THE DEFENCE OF IOHN ETHERINGTON AGAINST STEVEN DENISON, and his Witnesses, their Accusa­tions, and Depositions. VVherein their whole Proceedings and ground whereupon he was Cen­sured and committed to prison by the high Commission Court, is in briefe declared. Which he having now opportunitie, and speciall occasion also urging, thought needfull to publish.

PROV. 19. 5. A false Witnesse shall not be unpunished, and he that speaketh lyes shall not escape.
LEVIT. 19. 15. Ye shall doe no unrighteous Iudgement; Thou shalt not respect the person of the poore, nor honour the person of the mightie.
DEUT. 1. 17. Yee shall not respect persons in Iudgement, but yee shall heare the small as well as the great.

Printed in the Year, 1641.

THE DEFENCE OF IOHN ETHERINGTON Against STEPHEN DENISON, and his witnesses, their accusations, and depositions: upon which he was censured by the high Com­mission Court.

Vnto all Christian people of what estate or calling soever, which in your hearts doe preferre the love of God the Fa­ther, and of the Lord Iesus Christ, his grace and truth, To judge righteous judgement, To shew mercy, To defend the innocent, To releeve the oppressed, To comfort the af­flicted brethren of Christ, To suffer affliction with them, and so your owne eternall happinesse before all temporall honour, pleasure, profits, promotions, and reputations of this world. The love of God the Father, and of the Lord Iesus Christ, his grace and truth, mercies and peace, and an assured hope of eternall happinesse be with you all, Amen.

BELOVED Christians, for of what degree soe­ver yee be, a more honourable and blessed title yee cannot have, being so indeed. If a Christian that is despised, reviled, and per­secuted, having all manner of evill that evill man can invent against him, and that by persons pro­fessing [Page 2] a strictnesse in Religion above others, as well Prea­chers as professors of that kinde; not onely in their pri­vate talke and conferences together, but publickly in Pul­pits and printed bookes, and in the open streets and parts both of City and Countrey, as (among the rest of the e­vils) That he will equivocate, lye, deny and forsweare all things before Authoritie, which he beleeveth, sayth, and doth privately, and submit with his body and word to a­ny Religion, and not suffer persecution for any thing. If such a one may be admitted to speake for himselfe in his owne defence, and that his words may possibly be re­garded, then give me leave a little now once at last I humbly beseech you, and regard my words so far forth as charitie and truth may bind you thereunto.

It is so well knowne to many in this City of London, both how my adversary, before named, hath dealt and proceeded against me from his first beginning to this pre­sent, as also how I have dealt with him, and what my minde concerning Religion, that if I should set downe any thing that were untrue, either in one respect or other, I should be soone taxt for the same. Not onely by mine enemies (who having done so already without cause, will doe it againe quickly when there is cause) but by others also which know me and understand truly how things are. And so I shall give all men just occasion to reject me, and to account me a false deceitfull man; which yet I am sure I have not done, and which is more, I shall cor­rupt my conscience toward God, and provoke him to displeasure against me, unto whom now, notwithstan­ding all the evill of man, and malice of Satan, I can ap­peale with a good conscience, and make my petition and complaint vnto him, as a childe to a most gracious Fa­ther and just avenger of all his childrens wrongs. There­fore whatsoever I here write, though it be but little in comparison to that which hath been said, sworne, and published against me, yet as prizing a good conscience farre above either liberty of my body, or favour of the [Page 3] world, through the grace of God, it shall be true, and so cleare, and full in all things, as I shall be able in so short a space to expresse.

My accusers are many, the first and chiefe of all, the common accuser onely excepted, is Mr. Stephen Denison, Vicar of Katherine Cree-Church in London; the rest as they stand recorded by the Register, are,

  • Rowland Thomson, Thomas Rogers, Joyners.
  • Christopher Nicholson, Chandler.
  • Peter Worcester, Drawer.
  • Susan Price, a Porters wife.
  • Henry Robrowgh, Curate.
  • Iohn Okey, Clothworker.
  • George Dunne, Chirurgion.
  • Thomas Stephens, Clarke.

These are the full number of Mr. Denisons Witnesses, whose testimonies were taken by the Register, and stand for proofe of the articles against me.

Their accusations are these following.

Their first accusation.

That the said Iohn Etherington, being a Boxmaker by his trade, about five or six yeares since, gave over his trade of Box-making, and betooke himselfe to the expounding or interpreting of the holy Scriptures to others besides those of his owne family, and hath so done since the 20 of December 1623. and taken upon him to instruct ma­ny persons, not being of his owne family, in poynts of doctrine and matters of faith.

These are the words conteined in the sentence, as they are set downe by the Register, to which Rowland Thom­son, Thamas Rogers, Christopher Nicholson, Henry Ro­browgh doe testifie.

The deposition of Thomson.

To the first Article he saith and deposeth, that this de­ponent hath known the said Etherington the space of these seven yeares last past, about the beginning of which time he the said Etherington professed the trade of a Box-ma­ker, and followed that trade for many yeares together; and also saith, that the said Iohn Etherington hath of this deponents certaine knowledge, and in his presence and hearing, oftentimes tooke upon him to expound sundry places of Scripture, and to instruct many persons not be­ing of his owne family, in poynts of doctrine and mat­ters of faith, tending to the salvation of the soule; and this he hath done within the time aforesaid, and since the 20 of December 1623.

The deposition of Rogers.

To the first Article he saith and deposeth, that the ar­ticulate Etherington, being for some yeares past (as this deponent hath heard) a Box-maker, and professing that trade, did about the time in the article mentioned, give o­ver his said trade and vocation, since which time being since the 20 of December 1623. this deponent hath heard him take upon him to expound some part of the Scrip­ture, to sundry persons not being of his owne houshold.

The deposition of Nicholson.

To the first Article he deposeth and saith, that he hath knowne the articulate Etherington for the space of six or seven yeares last past, at which time this deponent belee­veth, that he the said Etherington professed the art of a Box-maker, but since that time he utterly forsooke his said trade and vocation; and further saith, that he the said Etherington (as he this deponent verily beleeveth) [Page 5] hath of late time, and since the 20 of December 1623. endevoured to instruct divers persons inhabiting in seve­rall places in or neere unto the Citie of London, in new and strange poynts of doctrine, and also to expound the holy Scriptures unto them, and that he the said Ethering­ton doth take upon him as a Teacher in matters of do­ctrine, and is so generally reputed among his proselites and followers, as he this deponent hath heard and be­leeveth.

The deposition of Robrowgh.

To the first Article he deposeth and saith that he hath knowne the articulate Etherington for these foure or five yeares past, or thereabout, and knoweth that he for most part of the time articulate professed himselfe to be a man able to interpret the Scriptures, and that to those which are not of his owne family or houshold, because he hath opposed some Ministers of the Church of England in dis­putation, which his writings between him and this depo­nent, and likewise his printed bookes doe plainly shew, and also because this deponent once meeting with him and his company to dispute of matters of Religion, told him the said Etherington, that he this deponent was ex­horted by a Minister not to trouble himselfe in disputati­on with him; whereupon the said Etherington replyed, that the said Minister so spake it, because he was afraid to contest with him the said Etherington.

These are the words as they stand recorded by the Register.

My answer and defence.

Here Mr. Denison and his Witnesses at their very first entrance doe plainly shew forth and discover their evill conspiring mindes against mee; for it is well knowne (which they could not be ignorant of, neither if they [Page 6] were will it in this case excuse them) that although I left the trade that I had used, which they so often mention by the name of a Box-maker, in scorne and der [...]sion as a­ny man may well perceive, though it may beseeme a poor Christian, like my selfe, well enough, if it were meaner then it is; yet did I not then or thereupon betake my selfe to the expounding or interpreting of the Scriptures, as a teacher or instructer to many persons as they speake; nei­ther did I leave it for any such end, nor to live or have a­ny maintenance thenceforth for such a thing, as they my accusers by their cunning Article and deceitfull testimo­nies would make the Court and the world beleeve; but I betooke my selfe to another kinde of trade or worke, as low and servile as it, touching the conveyance of water in pipes that I made of earth, which I had used seven or eight yeares before, and had now necessary occasion re­quiring me to follow altogether, by reason of a worke I had to do for the serving of the City of Westminster with water, and not utterly leaving or forsaking the other, as they depose, but made use thereof also as need required in things concerning this, which I have followed with much labour and paines night and day, as well for the maintenance of my selfe, my wife, and children, as for the good and benefit of others; as all or most of the In­habitants of Westminster, and sundry other Gentlemen and Inhabitants of London, and other parts of the King­dome, for whom I have done the same kinde of worke, will testifie for me, and wherein I should at this present time also be imployed for the supply of my own, and my wife and childrens present wants, and for the good of the Common-wealth, if I were not (through the envy of my for-mentioned enemies, & pleasure of the Court) restrained by imprisonment; for God doth know, that as I hold it to be a more blessed thing to give, then it is to receive,Matth. 25. as Christ hath said, and St. Paul testifieth, so I doe desire in my heart to give and doe service in that kinde to others,Acts 20. rather then to receive of any.

[Page 7]Neither have I ever in my life taken upon me, or any way assumed to my selfe, the office, name, or place of a teacher, or instructer over any people in any private con­venticle or meeting whatsoever, nor have so much as to imitate Ministers or teachers in any manner of forme, ge­sture, expounding, or interpreting, or to be as a chiefe lea­der, or to have proselites or followers, or a company, as they my accusers charge me, but doe utterly dislike all such bold presumptuous practices, and have opposed and reproved them, as some that know me well, and things that I have writ, can witnesse.

Neverthelesse, this I confesse, that not onely for five or six yeares past, but for these five or six and thirty yeares, since the time that it pleased God of his gracious good­nesse to call me from the pleasures of the sinnes of my youth to seeke him, I have given my minde with earnest desire of my heart and prayer unto God, to reade, heare, and understand the word of God, to the end, that under­standing the truth and way of life conteined in the same, I might walke therein all the dayes of my life, to the ho­nour of God and my owne comfort and salvation. For I remembred that Christ commanded to search the Scrip­tures: John 5. 39. and foretelling of the abomination of desolation that was to come,Matth. 24. 5. warneth his people, that who so readeth, should understand: and how he doth pronounce them blessed, that reade and heare the words of his prophecy, and keepe those things which he hath spoken, because the time of his comming is at hand:Revel. 1. 3. and as God vouchsafed to shew his grace and mercies unto me, and give me un­derstanding in the same his truth and way of life, so I have endeavoured to impart that which I understood, with admonition to my wife and children, neighbour and friend, desiring in my heart, and praying unto God in secret, that he would vouchsafe the same grace unto them. This I confesse, I have done, though in great weak­nesse, and so, as holding it alwayes a speciall poynt of wisdome, to be more ready in this respect to receive, then [Page 8] to give, to heare, then to speake; and I confesse, I have not been in all this time of thirty-five yeares so conver­sant and sociable with the prophane multitude of the world, as I have been with the sober and well disposed, the wise in heart. I have desired to converse with such e­specially above all other wheresoever I have come to talke and confer together of the word of God, which wee have either heard or read, or had in our hearts and memories, edifying one another in the faith & hope of eternall life. This on the first day of the weeke, and so daily as oppor­tunitie might permit, I confesse, I have done in societie with such persons; remembring the charge given by St. Paul to every Christian, saying, Take heed brethren, Heb. 3. 12, 13. least there be in any of you an evill heart of unbeliefe in departing from the living God, but exhort one another daily while it is called to day, least any of you be hardened through the deceit­fulnesse of sinne. And againe,Heb. 10. 24. 25. Let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good workes, not forsaking the as­sembling of our selves together as the manner of some is, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as yee see the day approaching. All which I suppose the meanest Christi­an of the lowest degree or place that is, may doe, and that it concerneth him as much as it doth any other, though never so great.

If in this I have offended against the law of the Church of England, I have offended it, I confesse, but I doe sup­pose, nay, I verily beleeve there is no law in this Christi­an Kingdome, now at this time, forbidding these things. In the times of Papistry, it was not held lawfull for the Scriptures to be in the English Language, nor for the lay people to reade the same. But thankes be to God, it is not so now, those dayes of desolation are shortned in this Realme; according to the word of Christ as he foretold, saying. But for the elect sake those dayes shall be shortned. Mat. 24. 22. The Scriptures wherein the light of the truth and way of salvation is conteined and held forth, which by Anti­christ and his Church hath beene so long obscured, are [Page 9] by the Lawes and Authoritie of this Land translated into our owne native tongue, and by the same Authoritie, all men young and old, have free libertie to reade and consi­der the same, to talke and conferre thereof one neighbour with another; and as the men of Berea after they had heard Paul preach, did search the Scriptures daily; so may we doe after we have heard; and as Timothy did know the Scriptures of a childe, which were able to make him wise unto salvation, so may wee even of children know the Scriptures. Therefore we are greatly bound to be thankfull unto God for this inestimable treasure, and for those his servants, who have beene the meanes of this so great good unto us. And God forbid, that ever the Au­thoritie or Law of this Christian Kingdome should pro­hibit the same againe.

