A DISCOURSE CONCERNI …

A DISCOURSE CONCERNING LIBERTY of CONSCIENCE, In which are Contain'd PROPOSALLS.

About what Liberty in this kind is now Politically Expe­dient to be given, and severall Reasons to shew how much the Peace and Welfare of the Nation is concern'd therein.

By R. T.

LONDON,

Printed for Nathaniel Brook, and are to be sold at his shop at the Angel in Cornhill. 1661.

A DISCOURSE CONCERNING Liberty of Conscience, &c.

I Am not ignorant that it is the fate of those who propound modells con­cerning Affaires of State or Religion, to be usually look'd on as knaves or fools, and as such who either do not know the in­curable defects of humane nature, or by pretending to cure them, would only mend their own fortunes.

Leaving therefore the makers of plat-forms about morall things to such censures as attend them, I shall not [Page 2] here in this following discourse of Li­berty of Conscience, so much resem­ble him that draws the modell of an house, as one that applies an Engin to quench one a fire. And indeed the se­curity of the Nation is so concerned in the granting of this Liberty, that any who shall by the contrary practice pre­tend to promote that, will most truly deserve the name of a projector.

Moreover, I know that in nothing more then about Liberty of Consci­ence querulous persons have shewn a childishness in their complaints, with­out telling what the very thing is that troubles them, and how far they would have it removed; and so complaining for want of Liberty of Conscience in generall, have been as ridiculous as a Plaintiff would be, that brought his Action about anothers owing him mo­ney in generall, or a Judge that accor­dingly order'd some money in generall to be paid. When therefore any sub­jects have exprest the due Liberty their Consciences need, then is a King [Page 3] in a capacity to shew a God-like be­nignity and power in granting the things they ask, as far as they conduce to his honour and the peoples good. Nor is it rationall that this Liberty should be granted on other termes: For a King that gives to all men all the Liberty of Conscience they beg from Him this day, will be forced to beg it from them the next. As I shall there­fore decline such an offer of the ways of securing Liberty to the Consciences of the severall parties among us, as might amount to the exactness of a modell, and seem to impose upon the Ma­gistrate, and tempt other men into an opposition of those methods whereof they were not the Inventors, so shall I likewise avoid the error of those who cry out for want of Liberty, before they know their own minds fully in this affaire, or take care that the Ma­gistrate shall know them otherwise then by inspiration. Nor shall I at all in these papers consider what Liberty to the Consciences of others Religi­on, [Page 4] but purely what politicall interest prompts us to give. It is, I confess, none of the most renowned principles for Nations to preserve a fair enter­course with one another, and with their respective Members, because 'tis their interest so to do; but 'tis a thing much more shamefull for a people to be so infatuated, as not to see their in­terest when it is most obvious to them; as in this case of the due Liberty of Conscience it so eminently is, that it can be the reall Concernment of none but Souldiers of fortune to op­pose it. 'Tis pity but those miseries which some mens pedantick incivili­ties to the Consciences of others have formerly overwhelm'd the Nation with, should be so instructive to us, as to convince us of the necessity of setting out the true bounds of Liberty of Conscience, as the Egyptians of old by the overflowing of their Nile were forc'd upon the study of Geometry, that so the certain bounds and proprieties of Lands might afterward be retrived.

[Page 5]I shall therefore without any more Prefatory words addresse my self to the proposalls about the freedom that is now fit to be given to the severall Protestant parties, differing in lesser matters of Religion among us; whose perswasions being different from those own'd by the Reverend Divines of our old Hierarchy, do put them in a pre­sent necessity of having some liberty granted to them.

First then I shall propound, that (if there be not a coalition of those that are call'd the Presbyterians, and the Assertors of the former Hierarchy among us, into the same form of Church-Government, and thereby the Presbyterians so call'd be put in a capacity to divide the highest prefer­ments of the Church with others,) however no Ministers may be devested of their present Livings, or be made uncapable of being presented to other, meerly because they have been or­dain'd by Presbyters without Bi­shops.

[Page 6]Secondly, that any publick Preachers of the Independent perswasion, may not meerly because of that discrimina­ting opinion of theirs, be render'd un­capable of being Lecturers in any Parish where the major part of the Parish, and the Minister shall desire them so to be. More liberty is not desired in their behalf, because, according to their principles, it is not lawfull for them to take Tithes, and to do the usuall Offices of a Minister in a Parish.

The Reasons why I judge it con­venient that the Pastors and Teachers of Independent Churches should thus (if nothing be alledged against them but their particular opinion) be per­mitted to preach publickly, are, be­cause as to the Doctrinall part of Reli­gion, they concur with the 39. Arti­cles of the Church of England, and they are generally men of strict lives, and are such as have been bred up in the Universities; and if they have not the liberty allow'd them to preach [Page 7] publickly, it will necessarily occasion their preaching to their Churches in private meetings, which may be of worse consequence to the Magistrate then their publick preaching can be. And again, their opinions about Church-Government, though pos­sibly not true, are not unworthy of good and Learned men; for by such they have been own'd, as namely by Ames, Ainsworth, and Cotton of New-England.

Thirdly, that those of these per­swasions that are not Ministers, I mean Gentlemen and Tradesmen, Presby­terian or Independent, may not for their opinions sake as to Church-Government be debar'd of any civil employment in the Nation they are otherwise capable of.

Fourthly, that Anabaptists may not be punish'd meerly for their opinion of Administring Baptism as they do, and their meeting to pray and preach, and take the Sacrament of the Lords Supper together. For though those [Page 8] of that perswasion were in Germany as so many fire-ships among the States of the Empire, it doth not follow that others here must necessarily prove in­cendiaries in the same manner: [...] the acts of reasonable creatures may much more vary in severall places, then Lightning and Thunder hap­pen to be more hurtfull in some Countreys then other, and some plants more or less poysonous in severall pla­ces.

Fifthly, that the Quakers may for a while be tolerated, till we have seen what effects their light within them will produce. A present and a speedy punishing so numerous a party would not be prudent, because the persecu­tion of one party would alarme all the others, and make them fear that their turnes would be next. This is a party that none have reason to fear as long­liv'd according to the course of nature; for it doth not cherish the hopes of its followers by any sensuall pleasures in this World, nor can its principles as­sure [Page 9] men of any reward in the World to come; because the Quakers having degenerated from the light of the Scripture to that within them, they can have no grounded assurance of any good terms in another World.

Those of them that are idle, and go from Town to Town, neglecting their callings, may without any injury or provocation to the rest of the parties he compell'd to work. And I am con­fident that these poor Enthusiastick people, by hard labour and diligence in their callings, might be at once curd of their melancholy and errours, and be thus induced no longer to call a bad spleen a good Conscience. Undoubt­edly any Enthusiast that had been tired in some Mechanicall Trade by very hard labour in the day, would find lit­tle gusto in reading Iacob Behmon's works at night.

Sixthly, that those who professe the belief of a fifth Monarchy, that is, of Christs Reigning personally on the Earth a thousand yeares, and draw no [Page 10] consequences from thence about their duty in promoting that fifth King­dom, by being active in dethroning a­ny Magistrates, or devesting Bishops and Ministers of their places, because they are said to be of the fourth, may not for that opinion be liable to any punishment. For as ill uses as this o­pinion hath been put to in our dayes, it was believed by almost all the Fa­thers of the Church before the first Nicene Councell.

And therefore I do so state this sixth proposall, that only those now that believe a Millennium, and draw no more consequences of Rebellion and Sedition from it then its Primitive as­sertors did, may have the benefit of liberty.

As for those who by this innocent opinion would occasionally disturb ci­vil Societies, it is fit they should be dealt with as enemies of mankind, and as such who would found the fifth Mo­narchy in a colluvies of more vile peo­ple then Romulus did the fourth, and [Page 11] would multiply Confusions and Dis­orders in the World, by destroying propriety, and producing innumerable swarmes of Hypocrites; in so much that if the Devil were to reign perso­nally on the Earth, he would not fill the World with more prodigious im­pieties. For 'tis likely that he would not take away more mens lives then they, but rather be willing that seve­rall generations of men should still suc­ceed one another; and that he would account the most provoking indigni­ties that could be offer'd God in the World, were only to be shewn by those men who would advance their temporall designes by Religion; it be­ing a greater affront to a King to be put to servile and ignominious uses in his Kingdom, then to be banish'd from it.

Till any factious assertors of the fifth Monarchy can shew Gods war­rant for their having Donations from him of our Estates, as the Israelites could for their seising on those of the [Page 12] Egyptians, we have reason to look on them as the Nations exterminated by Ioshuah out of their Countries did on him, who, as Procopius saith in the se­cond book of his Vandalics, caus'd Pillars to be erected with words on them in the Phanician Language, which he thus renders, [...]. i.e. We fly from the face of Ioshuah the thief, the Son of Nun. But with­out doubt these mens design is not to claim our goods by such a right as Gods people, the Israelites, (who yet were weary of the Theocracy they liv'd under) did the Egyptians first of all, but as the Mammelucs did since, whose Government is the true exam­ple of theirs who would rule us by a Nation within a Nation.

And indeed those men may be a­sham'd to ask Liberty of Conscience, who in their principles proclaim they will never give it; from whom all the favour such as are not of their opini­ons can hope is to be kept so well in [Page 13] heart, as to be able to hew their wood and draw their water for them. More­over, their abusing those words of the Saints inheriting the Earth, or, which is all one, founding dominion in grace, would leave us still in a state of war. For every man pretending to have grace, nothing can decide the controversie but the Sword where there is no infallible judge. Among the Papists there is a pretended one, and so the opinion of giving the bal­lance of Land to the party preponde­rating in grace, where there is a stea­dy hand to hold the scales, is not a­mong them so mischievous as here it would be.

Seventhly, that neither the old Discipline, nor the Ceremonies of the Church of England, nor an ac­knowledgment of the lawfulness or expediency therof be obtruded on any of the fore-mention'd parties; nor that any censures from Ecclesiasticall Courts, by Fines or Excommunicati­on may be extended against them for [Page 14] Non-conformity. For though Ex­communication from a Church which a man doth not own as true, or having Authority over him; doth terrifie him no more then predictions of Thun­der from Almanacks, yet it makes that tremendous punishment of the the Gospel, that judgement precurso­ry of the last, cease to be formidable. But truly according to the Custom of our Church, and much more accor­ding to the Church of Scoland, an Ex­communicate person is some way ob­noxious to outward punishments. And as our barbarous custom is for the Lord of a mannor to seize upon all the goods of any shipwrack'd persons that were thrown up by the Sea on his ground, so in Scotland often the goods of those men who fall as wrecks on the shore of the Church, accrue to it. And thus accidentally trouble is created to the Magistrate about tempering the ri­gour of the Church by his power: As one not many yeares since Ex­communicated in Scotland, procur'd his [Page 15] Excommunication to be taken off by a Counsell of War; and so it was re­vers'd errante gladio, as laid on possibly errante clave.

