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A58710 The history of the affaires of Scotland from the restauration of King Charles the 2d. in the year 1660, and of the late great revolution in that kingdom : with a particular account of the extraordinary occurrences which hapned thereupon, and the transactions of the convention and Parliament to Midsomer, 1690 : with a full account of the settling of the church government there, together with the act at large for the establishing of it. T. S. 1690 (1690) Wing S164; ESTC R32344 93,166 272

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THE HISTORY OF THE AFFAIRES OF SCOTLAND FROM The Restauration of King Charles the 2d in the year 1660. And of the late great Revolution in that Kingdom WITH A particular account of the Extraordinary Occurrences which hapned thereupon and the Transactions of the CONVENTION and PARLIAMENT to Midsomer 1690. With a full Account of the Settling of the Church Government there Together with the Act at Large for the Establishing of it Licensed and Entred according to Order LONDON Printed for Tho. Salusbury at the sign of the Temple near Temple-Bar in Fleet-street 1690. TO THE Right Honourable JANE Countess of SUTHERLAND Madam IT was the Custom in former Ages when Offerings were made to various Deities that the Adorer made choice of that same Numen to which he thought his Oblation would be most Grateful The same reason encourages this Address to your Ladiship in hopes the Subject of it will be acceptable to a Personage so eminently fam'd for being so highly concerned in the late Miraculous Revolution and your assisting the Deliverance of these Oppressed Nations To you therefore Madam this Compendium appeals as an accomplished judge of Truth where ' ere you find it or in what ever dress 'T is true Madam the Present is but inconsiderable as is the Quality of the Presenter But Persons in your Station look down as well as upward Which if your Ladiship shall vouchsafe to do with an Eye of favour upon this unworthy Offering it is the chief Happiness aspir'd to by Madam Your Ladyships most faithful and most Humble Servant T. S. TO THE READER PRovidence over-rules all Things but never any Act of Providence so strange and so surprizing as the great Revolution that so lately happened in the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland A Revolution not to be parallel'd in History but seasonable to the British Monarchy the Glory whereof was almost brought to Ruine and Destruction Nor was it to be admired that the desire of such a Change should reach so far as Scotland where the causes were the same and the cries of Oppressions were no less loud then in England For it is too evident that all the Laws Priviledges and Rights of the Kingdom of Scotland had under the late Raigns been not onely encroached upon but subverted and Overthrown In regard that by the gradual enlargements of the Prerogative beyond what was allow'd by the Laws of the Constitution and the Statutes of the Realm the Legal and Regular Monarchy of the Nation was swell'd into an Arbitrary and Despotic Power So that all the Franchises and Rights which by Original Contracts and Subsequent Laws were reserved unto the People were either overthrown or precariously enjoy'd No wonder then it was that as well the Scots and the English sought for speedy Redress and to be freed as well from Spiritual Bondage as Temporal Slavery Which at length they obtained by the auspicious Conduct and Generous Advance of his Present Majesty to their Relief A Story certainly that cannot be otherwise then most grateful to Posterity as being accompanied with such Variety of circumstances such unparallel'd Success and the General Advantage of all Europe It was no easie Thing to reduce into Order a Chaos of Government so dismally mangled and confus'd which being so great a Work and brought to so much Perfection in so short a Time as it shews the Extraordinary Zeal and Prudence of the Artificers so did it no less magnifie the Influences that govern'd and directed all their Actions Insomuch that it may be said of the Most Illustrious King WILLIAM what Suetonius says of the Famous and Best of the Roman Emperours Vespasian Rebellione Trium Principum et caede incertum et quari vagum Imperium suscepit firmavitque Gens Nassovia Popery and Idolatry now droop and the Protestant Religion enjoys a general Freedom under a truly Protestant Defender Vnder whose Auspicious Government soon might these two Nations be happy had we not so many Disturbers of Israel amongst us though it was not well known what they repined and grumbled at till this late detection of complicated Conspiracy for the Restoration of Popery and Tyranny In short there has already an accompt been given of our deliverance in England This is a Prospect of the same Deliverance in Scotland the one no less conducible to be known then the Other especially to those who are desirous to observe the Coherences and Concatenations of Providence I will not say it is a structure embellished with the flourishes of Eloquence as being only designed for plainness and