The history of conformity, or, A proof of the mischief of impositions from the experience of more than 100 years Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1681 Approx. 107 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 21 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2008-09 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A33964 Wing C5319 ESTC R28566 10629796 ocm 10629796 45468 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online 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. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A33964) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 45468) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1400:24) The history of conformity, or, A proof of the mischief of impositions from the experience of more than 100 years Collinges, John, 1623-1690. [7], 2, [i.e. 32] p. Printed by A. Maxwell and R. Roberts, London : 1681. Reproduction of original in the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign Campus). Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). The general aim of EEBO-TCP is to encode one copy (usually the first edition) of every monographic English-language title published between 1473 and 1700 available in EEBO. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). The EEBO-TCP project was divided into two phases. The 25,363 texts created during Phase 1 of the project have been released into the public domain as of 1 January 2015. Anyone can now take and use these texts for their own purposes, but we respectfully request that due credit and attribution is given to their original source. Users should be aware of the process of creating the TCP texts, and therefore of any assumptions that can be made about the data. Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). If an author (or for an anonymous work, the title) appears in NCBEL, then their works are eligible for inclusion. Selection was intended to range over a wide variety of subject areas, to reflect the true nature of the print record of the period. In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. Image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. Quality assurance was then carried out by editorial teams in Oxford and Michigan. 5% (or 5 pages, whichever is the greater) of each text was proofread for accuracy and those which did not meet QA standards were returned to the keyers to be redone. After proofreading, the encoding was enhanced and/or corrected and characters marked as illegible were corrected where possible up to a limit of 100 instances per text. Any remaining illegibles were encoded as s. Understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of TCP data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. The texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the TEI in Libraries guidelines. Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Freedom of religion -- England -- History. Dissenters, Religious -- History. 2006-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-07 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-03 Robyn Anspach Sampled and proofread 2007-03 Robyn Anspach Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion THE HISTORY OF Conformity : Or a PROOF of the MISCHIEF OF IMPOSITIONS , FROM THE EXPERIENCE Of more than One Hundred Years . LONDON : Printed by A. Maxwell , and R. Roberts , 1681. To the READER by way of INTRODUCTION . Christian Reader ! WHAT was in a great measure proved before the Committee of Parliament in the year 1666 , that London was burned by the treachery of Papists , and hath withal been suspected a long time by our wise and discerning Patriots , that a Plot was by them laid to subvert the Government of the Nation , and introduce the Popish Religion , hath been so fully proved by a variety of Evidence before the greatest Courts of Judicature in England , since the first discovery of the late Hellish Plot , and that with this advantage ( to convince us of the Villany and danger of that party ) , That they had upon it grafted a design for the hastening of the other to assassinate his most Sacred Majesty , and several eminent Peers , and by a Popish army to massacre all Protestants , as none can deny it with any degree of modesty . And if any had any inclinations to it , the murther of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey , and Assassination of Mr. Arnold , the manifold lyes , perjuries , subornations , which have been proved against them , the device of the Meal-tub Plot , &c. to spoil the credit of the manifold proofs against them , have been such convictions as none hath been able to outface , unless such as have dreamed of a liberty , yea and a merit too , for , and in doing any thing for the reputation of the Catholick Church , as they nickname the Synagogue of Rome . It is as evident that the design of the Popish faction was to have cast the Odium of these actions upon the Protestants . The Odium of Sir Edmondbury Godfreys death should have been cast upon Debauches of that Religion , had it not been unluckily discovered that he was murthered within the Walls of Sommerset House . But that of the Kings Death ( could they have effected it ) should have been thrown on the Presbyterians , ( a name under which of late they have comprehended all Dissenters . ) This should have engaged our credulous and furious men to have helped them to have destroyed the Dissenters , while they should have got their Catholick Army in a capacity at last to have destroyed them also . This restless party having had this long in their design , no doubt wonderfully influenced some to procure such a settlement of Religion upon his Majesties Restauration as should produce Dissenters enough ; nor is it reasonable to think that all the latter severe Acts against Dissenters were not the fruits of their counsels , considering how conducive they were to make a great number of Protestants willing for their own ease to have had an Vniversal Toleration , which ( though nothing is or can be more contrary to Popish Principles ) would admirably have served their design , giving an undisturbed liberty to their Priests and Jesuits ( who can never have an abode in any place without contriving the ruin of those they call Hereticks ) in our own bowels to have contrived our ruin . Or if this failed ( as indeed it did ) yet they knew that this way they should employ all our Courts of Judicature against Protestants , so as they should not look after them ; and besides , raise a mighty odium and prejudice in the hearts of Protestants one against another , so as whatever Villany they should have effected , it would have been easie to have charged it upon Dissenters , and there had been a party of Protestants in name ready prepared to give credit to it . It is now evident to all who will not wilfully shut their eyes , how near they were to have accomplished their design . But God in infinite mercy hath prevented the accomplishment . After all this one would reasonably think that there should not be one Protestant in England , who should not think it high time for our Superiors to unite all Protestants . A thing the more easie and reasonable , because it is apparent that it may be done without the least offence to God , or scandal to the generality of Reformed Churches ; and by the abatement only of some things which being abated , we shall be much more like all Reformed Churches , than we are . But against this some make a mighty outcry , ( out of what design God knoweth ) For it is a little mysterious , that those men who all along have been great pleaders for a reconciliation betwixt us and the Church of Rome , and the true Disciples of those Bishops , who to prevent the offence of that Church , took upon them in the time of King Charles the first to expunge passage out of the Common-Prayer-Book , and to bring us as near as possible to them , erected Altars , brought in Tapers , and twenty things more ; should , now that they see the effect of those endeavours for , and favours to Papists , not be willing for the reconciling of all Protestants to abate those things which themselves own no where specially commanded by God ; and this too at a time when the Popish bloody Knives are at all our Throats . Especially considering that the true cause of retaining our Ceremonies at the first , and forming our Common-Prayer-Book in the method it is , was originally a desire so far to commend our Worship to the Papists ( whose Religion lyes all in Ceremonies and Set-forms ) that they might be proselyted to us ; and the effects we have seen after an hundred years and upwards , is but the hardning of Papists , and the alienating infinite numbers of Protestants from us . I am aware that a late Author in his Book call'd , The Vnreasonableness of Separation , hath given us an account of three other reasons of the first Imposition of the Ceremonies upon the Reformation . 1. A due reverence to Antiquity . 2. To manifest the justice and equity of the Reformation , by letting the Papists see we did not break communion with them for things meerly indifferent . 3. To shew our consent with other Protestant Churches . But he had better have said nothing . For will some say , How have we reverenced Antiquity in retaining three of their ceremonies , and leaving out twenty more of greater antiquity ( if we may believe the Books we have ) than the Surplice and kneeling at the Sacrament , two of the three we have retained can pretend unto ? Besides that , all the account we have of antiquity is from Books Printed within 200 years ( for Printing is very little older ) , from Manuscripts , which if they bear date three hundred years after Christ , must be 1100 years old when they were Printed . If we stretch antiquity to 600 years after Christ , they must be 800 years old , and all that time generally kept in the hands of the known depravers of all Books that ever came in their hands where was any thing not for the purposes of their Church . Now what reverence is due to any such worm-eaten Records of antiquity , let any men of sense judg . His second reason is as invalid ; for what need was there of our keeping two or three Ceremonies to testifie we did not differ from them for meer matters of indifferency , when so many Books , so many Disputations , testified we differed from them because of their Idolatry in many things , and their Doctrine of Justification by Works , &c. The last is yet of all the most weak ; for how did we by it shew our consent with other Protestant Churches ? In the year 1552 which was the last of King Edward ; in the year 1558 , which was the first of Queen Elizabeth , there were no Protestant Churches but the Luther an Churches , the Suitzerland Churches , and that of Geneva , besides some in Germany , which followed the Reformation of Suitzerland and Geneva . In retaining these Ceremonies we shewed a dissent to the Reformed Churches in Suitzerland , and at Geneva , and all those who followed their order , and shewed our consent only with the Lutheran Churches so imperfectly reformed , that in the Synod at Dōrt the Messengers of all Reformed Churches there met , made a difficulty to afford them the name of Protestants , though I think the name Protestant better agreed to them than that of Evangelici , which was the name the Reformed were known by for the ten first years after the Reformation began . Besides , that for Kneeling at the Sacrament , the Saxon Churches retain it upon their peculiar notion , wherein they differ from all other Reformed Churches , viz. The Corporeal Presence of Christ in and with that Ordinance . For the retaining of some Ceremonies