Having thus presented the proposalls to be considered, and therein occasionally given some Reasons for Liberty of Consci­ence, as it concerns some of the re­spective parties among us; it remains now that more generall Reasons be produced, and such as are comprehen­sive of the concernments of all or most of the parties differing in lesser mat­ters of Religion: To prove how much a due liberty granted to them will conduce to the peace and safety of the Nation, and what publick inconveni­ences will follow from the contrary.

The first Reason shall be taken from the necessary connexion between Ci­vil liberty, and that which is Spiritual; and therefore they that would devest any of their spirituall liberties, do a­larm them with just causes of fear a­bout their losing civil liberties by the same hands.

[Page 16]For, first, it must necessarily be pre­sumed that such persons intend to be judges how far mens civil and spiri­tuall liberties reach, and what are the frontires of both. Nothing we see is more common among the Romish Priests, then to pick the pockets of the people, in ordine ad spiritualla. And 'tis most certain that he who doth impose any thing upon the people un­der the species of Religion, would not leave them a power to judge whether it be in order to it or no. For if they are the Judges of it, they will say that any thing in Religion which displea­seth them opposeth their civil liberty, and so nothing at all will therein be enjoyned.

Secondly, those that take away from others their spirituall liberties, shew that they can take away part of their civill at least, or else the whole of them, accordingly as they valued their spirituall liberty. If it be said that mens civil liberties are thought more important then their spirituall, [Page 17] yet it may be replyed, that in the thoughts of very many men their spi­rituall liberties are as considerable as part of their civill: So that the totall destroyers of spirituall liberty shew that part of the civill is at their mer­cy. And if they are able to take away one part of mens civill liberties, they are by that means in a better capacity to take away another; just as he that is able to take away one limb from a mans body, is the more able to take away another, because by the losse of that a man hath the less strength to defend himself against a further as­sault.

But although in some parts of the World men have not the same high esteem for spirituall liberty as for civil, just as the par or proportion of Silver to Gold in severall Countries doth differ, it may be affirm'd that in this Nation generally they have. 'Tis true that broken-fortun'd men do not va­lue civil liberty, nor men of debauch'd Consciences spirituall; but neither of [Page 18] these qualifications hath produced a generall undervaluing of either sort of liberty among us. As to what may be objected concerning some Popish Countries, as Venice, &c. where they have not a proportion of esteem for spirituall liberty equall to their civil; I answer, that their Religion obligeth them to perform a servile obedience to the Bishop of Rome in things sacred, and they looking on him as infallible, have no reason to prize a liberty of not obeying him: Yet even in those places obedience to the Roman Ca­tholick Religion is not maintain'd by the severe Discipline of an Inquisition. The policy of the French Nation is in this respect exactly good, the liberty of the Gallican Church being so cau­tiously asserted in order to the liberty of the Gallican Kingdom, where their Courts of Parliament in case of Ap­peals do declare void and null the Popes Bulls and Excommunications; and forbid the execution of them when they are found contrary to the [Page 19] liberty of the French Church, and the Kings Prerogative. Nor without cause were the severall European Prin­ces jealous of the Popes designs to in­vade their civil liberties, when, as Mr. Selden observes in his Dissertatio ad Fletam, Innocent the second being ve­ry earnest with them to admit the Ca­non Law into their Territories, they received the Civil Law, to keep out the Canon.

In which Law the Bishops of Rome have severall Titles, De emptione & venditione, De locato & conducto, and severall other Titles that concern Temporall affaires between man and man.

Thirdly, they engage themselves to be in readiness by Temporall power to maintain their conquests over mens spiritual liberties: For he that takes away a feather out of a mans hat, is obliged in interest to take away his sword from his side. If it be said that a man may think himself bound in Conscience to oppresse people in spi­ritual [Page 20] things, but not in civil; I an­swer, most certainly then his Consci­ence will lead him to put them out of a condition to assert their spiritual li­berties so opprest. It is with restrain­ing the freedom of Conscience as the denying a mare liberum to neigbour­ing nations, which any Prince that doth must not trust to prescription of long time, or imaginary lines in the hea­vens whereby the compasse of his do­minion of the Sea may be determi­ned, but to powerfull Fleets.

Fourthly, they give men just cause to think that they will be willing to invade their civil liberties, whenever their Consciences or their interests shall prompt them to it.

From what hath been said in this first Reason about the connexion of civil and spiritual liberty, and mens concernednesse in the valuation of both, I shall occasionally affirm, that the next best way to Liberty of Con­science for the preservation of the pub­lick peace of a Country, where spiritu­all [Page 21] liberty is regarded in any high measure by the people, is an In­quisition. But he hath much to learn in Politicks, who thinks that an Inqui­sition is practicable among us as 'tis in Spain, where one Religion hath had quiet possession in the Countrey so many yeares.

The second Reason to prove that the Peace and Safety of the Nation will be very considerably advanced by the allowance of freedom to mens Consciences, shall be this;

As long as there is such a due Liber­ty of Conscience granted, 'tis hardly possible for any civil Wars to happen on the account of Religion, which for want of this freedom may. If there are but two parties in a Nation that differ from one another in Religion, 'tis not unlikely but that a civil War may arise on the account of Religion, though the one doth tolerate the o­ther; because either of them that thinks its share in the chief Magi­strates savour least, may for that rea­son [Page 22] attempt a forcible suppression of the other: But any such War can hardly be where the parties differing in Religion are many; For they are not likely to know the exact strength of one another, and their severall ani­mosities will keep them from joyning together against any one that doth not invade their liberty in generall. No­thing but extreme necessity can bring them to meet amicably and consult together. For the nearer they seem to one another in opinion, the sharper their mutuall hatreds are; just as peo­ple of severall Countreys that live in the frontires of each, do hate one another with a greater vehemence then those more remotely situated do.

Besides, 'tis probable that if any one of the parties tolerated should go a­bout to make it self uppermost, (which design only could make it fly out into a civil War) the rest would immedi­ately Joyne to suppresse it. For they are not sure they shall have that from the conquering party, after all the hor­rors [Page 23] of War, which they already pos­sesse, to wit, a fair liberty. Which if it be competently allow'd to the seve­rall parties, seditious persons at home, and the Ministers of State to our ene­mies abroad, will be deprived of their old benefit from our Divisions in Re­ligion, which they accidentally made use of as a handle to draw us into civil War; just as by the Spanish Counsells formerly the Kings of France have been excited to persecute the Hugue­nots sometimes, and the Huguenots been fed with money and advice to re­sist their persecutors; and as in like manner Richelieu is thought to have encouraged the last Arch-bishop of Canterbury to increase his severity to­ward the Puritans, and to have anima­ted the Scotch and English Puritans to do as they did.

I grant that in respect of forreign in­vasion it is somewhat dangerous for a Prince to tolerate any Religion in His Countrey that his neighbours are of, and those potent, and likely to invade [Page 24] him. For then such an invader would expect assistance from those of his opi­nion in Religion, who would promise to themselves the advantage of having their opinions the Paramount State­Religion upon the invaders success.

And for this reason we are obliged to be wary in the toleration we allow Papists. We have no reason to be afraid of the toleration of Calvinists, because the united Provinces in the Low Countries are of that perswasion, for they are not a Common-wealth of increase by Armes but Trade. Nor would they take our Countrey if we should offer it them, for they would not know what to do with it, as their affaires at present are, and likely to be.

In this second reason I consider, that as there is hardly a possibility of a ci­vill War arising on the account of Religion, if there be a fair Liberty of Conscience established; so there is danger in this particular from the se­verall parties if there be no such liber­ty. [Page 25] I grant that 'tis the principle and practice of some of these parties, and especially those call'd Presbyterian (by far the most considerable of them) to suffer for Religion, rather then to re­sist meerly for it; and therefore we have no reason to charge them with taking up of Armes purely for Religi­on. But yet I think, had it not been for Religions sake, and for the greater free­dom of their Consciences, they would not formerly have pretended that ne­cessity or lawfulnesse to take up Arms on a civil account as they did. For though their right in civil things was, as they pretended, the Constituent cause of the War, yet Religion was the impulsive, or that which inclined them to make use of the other; of which though they thought lawfully they could, yet but for this impulsive cause they would not have made use. And truly any man that considers the addictednesse of the English Nation to Religion in generall, will not wonder at mens being stimulated thereby to [Page 26] do what in civill things they think they lawfully may. Of this propen­sion of the English not onely to Reli­gion, but vehemence in it,Barclay in the 4th. book of his Euphormio. Barclay doth well take notice, who saith of them, Nec quicquam in numinis cultu modicum possunt; and afterward speaking how ridiculously narrow in their principles our severall Sects were, saith, they thought unos se coelestium rerum parti­cipes, exortes caeteros omnes esse. i. e. Nor can they in the worship of God do any thing without excesse, they think themselves the only sharers of Hea­venly things, and all other persons to be no way concern'd in partaking of them. Nor is the strong and passionate inclination of this Kingdom to Religi­on, a humour bred lately among us since the introduction of Protestancy; for the greatest part of the Decretal Epistles in the books of the Canon­Law were sent to the English as re­scripts occasioned by their addresses to the Pope, for his determination in se­veral [Page 27] matters of Religion. Besides, it may be attributed much to the effica­cy of Religion in general among us, that no Epidemical vice is charged upon our Nation, as upon others.

But that which is most important in the confirmation of the tendency that the liberty propounded hath to pro­mote the safety and peace of the Na­tion, is the consideration of the pre­valent interest these severall parties have therein, and consequently abili­ty to do harm or good; which I shall make use of as a THIRD REASON of the above-mentioned assertion.

Now here I shall begin with the sort of Divines call'd Presbyterian, (though more truly meriting to be styled those that are for moderate E­piscopacy) and shall consider their in­terest and strength.

And first, the whole Kingdom of Scotland is united in a solemn League with them: Nor is the federall union likely to be dissolved between that Nation and them, because they have [Page 28] submitted to the form of Primitive Episcopacy described by the Bishop of Armagh, their Covenant binding them only against that high Prelacy former­ly in use among us.