exactness wherein I may he bold to say that diligence has been observed as to compile it in the best manner and method that the Truth of Collection could any way claim as due to it And being laid upon so solid a foundation however it fares of it self it may serve to give Light to politer Pens when they shall be at leisure to be more accurate Though there is no question to be made but that many will be as willing to see the naked Rasters of a History as to view the covered Frame though Japanned over never so curiously The History of the Affairs and late Revolution in Scotland from the Year 1660. to this present Year 1690. WHEN Charles II. was restored in the Year 1660. to his ancient Dominions from which he had been for some time kept out by the Civil Wars the Joy was no less cordial and universal in Scotland then in England And it may be said the extraordinary favour of Heaven did so second the Constancy of the Scottish Nation 's Love to a Prince so long wish'd for that their great Persuasions of his singular Endowments without regard to the wary Cautions of scrupulous Prudence were the only measures of their Concessions They established his Prerogative to be absolute and uncontroulable in the choice of all Officers of State Counsellors and Judges and in and over all matters of Peace War Leagues Conventions and Parliaments with a distinct Exclusion of all Exceptions They added to his Revenue above double of what he formerly possessed They declared his ordering and disposal of Trade with Foreign Nations and the laying Restraints and Impositions upon Foreign Imported Commodities to belong to his Majesty and his Successors as an undoubted Prerogative of the Crown And that it might appear that they placed the Security of all their Interests more in the confidence of His Majesties Goodness than on the firmest provision of their best Laws tho' the Parliament in 1641. was held by King Charles I. then present in person and many Acts were there pass'd and subscribed by him for the setling their Religion and Liberties with all the Authority of Judgment that long and well-weigh'd Experience could furnish yet because their Luster seemed to be somewhat eclipsed by the harsh remembrance of some previous Contentions wherein it was their misfortune to have His Majesty differing from them at one blow they annull'd that Parliament and without any other reason
that the Officers and Souldiers should take the Oaths of Allegiance which in Scotland comprehends that of Supremacy Which being done in the Year 1672. when the Cabal at Court for the advancement of Popery and Arbitrary Power was in its Ascendent and Matters were come to a manifest Crisis was a shrewd Argument that L. was deep in the Plot. Nor was his Administration in Church Affairs less grievous and terrible to the Nation For that after the extream Distress where into the Episcopal Persecutions had brought the Country had mov'd the Compassion of some more moderate Persons to obtain for it the ease of a small Indulgence in 1669. L. in 1670. commands Conformity again prohibiting Praying to God in any Meeting or Preaching without Licence under Forfeitures of Life and Confiscation of Goods And by other Acts enjoyning all the Kings Subjects to keep to their own Churches and to make discoveries upon Oath of what Conventicles they knew and what Words they heard spoken therein under the pains of Banishment and Imprisonment All which the People lookt upon to be a Tyranny beyond that of the Inquisition Nor is it in the last place to be omitted that he had also enlarg'd the Power of the Lords of the Articles to the subversion of the Rights and Priviledges of the Parliament So that his Administration was not only Cruel and Tyrannical but he had in a manner over-turn'd the whole Frame of the Scotch Government However after he had thus serv'd and assisted in the Popish and Arbitrary Designs then on Foot both to his own Infamy and greatly to the depopulation of his Country yet because he demurr'd to act on still for the eradication of Protestantism and erecting Popery to be the National Religion he was discharged from his Ministry and Offices and grew despis'd and contemn'd in his Person And then it was that the D. of York retiring into Scotland from the Dangers that threaten'd him in England built upon the Foundations that L. had laid and driving on in the concerns of Popery and Slavery with his wonted Phaetonic Fury thought to have compleated his Work but made way for the following Revolution So soon as the Duke got into Scotland a Parliament was summon'd and great Industry us'd to choose the Commons to cajole some of the Lords and to make D. Hamilton believe and trust the Court for the future And so soon as the Parliament sate the Duke of York entred as his Brothers Commissioner without any regard to the Laws of the Realm or the Qualifications necessary for taking the Oaths However his Brothers Indulgence bore him out and when he was in he obtains the succession of the Crown to be confirmed by an Act and gets a Test pass'd by which all were to swear not to endeavour to alter the Government either in Churh