in the Saxon Churches , a double account is to be given . Luther and Ambsdorfius were great Zealots for them , partly to quiet the people , who had so lately been Papists ; and it may be partly in opposition to Zuinglius , and specicially to Carolostadius , who had made himself the Author of abolishing some , during Luther's absence , when he was hid for fear of a Decree at Worms . Melancthon ( a very learned man ) being of a more so●t ductile spirit , with Justus Jonas , and some others , took Luther's part . Carolostadius was run down ; both Zuinglius and Carolostadius saw that the retaining any of the Popish Ceremonies would have no desired effect , but rather scandalize their friends , and harden the Papists ; and the taking them away afterward , would be called a Refining upon a Refining ; they therefore , though they bare with much some few years , yet took the first opportunity to throw them all out where they had to do . The case was much the same with us in England ; our Ceremonies were retain'd upon no such pretences as were before expressed . There was no Reverence in it shewed to antiquity . No consent shewed with the most or best Reformed Churches at that time . But our best and most eminent Ministers had been Papists , used their Missal , practiced all their Ceremonies . At that time to have receded from the Papists in all things fit to have been receded from , might have been oddly lookt upon by the people . Besides that the people in times of Popery were much strangers to any thing of Religion but Ceremonies , and hearing Mass ; hence ( as may be seen in the first Edition of the Common Prayer ) many things were put in , which were left out by the Bishops in the 2d Edn. of it in K. Edw. time . And had it pleased God after Q. Maries time to have continued us such Bishops as Cranmer , Hooper , Latimer , Coverdale , &c. there is little doubt but these Controversies had long since been at an end . But our Bishops many of them were such moderate men as could abide here all Queen Maries time ; others of them were such as indeed had been beyond Sea , but very zealous there to keep up the Book , in the framing of which themselves had an hand ( amongst these was Dr. Cox ) , the same reason held as in K. Edw. the 6. time , for humouring the people ; thus the Ceremonies came at first to be established . For the Forms of Prayer , there was not the same reason for establishing some Forms at present in that state of the Church ; there could scarce have been any Praying or Preaching without some Forms both of Prayers and Sermons ; there were twenty reading Ministers for one who had any competent abilities either to Pray or Preach . But the reason was the very same for the establishing so many of the Old Forms , and keeping Methods agreeing to none of any Reformed Church . I offer it to any knowing persons to judg whether ( whatever be said by some ) this was not the true reason of the first establishment ; and they were no invaluable reasons for the continuance of them for some few years until people were brought off more from their old Superstitions . I find that in most places of Germany at first , the Reformation was gradual , some Ceremonies and Superstitious usages were cast out one year , some the next , some several years after the Gospel was first Preached in those places . But why these should be continued after twenty years , when it was seen that the continuance of them had no effect to bring in Papists , but gave a great scandal to , and made a great division amongst Protestants and when people were further enlightned , and their first heats for their old ways of worship were abated , is a much greater mystery ; yet we shall find that in the 25 , 26 , 27 years of Queen Elizabeth , there was a more severe urging these things than ever before . I am loth to think any rancor against those at that time called Puritans , was the Original cause ; but do believe that an imployment for those who managed the Ecclesiastical Courts , without using their power against the Papists , or Moral Debauchees , might be no little argument in the cause , and a design driven by the Papists and Atheists in the Nation to that purpose . Such Considerations as these could never affect an English Parliament so as to make a first establishment of them . But the succeeding Parliaments and Princes found them in possession ( that we say is nine parts of a Law ) and some Zealots in the Church strained their wits to make them appear lawful , and so within the power of the Superiour , and for many of them several good : men had not then light enough to discern their unlawfulness . ●● as there were very few that wrote to purpose on that argument ( Dr. Ames was almost the only man in his age . ) Indeed the Ceremonies , the reading the Old Translation of the Scripture , and the Apocryphal Books , the Subscription , That there was nothing in the Common Prayer Book , and Book of Ordaining Priests and Deacons , but what was agreeable to Gods Word , were an hundred year since argued against as unlawful , as I could prove by several writings of the Nonconformists of those times ( I have seen an ancient Manuscript of them big enough for a just folio ) , some things were not then practised , non required to be put in ure , though they were in the Queens Injunctions , &c. ( some of them at least . ) In all the cases of Nonconformists in Queen Elizabeths time , I find not a Minister complaining for being inforced to receive , or to administer the Sacrament to people kneeling ; I find nothing of any suffering for not bowing at the name of Jesus , not ralling in the Communion-Table , not setting it Altarwise , not reading the second service at it , with many more such things which were brought into practice by Archbishop Laud , Bishop Wren , and others . One great pretence of keeping up many of these things , was to avoid the scandal of the Papists , and to intice them to our Religion , &c. We have now seen the effects of this in the experience of an hundred years , which have been too sad to particularize ; it were easie to make a Book of Acts and Monuments twice as big as Mr. Foxes , with the sufferings of holy and good men , upon these accounts in that time . What manner of persons the Dissenters are , the experience of twenty years since his Majesties Restauration , hath sufficiently informed the world . What have the most fiery of their adversaries to object against them except in the matters of their God ? What kind of friend the Popish party hath been , hath been also made sufficiently evident . I humbly leave it to the judgment of his Most Excellent Maejesty and his Parliament , whether seeing ( confessedly ) it may be without offence to the Divine Majesty , The taking away of those things which alone make the Partition-wall betwixt Protestants and Protestants , be not as politick as pious , considering the History of Conformity from the first unto this very day , which might possibly have appeared more reasonable if I would have inserted the lamentable stories of the sufferings of good men on this account , ( of which I have a plenty ) but I had rather they should be forgotten , most of the Authors of them before this time have given up their account , and know whether they did good or evil ; and if any be alive , I hope all good men will say , Father forgive them , for they knew not what they did . Only let it be the Religious care of our Superiors to prevent any further complaints of this nature in our Streets , for the Lord most certainly heareth the crys of the Innocent and oppressed . The History of Conformity : or a Proof of the Mischief of Impositions , from the experience of an Hundred years . THE notion of Conformity with us in England , hath always signified a compliance with , and obedience to such commands of Superiors in matters of Doctrine , Worship , and Government of the Church , as are no where expresly originated in the Word of God , but supposed to be there left to liberty ; and being neither there commanded , nor forbidden , are presumed to be matter of Superiors just commands . The power of Superiors to command in things which the parties commanded do agree indifferent , was never yet disputed by the generality of Nonconformists . But there being many things which Superiors call indifferent , which the Inferiors verily believe to be unlawful , the difference hath chiefly been about these , and still is so to this day . Upon the Reformation of this Nation from Popery in the days of K. Edw. the 6th , in the year 1552 , ( which was 6 Edw. 6th ) there were Articles of Faith agreed on ; and in the 2. & 3 Edw. 6. cap. 1. & 5. & 6 Edw. 6. cap. 1. two Acts were made referring to two Common-Prayer-Books made in the short Reign of that excellent Prince . It must be known , that before this time in the time of K. Hen. 8. there were great foundations for Reformation laid , in the suppression of Monasteries , taking away the Popes Supremacy destruction of Appeals to Rome , Printing the Bible in English ; but there was no Reformation in Doctrine , Worship , or Discipline . For the Doctrine , it appeareth to have been Popish by the six Articles ; the first of which yet was so penned , as though it established a corporal presence of Christ in the Supper , yet it seemed to leave it indefinite , whether in the Popish or Lutheran sense , which possibly gave Archbishop Cranmer ( who as well as Latimer and other good men at that time were Lutherans ) a latitude to be an agent in Lamberts condemnation . The other five articles against giving the Cup to the Laity , and for Private Masses , and Monkish Vows , Auricular Confession , and Priests Marriages , were perfectly Popish . So as in that time no Nonconformist appear'd , but as to Doctrine , of which Lambert the Martyr was one , and so were all those that suffered upon the account of the six Articles , together with multitudes who fled into other Countries to avoid that Persecution . The Worship of those days was the Mass , only some parts of it were in English . The Government of the Church was also in the same method ; for though three Acts had been made to authorize K. H. 8. to call together 32 persons to make a Book of new Canons ; yet for ought appeareth to us , it was not done . And possibly a due consideration , that several of our greatest Reformers were Lutherans at first , may satisfie us as to the first establishment of our Liturgy in the method it was , and retaining of some Ceremonies ; the Saxon Churches having before reformed in that method , keeping as much as they could both of the Old Prayers and Ceremonies . And it is very likely that when after Queen Maries time the Reformation came to be re-setled , some of those who had a great hand in it , were possessed of the Lutheran Principles , as to the Corporal Presence , Forms and Ceremonies , or at least had a very great Reverence for Cranmer , Latimer and others ( who were then dead as Martyrs ) , and chose to fix things according to their sentiments in these matters , without so due weighing things as the matter required , or having not so early a prospect of the evils which experience hath since let us see following thereupon . In the first Parliament of King Edw. 6. the first Statute tells us , that before that time ( in the times of Popery ) they had several Forms , one used at Sarum , another at Bangor , &c. and the whole Ministry of the Nation were just come out of Popery , and neither fit to Pray nor Preach , which was the reason both of that establishment , and also of the Book of Homilies , and of the Original cause of that Imposition on the Ministry , not to preach without license . For