The Laudian Bramhall and the "forreign Churches"

From the Laudian Bramhall - then Bishop of Derry, appointed Archbishop of Armagh at the Restoration - in his A Fair Warning, To take heed of the Scotish Discipline (1649), demonstrating that his critique of the attempt to impose the Scottish presbyterian system on England was not at attack on "forreign Churches":

I foresee that they will suggest that through their sides I seek to wound forreign Churches. No, there is nothing which I shall convict them of here, but I hope will be disavowed, though not by all Protestant auctors [authors], yet by all the Protestant Churches in the world ... If it were not for this Disciplinarian humour, which will admit no latitude in Religion, but makes each nicity a fundamental, and every private opinion an Article of faith, which prefers particular errours before general truths. I doubt not but all reformed Churches might easily be reconciled. Before these unhappy troubles in England, all Protestants both Lutherans and Calvinists did give unto the English Church the right hand of fellowship.

Here we see Bramhall the Laudian - and his Laudian credentials clearly cannot be doubted - both refuse to 'unchurch' continental Protestants (many of them having non-episcopal orders) and affirm fellowship with them, "both Lutherans and Calvinists". 

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