So that whereas Steven Denison and his witnesses doe charge me that I have oftentimes taken upon me to ex­pound sundry places of Scripture, as a teacher or instru­cter to many persons, &c. They charge me very falsly, for I never did otherwise then as one Christian neigh­bour or friend may and ought to doe to and with ano­ther (so far forth as God hath given him grace and un­derstanding) as I have sayd.

But because it will be conceived, that all this that hath been said and done against me, was not for nothing, I must therefore request the favour and patience of the Reader, to give me leave to relate the beginning and ground of all, which was this;

First, it is true, I confesse, I did and doe still hold as a maine truth of the Gospel of Christ (contrary, as it ap­peareth, to Mr. Denison) that repentance doth necessarily goe before remission of sinnes, and so before justifying faith also, as well as before justification or remission; and this, I confesse, I have endeavoured to maintaine against some that have held the contrary. Which thing Mr. De­nison having heard of, he tooke upon him with great vio­lence, in his Pulpits to oppose the same, calling it a [Page 10] damnable errour, a familisticall poynt of doctrine, and that none but familists held it, and naming me often by name and by trade, as if I were the Author thereof, and charged me also with many other things very false, vilde, and wicked. And this was before he began his suite in Court against me, and not at all knowing me, or having once ever spoken with me, but being onely informed and set on by his two first witnesses Thomson and Rogers, as Thomson afterward acknowledged.

These two Thomson and Rogers, are men that I was ne­ver acquainted or conversant with, either in one kinde or other; neither have I ever been in their company, but by their owne occasion or procurement, or some of their owne or Mr. Denisons sociates, and alwayes with some others with them, and under pretence of refuting the fore­mentioned poynt of repentance before justifying faith, which I held, or, (after Mr Denison had begun so in his Pulpits) under colour of friendship, as seeming to be de­sirous to know my minde in matters of Religion more fully, to the end they might informe Mr. D. thereof right­ly, and so stay his proceedings in his Pulpits; for this Thomson and Rogers were his speciall devotaries and in­ward with him.

I say under these forementioned pretences, they procu­red me into their company three or foure times, which I for my part never sought. And when I was in their com­pany, they or some of their fellowes spake as much or more then I, and especially Mr. Robrowgh, who for most part of the times was one with them; and the speech was not in any manner of teaching or expounding as a tea­cher or instructer for my part especially, but in the way of reasoning and answering to their questions and de­mands; and the chiefe matter was concerning repentance, which I hold for a principle of truth, is and must be be­fore justifying faith; I say not all kinde of faith, but justi­fying onely. We must repent, that is to say, returne from the pleasures of our vaine and evill wayes, and sinnes, to a [Page 11] true and deepe sorrow and mourning for the same, and in humblenesse and contrition of heart confesse them unto God, and like the Publican, standing a far off, as not da­ring (because of our sinnes and vildnesse) to looke up to heaven, but smiting our brest as truly confounded, ear­nestly desire God to be mercifull to us sinners.Heb. 6. This re­pentance,Mark, 1. 1, 2, 3, 4. being a principle of Christ, and part of the Go­spel, doe I hold, is and must be before justifying faith; as these Scriptures doe declare, Matth. 4. 17. Mar. 1. 15. Luk. 24. 47. Act. 2. 38. Act. 3. 19. Act. 5. 31. Act. 13. 23, 24 Act. 19. 4. Luk 18. 13, 14. Which Mr. Ro­browgh being their chiefe disputer, denied, and opposed as a damnable errour; denied, I say, repentance to be be­fore justifying faith, but acknowledging it to be before justification and remission of sinnes; for he maketh repen­tance and sanctification (meaning a holy and new life) to be both one, and will have them to fall in and come betweene justifying faith and justification, as in the wri­ting which he before in his deposition mentioneth, passed betweene him and me, is to be seene; as if justifying faith could be one moment of time, without or before justifica­tion or remission of sinnes, which are in effect both one; for, to have ones sinnes forgiven, is to be justified from them, and so of necessitie it will follow, that if repentance be before remission of sinnes and justification, it must be before justifying faith, because where remission of sinnes is not, there can be no justifying faith.

Hereupon it is that the said Thomson and Rogers doe depose that I have often times taken upon me to expound sundry places of Scripture, and to instruct many persons in their presence and hearing, and therefore they name no time, place, part of Scripture, poynt of doctrine, nor person to be present besides themselves, least their cunning equivocations should be discovered, but since the 20 of December 1623: they are very carefull to have set down, because they would not have King Iames his pardon by any means to relieve me against their wicked conspiracy.

[Page 12]And Henry Robrowgh, he sayth not that I have often times taken upon me to expound sundry places of Scrip­ture, and to instruct many persons in his presence and hearing, &c. Which he might have deposed as safely as they, having all one and the same ground, hereby seem­ing to have some more honesty in him. But that I pro­fesse my selfe to be a man able, and sets downe the reason thereof to be, because I have opposed some Ministers in disputation, naming himselfe onely, and the writing that passed betweene him and me, for proofe thereof. Where­as, as it is well knowne, he was the man that desired it, and promised faire and friendly proceeding, though he now hath shewed himselfe otherwise; and mentioning al­so my printed bookes, as in his deposition, for further ground. As if a man may not reason, or dispute with a Minister, nor speake or write of Religion, or of the Scrip­tures, but he therein taketh upon him as a teacher or in­structer, and professeth himselfe to be a man able; for this is the thing Robrowgh drives at, as well as Thomson and Rogers, to prove against me to the Court; which for my part, I never did professe, nor take upon me, although I know a man may through the grace and gift of God, be in some measure able, that dareth presume to take the of­fice, name, or profession of a Teacher or Instructer upon him. And such gifts of God, as to prophecy, if in a man of the lowest degree, place, or calling in the Church of God, Shepheard, Clown, Carpenter, or other, ought not to be dispised or envied at for his low estate, or meannesse of his person sake. Nay, a greater Messenger of God then ever Mr. Robrowgh was or will be, sayd once of some that for the same causes were so envied, and complained of; I would that not onely they, but the whole host of Israel did prophecy. And St. Paul sayth without excepting the mea­nest artificer, Desire the best gifts, and chiefly that yee may prophecy. Mr. Robrowgh forgets that they were but envi­ous scorners, though Scribes and Pharises, who once up­on such tearmes, so slighted and dispised the Lord him­selfe, [Page 13] his works and words. So that Mr. R. comes nothing short of Thomson and Rogers in false witnes-bearing and scorning; I will not equall him with the old Scribes and Pharises, because of the honour and grace of him whom they so dispised.

And for Nicholson, the other witnesse, a man that I was never in any sort conversant with, nor have had one halfe houres time of speech with in my life, whose testimony therefore is altogether as he hath heard and beleeveth, and so, what he hath heard and beleeveth, he presumeth to sweare; what those new or strange poynts of doctrine are, in his deposition, he nameth not, nor any one of those sundry persons that I should expound the Scrip­tures unto, whom he calls my proselites and followers, and me their Teacher in matter of doctrine. But howso­ever, though his deposition be but upon hearesay onely, and as he verily beleeveth, yet the Court hath so credited his testimony, that the most of the words and matters of this first accusation in the sentence, are his words, and grounded chiefly upon his deposition; and so he is and will be found a false witnesse like the rest, and the Count, I suppose, cannot be excused, but I referre all to the un­derstanding Reader to judge how rightly I have been dealt withall by my accusers and the Court.

But now let me yet give the Reader a little further to understand, That before Mr. Denison began his suite in Court against me, after he had begun to revile me in his Pulpits, and I having used all meanes both by writing and friends of his and my own to speake with him, to in­forme him rightly of things concerning my selfe and my minde in matters of Religion, before some men of under­standing, that they might heare and discerne truly there­of, and so pacifie him, and stay his violent course, and could by no meanes obtaine either the one or the other, but that he still persisted both at Cree-Church and great Allhallowes for neere halfe a yeare together, reviling me by name in most bitter manner, calling me Viper, Serpent, [Page 14] Heretique, Familist, and many other vile reproachfull and scandalous names, unseemly to be spoken, and shame­full to be uttered by a Minister in a Pulpit, and charging me with many very false and wicked things, and saying to the people, This is one Etherington a Box-maker, whi­ther he be dead or alive with God or the devill, I cannot tell, I know him not if I meet him in my dish, &c. And utterly refusing still to be spoken with, gave out in his Pulpit, as a flat deniall, saying, Must I speake with every Heretique before I may reprove him openly; nay, it hath been told me by them of the houshold of Cloe, and I beleeve it to be true.

Then I being much urged and provoked by reason of some that began to conceive and say, If things were not so, and that I were not such a one as he had charged me to be, I would complaine. Hereupon, I confesse, I did complaine by Petition to Doctor Martin, who was then Chancellor (for so I was advised) certifying him how matters had passed, and requesting that he would send for Mr. Denison, and examine the reason of his so strange and unlawfull proceedings, and to stay the same, and appoint that the things of difference in opinion, or howsoever, might be heard before some Ministers, if he thought fit; to which he answered, You have brought me here a strange Petition, I know Mr. Denison to be a very honest man, I know not you, I will not send for him Dic ecclesia.

Then as thinking it but my dutie to seeke to the Rulers of the people, whose office is to defend the innocent, and to rebuke the offenders, and as hoping still things would be heard, examined, and ended in peace. I did complaine to the Bishop of London to the same effect, who granted my Petition, and sent for Mr. Denison, who at the time appointed came, bringing with him his friend Mr. Ro­browgh, to assist him; And so the Bishop having questio­ned some thing about the matter, and a little blaming him, spake when to have another time of hearing, which Mr. Denison presently opposed, saying, I meant to have [Page 15] had him into the high Commission Court, if he had not prevented me, Dr. Martin being also there present, and speaking to his purpose, as his speciall friend, furthering his motion, the Bishop answered, you may then doe so yet; which when I perceived, and that Mr. D. had such a friend of Dr. Martin, I did with as much speed as I could Petition to the Archbishop of Canterbury, certifying him also how things had passed, and requesting that he would be pleased to send for Mr. D. and appoint that the matter might be heard & ended without suite of Law, if it might be. To which he answered, that Mr. D. had been with him the day before, and shewed him a scrowle of strange things against me, and so contradictory one to another, as never was knowne to be in any Heretique whatsoever, and that he thought it not possible therefore they could be all true, yet told me that he had Letters missive gran­ted him, but willed me to be at the Court the next thurs­day, and he would order that I should cleere my selfe ac­cording to my owne conscience upon my oath; which accordingly was done; whereat Mr. D. murmured, and said, My Lord, I have witnesses that will sweare against him; to which the Bishop answered, Peradventure you may have two or three evill persons that will sweare and cause a man that is innocent to be condemned, he shall cleere himselfe upon his oath. And so I did according to the order, give into the Register Office full answers upon oath to all Steven Denisons Articles, which are to be seen. This being done, and Mr Denison perceiving that I was to be cleered thereupon, and seeing that matters would then fall foule with him, and having no way to heale him­selfe, but by wounding and suppressing me, moved to the Court, vehemently affirming that I was a Familist, and would forsweare and deny all things in publique which I held and did in private, saying I have twenty witnesses that will sweare against him. Whereupon Dr. M. stood up, and spake so to the furthering of his motion, as that the Archbishop was turned against me; way was given [Page 16] him, the order of my clearing upon my oath was crossed, my answers to his articles rejected, and never might come to the view or hearing of the Court. And so his Witnesses being all of them either those his associates and devota­ries which first set him on, as aforesaid, or such as he had in his Pulpit (three or foure dayes before he was to goe before the Bishop of London) charged to assist him, say­ing, Whosoever hath any thing against Iohn Ethering­ton, let him come to my Chamber to morrow by eight a clock; As yee love the Ministers of God, now stand for them, for they goe about to silence all the good Ministers in the Citie, such as by this meanes, and by his diligent search and inquiry through the Citie, partly by faire per­swasions, partly by threatnings, had gathered together to conspire against me; laying also plots to get me into their company, that so they might finde occasion, and get matter whereof to accuse me; these came readily together with him to the Court, to take their oathes against me.

Then upon Motion and Petition of complaint, which I againe made of Mr. Denisons unlawfull proceedings in his Pulpits, the Court did order that I should bring in my Articles against him, and I should be heard. Which to the end things should be the more cleared, I did; but the day that he was to make his appearance unto them, Doctor Martin with another speech which he then made, caused my Articles to be rejected, and this order also, as the former, to be crossed, so that I might not proceed in Court against him, till his suite against me were ended.