the truth is , hardly one of an hundred of the Priests newly proselyted from Popery , were fit to Preach at all , which made our Rulers restrain Preaching only to such as should be licensed . Besides , that there was just reason to fear that those Priests but for such a Law , and such a Book , would have returned to their former Mass-service . To prevent which , the Book was provided , 2 , 3 Edw. 6. and corrected 3 , 4 Edw. 6. And all Ministers injoin'd by Statute to read those Prayers , and all the people to bear them . There was before that time no Nonconformist to direct the Act against , only Papists . But upon the second Edition of the Common-Prayer there appeared a considerable party , who opposed themselves to it . Three years before , Bishop Hooper and Mr. Rogers had declared themselves against some Rites and Ceremonies But the last year of Edw. 6. was the first time we read of any opposition to the Common Prayer , and the contest was quickly at an end by the coming in of Q. Mary . The business of Church-Government as to the rules of it , was left by King Edward undetermined ; for he died before he had given his Royal sanction to that Systeme of Ecclesiastical Laws which was drawn up by Archbishop Cranmer and others , by vertue of his Commission directed to them in the fifth year of his Reign . In all his time no Subscription was required by Statute or Canon ( that I can find ) established by his authority under the broad Seal , either to the Articles of Faith , or to the Book of Common-Prayer , &c. nor do I read of one Minister silenced , or suspended upon any such account , or any people vexed for Nonconformity . Our prudent Reformers knowing they had to do with a people who were Papists the other day , in their first Common Prayer Book varied as little as they could from the Popish Missal , and kept as many of the Ceremonies as they conceived were consistent with any degree of Reformation . In the second Common-Prayer-Book they varied more ; but yet we are assured by Dr. Fuller in his Church History , Lib. 7. that the party now disaffected to the Liturgy became very considerable . This was in the very beginning of the Reformation , Anno 1553. Queen Mary succeeding , put an end to all these contests in England for the whole time of her Reign , which was but five years . To avoid her Persecution , multitudes fled beyond the Seas , fixing some at Basil , some at Geneva , some at Strasburgh , some at Embden , some at Francfort , and other places . We have no account , that I know , how those governed themselves as to Religious matters , who fixed at any of those places , save only at Francfort and Geneva ; those at Geneva followed the Order of that Church , so did those at Francfort , using the order at Geneva from June 27 , 1554 , to Mar. 13. 1555 , when Dr. Cox ( one of those who had compiled our English Common Prayer Book , and was mightily in love with his own labours ) came over with a new party from England , and by his arts got admission into the Church at Francfort , and brought in the English Book amongst them ; nor did this satisfie him , but he must also turn out their Pastor Mr. Knox , and that not from his charge only , but out of Francfort , procuring him ( by some of his party ) to be accused to the Senate for a Sermon he had two years before Preached in Bucking hamshire here in England , in which he had some passages reflecting upon the Emperour of Germany as an Idolater , &c. which made some of the Senate advise him to leave the City , because the Imperial Court was then at Ausburgh ; and if this malicious party had carried an accusation against him thither , and the Emperour should require the City to deliver him as a Traytor to him , they could not refuse him . Which made Mr. Knox and a considerable party of that Church remove to Geneva . This was the first fruits of the conformable mens kindness to poor Dissenters , though at that time they were both parties voluntary Exiles in a strange Land for the common Cause of Religion . So that Dr. Cox , who was afterward Bishop of Ely ; and Horne , who was afterwards made Bishop of Winchester ; were left in possession of that Church , and there performed their Devotions by the English Common-Prayer-Book , which at that time had had but the establishment of one year before it was thrown out for the Mass in England . Queen Elizabeth came to the Crown Three years after this , in the year 1558. Upon which , the banished from all parts returned , both those who had fled from King Hen 8. persecution , for the Six Articles , who if any of them returned before , were driven back again ; and those who fled from Queen Maries persecution , from 1553. to 1558. These ( if we may believe Bishop Bancroft and Dr. Fuller ) having beyond Sea sucked in the Protestant principles for Worship as well as Discipline , were the Fathers of Nonconformity in England . But these were either many more than I could ever find registred , or else under both persecutions multitudes must lye hid in England . And indeed some make the cause of the different apprehensions in Protestants at that time to lye here ; That those most favourable to Conformity , and promoters of it , were such as had never been abroad , but during both those persecutions , weathered the storm in England ; and the Nonconformists , such as had been abroad , and seen the Worship , Order and Discipline of the Churches in Suitzerland , and Germany , and at Geneva . But this is not Universally true ; for both Dr. Cox. and Mr. Horne were at Francfurt , yet high en ough for our Conformity , both during their abode there , and after their return into England . In the first year of Queen Elizabeth several Acts passed , which revived the Reformation , Uniting the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction to the Crown , Repealing Queen Maries Act of Repeal , and reviving several Statutes for the Reformation made in the time of Hen. 8. and Edw. 6. establishing Vniformity of Prayers . And it is to be noted , that these Acts passed without the assent of one Bishop : there were at this time but Fourteen present , and they were all Papists , and notorious Dissenters from all Acts of this nature . This by the way may let my Reader understand the Popish design of a party amongst us , for whom it is not enough that the Clergy be owned as one of the Three Estates of the Realm ( of which the King is the Head ) but they will also have them to be one of the Three States in Parliament ; which if they be , no Law can be of force that wants the consent of some of them . So that if that notion were yeilded , all our Acts for Reformation must be concluded Nullities . It was the second year of the Queen before we had a set of Protestant Bishops . It was her Majesties interest at that time , so to govern her self , as to caray an equal hand to all Protestants ; accordingly she fill'd up the Bishopricks , partly with men that during the late persecutions had staid in England ; partly of such as had fled beyond the Seas . 1. Mathew Parker , Archbishop of Canterbury — he had lived a private life in England . These , if no more , had been Exiles . 2. Edward Grindall , Bishop of London . 3. Robert Horne , Bishop of Winchester . 4. Richard Cox , Bishop of Ely. 5. Edward Sands , Bishop of Worcester . 6. John Jewel , Bishop of Salisbury . 7. Tho. Beatham , B of Coventry and Litchfield . 8. John Parkhurst , Bishop of Norwish . Whether these had been beyond Sea , during the persecution , I cannot tell . 9. Rowland Mecreek , Bishop of Bangor , 10. Nicholas Bullingham , Bishop of Lincoln . 11. Thomas Young , Bishop of St. Davids . 12. Richard Davyes , Bishop of Asaph . 13. Gilbert Barclay , Bishop of Bath and Wells . 14. Edmond Guest , Bishop of Rochester . 15. William Alley Bishop of Exeter . 16. Edmond Seamler , Bishop of Peterborough . 17. Richard Cheyney , Bishop of Glocester . 18. Thomas Young , Archbishop of York . 19. James Pilkington , Bishop of Durham . 20. John Best , Bishop of Carlisle . 21. George Downham , Bishop of Chester . The other Bishopricks were either detained in the Queens hands , or held in Commendam . These men were all of them Conformists , but some of them knew the heart of Sufferers for their consciences towards God , for themselves had been such ; indeed they generally had been so , though in different degrees . This temper of these Bishops gave that party much quiet for several years , who could not agree to the Liturgy and Ceremonies . I find a very large Petition presented by multitudes to the Queen , Anno. 1561. which was the Third year of her Reign , in Three or Four Sheets M. S. where they complain of insufficient and scandalous Ministers , of Pluralists , and Non-residents , and Lawyers being Ministers , but I find not the least complaint of any suspended , deprived , &c. Yet even at the first I find Mr. Coverdale refusing to be restored to his Bishoprick of Exeter , and Reverend Gilpen refusing the Bishoprick of Carlisle . But no Subscription was yet required to any thing , by any Legal Authority ; nor was the use of all the Common-Prayer-Book , or an exact observance of the Ceremonies , generally urged . This kept all in quiet some years : the people enjoyed the labours of their godly Ministers : the Ministers at that time scrupled not to use some parts of the Common-Prayer : the Bishops did not exact their use of the more offensive parts of it , nor of the Ceremonies : some particular Officials were a little busie ; and some few , very few men were sufferers by them : but the body of the Nonconforming Ministers and people were much quiet , until not only Arch-Bishop Parker was dead , but Bishop Grindall also , who succeeded him in that , who died about 1583. about the 25th of the Queen . In the year 1583. Dr. John Whitgift came to be Archbishop of Canterbury . The first I read of , as to Subscriptions and Nonconformity , was when the Subscription to the 39. Articles , which were made by the Convocation 1562. but not confirmed by Parliament until the year 1572. ( which was the 13th Eliz. ) and then only required to be subscribed by such as were to be admitted to Livings : and ; that no further than so far as concerned matters of Faith and the Doctrine of the Sacraments , was exacted from all Ministers . After the agreement in them by the Convocation , 1562. several Bishops without any Authority from Parliament , imposed a Subscription to the whole number of them upon all Ministers in their Diocesces ; the refusal of which caused the sufferings of seveaal particular men . John Fox being required to Subscribe , pulled out his Greek Testament , and plainly told the Archbishop , he would Subscribe to nothing but that ; but yet such was the gravity of the man , such his Eminency for his service to the Church , that he was let alone . The famous Laurence Humfry , and Anthony Gilby , and some others appeared Nanconformists . Betwixt 1563. and 1583. also ( especially in the latter part of that time ) the Bishops began to press a Subscription to Two Articles more , the one to acknowledg the Queens Supremacy : that none denied , or as good as none : the other was , that the Common-Prayer-Book , the Books of Homilies , and the Book of ordering Bishops , Priests and Deacons , contained in them nothing contrary to the Word of God. To this day there is no Book of Canons confirmed by Parliament that requireth any such thing : but I cannot find that there was any Canon about these things , that had King Edward's , or Queen Elizabeths assent notified under the Broad Seal , so as it could pretend to any Legal establishment . But the Bishops of that Age were adventuring to establish these