Secondly, the way of their preach­ing being very practicall, and accom­panied with zeal and vehemence, doth leave generally deep impressions on the minds of men, and consequently creates among the people a reverenti­all esteem for their persons. And in­deed so many Preachers as there are of the moderate Episcopall or Presbyteri­an way, there are so many Orators, whereby they influence the people more then if they were so many Po­stillers. Every one of them almost doth, as Tully saith, aculeos relinquere in animis audientium. Their way of Preaching is not whining, like that of the Sectaries; and though far from be­ing in most of them conformable to the Rules of Rhetorick, yet I count it suitable to Oratory, because it doth perswade. 'Tis beyond dispute, that [Page 29] this way of Puritanicall preaching hath insinuated it self much into the affecti­ons of many, by that civility and emen­dation of manners it hath proselyted them into, and so hath obtain'd re­spect both from them and their relati­ons. Nor can it but be supposed that the common sort of men, I mean such as live by Trade, whose being either rich or beggers depends much on the honesty of their servants, should like that sort of Preachers best, who are most passionate and loud against Vice, and the appearances of it. And the impressions of this practicall way of Preaching are the more permanent in their hearers, because these Preachers do propagate the belief of the morali­ty of the Sabbath, and do oblige their hearers to discourse on that day chiefly of Religious things, and to pass their time in Prayer, and Repetition of the Sermons then preach'd.

Thirdly, they are highly esteem'd by a great part of the people for the strictnesse and austority of their lives. [Page 30] And by nothing more then unstain'd lives can Ministers attract reverence for their persons and Doctrines.

How much mens affections cool to­ward a Religion many of the Teachers whereof are debauch'd, appeares by that common observation of Travel­lers, that the people who live at a great distance from Rome are more superstitious then those who live in Rome, where they see so much pro­phanenesse among the Grandees of the Church.

Fourthly, being for the most part of them not much immerst in the Studies of School-Divinity, and indeed more Polite Literature, as Philology, &c. they are enabled to preach oftner, and have more Sermons of Practicall Divinity to Print, then the Reverend Divines of the old Hierarchy; and by this means to adde to their repute and credit with the people.

Fifthly, they converse more gene­rally with one another, and with the common people, then the Reverend [Page 31] Divines that are for the former Prelacy do. And indeed men that are resolved Students, and habitually Bookish, have regrets against conversation, especially that of those men they can gain no knowledg by. Nor indeed is the com­pany of illiterate Lay-men ordinarily acceptable to any Scholars, but such as pursue knowledg in mechanicks. Now so great and generall is the con­versation of the Divines call'd Presby­terian with one another, that not one of them can come to live in any Coun­trey, but in a few weeks is known to all the Ministers of that party there, whom he meets at Lectures, or pub­lick Fasts. On the other side, it is usu­all for the Divines of the former Pre­latical perswasion, to admit only those to a freedom of converse with them that are in Ecclesiastical or Civil Dig­nity equal to them. Moreover, the Di­vines call'd Presbyterian do more then the others converse with their hea­rers, and by this means have the inte­rest of Confessors among Lay-people, [Page 32] from whom they hear related the most secret passages of their Lives and Consciences, and of the spiritual Ma­ladies and Desertions they languish un­der.

And here it may be observ'd how the non-conforming Divines were heretofore necessarily more then the other obliged to be much in the com­pany of their Lay-hearers; for by be­ing so, most of them got those Church-preferments they had: Their opinions causing them to be put by from Fellowships of Colledges in the Universities, they betook themselves for shelter to the Lay-Puritans in se­veral parts of the Nation, and so com­pass'd the being Lecturers in Corpora­tions and Market-Townes. And here­by they became of more active tem­pers, saw more of the World, were more harden'd, either for the resisting what troubles they could, and bearing what they could not resist, then o­thers that in quest of knowledg and the highest dignities of the Church, had [Page 33] been long in Universities accustom'd to private and sedentary lives.

Sixthly, by their dis-esteem of Ce­remonies and external pomp in the Worship of God, they are the more endear'd to Corporations, and the greater part of persons engaged in Trade and Traffick, who hate Cere­monies in generall, that is, forms and set behaviours that are not necessary, as being not at leisure for them, and as they are expenceful, and as contrary to their Genius and Education. And indeed men that live amidst the con­tinual dispatches of business in a way of Trade, do naturally grow into a hatred of what doth unnecessarily take up time. We see therefore in Holland, that Funerals (the last solemn Offices the dead can have paid them, and of which the observation in less Trading Coun­tries doth with its Ceremonies de­voure so much time) are there to be celebrated before two i'th' afternoon; and for every houre that a Herse is kept in a house after that time, some­what [Page 34] what is paid to the State. Nor can it otherwise be, but that the same persons who nauseate Ceremonies in Civil things, will loath them likewise in Re­ligious: Just as a man that hath an an­tipathy against Muskadine in his Par­lour, cannot love it at the Sacrament.

The Fathers, upon whose writings those that would now recommend Ceremonies to the Church do build their assertions of them, were such as did live in the Southern parts of the World, where Ceremonies are more lov'd in Civil and Religious things, then by us Northern people they are. And besides, the people there being of sharper wits then among us they are, the Artifices of Ceremonies are re­quisite to raise mists before their un­derstanding faculties, and to detain them from as much knowledg as they can by admiration, lest they should become the less obedient by being the more knowing. The eminency of the Southern wits above the Nor­thern appeares to us from the con­stant [Page 35] and just complaints of Northern Nations, that the Southern have still over-reach'd them in Treaties, after they had defeated their Armies in the field. And what I here observe con­cerning these Nations, is attested by Bodin in his fifth Book De Republicâ: Where he shews what his observation of the Genius and subtle understand­ings of Southern people was, and how it was fit they should be awed into the doing of things by a solemn and pom­pous managery of Religion.

'Tis further observable concerning Northern Nations, that they are more addicted to Trade then Southern; which they are necessitated to be, be­cause the things that of their own ac­cord, that is, without industry, grow out of the Earth, are fewer among them then Southern; and because they are more populous: and while they are more then the other Nations addicted to Trade, they must needs be less addicted to Ceremonies. The Hollanders may serve as an instance to [Page 36] evince the truth of this, who having scarce any native commodities, & being a populous Countrey, for their quan­tity of ground, and being forced to ad­vance Trade, can hardly abstain from Markets on the Lords Day, and do account it a piece of Devotion to cover their Wares in Sermon time. Much less could they, or indeed any Trading Countrey, admit so many Holy-days as our Church of England did abound with. The Lutheran Religion being profest chiefly in Countries that sub­sist by Trade, though it owns an E­piscopall form of Church-Govern­ment, hath annex'd to it but few Ce­remonies; and I think except bowing at the name of Iesus, and standing up at the Creed, none considerable. Nor are there in any Church of Calvin's perswasion Responsalls to be used by the people in their Liturgies, as in ours: Nor in the Lutheran Churches, do a­ny but the Chatechis'd boys mind them much. And in Holland the Luthe­ran Church doth admit men to the [Page 37] Sacrament without private Confession and Absolution, which in less Trading places it strictly requires. While I am now inquiring into the disposition of Trading Countries, I shall by the way observe, that the interest which the Protestant Religion hath in them, is its greatest visible security and de­fence. For though Princes of the Po­pish Religion do command a greater quantity of ground then Protestant Princes, yet they have not an interest in Maritime Townes and Trading pla­ces equall to them. And and as the present State of Christendom is, he that commands the Sea commands the shore, and the Dominion of the Sea through Gods mercy is in Protestant hands. But to return from whence I digrest. If we reflect on those that did most love Ceremonies heretofore in our Nation, we shall find them to have been persons of the greatest Rank and Quality among us, who did affect Ce­remonies in Civil things; or of the poorest sort, who did get their daily [Page 38] bread by the Charity of the other. The midling sort of men, and especi­ally the substantial Trades-men of Corporations, did generally disgust them. So natural is it for men to paint God in colours suitable to their own fancies, that I do not wonder at Tra­ding persons who hate Ceremonies, that they thus think God in respect of this hatred altogether such as them­selves. And therefore Almighty God designing his Worship from the Jew­ish Church to be full of Ceremonies, and such as were Typical of his Son, did divert that Nation from the utmost promoting of Trade. To this end they were not planted, except a few of them by the Sea-side, but in In-land places, and thereby were the better enabled to advance shepherdry, and the multiplying of various kinds of Cattel in order to their Sacrifices. They were forbid to take use money of one another, not that there was any reall evil or Injustice in Usury, but that it would have drawn them on to the ad­vancement [Page 39] of Trade, and consequent­ly have interrupted the course of their solemn Rites and Ceremonies: Reli­gion would then have suffer'd by Trade, whereas the contrary thing hath since happen'd from it. For beside those Vices that are concomitant of Idleness, which Trade repels, the in­crease of Navigation must necessarily propagate the knowledg of Christian Religion, as well as humane Arts and Sciences. Thus, Multi pertransibunt, & augebitur Scientia.

If in opposition to what hath been said about Trading persons, being generally disaffected to Ceremonies in Religion; any shall urge, that in the Popish Re­publicks Trade and Ceremonies are both us'd: It may be answer d, that the many Ceremonies there are rather en­dured then loved, and that if mens understandings were not there mis-gui­ded by a belief of their being necessary to salvation, the practice of them would quickly be abated; just as we see the motion of a lock to be alter'd when [Page 40] the hand is removed that held back the spring. Let but the Protestant Religion get ground there, and so con­sequently the Tributes of their time be no more demanded for their present Ceremonies, and we shall soon find how unwilling they will be to pay them.

I shall now briefly speak of the o­ther parties, as the Independents, &c. and take notice of their considerable­ness, and hopes of bidding fair for an interest in the hearts of any of the peo­ple.

And here I shall observe, that if these Sects had got no ground in the Nation, that yet they want not their likelyhoods of doing it; and that first by reason of the ready inclination of many among us to mutability, in no­thing more then their opinions about controverted things in Religion. For opinions held by the English are held by Islanders; And therefore Bodin in his Methodus ad facilem historiarum cog­nitionem, and fifth chapter of it, doth [Page 41] very judiciously shew how people are to be moderated by different Laws, according to their Climates and Si­tuations, which he confirmes by men­tioning the severall Vices and Vertues of Countries remotely distant from one another; saying, how that Vento­sa loca ferociores homines & mobiliores reddunt, quieta verò humaniores & con­stantiores. i. e. Countries disturb'd with frequent winds make men more fierce and mutable; but Countries that are free from such, do make men more civil and constant.

