ARTICLES TO BE INQVIRED OF IN THE FIRST TRIENNIAL VISITATION OF THE MOST REVEREND FATHER, WILLIAM, By GOD'S Providence, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, Primate of all England; and METROPOLITAN: In and for the Diocese of Canterbury, In the year of our LORD GOD 1637, And in the fourth year of his Grace's Translation. printer's or publisher's device EX IGNE RESURGIT VIRTUS Printed at London, by Richard Badger. The Tenor of the Oath, to be Ministered to the Churchwardens and Sidemen. YOu shall swear, that you, and every of you, shall duly consider and diligently inquire, of all and every of these Articles given you in charge; and that all affection, favour, hatred, hope of reward and gain, or fear of displeasure, or malice set aside; you shall present all and every such person, that now is, or of late was within your Parish, as hath committed any offence, or made any default mentioned in these, or any of these Articles; or which are vehemently suspected or defamed of any such offence or default: wherein you shall deal uprightly and fully; neither presenting, nor sparing to present any, contrary to truth: having in this action God before your eyes, with an earnest zeal to maintain truth, and to suppress vice▪ So help you God, and the holy Contents of this Book Concerning the Church, the Ornaments thereof, and the Church's possessions. IMprimis, Whether have you in your several Churches, and Chapels th● whole Bible of the largest volume, and the Book of Common Prayer● both fairly and substantially bound: A Font of stone set up in the ancient usual place: A convenient and decent Communion Table, with a Carpet of silk, or some other decent stuff, continually laid upon the same at time of Divine Service, and a fair linen cloth thereon, at the time of the receiving of the holy Communion. And whether is the same Table placed in such convenient sort within the Chancel or Church, as that the Minister may be be●● heard in his Prayer and Administration, and that the greatest number may communicate. And whether is it so used out of time of divine service, as is not agreeable to the holy use of it; as by sitting on it, throwing hats on it, writing on it, or is it abused to other prophaner uses: and are the ten Commandments set upon the East end of your Church or Chapel, where the people may best see and read them, and other sentences of holy Scripture, written on the walls likewise for that purpose? 2 Whether are the afternoon Sermons, in your sever all Parishes, turned into Catechising by question and answer; according to the form prescribed in the Book of Common Prayer? And whether doth every Lecturer read divine Service, according to the Liturgy printed by authority, in his Surplice and Hood, before the Lecture? And whether are his Majesty's Instructions in all things duly observed? 3 Whether have you in your said Church or Chappel, a convenient seat for your Minister to read Service in, together with a comely Pulpit set up in a convenient place, with a decent cloth or cushion for the same, a comely large Surplice, a fair Communion Cup, with a cover of silver, a Flagon of silver, tin, or pewter, to ●ut the Wine in, whereby it may be set upon the Communion Table, at the time of the blessing thereof, with all other things and ornaments necessary for the celebration of divine Service, and administration of the Sacraments? And whether have you a strong Chest for Alms for the poor, with three locks and keys, and another Chest for keeping the Books, and Ornaments of the Church, and the Register Book? And whether have you a Register Book in Parchment, for Christen, Weddings, and Burials, and whether the same be kept in all points, according to the Canons in that behalf provided? And is the Mother's Christian name therein Registered as well as the Fathers, and a transcript thereof brought in yearly within one Month after the 25 of March into the Lord Archbishop or Bishop of the Diocese his principal Register? And whether have you in your said Church or Chapel, a Table set, of the degrees wherein by law men are prohibited to marry? 4 Whether are your Church and Chapels, with the Chancels thereof, and your parsonage or vicarage house, your parish Almshouse and Church-house, in good reparations: and are they employed to godly, and their right holy uses? Is your Church, Chancel, and Chapel decently and comely kept, as well within as without, and the seats well maintained, according to the 85. Canon, in that behalf provided? Or have any patrons or others decayed the Parsonage-houses, and keep a stipendiary Priest or Cu●●te, in place where an incumbent should be possessed? Whether is your Churchyard ●ell fenced with walls, rails, or pales, and by whom: and if not, in whose default the ●●me is, and what the defect or fault is? And whether any person have encroached upon ●he ground of the Churchyard, or whether any person or persons, have used any thing ●r place consecrated to holy use, profanely or wickedly? 