done by a divine and unchangeable Authority. But the only Way to judge rightly of this Matter, is, to con­sider what is the original Ground of that Rela­tion, and by whose Designation and Autho­rity it has been made. Now as to this,

1. I BELIEVE, that every Body will grant, That in promoting Bishops to such and such Sees, and Clergymen to their Districts or Pa­rishes, a Regard ought, and will be had, to the Sentiments and the Judgment of the Spiritual Governors of the Church; who, as I said above, in Consequence of their Com­mission from CHRIST to plant and govern it, must be supposed Invested with a Trust as to the spiritual Qualifications of the Persons to be employed in Holy Offices. And this Care, and Trust, and just Authority, they are sup­posed to discharge in their Admission of Persons into Holy Orders. In which they have Authority to provide, that no Persons unqualified, should be admitted into the Service of GOD. But then, when the Church has effectually taken this Care, it must cer­tainly be granted also in the

[Page 56] 2. Second Place, THAT Christian Princes and States have both an Interest in this Affair, and a Trust also committed to Them in pro­viding proper Spiritual Guides and Pastors for their People. And where they have both an Interest and a Trust, it will be very hard to say, that they have no Authority. Suppose that the Governors of the CHURCH should in­cline to appoint such Persons as the STATE can have no Confidence in, or no Security from, must they be allowed no Authority, even where their Peace and Safety appear to be very deeply concern'd? Sure this is too unreasonable and absurd to be believed. Or, again, Suppose that the Governors of the CHURCH should be careless, and neglect pro­viding for their Sees, would not the Tempo­ral Powers be bound to supply that Defect, and to take Gare that the People should not want proper Guides and Pastors? It is ab­surd then to think, that they have no Au­thority in a Matter which they are bound in Conscience to take Care of. Now as all this seems very agreeable to common Rea­son; let us go on, and consider

3. WHAT has been the Practice of the CHURCH in this Particular. And here we [Page 57] shall find, that generally speaking, every One who appeared to have an Interest in the Management of Ecclesiastical Affairs were allowed to have an Influence, and some Power in the Designation of the Person to be employed in such a Place or District.

THE CHURCH commits a Catholick Pow­er or Authority in Consecration or Ordina­tion, which Authority is to be exercised so far as lawfully it may, thro' the whole CHURCH of CHRIST, without any Assign­ment of this or that particular Jurisdiction. So the Form of Consecration runs with us: Receive ye the Holy Ghost for the Office and Work of a Bishop in the Church of GOD. And that such was the Manner of Primitive Ordinati­ons, the Reverend and very Learned Dr. Pot­ter, Ch. Gov. p. 452. now Lord Bishop of Oxford, proves from hence, That Ministers were then sometimes ordained without any Designation at all to particular Districts. And indeed, without this general Commission in Ordination, I do not see how they could be said to be invested with a Spiritual Power or Authority thro' the Whole Christian Church. This Power then be­ing thus convey'd by the Church; the Desig­nation of the Persons to this or that particu­lar District, was made several Ways. In the Apostles Time, such and such Persons were [Page 58] sent by them to such and such Cities, and great Towns, to minister therein, and go­vern the CHURCH according to the Directi­ons given. But afterwards the Clergy of the vacant Diocese sometimes chose their own Bishop, and sometimes the eldest Presbyter succeeded in Course. But then, to shew that every Thing which the Bishops and Clergy at that Time did, was not done by a Divine Authority: What was sometimes done in this Affair by the Clergy, was sometimes done by the People also, when the Bishops of another Province advanced any new Bishop to a va­cant See, it was always done with the Con­sent and Approbation of the People. Usual­ly this Approbation and Consent of the Peo­ple was had, as to the Person, before his Con­secration. The forementioned Right Reve­rend Bishop has cited a Passage out of the VIII th Book of the Apostolical Constitutions, c. 4. in which it is decreed, That such a Bishop must be ordained as was elected by the People for his emi­nent Merit, and their Consent was to be a third Time asked. And to the same Purpose there are several Passages in St. Cyprian, whereby it plainly appears, that the People had so much Authority, that they were usually con­sulted, and their Vote and Consent asked in the Designation of the Bishop that was to [Page 59] preside over them. Which shews most plain­ly, that such a Designation was not made by the divine appropriated Powers of the Bi­shops and Clergy only. And it is very well known, that what the People had at the Be­ginning, came by Degrees into the Hands of Kings and Princes. They had the Nomi­nation of Bishops to their several Sees; and I would therefore have a very good Reason given, why those Rulers who had Authority in Promoting them, should not be allowed the same in Removing them. Or how such a Removal can be called an Invasion of the sacred Rights of the Priesthood; when they were promoted by the Election or Nomination of the Laity, as well as of the Bishops?