or State and all such as refus'd to take it to lose their Employments This Test was generally dislik'd as not conformable to the Scotch Confession of Faith several of the Scotch Synods rejected it and many of the Laity refused it Among the rest the E. of Argyle declin'd the taking it unless he might make his own Explanation of the sense and meaning in which he took it Which being at first allow'd him by the Duke and his Party yet afterwards when he had deliver'd in his Explantion which was no more then what the Privy Council were forc'd to do for the satisfaction of the People The Duke having a particular Animosity to his Person and resolv'd to remove him out of the way as a Grand Obstacle to his Designs caus'd his Interpretation to be scan'd and sifted to that degree with a particular encouragement to his Advocates to try whether it might not be wrested to Treason that at length a latent piece of High-Treason was found in it upon which he was Indicted Arraign'd and Condemn'd and had been put to death had he not made his escape out of Edinborough Castle Popery then began to triumph bare-fac'd in Scotland to that degree that Mass-Houses were publickly erected both in Edinborough and divers other Towns and Cities of that Realm while the Protestant Non-conformists were every where punished with the utmost severity And such was the Dukes inveterate hatred of those People that in his publick Declarations he stigmatiz'd them as a sort of Caitiffs not fit for Human Converse and scrupl'd not to testifie his Resolutions to eradicate them for refusing to conform to his Will and Pleasure as the Pests of Mankind Affirming withal that it would never be well with Scotland till all the Country on this side the Forth were made a Hunting Field Which Rigorous and indeed Inhuman Proceedings in leaving these poor People at the Mercy of his Souldiers to be not only disturb'd in the Exercise of their Divine Worship but to be Arraign'd and Condemn'd by Military Judges without any Form or Process of Law wholly alienated the Affections of a great part of the Scotch Nation from his Person and Government But the Duke encompass'd with a standing Force and encouraged by his continu'd Success in carrying all things before him thought he could meet with no Obstruction which he could not Conquer and therefore resolv'd to remove what ever Impediments that he found in his way Which run him upon that no less Impolitick then unjust and violent Prosecution of the E. of Argyle for the taking away of whose Life he could find no other pretence but his refusal to take an insnaring Test which the generality of the Clergy and Laity refus'd For if the whole Body of Refusers had had but one Neck he might have cut it off for the same Reason as well as the single Head of the Earl Many others also were prosecuted and condemned at the same rate for Crimes made such for their Destruction rather then that they were really so The citing Sir John Scot of Ancrum and bringing him before the Council upon pretence of Treasonable Words alledg'd against him by an avow'd Enemy and which had certainly done his business considering he was lookt upon as a true Lover of his Country had he not been so fortunate as to have four or five Persons of great Worth and Credit by when the Words were pretended to have been spoken who clear'd and acquitted him The seising and putting to the Torture one Hamilton meerly because he was of the contrary Party and consequently barely suspected who nevertheless after his enduring his Torments with an extraordinary Patience was at length acquitted and declar'd Innocent by the Justice Court The putting under Bail or in Prison almost all the Honest Protestant Worthy Gentlemen or forcing them to abscond or withdraw out of the Kingdom of whom the Lord Melvil was one who never could be induced to act in publick under the Government of the Duke but was forc'd to abandon his Relations and Native Country and flie into Holland where and in Germany he remain'd seven Years The sending away of above sixty Men at
always affectionate to the Royal Family and govern'd for many Ages by Laws made by the Authority of their Kings and of the Estates of Parliament and by common Customs is reduced to by endeavours that have been used to change the Constitution of the Monarchy Regulate by Laws into a a Despotick and Arbitrary Power which doth evidently appear not only by the actings of Evil Counsellors in Power but by the deliberate and express publick Declarations bearing that the King is an Absolute Monarch to whom Obedience ought to be given in all things without reserve thereby to make way to introduce what Religion they please without so much as the necessity of the Consent of the Nation by their Estates in Parliament Whilst We consider and ponder these things as We cannot but be touched with a tender Sense of those Miseries so the giving such Remedy to them as may be proper and may answer the expectation of all good Men and true Protestants is the great thing which We propose to our selves in this undertaking the Equity whereof will be justified to the World if what hath