Then after his Witnesses had beene examined, I had upon motion a Defence granted me; but King Iames then dying, the great plague of pestilence immediately ensuing, the Court for a yeare or thereabout ceasing, and I supposing that he my adversary (as being by this time in conscience rebuked, had let fall his suite, and I not willing of my selfe, to stirre the matter up againe, partly, because of the great charge, and for that I saw he was, by reason of his great friends in Court, too strong [Page 17] for me, though I knew my cause to be better then his) I neglected it, he prevented me, the matter was ordered to sentence before I knew or thought it was once againe called upon; after which, though in all humblenesse, I moved and requested severall times for a defence, I could not have it granted, Doctor Martin his voice, which so greatly swayeth the Court, as at other times, so now like­wise withstood me, and so upon the last Court day of Michaelmas tearme 1626. the Depositions of Mr. Deni­sons Witnesses were by his Councell read, and as their manner is, aggravated against me to the Court, and I was censured without any defence or permission to be heard speake for my selfe.

This hath been the beginning, proceeding and prose­cution of this businesse and cause hitherto, which being first knowne and considered, will make all things more plaine and cleare to be understood. The rest of the mat­ters conteined in the sentence, and the testimonies of the Witnesses, which stand for proofe, with my defence unto them, follow.

The second accusation, as it is in the sentence.

That the said Etherington since the 20 of December a­foresaid, hath been and is a man disaffected to the go­vernment and discipline of the Church of England now by Law established, and agreeth with the sect of the Fa­milists and other Sectaries, having said and writ touch­ing their Conventicles and unlawfull meetings, that Cae­sar may command a place in publique, so he forbid none in pri­vate; and further, that he maintaineth and agreeth with the Familists, in the perfect puritie of the soule.

Touching the government and discipline, Rowland Thomson, Thomas Rogers, and George Dunne, doe depose and testifie.

The testimony of Thomson.

To the second Article this deponent saith, that by rea­son of some opinions, that he the said Etherington hold­eth, [Page 18] this deponent conceiveth him to be a man disaffected to the government and discipline of the Church of Eng­land.

The testimony of Rogers.

That this deponent knoweth that the articulate Ethe­rington, for all or most part of the time articulate, hath beene and is a man disaffected to the present discipline of the Church of England, in regard this deponent hath in the time articulate heard him the said Etherington main­taine some opinions, contrary to the received judgement of the said Church.

The testimony of George Dunne.

That this deponent well knoweth that the articulate Etherington for these twentie yeares together, hath beene and is a man disaffected to the government and discipline of the Church of England, in regard this deponent hath often conversed with him the said Etherington.

These are their words as they stand recorded by the Register.

My Answer and defence is this.

These three Witnesses in these their testimonies, how­soever it may stand with a good conscience, they lay­ing that aside, have shewed themselves very willing men, as before to the first Article, so here to the second, to witnesse any thing against me, though never so falsly.

Thomson saith, he conceiveth and holdeth it to be so by reason of some opinions which I hold, but nameth none.

Rogers saith, he knoweth it to be so by reason of some opinions he hath heard me maintaine, but nameth none.

George Dunne saith, he knoweth it to be so, by reason he hath often conversed with me, &c. yet nameth no­thing that he hath heard me say or knowne me practice or doe in all this his said time of twenty yeares, tending [Page 19] to that purpose or any other. As it the Court would trust to their understandings of the discipline & government, and to their judgements and conceivings of my opinions, and not heare the opinions, nor a word or practise men­tioned, and so passe sentence; for who can know a mans affections, but by his words or deeds?

First, for Dunne, I will excuse him in this, that he na­meth neither word nor deed, because the truth is, he never conversed with me in his life, nor I with him, neither had I ever any kinde of dealing with him in my life, except onely that about nineteene or twenty yeares agoe, my wife having sore eyes, he came (by whose meanes I know not) and laid something to them, for which I payed him. So that Dunne could not well name any thing upon the ground of often conversing with me, yet he is a false wit­nesse neverthelesse, and a foresworne man every way to his owne knowledge; first in this, That he upon his oath saith, he well knoweth that which he knows he knoweth not, and sets downe that for his reason and ground, upon oath also, which he knowes is false.

There are other matters wherein George Dunne hath upon his oath also testified falsly, which because they are not taken for proofe of any thing conteined in the Sen­tence, I passe them over untill some further occasion.

But for Thomson and Rogers they might have named what the opinions had beene, for they heard me main­taine them, they say. It seemeth they meane by opinions, those before mentioned against Robrowgh and Denison, which Rogers calleth the received judgement of the said Church, as holding their doctrine to be the discipline and government of the Church of England; for such a devo­ted conceit have they of these two men, and some other of their straine, as if the Church of England, doctrine, go­vernment, discipline, and all matters else thereof did con­sist in them; for it is to be noted, that these words, Now by Law established, which are in the Sentence, are not in any of their testimonies. But I leave the testimonies of [Page 20] these men to the consideration of the understanding Rea­der, to judge how good and sufficient they are, and how judicially the Court hath proceeded against me, to con­demne me upon such evidence.

And as touching the second part of this second Article passed in the Sentence, That I doe agree with the sect of the Familists and other Sectaries, &c. Rowland Thomson, Tho­mas Rogers, Henry Robrowgh, doe testifie.

The testimony of Thomson.

That the said Etherington doth agree with some of the Sectaries articulate in many tenents and opinions, which he this deponent knoweth, in regard he hath been present when he the said Etherington hath strived to maintaine the same.

The testimony of Rogers.

That he the sayd Etherington doth agree in some points and tenents with the Familists articulate, which he hath published in this deponents presence.

The testimony of Robrowgh.

That the said Etherington concurreth with the Separa­tists and Sectaries in private Assemblies, which this depo­nent knoweth by report, and also by his printed booke against Separatists, where he sayth, Caesar may command a place in publique, so he forbid none in private, Page 82. and he agreeth with the Familists in the perfect puritie of the soule after regeneration, as one Iesop confessed to this deponent to be his and the said Etheringtons opinion.

My answer and defence.

Thomson pretends now to speake upon knowledge, as well as Rogers; their grounds are both one; The one saith [Page 21] he hath heard me strive to maintaine, the other to publish tenents and opinions, and both of them, like brethren in evill, are still agreed to forbeare to tell what the tenents and opinions are, least by naming them they should disa­ble their testimonies to their purpose. No doubt they are the tenents and opinions before mentioned, which Mr. Denison had told them in his Pulpits, was a sure mark whereby they should know a Familist, and so they pre­sumed upon his judgement, and by concealing what the tenents are, make them serve their turne for this as well as to be against the government and discipline, how suffici­ent the testimonies of these two men are, to prove the things in the Sentence, and how concionably they have dealt, I referre to the Christian Reader to consider.

My defence against Robrowghs testimony.

To the first concerning private Assemblies, What Mr. R. knowes by report, that he may safely depose and say, So God helpe him, I refer to the Reader to consider. But where he sayth, And also by his printed booke against Separatists, &c. I confesse, I wrote such a booke, which being allowed, was published in the yeare 1610. where in Pag. 82. these words are, Caesar may command a place for the publique, so he forbid none in private; yet neverthelesse, Mr. Robrowgh hath shewed himselfe a very evill minded man in two respects; first, in that he leaveth out the words and matters going before and following after in the said booke, which would have cleared my meaning more ful­ly, and taketh onely those words as may most seeme to make for his purpose. And secondly in this, that where­as my words are, Caesar may command a place for the pub­lique, so he forbid none in private; he gives it into the Court upon his oath, Caesar may command a place in publique, &c. leaving out two of my words, and putting in one of his owne in stead of them, to alter the scope and intent of those few words which he doth take, to make them serve [Page 22] his turne against me, for who knoweth not, that the lea­ving out or changing one word for another in a sentence, doth oftentimes alter the intent and scope thereof; as to build a house in a Citie, and to build a house for a Citie, are two differing things; the King may build a house in the Citie of London for his owne use, but if the King, say I, build this house for the Citie of London, all men will understand, he meaneth for the Cities use: againe, the King may command a place in publique, for himselfe to come and worship God therein; but to command a place for the publique, is for the people also publiquely: So whereas I say, Caesar may command a place for the publique, my meaning is, that the King may lawfully with autho­ritie from God, and warrant from his word, command a place and places for the publique worship of God, to all his Subjects, in and throughout all parts of his Domi­nions; which if the King may, and that my words doe intend and expresse so much, (as I thinke no man that is wise and conscionable will deny) then all the Kings sub­jects are bound to obey the King, and come to the pub­lique worship of God in those publique places; and as it is for place, so it is for time, and other such like circum­stances, (as in the 83. Pag. of the said booke against Ana­baptists is also set downe) alwayes provided (as it must be understood) that it be the true worship of God that is commanded, and not any idolatry or heathenish super­stition; as is now in the Church of Rome commanded and practised: these things being so, then I reason thus, further; If Caesar, or our King, Law and Authoritie, may command a place and places, times, &c. for the publique worship of God, that is to say, for the assembling toge­ther of the people of God, to prayer, preaching, reading and hearing of the word of God, the administration and participation of the Sacraments, praising and giving thankes unto God for all his benefits, &c. and that all true Christian Subjects are bound to obey the King, Law, and Authoritie, and come to the publique worship of [Page 23] God in those publique places, times, &c. then no Chri­stian subject may separate or schisme therefrom, nor make any private assemblies, speake, practise or doe any thing in opposition or contradictory thereunto; Nay, but on the contrary, every Christian subject, young and old, is bound to be thankfull unto God day and night, that hath vouchsafed to dispose the hearts of Kings, Princes and Authoritie of that Nation whereof he is a member and a subject, to set their helping hands to build the walls of Ierusalem, to cast out the abominations of the Heathen, and of Antichrist, and restore the morning and evening sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, (as in the former time and in the dayes of old) which the Kings, Princes, and Authority of this our Nation have in some good measure done, to the great benefit of the same, thankes be unto God therefore. So that taking my words right as they are, Caesar may command a place for the publique, and this will be the true and necessary consequence of them; and then these words, so he forbid none in private, will receive of all charitable minded Christians, a more favourable construction, then to tend to the maintaining of the pri­vate assemblies of Familists, Separatists, or other Sectraies; but onely to preserve the libertie that every Christian hath, to worship God, to pray unto him, and doe him service, at all times and in all places, every where, even in our secret chambers with humble and contrite hearts, lifting up pure hands, as the Scriptures speake, Ioh 4. 23. Mat. 6. 6. 1 Thes. 5. 17, 18. 1 Tim. 2. 8. and as it is in Psal. 111. 1. How false and deceitfull therefore Henry Robrowgh hath here sworne and dealt, I refer to the in­different discreet Reader to consider.

And secondly, in that the chargeth me to agree with the Familists in the perfect puritie of the soule, after regene­ration, and onely upon the report of one Iesop, as him­selfe saith: I refer also this to the wise to consider, how safely he may depose the same of me upon the report of another, whereas for my part, whatsoever Iesop hath said [Page 24] or holdeth, I never held any such thing, but doe hold the soule of the holiest man living to be impure; and although as Paul faith of himselfe, a regenerate Christian doth in his minde serve the law of God, yet neverthelesse through the law and strength of his corrupt members, he even his soule is led captive to the law of sinne, and of death, and so is a captive to sinne, but not a servant. Neither did I ever agree with the Familists, or any other such like blas­phemous sect, in any of their tenents and opinions, but have opposed and disproved them, according to my abi­litie, as in the aforesaid booke against Anabaptists is to be seene, and as some can testifie, so that herein also Mr. Robrowgh is a false witnesse; how rightly I have been condemned by the Court for these things upon these te­stimonies, I refer to the discreet Christian Reader to consider.

Their third Accusation, as it is in the sentence of the Court, according to Mr. Denisons fourth Article.

That the said Etherington within the time aforesaid, hath also maintained and published, that the Church of England is no true Church of Christ, and that it teacheth false doctrine.

To the first part, that the Church of England is no true Church of Christ, Rowland Thomson, Thomas Ro­gers, and Henry Robrowgh doe depose and testifie.

The testimony of Thomson.

To the fourth he deposeth and saith, that he this depo­nent hath within the time articulate heard the said Ethe­rington maintaine or publish some of the opinions articu­late, viz. that the Church of England as it is now by Law established, is no true Church of Christ.

The testimony of Rogers.

To the fourth Article he deposeth and saith, that the [Page 25] said Etherington hath within the time articulate, and since the 20 of December 1623. held and published, in this de­ponents and his precontest Thomsons presence, that the Church of England as it is here by Law established, is no true Church of Christ.

The testimony of Robrowgh.

To the fourth Article he deposeth, that the articulate Etherington hath of this deponents knowledge, within the time articulate, maintained and published, that the Church of England as it is here by Law established, is no true Church of Christ, because he teacheth this true Church to consist of the regenerate onely, as in his booke against Separatists, Pag. 15.

My answer and defence.