I KNOW it will be said, That all this was only a prudent Condescention and Compli­ance with the People of their Flock, without any Authority. But to this I answer, Does not Voting, and Electing, and an almost constant and establish'd Usage of Consign­ing Persons to such and such Districts by Voting and Electing, look like a good De­gree of Authority in the Matter? And would the Fathers of the Church have suffered all this, if they had had the same Notions with some in our Days? Would they have conde­scended so far, if they had known it to be [Page 60] an Invasion of the CHURCH'S Independent Pow­ers? No certainly; their Practice in this Case, is a sufficient Demonstration that they had no such Sentiments.

AND indeed, how shall we judge, or how shall we know what are the CHURCH'S pecu­liar Rights, and what not; but by the Words of CHRIST'S Commission, and the Practice of the most Primitive Churches thereupon? The Performance of those Sa­cred Offices which CHRIST by His Commis­sion has taken away from the Civil Powers, and vested in a distinct Order of Men, we own to be the peculiar Authorities of the CHURCH. And accordingly, the Primitive Fathers did not allow the Laity to have Au­thority therein. They never condescended so far as to suffer them either to consecrate the Eucharist, or to lay on Hands in Ordina­tion. When therefore as to the Designation of Bishops to such and such particular Di­stricts, CHRIST'S Commission gives no Re­straining or Appropriating Rules at all, and the constant Practice of the CHURCH has been to admit the Laity to have an Interest and a Vote therein, and to promote by their Election: I do not know what can confute the Claim of a Divine Relation, and an In­dependent Authority herein, if this will not.

IF then the Designation of Bishops and Clergymen to their several Districts be no Part of the CHURCH'S sacred and unalienable Rights; certainly the Removal or Depriva­tion of such Persons, can be no Invasion of them; because doubtless they who have a competent Authority to promote, must be al­lowed to have the same also to Remove.

THE Conclusion of the Whole then, is, There is no such Thing in our Days as a Clergyman's having a Divine Right to his District. His Claim and Right is wholly Hu­man and Legal; founded on the Laws of the Land, and the established Constitutions of the CHURCH and Country in which we live. Consequently then, what the STATE does in a legal Way in such Deprivations, is done by a competent Authority; it is Valid in all Respects; and binds the Consciences of all Men. It transfers the Obligations, as to Religious Communion, from the former Possessor to the latter. It makes it our Duty to adhere to such Bishops, as in such Cases, the Laws of the Land regularly advance: And it makes our adhering to the Communion of the Bishops so deprived, to be both sinful and schismatical.

II. THE second Objection is, That what I have here advanced, seems not to agree with the Practice and Principles of the CHURCH for the first three hundred Years.

As to the Practice of the CHURCH in those Times, I have in some Measure thus accounted for it already. That it proceeded from the Exigencies and Necessity of Affairs at the Time when the Christians were either under Persecution, and so were constrained to act in Opposition to their Secular Go­vernors, because Christianity could not other­wise be propagated: Or else, it was done under the Connivance and Permission of such Temporal Powers. In either of which Cases, what was necessary to be done by the Bishops and Governors of the CHURCH for the Pro­motion of the Christian Religion, they un­doubtedly had a Divine Right and Authority from GOD to do. But then, in such Cases, the CHURCH did not claim a Divine Authori­ty of Excluding the Jurisdiction of the Em­perors and Secular Governors; but they ex­cluded themselves, by refusing to intermed­dle in this Government. Even the mildest of the Heathen Emperors, who, as Tertullian tells us, Apol. cap. v. forbid the Christians to be enquired after, or persecuted, seem to [Page 63] have dealt with them, only as Gallio the De­puty of Achaia did, I will be no Judge of such Acts xviii 15. Matters. When therefore the Christian Bi­shops and Clergy were so far either neglec­ted, or favoured by their Heathen Governors as to be left to themselves; they had Nothing more to do than to make wise Laws, and proper Canons, and see them duly executed. And if against those, who among themselves were mutinous, and turbulent, and schisma­tical, they pleaded the just Obligation of their Sanctions, and set forth very emphatically the Disorder and Guilt of those who in such Cases revolted from their proper Bishop, and despised his Authority, and separated from his Communion; they certainly Argued very justly, and Acted very rightly. All Christians were bound in Conscience to con­form themselves to such good and wise Rules, and to submit to such just and lawful Autho­rity. But what is all this, to the Rights of the Temporal Powers, whose Authority does not appear so much as once to have fallen under their Debates for the first three hun­dred Years.