5 Is your Church or Chapel decently paved, and is your Churchyard well and orderly kept without abuse? Are the bones of the dead decently interred, or laid up in ●●me fit place as be seemeth Christians? And is the whole consecrated ground kept free ●rom Swine and all other nastiness, as becometh the place so dedicated? 6 Whether have any ancient Monuments or Glass-windows been defaced, or any ●rasse Inscriptions, Led, Stones, or any thing else belonging to your Church or Chapel, been at any time purloined, and by whom? 7 Whether have you the Terrier of all the Glebe lands, Meadows, Gardens, Orchards, Houses, Stocks, Implements, Tenements, and portions of Tithes (whether within your parish or without) belonging unto your Parsonage or Vicarage, taken by ●he view of honest men in your said parish? And whether the same Terrier be laid up ●n the Bishop's Registry, and in whose hands any of them are now? And if you have no Terrier already made in Parchment, you the Churchwardens and Sidemen, together with your Parson or Vicar, or in his absence with your Minister, are to make diligent inquiry and presentment of the several particulars following, and make, subscribe, and sign the said Terrier, as aforesaid? 1 How many several parcels of Glebeland, do you know, or have you credibly heard to belong unto your Rectory, Church, Parsonage, Vicarage, etc. and by what Names are they (or any of them) commonly called and known; and what yearly rent have you known or heard to have been paid, unto the Parson, Vicar, or to his or their Assigns, for every, or any of the said parcels? 2 In whose occupation are the said parcels at this present? How much doth each parcel contain by measure of the 16 foot Pole? How is each parcel Butted, on every part? And who is to repair the fences on each side thereof? 3 What hedge, ditch, mere, tree, thorn, doole, or distinction, is there now, at this present, whereby the said parcels of Church-lands may be apparently known and distinguished, from the lands of other men, upon whom they do abutt? 4 What Cart-way, Horse-way, Footway, Gates or Styles do lead from your Parsonage or Vicarage-house, unto every of the said parcels of Glebe land? Declare your knowledge therein. 5 Whether do you know, or have you credibly heard, that some styles, gates, hedges, ditch, mere, tree, thorn, or other doole (formerly growing or being, between the said parcels of Glebe (or some of them, and the Lands of other men) have been digged up, felled down, destroyed, put by or defaced? And who had the said parcel (so wronged) in occupation, when the said style, gate, hedge, ditch, mere, tree, thorn, or other ancient doole, was so digged up, felled down, destroyed, put by or defaced? Concerning the Clergy. 1 WHether doth your Parson, Vicar, or Curate, distinctly and reverently say Divine Service upon Sundays and Holidays, and other days appointed to be observed by the Book of Common Prayer; as Wednesdays, and Fridays, and the Eaveses of every Sunday and Holiday, at fit and usual times? And doth he duly observe the Orders, Rites, and Ceremonies, prescribed in the said book of Common Prayer, as well in reading public prayers and the Litany, as also in administering the Sacraments, solemnisation of Matrimony, visiting the sick, burying the dead, Churning of Women, and all other like Rites and Offices of the Church, in such manner a● form as in the said book of Common Prayer he is enjoined, without any omission addition. And doth he read the Book of the last Canons yearly, and wear a Surpl● according to the said Canons? 2 Whether have you any Lecturer in your parish, who hath preached in his Cloak and not in his Gown, and whether have you any Lecturer who will not profess h● willingness and readiness to take upon him a Living or Benefice, with cure of soul● or who hath refused a Benefice when it hath been offered unto him? 3 Doth your Minister bid Holidays and Fasting-days, as by the Book of Common Prayer is appointed? And doth he give warning beforehand to the parishioners for the receiving of the holy Communion, as the two and twentieth Canon requires and whether he doth administer the holy Communion so often, and at such times, that every parishioner may receive the same, at the least thrice in every year; where once at Easter, as by the Book of Common prayer is appointed? And doth your A●nister receive the same himself, on every day that he administereth it to others, a●● use the words of institution according to the Book, at every time