things upon their own Authority , directly contrary to the Statute 25. Henry 8. which restrained them from putting any Canons in use , to be made after that time , unless they first had the Kings Assent . The Oath of Supremacy was indeed established by Act 1st . Eliz. but a Subscription was not . The use of the Common-Prayer was commanded by an Act 1st Eliz. but a Subscription , that that there was nothing in it , nor in the Homilies , nor in the Book of Ordering Bishops , Priests and Deacons , contrary to the Word of God , under a penalty of suspension or Deprivation , was not . And the question so often put to them by the Bishops , Will you use that which you will not subscribe to , that it contains nothing repugnant to Gods word ? is easily answered : There was a great part of the Book ( viz. the Rubricks ) that were not to be used in God's Worship . Nor did they use it all , but some part of it , which was not offensive to them and other good people . But altho' many suffered upon this new imposition after Whitgift came to be a considerable figure in the Church ; yet the great shock was after that he came ( upon the death of Grindal ) to be Arch-bishop of Canterbury , which was about the year 1583. and the first considerable Nonconformity of Ministers in England is to be dated from this time . Some separation there was before this time : For Bishop Bancroft in his Dangerous Positions tells us , That within the ten or eleven first years of the Queens reign , many of the people separated , meeting in woods and fields . But their numbers were not valuable , nor their persons much considerable ; they were generally as sheep without a Shepherd , few or no Ministers being amongst them , at least of any note or authority , to give them any great name or repute . The Author of the Book entituled , The unlawful practices of the Prelates , which was wrote about that time , tells us , That as to Protestant Dissenters , the Queen had a most peaceable Government for the first twenty four years of her reign . Towards some particular good men , some hard dealings were shewed here and there , by the instigation of some ignorant and half Popish persons , for lack of judgment and knowledg . That which possibly gave occasion to this activity of the Bishops , were two sorts of Dissenters which they observed amongst the Ministers . Some who only dissented as to the Common-prayer-book and Ceremonies , of which number were Mr. Field , Mr. Wilcox , Mr. Standon , Mr. Boxham , Mr. Saintcloe , Mr. Clare , Mr. Edmonds . Others that were also for the Reformation of Discipline , amongst whom were Mr. Clark , Mr. Travers , Mr. Barber , Mr. Gardner , Mr. Chestou , Mr. Crook , Mr. Egerton , who were all betrayed by one Mr. Johnson who was wont to meet with them , and many of them most miserably treated in the High Commission upon it . A great noise was made of the election of a Presbytery at Wandsworth in Surry , the meaning of which was no more than this . The Queens and the Bishops Orders extending no further to the trial and fitness of Communicants , than if they could say the Creed , the Lords Prayer , and the Ten Commandments ( all which might be done by one so ignorant , that no Minister who regarded what he did , could administer the Lords Supper unto ) some Ministers did agree of a stricter examination , and the people made choice of ten or eleven persons to be present at that action . Possibly it had been less exposed to scandal , if instead of them , two or three Ministers had so joined , and the end as well obtained ; but surely this was a far lesser evil , than the admitting of all to the Sacrament that could but rehearse the Creed , Lords Prayer , and Ten Commandments ; there was nothing in this action , but any pious Ministers who are the stewards of the mysteries of God , might answer with a safe conscience ; for of Stewards it is required that they should be faithful , saith the Apostle ; and I believe any Bishop would have judged his Steward unfaithful , if he had dealt out his Master's goods contrary to his Master's order . The Ministers Master's order is plain enough , that the holy Sacrament belongs not either to ignorant or scandalous persons . All the Churches of God in all Ages agree this , our own Church in her principles agreeth it ; yet in practice , all Ministers were tyed to give the Sacrament ( as in times of Popery ) to all such as could but rehearse the Creed , the Pater Noster , and the Ten Commandments ; and confessed in Lent ; those eminent persons who were commissionated by Edw. 6. to draw up a new body of Ecclesiastical Laws ( though that excellent Prince lived not long enough to set his Hand and Seal to it , so as what they had done had no legal force ) had expresly determined , Tit. de Sacramentis , Cap. 5. We will have none admitted to the Table of the Lord , until in the Church he hath made profession of his faith . What should good Ministers do in this case ? they could act but precariously ; it seems at Wandsworth in Surry , there was a people that voluntarily submitted to this ; what harm was this to the Bishops ? But the truth is , this business of discipline came into very little debate before 1584. after that Subscription had been so fatally imposed . In several Diocesses I perceive there were some circumstantial variations in the forms of Subscriptions . To let my Reader therefore know what it was , I will give it him as it lieth in the 36th Canon , 1603. when it first received any thing like a legal confirmation , which was at least 25. or 26. years after it was first devised , and full 30. years after it was so rigorously pressed . 1. Art. That the Queens Majesty , under God , is thē Supreme Governour of this Realm , and of all other her Highnesses Dominions , and Territories , as well in all Spiritual or Ecclesiastical things or causes , as Temporal ; and that no forreign Prince , Person , State or Potentate , hath , or ought to have any Jurisdiction , Power , Superiority , or Preheminence , or Authority , Ecclesiastical or Spiritual , within her Majesties Realms , Dominions or Countries . 2. Art. That he alloweth the Book of Articles , agreed on by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Provinces , and the whole Clergy , in the Convocation holden at London , 1562. and that he acknowledgeth All and Every the Articles therein , being in number 39. besides the Ratification , to be agreeable to the Word of God. 3. Art. That the Book of Common-Prayer , and of ordering Bishops , Priests and Deacons , containeth in it nothing contrary to the Word of God , and that it may lawfully be used . and that he himself will use the form in the said Book , prescribed in publick Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments , and no other . This Engine was first formed by the Archbishop Whitgift , and was one of those 16. Proposals he offered to the Queen , for the setling of the Church ( a Copy of which in M. S. with two Answers to them , I have read , ) some little difference there was in the Arch-bishops form : His first Article was , 1. Art. That the Authority which is given her Majesty , in Causes Ecclesiastical , by the Laws of the Land , is lawful , and according to the Word of God. The Second Article was his Third , andran thus : 2. Art. That he allowed the Book of Articles of Religion , agreed on by the Archbishops and Bishops of both Provinces , and the whole Clergy in the Convocation holden at London 1562. and set forth by her Majesties Authority , and that he agreeth the Articles therein contained , to be agreeable to the Word of God. 3. Art. ( Which was the Archbishops Second ) was word for word the same . This Motion of the Archbishops put the Queen upon adding force to the Imposition , which indeed had been by some Bishops began before , but now in most Diocesses it was rigorously pressed . The issue of this is told us by the Author of the unlawful practices of Prelates in these words : Whatsoever was required in Civil Causes , either that concerned her Majesty ; or the State , was by the Ministers embraced wholly and freely In Ecclesiastical Causes also , whatsoever concerned Doctrine , or otherwise , was expresly required by Statute for Subscription . Thus far at the first all men with protestation offered , but to yeild to this thing , so strange and new , without any Law in streighter sort than ever was required . That all things were agreeable to Gods Word , and not against it ; not only tollerable but allowable , both in the Book of Common Prayer , and in the Book of ordering Bishops , Priests and Deacons . This was refused , divers of the Ministers were suspended , multitudes were thrust out How many godly , able , painful Ministers were outed all over England , I cannot tell , but ex ungue Leonem , I have seen a M. S. which gives an account of the names of Sixty odd in Suffolk , Twenty one in Lincolnshire , Sixty four in Norfolk , Thirty eight in Essex ; which though they seem comparatively few , yet are a great many when we consider that in Essex , at that time , there was an account given of 163. Ministers that never Preach'd , only read Prayers and Homilies , and 85. more , Pluralists , Non residents , or persons most notoriously debaucht . This was the first fruit of that Archbishops preferment , and a fair offer at the rooting out of the reformed Religion as soon as planted , which never did , nor ever will live and flourish in any place , under the conduct of an ignorant , debauched , unpreaching Ministry ; such a Ministry , much better serving Popish than Protestant purposes . What the Ministers that were suspended , or deprived did , to prevent their misery ; or to get this severity a little mitigated and allayed at this time , in the years 1583 , 1584 , 1585. I shall inform the world from the worthy Author of the Book aforementioned , wrote at that very time , and often quoted by Bishop Bancroft . His words are these : The Cause was general , means were made , Ministers presented Doubts , Protestations , Supplications ; they were repulsed , reviled , threatned ; the Ministers did indure , sustained with a good Conscience ; but their miserable flocks were subject to all disorders , spoils , havock : Good men mourned , evil men prevailed , License possessed all places , nothing was reserved whole to civil and modest life . These things Gentlemen of all sorts took to heart , they lamented their own estate , and the estate of the people , they pitied their Ministers , their Wives and Children ; Gods Cause moved them , the honour of the Gospel drew them , yea the safety of her Majesty in these dangerous times compelled them , their own Offices of Justice , which by the word was so well aided , and which without it they could not steer in a storm of so great confusion , drew them to sue in all humble sort to the Archbishop , testifying the wholesome Doctrine , together with the honest life of their Pastors , declaring the breaches , waste and wrecks of their Country , the present evil , the dangers to come ; finally craving , that in regard of the souls of the people , and their own , he would accept such a Subscription as the Law expresly appointed [ 13. Eliz. c. 12. ] and restore the poor men both to their Preaching and Livings . This second means prevail'd with him [ Archbishbp Whitgift ] no more than the first . The third was attempted . This refuge was to the Honourable Senate of her Majesties Privy-Council . There it was in like manner sought , and declared , the proceedings before used with the Archbishop . The inconveniency by this new dealing sprang up in the Church and Commonwealth , was shewed , and witnessed by Subscribed Hands . These supplications , with Letters of favour were sent to the Archbishop , in the behalf of Preachers ; did he yet any thing relent ? surely no , nay , I would he had not been more indurate . Six or Eight months were thus spent , the Country devoid of Preaching , the calamities of some Shires increased , testimonies , informations , multiplied . At the length , such were the complaints , that her Majesties most Honourable Council dealt very feelingly in the case Lest any should traduce that Book as giving a false account , I could out of a MS. in my hands , fill a competent Volume with Copies of Supplications of this nature . It shall suffice to give an instance or two . 