WHEN the Romans had conquered Judea, they yet left the Jews in a great Measure to the Management of their own Civil Go­vernment. And what Herod, or the high [Page 64] Priest and the Sanhedrim, in such Cases, en­acted or ordained, was doubtless in Consci­ence to be obeyed; and it was a Sin to be mu­tinous and seditious against them. But sure this Privilege could never be extended to the ex­clusion of the Power and Authority of the Ro­man Emperors. So here, the Roman Emperors put the Christians under a Necessity of Act­ing independently on the Temporal Power, because they would not concern themselves therein. But this does not at all prove, that therefore all Secular Powers must for ever be excluded. I am amazed therefore, to find such a Fondness, as I do, for the Rules and Sentiments of the Cyprianick Age in this Con­troversy; I cannot but smile at Mens At­tempts to determine it by the Practice and Principles of St. Cyprian, or any other Father of those Times. All that they say, is out of the Question, and foreign to the Purpose. They only plead the Power and Authority of the Church's Sanctions among themselves; and the Guilt of separating from the Com­munion of their Bishops, while there was no other who would meddle in the Govern­ment of it. In such Cases, theirs was the only proper Authority to be regarded; be­cause the Secular Powers had declined all Ju­risdiction therein. But this is no more a [Page 65] Proof that the Authority of Kings and Princes must for ever be excluded from all Ecclesiasti­cal Affairs, than the Decrees of Herod, and the Jewish Sanhedrim, are a Proof that Julius, and Augustus Caesar had no Authority in Judaea.

WHAT shall we say then to Dr. Hickes, who would send all Christian Emperors and Kings to these very Times to learn new Les­sons, and to know from these Examples what Power they ought to exercise in Ecclesiastical Prop. 26. Affairs? Certainly this is a very odd Way of Arguing, That because Heathen Emperors would not meddle with the Government of the Christian Church, therefore Christian Kings and Princes must not. As tho' the Neglects and Disregards of the one, were to be a Bar and an Interdict to the just Rights and Claims of the other. That this is the Truth of the Case, and that there is no more than this in it, will be undeniably plain and clear,