that the Bread a●● Wine is renewed, accordingly as by the proviso of the 21. Canon is directed: A●● doth he deliver the Bread and Wine to every Communicant severally, and kneeling Whether he hath admitted to the holy Communion, any notorious Offender or Sch●maticke, contrary to the 26. and 27. constitutions, or received any to the Communion being not of his own Cure, or put any from the Communion, who are not public●ly infamous for any notorious crime? Doth he use the sign of the Cross in Ba●tisme, or baptise in any Basin, or other Vessel, and not in the usual Font; or a●mit any Father to be Godfather to his own child, or such who have not received 〈◊〉 holy Communion, or baptise any children that were not borne in the parish, or wilful refuse to baptise any infant in his parish, being in danger, having been informed 〈◊〉 she weakness of the said child; and whether the child dieth through his default without baptism? 4 Whether hath your Minister married any without a King, or without Banes published threée several Sundays or Holidays in time of divine Service, in the seuer● Churches or Chapels of their several abode, according to the Book of Common pra●er, or in times prohibited, albeit the Banes were thrice published, without a Licence dispensation from the Archbishop, the Bishop of the Diocese, or his Chancellor, fi● obtained in that behalf? Or not betwixt the hours of eight and twelve in the for noon, or have married any in any private house, or if the parties be under the age 21 years, before their parents and governors have signified their consent unto hi● 5 Doth he refuse to bury any, which ought to be interred in Christian burial, or ●fer the same longer than he should, or bury any in Christian burial, which by the con●tutions of the Church of England, or Laws of the Land, ought not to be so interr● 6 Is your Minister a Preacher allowed, if yea, then by whom? If not, whether do● he procure some who are lawfully licenced, to preach monthly amongst you at the lea●● 7 Doth your Minister (being licenced,) preach usually according to the Cano● either in his own Cure, or in some other Church or Chapel near adjoining, wh● no other Preacher is, and how often he hath been negligent in that behalf, & doth preach standing, and with his hat off? Or whether doth he or his Curate upon eue●● Sunday, when there is no Sermon, read an Homily, or some part thereof, accordi●● as he ought to do; or in case he be not licenced to preach, doth he take upon him Preach or expound the Scriptures in his own Cure, or elsewhere? If so, than you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 present the same, the time and place, when, and where he did it? ● Doth your Minister use to pray for the King's Majesty, King Charles, and for the ●aéenes Majesty, Prince Charles, and all the royal Progeny, with addition of such ●le and Titles as are due to his Highness, and exhort the people to obedience to his majesty, and all Magistrates in authority under him: And doth he also pray for all arch-bishops, Bishops, and other Ecclesiastical persons? 9 Is your Minister continually resident upon his Benefice, and how long time hath been absent, and in case he be licenced to be absent, whether doth he cause his Cure to 〈◊〉 sufficiently supplied, according to the Canons? Or in case he hath another Benefice, ●●ether doth he supply his absence by a Curate sufficiently licenced to preach in that ●ure where he himself is not resident? Or otherwise, in case the smallness of the li●ng cannot find a preaching Minister, doth he preach at both his Benefices usually? 10 Doth your Minister or Curate, serve any more Cures than one: If yea, than what ●her Cure doth he serve, and how far are they distant? 11 Doth your Minister or Curate every Sunday and Holiday, before Evening ●●ayer, for half an hour or more, examine and instruct the youth and ignorant persons 〈◊〉 his Parish, in the ten Commandments, Articles of the Belief, and in the Lord's ●rayer, and the Sacraments, according as it is prescribed in the Catechism, set ●●th in the book of Common Prayer only? And if he do not, where is the fault, either 〈◊〉 the Parents and Masters of the children, or in the Curate neglecting his duty? And 〈◊〉 he careful to tender all such youth of his parish as have been well instructed in their catechism, to be confirmed by the Bishop in his Visitation, or any other convenient ●ne, as is appointed by the book aforesaid. 12 Doth your Minister in the Rogation days, go in perambulation of the circuit of ●●●e parish, saying, and using the prayers, Suffrages, and Thanksgiving to God, appointed by Law, according to his duty, thanking GOD for his blessings, if there plenty on the earth: Or otherwise, to pray for his grace and favour, if there be a fear scarcity? 