1. Of the Ministers Applications to Archbishop Whitgift . 2. The peoples , and several Gentlemens applications and supplications to the Archbishop ; then 3. To the Council . Letters from Noblemen and Privy-Councellors to the Archbishop , &c. That of the Ministers of the Diocess of Ely , is one of the shortest , I shall therefore transcribe that for a specimen of Applications to the Archbishop . Whereas two Canonical Admonitions upon our obedience , are already past ( most R●verend Father in God ) and suspension ready to proceed against us for not subscribing to some things we know not , and others that we greatly doubt of : We having received good hope upon our own knowledg of your Lordships wonted hatred of sin , and love of true Religion and godliness , are bold to offer our humble supplication unto you , as well to shew our obedience to all superiority over us in the Lord , as also to crave your Lordships lawful favour for larger space of time to be granted to us , considering how carefully we have used our Ministry to the building of the Church , endeavouring with all our hearts to keep the good peace thereof , which we daily pray for : Wherefore if it shall please your Lordship to deal so graciously with us , as either to free us from all subscriptions , saving to her Majesties authority , and the Articles of the Christian Religion , which the Law requireth ; or to give us so long time , as divers Treatises may be perused by us , that either we may be satisfied in our persuasions to subscribe , or ( if there be no remedy ) quietly to give place to the peace of the Church . In the mean time we judg them not that have subscribed , as we desire not to be judged in this our staying . Thus if it shall please Almighty God to move your Lordship to take compassion on our troubled consciences , that we may feel our burden lighter by your good favour , we shall praise God for the same , and shew our thank fulness to your Lordship , which we pray God to preserve and keep to the good and benefit of his Church , and to your own comfort . 12. March 1583. Your Graces most humble , Robert Garret Bowter . Martin . Henry Dickenson . Mat. Chapman . Edw. Brain . Christopher Jackson . Thomas Brain . Many Supplications of this nature were in that and in the two following years presented to the Archbishop , to particular Bishops of Diocesses , &c. which I forbear to transcribe , the matter being much the same . These not finding their due effect , the Gentlemen of several Counties petitioned the Archbishop . I could insert several Copies ; I shall only insert that of the Gentlemen in Cambridgshire to the Archbishop , bearing date the 26. of April , 1583. May it please your Lordship , that under your good favour we whose 〈…〉 en ●●y be acceptable suitors on the behalf of divers godly Ministers with in this County of Cambridg , whose names are set down in a schedule herewith sent unto you , concerning the manner of subscribing to the articles lately published , the execution whereof towards our Ministers , we fear would be to the displacing of them , as some are already ; whereby we think great inconvenience must follow in these parts , by reason that both the sufficiency and good conversation of these already placed , with the good success and blessing on their labours , is evidently known unto us , and we are persuaded that they continue their places by bond in conscience , for that hitherto we have not heard of any contentiousness in Religion , or disquietness and disorder in any of them or their people : Wherefore altho in your wise and fatherly care , your desire is to make choice of a good supply if these fail ; yet if it should seem good unto your Wisdom , we should acknowledg our selves much bound unto your Lordship in the continuance of these men , being known unto us already ; the other hereafter to come being unknown what they shall be ; and so much the rather , because of the bare Livings which some of them have , whereby it is to be feared it will be no easie matter to place sufficient men in their stead . Thus trusting , and nothing doubting but that they may find your honourable favour so far forth as you may grant , not contrary to the Law of this Realm ; and most humbly beseeching , that we may enjoy them in their rooms as long as any others in other places , whereof we and they hope so much the more , for that it pleased God once to make your Lordship a special member in this County for a time , whereby as you gave and bestowed a great cause of love , so you reaped much good will ; which as it remaineth in us and them to stand you in any stead to our powers , so we trust that we and they shall find this latter fruit of it , to our great comfort and benefit : and thus we humbly take our leave . Your Graces assured , John Cutts . Fr. Hind . John Hutton . Fitzralph Chamblein . Thomas Wendy . Thomas Chickly . Anthony Cage . Some others there were of this nature ; but it seemed ●●●h by what followed , and also by what the Author of the Book aforementioned saith , that the Archbishops ear was deaf to all Supplications of this nature , and has resolved to carry his Subscription through . The poor Ministers in this distress , together also with the Gentlemen of several Counties , and the people of several places , addressed themselves by Petition to the Queen , and to particular Lords of the Council , then to the Queen and the whole Council . Particularly , Dunmow in Essex sent a Supplication to my Lord Rich. The Parishioners of Aldermary in London , to the Earl of Leicester . The Ministers of the Diocess of Peterborough , to another Lord. Many addressed to the whole Council , viz. The Gentlemen of Norfolk , the Ministers in Norfolk , the Ministers of Essex , the Ministers of Lincolnshire . Essex , Oxfordshire , the Isle of Ely , and many other Counties and places . I have by me all the Copies ; I shall only transcribe that of the Ministers of Lincolnshire . The Supplication of the Ministers of Lincolnshire to the Lords of the Council . Forasmuch ( Right Honourable ) as the Lord of heaven and earth hath substituted your Honours next under her Majesty , to procure passage to his Gospel , beauty to his Church , and glory to his Kingdom ; in which business of the Lord , to the great joy of all those which pray heartily for the peace of Jerusalem , hitherto you have happily proceeded : We whose names are underwritten , whom the same Lord hath in mercy placed over some of his people here in Lincolnshire , as Pastors and Preachers to feed them with the word of truth , do humbly beseech your Honours to regard the pitiful and woful estate of our Congregations and people in these parts , which being destitute of our Ministry by the means of a Subscription generally and strictly urged now of late by the Bishops Officers , do mourn and lament . It is well known to all your Lordships , that an absolute Subscription is required throughout the whole Province of Canterbury to three Articles . The first concerning her Majesties Supreme Authority . The second to the Book of Common-prayer , with that of consecrating Bishops , and ordering Priests and Deacons . The third concerning the Book of Articles . As touching the first , we offer our sevles to a full Subscription , as always heretofore we have done ; as also to the Articles of Religion [ I presume here must be meant , as in the rest generally is exprest , so far as they concern matters of Faith , and the Doctrine of the Sacraments , ] and cannot be accepted herein , without an absolute Subscribing to the other , unto which we dare not condescend , being as yet many of us not fully acquainted with the Book of confecrating Bishops , and ordering Priests and Deacons ; and all of us unresolved , and unsatisfied in our Consciences , in many points of the Common-Prayer . May it please your Lordships also , favourably to consider , that in refusing an absolute Subscription , we do it not out of any arrogance , or singularity , but only for that we have no sufficient resolution , which we have earnestly desired of some doubts , about divers weighty matters , and points in the same Book ; which requests of ours , sith we could not obtain , we desired , that at the least in our Subscription , we might make exceptions of the things whereof we doubted , which they have utterly denied us , for which causes ( Right Honourable ! ) we fearing to Subscribe so absolutely as we were urged , we are all suspended from executing the function of our Ministry amongst our people , to the great danger of their souls , and danger of losing the fruit of our former poor labours , which we have by Gods Grace imployed upon them : wherefore we humbly crave of your Honours ( our Cause being , as we are perswaded , the Lords own Cause , and his Churches ) that it may be considered : And that since we can neither be impeached of false Doctrine , nor of contempt of her Majesties Laws , nor of refusing of the exercising of the Book of Common-Prayer in our charges , nor of breeding contention and sedition in the Church : And again , that Papists , her Majesties enemies , with Atheists , to the corrupting of Religion in Doctrine and Manners , do daily multiply and increase , we may be restored to our flocks and people , in such sort , as with all peace of Conscience we may go forward with the Lords Work in building up his house in several places . Thomas Fulkeck . Hugh Tuke . John Daniel . Richard Allen. Anthony Hunt. Reinold Grome . Thomas Tripler . Shepheard . Henry Nelson . Mat. Tomson . Thomas Bradly . Joseph Gibson . James Worship . Charles Bingam . John Munning . Humfrid Travers . John Pryer . John Summerscales . John Wintle . Richard Holdsworth . Richard Kellet . These are enough for specimens of several sorts of Supplications . There were others more particularly directed to the Queen , and to some great persons , all much to the same sense . This last means had some little effect : of which the Author of the Book called The unlawful practices of Prelates , giveth us this account , c. 4. Hence became the subscription to be somewhat more tolerable , and further time was granted unto divers in divers Countreys , and retaining that which pertained to the Civil State , and in the Ecclesiastical that which concerned doctrine , with protestation to use the Book of Common-prayer , the Archbishop suffered himself to be entreated to require no more of many . To this many were drawn : the peace of the Church , the compassion of their flocks , the weariness of turmoils , brought many to it , that yet did it , some with tears , some with so great heaviness of conscience long after , as they were never quiet till their dying day . So great a desire of unity was in sundry men that stood herein . Others satisfying themselves with a protestation of an holy and godly resolution by the Archbishop , and other of the Bishops , in certain points ( as they supposed ) by the example of certain learned men in the like case , did not refuse to