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Occasional Papers - Selected from the Guardian, the Times, and the Saturday Review, - 1846-1890 by R.W. Church
page 18 of 398 (04%)
Constitution, that ecclesiastical laws should be administered by
ecclesiastical judges. These were the securities on which the
Church relied; on, which she had a right to rely; and on which,
for a long series of years, her alliance was justified by the
results.

And further:--

The Church had this great and special security on which to rely,
that the Sovereigns of this country were, for a century after the
Reformation, amongst her best instructed, and even in some
instances her most devoted children: that all who made up the
governing body (with an insignificant exception) owned personal
allegiance to her, and that she might well rest on that personal
allegiance as warranting beforehand the expectation, which after
experience made good, that the office of the State towards her
would be discharged in a friendly and kindly spirit, and that the
principles of constitutional law and civil order would not be
strained against her, but fairly and fully applied in her behalf.

These securities she now finds herself deprived of. This is the great
change made in her position--made insensibly, and In a great measure,
undesignedly--which has altered altogether the understanding on which
she stood towards the Crown at the Reformation. It now turns out that
that understanding, though it might have been deemed sufficient for the
time, was not precise enough; and further, was not sufficiently looked
after in the times which followed. And on us comes the duty of taking
care that it be not finally extinguished; thrown off by the despair of
one side, and assumed by the other as at length abandoned to their
aggression.
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