And secondly, because the Prote­stant Religion doth indemnifie us in the Court of Conscience, for believing in matters of Religion according to the Dictates of our private Judgements, or rather oblige us to it. Doubtless, if it be not lawful for every man to be guided by his private judgement in things of Religion, t'will be hardly possible to acquit our separation from the Romish Church from the guilt of schism. The Genius of the Protestant [Page 42] Religion doth make it as naturall to us to weigh and consider any notions, though recommended to us by our Ministers, as 'tis to tell money after our spiritual Fathers, which we shall be as ready to do as after our naturall. Nor can the decisions of Synods and Gene­rall Councils terminate our inquiries in Religion, or keep single Divines from recommending notions de fide. And therefore as any Judge is con­cern'd to be wary how he gives sen­tence in a cause, or inforceth the Exe­cution of it, when there lie appeales from his to severall other Judicatories; so doth it likewise import Synods or Conventions of Divines to be cauti­ous in their deciding matters of Faith, since every such cause is to be car­ryed from their Bar to the examinati­on of more then ten thousand Chan­cellours, as many being Judges of the cause as there are rational men. It hath been long since observ'd by many, that Christian Religion hath modera­ted the extremity of servitude as to [Page 43] civil things in the places where it hath been receiv'd. And certainly it is much more consonant to that Religi­on, and especially that form of it which hath asserted its spirituall freedom from the impositions of others, to allow spiritual liberty to others. Nor doth it seem worthy of Christ, who hath left us a Religion full of Mysteries, and not any visible Judge of them, to have design'd about those any visible Execu­tioners. If any man thinks otherwise let him say so. I might further shew how these Sects caresse the vulgar, in giving the power of the keys to the people in their gather'd Churches; and how likely 'tis that many busie men, and of good natural parts, who have not Learning enough to procure any good Church-preferment from the old or modern Episcopall men, and it may be any such Learned men as have been repuls'd by them as to preferment, will be gathering Chur­ches.

But this present inquiry concerning [Page 44] the interest the severall Sects among us have in the hearts of many, needs no further prosecution. We find too many places swarming with them: And such is the peculiar temper and complexion of most people of these perswasions, and the melancholy of them more fix'd and sharp then that of any other party, that this concurring with Religion (of which I doubt not but very many of them have a true sense) will incline them to persist in their present practises. Of the heighth and setledness of these mens discon­tents we had experience, in their vo­luntary removal out of the Nation, carrying their Estates with them, some to Holland, and others to New Eng­land; when the other more sagacious party of non-Conformists, since call'd Presbyterians, chose to weather out the storm at home, and to get for them­selves as good terms as they could.

THE FOURTH REASON that I shall urge to prove how much the peace and security of the Nation will [Page 45] be advanc'd by the liberty propound­ed, may be taken from the inclinati­ons of Orders and Degrees of other men among us, and such as are not much engaged in these parties; who account it their interest to be free from any religious impositions of the Cler­gy, and to have the power of Bishops so moderated, as that they may not be able to make any suffer for not being of their opinions in lesser matters of Religion. And here I shall observe, first, how the Judges of the Land and the Lawyers generally have been rea­dy to curb the excess of power in any Bishops. The Bishops judging of Ec­clesiastical causes according to the Ca­non Law, (a Law of which Albericus Gentilis, that renown'd Civilian, saith in the 19th. chap. of his second Book De Nuptiis, Sed hoc jus brutumque & barba­rum sane est, natum in tenebris seculorum spississimis, productum a monacho tene­brione, &c.) was an occasion of our Lawyers contrasts with them. And what may well create suspicions, that [Page 46] the Bishops keeping of Courts as they did was not according to Law, may be had from those words of the Arch-Bi­shop of Canterbury, in his Epistle De­dicatory to the King before his Speech in the Star-chamber.

I do humbly in the Churches name de­sire of Your Majesty, that it may be re­solv'd by all the Reverend Iudges of England, and then Publish d by Your Majesty, that our keeping Courts and Is­suing Processe in our own Names, and the like Exceptions formerly taken, and now renew'd, are not against the Law of the Realm, &c.

And how ready the Lawyers have been to check the severity of Ecclesia­stical Courts, their innumerable pro­hibitions shew. In the dayes of Pope­ry the Prelates could awe the Judges with Excommunication, for such crimes as the Church call'd so. But how little of terrour the application of that censure hath had since, appears from the frequent denouncing of it a­gainst the same man. And therefore [Page 47] that Learned Lawyer Judge Ienkins, in the second part of his Works, saith, that for opposing the excesses of one of the Bishops, he lay under three Ex­communications.

Secondly, the substantial body of the Gentry heretofore was, and is still likely to be for the moderating the exercise of Episcopal power, and for the opposing its extravagance.

The oath ex officio, and commu­ting for penance, and other such kind of things, cannot but be thought trou­blesome to them. But that which I shall here chiefly take notice of, is, how a considerable part of the Gentry of England is grown more inquisitive in matters of Religion within these late yeares then formerly.

Where this inquiring temper is not, no opinion so horrid but may be universally believ'd. Thus the Turks may be induced to think that there is a Devil in the juyce of Grapes, and the Papists that there may be a God therein. But when men are neither by [Page 48] Religion or temper restrain'd from searching into the causes of things, they will not in civility to other mens understandings believe propositions to be true or false. And that which makes me (beside my own observation) to conclude that many of the Gentry of late are grown more inquisitive in Re­ligious things then formerly, and are likely so to continue, is, because they are more then heretofore inquisitive in civil things.

As when the polish'd knowledg of Philologie had obtain'd a conquest o­ver the insignificant Learning of the School-men, no man was thought worthy the name of a Scholar but he who understood the Greek Tongue; so since the late introduction of reall Learning into the World by Galilaus, Tycho Brahe, my Lord Bacon, Gassendus, & Des Cartes, neither the knowledg of elegant words, or nice Speculations, wil yield any man the Reputation of being Learn'd that is altogether rude in Mathematicks; which as they were [Page 49] formerly counted the Black Art, and their Professors, such as Roger Bacon, Conjurers, so may possibly School-Di­vinity and School-Divines hereafter be.

Having thus asserted the present searching disposition of a great part of our ingenious Gentry, it may well be hence inferr'd that liberty of conscience may be of high use to them, and that if any Ecclesiasticall persons determine any thing contrary to their reasons, they will not believe them, or, if a­gainst their safety, not obey them. I think therefore by the way, it was ve­ry politickly done of the Consistory of Cardinalls to imprison Galilaeus for af­firming the motion of the Earth, since that notion of his might fill the world with several new debates and inquiries, and so Ignorance the mother of Devo­tion be destroy'd.

To prevent which, effectuall care is taken by the Iesuites, as appeares by the instructions given them in the Di­rectory of their order, call'd Directorium [Page 50] exercit. spirit. Ignatii Loyolae, part 2. p. 172. Where there are, Regulae aliquae tenendae ut cum Orthodoxâ Ecclesiâ sen­tiamus. And the first Rule is, Vt sub­lato proprio omni judicio, teneamus sem­per promptum paratumque animum ad obediendum Catholicae & Hierarchicae Ec­clesiae. It followes p. 176. Reg. 13. Ut Ecclesiae conformes simus, si quid quod oculis nostris appareat album nigrum illa definiverit, debemus itidem quod nigrum sit pronuntiare. This is in the Edition of that Book at Tholou, Anno 1593. and confirm'd by the Bull of Pope Paul the third.

In short, he that hath had but any conversation with that ingenious part of the Gentry who have concern'd themselves in the consideration of Church-Government, cannot but take notice of these two assertions be­ing in vogue among them; which whe­ther true or no 'tis not here pertinent to determine.

The first, that 'tis possible for Mo­narchy to subsist here without that [Page 51] high power our Bishops formerly had, and so that Maxim, No Bishop no King, hath been disbelieved. This Maxim seems to them true concerning Turky, No Mufti no Grand Signior, because the Mufti can with the Screen of Religion as he pleases hide the ugliness of those actions the Grandeur of the Turkish Empire is supported by. But our Kings govern according to Law, and so the Engin of Superstition is not here of use for the amusing people into slavery. I confess, any party of men that wil not own the Kings Supremacy in Ecclesia­stical causes as well as Civil, is not fit to be allow'd as the State-Religion.

But that Supremacy of the Kings in Ecclesiastical matters and in Civil, is acknowledged by the Divines that are for the Lord Primates form of Episco­pacy, as much as by any other.

A second assertion very much re­ceiv'd among them is, that no particu­lar form of Church-Government is of Divine right. Of this opinion my Lord Bacon shews himself to be ex­presly [Page 52] in his Considerations touching the Edification and Pacification of the Church of England: and so my Lord Falkland, in one of his printed Spee­ches, where speaking of Bishops, he saith, I do not believe them to be jure divino, nay I believe them to be not jure divino, but neither do I believe them to be injuria humana. So that it is no wonder that among our ordinary enquirers after knowledg this notion is believed, which was so by those two incomparably Learned persons. And it may seem much more to gratifie the power of Princes, then the Maxim, No Bishop no King can do. The Author of the History of the Council of Trent, makes mention how Laymez, Generall of the Jesuits, spent a whole Congregation in proving that Bishops are jure pontificio, and not jure divino; and said, that the power of Iurisdiction was given wholly to the Bishop of Rome, and that none in the Church hath any spark of it but from him. 'Tis there said how the Legats were of opinion that the question of the [Page 53] Divine Right of Bishops was set on foot to gratifie the Authority of Bishops, and that the importance of that might be to inferre that the Keys were not given to Peter onely, that the Council was above the Pope, and the Bishops equall to him; they saw that the Dignity of Cardinals Superiour to Bishops was quite taken a­way, and the Court brought to nothing; that the Preventions and Reservations were remov'd, and the Collation of Bene­fices drawn to the Bishops.

Thus we see how apt men are to make use of Divine Right, as fire, and to count it a good servant, but a bad Master. Nor are some without their feares, that if Bishops were here pub­lickly own'd as by Divine Right, that the King would quickly lose his Power of nominating them, and subjects the benefit of Appeals from their Courts to the King in Chancery. I acknow­ledg that a moderate Episcopacy is ge­nerally reputed of Church-Govern­ments the best: But the believers of the Divine Right of it are of late years [Page 54] grown very few. For the skirmishes in the Presse and Pulpit concerning it, between the Divines of severall par­ties, have occasion'd two popular rea­sons to be brought against it; which how valid they are, is not my task to determine.

The first is this, That is not likely to be of Divine positive Right (which is the Right here meant) about which Christians equally considerable for strength of parts, both naturall and acquired, and for time spent in that part of Controversiall Divinity that concerns Church-Discipline, and withall for holinesse in their lives, do at last disagree.

The second Reason drawn from the eager Disputes of Church-men about their severall Divine Rights is this; Nothing really oppressive of Civil Societies, or destructive of their welfare, is of Divine Right: but so these forms of Church-Government have been by the opposite Divines of each Perswasion accused to be, and likewise by other persons.