3. FROM the great Concessions and large Compliances that the Christian Bishops and Clergy soon made when the Roman Empe­rors favoured their Interest, and interposed their Authority in the Management and Set­tlement of the Affairs of the CHURCH. If the Primitive Fathers had had the same Sen­timents with Dr. Hickes and his Friends, as to the CHURCH'S Divine Right to an Independent [Page 66] Authority; it is impossible that they should have given in to the Authority and Jurisdicti­on of the Emperors, as they are found to have done. And whether they will impute it to the Ignorance of the Primitive Christi­ans, or whether they will make them the first Betrayers of the CHURCH'S sacred Rights, I leave to themselves; let them account for it as they please. I am contented to observe, from a very learned Treatise of our present Author. Christian Prin. c. 2. Sect. 4. c. 17, 21, 27, 34, 35. great and good Archbishop, who has support­ed his Assertions with Authorities which are indisputable, That no sooner did the Euseb. Vit Const. Lib. III. c. 6, 7, 10, 12, 13, 17. Contanstine called the first general Council by his Imperial Authority, appointed the City Nice in Bithynia for the Place of their Meeting, and on the Day set for opening the Synod he came and sat among them, and Reasoned with them and compo­sed their Differences. Ibid. Lib. IV. c. 42, 43. He summoned another Council to meet at Tyre. A. D. 335; and Threatned those who disobey'd his Summons with Banishment, or Ejectment out of his See; afterward he adjourned it to Jerusalem. To this Council Athanasius came in pure Obedience to the Emperor, and appealed from it to his Authority. Ib. Lib. I. c. 44. Eusebius commends Constantine for his Piety and Religious Care in all this. Dr. Cave. Hist. Lit. Vol. 2. p. 152. In the Assembly at Car­thage. A. D. 411. Marcellinus the Emperors Commissioner di­rected the Manner of their Proceeding, appointing Seven Bishops only of a Side to enter into Debate; and in the end gave Sen­tence in favour of the Orthodox. And when upon Marcellinus his Death the Donatists would have had all that had been done re­scinded; Honorius confirmed their Decrees and made them Va­lid. Ib. p. 158, &c. Upon the Feuds, and contrary Decrees in the Council of Ephesus, A. D. 431. between John Patriarch of Antioch, and Cyril of Alexandria against Nestorius, Theodosius the Emperor commands all that had been done on both Sides to be rescinded; and upon a full and true Information of what had past, he confirm'd the Decrees made against Nestorius. As to Imperial Laws in Ecclesiastical Affairs I will mention a Few only out of the Code and Novells of Justinian. God. Lib. I. Tit. iii. cap. 8. If a Clergyman gave false Witness in a Pecu­niary Case, he was to be suspended from his Office for Three Years; if in a Criminal Cause, to be Degraded from the Priestly Office, clericatûs honore nudatus, &c. ib. Novel. Coll. ix. Tit. vi. 123. cap. x. A Clergyman playing at Tables, or standing by to lay Wagers, or look on, was to be sus­pended for three Years; jubemus tribus annis, a venerabili Mini­sterio prohiberi. ib. c. 17. He that shall give or take Money to procure the Election or Ordination of a Minister, was to be degraded; a gradu Sacerdotij retrahatur. ib. c. 31. A Bishop not Consecrated according to some particular Impe­rial Constitutions was to be deposed. Jubemus hunc omnibus modis Epicsopatu depelli, Novel. ix. Tit. vi. 123, 1. A Presbyter ordained before examination, if he had been accused as unfit, was to be deposed, a Sacerdotio repellatur c. 2. A Bishop deserting his See and not returning in a set Time was to be Deprived. Ab Episcopatu expelli. ib. c. 9. If a Bishop or Presbyter excommunicates any without hearing his Cause, the Person unjustly excommunicated shall be Absol­ved by another Presbyter, and he that unjustly excommunicated him, shall himself be excommunicated. ib. c. 11. If a Bishop that was deprived, or deposed, Sacerdotio pulsus, presumed to return to the City he had belonged to, he was to be confined in a Monastry. ib. A Bishop permitting a Deacon to Marry after he was ordained was to be deprived; expellatur ab Episcopatu, and a Presbyter so Marrying was to be degraded; expellatur a clero. ib. c. 14. Many more Laws of this kind equivalent to our Acts of Par­liament, might be mentioned; and they all demonstrate that the Christians of those Ages knew no such Principle, as the Inde­pendent Power of the Church in Ecclesiastical Affairs. Chri­stian Emperors concern themselves in the Af­fairs of the Church and the Government of it, but the Bishops admitted them to summon [Page 67] Councils by their Imperial Authority; to ap­point the Time and Place of their Meeting; to direct the Matter to be treated on, and the Manner of their Proceeding. To Preside in, and Regulate their Debates; to exercise Authority over their Declarations and Ca­nons, sometimes to Revoke, and sometimes to Suspend their Decrees. Sometimes they [Page 68] not only made Laws about Church Go­vernment, without the Clergy; but even regulated their Qualifications, and punished their Miscarriages; sometimes with Com­mands to the Church to Degrade them, and sometimes to Excommunicate 'em. They took upon them to judge of the Controversies be­tween the Bishops; suspended one, and set up another; and threaten'd the Refractory with Deprivation, if they but disputed the Au­thority of their Summons. These Things they did sometimes at the Request of the CHURCH, and often with hearty Thanks for what they had done. And those Ages knew no such Thing as disputing the competent Au­thority by which they acted, or the Validity of their Sentences; so long as Nothing was done by them to the Detriment of the Chri­stian Faith or Religion. This shews most plainly, that what was practised by the Inde­pendent Authority of the Bishops and Cler­gy [Page 69] for the first three hundred Years, was on­ly out of Necessity, and not in a Claim of any Divine Right to exclude the Secular Powers.