subscribe , as the Ministers of Sussex , and such like . Again , some other special men were admitted in divers places with more favour , as the Ministers of Leicestershire , Buckinghamshire , and somt other places , and some such others ( chiefly such whose authority would have brought discredit to their too too severe proceedings ) without any subscription at all . Hence , of the multitude that held out , at first seemed not so great ( tho in truth in respect of the men , and the times , they were too too many ) and their subscription laid with their sundry exceptions in a manner no subscription at all . But with the credit of these , shewing only the subscriptions in one paper , and retaining their Protestation in another , many were drawn also as unawares birds into the net , by the chirping of birds first taken . From the colour of these last forms of subscriptions , sprang bruits , as tho all things were well in the Orders and Liturgy of the Church of England ; all things subscribed unto ; that all had yielded ; that whosoever mouths were open , had subscribed . But how far these differ frow that which was at first tendered , I suppose no man is ignorant . As again , how little difference there is between the latter , and that which all men did freely and frankly offer at the first . Nothing that did pertain to her Excellent Majesty was struck at ; nothing that concerned doctrine , or the substance of our faith . Nothing that in the Statutes was set down touching Subscription . The most that was excepted against at first , and that generally , were the Ceremonies , The reading the Apocryphal Books , The ill translation of the Scriptures used , The Rubricks , Very many things in the Book of ordaining Bishops , Priests , and Deacons , and several passages in the prayers . The number was not many , who refused to use a set-form of prayer to be constantly used in their Ministry . It was but twenty five years since the whole Nation came out of Popery , where they knew nothing else ; and it could not be expected that in that time should be a discovery of all that was truly blameable in Worship , or Government of the Church . Yet there were some that in those days refused this . Bishop Bancroft in his Dangerous Positions , p. 84 tells us , that Mr. Field in a Letter to Mr. Asker , 14. Ap. 1585. tells him : I preach every Sabbath-day , ( if no other that cometh by chance doth supply the place ) having nothing to do at all with the former Book of Common-prayer , &c. This was the first division of godly Ministers into such as were purely Nonconformists . 2. Conforming Nonconformists . The latter were the greater number , who had subscribed to use the Common-prayer , but not to read it fully and in all parts ; and this with protestations , that their subscriptions should not oblige them to do any thing contrary to the word of God , &c. there were several forms of it . Twenty Ministers of the Diocess of Chichester thus subscribed , with exception to all the Rubricks , the Book of Ordination , and I know not how many limitations . Here the great and infinite wisdom of God was seen , governing the failers of his servants to his own wise ends and glory . By this means a preaching Ministry was preserved in England , which had the Bishop kept to his first severity , and all the Ministers that at first refused , absolutely persisted in their refusal , had before the Reformation was 28. years old , been destroyed throughout England , at least the greatest part of it . But ( saith our Saviour ) He that will save his life shall lose it . Very many of these good men were afterwards suspended , deprived , indited , imprisoned , wearied out of their lives by troubles in the High Commission ; though not for not subscribing ( for which was no Law ) yet for not wearing the Surplice , not using the Cross in Baptism , not keeping Holydays , not reading all the Prayers , or some such like things . Thus was our state from 1583. till 1603. when King James came to the Crown . Hitherto I have shewed my Reader the first Impositions in England , and the woful mischief wrought by them , not only to multitudes of particular Families , but to the interest of the Gospel and Reformation in general . I shall now proceed to a second period , which will take up the whole time of King James his Reign , from 1603. to 1625. Whitgift was in the beginning Archbishop , and Bancroft Bishop of London . Their Writings sufficiently testifie how zealous both of them were against Nonconformists . The Convocation this year established the three Articles ( which 20 years before had made such a confusion ) by a Canon ; it is their 36 Canon : which Canons were confirmed by King James , but never since brought to a Parliament , or confirmed by them . I am not concerned to enquire how valid they are as Laws obligatory to the subject , till confirmed by Parliament ( that belongeth to Lawyers to argue , and dependeth upon the Kings Prerogative , and the terms used in the Act of 25 Hen. 8. ) I am only concerned to note how Conformity improved upon these Canons , and also what the effect of these new Impositions was . For the first , let the Canons themselves speak . Subscription to the three Articles was now enjoined by Canon 36. Bowing at the name of Jesus was enjoined Can 18. Bidding of prayer , by another Canon , with a multitude of other things too long to be here recited ; for which I refer my Reader to the Book of Canons . The first fruit of this was a Petition with a thousand Ministers hands , presentad to the King 1603 , 4. saith Dr. Fuller . Indeed Dr. Fuller saith , the hands were but 750. I believe he taketh his intelligence from the abridgment of that Book , which the Ministers of Lincoln Diocess , delivered to his Majesty , 5. December , 1604. I find them there mentioned to be 752. out of 23. Counties . Dr. Fuller saith , 25. which are but half the Counties of England and Wales , hardly so much . Their numbers are thus countd . Oxfordshire 9. Stafordshire 14. Dorsetshire 17. Nottinghamshire 20. Surry 21. Norfolk 28. Wiltshire 31. Buckinghamshire 33. Sussex 47. Leicestershire 57. Essex 57. Cheshire 12. Bedsordshire 16. Somersetshire 17. Darbyshire 20. Lancashire 21. Kent 23. London 30. Lincolnshire 33. Warwickshire 44. Devon and Cornwall 51. Northampton 57. Suffolk 72. These make 752 : Here are none reckoned of any County in Wales , nor any of Yorkshire , Barkshire , and many others . I know no reason any hath to doubt , but that there were a 1000. hands to this Petition ; the Petitioners in the body of their Petition say , they were more than a thousand , and they would not have told a Lye to a King , which so little labour as counting them would have proved to be such . But the matter of the Petition is very considerable , to let my Reader know both to what height Impositions were grown 77. years since , and what Oppositions they met with from our fore-fathers . Dr. Fuller in his Church-History assures us , he has got the true Copy , I will therefore transcribe it from him , as I find it in the 10th Book , p. 22. Most Gracious and Dread Soveraign ! Seeing it hath pleased the Divine Majesty , to the great comfort of all good Christians , to advance your Highness , according to your just Title , to the peaceable Government of this Church , and Common-wealth of England : We , the Ministers of the Gospel in this Land , neither as factious men , affecting a popular parity in the Church , nor as Schismaticks , aiming at the dissolution of the State Ecclesiastical , but as the faithful Servants of Christ , and loyal Subjects to your Majesty , desiring , and longing for a Redress of divers abuses of the Church , could do no less in our obedience to God , service to your Majesty , love to his Church , than acquaint your Majesty with our particular griefs , for as your Princely Pen writeth t● The King , as a good Physician , must first know what peccant humours his Patient naturally is most subject unto , before he can begin his Cure : And although divers of us that s●● for Reformation , Subscribe to the Book , some upon Protestation , some upon Exposition given them , some with Condition , rather than the Church should have been deprived of their labour and Ministry ; yet now we to the number of more than a thousand of your Majesties Subjects and Ministers , all groaning as under a common burden of humane Rites and Ceremonies do with one joint consent humble our selves at your Majesties feet , to be cased and relieved in this behalf . Our humble suit then unto your Majesty is , that these offences following , some of them may be removed , some amended , some qualified . 1. In the Church Service , That the Cross in Baptism , Interrogatories ministred to Infants , Confirmation ( as superfluous ) may be taken away , Baptism not to be administred by Women , and so explained . The Cap and Surplice not urged . That Examination may go before the Communion . That it may be administred with a Sermon . That divers terms of Priests , Absolution , and some others used , with the Ring in Marriage , and other such like in the Book , might be corrected . The longsomeness of Service abridged . Church-songs and Musick moderated to better edification . That the Lords day be not profaned . The rest upon Holidays not so strictly urged . That there may be an Vniformity of Doctrine prescribed , No Popish opinion any more taught or defended . No Ministers charged to teach the people to bow at the Name of Jesus . That the Canonical Scriptures only be read in the Church . 2. Concerning Church Ministers : That none hereafter be admited into the Ministry but able and sufficient men , and those to preach diligently , and especially upon the Lords day . That such as be already entred , and cannot Preach , may either be removed , and some charitable course taken for their relief , or else to be forced according to the value of their Livings to maintain Preachers . That non-Residency be not permitted . That King Edwards Statute for the lawfulness of Ministers Marriages may be revived . That Ministers be not urged to subscribe , but according to the Law , to the Articles of Religion , and the Kings Supremacy only . 3. For Church-livings , and Maintenance : That Bishops leave their Commendams , some holding Prebends , some Parsonages , some Vicarages with their Bishopricks . That double beneficed men be not suffered to hold , some two , some three Benefices with Cure , and some two three or four Dignities besides . That Impropriations annexed to Bishopricks and Colledges , be demised only to Preachers incumbent , for the old Rent . That the Impropriations of Lay-mens fees may be charged with a sixth or seventh part of the worth to the maintenance of the ●reaching Ministers . 