BISHOP GIBSON’S FIRST COMMISSION258

    9 February, 1726–7

    The king, etc., to the Reverend Father in Christ, Edmund, by divine permission Bishop of London, Greeting:

    1. 1. Inasmuch as our colonies, plantations, and other dominions in America have not yet been divided or formed into dioceses, or annexed to any diocese within our kingdom of Great Britain (by reason of which, jurisdiction in ecclesiastical causes arising in them or any one of them belongs to us alone, as supreme head of the Church on earth), and inasmuch as it has seemed necessary to us that in turn spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction in those regions in the cases undermentioned in these presents be instituted and exercised by our royal authority according to the laws and canons of the English Church [that are] lawfully received and sanctioned in England, in order that the incorrupt worship of God and the pure profession of the Christian religion may be the better promoted:
    2. 2. Know ye, now, that we, trusting very much in your pure religion and doctrine and uprightness of character and in your provident care and zeal in conducting affairs in this behalf, of our special grace and certain knowledge and mere motion have given and granted, and by [these] presents do give and grant, to you the foresaid Bishop of London, full power and authority to exercise, by yourself or by your sufficient commissary or your sufficient commissaries by you to be substituted and named, spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction in our respective colonies, plantations, and other dominions in America, according to the laws and canons of the English Church [that are] lawfully received and sanctioned in England, in the special causes and matters expressed and specified below in these presents; and for a declaration of our royal will as to the special causes and matters in which we wish the foresaid jurisdiction to be exercised by virtue of this our commission, we have further given and granted, and by [these] presents do give and grant, to you, the foresaid Bishop of London, full power and authority, by yourself or by your sufficient commissary or your sufficient commissaries by you to be substituted and named, to visit all churches in our colonies, plantations, and other dominions aforesaid in America in which divine service according to the rites and liturgy of the English Church shall be celebrated, and all rectors, curates, ministers, and incumbents (or by whatsoever other name [they may be] called) of the churches aforesaid, and all priests and deacons instituted in holy orders of the English Church, with all and all manner of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, power, and coercion requisite in the premises, and at days and hours and fit places (whatsoever, how often, and whensoever to you or to the commissary or commissaries aforesaid shall seem more suitable and convenient) to summon the foresaid rectors, curates, ministers, incumbents, priests or deacons instituted in holy orders of the English Church, or any one or more of them, before you or the commissary or commissaries aforesaid, and by witnesses to be sworn in due form of law by you or by the commissary or commissaries aforesaid, and in other lawful ways and manners in which this may of right be better and more effectually done, to inquire concerning the morals of the same, and concerning the morals of the parish clerks and concerning the skill, care, and diligence of the same in performing all duties pertaining to the place of a parish clerk according to the laws and canons of the English Church, and also to administer whatsoever lawful oaths [are] customary in ecclesiastical courts, and to correct and punish the foresaid rectors, curates, ministers, incumbents, priests and deacons instituted in holy orders of the English Church, and parish clerks, according to their deserts, whether by removal, deprivation, suspension, excommunication, or whatsoever other kind of due ecclesiastical censures or corrections, according to the canons and ecclesiastical laws aforesaid:
    3. 3. And further we have given and granted, and by [these] presents do give and grant, to you, the foresaid Bishop of London, full power and authority to inquire, by yourself or your sufficient commissary or your sufficient commissaries, concerning the condition and repair of parish churches and of houses belonging or pertaining to any rector, minister, incumbent, or by whatsoever other name [he may be] called, within our colonies, plantations, and other dominions aforesaid in America, and concerning the provision of all those things whatsoever [that are] requisite and necessary for the decent and regular celebration of divine service and the administration of the sacraments in the foresaid churches according to the requirement of the law, and to compel and coerce all and singular persons who by the laws shall thereunto respectively be held and obliged, to repair and maintain the same churches and houses, and respectively, and to provide and supply other things and materials abovementioned, according to the form and process of ecclesiastical law, with all and all manner of lawful jurisdiction, power, and coercion requisite in the premises, and also to correct and punish such persons abovementioned as in the premises shall be found delinquent or contumacious, according to their deserts, by excommunication or any other kind of due ecclesiastical censures or corrections according to the canons and ecclesiastical laws aforesaid, and generally to do, exercise, and execute all and singular the things which lawfully belong and pertain to the execution of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in all and singular the premises or shall be necessary about them:
    4. 4. And further, of our more abundant grace, we have given and granted, and do hereby give and grant, to you, the foresaid Bishop of London, full power and authority from time to time to name and substitute, under your hand and your episcopal seal, sufficient commissaries for exercising and executing effectually all and singular the premises in the several and respective colonies, plantations, and dominions aforesaid in America according to the tenor and true intent of this our commission, and to remove and change such commissaries from time to time as it shall seem to you expedient:
    5. 5. To have and to enjoy all and singular the powers and authorities aforesaid, to you, the foresaid Bishop of London, as long as it shall be our pleasure.
    6. 6. We wish, nevertheless, and we do hereby declare and ordain, that it be freely allowed, and it shall be allowed, to any person or any persons whomsoever against whom any judgment, decree, or sentence shall be given or pronounced by virtue of this our commission, to appeal from such judgment, decree, or sentence to our well-beloved and right trusty and our counsellors, the Right Reverend Father in Christ, William Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop of Canterbury for the time being; Peter Lord King, Baron of Ockham, our Chancellor of Great Britain, and our Chancellor of Great Britain or the Keeper of our Great Seal of Great Britain for the time being; the Right Reverend Father in Christ, Lancelot Archbishop of York, and the Archbishop of York for the time being; our High Treasurer of Great Britain for the time being; William Duke of Devonshire, President of our Privy Council, and the President of our Privy Council for the time being; Thomas Lord Trevor, Keeper of our Privy Seal, and the Keeper of our Privy Seal for the time being; Lionel Cranfield, Duke of Dorset, Marshal of our Household, and the Marshal of our Household for the time being; Charles Duke of Grafton, Chamberlain of our Household, and the Chamberlain of our Household for the time being; Thomas Duke of Newcastle, one of our Principal Secretaries of State; Thomas Earl of Westmoreland; James Earl of Berkeley, Principal Commissioner of our Admiralty, and our High Admiral and the Principal Commissioner of our Admiralty for the time being; Charles Viscount Townshend, the other of our Principal Secretaries of State, and our Principal Secretaries of State for the time being; Spencer Compton, Knight of the Bath, Speaker of our House of Commons, and the Speaker of our House of Commons for the time being; Robert Walpole, Knight of the most noble Order of the Garter, Chancellor of our Exchequer and Principal Commissioner of our Treasury, and the Chancellor of our Exchequer and Principal Commissioner of our Treasury for the time being; Robert Raymond, Knight, our Chief Justice appointed for the pleas to be held in our presence,259 and our Chief Justice appointed for the pleas to be held in our presence for the time being; Joseph Jekyll, Knight, Master of the Rolls of our Chancery, and the Master of the Rolls of our Chancery for the time being; and Robert Eyre, Knight, our Chief Justice of the Common Bench, and the Chief Justice of the Common Bench for the time being — to whom, namely William Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Archbishop of Canterbury for the time being; Peter Lord King and our Chancellor of Great Britain or the Keeper of our Great Seal of Great Britain for the time being; Lancelot Archbishop of York, and the Archbishop of York for the time being; our High Treasurer of Great Britain for the time being; William Duke of Devonshire, and the President of our Privy Council for the time being; Thomas Lord Trevor, and the Keeper of our Privy Seal for the time being; Lionel Cranfield Duke of Dorset, and the Marshal of our Household for the time being; Charles Duke of Grafton, and the Chamberlain of our Household for the time being; Thomas Duke of Newcastle; Thomas Earl of Westmoreland; James Earl of Berkeley, and our High Admiral and the Principal Commissioner of our Admiralty for the time being; Charles Viscount Townshend, and our Principal Secretaries of State for the time being; Spencer Compton, and the Speaker of our House of Commons for the time being; Robert Walpole, and the Chancellor of our Exchequer and Principal Commissioner of our Treasury for the time being; Robert Raymond, and our Chief Justice appointed for the Pleas to be held in our presence for the time being; Joseph Jekyll, and the Master of the Rolls of our Chancery for the time being; and Robert Eyre, and our Chief Justice of the Common Bench for the time being — being of our Privy Council — or to any three or more of the same, being of our Privy Council, we hereby give and grant full power and authority from time to time to hear and finally to determine all and singular such appeals and to affirm, change or revoke such judgments, decrees, or sentences, and to give and pronounce judgments and sentences finally thereupon, in as ample manner and form as the Commissioners under our Great Seal of Great Britain constituted and appointed by virtue of the Statute made in the twenty-fifth year of the reign of the Lord Henry the Eighth, late King of England, entitled “An Act for the Submission of the Clergy and Restraint of Appeals,” can or ought to proceed in appeals subject to their determination by the statute aforesaid, anything herein contained to the contrary in anything notwithstanding:
    7. 7. Commanding, furthermore, and hereby for ourself, our heirs and successors by firm injunction instructing as well all and singular our governors general, judges, and justices, as all and singular rectors, incumbents, ministers, officers, and our subjects whomsoever within the colonies, plantations, and other our dominions aforesaid in America, that they themselves and every of them be assiduous and assisting to you, the foresaid Bishop of London, and to the Commissary or Commissaries aforesaid, in the due execution of the premises in all things, as is fitting.

    In [testimony] of which, etc., Witness the King at Westminster on the ninth day of February.

    By Writ of Privy Seal