[Page 55]It hath been further observ'd by many, that though severall things were once confirm'd in the Church by an Apostolicall Precept or Pra­ctise, they are like Lawes abolish'd by desuetude, and do not now oblige the Christian world, according to the Vogue of all our Church-men: as namely the Diaconissae, the Anoint­ing the sick with Oyle, the Peoples saying Amen after the Ministers Prayers, and Preaching with the head uncover'd, &c.

To conclude the Examination then of this particular; a considerable number of the Laity, whose Fortunes and Parts do keep them from stand­ing up and drawing their swords to maintain other mens Creeds in eve­ry circumstance of them, having by the contests of the Clergy found out (as they think) the Vanity of all their pretendings to Divine Right, will not encourage immoderate and high behaviours in any one party of them; but upon this their imagin'd detecti­on [Page 56] adhere to that form of Church-Government that shall seem to them most consistent with the Nations good; just as the Roman Emperours were sometimes chosen in the Camp, Evulgato (as Tacitus saith) Imperi­arcano, Principem alibi quam Romae fieri posse.

Thirdly, it is naturall to Parlia­ments to check any Power that in­vades a due Liberty of Conscience, themselves wanting it as well as those whom they represent.

Nor can any body of men be well without it, as we see in the late Assembly of Divines, that party which joyn'd against the Indepen­dents did want Liberty of Consci­ence about no mean points in Reli­gion; some of those Presbyterian Divines (as they were call'd) being of Calvins, and others of Bishop Da­venants opinions, concerning Election and Reprobation.

And moreover, the Parliament that call'd that Synod was in mat­ters [Page 57] of Religion much more divi­ded.

But I shall chuse to look further back on the nature of our Parliaments in reference to Religion. It cannot be expected that while Popery was pre­valent in England, much Liberty of Conscience should be granted; the Pope being then reputed the Vicar of Christ in Spirituall things, was necessarily to be obey'd therein.

And yet notwithstanding the Au­thority he had here, no man suf­fer'd death for opposing his Dictates in Religion, till the second of Henry the fourth. Nor are there want­ing Lawyers, and those both Lear­ned in their Profession, and in this case uninteressed, who deny that this Statute was ever more then a pretended one, and say that it was never assented to by the Commons; and that whereas in the Act it self it is said, Praelati & clerus supra­dicti, ac etiam communitates dicti reg­ni [Page 58] supplicarunt, that those words, Communitates dicti regni, are not in the Parliament-Roll, in which when the Law comes to be Enacted it runs in this form of words, Qui quidem Dominus Rex ex assensu magnatum, & aliorum procerum ejusdem Regni, concessit & statuit, &c. where the Commons are not at all named. See Mr. Bagshaw of the Temple his Reading on the Statute of 25. Ed­ward the III. call'd, Statutum pro clero, p. 32.

But that de facto this Statute went currant for Law, the cruell ef­fects of it did too clearly shew. Yet as high as the Popish Clergy then was, with whom that usurping King complyed, the Commons petition'd the King to take away their Tem­poral Possessions, and that the Statute made against Lollards in the second year of the King might be repeal'd. And by the complaint of the Commons, as appeares by the Statute of 25. Henry the VIII, it was then in part re­peal'd.

[Page 59]Afterward in a Parliament held Vicesimo octavo of the Queen the Commons quarrell'd with the Ex­cessive Power of the Clergy, de­siring to have it restrain'd both in the conferring of Orders, and in their Censures and Oath Ex of­ficio.

'Tis true, the Foundation of the high Commission is built upon the Statute of the first of Queen Eliza­beth; but the design of that was chiefly to destroy the interest of the Popish Clergy then not exter­minated. In the Reigns of follow­ing Princes, a party known by the Name of Puritan had obtain'd a large Vogue in Parliament, insomuch that that party, and another call'd the Pa­triots (a sort of men who were Zea­lots for the welfare of the Nation, though not for any Religion) being frequently in conjunction, were the over-ballancing party in the House of Commons. And in the last Par­liament on the fifteenth of Decem­ber, [Page 60] 1640. It was resolv'd, nemine contradicen [...]e, That the Clergy of England Convented in any Con­vocation or Synod, or otherwise, have no power to make any Constitu­tions, Canons or Acts whatsoever, in matter of Doctrine, or otherwise, to bind the Clergy or Layety of this Land, without the Commons consent in Parliament; and that the severall Constitutions and Ca­nons Ecclesiasticall, treated upon by the Arch-Bishops of Canterbury and York, and the rest of the Bi­shops and Clergie of those Provin­ces, and agreed upon by the Kings Majesties Licence, in their severall Synods began at London and York, 1640. do not bind the Clergy or Laiety of this Land, or either of them. Which Vote of that House may seem to be grounded on this consideration, that a Legislative pow­er is inseparable from the King and Parliament; and that if a Parliament would transmit their interest in [Page 61] the Legislative Power to any other order of men, they cannot do it, more then a Judge can delegate his Autho­rity to his Clerks, or any be a Depu­ties Deputy.

I shall onely here further observe, that the Lawyers (whose Obligations on the account of interest to mode­rate the power of Bishops I have be­fore spoke of) are still likely to be a great part of the House of Commons, and to have the conduct of Parliamen­tary Affaires much in their hands, and to concur with any party against the Bishops, if they should invade the due Liberty of mens Consciences, or en­deavour to make themselves formi­dable in the Nation.

The LAST REASON I shall urge to prove what advantages will redound to the Nation from the allowance of a due Liberty of Conscience, is, that it will necessarily produce an advance­ment of our Trade and Traffick, the hinderance whereof must needs fol­low from the contrary practice. The [Page 62] largenesse of Trade in any Countrey is most certainly founded in the po­pulousnesse of it.

'Tis onely in populous Countries that the wages of work-men are cheap, whereby a greater store of Manufactures is prepared for Expor­tation. In populous Countries onely they fell their own Commodities dear, and buy foreign cheap. 'Tis there that Land is worth twice as many yeares purchase as elsewhere. And in such Countries onely is the fishing Trade carryed on, which none will employ themselves in that can live upon the shore reasonably well; and which in populous Countries enough will not be able to do.

This then being laid down as a principle, that the wealth of any Na­tion depends on its populousnesse, I may confidently affirm, that the po­pulousnesse of a Countrey doth much depend upon the Liberty of Consci­ence that is there granted.

The Kingdom of Spain may here [Page 63] serve for this to be Exemplified in, where there are not men enough to Manufacture their own Wooll, and where there is more black mony, Brass or Copper Coin used then in other Nations, notwithstanding all the Sil­ver that comes thither from the West-Indies. It was the rigour of the In­quisition that brought that Monarch, who would have been an universall one, to send Ambassadours to his high and mighty subjects.

But we need not look out of our own Countrey for instances of Trades suffering together with Freedom of Conscience: For by reason of the former severity exercised on those that would not conform to the Cere­monies imposed, many thousands of people bred up in a way of Trade and Traffick left the Kingdom, going, some of them to America, and others to Holland, where our Countrey-men did compensate to the Hollanders for severall Manufactures which they di­rected us to, when the Rage of Duke [Page 64] Alva's persecution occasion'd their residence among us. And what could more prejudice the Trade of our Countrey I know not, then the peo­pleing other Countries with our Ar­tificers, and the teaching them our Arts and Manufactures. And it is considerable that the sort of Trading men on whom the shock of persecu­tion did seem to light most heavily, was that of those whose Trades did lie chiefly in advancing our staple-Commodity of Wooll, and prepa­ring our Old and New Draperies for Exportation: to which Trades the ordinary sort of Puritan Non-Con­formists were rather inclined then to ploughing and digging, because in these Trades of theirs; as namely Weaving, Spinning, Dressing, &c. Their Children might read Chapters to them as they were at work, and they might think or speak of Religi­ous things, or sing Psalmes, and yet pursue their Trades. Besides, these Trades were more suitable to their [Page 65] Constitutions, which were generally not so Robust as of others; and to the melancholy of their tempers.

Now these men being frequently disturb'd by Apparitors, and sum­mon'd to Ecclesiasticall Courts for working on Holy-Days perhaps, or going on a Sunday to some Neigh­bouring Parish when they had no Sermon in their own, or for some such causes, were so hinder'd in the course of their Trades, that they were neces­sitated to remove out of the King­dom. They could not expect that Merchants or other Trading persons would imploy them and take their work, unlesse they could bring it in at such a set time that it might be as occasion required Exported, and sent to Faires and Markets abroad at pun­ctuall times likewise; which Mer­chants are concern'd in taking care of, lest their Commodities be under­sold.

Now these Puritan Traders were not in a capacity to dispatch the send­ing [Page 66] in of their Manufactures to others at the time agreed on, by reason of their frequent Citations to, and De­lays at, the Bishops Courts.

And since other Nations have now the way of making Cloath, as namely France, Holland and Flanders, if we do not sell it cheaper then they, we shall hardly have any abroad sold at all.

To conclude the Examination of this particular affaire; not any that hath search'd at all into the nature of the Trade of this Nation, but be­lieves that the best way to advance it would be to call in and invite any Protestant strangers to come and live among us; and to encourage Ar­tists of all Nations to come and plant themselves here: which cannot be done without the giving them a due Liberty of Conscience, and if it be our interest to encourage strangers, and give them this Liberty, this dealing may much more be expected by our own natives.

[Page 67]But, 'tis needlesse to insist longer in giving plain reasons for a plain pro­position.

I shall onely therefore before I now draw this discourse about the due Liberty of Conscience that is fit to be practised in this Nation toward an end, shew that thereby the Reve­rend Fathers of the Churche, the Bishops, will find their inter [...]st ad­vanc'd in particular, as well as the in­terest of the Nation in generall.

If any man shall say that the Go­vernment of the Church by Bishops is the most pure and Apostolicall, I am firmly of his opinion; yet as No Bishop no King is now no uncontra­dicted Maxim, so is it lesse unque­stion'd, that no force in matters of Re­ligion, no Bishop. But notwithstand­ing the severity that hath been exer­cised on mens Consciences by former Prelats, such is the prudence of some of the present Fathers of the Church, that they will I believe see it to be as much their interest to give Liberty [Page 68] of Conscience, as it can be the inte­rest of any men to receive it. And indeed if this were but in a fair man­ner distributed among the severall Sects I have spoken of, they would no more endeavour the destruction of the Episcopall Clergy, then the Iews at Rome tolerated do design the ruine of the Pope. Nay further, these Sects having liberty under their Go­vernment would serve them as a ballance against popular envy. I have often wish'd that our Nobility would dispose the Education of some of their Sonnes in order to Ecclesia­sticall preferments, and that a great deal of envy might be diverted by the same persons, being Lords Spiritu­all and Temporall. But it cannot be expected that persons nobly descend­ed should be engaged in Holy Orders, till they could see the way of Admi­nistring things in the Church to be as much in the affections of the people here, or above danger from their hatred, as in other Countries it is, where [Page 69] the Nobless are many of them Church-men. Now then the Reve­rend Fathers the Bishops, may com­passe the Affections of the people by Liberty of Conscience, and security from the danger of their hatred by an Inquisition; but (as I said before) that cannot it self be compast here.