4. For Church-Discipline : That the Discipline and Excommunication may be administred according to Christs Institution , or at the least that enormities may be redressed , as namely , That Excommunication come not forth under the names of Chancellors , Lay-persons , Officials , &c. That men be not Excommunicated for trifles , twelve peny matters , That none be Ecommunicated without consent of his Pastor . That the Officers be not suffered to extort unreasonable fees . That none having Jurisdiction or Registers places , put out the same to farm . That divers Popish Canons as for restraint of Marriage at certain times be reversed . That the longsomeness of Suits in Ecclesiastical Courts which hang sometimes 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 years , may be restrained . That the Oath ex Officio , by which men are forced to accuse themselves , be more sparingly used . That Licenses for Marriage without Banes asked , be more cautiously granted . These with such other abuses yet remaining , and practised in the Church of England , we are able to shew to be not agreeable to the Scriptures , if it shall please your Highness further to hear us , or more at large to be informed , or by conference amongst the Learned to be resolved . And yet we doubt not but that your Majesty without further process , of whose Christian judgment we have received so good a taste already , is able of your self to judg of the equity of this cause ; God we trust hath appointed your Highness our Physician to heal these diseases ; and we say with Mordecai to Esther , Who knoweth but you are come to the Kingdom for such a time ? Thus your Majesty shall do that which we are perswaded shall be acceptable to God , honourable to your Majesty in all succeeding ages , profitable to his Church , which shall be thereby increased , comfortable to your Ministers , which shall be no more suspended , silenced , disgraced , imprisoned for mens traditions ; and prejudicial unto none , but those who seek their own credit , quiet and profit in the world . Thus with all dutiful submission referring our selves to your Majesties Pleasure for your Gracious answer , as God shall direct you , We most humbly recommend your Highness to the Divine Majesty , whom we beseech for Christ his sake to do herein what shall be for his glory , the good of his Church , and your endless comfort . Your Majesties most humble Subjects , the Ministers of the Gospel , who desire not a disorderly Innovation , but a due and Godly Reformation . How his Majesty resented this Petition , is variously reported . But sure it is ( saith Fuller ) it ran the Gantlop through all the Prelatical party , every one giving it a lash , some with their Pens , more with their tongues , and the dumb Ministers as they term it found their speech most vocal against it . How many the number of those was who joined in this , and several other Petitions at the same time , and were suspended , deprived , imprisoned , &c. I cannot tell ; but a great division arose , which held during the Archbishop Bancrofts time . Bishop Abbot who succeeded him in the Archbishoprick of Canterbury , was much calmer . Several Books were wrote at this time against the Nonconformist , by Mr. Hutton , Mr. Rogers , Dr. Lovel , and Dr. Spark , ( who had himself been a Dissenter ) ; but in the year 1607 , & 1608 , they were learnedly answered by a Book of three parts , call'd , A Defence of the Ministers Reasons for refusal of Subscription . The first part was concerning the holy Scriptures ; the ill Translation of several Texts . The second concerning the Holy Scriptures and Apocrypha . The third was about kneeling at the Sacrament . Several able Ministers left the Nation , many others with their Families were undone in it . Thus Conformity stood till the time of King Charles the First ; some Bishops being more , some less rigid in pressing the Canons . But when Archbishop Laud came to be Archbishop of Canterbury , ( who succeeded Abbot ) he made a new Edition of Impositions , to which he required Conformity , saying second Service at the Table , setting that at the East end of the Church Altarwise , commanding the Communion . Table to be railed in , and all people to come up thither to receive the Communion kneeling ; enforcing the bowing at the Name of Jesus . Forbidding Lectures , and Afternoon-Sermons . Pressing the Book of Sports on the Lords day . Not injoining but commending bowing toward the East-end , &c. and twenty more things . What havock hese things made , is yet within the memory of many ; and what disturbance Bishop Wren made in Suffolk , and other places , as several other Bishops that were his Creatures did in other Diocesses , many alive know ; multitudes of Ministers were again deprived and suspended . Many undone in the High Commission . At last in the Convocation 1640 , an Oath with &c. was devised , which had perfected the business in rooting out all Puritan Preachers , had not a Parliament came and spoil'd that design . Scarce any is ignorant what numbers of Godly Ministers and people left the Nation upon this account , betwixt 1630. and 1640. so many as to make one of the noblest Colonies at this day in the world ( that , I mean , of New-England ) besides those who fled into Holland and Ireland . Many staid at home , and were miserably treated by Courts . Some lived privately , others in some quiet parts of the Nation kept their Station . How little the Conformable Interest gained by this ( though that Party ruined multitudes of godly people and their Families ) quickly appeared in the year 1641. when the Parliament began to espouse their Cause , and give them liberty . The number of Ministers , favouring Nonconformity , presently appeared far greater than ever before ; so as their adversaries had a little satisfied their lusts , and malice , but not in the least promoved their Cause . The people were more imbitter'd against them , and more enamoured upon painful godly Ministers . And the Bishops restraint of Preaching , did but inflame people with the desire of it . Several Noblemen and Worthy Gentlemen in all parts of England began to be awakened , as may appear by many of their excellent Speeches in the beginning of the Parliament 1641. They plainly saw , that through these extravagant actings , We lost many of our Eminent Ministers , multitudes of our most sober people were removed into other Countries . The Trade of the Nation was altered , much of it carried elsewhere ; the people in many places turned ignorant brutes for want of Preaching ; many turned Papists , many Doctrines of Popery were Published , Colledges were fixed for Romish Priests , and Nuns fixed , &c. a Plot laid by them against the King and Nation ; they judged it high time to put an end to those practices , which had caused those disorders ; and had this advantage to do it , because their Conformity , whether old or new , had no further Statutable Authority , than was given it by the Act of Conformity , 1 Eliz. and the Stat. 13 Eliz. c. 12. about the Articles of Faith. Upon his Majesties happy Restauration , Anno 1660. all promised themselves a freedom from these evils which had troubled the Church very near 70. years , from the 13 Eliz. to the year 1640. though indeed in no great degree from the 13th to the 25th of Eliz. but for about 19. years of Queen Elizabeths Reign , and the whole time of King James his Reign ( which was 21. years ) , and 16. years of King Charles his Reign , these Impositions were the cause almost of all the evils under which this Nation groaned . We had reason to promise our selves this immunity from his Majesties Declaration at Bredah , and his first Declaration about Ecclesiastical affairs , in the year 1660. Whether the wisdom of his Majesty , or that party of the House of Commons , who then opposed the passing of it into an Act , were greater , let the experience now of Twenty years more determine , which for the most part have been years of confusion and disorder ; as to matters of Religion . That failing , Impositions were augmented . Upon this last attempt for settlement , Ministers were not only left to the Bishops power to have exacted upon them , 1. A Subscription to the 3. Articles in the 36th Canon . 2. The Oath of Canonical obedience , which though ancient , as established by Canons in times of Popery , yet we read not of , all the time of Queen Eliz. But 3. They must be ordained by Bishops , though before ordained according to the Ordination of all other Reformed Churches ( which in Queen Eliz. time , the Statute 13 Eliz. cap. 12. dispensed with , and made needless . 4. They must assent and consent to all and every thing in the Common-Prayer , as now Printed . 5. They must declare , renounce , and abjure : all this over and above , being tyed to the personal reading of the Common-Prayer , and use of the Ceremonies , &c. The effect was , the laying aside of more than 2000. Ministers . Besides the Congregations which depended on these good mens Ministry ; the number of Quakers , who had no Ministers , and of Pastors of Congregational Churches , who had no Livings , but were maintained by their people , together with the people that depended on them , and the Antipaedobaptists , were not small , who all had an equal , if , not a greater prejudice to the Common-Prayer-Book and Ceremonies , &c. What could by any wise men be expected , but what we have seen , that in all places people should gather into separate Congregations ? Could it be expected , that such a vast number of Ministers , not half of which had any thing to live on but their labours to maintain themselves , Wives and Families , should quietly have sate still and never Preached ( if they could have imagined , that this humane Law could have discharged them from any previous obligation to God ) , especially being importuned by the people whom God had committed to them ? If any had such fancies , they were very wild ones . In publick Temples they must not Preach ; what remained , but their own or others hired houses . What would be the event of this , was quickly seen , and an Act provided against Conventicles , making the punishment , Fines , Imprisonment , Banishment , &c. What a stir this made , is sufficiently known . This commenced 1664. and being a temporary Act , determined 1667 , or 1668. Soon after this , 1665. passed the Act prohibiting Noncon . Ministers to inhabit in Corporations . And the Act about Conventicles being expired , another Act was made , which took place , Anno 1670. How many sober Ministers and people in Eight years time had been undone , by proceedings against them in the Ecclesiastical Courts , Indictments at Sessions and Assizes , and by putting the first Act against Conventicles in Execution , is sufficiently known , and too large , and sad a story to relate . The new Act against Conventicles ( and such a one as never before passed a Parliament of England with respect to Magna Charta , and the fundamental liberties of the subject ) passed about 1670. Ministers and people were again prosecuted to incredible degrees , almost in all places , until his Majesty gave a Writ of ease by his Declaration of Indulgence , 1672. that lasted but two years ; and in 1674. the storm began again , as fierce as ever , but gradually abated till the year 1677. about which time the Parliament began to have a scent of a Plot to bring in Popery ; indeed they scented it first in 1673. Our worthy Patriots from that time stood upon their watch , something they discerned to be in hand , and that the project was deeply laid , but on what persons to charge it they knew not , and were wholly in the dark as to the methods and particulars of it , till God , in the year 1678. inclined Dr. Oates to do that ( never to be forgotten ) service to his Country , at one time saving the Life of his Soveraign , the Government of the Nation , and the Protestant Religion , from a total extirpation , and all good Protestants from a Massacre . The eyes of all Sober persons are at length opened to see , that an Vnion of Protestants is necessary . The Question is , which way it shall be effected ? for my own part , I should say , any way , by which it is practicable . There are but Two that can fall within the comprehension of any man of sense . 1. The First is by continuance of the Impositions on Ministers and people , rooting out all private Meetings , enforcing people to come to hear the Common-Prayer , and to conform to the Ceremonies , and hear their Parish-Ministers , and receive the Sacrament with them . 