Thomson and Rogers, they as two confederates keepe close together in their conspiracy against me, for al­though I neither published nor spake to or in the hearing or presence of them, or any other, that the Church of England as it is now by Law established, is no true church of Christ, nor any thing to such purpose; yet these two Joyners as well acquainted before hand with Mr. Denisons Articles, and being with Henry Robrowgh the chiefe of his counsell in the inventing and making them, to con­firme what they had begun, by a secret equivocation they depose upon some words which I spake in answer to their questions and demands, that I had published, as a­foresaid, and because they will be sure to agree in one tale, they come both together to the office to be examined, and there Rogers standing by Thomson while he was exa­mining, which is the reason why the Examiner calleth Thomson Rogers precontest, as being examined immedi­ately before him and in his presence and hearing; which my selfe comming to the Office the same time saw; let [Page 26] not the Reader therefore marvaile that they so well a­gree.

They name no time, place, nor person to be present besides themselves, Rogers and his precontest, when I should publish this thing, and I was never in company with these two men alone at any time. Christ sayth, He that doth evill hateth the light, and he that doth well commeth to the light, &c. wherefore if these mens consciences had not accused them of their false and evill dealing, and that they had not feared their evill deeds to be discovered, they would no doubt have named both time and place, and some of the persons that were present beside them­selves, for by that meanes their testimonies would have carried a more faire and honest countenance then now they doe, but since the 20 of December, that must not be omitted, they will not have me pardoned by any meanes. I doe well remember, that about the time that Mr. Deni­son first began his suite in Court against me, after he had a long time before reviled me in his Pulpits, these two men, Thomson and Rogers, sought to get me into their company, Rogers being the sollicitor or earnest suit or for the same to one Salomon Seabright, being of his acquain­tance and one that knew me, to bring it to passe, pretend­ing and promising that if they might speake with me, and should finde things to be otherwise then they had conceived, they would enforme Mr. Denison thereof, and cause him to cease his course and proceedings against me. Whereupon I did consent to speake with them, so that they would appoint the time and place, for I suspe­cted it to be a plot layd between Mr. Denison and them, to get matter against mee, either to prove a conventicle or otherwise to entrap me in my words, being forewar­ned by one that knew some of their secrets, that such a thing was plotted and intended by them, which accord­ingly so proved; So the place being at the said Salomon Seabrights neere Algate, I met them there at the time they appointed, where in the hearing of sundry persons, they [Page 27] moved many questions unto me, concerning repentance and faith, the Church, and other things, to which I did answer them according as I did understand and beleeve.

As touching the Church, they asked mee, what I held the true Church of Christ to be; To this I answered and told them plainly, that I held the true Church of Christ to be and consist of the true regenerate servants and peo­ple of God, sanctified in heart by faith in Christ Jesus, lively stones, built upon the rock Jesus Christ, the chiefe corner stone,Mat. 16. 18. 1 Pet. 2. 4. 5. according to the words of Christ, and as S. Peter describeth it, which St. Paul calleth the body and spouse of Christ, the pillar and ground of truth; according also as it is conteined in the Creed, I beleeve in the holy Ghost, the holy Catholique Church, the communion of Saints, &c.

Then they asked me of the outward state of the Church of England, if all in generall were the same true Church of Christ, or of it; to which I answered, nay, I could not say so; Then if any whole Parish that I knew were, to which I also answered, nay, I knew no such Parish that I could so conclude of all, God knoweth who are his: Then lastly, if I did not hold some private company with my selfe to be the same true Church of Christ; to which I answered also and told them, nay, but that all of all de­grees and callings in the whole Kingdome, whose hearts were sanctified by faith in Christ Jesus, were the true Church of Christ here of England: and that if I, or they that asked those questions, or the rest there present, were so sanctified in heart, then were wee of the same true Church of Christ, else not, and that there was never any Church, generally considered as it was outward and visi­ble to the eye of man, but some, yea many times the most part, and of the greatest of them in most eminent place in the Church, as well as of the lowest and meanest, have been unfaithfull, ungodly, unholy, and so, not of the Church, though they were in it: And I told them plain­ly, that I held the Church of England as it was by the au­thoritie [Page 28] of Princes and by Law established, to be the best reformed, so generally considered, this day in the world, and that I did beleeve God had a speciall respect unto it above any one Nation or Kingdome whatsoever; and that he had many faithfull servants, sonnes, and daughters therein, and much people to save, for whose sakes the rest doe fare well, and are the more happy.

These were my answers to their questions, touching the Church, or to this very effect, as some that were there present and heard me, as well as they, can testifie. It seem­eth that upon my answer to their question of the outward state of the Church of England, if all in generall were the true Church of Christ, or of it, because I said, nay I could not say so, therefore they presume to sweare, that I held and published, that the Church of England as it is now by Law established, is no true Church of Christ, as if I would have some other outward forme established, to make a true Church, or that none could be in the outward state of the Church, and partake with it in the outward cal­ling of the ministry, preaching, administring, hearing; receiving, but regenerate persons onely, all which was far from my thought; So that in this also as well as the former, they are very false witnesses.

And concerning Robrowghs testimony, who deposeth that because I say the true Church doth consist of the re­generate, therefore I teach and maintaine that the church of England as it is now by Law established, is not a true Church of Christ.

My answer is, that if Mr. Robrowgh can, and when he shall prove that the Church of England as it is now by Law established, is not part of the holy Catholike Church of Christ, whereof all are Saints, then will I grant his testimony to be true; in the meane time, he is a false ac­cuser, and one that doth deny the Church of England now by Law established, to be part of the true holy Ca­tholique Church of Christ, of the Communion of Saints; proving himselfe guiltie of that whereof he chargeth me. [Page 29] It would small avayle the Church of England to have the name of a true Church, and not to be of the holy Catho­like Church, which the Creed and the Scriptures doe de­scribe unto us, and require us to beleeve and acknow­ledge for Christs true Church, his body, his spouse, &c. for although all be not Saints that are in the Church, as touching the outward estate and societie thereof, yet as touching the true spirituall communion, all are Saints that are of it, and are one body and one bread, being all made partakers of that one bread Christ Jesus, and bap­tized by one Spirit into one body,1 Cor. 10. 17. & 12. 12, 13. and made to drinke into one Spirit, as St. Paul declareth, according as St. Iohn testifying against some Antichrists of his time;1 Joh. 2. 19. They went out from us, but they were not of us, for if they had been of us, they would no doubt have continued with us, but they went out that they might manifest that they were not all of us: and St. Paul againe; But Christ the sonne over his owne house, Heb. 3. 6. whose house are wee, if wee hold fast the confidence, and the rejoycing of the hope firme unto the end. So that they onely which are truly faithfull, and hold fast the confi­dence, &c. are the true Church of Christ.

If Mr. Robrowgh doth or will deny himselfe to be one of these, I dare then deny him to be one of Christ true Church, notwithstanding he hath the office of a Curate in the outward state thereof.

And secondly, whereas I stand charged in the sentence to have said, that the Church of England teacheth false doctrine, and upon the testimony of Susan Price onely, a woman greatly devoted to Mr. Denison, and an asso­ciate of Thomson and Rogers; My answer is, shee testifi­eth falsely, unlesse the Church of England doth consist of Mr. Denison, Mr. Robrowgh, and some other of their corrupt humour, as many such women (and some men also as unwise as they) doe conceive it doth, and there­fore dare sweare that whatsoever is spoken against them and their doctrine, is spoken against the Church of Eng­land.

Their fourth Accusation.

That the said Etherington within the time aforesaid, viz. since the 20th of December 1623. hath maintained and published, that the Sabbath since the Apostles times was of no force, and that every day is a Sabbath, as well as that which wee call the Lords day or Sunday.

To this first position of the fourth Article, Rowland Thomson, Thomas Rogers, Suzan Price, Peter Worcester, Heury Robrowgh, doe depose and testifie.

The testimony of Thomson.

That he this deponent hath within the time articulate, heard the said Etherington maintaine or publish, that the Sabbath was of no force since the Apostles times, and that every day is a Sabbath as much as that which wee call the Lords day or Sunday.

The testimony of Rogers.

He deposeth and saith, that he the said Etherington hath within the time in this Article mentioned, and since the 20 of December 1623. held and published that the Sabbath was of no force since the Apostles time, and that every day is a Sabbath as much as that which we call the Lords day or Sunday.

The testimony of Suzan Price.

That shee this deponent doth certainly know that the articulate Etherington within the time articulate, main­tained and published, that the Sabbath was of no force since the Apostles times.

The testimony of Worcester.

That he this deponent hath within these eight moneths last past, before his examination, heard the said Ethering­ton maintaine, that there is no day to be set apart for out­ward rest, by vertue of any commandement.

The testimony of Robrough.

That the articulate Etherington hath of his deponent [...] knowledge within the time articulate, held, maintai­ned, and published, that the Sabbath is of no force, and that we are not now bound to keepe it, by vertue of the fourth Commandement.

My answer and defence.

The words of Tomson, Rogers, and Susan Price, which are the words contained in the Sentence, I never spake in my life, much lesse maintained or published as they depose, nor yet the words of Henry Robrough, but I doe hold the Sabbath to be in force according as I shall here­after manifest, and that the first day of the weeke is to be observed.

And as touching Worcester and his testimony, for him he is a man that I was never conversant with, onely I have beene in his company two or three times, and the last time was as he saith, and at the house of one Master Pike in East-cheape, where hee the said Worcester with some other of Master Denisons favorites, had occasioned me to meet them, under pretence of friendship also, and of making peace, but being indeed another traine to in­trap me. This Worcester with some of his sociates then present, were very importunate with me to reason with them concerning repentance, and the Sabbath, which I refused to doe, being forewarned of their conspiracy, and that this Worcester with others of them, had given out threatning words, tending to the taking away of my life, one saying it is pitie that he liveth, hee deser­veth to be burned, another, I will never leave him till I make him fry, and others to the like effect, and be­cause I held it not a thing fitting to make a controversie of this matter of the Sabbath, which they most desired to have me speake of with them, neither did I ever con­tend with any man about it, untill Master Denison had [Page 32] begun to revile me in his Pulpits, and charging me false­ly in many things concerning it, nor had I then, but that I was drawn to it once through faire pretences also, with one Master Cleaver, at which time we seemed to part friends, and not so disagreeing as there need to be any enmity between us for the difference. So that I only told Worcester and the other with him, my mind in few words, but not in way of maintaining as he deposeth, for the words, it is like I did say thus or to this effect, that if the fourth Commandement, as it did concerne the outward bodily rest of the seventh day, be abroga­ted (as I thinke all the Christian Churches in the world doe hold it is) then there is no Commandement in the word of God requiring the same outward bodily rest upon any other day instead thereof: and this I say still, yet not denying the observation of the first day of the weeke, as I shall declare, so that thus farre I deny not Worcesters testimony, though otherwise, and in other matters he is false like the rest.

But whence these two sworne brethren Thomson and Rogers (whose testimonies: because they so well agree, are so oft the words of the Sentence) Susan Price and Henry Robrough, have had the words they depose, I can­not tell, neither doe themselves declare, nor mention any time, place, or person to be present, when I should publish, and maintaine them as they speake, and I am sure I never said to any man living, that the Sabbath was of no force, but doe hold that it is in force, and the Commandement also according to the spirituall in­tent therof; I meane by Sabbath the true and perfect rest of God, which hee did rest the seventh day, having finished all his workes, therefore called his rest, as hee saith, If they shall enter into my rest.

And that it is here entred into of us, and kept not through the Law, by doing any kind of worke or works therein contained, but through the promise, eventhe the Gospell of Jesus Christ by beleeving, as Saint Paul saith; For wee which have beleeved doe enter into rest, as h [...]e [Page 33] said, as I have sworns in my wrath, if they shall enter into my rest, although (saith he) the workes were finished from the foundation of the world, for hee spake in a certaine place of the se­venth day on this wise, And God did rest the seventh Day from all his workes; and in this place againe, If they shall enter into my rest, Heb. 4. Where the Apostle declareth plaine­ly, that the rest of God, which hee is said to rest the seventh day, and this in David, which the faithfull doe enter into, is all one and the same rest, and that it is preached unto us in the Gospell, as it was to the Isra­elites in Davids time, and in the wildernesse; And the reason why they that fell in the Wildernesse entred not in; was their hardnesse of heart and unbeleefe, as in the 15. ver. of the 3. chap. and the 2. ver. of the 4. chap. He declareth and saith further, That they that are so entred [...]ve ceased from their owne workes, as God did from his; that is, from seeking their owne pleasures, and speaking their owne words, from all their corrupt carnall and sinfull pleasures and delights of the world, wherein their soule as well as their bodie and members there­of had walked; (the whole man being corrupted through the fall) and which are therefore called their owne workes and their owne pleasures, and their delight is now in the Lord, and in his holy and heavenly wayes, seeking his face continually, & honouring him, &c. as the Prophet Esay saith; And they that are so entred here by faith and keepe the Lords holy Sabbath, will the Lord cause to ride upon the high places of the earth, and will feed them with the heritage of Iacob their father, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it,Esay 58. which heritage of of Iacob is the everlasting Kingdom, the heavenly Coun­try and Citty promised which all the holy Fathers loo­ked for and is to be manifested and fully accomplished, when Christ shall come in his glory, and all things shall be restored according to the Prophets. And so I hold the Sabbath spirituall, and eternall to be in force, and that the outward rest of man and beast commanded the Jewes on the seaventh day was but a shaddow thereof [Page 34] and is now ceased to Christians; So that as wee are [...] bound to Circumcision, nor other ceremonies of the Law, which is manifest by Acts 15. Gal. 4. and other places of Scripture, neither are we to the strict obser­vation of any litterall Sabbaths of yeeres, times, mo­neths, or dayes, as the Jewes were by the Law, but are free as Saint Paul sayth Let no man judge you in meates or in drinkes, or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moone, or of the Sabbath day, which are a shaddow of the things to come, but the body is Christ, Col. 2. And he said to them of Galatia, who were by false Teachers brought to an extreame in that kind more then the Law it selfe,Gal. 4. (ever intended) Ye observe dayes, and moneths, and times, and yeares, I am afraid of you, &c. in both which places, the Apostle speaketh of the seventh day Sabbath, and concludeth of it as of the rest, In Gal. he beginneth with it before the month­ly Sabbathes, as besides which before the monthly there is not another to be rekoned, and in Col [...]. He ends with it, in reckoning next after the new Moones or monthly Sabbathes, except which after the monethly there is not another to be named, and counteth it with the rest a shadow of things to come.