been acted at the instigation of those Evil Counsellors be further impartially weighed It is well known that the Laws Priviledges and Rights of the Kingdom have been overturned to the great prejudice of King and People whilst thus all Foundation of Confidence and Trust is removed And it is no less known what have been the arbitrary Procedures of an incroaching Privy Council for although by the Laws enacted by the Authority of King and Parliament it is expresly prohibited that the Popish Religion should be professed or Seminary Priests suffer'd within the Kingdom or that the Children of any Noblemen or Gentlemen should be sent'abroad to be Educated in Popish Colleges yet have these Evil Counsellors order'd or suffered young Noblemen to be taken from their Relations and to be sent abroad to be instructed in Jesuits Colleges and have likewise caused Schools to be erected under the conduct of Popish Priests and that in the Capital City of the Kingdom In an open contempt also of the known Laws of the Kingdom Papists are put into Places of highest Trust both Civil and Military and entrusted with all the Forts and Magazines The Rights and Privileges of the Royal Boroughs the third Estate of Parliament having as many Deputies in it as all the Shires in the Kingdom are taken away and they hindred in the free Election of their Magistrates and Town-Councils to the manifest Violation of their Charters Established by Law and immemorial Possession And all this is done by meer Arbitrary Power without any Citation Trial or Sentence And whereas no Nation whatsoever can subsist without the Administration of good and impartial Justice upon which Mens Lives and Liberties their Honours and Estates depend yet those Evil Counsellors have subjected these to an Arbitrary and Despotick Power having turned out Judges who by Law ought to continue during their Life or their good Behaviour because they would not conform themselves to their Intentions and put others in their Places who they believe would be more compliant and that without any regard to their Abilities by which it evidently appears that those Evil Counsellors design to render themselves the absolute Masters of the Lives Honors and Estates of the Subjects without being restrained by any Rule or Law By the influence of the same Evil Counsellors hath a most exorbitant Power been exercised in imposing Bonds and Oaths upon whole Shires without any Law or Act of Parliament in permitting Free Quarters to the Soldiers although they had a sufficient Establishment for their Pay whereby the Kingdom was doubly burthened without any redress in Imprisoning Gentlemen without any so much as alledged Reason forcing many to accuse and witness against themselves imposing arbitrary Fines frighting and harassing many parts of the Country with Intercommoning and Justice-Aires making some incur the forfeiture of Life and Fortune for the most general and harmless Converse even with their nearest Relations outlawed And thus bringing a Consternation upon a great part of the Kingdom which when Outlawries and Intercommonings went out against multitudes upon the slenderest pretexts was involved so Vniversally in that danger that those Counsellors themselves were so obnoxious as to find it necessary to have Pardons and Indemnities whilst the poor People were left to mercy impowring Officers and Soldiers to act upon the Subjects living in quiet and full peace the greatest Barbarities in destroying them by Hanging Shooting and Drowning them without any form of Law or respect to Age or Sex not giving some of them time to pray to God for mercy and this for no other reason because they would not answer or satisfie them in such Questions as they proposed to them without any Warrant of Law and against the common Interest of Mankind which frees all Men from being obliged to discover their secret thoughts Besides a great many other Violences and Oppressions to which that poor Nation hath been exposed without any hope of having an end put to them or to have relief from them And that the Arbitrary and Illegal Proceedings of those Evil Counsellors might be justified and supported such a Declaration hath been procured by them as strikes at the Root of the Government and overturns the most sacred Rights of it in making all Parliaments unnecessary and taking away all Defences of Religion Liberty and Property by an assumed and asserted Absolute Power to which Obedience is required without reserve which every good Christian is perswaded to be due to God Almighty alone all whose Commandments are always just and good These Evil Counsellors have used their utmost endeavours to abolish the Penal Laws excluding all who are Protestants from publick Trust which give too great a Check to their Designs For the accomplishing of this a Liberty hath been granted to Dissenters but such an one as that the continuance thereof is plainly insinuated to depend upon their hearty concurrence for Abolishing the above-mentioned Penal Laws the only Legal Defence of their Religion although the Dissenters have just cause of Distrust when they call to mind how some