13 Hath your Minister admitted any Woman begotten with child, in adultery or ●●nication, to be churched without licence of the Ordinary? 14 Hath your Minister, or any other Preacher, baptised children, churched any wo●●n, or ministered the holy Communion in any private house, otherwise than by law is ●●●owed? ●5 Doth your Minister endeavour and labour diligently to reclaim the popish Recu●nts in his parish from their errors (if there be any such abiding in your parish.) Or ●●ether is your Parson, Vicar, or Curate, overconuersant with, or a favourer of Recu●nts, whereby he is suspected not to be sincere in Religion? 16 Hath your Minister taken upon him, to appoint any public or private Fasts, ●ophesies, or Exercises, not approved by Law, or public authority, or hath used to ●et in any private house or place, with any person or persons, there to consult how to speech or deprave the Book of Common Prayer, or the doctrine or discipline of the ●●urch of England: If yea, than you shall present them all? 17 Hath your Minister stayed the publication of any excommunications or suspenti●s, or doth he every half year devounce in his parish Church, all such of his Parish 〈◊〉 are excommunicated, and persevere therein without seeking to be absolved, or doth he ●●ttingly and willingly keep company with such as are excommunicate: And hath he ●mitted into your Church any person excommunicate, without a certificate of his ablution from the Ordinary, or other competent judge? 18 Doth your Minister carefully look to the relief of the poor, and from time to time call upon his parishioners to give somewhat, as they can spare to godly and charitable uses, especially when they make their Testaments. 19 Whether your Minister or any, having taken holy Orders, being now silenced or suspended, or any other person of your knowledge, or as you have heard, hold any conventicles, or doth preach in any place, or use any other form of divine Service than is appointed in the Book of Common prayer: If yea, than you are to present their names, and with whom? 20 Whether is your Curate licenced to serve, by the Bishop of this Diocese, or by any other, and by whom? 21 Doth your Minister use such decency and comeliness in his apparel, as by the 47. Canon is enjoined: is he of sober behaviour, and one that doth not use such bodily labour, as is not seemly for his function and calling? 22 Is your Minister noted or defamed, to have obtained his Benefice or his orders, by Simony, or any other way defamed, to be a simoniacal person, or any way noted to be a Schismatic, or schismatically affected, or reputed to be an incontinent person, or doth table or lodge any such in his house: or is he a frequenter of Taverns, Inns, or Alehouses, or any place suspected for ill rule: Or is he a common Drunkard, a common Gamester, or player at Dice, a Swearer, or one that applieth himself not at his study, or is otherwise offensive and scandalous to his function or Ministry? 23 Doth your Preacher or Lecturer read Divine Service, before his Sermon or Lecture, and Minister the Sacraments twice a year, at least, in his own person, according to the Canons? 24 When any person hath been dangerously sick in your Parish, hath he neglected to visit him, and when any have been parting out of this life, hath he omitted to do his last duty in that behalf? 25 Doth your Minister, Curate, or Lecturer, in his or their Sermons deliver such doctrine as tends to obedience and the edifying of their auditory in faith and religion, without intermeddling with matters of State, not fit to be handled in the pulpit, but to be discussed by the wisdom of his Majesty and his Council. And if you find any faulty herein, you shall present them? Schoolmasters. 1 DOth any in your Parish openly or privately take upon him to teach School, without licence of the Ordinary, and is be conformeable to the Religion now established? And doth he bring his Scholars to the Church, to hear divine Service and Sermons? And doth he instruct his Scholars in the grounds of the Religion now established in this Church of England, and is he careful and diligent to benefit his scholars in learning? 2 Doth your Schoolmaster teach and instruct his youth in any other Catechism than is allowed by public authority? And what Catechism it is that he so teacheth? 3 Is any Living or means given towards the erection or maintenance of any School withheld back or otherwise impolyed, and by whom? 4 Doth any keep school in the Chancel or Church, by which means, that holy place, and the Communion Table are many ways profaned, and the windows broken? Parish Clarke and Sextons. 