And this, no doubt was the reason why the Apostles and Christian Churches to this day, have left it with the rest of the signes and shadowes of the law, as holding that Christians are free, as touching their consciences in all such respects.

If this be true, that the litterall rest of the seventh day commanded in the Law be a shadow, as by the Apo­stles words, is most cleere and past all contradiction, then the first day of the weeke used in the Apostles times, and ever since in the Christian Churches, for the assem­bling together of the people of God to breaking of bread and prayer, and preaching, and hearing the word of God, for exhortation, spirituall communion, edification and comfort one another, praysing the Lord, &c. Was taken up freely, and is a free observation, and not by force of any commandement of the Law or of the Gospell.

[Page 35]And this doth the Apostle further declare in Rom. 14. where he plainely sheweth, as he doth also in Colo. 2. the in [...]iferency now under the Gospell of eating and not ea­ting of meates, and of esteeming and not esteeming one day above another. So that although Christians be now free in these things, as touching the conscience, in re­spect of the Law, and are not bound, yet, they not only may observe a day to the Lord for the ends before men­tioned, and forbeare therein their common worldly affaires, but ought, it so being ordained and appoin­ted by the state and Church wherein they live, and so farre wee are bound by the command of the word of God, in all good and lawfull things to obey; And some day or time is needfull, and the more time the bett [...]r, and hee that makes the most use of the same time to the same ends doth the best; and the first day of the weeke may very well be the day, rather then any other, be­cause it was for some reasons, no doubt, taken up, and used for those ends in the Apostles times, whither be­cause they might be more free therein in respect of the Jewes, then on the Sabbath day, or for what reason else, it is not written, being not so needfull to be knowne. And so in respect of this spirituall use and end, it hath beene and is appointed and imployed unto, it may be called a Sabbath day, though not by force of the com­mandement.

But whosoever shall lay such a burthen upon the con­sciences of Christian touching the day, as Master Deni­son and some others have done, charging the people upon heavy curses and condemnation to doe, and not to doe such, and such kind of things as they prescribe, These things.

Which although you may lawfully leave them undone upon any other day and not sinne, you are bound to doe them in this day in paine of condemnation.

And these and those kind of things or actions, which although you may lawfully doe them on any other day and not sinne, you are bound not to doe any of them in [Page 36] this day on paine of condemnation, and whosoever doth not constionably, so observe the day cannot be a true Christian; wherewith they have so inthralled the minds of many people, some of tender consciences zea­lously affected towards God, and have brought them to such distraction and unquietnesse of spirit, by reason they are not nor can be satisfied in every particular acti­on, what they are so bound to doe, and what not to doe upon that day, when to begin and when to end, that there is more talke and questioning among them, and and more resorting to Ministers for satisfaction about the same, then about any matter of religion whatso­ever.

This doctrine (I say) is very unsound, and just like un­to that which the false Apostles and Teachers taught and charged them of Antioch and them of Galatia touching Circumcision and the Sabbath of the Law, which was very erroneous, even in the time of the Law; and a bur­then as Saint Peter saith, which they nor their fathers were able to beare, for such doctrine had beene taught the Jewes by such Pharisees and false Teachers, a long time before Peters dayes, and is by the Church, in Acts 15. and by Saint Paul in Gal. 4. condemned for false and very erroneous doctrine, and to be a dangerous step of falling from Christ, for Saint Paul testifieth plain­ly, that the Gentiles which had not that Law of Circum­cision, and the Sabbaths, &c. might have the truth and effect thereof in their hearts, and be a Iew inwardly in the spirit though not outwardly in the flesh, so that there was never such a necessity as those false Teachers taught, and most part of the Jewes conceived, nay, they ought to have knowne, that although themselves that had the Law, (to whom especially it was given) were bound to observe it to the utter-most of their power, yet if they fayled in any part (as all did in many) and so in all parts, they might be saved another way, through the grace and mercy of God in the Gospell, and that of this there was alwayes a necessitie, and [Page 37] without the same no man could be saved; and that a Gentile having the same grace, should be saved, though he were ignorant of the Law; for this is the effect which was signified by those signes and shadowes which are now (as it was a law to the Iewes) ceased to Chri­stians.

Unto all this doe agree the best approved writers of the Christian Church, both of the antient and latter, s [...]ce the Apostles times, as Hierome upon Gal. 4. Augu­stine in his Epistles ch. 19. and in his booke Conscientiae Diaeta, and of the Spirit and letter, chap. 14. and upon these words of Christ, Take up thy bed and walke, Tract. 17. Tertullian also in his booke Adversus Iudae [...]s, and others; And of the latter Master Tindall in his answer to Master Moores first booke, page 287. Doctor Barnes in declaration of the cause of his condemnation, page 106. Master F [...]ith in his declaration of Baptisme, page 96. Master Calvin and others, and as it is contayned in the Harmony of con­sessions of the Reformed Churches, page 473. and page 499. besides sundry writers of this present age; So that in this I am not singular, though I differ from Master Denison.

Their fift accusation.
That the Bookes of Esdras are and ought to be esteemed part of the Canonicall Scripture.

They that testifie to this are Rowland Tomson and Susan Price, their testimonies are both according to the words of the Sentence.

My Answer and desence.

Their testimonies to this also, as they have given it into the Court are false, for I never said that the two last Bookes of Esdras (which it seemeth they meane) are or ought to be held canonicall, or part of the canonicall Scripture, But this I say, and doe beleeve, that Esdras [Page 38] was a holy Prophet and true servant of God, and that those his two last Bookes are as well as the rest, holy and true, as sundry Divines have esteemed him, and written of them, and one Booke now publike, Printed first in Queene Elizabeths dayes, and presented to the Lord Ro­bert Devoreux Earle of Essex, upon the 11. chap, of the last Booke of Esdras, wherein matters of great moment, are manifested worthy, I dare say, to be regarded of every true Christian that desires understanding.

And I dare say further, that they have done and doe very wickedly which rayle against him, calling and counting him a counterfeit, a lyer, a blasphemer, as some have done, it had beene farre more wisdome for them to have left him in these his last Bookes, and suspended their judgements untill time, the tryer and discoverer of truth from falshood, should manifest things more clearely, that so upon cleare proofe of experience, they might have judged rightly of that, which through want of understanding, they could see before.

Their sixt accusation as it is in the Sentence.

That the said Iohn Etherington within the time aforesaid, hath kept private Conventicles or exercises of Religion by the Lawes of the Realme prohibited, and taken upon him in such Conventicles to be the chiefe speaker or expound [...]r of the Scrip­ture, and hath many adherents disciples and followers of his do­ctrine, and giveth many oppositions contrary to the received opi­nions taught in the Church of England, saying, that outward ordination of a Minister doth snot make a true Minister, And hath useth many reproachfull speeches, to and of the Ministers of the Church of England, And by this meanes hath seduced and drawn many from th Church of England to be Scismatiques and separa­tists, and caused them, or some of them to forbeare to partici­pate with us in the celebrating of Devine service and Sacra­ments.

They that testifie to this are Rowland Tomson, Thomas Rogers, Christopher N [...]cholson, Peter Worcester, Susan Price, Henry Robrough, Iohn Okey, George Dunne.

[Page 39]Here like pursuers of blood, they cry out together with open mouth, as if they meant now at last to swal­low me up quite and cleane, this being the maine toyle which they (from the beginning) had layed, whereby above all, they made sure account to take me.

Their depositions to this sixt Accusation are not onely many, but so long and tedious, that if I should set them all downe, with answers to every particular thing in them, it would require more time and space then all that is already past, and would weary any sober mind to read them over, I will therefore give my answer & defence to that which is contained in the words of the Sentence, as being the maine and summe of all, as also to the chiefe of their depositions, and leave the rest untill some further occasion shall serve.

My Answer and Defence.

To the first, concerning private Conventicles and exer­cises of Religion by the Lawes of this Realme prohibi­ted, my answer is. It is a false accusation, I never kept any such, nor have done otherwise then I have acknow­ledged in my Defence to their first Article, as one Chri­stian neighbour or friend, may and ought to doe to and with another, which I am out of all doubt, the lawes of this Realme doe not forbid, neither I hope ever will.

And secondly, whereas they say that I take upon me to be a chiefe speaker or expounder of the Scriptures, and to have many adherents, disciples and followers, &c. My answer is, They charge me in this also very falsely, I am so farre from taking upon me such things as that I doe reject, the very thought thereof in my selfe, especial­ly, and have opposed and reproved such as have so done and beene so affected, as some can witnesse, although I confesse I have beene free, and alwayes ready to speake to my neighbour and friend, and children, &c. whatso­ever I have knowne and understood of the word, and wayes of God, as I have beene also to heare and recite, [Page 40] and so I hope I shall continue to doe, as time and occa­sion shall serve, so long as I live.

Thirdly, in that they charge me to give many ex­positions contrary to the received opinions taught in the Church of England.

The chiefe besides those before mentioned of Repen­tance, &c. (which I confesse are contrary to M [...]ster De­nisons and Robroughs doctrine) being (as it seemeth) this contained in the Sentence, That outward Ordination of a Minister, doth not make a true Minister, Page 70 & 71. Deposed by Henry Robiough from the foresaid booke against Anabap­tists. To which I answer and confesse, that the words are in the place of the booke, and I am not afraid to ju­stifie them to be truth agreeing with the Scriptures, and with the Doctrine of the Church of England, as I meant them, I doe not say that out ward Ordination of a Mini­ster doth not make a lawfull Minister outwardly, nay, I acknowledge it doth. So as that hee may lawfully Mi­nister, and people may lawfully receive the word and Sacraments with him, according to the 26. and 36. Ar­ticles of the Church of England, and as it was in the Apostles times, and in the Church of the Iewes, with Christs approbation. But this, I say, that outward Or­dination doth not make a true and faithfull Minister in­wardly, in Gods accounts he may be a deceiver, a false Prophet, an Antichrist, notwithstanding which they that are true in Gods account, called and sanctified of him by a more speciall, heavenly, inward calling may not, for they are built upon the Rocke, the gates of hell shall not prevaile against them. Otherwise, if outward Ordination of a Minister did make a true Minister in­wardly in Gods account, then all they of the Church of Rome must needs be true Ministers, for they have out­ward Ordination, as they have also outward Baptisme, and such as wee doe not hold needfull to be cast off, (if any come out from them) and receive another outward Ordination and Baptisme before they may administer, or be received for true Ministers or true Christians, (as [Page 41] the Anabaptists opinions is, So that of necessity there must be some more excellent thing or things besides outward Ordination and outward Baptisme to make a true Minister and a true Christian in Gods account.

Neither were the words spoken or given in a private Conventicle to adherents or disciples of mine, as my doctrine to them, as my answers seeme to depose, or at least as the Register set it downe and is in the Sentence, But they were written in defence of the calling of the Ministers of the Church of England, and of the Sacra­ment of Baptisme here administred against the Separa­tists and Anabaptists, who denyed the same, and was published in print with licence of the Bishop of London. being first viewed over by himselfe and by his appoint­ment by Master Crashaw, then Minister of White-Chap­pell, who did also approve of the same, and suscribe to them, which is well knowne to be true.

And this deponent Henry Robrough chargeth me fur­ther, saying, That hee knoweth the Articulate Etherington doth teach and maintaine opinions which doe derogate from the Iurisdiction of Bishops, because he interpreteth that place of Scripture, Math 18. Tell the Church to be understood of the little ones borne of God, as in his booke against Separatists, page 74.