hundreds of their Ministers were driven out of their Churches without either Accusation or Citation The filling of many whole places with Ignorant and Scandalous Persons hath been one great occasion of all those Miseries which that Country for a long time hath groaned under And Dissenters have but small ground to rest on any present ease founded upon a Proclamation which may be recalled every hour and which in the first and second Editions of it gave no relief to them especially considering that not many Months before the greatest of the forementioned Severities and Barbarities had been exercised upon them But to crown all there are great and violent presumptions inducing us to believe that those Evil Counsellors in order to the carrying on of their ill Designs and to the gaining to themselves the more time for the
pleased to send him a Commission to represent his Royal Person in the first Session which he acknowledged to be an Honour far above what he deserved especially at such a time when the Importance and Condition of His Majesties Affairs in the Kingdom of Scotland required the Greatest Trust from his Majesties and the greatest Faithfulness and Ability in his Commissioner which were otherwise necessary in so high a Station And that although the short advertisement of his Majesties Pleasure therein might give him some difficulty in discharging the several duties incumbent on a person in that High Character yet such was the Zeal he had for His Majesties Service and the Good of his Country that he resolved to give all ready and chearful Obedience to His Majesties Commands and to omit nothing in his Power that might advance His Honour and Interest or contribute to the Peace and Security of the Nation That he had received His Majesties Instructions for turning the Meeting into a Parliament and then to adjourn the Parliament to the seventeenth of June and after that to consent to the enacting of such Laws as might not onely redress the particular Articles of the Grievances but to any other Acts which they should advise for securing the Religion Peace and Happiness of the Nation The Duke having thus delivered himself the Kings Commission was read together with the Letter from His Majesty declaring His pleasure to turn them into a Parliament Which being done the Commissioner acquainted the Estates with the Kings farther pleasure that the Earl of Crawford should preside in the ensuing Session of his first Parliament Upon which the Earl came from the Lords Bench to the Presidents Seat before the Throne and made a Speech to the Estates and then moved that the Act for turning the Meeting into a Parliament might be forthwith drawn Upon which the Commissioner named the Earl of Lowthian Viscount Torbat the Lord of Ormiston Sir Patrick Hume of Polwart Mr. William Hamilton and David Spence to be of a Committee for drawing up the Act who thereupon presently withdrawing into the Inner House after a little time returned with the Act drawn up accordingly which being read and debated was without delay both voted and approved as follows The King and Queens Majesties with Advice and Consent of the Estates of this Kingdom at present assembled Enact and Declare That the three Estates now met together the Fifth of June 1689. Consisting of the Noblemen Barons and Burgesses are a Lawful and Free Parliament and are hereby declared enacted and adjudged to be such and to all intents and purposes whatsoever notwithstanding the want of any new Writs or Proclamation for calling the same or the want of any other Solemnity And that all Acts and Statutes to be passed therein shall be received acknowledged and obeyed by the Subjects as Acts of Parliament and Laws of this Kingdom And it is hereby declared That it shall be High Treason for any Persons to disown quarrel or impugn the Dignity and Authority of this Parliament upon any pretence whatever This Act being thus passed and at the same time touch'd with the Scepter the President by Command of the High Commissioner adjourned the Parliament to the Seventeenth of June being Twelve dayes Upon the Seventeenth of June the Parliament met at what time the Commissioner having ordered the Honours to be sent for from the Castle Knighted Mr. William Hamilton Advocate and a Member of the Parliament After which the Commissioner acquainted the Parliament That he had Instructions from their Majesties about redressing the Greivance of the Lords of the Articles as formerly constituted and that their Majesties had ordered him to condescend to the passing an Act for chusing Eight out of every Estate Lords Barons and Burgesses which with the Officers of State should prepare Things for the Parliament And that it should be always in the Power of the Parliament even of those things which the Committee should report if they should think sit so to do Thereupon an Act being drawn to that purpose it was presented by the Commissioner to the Earl of Crawford President of the Parliament who before he gave it to the Clerks deliver'd himself to this Effect That in regard they were now in another Station than they were formerly that is