1 Have you a fit Parish Clarke, aged twenty years at least, of honest conversation, able to read and write? Whether are his and the Sexton's wages paid without fraud, according to the ancient custom of your parish: if not, then by whom are they so defrauded or denied? by whom are they chosen? and whether the said Clerk be approved by the Ordinary? And hath he taken an Oath, as in such cases is fit and required: and is he diligent in his Office, and serviceable to the Minister, and doth he take upon him to meddle with any thing above his Office: as Churching of Women, burying the dead, or such like? 2 Doth your Clerk or Sexton keep the Church clean, the doors locked at fit times? is any thing lost or spoiled in the Church, through his default? Are the Communion Table, Font, Books, and other Ornaments of the Church kept fair and clean? Doth he suffer any unseasonable ringing, or any profane exercise in your Church? Or doth he (when any is passing out of this life) neglect to toll a bell, having notice thereof? Concerning the Parishioners. 1 WHether any of your Parishioners, being sixteen years of age or upwards, or others lodging or commonly resorting to any house within your Parish, do wilfully absent themselves from your parish Church upon Sundays and Holidays at Morning and Evening prayers? Or who come late to Church, and departed from Church before service be done upon the said days? Or who do not reverently behave themselves during the time of Divine Service, devoutly kneeling, when the general confession of sins, the Litany, the ten Commandments, and all Prayers and Collects are read, and using all due and lowly reverence, when the blessed name of the Lord jesus Christ is mentioned, and standing up when the Articles of the Belief are read; or who do cover their heads in the Church during the time of Divine Service, unless it be in case of necessity, in which case they may wear a Night cap or Coif? Or who do give themselves to babbling, talking, or walking, and are not attentive to hear the Word preached, or read? Whether any of your parish, being of sixteen years of age or upwards, do not receive the holy Communion in your Church thrice every year: whereof once at Easter, and whether they do not devoutly kneel at the receiving thereof? And whether any having divers houses of remove, do shift from place to place of purpose to defeat the performance of their Christian duties in that behalf? 2 Whether any of your parishioners, being admonished thereof, do not send their children, servants, and apprentices, to the Minister, to be catechised upon such Sundays and Holidays as are appointed? Or whether any of them do refuse to come; or if they come, refuse to learn those instructions set forth in the Book of Common Prayer? 3 Whether any of your Parish do entertain within their house, any sojourner, common guests, or other persons, who refuse to frequent Divine Service, or receive the holy Communion, as aforesaid? present their names, their qualities or conditions. 4 What Recusant Papists are there in your Parish, or other Sectaries? present their names, qualities, or conditions? whether they keep any Schoolmaster in their house, which cometh not to Church to hear divine Service, and receive the Communion? What is his name, and how long hath he taught there, or elsewhere? 5 Whether any of the said popish Recusants, or other Schismatics, do labour to seduce and withdraw others from the Religion now established? Or instruct their families or children in popish religion: or refuse to entertain any, especially in place of greatest service, or trust, but such as concur with them in their opinions? 6 How long have the said popish Recusants abstained from divine Service, or from the Communion, as aforesaid? 7 Is there any in your parish that retain, sell, utter, or disperse, any popish books, or Writings, or other Books, Libraries, or writings of any Sectaries, touching the Religion, State, and Government Ecclesiastical of this Kingdom of England, or keep any Monuments of Superstition uncancelled or defaced? 8 Whether have you any in your Parish, which heretofore being popish Recusants or Sectaries, have since reform themselves, and come to Church to hear divine Service, and receive the Sacraments: if yea, then who are they? And how long since hau● they so reform themselves? And whether they still remain and abide in that conformity. 9 Is there any in your parish that refuse to have their children baptised, or themselves to receive the Communion at the hands of your Minister, taking exception against him, and what causes or exceptions do they allege; or have any married wives refused to come to Church, according to the Book of Common Prayer, to give God thankes after their childbirth, for their safe deliverance? And whether do any of, or in your Parish, refuse to have their children baptised in your parish-Church, according to the form prescribed in the Book of Common Prayer? 