AND now I come to the

III. AND last Objection. Some are apt to think the Principles I advance too prejudicial to the CHURCH'S Interest and Advantage, that they tend too much to oppress and en­slave Her. But I hope, I have not laid my self open deservedly to any such Charge. I have granted it a divine unalienable Right to the Holy Offices of all Religious Ministra­tions, to the Power of the Keys and to Or­dination. I have allowed it a natural and common Right to all the general Powers of Government, and owned that by Virtue of CHRIST'S Commission, it has a Trust use­ful to it in all its Exigencies; and an Autho­rity to do every Thing in the Exercise of its Spiritual Powers, that is necessary to be done for the Propagation and Support of the Chri­stian Religion. Where then is the Slavery or Oppression in these Principles? Or what is it that we can by the Authority of GOD and CHRIST claim more? Other Privile­ges and Authorities, may be granted to it by the STATE: But of its own Right, I am [Page 70] not convinced that it can pretend to more than these.

I AM, in Truth, very sensible, that the Clergy are in some Mens Esteem and Opini­on very low and mean; and I hope, I shall alway carry a ready Inclination to do my Endeavour to support both the Honour and the true Interest of the Order. But, as all the Contempt that we seem to lie under, is either with Men of profligate Principles, and wicked Lives, whose Reproaches can do us but little or no Harm; or else with those, who take Offence at our Carriage and Con­duct: So Nothing certainly will go farther to raise our Character, and promote our In­terest, and engage Kings and States to en­trust us with additional Honours and Powers, than our Prudence and Piety, and Modesty, and great Humility, which are none of them inconsistent with a due Regard to our just Au­thority. And while these Virtues and Graces are sound to shine thro' all our Conduct, we may vindicate our real Rights without any Scandal or great Offence. But if we be vain and imprudent in our Behaviour; trou­blesome and turbulent in our Conduct, and grasp at Power and Authority in the Church, only to support Factious Parties, and to raise Tumults and Seditions against the STATE: All [Page 71] this will really do us harm. The Adversary will not fail to make all the Advantages that they can of it, and we thus give them too just a handle thereto. And this which is disa­greable to the true Temper and Spirit of the Gospel, will have yet a worse influence to our mighty Disadvantage. It will make us cheap and mean in the Eyes of those Wise and Good Men, by whose deserved Favour and Interest the Dignity and Character of our Holy Order should be supported.

LET any Man of common Understand­ing judge what the World will think or say of those Claims and Pretensions to Divine Power and Authority, which apparently mini­ster only to Ambition, and Pride, and Faction; but are not at all serviceable to the Interest of true Religion. Such are the Pretences that I have so often mentioned already of the Gover­nors of the Church being Spiritual Kings, Prin­ces, Lords, Legates, and supreme Monarchs in the Church Regent, instead of the Church Militant; and having a Share of CHRIST'S Kingly Power in his spiritual Kingdom, as well as of his Priesthood. In consequence of this, to make all Christian Kings, and Princes, and States, their spiritual Inferiors and Subjects, from whom, Submission and Obedience is to be ex­pected in all Religious Matters, under the Pe­nalty [Page 72] of Excommunication, and consigning them over to the Devil.