to say the Supreme Court of the Kingdom and so happy in a Prince who preferr'd the just Rights and Interests of his people to his own Prerogative and who crav'd nothing of them but what would make them happy That they should lay aside all Animosities and private differencies and make the Publick Good the only motive and end of their Actings which Things as they were always necessary so especially at that Juncture when they had Religion the Government of the Church and the Just Rights of the Subject to Establish and Greivances to Redress That Christianity taught Verity the King crav'd and the present Juncture made it indispensably necessary and Gods blessing always attended it That the King had put it fully into their power to make such Laws as might secure to them their Religion and Properties wherein if they failed it would be their own fault that the Eyes of their Enemies were upon them waiting for their halting and that nothing could encourage or strengthen them more then Animosities and Divisions among themselves The President having thus spoken delivered in the Act to be Read But then it was mov'd by the Lord Ross that before they went about to consider or Vote any Act that they should all Swear and Subscribe the Oath of Allegiance and that an Act should be made to that Intent Which motion being approv'd the Lord Ross gave in the following draught of an Act in pursuance of what he had mov'd That the Estate of Parliament considering that Their Majesties had accepted the tender of the Crown of this Realm made to them and had taken the Oath appointed to be taken by all Kings and Queens of this Kingdom therefore They with the consent of Their Majesties did Declare Recognize and Assert Their Royal Authority and Right thereto And Ordered all the Members and Clerks of Parliament and all other Persons that at present are in or shall happen to be called hereafter to any place of publick Trust Civil and Military to Swear and Subscribe the Oath hereto subjoyned And they hereby discharge and annual all former Acts of Parliament appointing any other Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy Declarations Tests or Other publick Oaths whatever to be taken by them henceforward so as they appoint the same to be taken except the Oath de Fideli Administratione To which the Oath subjoyned was this I A. B. Do Solemnly Swear in the Presence of God That I shall bear Faith and True Allegiance to King William and Queen Mary So help me God This Act passed Nemine Contradicente only that the Earl of Kincairden withdrew so that being thus passed and touched with the Scepter all the
Members that were present took the Oath with uplifted hands and then the President administred it to the Clerks and the next day they all subscribed it It was at the same time mov'd by the Earl of Cassils that all the Clergy should take the same Oath but that was wav'd till it were farther considered what other persons or whither all in the Kingdom should take the same and so that debate being laid aside they all took the other Oath de Fideli Administratione The next day being the eighteenth of June the whole House subscribed the Oath and such of the Members who were absent the day before both swore and subscribed it also Which done they proceeded to Read the Act for redressing the Grievance of the Lords of the Articles which appointed a constant Committee of Eight Persons out of every Estate with the Officers of state to be in place of the Lords of the Articles But this first draught of the Act did no way please the Generality of the Parliament insomuch that upon the 25th of June the draught of the Act was again presented and read with an Amendment that the Members of the Committees should be chosen by the Respective Estates the Noblemen out of the Nobility the Barons from among the Barons and the Burgesses by the Burgess Estate Which being agreed to they came to a new debate Whither the Officers of State should be supernumerary in those Committees and after much arguing the Question being put to the Vote it was carryed in the Negative and a Clause ordered to be added to the Act Declaring That the Officers of State were not to be Members of the Committees unless they should be chosen With which addition the Act was again Read Voted and Approved in the following terms Forasmuch as the Meeting of the Estates of this Kingdom did by their Vote of the Seventh of April last represent among other Grievances that the Committee of Parliament called the Articles was and is a great Grievance to the Nation and that there ought to be no Committees of Parliament but such as are freely chosen by the Estates to prepare motions and overtures that are first tabled in the House Therefore Their Majesties with the Advise and Consent of the Estates in Parliament do Enact and Declare That it is the undoubted Priviledge of the three Estates in Parliament to nominate and appoint Committees of Parliament of what number of Members they please being equal of every Estate and chosen by the respective Estates viz. The Noblemen by the Estate of the Noblemen the Barons by the Estate of the