10 Do any of your Parish usually go to other Parish Churches to hear Divine Service or Sermons? Or do they communicate, or baptise their children in any other Parish? 11 Whether there be any in your Parish who will come to hear the Sermon, but will not come to public prayers appointed by the Book of Common Prayer, making a schism or division (as it were) between the use of public prayer and preaching? 12 What persons within your parish, for any offence, contumacy, or crime, of Ecclesiastical Conusance do stand excommunicate? present their names, and for what cause they are excommunicated, and how long have they so stood, and what person or persons do wittingly and usually keep them company? 13 Whether any not being in Orders, do execute any Priestly or Ministerial Office, in your Church, chapel, or Churchyard, and what be their names? 14 Whether any in your parish, that having heretofore taken upon him the order of Priest hood or Deacon, hath since relinquished the same, and lives as a Layman neglecting his vocation? 15 Hath any person in your Parish quarrelled, or stricken, or used any violence to your Minister, or have stricken or quarrelled with any other person within your Church or Church-yard, or demeaned himself disorderly in the Church, by filthy or profane talk, or any other base or immodest behaviour? Or hath disturbed the Minister in time of Divine Service or Sermon, or hath libelled or spoken slanderous words against your Minister, to the scandal of his vocation, or defamed any of his Neighbours, touching any crime of Ecclesiastical Conusance? 16 Whether any of, or in your Parish, without consent of the Ordinary, or other lawful authority, have caused any to do penance, or to be censured or punished for any matter of Ecclesiastical Conusance, by any Vestry-meetings, or otherwise by their own authority? Or have taken any money or commutation for the same? Present their names that have done it: And who have been so punished? In what manner, and upon what cause? 17 Whether any person in your Parish, do exercise any Trade or labour, buy or sell, or keep open Shops, or Warehouses upon any Sunday or Holiday by themselves, their Servants, or Apprentices, or have otherwise profaned the said days, contrary to the orders of the Church of England? And whether there be any Inne-kéepers, Ale-house-kéepers, Victuallers or other persons, that permit any persons in their houses, to eat, drink, or play, during the time of Divine Service or Sermon, or reading the Homilies, in the forenoon or afternoon, upon those days? 18 Whether the fifth day of November be kept holy, and thanksgiving made to God, for his Majesties and this States happy deliverance, according to the ordinance in that behalf? 19 Whether any of your Parish hold or frequent any conventicles or private Congregations, or make or maintain any constitutions, agreed upon in any such assemblies? Or any that do write, or publicly or privately speak against the Book of Common prayer, or any thing therein contained, or against any of the Articles of Religion agreed upon, in Anno 1562. or against the King's Supremacy, in causes Ecclesiastical, or against the Oath of Supremacy, or of Allegiance, as pretending the same to be unlawful and not warrantable by the Word of God? Or against any of the Rites or Ceremonies of the Church of England, now established? Or against the Government of the Church of England under the Kings most excellent Majesty, by Archbishops, Deans, Arch-Deacons, and other Officers of the same: affirming, that the same is repugnant to the Word of God, and that the said Ecclesiastical Officers, are not lawfully ordained? Or whether there be any Authors, Maintainers or favourers of Heresy or Schism, or that be suspected to be Anabaptists, Libertines, Brownists, of the Family of Love, or of any other heresy or schism? present their names? 20 Whether any in your Parish have married within the degrees by Law prohibited, and where, and by whom? And whether any couple in your parish being lawfully married, live apart one from the other, without due separation by the law, or any that have been divorced, which keep company with any other at bed or at board? 21 Whether do any persons administer the goods of the dead without lawful authority, or suppress the last will of the dead? Or are there in your parish any wils not yet proved or goods of the dead (dying intestate) left unadministred? By authority in that behalf you shall not fail to present the Executors and all others faulty therein: and also how many persons being possessed of any goods and chattels, have died within your Parish, since the x. day of February? 