Indeed our Ecclesiasticall Rulers have reason to steer us cautiously, since they sit at Helm in such a ship as hath thrown very many Pilots over-board. And it may well become those Worthy Divines that have been of late releast through Gods good Providence from the extremity of their sufferings, to be of most calm, quiet and sedate spirits, just as persons taken from the rack do presently fall asleep.

The great alteration in the body of the people since these last twenty years, requires that our old ends of promoting the welfare of the Church of England, should be attain'd by the conduct of new means.

[Page 70]For the greatest part of the old As­sertors of all the Ceremonies of the Church are lodged in graves, many of the zealous Lovers of them are now in Heaven, where Calvinists and Epis­copal men agree; and the present Ma­jor part of this Land consists of those, to whom the introducing the old Church-Government will seem an innovation.

I grant the inconveniences which we suffer'd for want of Church-Go­vernment in generall have been many, and those which we should have suf­fer'd from a Scotch Presbytery would have been more. But yet it must like­wise be granted, that the undistinguish­ing vulgar will be but too ready to en­deavour the removall of any Church-Government which doth at present in­convenience them, without conside­ring that the miseries they formerly felt will thereby recur upon them; just as a horse will strive to fling any Rider that doth at present gall and spur him too much, without conside­ring [Page 71] that the next Rider may possibly gall him worse; or as a man would try to repell the hand of one who held a burning coal to his flesh, though he should tell him that if that coal were removed he would apply a hotter. They therefore that would endeare any form of Church-Government to the Majority of the people, are con­cern'd to make it largely diffusive of advantage to them.

'Tis very apparent how many par­ties among us have been ruin'd by nar­rowing their interest, and not making it nationall. And God grant that af­ter all our enquiries about Church-Discipline, the Gentry of England be not by any divisions the present Cler­gy may cause, tempted to cry up the Divine Right of Erastianisme, and say No Erastian no King; which opinion doth as much exceed the Episcopal in giving power to the King, as the Epis­copal doth the Presbyterian, or that the Independent perswasion.

It is therefore the true interest of [Page 72] the Clergy here so to temper the Go­vernment of the Church, that it may be accommodated to the content and satisfaction of the Gentry or other Lay-persons, and of its own Mem­bers. And 'tis very irrationall to think that any Church-Government in a Protestant Countrey can be so, which doth restrain a large and almost absolute power to the hands of a few. Nor is it more prudent for France to own no distinction between a Gentry and a Nobility, but to allow equal pri­viledges to such as we reduce to two Orders here, that it may effectually curb the insolence of the Peasants, then for the whole Clergy here to grow into one body or form of Go­vernment, and all the parts thereof to be influenced with a convenient pow­er, that so it may be in no danger from the Enemies of a Ministry in generall. Nor was there ever any thing pro­pounded as a means to make the Cler­gy of England very considerable, that can be thought comparable to the [Page 73] form of Episcopacy described by the Bishop of Armagh. And therefore I do not wonder that its publickly own'd by the Divines formerly call'd Presbyterian (who now deserve a name less odious, and to be call'd the Divines that are for moderate Epis­copacy, as I said before) but rather that it is not as generally contended for by all their brethren of the Church, ex­cepting a few that are actually invest­ed with the highest Dignities there­in. Now if we divide the Clergy here into [...] parts, not one in three hath these great Dignities, or is likely in any time to attain to them. But that which the Bishop of Armaghs model of Epis­copacy offers to more then three parts of four, is an Accession of power, or a gaining of that Authority in Eccle­siasticall matters, as namely in Ordi­nation and Church-Censures, which before they had not. And certainly, the grasping of present power must needs to any Ingenious men of the Clergy seem more delightfull then [Page 74] the tedious Expectation of distant preferments, and the servile licking up of any mens spittle, that others here­after may do so with theirs. By the practice of this modell the spirit of the Clergy would be kept from being embased, and the ordinary sort of Vi­cars would be cured of affecting ser­vility, laziness and ignorance. In­dustry, Parts, Learning, would be likewise thereby encouraged. For the power of the Keys being thus given to the Bishop and all the Presbyters in any Precinct or Dioces, those men that could offer the best reasons for things, and shew the greatest strength of parts, would be most swaying in Ecclesiastical Conventions.

Nor is it likely that the Gentry would be aggrieved at the practice of this way of Episcopacy, or every Church-Censure's passing through a Consistory of Divines. For 'tis not probable that in such an Assembly there should be a Combination to execute any censure on any man, to [Page 75] gratifie the lusts or private piques of another. Besides, there is no such way that a Divine can use to make himself considerable with the Laiety as his being eminent for power in the sphere of his own Profession; just as a Mercer that would by any sway in­fluence the Company of Drapers, must first obtain a large interest in his own Company.

In short, the Clergy by this fair di­stribution of Ecclesiastical power a­mong them will not be in danger of ruine by the discontents of any of its Members, or of any of the Laiety while Liberty of Conscience is secu­red to them, and Ceremonies are not imposed. Nor is there any way by which the incoveniences of the Presbyterian Government can again invade us, but by the engrossing of Ecclesiasticall power in the hands but of few persons, and by their using Ri­gour and Violence. I know 'tis ridi­culous to imagin that a Presbyterian Government can under that notion [Page 76] find many to own it now in this King­dom.

Yet are the Non-Conformists like­ly still to increase, as from Edward the sixths time to this they have gradu­ally done. And some that are weary of our former Presbytery, may yet be willing to return to it, if they find Episcopacy Afflictive to them; though thereby they onely shift their pain. For nothing so much as Persecution makes men set up, Altare contra altare, every man choosing rather to be a Sa­crificer on his own Altar, then a Sacri­fice upon anothers. If any Ecclesia­stical persons therefore shall design to gratifie the Peace and Welfare of the Nation without the allowance of a due Liberty of Conscience, I shall think their onely aime hereby is to confirm the truth of their Doctrine and Discipline by a miracle. I cannot but judge them too sagacious, to be­lieve that they can convince mens un­derstandings of the truth of any Asser­tions by Torturing their bodies. [Page 77] For men by the rage of passion to con­duct knowledg into the World, is as unlikely as the lighting of a candle with Gun-powder. How ridiculous is it to think that Truth got any thing by the writings that pass'd between Luther and Henry the eight? There are severall erroneous opinions, that if we wish the world well rid of, we shall find to die away of their own accord, if we do not exasperate the main­tainers of them; just as nature makes us amends for the ugliness of Mon­sters in their being short-lived. Yet even in the case of naturall unhand­somenesse, I have seen the vulgar va­ry from their common Rule of judg­ing it, when a deform'd Malefactor hath been going to Execution. Nor do the words of Cheaters that die on Gibbets want belief among the Rab­ble. And if the common people are alwaies so ready to believe what is af­firm'd by infamous persons, because they are dying, we may well suppose they will give credit to the words of [Page 78] such as liv'd demurely when they are to die, because such and such thing were affirm'd by them. I believe that hardly more Priests have been cut off by the Law then Papists thereby made. That Faith hath been given to the Assertors of Popish opinions, because they have been dying, which they could just have drawn from me by raising the dead. Nor is it a thing unobserv'd by any lookers into Anti­quity, that the Christian Religion hath still got ground in the World, not by persecuting but being persecu­ted.

But that which I cannot without horror observe, is, that the not allow­ing a due Liberty of Conscience, hath instead of advancing the cause of Truth, propagated Atheism in this Nation. This doth but too clearly appear from that Irreligion many of our Gentry have been infected with by the Reverend Divines of the Church of England not having had freedom to Worship God in publick [Page 79] according to their Consciences. For severall persons of the Gentry not being able to hear a Liturgy, (a way of Prayer which every Church in the Christian World but ours then had) and Sermons from such Divines as were not Puritans, chose rather not to go to Church at all then be there present at the Worship they disgust­ed; and no marvell that thus neglect­ing Gods publick service, they at last grew unconcern'd in any Religion.

The like temptations to Atheism would be incident to many that are not of the Gentry, if Liberty as has been propounded, should not be given to the Non-conformist Divines. For though severall of this sort of men would exercise their Devotion in private meetings, and some would joyn with such publick Worship as was to be had, yet many would hear no Sermons at all, as possibly not like­ing that which looks like a Conven­ticle, and more disliking the way of praying and preaching us'd by very [Page 80] many Divines that adhere to the for­mer Episcopacy. Now t'were pity that this disease of Speculative Irreli­gion should infect the Commonalty as well as others, and that by the per­secution of Ministers, who differed from us in lesser things, we should as it were naile those Canons that might be employ'd in battering the Atheism of the Age, because they are not all of the same length and shape. Which Atheism I fear hath occasio­nally been not a little advanced by the disagreements of Ministers about the Divine Right of severall forms of Church-Government. For things to be believed and done in order to sal­vation, can have no more then a Di­vine Right, and their opinions of Dis­cipline have claim'd so much; and by this means they have made some foo­lish men apt to think that the Trum­pet of Religion giveth an uncertain sound, and that nothing at all is of any Divine Right. I account the bo­dy politick of the Nation to be as [Page 81] well concern'd in the upholding Reli­gion as the Souls of men; the Majesty whereof would be sufficiently kept up, if the Teachers of it did either agree in all points about it, or else in this one thing, that the dissenters in les­ser Controversies of Religion are ob­liged to allow a mutuall toleration. And indeed when I consider what opi­nions men call one another Hereticks for not agreeing in, it seems to me the same thing, as if after the Pope had pronounced Virgilius the Bishop of Saltsburg Heretick, for saying there were Antipodes, he should have call'd the Pope Heretick too for saying there were none. These parties that differ so in the circumstantial points of Religion are equally Antipodes to one another, and alike near Heaven, and in the Revolution of a few houres they see the same fun, though not the same stars; I mean, they have the same Fundamentall, though not lesse considerable Truths. The Popish Re­ligion among all the different Ritualls [Page 82] our fore-Fathers used was accounted the same, some Worshipping God, Secundum usum Sarum, and others, Se­cundum usum Bangor, &c. Why then may not the Protestant Religion be so esteem'd here among our little vary­ings? Though possibly some very few Divines of all parties here for want of Prudence and Goodnesse of nature may endeavour the rigorous imposing of things not necessary, that is, such as we may be without, and which all Protestant Churches but ours are without; yet will the Laiety probably, and I hope a great part of the Clergy of severall perswasions be far from concurring with them as A­bettors of such an odious work as may produce further mischiefes to Church and State, meerly to gratifie the blind zeal or unpurged choler of a few. If Gods Ambassadors have a mind to quarrell about Precedency or Cere­monies in Religious things, pretend­ding that it is necessary to observe them most strictly, the people are [Page 83] now grown so wise as not to think it necessary for themselves to encounter hazards, to make some of these Le­gats of Heaven submit to the Pun­ctilio's of others; just as severall Am­bassadours from one Prince falling out in a strange Countrey about Ceremo­nies in Civil things, which one of them being of a loftier humour would reduce the rest to practice, would hard­ly find any of the Natives of the place concern'd in their debate, whatever love they bore to their Master.