IN the Name of GOD, what Advantage will all this be to Religion? How naturally do such Pretensions put Mankind upon en­quiring, What Use the Clergy have made of this Authority in Times past, when they had it in their Hands? And when upon several Passages and Instances in History, they can tell us, that thro' this very Power, Religion has been depraved and corrupted by the Clergy themselves, who claim it: What Advantage will this be to the Honour, and Credit, and Reputation of our Holy Or­der? Will not every notorious Miscarriage committed under the Covert of a Divine Pow­er from Christ in all Spiritual Causes; occasion his whole Commission to be evil spoken of, and turn the very Name of divine Right into Banter and Ridicule, and a Name of Contempt and Derision; and give too plausible a Ground for the scandalous Imputation of Priestcraft? Who must bear the Blame of all this? To whom is all this Contempt of the Clergy to be imputed? In too great a Measure, to the blameable Arrogance, and boundless Ambiti­on, and spiritual Pride of some Clergymen. Mankind often fall the lower, by aspiring too high. The Name of the Virgin Mary was [Page 73] always venerable, and treated with great Respect among Christians, until some began to adore her as a Goddess. And Nothing has brought Her to be so disrespectful­ly treated, as the Idolatry of Men in Wor­shipping her. And so I in my Conscience believe, That where there has been no scan­dalous Immorality of Life, Nothing has made our Sacred Order meaner, or lower in their Interest and Esteem, than the claim­ing under GOD and CHRIST more Power than They ever intended to bestow up­on us.

AND especially then are these Pretences scandalous and disadvantageous to our Cha­racter, when the spiritual Authority of the Priesthood, is set up in Opposition to the STATE; and made use of as a Check upon the Secular Powers, and a Means to weaken them in their Authority, and to cramp them in the Administration of Civil Govern­ment. I verily believe, that the Christian CHURCH has lost more of Her true Interest by this, than by any other Means whatsoever. In that when the Lay Powers recover themselves out of such injurious Oppressions, they ne­ver fail to make very large and ample Re­prisals. And here, I must beg leave to re­mark, That this Claim of an Independent [Page 74] Power in Ecclesiastical and Spiritual Af­fairs, has not, that I know of been set up by any of the Clergy of our Reformed CHURCH from Her first Reformation untill the late Happy Revolution. And as it was then first set on foot by the Non-jurors in Defence of the Deprived Bishops and in Opposition to King WILLIAM and his Government: So has it ever since been chiefly held up by those who have had little or no Affection for our National Establishment and Constitution from that Time. And the Scandalous Part of all this Scuffle in Controversy, and a Schismatical Separation from our CHURCH, is not made on the Account of our Holy Religion, and in Defence of the Powers by which that is to be Preserved; but only in Behalf of a few particular Men, and by those who are confessedly in the Interest of the Preten­der, and who have Nothing more at Heart then this groundless and unreasonable Schism in the CHURCH to dispose the Hearts of the English People to another Rebellion against the STATE. Had it not been for the servicea­bleness of this Doctrine to breed such Con­fusions among us, and to throw us into Fac­tions and seditions, it had never been set on Foot at first. And if all other Methods of serving and supporting the Pretender's Cause [Page 75] had not been baffled and made ineffectual, it had never been revived now. For while they had Hope from other Means, These were laid asleep. And if Men were not blinded and infatuated above all Measure: This is Demonstration clear enough, that no such Ecclesiastical Power can be given by GOD and CHRIST. The foremention'd Concession of our Adversaries being a most certain and indisputable Truth: That Christ has given no Authority to his Church, that can interfere with the Civil Powers.

To make an end; I think I have plainly and clearly proved, that altho' by CHRIST'S Commission the Divine Offices of all Christi­an Religious Ministrations are Appropriated to the Bishops and Clergy only: Yet the Ge­neral Governing Powers of this Divine So­ciety are not. That as these belong to it on­ly of that Common Right which naturally be­longs to all Societies, and as they are necessary to the Attainment of that End for which it was Instituted of GOD; so consequently they have nothing in 'em to exclude the Jurisdicti­on of temporal Governors. Because those tem­poral Governors have the very same natural and common Right over all their Subjects, and in all Cases and Causes, to do every Thing that shall be found necessary to the Support [Page 76] and Preservation of the STATE; which the others can pretend to Claim for the Support and Preservation of the CHURCH. Nay far­ther, That it would be no certain Advan­tage to Religion for the CHURCH to be pos­sess'd of such Authority. That it would rob Kings and Princes of one great Branch of their Sovereignty; and may be, and often has been, used to defeat even their Civil Admini­strations and to shake their Thrones, and to Ruin their Dominions. And in a Word that such an Independent Authority is Incompa­tible with the Supremacy of Secular Princes, whose Affairs must inevitably be influenced and controul'd thereby. Therefore too such inconsistent Supremacies cannot be believed to be derived both from GOD.