To which I answer, That if Master Robrough can, and when he shall infallibly prove as he doth here in effect sweare, that Bishops are not not can be of the little ones, borne of God, spoken of in Mat. 18. then will I grant his deposition to be true, in the meane time hee proveth himselfe a false accuser, and one that denieth Bishops to be of the holy Catholicke Church of Christ, which I doe not. For although it be true that the little ones borne of God, the lively stones built on the head corner-stone Iesus Christ, be the true Church of Christ, against which the gates of hell shall not pre­vaile, and to which Christ hath given the keyes of the Kingdome of heaven, as in Mat. 16. and Matt. 18. and 1 Pet. 2. and other Scriptures is evident. And that [Page 42] the places and Iurisdictions of Bishops be now great, and great and high places be dangerous and slippery places, as the Scriptures speake, and experience (lamen­table) hath a long time and often proved, yet notwith­ding, I undoubtedly beleeve, that Bishops have been, or may, and shall be found to be of the little ones borne of God, and so of Christ true Church, against which the gates of hell shall not prevayle, &c. When many a one of as low a place in the Church as Master Robrough shall come short of being of that number. For I know that he that is greatest may be as the least, and he that is chiefe, as him that serveth, according to the word and commandement of Christ, And it greatly con­cerneth every such one so to be, and to beare with his weake Christian brother, and not to constraine him with any kind of violence, either in words or deeds, to doe things against his conscience, which he is not, nor can yet be perswaded of, though otherwise lawfull, be­cause whatsoever is not of faith is sinne. That so ruling in wisedome, and judging alwayes righteous judgement, instructing with truth in the spirit of meekenesse and love, shewing mercy with good works of charity, hee may receive double honour of his Christian brethren, and so continuing, be found one of those of whom Christ sayeth, Blessed is that Servant whom his Lord when he commeth shall find so doing. But otherwise, if any one so intrusted in place of authority, shall begin to smite his fellowes, to eate and drinke with the drunken, &c. the same servants Lord will come in a day that hee is not aware of, &c. and will hew him in peeces, and give him his portion with hyporites.

And Iohn Okey, the man that vowed hee would not leave me till he made me fry, to this of the fourth Arti­cle he deposeth saying,

That he knoweth that the said Etherington held, that hee was as Elias, left alone, and that he knew none to be of the visible Church of God but himselfe.

These are Okeys words as they stand in the deposition, [Page 43] which in the Briefe that was read to the Court, are alte­red and set downe thus.

That within the time articulate the said Etherington, hath affirmed, that he was as Elyas, left alone, and that he knew none of the visible Church of God but himselfe.

And to this deposition of Okeys is also added another of Henry Robroughs, his words as they stand in the briefe which was read to the Court are these.

That the Author of the Epistle to the Church of Rome viz. Iohn Etherington affirmeth, that he knoweth no man in the flesh that holdeth with him, That the said Etherington is the Author of the book intituled The Epistle to the Church of Rome. looke page 9.

My Answer and Defence.

First, for the words of Okey, they are a very false accu­sation in both places. I never held, neither affirmed, nor thought any such thing of my selfe, but doe hold it a vile and wicked thing for any man so to thinke, much more to affirme to himselfe or of any other. How Okey knoweth that I held this of my selfe, which he deposeth in the first place, or who heard me affirme so of my selfe, in the second place he mentioneth not. And for him, he is a man that I never had any acquaintance or dealing with, neither have I beene in his company, to my know­ledge, one halfe houre together in my life, nor have spo­ken two words with him these twenty yeares at least, but onely, about three or foure yeares agoe, I having heard that he had threatned me, spake to him at a Book­sellers stall in Cheape-side, who heard what I said unto him.

And secondly, for Robroughs testimony, as touching an Epistleto the Church of Rome, I confesse I have seen & read such a Booke, which was published in the yeare 1588. when I was not eighteene yeares of age, and therefore farre unable to write such a book, as I am still, I confesse; So that I could not possible be the Author thereof.

[Page 44] And whereas Robrough directeth to the ninth page of the said booke for proofe of his deposition, where the Author having described to the Church of Rome the true Church of God and her true children, sayth him­selfe, being (as it seemeth) then in Rome. And yet thou sayest, let me see her, Behold be that writeth testifieth before the Throne of God and all his holy Angels, that hee knoweth no one this day after the flesh, that taketh part with him; what then shall I say, I am left alone? God forbid, for I see and heare with the eares and eyes of my soule, the groanes, the chaynes and teares of seven thousand, whose obedience is greater then mine, and of which number I am the least and as a poore and miserable, and borne out of time, am not worthy to be one of them, and this is she who once Balam walkes in thy streets, and all the earth was fil­led with her beauty, &c. And a little before in the same page of the booke he sayeth, Whose modest countenance, whose chast and comely steps walke in our streets, &c. meaning here in England, himselfe being an English man.

So that Henry Robrough doth here also declare him­selfe to be a very evill minded man in severall respects. First, in that hee altereth the Authors words, where he sayeth, That he knoweth no one this day after the flesh that ta­keth part with him, and sets it downe, that hee knoweth no man in the flesh that holdeth with him, as if the Au­thor meant and affirmed, that there was no man living of his opinion, so altering not onely his words, but his very intent and meaning to another purpose, for so it is set downe in the Briefe that was read to the Court, that I affirmed that there was no man of my opinion but my selfe.

Secondly, in that hee leaveth the words going be­fore and comming after, which doe plainely shew, that he speaketh not of his opinion, but of his sorrow and teares of repentance, and therefore sayeth, that he saw and heard with the eares & eyes of his soule, the groans, the chaines, and teares of seven thousand, whose obe­dience was greater then his, and judges himselfe not worthy to be one of them, so that although at that in­stant [Page 45] he knew no one after the flesh, yet he saw thousands after the spirit with the eyes of his mind, whom hee preferreth before himselfe.

And thirdly, in that the said Robrough deposeth and would prove by the said page of the said booke, that I am the Author thereof, that so by making himselfe ano­ther false witnesse with Okey, he might accomplish Okeys vow against me, that hee would never leave me till hee made me frie; For Okey deposeth as it seemeth from the same page of the said book, (judging also me to be the Author) that I affirmed that I was as Elyas left alone. Whereupon the voyce of one Bishop in the passing sen­tence against me, was that I should goe the same way to heaven that Elyas went, through fire, though he thought (he said I should never come there as Elias did) whereas the Author doth not say hee was as Elyas left alone, but what then shall I say, I am left alone? God forbid, which is the cleane contrary; and therefore these two evill men (as before with the rest of their fellowes) so here from the fountaine and evill treasure of their hearts, they have brought forth their evill and bitter fruit, which any judicious Christian may perceive.

And whereas I am charged to have used many re­proachfull speeches of the Ministers of the Church of England, which though they be not set downe in the Sen­tence, yet they are in their testimonies, the speeches are these, that there is a generation of Pharisees among the Ministers of the Church of England.

They that testifie to this, are Peter Worcester and Su­san Price, and the Ministers that I should use these spee­ches of, Susan Price nameth Master Denison, and Master Robrough, for the principall, and Worcester another whom I will not here name.

My Answer and Defence.

I would it were not true, that there is a generation of Pharisees among the Ministers, as well as among the people, and although it be not an usuall thing with me [Page 46] so to speake of any Minister by name, yet I might well say it of these two, which this woman nameth for prin­cipall, and doe them no wrong at all, and no doubt they have more fellowes, else were the Church of En­gland the rarest Church that ever was in the world.

And lastly, whereas they charge me that I have by this meanes drawne many from the Church of England to be Schismaticks, and Separatists, and caused them or some of them, to forbeare to participate with us, &c.

My Answer and Defence is.

This is a very false accusation, not withstanding their mouthes be all open to witnesse it.

First, for my selfe it is well knowne in all places where I have lived, what my behaviour hath beene, For so it is, that since the beginning of the yeare 1588. now above these forty yeares, I have lived in or nere unto the Citty of London, and untill now, that Master Denison and his Sociats had thus prosecuted against me. I was never presented, nor once complained of, for any neglect or ill carriage towards the Church of Englands either in one respect or other; and that I have frequen­ted the publike Assemblies and Sacraments, for neere twenty yeares last past before my imprisonment, I have sufficient Certificate and testimony, for proofe of the same, which I had ready to shew to the Court, if my de­fence had beene admitted; and I never was in any pri­vate Assembly in my life, where I have either received the Sacrament my selfe, nor seene it done by others; So that for mine owne part, I am neither Schismaticke nor Separatist. And for others, I know there is not a man living that can truely say, much lesse depose, that I have drawne, or caused any one to Schisme or Separa­tion from the Church of England, not to refuse to parti­cipate, either in Prayers, Preaching, or Sacraments, nay, I am sure, that neither Master Denison, nor all the enemies else I have in the world, are able to bring forth one.

[Page 47]But on the Contrary there be sundry can witnesse that I have beene a meanes of the withdrawing and disswa­ding some, from Schisme, Separation, Anabaptisme, Fa­milisme, and other corrupt opinions and unlawfull practises, so that their testimonies to these things also, are all likewise false.

This hath beene the passage and proceeding of this bu­sinesse and cause against me, these be the things contai­ned in the sentence, and these be the testimonies that are for proofe of them, for which, and whereupon I was censured by the high Commission Court on the last day of November 1626. not having any defence, nor being heard what I could say for my selfe.

The sentence or judgement of the Court is this, I was fined five hundred pounds to the King, to pay cost of suit, I was committed to the new prison there to re­maine during the pleasure of the Court, and injoyned to make a publike recantation in such words as should be set downe by the Court.

And although Master Denison had prevailed thus farre, and that I was layed up in prison, yet was he not herewith satisfied, but in the beginning of Hillary terme next fol­lowing, he moved and requested to the Arch-bishop and the Court, that he might preach at Pauls crosse the last Sunday in the said Terme, and that I should bee brought to stand there before him during his Ser­mon, which his request as unreasonable and unnatu­rall as it was, (by Sir Henry Martins meanes) was soone granted him. And I was by a Pursuivant and a keeper, the same day, brought to stand there before him, in the view of the people, and being come to the place, they having a Paper contayning the chiefe things of the sentence, Written with large Letters, which I taking in my hand, protested against unto the people, as falsly charg'd upon me, and falsly, by false witnesses, deposed against me. But they, the Pursuivant and keeper laying hold of my armes, took the Paper from me, and pinned it on my brest, and so held me till I intreated them to let my armes [Page 48] loose, and promised that I would not remove it, that so he my adversary and prosecutor might make open shew of me the person whom he had so long hunted for, and ha­ving me now under his clawes, might prey on me at his pleasure, and make knowne to all men, that what he had done before in his Pulpits, without & against all Law and Christianity, he could doe now boldly with authority. And how maliciously, contemptuously, and falsly, he there spake and dealt, (reviling me by the names of) this seducer, this Woolfe Iohn Etherington, that stands heere before you, this Varlet, Hereticke, Faruilist, with sundry other vile, false, and evill speeches which he there uttered of me, many that then heard him can witnesse.

And so, I having stood there before him about the space of three houres, he took forth a Paper wherein the words for my recantation (which the Court had ordered) were Written, and began to read them, saying; Whereas I Iohn Etherington stand by the depositions of sundry witneses ju­dicially convicted before the Kings Majesties Commissioners ap­pointed for causes Ecclesiasticall, for that since the 20 of December 1623, I have maintained &c. (The words following being all the matters contayned in the sentence which they would have had me to acknowledge as justly proved and so condemne my selfe, and justifie all their proceed­ings.) So hee having read a part twice over, called upon me twice to say after him, which I refused to doe, know­ing my selfe to be cleere, as I have before declared, onely I answered and testified to the people, that the witnesses were false witnesses, and their testimonies false, and that he had delivered many lyes and false things of me, and so I was taken away from the Crosse to the prison againe.

And yet, further, for after all this, he got lycence to publish a Booke of that Sermon in Print, partly refined of some of the palpable untruths, and bitter reviling speeches he then uttered, and partly filled with more ma­lice and falshood, by which, in the most disgracefullest manner, as (I thinke) ever was knowne. He hath devised to defame me, my name, and posterity for ever, if it be [Page 49] possible for the spirit of wickednesse by evill inventions and lyes to doe it.

And except Christ had foretold, that men should not onely revile and persecute his servants, but that they would falsly say all manner of evill against them for his name sake, all manner of evill, nothing excepted, that the evill heart of man can invent, I should never have be­leeved that there had beene or would be such manner of evill things invented, spoken, and practised, published, and beleeved, against any one, as hath beene, all fasly (God knoweth) against me, the most unworthy to be so blessed, and to have such cause of rejoycing, as Christ te­stifieth and promiseth to such, though for the present as touching the body and outward name and estate: I with my wife and children doe suffer and undergoe distresses, scandals, defamations, and reproaches of the world.

In all which, how unchristian-like, and unnaturally I have beene delt withall, by this Steven Denison, how evill, false, and dishonest his witnesses have manifested them­selves to be in their practises and depositions, And how rightly and upon what just grounds the Court hath pro­ceeded, judged, imprisoned, appoynted, and given way for all these things to passe and be done against me, I re­ferre to the judicious understanding Christian Reader, of what estate or calling soever, to weigh and consider.

