[ 416 ] Oaths of Sup:emacy and Fidelity.may'be .taken (I told you m what fenfe.) 2. And that the Pope's Jurifdietion here ( but no where elfe ) b~ declared to be ofHumane Right (that is,'fay ours, by the Fathers in General Councils not without the .Apoftles, by who[e ·church-Larps we• are all bound.) 3. That all iliould be really performed to the King, fo far as other Catholick Princes ufually enjoy and expect as their due, and fo far as the Biiliops were to be independent both from King , and Pope ( but not from fubjettion to either.) This (faith he) no man of Learning and Sobriety would have grudged to grant him. 4· Marriage· permitted to Priefts. 5. The. Communion in ~ both kinds. 6. The Liturgy in Englifh. I ask any fober man now, · .It_u. 1! .Whether the Pope did himfelf think that by this bargain he ceafed to be Pope, and all Papifts to be Papills ? · · 2. Whether if the King had been thus far equalled with other Catholick Princes, the Pope would not have fuppofed him:,and his Bifhops and Church to be of the fame Roman Catholkk Church as they ? · 3· Whether in all this here be any renunciati– on of the Popes Ecclefiaftical Jurifdietion in Eng– land, but only of the Divine Rightof it ? 4· Whether here be any renunciation of his .claimed UniverfalJurifdietionover all theChurcb on Earth? 5. Whether fudi an Univerfal Church Monarch ( by Humane' Right with fome·and Divine: with others ) be confiftent with the Proteftanc Doctrine, and that ofthe Former· Churchof Efl!!;e land 1 t • 'e. Whe~
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