163●. 22 Whether any withhold the Stock of the Church, or any goods, or other things, given to good and charitable uses? 23 Whether your Hospitals and Almshouses, and other such houses and corporations, founded to good & charitable uses, and the lands, possessions, and goods of the same, be ordered and disposed of as they should be? And do the Masters, Governors, Fellows, and others of the said Houses and Corporations, behave and demean themselves according to the godly ordinances and statutes of their several Foundations? 24 Whether have you any in your Parish to your knowledge or by common fame or report, which have committed adultery, fornication, or Incest: or any which have impudently bragged or boasted, that he or they have lived incontinently with any person or persons whatsoever: or any that have attempted the chastity of any Woman, or solicited any Woman to have the carnal knowledge of her body, or which are commonly reputed to be common Drunkards, Blasphemers of Gods holy Name; common Swearers, common Slanderers of their neighbours, and sowers of discord, filthy and lascivious Talkers, Usurers, simoniacal persons, Bawds, or harbourers of Women with-child, which be unmarried, or conveying or suffering them to go away before they have made satisfaction to the Church, or any that having heretofore been presented, or suspected of any the aforesaid crimes, have for that cause departed your Parish, and are now returned again? Or any which have used any enchantments, sorceries, incantations, or witchcrafts, which are not made felony by the Statutes of this Realm, or any which have committed any perjury in any Ecclesiastical Court, in an Ecclesiastical cause, or which have committed any forgery, punishable by the Ecclesiastical Laws, and the procurors and abettors of the said offences: you shall truly present the names of all, and singular the said offenders, and with whom they have committed the said offences, in case they have not been publicly punished to your knowledge for the same crimes? Physicians, Surgeons, and Midwives. 25 HOw many Physicians, Surgeons, or Midwives, have you in your Parish? How long have they used their several Sciences or Offices, and by what authority? And how have they demeaned themselves therein, and of what skill are they accounted to be in their profession? Touching the Churchwardens and Sidemen. 1 WHether you and the Churchwardens, Quest-men, or Sidemen, from time to time, do, and have done their diligence, in not suffering any idle person to abide either in the Churchyard or Church-porch, in Service or Sermon time, but causing them either to come into the Church to hear divine Service, or to departed, and not disturb such as be hearers there? And whether they have, and you do diligently see the parishioners duly resort to the Church every Sunday & Holiday and there to remain during divine Service and Sermon? And whether you or your predecessors, Churchwardens there, suffer any plays, Feasts, drink, or any other profane usages, to be kept in your Church, chapel, or Churchyards, or have suffered to your and their uttermost power and endeavour, any person or persons to be tippling or drinking in any Inn or Victualling house in your parish, during the time of divine Service or Sermon, on Sundays and Holidays? 2 Whether, and how often have you admitted any to preach within your Church or Chapel, which was not sufficiently licenced? And whether you together with your Minister, have not taken diligent heed and care, that every parishioner being of sixteen years of age or upwards, have received thrice every year, as aforesaid: and also that no stranger have usually come to your Church, from their own parish Church? 3 Whether have there been provided against every Communion, a sufficient quantity of fine white bread, and good and wholesome wine for the communicants that shall receive? And whether that wine be brought in a clean and sweet standing-pot of pewter, or other purer mettle? 4 Whether were you chosen by the consent of the Minister and the Parishioners? And have the late Churchwardens given up a just account for their time, and deliuere● to their successors by Bill indented the money, & other things belonging to the Church which was in their hands? And are the Alms of the Church faithfully distributed to the use of the poor? 5 Whether do you see the names of all Preachers which are strangers and preach in your parish Churches, to be noted in a Book for that purpose, and whether every Preacher do subscribe his name, and of whom he had his Licence? 6 Whether any do trouble or molest you for doing your duties? 