I doe confesse, that after Master Denison had done his pleasure against me at the Crosse, I having complayned of the great wrong I had sustained by him & his witnesses, first by a letter that I wrote to the Bishop, then of Dur­ham, now of Winchester; whom I made bold to acquaint with the matter, by reason I had beene with him some few dayes before this unexpected sentence was passed a­gainst me, to speake with him about the conveyance of water to his house of Akeland in the County of Durham, and was by his apoyntment to come to him againe to speake further of the same; but being now prevented by imprisonment, I wrote, giving him to understand the cause therof, (for he was not at the Court when I was cen­red. [Page 50] And requesting his favourable helpe to relieve me, who hereupon with the Bishop of Rochester tooke the matter into their consideration, & began to commiserate my case, so that when my Petitions of complaint came to the Court, they were willing to have them read, & mo­ved for me to the Arch-bishop that things should be yet further examined according to my request. Whereupon the matter was referred unto them, and I acknowledge they took pains therein, & were very willing to relieve me, per­ceiving that I was wronged, & as they found the falshood of the accusations, and of the depositions of the witnesses caused the Register to write them downe. But Denison my adversary, accuser, and prosecuter, being there present at my elbow, when things were now examining, and knowing that my cleering would discover his unjust and evill dealing, moved the Bishops with another poynt, not in the sentence, concerning Baptisme, which I could not deny; but indeavored to maintaine for a truth, and they much apposed me in, and alledged the words of the Booke of Common prayer, that God had sanctified the flood Jordan and all other waters, to the mysticall wash­ing away of sin, and said unto me, as thou dost convey water in thy Pipes, so is grace conveyed in the act of Bap­tisme, and so it was by Circumcision &c. And Doctor Co­zens he being by, withstood me also in that I said, and affirmed withall, as touching the Lords Supper, that the very flesh of Christ was eaten with our teeth, which I could not but say was grosse Popery, so upon these occasi­ons the Bishops displeasures were kindled against me, things were left without any further examining, and I was sent again to prison wherewith straighter usage then I had before, I have now endured above these twenty months, and he my accuser was now further allowed to publish what he listed against me, not onely in Print, but in his Pulpits also, as hee still doth, his Booke hee presenteth to the King, and made suite as I heere, to have me put to death, for it was my blood he thirsted after, as his Ser­mons and Bookes doe prove, the cause you have seene re­lated.

[Page 51]Otherwise if this point of Baptisme, which he (as it seemeth) knew, would moove the Bishops against me, had not beene by him forced unto them, I had no doubt been cleered by them. Therefore, because Inow suffer for it as well as for any things else, I will declare my minde therein more fully.

The point or tenent is this: That outward Baptisme doth neither conferre nor confirme grace to the heart of any man no more than Circumcision did; in the aforesaid booke against Anabaptists, page 61. Which I doe acknow­ledge and justifie to bee true, in defense of the Baptisme and doctrine of the Church of England against Anabap­tists, Arminians and Papists; against Anabaptists who held that all such as they Baptised with outward Bap­tisme, were thereby confirmed to bee true Christians, inwardly in the sight of God; against Arminians and Papists, who hold that outward Baptisme doth conferre grace to the heart, and maketh a Christian inwardly; From which doctrine of each, falling away after regene­ration from the estate of salvation to everlasting condem­nation, doth necessarily follow, free will; and other ab­surd and unsound points of doctrine, which they like­wise hold and teach; contrary to the doctrine of the Church of England, (which are also disproved in the same Book against Anabaptists; the Book being viewed over by the Bishop of London, and by himselfe allowed as is aforesaid; I doe acknowledge as I also believe, that outward Baptisme is a visible signe or outward signi­fication of the new birth from above, and of that Bap­tisme wherein wee are said to bee buried with Christ and risen with him, and to put him on, and which saveth; and that it doth signifie and set forth the same unto us; and I doe believe also that it is a seale or token of the Co­venant which God hath made with the faithfull and their seed, as Circumcision in the flesh was to faithfull Abraham and his seed, as in Gen. 17. 7. 8. 11. and Rom. 4. 11. Not all that came of Abraham after the flesh, nor all that were cir­cumcised or that are now Baptised in the flesh, but [...] God said [Page 52] to Abraham, In Isaac shall thy seed be called (that is, as Saint Paul saith) they which are the Children of the flesh, these are not the Children of God, but the Children of the promise are counted for the Seed, Rom. 9. 78. they that are Circumcised in heart, and are of the same faith, As Rom. 4. 16. for that is the sure seak of the covenant.

And on our parts wee doe thereby give our names to Christ and Covenant with God to bee his people, and to serve him; and so it giveth us the name and state of a Chri­stian outwardly, as circumcision on the flesh did the name and state of a Jew outwardly; It doth no more give or conferre grace to the heart to make a Christian inward­ly, then circumcision in the flesh did to make a Jew or a Christian inwardly; for, to be a Jew inwardly, and to be a Christian inwardly is all one in truth; as also to bee circumcised in heart, and to bee baptized in heart is all one in trueth, as Saint Paul declareth; Coloss. 2. 11. 12. and so it followeth, that Circumcision in the flesh, and Bap­tisme in the flesh are both one in signification and operation.

Wherefore if these things bee so, and that hee is not a Jew which is one outwardly; nor that circumcision which is outward in the flesh; but he is a Jew which is one inwardly, and Circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit, not in the letter, whose praise is not of men, but of God, as Paul saith, then,

Neither Circumcision in the flesh nor Baptisme in the flesh doth give or conferre or worke grace in the heart, to make a Jew or a Christian inwardly; neither are they or either of them any part of the new birth, from above, or of that Baptisme wherein wee are said to put on Christ, and to bee buried with him, and which saveth, as Saint Peter also confirmeth saying; The like figure whereunto, even Baptisme, doth also now save us; not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God, by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ. 1. Pet. 3. 21.

Otherwise if either Circumcision or Baptisme on the flesh did conferre grace to the heart, then all are thereby set in the state of salvation; and so the errour of falling [Page 53] away, which the Anabaptists, Arminians and Papists hold, will necessarily follow; because it is evident that all are not saved, that have beene circumcised or baptized in the flesh; or, if either of them were a part of regene­ration, then no one could be saved without the one or the other, because every part of regeneration is of necessitie to salvation.

But it is certaine, that many are saved which were ne­ver circumcised nor baptized in the flesh, as (besides all those faithfull that lived before either Circumcision or Baptisme on the flesh was instituted) all the holy women of the Jewes; That every part of regeneration is of neces­sitie to salvation the Lord Jesus hath irrevocably conclu­ded saying; Except a man be borne of Water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God; Iohn 3. both the parts of this new birth are of necessity to salvation.

These words, except a man bee borne, doe stand as firme for the first part (of Water) as for the second part, of the Spirit.

And under the name man, every child of man, born of flesh young and old, male and female, are comprehended, so that whosoever dyeth without the first part of this birth, the Baptisme of water here meant, shall as certain­ly be excluded from entring into the Kingdome of God, as he that dyeth without the second part, the Baptisme of the spirit; That the first part of this birth from above is something called in Scripture by the name of Bap­tisme, besides that which is called the Baptisme of the ho­ly Ghost, is out of question (I thinke) to all. Outward baptisme it cannot be, for the reasons before mentioned, because one may be saved that is never baptized therwith, as hath been proved; Then without all doubt it must bee some speciall necessarie principle of Christ called in Scri­pture by the name of Baptisme, and signified also by out­ward Baptisme, because it is layd downe in the first place as a necessarie part of the new birth, and first plantation of a Christian.

And there is no principle of Christ so speciall and ne­cessary [Page 54] called by the name of Baptisme, and signified by outward Baptisme, that is required to the first planta­tion of a Christian (besides the Baptisme of the Holy Ghost) but onely repentance; That repentance is a spe­ciall principle of Christ is evident by Marke 1. 1. 2. 3. 4 Luk. 24. 47. Act. 20. 21. Heb. 6. 1. That it is so ne­cessary is also evident by Christs owne testimony in Luke 13. where hee urgeth it with the same words of necessi­tie saying, Except yee repent, yee shall all likewise perish; Vers 3. That it is called by the name of Baptisme, and signified by outward Baptisme, is manifest by Mat. 3. 11. Mar. 1. 1. 2. 3. 4. Luke. 3. 3 Act. 10. 37. Act. 13. 24. Act. 19. 4. And that it is required in the first place to the first plan­tation of a Christian is also manifest by sundry Scriptures where the Holy Ghost saith, Repent and believe the Gospell, Repent that your sinnes may be blotted out; Repent and be Bap­tised every one of you, in the Name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. Mar. 1. 15. Act. 3. 19. Act. 2. 38.

Therefore the first part of regeneration is the Baptisme of repentance, even the same which Iohn the Baptist a spe­ciall Minister and patterne thereof preached in the po­wer and spirit of Elias, wherewith hee made ready a people prepared for the Lord, as it was prophesyed of him Esay 43.Mat. 4. 8. And is a turning and dissolving of the heart, which naturally through sin, is hard and stony, to water as it were, to flesh, as the Scriptures speake, even to weep­ing and mourning and humble confession of sinnes unto God, as Christ himselfe expresseth it in a Parable saying: Wee have lamented unto you, Mat. 11. 17. and yee have not wept, and is cau­sed by the speciall power and working of the Holy Ghost, and is of the Gospell, and not of the Law.

The second part of this birth from above is that Bap­tisme of Christ which Iohn the Baptist also spake of to his disciples, whom he had prepared by the Baptisme of re­pentance, saying,Mat. 3. 11. 12. I indeed Baptise you, with Water to repentance; but he that commeth after me is mightier then I, hee shall Baptise you with the Holy Ghost and with fire, as if hee had said, I in­deed [Page 55] through the power and Spirit of God preaching un­to you repentance, have prepared you ready for the Lord. I have brought you into the travell of the birth, to weepe and mourne for your finnes, the first laver of rege­neration. But Christ which cometh after me, he is migh­tier then I, he by a more excellent gift of the Spirit (as it were with fire) will purge and sanctifie your hearts by faith and so justifie you from all your finnes, he will de­liver you that labour and are heavy loaden and accom­plish in you the new birth, comfort you that mourne, bind up your broken hearts, and speake peace to your soules: For although repentance be a part of the Gospell in a generall confideration, the first principle, and of the purchase of Christ, as it is manifest by Luke 24. 47. 48. Act. 20. 20. 21. Heb. 6. 1. &c. yet the Word preaching peace by Iesus Christ the glad tidings of remission of sins to the repentant is the Gospell, and so called in a speciall distinct manner from repentance, and the preaching and the enjoyment thereof by faith is a more excellent thing then the ministery and enjoyment of repentance. And in this regard hee that is the least messenger of the latter, is greater then hee that is the greatest messenger of the first. as Christ himselfe testifieth, Matth. 11. 11.

This is it which the Prophet Esay prophecied of be­fore concerning Christ, saying, The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me, Esay 61. 1. 2. [...]. and hee hath annoynted me to preach glad tidings to the poore and to bind up the broken hearted &c. he saith not to all or every one in the world, but the poore, the broken in heart onely. &c.

This is that word preaching peace by Iesus Christ which is said to begin to be preached after the Baptisme of repentance which Iohn peached,Act. 10. 37. Not but that it was preached before this time even in all ages from the be­ginning,Act. 13. 23. 24. but because no one did receive it or had it so preached unto him in such a speciall peculiar manner, but such a one as was first prepared by repentance, therefore it is said to begin to be preached after.

And because it was now to bee done in a more plenti­full [Page 56] and larger manner then ever it was before. Therefore was Iohn sent before the face of the Lord in the power and spirit of Elias to prepare his way before him.

This is it which Christ sent Iohn word of saying, Goe tell Iohn, Mat. 11. 5. The blind doe see, the lame doe walk, Luke 7. 22. and the poor have the Go­spell preached unto them, as much as to say, the humble re­pentant sinners, the poore and contrite in heart, they have the glad tidings of peace and remission of sinnes preached unto them, and ministred unto their soules ac­cording to the prophecie of Esay, and they receive the same, or believed it with joy and peace in their heats, for this preaching implieth such a believing or receiving. And so doth Saint Paul interpret the words of Iohn con­cerning this Baptisme of Christ in Act. 19. where he saith Iohn verily Baptized with the Baptisme of Repentance, saying unto the people, that they should believe in him which should come after him, that is in Christ Iesus, Iohns words beeing, He shall Baptise you with the Holy Ghost & with fire. So that, as, to bee Baptized with the Baptisme of Repentance, is to repent, to weepe and mourne for our sinnes, washing them as it were in this first laver: So, to bee Baptixed with the Holy Ghost and with fire, is to believe in Christ, to bee justified and purged from our sinnes by faith in him.