FINIS.
A DISCOURSE REPRESEN …

A DISCOURSE REPRESENTING THE LIBERTY of CONSCIENCE, That is Practised in FORREIGN PARTS.

By N.Y.

LONDON, Printed for Nathaniel Brook, and are to be sold at his shop at the Angel in Cornhill, 1661.

THE LIBERTY of RELIGION, Which is in use amongst PROTESTANTS.

TIs first inquir'd what Liberty the States which profess the Pro­testant Religion give to different opinions with­in their Dominions?

To this I shall briefly answer, and begin with the Northern Climate, going along and relating what I have observed in every different Jurisdicti­on.

When I was in Sweden, I found the Administrators of that Kingdom very [Page 90] much inclined to Moderation towards the Reformed party, for they suffered them not only to have School-masters of their own to teach their Children, but also they permitted them to have private meetings in their distinct Co­lonies, wherein they had the free use of holy Ordinances in their own way without disturbance: And although the Clergy of the Nation did not willing­ly allow this; yet whiles the King Gu­stavus and his Daughter the Queen Christina ruled, their Liberty was not abridged; but when Charles came to the Crown by the Resignation of Christina, the old Chancellour Oxensti­ern, in favour of the Clergy, caused the King to take an Oath at his Co­ronation, whereby he was obliged not only to restrain all publick exercise different from the Lutheran, but also to abridg the Reformed party of the Liberty which they had formerly en­joyed; which hath had some operation upon their freedom: but how far they are abridged of it now, I am uncertain.

[Page 91]In Denmark there is no Liberty granted to any that differs in judg­ment, so far as I have been acquainted with that State, only in Holstein, when the Remonstrants after the Synod of Dort, had not that Liberty which they desired in Holland, they planted them­selves in Eidersh at Fridericksburg, where they and others also obtained the prviledg of the exercise of their profession without control, which is continued unto them still. Moreover, in Holstein at Altena, the High and the Low Dutch, and the French Refor­med Churches have the Liberty of publick meetings in their profession; who dwelling in Hamburg, and not obtaining that Liberty within the Ci­ty, have procured it within a little English mile from the Gates there­of.

In Dantzick, the three Professions, viz. Reformed, Lutherans, and Pa­pists, have, or rather had, an equall liberty in the time of Keckermannus. The Reformed party had the preemi­nence [Page 92] of the Government, and then they did in a friendly manner admit of some Lutherans to share with them in it (for in Religious concernments all were alike;) but since they have been admitted to partake with them in the Government, they have found a way to worm the Reformed party out of power, by which means they have abridged them of their anci­ent Priviledges and Liberties; so that before these late troubles they were forced to appeal to the King of Poland, who made decrees in favour of the Reformed party; but in these late troubles the waies of redress have been obstructed.

And at Elbing, when I was there the chief of the Magistrates, and the regents of the School also, being of the Reformed Religion, the Liberty was so equal that no party had any per­ceptible power over the other, but all was carried with that moderation, that no offence was either taken or given whiles I was there: but since (I [Page 93] fear) it is fallen out otherwise, a fierce Lutheran Minister succeeding in the room of him that then was there, who by dividing practises, and distin­guishing forms, hath disturbed their Peace.

In Poland there was an absolute freedom for the exercise of all profes­sions, and the venting of all opinions; the Papists, the Protestant, Calvinists, Lutherans, Anabaptists, Socinians, &c. all had an equal Liberty: and because the Protestants in former time found that by their Divisions, and distance in Communion from each other they were much weakned, therefore in the year 1570 they agreed at Sendo [...]ire, in a Synod of the three parties, viz. the confession of Helvetia, of Bohemia, and of Ausburg, to unite and make up but one body▪ to which effect they established afterward at many Na­tional Synods severall Orders, to remove and prevent scandalls and disorderliness from amongst them­selves, and to confirm their uni­ty [Page 94] by the means of mutual Edifica­tion.

In Transylvania both the Reformed and the Lutheran profession are equal­ly free, and in Nationall Synods they meet together, and consult in com­mon, concerning the means of mutual edification; whereof I have a large proofe in the business of Peace and Unity, concerning which they have done more then any of the Churches in Europe, by answering all the doubts which were proposed unto them as Cases of Conscience to be resol­ved.

In Germany heretofore the reformed party did freely exercise their Religi­on under the Protection of the Princes of their own profession; but the Lu­therans did always make it a matter of Dispute, whether that Liberty did belong unto them yea or no? yet now the Treaty of Peace late­ly concluded at Munster and Osna­brugge hath decided fully that contro­versy; for, by a Statute-law it is de­termined [Page 95] that the reformed party shall have the same right and privi­ledge of free exercise which Luthe­ranes and Papists have; and this is thus determined by the 7th Ar­ticle of the Instrument of Peace. Quoniam verò controversiae Religionis, &c.

Now because the controversies of Re­ligion, which are in agitation at this time amongst the forenamed Protestants, have not been hitherto reconciled, but have been referred to a further endeavour of agreement, so that they still make two parties; therefore concerning the right of reforming, it is thus agreed between them; That if any Prince, or other Lord of the Territorie, or Patron of any Church, shall hereafter change his Religion, or obtain, or recover a Principality or Dominion, either by the right of succession, or by vertue of this present Treaty, or by any other Title whatsoever, where the publick exercise of Religion of the other party is at present in use, it shall be free to him to have his Court-chaplains of his own Confession [Page 96] about him in the place of his Residence, without any burden or prejudice to his Subjects [...] but it shall not be lawfull for him to change the publick exercise of Religion, or the Laws or Ecclesiasticall Constitutions which have been there hi­therto in use, or take from these that for­merly were there their Churches, their Schooles, their Hospitals, or the revenues, persians and stipends belonging thereun­to, or apply them to the men of their own profession; or obtrude Ministers of ano­ther Confession unto their subjects, under the pretence of a Territoriall, Episcopal or Patronall right, or under any other pre­text whatsoever; or bring about any o­ther hinderance or prejudice, directly or indirectly, to the Religion of the other party.

And that this agreement may be the more firm, in the Case of such a change, it is lawfull for the Communalties them­selves to present; or such as have not the right of presentation, they shall have the right to name fit school-masters, and Mi­nisters of the Churches to be examined by [Page 97] the publick Consistory or Ministry, if they be of the same Religion with the Commu­ [...]alties, which nominate and present; or if they be not of the same Religion, they shall be examined in the place which the Communalties shall chuse; whom the Prince or Lord shall afterwards without any denial confirm.

This Statute-law of the Empire is the ground of all that freedome which the Reformed, or the Lutheran party, can lay claim to, when they fall un­der Magistrates of a different profes­sion.

As for the observation of this Law, it is found that the Reformed Magi­strate is almost every where more e­quitable towards Lutherans, then these are unto those: for in the Palatinate, at Heidelberg, and other places; in Hessen, at Smalcalden, and at Marpurg, and in some places of Anhalt; in all the Ter­ritories of the Elector of Brandenburg, and in the Principalities of Nassaw, where the Reformed have the su­preme power, the Lutherans have [Page 98] their full liberty without interruption; but where the Lutherans have the su­preme Authority in Germanie, I know no places where they permit the free exercise of the Reformed profession; but in the places named heretofore in Holstein, at Fridericksburg and Altena; and in Hamburg the English have their freedome within the City, but none else; nor doe I know any Impe­riall City where the Magistrate is Lutheran, which permits the Reformed party to have the liberty of publick profession within their walls: there is one of the Lutheran Earls of Hanaw, who hath given of late years to the Reformed party dwelling in Strasburg, the liberty to build a Church upon his Territory, and to have their publick meetings therein: and one of the Lu­theran Marquesses of Brandenburg hath done the like a year or two ago to the Reformed inhabitants of No­imberg.

At Bremen, where the Magistrate is wholly reformed, within the City the [Page 99] Lutherans have the possession of the Cathedrall Church, where they ex­ercise their Religious Worship in pub­lick; but there are complaints made of the late King of Sweden, that in the Territory under his Jurisdiction he hath suffered the Statute of the Em­pire touching the freedom of Religi­on to be violated, by casting out the Reformed Ministers, and imposing Lutherans upon the Reformed Pro­fessors, depriving them of the Liberty which they have enjoyed ever since the first Reformation of these places from Popery.

In the Low Countries of the united Provinces, the Lutherans, the Re­monstrants, and the Anabaptists have a freedom to meet in a publick way; others of all sorts do meet in private: and the difference which is made be­tween the Professors of severall parties is chiefly this; that the Reformed party, which doth own the National Confession, and are owned to be Members of the National Congrega­tions, [Page 100] have only the Priviledge and Preeminence of being admitted to places of Trust in the State, from which all others are excluded. And this Liberty of Religion which the uni­ted Provinces have yielded and main­tained unto all sorts; hath made that little spot of ground to be the Centre of the Trade of Europe, having onely three Sea-Ports, the Wicling, the Mase, and the Texel: and these Ports are not easie neither, but difficult to be en­tred.

In the Cantons of Switzerland and Geneva there is no different Professi­on publickly tolerated: although in the Circumstantial way of the Admi­nistration of Ordinances, and in the particular order of Discipline and Go­vernment, each Canton is different from another; yet they fell not out about their differences, but corre­spond in a friendly manner in matters of common concernment.