7 Whether there be any Legacies withheld given to the Church or poor people, or to the mending of Highways, or otherwise by the Testators? In whose hands it is, by whom it was given, and by whom it is withheld? 8 Do you know of any thing that hath been complained of, that is not yet redressed? Concerning Ecclesiastical Magistrates and Officers. 1 Whether do you know or have heard of any payment, composition or agreement, to, or with any Ecclesiastical Magistrate, judge, or Officer, for winking at or sparing to punish any person for any offence of Ecclesiastical Conusance, or for suppressing or concealing of any excommunication, or any other Ecclesiastical Censure, of or against any Recusant, or any other offendor in the cases aforesaid? What sum of money, or other consideration hath been received or promised, by, or to any of them in that respect, by whom, and with whom? 2 Hath any person within your parish, paid, or promised any sum of money or other reward, for commutation of penance, for any crime of Ecclesiastical Conusance? If so, then with whom? When, and for what, and how hath the same been employed? 3 Are your Ecclesiastical judges and their substitutes Masters of Arts, or Bachelors of the Laws at the least, learned and practised in the Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws: Men of good life and fame, zealously affected in Religion, and just and upright in executing their Offices? Have they heard any matter of Office privately in their Chambers, without their sworn Registers, or their Deputies presence? 4 Do you know, or have you heard, that any Ecclesiastical judge, Officer, or Minister, hath received or taken any extraordinary fees, or other rewards or promises, by any ways or means, directly or indirectly, of any person or persons whatsoever, either for the granting of the administration of the goods and chattels of those that have died intestate, to one before another, or for allotting of larger portions of the goods and chattels of those that have died intestate, to one more than to another: or for allowing larger and unreasonable accounts, made by Executors or Administrators: or for giving them Quietus est, or discharges, without Inventory or account, to defraud Creditors, Legataries, or those who are to have portions. And what sums of money do you know, or have you heard, that any Ecclesiastical judge or Officer hath taken out of the state of any dying intestate, upon pretence to bestow the same in pios usus: and how have the same been bestowed? 5 Hath any Ecclesiastical Magistrate, judge, Officer, or any other exercising Ecclesiastical jurisdiction within this your Diocese: Or any Advocate, Register, Procter, Clerks, Apparitors, or other Minister belonging to the same Ecclesiastical Courts, exacted or taken by any ways or means, directly or indirectly, extraordinary or greater Fees than are due and accustomed? And whether is there a Table for the rates of all Fees, set up in their several Courts and Offices? And whether they have sent or suffered any Process to go out of the Ecclesiastical Courts otherwise than by law they ought? Or have they taken upon them the Offices of Informers or Promoters to the said Courts, or any other way abused themselves in their Offices, contrary to the Law and Canons in that behalf provided? 6 What number of Apparators have every several judge Ecclesiastical? And wherein, and in what manner is the Country overburthened by them? And wherein have they caused or summoned any to appear in the said Courts, without a presentment or citation first had? Or whether have they threatened any to prosecute them in the said Courts if they would not give them some rewards, and what bribe's in that behalf have they taken? 7 What reward or fees hath any of the Apparators taken, to save the journeys to the Ecclesiastical Court of any persons, and what (after composition so made) have they or any of them taken and received, and what acquittance or discharge have they given or promised them, and whether have they not cited some to appear before the , or his Official, after they have been ordered by the Commissary, and done their penance accordingly, and whom have they so cited and troubled, and what hath it cost them, as you know or have heard, or by inquiry can find. If you know of any other default or crime of Ecclesiastical Conusance, you are to present the same by virtue of your Oaths? The Minister of every Parish, may and aught to join in presentment with the Churchwardens and Sidemen, and if they will not present, the Minister may and ought himself to present the defaults and crimes aforesaid: and there must be several presentments made to every several Article: and the Minister, Churchwardens, and Sworne-men, are to meet and confer about the said presentments, and answering of every of the aforesaid Articles? FINIS.