IN Consequence of all this, I have shew'd, That Princes have an Authority both in the E­lection, and also in the Deprivation of Bishops, if they be disloyal and disaffected to them. That without such a Power, Government may be made too weak to subsist, and may be in Danger of being Overturned by the Power of the Clergy. That as this is what Christ's Com­mission never was intended for, so consequent­ly all such Deprivations made by the legal Au­thority of the STATE are good and Valid to all Intents and Purposes, and oblige the Consci­ences of all the Subjects.

THE Conclusion of all this is, That the Deprivation of the late Non-juring Bishops was in all respects Valid; that the People of their several Sees are thereby discharged from all Submission, and Duty, and spiritual Com­munion, and Relation to them. That they have no longer any lawful Authority in our CHURCH; but we as Christians are bound to adhere to the Religious Communion of those whom the King by the Laws of the Land shall Promote into their Places. And in a Word, that the contrary Practice in leaving the Communion of this established CHURCH, and setting up Religious Assemblies under the pretended Authority of such Deprived Bishops or their Adherents: Is very Wicked and sin­ful in the Sight of GOD, and an undoubted Schism from the Communion of the Church of England.

I WILL only add, that as these have been the constant Doctrines and Principles of the Church of England from the Beginning of the Reformation down to our Times: So they had not now been disputed had it not been in favour of the Pretender and of Popery.

FINIS.

THE CONTENTS.

THE Occasion and Importance of this De­bate, page 1.
The State has a supremacy in all Cases ante­cedently to the Church's Claim, 3
Natural Religion gives no Independent Autho­rity to the Priesthood, 4
Christs Commission appropriates only the Mini­stration in Holy Offices, 5
The General Governing Powers of the Church, founded only on Common Right, and not Appro­priated to the Clergy by Christ's Commission, 8
Therefore not to be Executed by an Authority In­dependent on the State. This proved by Six Ar­guments, 10
I. From the nature of the Powers in Dispute, 11
Where Christ has not appropriated the Power, the State is not excluded, ibid.
Dr. Hickes admits this in Part, 12
How the Church's pretended Independency, is to be understood, 16
The Practices of the three first Centuries were of mere Necessity, pag. 17
The Royal Preisthood Nothing to this Contro­versy, 18
The Non-jurors lofty Style and Pretensions un­suitable to the Temper of the Gospel, 20
The Church's real Authority must not be judg'd of by high Strains and Metaphors; but by the Powers actually convey'd and appropriated, 22
II. Such an Independency in the Church not consistent with the Subordination of Christ's King­dom to that of the Father, 23
III. Not at all Serviceable to Religion, 25
IV. It robs Secular Powers of one Branch of their Sovereignty, 29
That secular Princes and States have Authority in Matters of Religion, proved from the Jewish Kings, 31, 32
V. Such a Claim dangerous to all Kingdoms, as Weakening and Ruining their Authority in their Temporal Affairs, 36
This Evidenced by the Practices of the Non-juring Schismaticks, 37
VI. Two Independent Powers in the Government [Page] of the same Body of Men breeds inevitable Confusi­ons; and therefore cannot be of GOD, pag. 41
The Necessity of granting, that Christ has given the Church no Authority that interferes with Civil Powers, 43
The State must have as ample a Power for its own Preservation, as the Church has for Hers, ib.
This necessarily gives them an Authority.  
1. In the Election of Bishops and Clergymen, 44.
2. In their Deprivation, 47
No Persecution in depriving the Nonjuring Bi­shops, 50
No real Invasion of Ecclesiastical Authority. 53
Three Objections answered; shewing,  
I. That the Relation of a Bishop to his Flock is not Divine, or Unalienable, 54
II. The Principles and Practices of the Cypria­nick Age, altogether foreign to this Controversy, 62
III. No real Detriment to the Christian Church or Priesthood from the Principles of this Essay. 69
The properest Method of Advancing the Cha­racter and Interest of the Clergy. 70
The Conclusion. 75

ERRATA.

Page 14. line 21. read Modification. p. 15. l. 6. r. Powers. p. 50. l. 25. for their r. the.

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