In France the Protestant Churches are to be considered within them­selves, [Page 101] for the Liberty which they enjoy under their Popish Magistrate is not under our consideration; but the liberty which their Nationall Sy­nod doth give to particular men to protesse different opinions without bleach of unity in the Church, is that which is to be observed, and may be a president to teach others Moderation; for in the late Controversies between Monsieur du Moulin and Monsieur Amyraut concerning Predestination, wherein many others were engaged on both sides, although some hears did begin to break forth; yet the Na­tionall Synod hath allayed the distem­per, and preserved Peace and Unity in the Churches, notwithstanding the difference of judgment which was found amongst them. The freedome which the particular Churches have to depute some of their members from their Consistories to the Col­loques and Provinciall Synods is the means to preserve their Unity and Peace.

[Page 102]In Switzerland the freedome which the Churches enjoy doth wholly de­pend upon the Constitution of their order, as ratified by the Civil Magi­strate, who in each canton is Sovereign; and upon the correspondency between the Churches, which is ordinarily managed by those of Zurich towards all the rest: for as the Canton of Zu­rich hath the precedency, and direction in all Civil matters of common con­cernment, so hath the Antistes and Consistory of Zurich in matters Ec­clesiasticall a kind of trust put upon them to communicate to the rest, by way of correspondency, matters to be advised on for mutuall concurrence.

In Germany there is no such corre­spondency between the Churches, but their freedome, in the exercise of Dis­cipline and Government depends wholly upon the Sanction which the Prince and his Ecclesiasticall Senate or Consistory doth make concerning the order and way of administring all things.

[Page 103]In the Low-countries the freedome of meeting in Classes and in Synods; in Classes every Month, or oftner, if need be, according as the Classes are divided) in Synods Provinciall every year once) is the preservation of these Churches in unity; for the six Provinces, viz. Gelderland, Hol­land, Ulrecht, Friesland, Groning, and Overyssell, hold their Synods so con­secutively, that they can send from each Synod Deputies to another, to correspond with them, and to com­municate matters of Deliberation, that there may be no causes of breaches between them; the Pro­vince of Zeeland hath no setled time of Synodicall meeting, but the Classes of Middelburg upon all E­mergencies doth give notice to the other Classes, of the adjacent Islands of matters to be taken into consideration: So that in the Low-Countries the Liberty to meet for the ordering of all things within themselves, which preserves the [Page 104] Churches in France; and the Li­berty to correspond and to commu­nicate one with another the things which they settle by order, which preserves the Churches in Switzer­land, is more complete then any where else; and because the De­puties, or rather Commissioners from the Civil Magistrate are al­ways present at the Provinciall Sy­nods, therefore their decrees are more valid, and yet altogether free in matters of spirituall concern­ment.

This is the Liberty which I have observed to be in use amongst Pro­testants within themselves, in the exercise of their profession, by pub­lick meetings, by the administra­tion of Government within them­selves, by Classes and Synods, and by a Correspondency with one another in Religious matters. As for the Liberty which particular members have in each Congrega­tion, and which the Congregati­ons [Page 105] have in each Classis or Col­loque, and by what Rules that Li­berty is limited, is a matter of more diffuse consideration, and per­haps of little use for the end for which this information is desired: therefore I shall not inlarge upon that subject.

OF THE LIBERTY of RELIGION

In use between PROTESTANTS & PAPISTS.

IF it be inquired what Liberty Papists have where Protestants bear Rule, or Papists give to Protestants when they have all the power:

It may be Answered by the consi­deration of the places where each power is prevalent.

On the one side, in Sweden and Denmark, and in all the Territories of the lower and upper Saxony, where­ever Protestants have the sole power, no Papists are permitted to have any [Page 108] publick exercise of their Religion; and on the other side, in Austria, Bohe­mia; Moravia, and all the heritable lands of the House of Austria, in Fran­conia, Bavaria, and the upper Palatinat where the Papists have the sole power, no Protestants are permitted to have the publick exercise of their Religi­on.

These whole Territories forenamed on each side being entire Bodies with­in themselves, under one head either of the one or the other profession, with­out the intermixture of different Do­minions, are uniform in the exercise of their Religion respectively diffe­rent. But the intermediate parts of the German Empire are interwoven under severall Princes of different Re­ligions, and therefore are of a mixt profession: my meaning is not, that the professions and forms of Religion's worship are mixed and jumbled toge­ther in one; but that both professions are exercised, some here and some there, in different places.

[Page 109]And because the inhabitants of the intermediate Territories being mixed, and pretending to have each of them a right to the same places of wor­ship, quarrells and strife did arise amongst them, therefore when they deprived one another of the free­dome to exercise their profession, the Treaty of Peace at Munster and Osnabrugge did appoint the Resti­tution of places for the publick exer­cise of Religion on both sides, and or­dered that all matters of this kind should be settled thenceforward as they were in use heretofore in the year 1624. which order occasioned a Deputation from all the States of the Empire at Francford in the years 1656, 57. and following, to see that Decree and other matters put in exe­cution.

Now the Intermediate Territories are the Circles of Westphalia, of the Rhine, of the Welterans, of Franconia, and of Suaben; containing many Principa­lities and great Cities depending im­mediately [Page 110] upon tht Empire; which being of different professions, and mixed one with another in respect of their Territories and Jurisdictions, in the time of war none that was preva­lent did suffer a different Religion to be exercised: But since the Instrument of the Peace made at Munster and Osnabrug was published, the Liberty of Religion is to be Regulated universal­ly by the seventh article, and some o­ther articles determining matters be­tween Protestants and Papists; and according to this Constitution, al­though some Territories which for­merly were under Protestant Princes are now under a Popish power, and vi­ce versa, yet the Liberty of Religion is to be left unto each party as it was used in the year 1624. Thus the Duke of Newburg, and one of the Landgraves of Hessen, and a Prince of Nassaw, and some others, are obliged to leave unto the Protestants within their Dominions the free exercise of their Religion which formerly they [Page 111] had. In like manner in some of the Imperiall Cities, as in Francford, Aus­burg, and others, the Papists have their free exercise restored unto them a­mongst the Protestants; at Ausburg also the Magistrate is half of the one and half of the other profession; but in all the other Imperiall Cities, so far as I remember, the Magistrates are wholly Protestants, except at Collen and Heilbron, where they are wholly Papists.

Thus matters of freedome stand in the German Empire.

In Poland, Hungaria and Transylva­nia, the Protestants and Papists have heretofore had a promiscuous Liber­ty; onely whensoever of later times either of the parties did grow more prevalent in power, they have abridged each other of their Liberties: and now at this time the Protestants of Transyl­vania have put themselves under the Protection of the Turke, to maintain the Liberty of their Conscience, be­cause the Jesuits by the power of the [Page 112] Emperour, which they can command to bring about their designes, would have forced them to embrace their Superstition.

In Switzerland the Protestants and Papists when they made their league at first to maintain joyntly their Liber­ties against the House of Austria, or any other pretenders to have Jurisdi­ction over them, they agreed mutu­ally upon this also, that if any of the Natives living in the Cantons of ei­ther side should change their Reli­gion, (for then they were perfect­ly divided and separated upon the in­terest of Religion, and so have con­tinued still, that no Papists have any free exercise of Religion among Pro­testants, nor Protestants among Pa­pists;) that then they should be per­mitted respectively to sell their goods, and transport themselves unto the par­ty whose Religion they should em­brace: but of late the Popish Canton Switz did break this agreement, and would not suffer some of their Native [Page 113] inhabitants to partake of this free­dome, but finding that some families had changed their Religion, they did confiscate their goods; and taking hold of some of them, by the Instiga­tion of the Friers and Jesuits, they condemned some of them to death, and others to the Gallies; which was the cause of the late war which broke forth amongst them; and although they cease from open Hostility, yet this business is not fully composed.

And because there are some places of Common Jurisdiction, wherein there are inhabitants of both parties, and the Cantons of each Profession put governors by turns for some years over them, it falls often out that the Protestant inhabitants in these Juris­dictions are commonly abridged of their Liberty by the Popish Gover­nours; which gives continuall occasion of complaints and disputes between the Cantons, and at last may break forth to some violent rupture, and to a totall suppression either of the one or the other.

[Page 114]In France, by Vertue of the Edict of Nantes, the Protestants ought to have the full Liberty of their Religion in the places of their abode, and enjoy all the Rights and Priviledges which belong to Natives; but since the time of our troubles in England they have been very much abridged thereof in severall places; yet in Oliver the Pro­tector his time they got some enlarge­ment, which now since the Peace is made with Spain doth cease, so that they are under the danger of being persecuted every where, as being expo­posed to the fury of the multitude, without any assurance of Safety, fur­ther then it is an inconveniency to the Society of Papists themselves with whom they live; otherwise the Jesuits and Popish Emissaries are restless to stir up their zelots to molest them, and do what they can to extirpate them; witness that which fell out of late at Montauban, at Bourdeaux, at Dieppe, and and elsewhere.

In the Vallies of Piemont the poor [Page 115] Churches there since the Peace made have still been molested more or less without intermission; for besides other matters, that which is their chief con­cernment, namely the Liberty to meet at St. Giovanni, to exercise their Catechisme, that not only the youth may be instructed, but those of riper years confirmed in the Protestant Re­ligion, is wholly taken from them. This Liberty is in a manner the whole substance or chief part of their pub­lick exercise; this formerly they have always had, and by this last treaty of Peace it hath been confirmed unto them; nevertheless they are deprived of it, and new matters of quarrell are formed against them for other pre­tences, and chiefly against their Mini­sters; for the designe is to fright away their Leaders, that being scattered like lost sheep upon the mountains, they may become a prey to the wolves that seek to devour them.

In the Low-countries both of the United and of the Spanish Provinces, [Page 116] there is a certain reciprocall Liberty for the Papists in the Dominions of the States, and for the Protestants in the Dominions of the Spaniard; but the Liberty is not equal, for in the United Provinces the States allow the Papists a certain number of Priests to administer unto them the things be­longing to their Conscience in a pri­vate way, which is done by an express concession or condescension; but in the Spanish Dominions no such thing is granted unto the Protestants who live amongst them, but the Ministers who administer Holy things unto them pri­vately, do it at their perill; they have no Concession to attend any private meetings, but only they are winked at, and suffered to doe (what they venture upon) by way of Connivence; so that the difference is, that the Papists in the United Provinces have an assurance of freedome which they enjoy, but the Protestants in the other Provinces have no such freedome assured unto them; which makes the Papists in­crease [Page 117] and multiply in the Dominion of the States, and the Protestants di­minish in the other Provinces: and the effect of this may be, that when some of the Papists shall creep into places of power, and finding the Protestants divided amongst themselves, and their own party strong enough to make a head with the assistance of neighbour foregin forces, they may make a totall change of Government in that Com­mon-wealth.

FINIS.

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.