These are the true parts of regeneration, the special and most necessary principles of Christ, the foundation, as Saint Paul calleth them the briefe or sum of the Gospell,Heb. 6. as Christ declareth.Luke 24. 47. 48. This did Christ Preach at the first, saying Repent and believe the Gospell, this did the Apostles Preach after him as he commanded them,Mar. 1. 15. Act. 2. 38 Act. [...] and Act. Act. 2. 38. 20. 20. 21. Where Saint Paul saith, I kepte [...]ching backe that was profitables, Act. 3. 19. but taught and testified both to the Iewes and also to the Greeks repentance towards God. Act. 20. and saith in our Lord Iesus Christ. Deut. 30. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. This did Moses and the Prophets also, before Christ came in the flesh, Preach and require of the people, as the most necessary things to be attained if they would be saved.

This Abel, Hen cb, Noah, and all the blessed of their times attained unto, and had it wrought in them from [Page 57] above.Esay 57. 14. 15. And Abraham also before circumcision in the flesh, was required. This all the holy Patriarchs, Pro­phets and righteous men and women of the Jewes had.Esay 66. 1. 2. And that woman which is so specially remembred unto us in the Gospell,Iere. 4. 4. whose Baptisme of repentance is so truely manifested by her plentifull teares wherewith she washed Christs feet.Hose. 10. 12. And her Baptisme of the holy Ghost and justification by faith from her sins,Ioel 2. 12. 13. by her true and much love to Christ expressed in her washing and kissing his feet,Psal. 51. 16. 17. and anoynting them with oyle.Psal. 95. 7. 8. 11. &c. For every one that is borne from above, of water and of the Spirit, is inwardly of the same heavenly nature all the dayes of his life after, whose fruit doth alwayes in his due times and seasons, according to his measure, (like the tree planted by the river side) shew forth the fame.

This al the elect of God that ever were, now are or here­after shalbe, have had, have & must have, yea the youngest child dying in the birth or the womb, if not in outward expression, yet inwardly in the true nature thereof, for no one child of man begotten of flesh can be saved, ex­cept he be begotten from above, of water and of the Spi­rit, and so changed or renewed from the polluted and in­thralled estate of nature, which we all had and received originally in the very conception, into the estate of grace and love with God in Christ.

And God may worke this change, this new birth, or rebegetting, in the wombe if it pleaseth him, as he did in Iohn the Baptist, or at the time of outward baptisme, if he so please, or before it, as he did in Abraham before circumcision in the flesh, and as in the Apostles times he did to some, or after it, as he had done formerly after cir­cumcision and now most usually doth, since all are so ge­nerally baptized in their young estate. For we may not limit God, neither hath he tyed himselfe to any time or estate of nature in us, nor to any one outward action performed by man unto us, although he hath ordained sundry excellent, holy out ward meanes whereby he doth direct and lead us, (as it were by the hand) to the [Page 58] things that are spirituall and indeed necessary, which we are bound to imbrace with much thankfulnesse to God, and to use with reverence, and not to despise the least of them, nor in any part wilfully neglect them, in paine of Gods high displeasure.

But the death and resurrection of Christ, the sacrifice of his body and blood, the value, vertue, price, and purchase thereof, he hath tyed himselfe unto, so as that without it, and some powerfull administration the same to the soule of man, there is no salvation, as Christ pronounceth saying, Except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man and drinke his blood, yee have no life in you, Iohn 6. 53.

The Sacraments of Baptisme and the Lords Supper, have both respect unto this. Baptisme to the new birth, wherein weare set in the estate of life thereby; the Lord: Supper to the continuall Commmunion which every one that is once made alive by it, hath therein to eternall life, and so the flesh of Christ Is meat indeed, and his blod is drinke indeed, to them, according to the word of Christ, Iohn 6. 54. 55.

Not as if any man did or could eat the very flesh or drinke his blood carnally, as Doctor Cosins affirmed; not that the bread of the Sacrament or the wine is turned in­to the flesh or blood of Christ, either before we receive them, or after, & so conveied into us as some would make us beleev; nor any other kind of way is the flesh or blood of Christ conveied, or infused into our bodies or sonles, to set us in the estate of life, or to continue us in the same; nay, then how could they that were before Christ came in the flesh be saved? for the same necessity of eating his flesh and drinking his blood, was to them then, even from the first fall of Adam, as is now to us; but it is the grace purchased thereby, which we doe receive in our hearts by faith, and which by his mediation is conti­nued with us. For as the Law (which is the Mi­nister of death) came by Moses, [...]o [...] grace and truth which bringeth life, is by JESUS GHRIST; And therefore the Apostles so often Write and [Page 59] say,Rom. 16. 14. The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you &c.

For although the very body and blood of Christ,1 Cor. 16. 24. be the price of the purchase,2 Cor. 13. 14. & in that respect the only mediate cause of our life and salvation,Gal. [...]. 18. yet doth not his body and blood enter into us to revive and save us;Philip. 4. 23. nay, so it pro­fiteth nothing,1 Thes. 5. 28. as Christ himselfe said against some that conceived his words,Rev. 22. 21. in such a carnall manner as now at this time many doe; What and if you shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before? It is the spirit that quickneth, the flesh profiteth nothing; the words that I speake unto you, they are spirit and they are life; Iohn 6. 62. 63. Neither doe we by the acts of eating the bread or drinking the wine of the Sacrament, eate or drinke the grace of God purcha­sed by the body and blood of Christ, neither is grace con­ferred, or any way secretly conveied to our hearts in the bread or wine, or by them, nor by any thing inferi­or unto it selfe; but it is conferred to the heart of man by the Spirit of God, through the word of his promise, therefore called the word of his grace.

And the instrument, hand or mouth wherewith wee doe receive the same, is faith in the heart, caused also therein by the operation of the same spirit,2 Cor. 3. 3. as Paul de­clareth, for the habit and estate of eternall life,Col. 2. 12. and the promise of raysing up at the last day; which Christ doth certifie to those that eate his flesh and drinke his blood,Iohn 6. 54. doth he assure to them that beleeve in him;Ver. 35. 40: and 47. so that to beleeve in Christ, is to eate his flesh and drinke his blood, according to his meaning; and therefore a sinner is sometimes said, to be justified by grace, sometimes by the blood of Christ, sometimes by faith, because in the act of our justification, all these doe concur, and are to­gether, the grace of God the Father, being the prime and chiefe cause therof; the body and blood of Christ the se­cond principal or mediate cause, & faith the instrumentall and inferiour cause; and the justified are said also to live, and to be saved by the grace of God, by the flesh, and blood, and life of Christ, and by faith.

And in this consideration, (because Christ is the one­ly [Page 60] mediator and reconciler between God and man) doth he so often speake of himselfe, and say, My Father gi­veth you the true bread from heaven; the bread of God is he which commeth downe from heaven, and giveth life unto the world, I am the bread of life; this is the bread of life which commeth down from heaven, that a man may eate thereof and not dye; I am the living bread which came down from heaven; if any man eate of this bread, he shall live for ever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world; except yee eate the flesh of the Son of man and drinke his blood, yee have no life in you: who so eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, hath eternall life, and I will raise him up at the last day. For my flesh is meate in­deed, and my blood is drinke indeed; he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him; as the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father, so he that eateth me,Ioh. 6. 32. 33. 35. 48. 51. 53. 55. 56. 57. 58. &c. even he shall live by me. &c.

And in this manner spake he afterwards of the Sacra­ment of the Supper, which hee left and commanded un­to his Church to bee done to shew forth his death, untill his second comming; saying of the Bread, Take [...] eate, this is my Body, and of the Cup; Drinke yee all of this, for this is the Blood of the New Testament which is shed for many for the re­mission of sinnes Matth. 26. 26. 27. 28. And Saint Paul like­wise saith of the same Sacrament; The cup of blessing which wee blesse is it not the communion of the Blood of Christ? and the Bread which wee breake is it not the communion of the Body of Christ? for wee being many are one Bread, for wee are all pertakers of that one bread, 1 Cor. 10. 16. 17. as if he should say is not this the spirituall intent and true mean­ing or signification thereof? doth it not shew forth and give us to understand the Communion that is betweene Christ and his Church and every member of it? how hee hath purchased it and life, and eternall salvation for it, with his owne Body and Blood, and that although the members thereof bee many, yet they being by faith made partakers of him, the true and living Bread, are all in a spirituall manner, one body with him, and one bread, and doe live by him.

[Page 61] The like whereof hee had said before to the same Cor­rinthians, of the forefathers: Moreover, brethren I would not that yee should bee ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the Sea, and were bap­tized unto Moses in the Cloud, and in the Sea, and did all eate the same spirituall meate, and did all drinke the same spiri­tuall drinke, for they dranke of that spirituall Rocke which fol­lowed them, and that Rocke was Christ, 1. Cor. 10. 1. 2. 3. 4.

So that all the holy fathers, not onely they that had passed through the Sea with Moses, whom Saint Paul doth here instance for proofe, but all that were before them and after them to his dayes, were baptized with the same spirituall Baptisme, wherewith hee himselfe and all the faithfull to this day have beene and are Baptized, and did all eate the same spirituall meat, and drinke the same spirituall drinke, as wee now doe; having all the same benefit of Christ and of the Sacrifice of his Body and Blood, as wee now have, and are all of him and one body with us, and wee with them, as Saint Paul also fur­ther manifesteth saying; For as the body is one and hath many members, and all the members of this one body being many, are one body; so also is Christ; For by one spirit are we all Baptized into one body, whether we be Iewes or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free, and have beene all made drinke into one spirit. 1. Cor. 12 12. 13.

For although Christ dyed but once in the latter time, and in one place of the world, yet his death was as a­vayleable with God, (with whom all things to come and past, are present) before his comming in the flesh, and death as since; and as effectuall to his elect of all nations, in all times, and in all places, then, as now; for there is but one way of salvation in him, and by him, unto all, in all times, and in all places, though it be not declared in a like manner and measure to all, in all times, and in all places.

These things I doe beleeve to be true, for which, if I shall still be judged vile, and continued a prisoner, I must [Page 62] still have patience: If otherwise and that I shall find re­liefe, I hope I shall be thankfull unto God, and not forget my duty to my relievers.

From the new Prison in Maiden-lane in London, 1627.

I doe now confesse againe, that after all these things I having indured three yeares imprisonment, and having often petitioned to the Court within the same time, shewing my wrongs and grievances, and requesting my liberty (those two fore-mentioned Bishops of Winche­ster and Rochester, Doctor Ne [...], and Doctor Buckridg, fur­thering my request to the Arch-Bishop) I was discharged and released without any kind of justification, either of the Courts proceedings or the witnesses depositions, or any part of Denisons doings, or acknowledging my selfe guilty of the things wherewith I was charged further then I have declared. The last Court day of Michaelmas terme, in the yeare 1629. for if I would but have acknow­ledged to the Court that I had been judicially convicted. which I could not doe, I might have beene discharged long before.

But notwithstanding this, that I am now at libertie from prison, yet the scandalls and reproaches of my ad­versaries, remain still all over this Land, and other parts likewise, by reason, not onely of that unrighteous sen­tence of the Court passed on me upon those insufficient and false depositions, but especially of those wicked in­famous Sermons and bookes which my accuser and pro­secutor Denison hath published against me, and are dis­perst through the Kingdome. So that not onely my per­son, but my name is odious and hatefull to many, my friends, my children, and all that beare my name suffer by this meanes. But why should it so much grieve me, or trouble them? seeing that the more any one suffereth for the truth sake, the more he hath cause to rejoyce, because so much the greater is his reward in heaven, as the Lord himselfe, Who is the way, the truth, and life, hath said, Mat. 5. So commending the judicious true Christian Reader, To the grace of God, and of the Lord Iesus Christ; I rest his true Christian friend,

JOHN ETHERINGTON.

[Page]And if any shall thinke I have not yet answered that Booke of the Sermon preacht against me at the Crosse, tituled, The white w [...]olfe, by Doctor Denison, (for he hath now by reason of that worke as it seemeth, obtained the name of Doctor, which before he had not) let such a one but consider well without partiallity, what is declared in this my defence, and I hope he shall see every thing in the Doctors White w [...]olfe that conserneth me, in substance fully answered, and whether he or I have played the ra­vening Woolves part, I refer to the judicious Christian Reader (that hath read both) to consider. And so I rest his christian friend, wishing him all true wisdome from above whereby to discerne betweene truth and falsehood, and betweene true Prophets, and false, that so he be not de­ceived.

I. E.

Errata.

IN pag. 1. l. the last after invent, read spoken against him. In pag. 2. l. 19. read mind i [...], In pag. 12. l. 23. for dareth read dareth not. In pag. 31. l. the 1. for his read this. In pag. 36. l. 18. for Sabbath read Sabbaths. In pag. 38. l. 19. read could not In pag. 38 1. 25. for oposition read exposition. In pag. 38. l. 28. for used read useth. In pag. 39. l. the last. recit read receive. In pag. 41. l. the 7. for answers read adversaries. In pag. 41. l. the 16. for suscribe read subscribe. In pag. 42. l. 6. for or may, read are, may. In pag. 44. l. 14. for walks read walt.

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