2. The Second is by taking off these Impositione , which all agree to be of things not in their own nature necessary , but such as the Magistrate may if he pleaseth relax . For the first method to unite us , it is a strange one , it aims only at uniting by destroying ; and purchases such a Church-Vnity as the Papists boast of , who by destroying of hundred thousands of righteous men , at last made all of one mind in appearance . The experience of more then 100 years hath taught us , that multitudes are neither to be argued , nor cudgelled into their conformity . The multitude of Nonconformists hath increased all a long , in stead of abateing , even from the first beginning of the difference at Francfurt , to this day ; and he is very ignorant that knoweth not , that since the fire of London , they have been almost doubled to what they were before . Nor hath the warmth of many Clergymen of late , in decrying the Plot , or lessening it , and indeavouring to make people believe it was a Nonconformist Plot , a little contributed to let the world know what they are , and would be at . Would any have these impositions still inforced ? what can they pursue , but the old design of Reconciling us and the Church of Rome , in which the Papists will listen to them , till they have ripen'd a design to cut their throats , as well as other mens ; but those are mightily ignorant of Popish principles , that can so much as fancy a possibility of reconciliation with them , so long as we maintain the Kings Supremacy , or a married Clergy ; so that in truth a reconciliation to the Church of Rome , is a thing not to be thought on by a married Clergyman , ( unless he be weary of his wife and children ) nor by a Loyal Subject that understands sense . The Vnion must therefore be effected by taking off these impositions , which now for an hundred years have produced so ill effects in this Nation . It is easy to see how great the good of this would be . We should all then be known by the single name of Protestants , and be hearty as one man in opposition to all Popish designs . Our Civil , and Ecolesiastical Courts might possibly then be at leisure to execute the power with which they are betrusted , against Papists and profane persons . Sober and industrious men would be encouraged to push out in trading to their utmost . There would be no complaining in our streets for want of the Ordinances of God so administred , as that concientious people might freely partake of them , without so much as a fancy that might make them call out , Death is in the pot , and sit at the Lords feasts without so much as a jealousy of a Divine Sword hanging over their heads , spoiling their Spiritual appetite . In short , it would restore us to one of the greatest pieces of Christian liberty , To serve the Lord without fear , either of offending God whom they know in matters of Worship to be a jealous God , or of being undone in their temporal concerns for the exercise of a tender conscience towards God. All good men should rejoice under the shadow of the King and Parliament , and unite their Prayers with chearfulness for both . What would be the Evil of it ? The foundations of Archbishop Whitgift , and Archbishop Laud , and my Lord Chancellor Hide ( the buildings upon which , hath hitherto been kept up with no less guard than the trouble of all the Courts of Judicature in England ) would be something shaken , and our foundations laid upon the word of God , which surely is far better ; the credit of some men , who have laid all the stress of Religion upon a Common-prayer-book and some Ceremonies , would be thought a little impaired ; the Magistrate should do nothing displeasing to God , who never required the imposition of these things at his hands : and doubtless hath been highly displeased at a great deal of force used , which hath not been good for the enforcing of them . It is , as I have said before , more than an hundred years since these impositions have been the cause of so much evil in these Nations , and that not only to particular families and persons , but even to the whole Nation . Though our Civil Wars were bottomed upon Questions and Grievances of a Civil Nature : yet it is hardly imaginable the common people should have been so inflamed , had they not before been wounded in so tender a part as that of their Consciences towards God. By reason of these contests , Papists have been connived at , and gained a great deal of Reputation , so much ( that till within these 2 years ) it was dangerous for Protestants to vie with them , for Loyalty or Religion . We see the issue , while they have been thus neglected , yea credited , they have been hatching the most hellish Plot that was ever heard of , hardly to be parallel'd by any story . The Plot hath in the bowels of it been discovered so full of Blood , and Cruelty and Ingratude , to his most Sacred Majesty ; and in the defence of themselves from the imputation of it , they have been found guilty of so many Lies , so much Perjury and Subornation , so much ungodliness and unrighteousness , that they cannot but see their Catholick Cause is wounded under the fifth rib , and their pretended Religion not like to recover its reputation , until there be none left of this Geration . They have nothing to do , but to wait a time when they may fight out their way with some probable hope of prevailing . It is certainly now high time to restore all Protestants ( be their persuasions what they will ) to a just liberty in the things of God , than the want of which nothing can more dispirit good men in their duty as to a common watchfulness and defence ; for what spirit can be in them who know they shall be ruin'd by one hand or another ? I surther offer it to the consideration of our grave Senators , who come up from the several parts of the Nation , and must best know the complexion of it , Whether those who are most against the taking of these Impositions , be not ( I do not say all , but forty for one ) the persons whom several Proclamations of his Majesty , and several votes of two Parliaments declaring it , and the several judgments upon some of the Traytors given by our Courts of Justice , have not been able to convince , That there is any Popish Plot ; but in all their converse they have made it their business to deny , or lessen the Plot , to defame and vilify the Kings Evidence , to impose upon people that it was a Plot of the Nonconformists , to make the dying words of the Jesuits creditable . In short , by all manner of ways to turn the whole Popish Plot into Ridicule . I do know some few ( very few others ) zealous for these Impositions , have born a Testimony against the Papists , and freely declare their Judgments about the Plot , to the sense of the King , the Parliament and the Judges ; but as to the generality , let observation be made , and judgment accordingly given . If it be found to be that party , they are fit only to be regarded by those who pray for the good success of that Execrable design , to which the continuance of these things , and a vigorous proceeding accordingly against Nonconformists , will as potently conduce , as it is possible any thing should . From this short , and true account of the rise , and growth , and effects of these Impositions , a good account may be given of a late Authors History of Separation , the smalness of it at first , and the further increase and improvements of it , which indeed did much vary , according as Impositions varied , and multiplyed . Those Congregations which he calls Separate Congregations , were from the first of Reformation ; but the numbers of them , and of the persons in them , was much increased after 1583. when Whitgift first brought in Subscriptions to Articles , and imposed them universally ; and increased yet more in 1603. and further in Bishop Lauds time , and were greatest in 1662 : when the greatest number of Ministers was thrown out and forbidden to preach in any publick Temples . Till that time Nonconformist Ministers might preach publickly , and most of them did so in the years 1634 , 1635. to 1640 : which is the true reason that in those years there were so few Private meetings , the people could in publick Temples hear their Ministers as Lecturers , yet in those times there were private meetings ; and notwithstanding all the fury some Bishops used , I remember Bishop Hall in a speech made to the Parliament 1641 or 1642. complain'd of an hundred such meetings to be in London alone . Nor is it any wonder if in near forty years time , good people have gained a little more light in matters of Worship and Discipline , and discerned the unlawfulness of some things in both , which were not at that time discerned . The Questions relating to both , have been more ventilated since the year 1640. than ever they were before , since the Reformation . So as a telling of the world , how few dissenters were at first , and in how few things they dissented , is very insignificant to any purpose but the loading of present Dissenters with an Odium from those ignorant and passionate persons who do not understand , That they had not half so much reason to dissent then , as they have had since , and now have ; and that the present Conformity required of Ministers , is twice more than was formerly required . And for the people , their Nonconformity in a greater degree must also be attributed to the further light they have gained as to matters of Worship and Discipline , the true nature and order of Churches , together with the outing of their Pastors , they being no such notions as all can swallow , That the forbidding godly Ministers to preach by an humane law , dissolves the pastoral relation of Pastors to their Churches . Or , that all within the bounds of a parish , are obliged to be members of the Church in that place ; or are therefore so , because they dwell within the bounds of such places . Some observe , that most men have some opportunities in their life-time offered them by the Providence of God , which if they lay hold of , they make them happy in the good things of this life . The like fate possibly attends Nations . We had one opportunity offered us in Q Elizabeths time , when Reformation might have been settled without these ingrateful impositions . This was lost through the fiery zeal of the then Archbishp , and brought us into near 20 years troubles . We had a second in the beginning of King James his time ; but the same man , and his successor Archbishop Bancroft &c. again hindred our seeing what concerned our peace . We had a third opportunity upon his Majesties Restauration ; by whose means it was then hindred , all know . We have since met with 20 years trouble more , or very nigh . We have a fourth before us at this time , upon the discovery of this Execrable Popish Plot. When God calleth us under the penalty of all that is dear unto us , to seek peace amongst our selves , ( for our Saviour hath told us , A Kingdom divided against it self cannot stand ) . All other proposals for Union , but the abating those Impositions which divide us , are meer idle toys and vanities . Good men cannot love peace so well , as to purchase it by submission to things which they judge sinful . If we should lose this also , I shall only say , The Interpretation be to those that hate us , and to the Enemies of our God. We may look for good , but no good will come . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A33964-e2590 See the Troubles at Francfort , p. 44 , 45. This makes it evident , that the Conference at Hampton-Court , this year , was not in the name of all Nonconformists , but only the personal Act of 3 or 4 men Noncon .