Barons and the Burghers by the Estate of the Buroughs for preparing motions and Overtures that are first made in the House or that the House may treat Vote and Conclude upon matters brought in plain Parliament without remitting them to any Committee if they think fit Or that the House may appoint plurality of Committees for Motions and Overtures that need to be prepared or digested for them Declaring hereby That no Officers of State are to be Members except they be chosen And hereby rescinding the first Act of the third Session of the first Parliament of King Charles the second and all other Lawes and Customs establishing the manner of Election and Power of any Committees of Parliament so far as they are not conformable to this Act. But when this Act was offered to be touched by the Scepter the High Commissioner signified to the House that their Vote not being in the terms of the Instrument which he had received from the King he could not give the Royal Assent thereto until he had acquainted His Majesty For the first Instructions to the High Commissioner were in these words You are to pass an Act for regulating the Articles to consist of twenty four persons besides the Officers of State whereof Eight are to be chosen by the Noblemen out of their Estate Eight by the Barons and Eight by the Burroughs out of their Estates But this Concession was not thought sufficient and it so much the more displeased because it was looked upon as a delay to the satisfying the People in the first and most important Grievance for the redress of which they had so solemnly stipulated with His Majesty It was urged that by the ancient Records of several Parliaments it appeared that the Officers of State were so far from being supernumerary in the Committees of the Articles that they were not so much as Elected into that trust nor had any room allowed them there though it appeared by the same Records that there were Members chosen by and out of the respective Estates sometimes in larger sometimes in lesser numbers to constitute such Estates And although after the year 1567. Some of the Officers of State were now then by reason of their great Abilities thought fit to be chosen among others for Lords of the Articles yet they were not Elected into those Committees by vertue of their Offices much less that they sate there as persons supernumerary to those that were chosen Besides that in the 37 Act in the Eleventh year of James the sixth where provision was made for the number of those that were to constitute this Committee it was only Enacted that the number of the Lords of the Articles should equal in each Estate and that the fewest out of each Estate should be six and the greatest number not above Ten. This was the state of the Court of Articles as being constituted at first for the ease of the Parliament in the dispatch of business till through the Usurpations of the Kings of Scotland especially after their succession to the Crown of England and the removal of their Royal Residence thither and through the officiousness of publick Ministers to the Prince and their Treachery to their Countrey it grew up at length to that exorbitancy that it became not only burthensom but intollerable For by reason of the Parliaments coming at last to commit the inspection into all affairs and preparing all remedies for Greivances into the hands of a few and those unchangeable during a whole Session the late Monarchs of Scotland obtained such an opportunity to incroach upon the Jurisdiction of Parliaments and the Liberties of the People that they soon improved it to the eluding all the good that the Kingdom was to expect from Parliaments and making those that were design'd to be the means of the peoples safety the instruments of their ruin For the accomplishment of which and the more easie rendring the Lords of the Articles Vassals to the Monarchs will and tools for executing his pleasure they first prevailed to have the Officers of State admitted into this Committees as supernumerary without being nominated and elected by the Estates in Parliament as having a right to sit there by vertue of their employments For King James the Sixth being by the Adulation of the English brought over intirely to their interest as well as to their Opinions and having
the business of supernumerary Officers the draught of an Act was given into the House and read that no persons who were imployed in the late Government and were grievous to the Nation or had shown their dissatisfaction to the happy Change or had been Retarders or Obstructers of the good designs of the late Meeting should be allowed to possess or be admitted to any publick Trust Place or Employment of any kind under their Majesties within that Kingdom But this Act likewise being brought in the 26th of June met with several Remora's occasioned by certain clauses which some thought required explanation Persons who had onely shewn dissatisfaction was thought too comprehensive and severe Those who had been obstructers and Retarders of the Good design of the Estates was deemed too liable to bad construction And there were exceptions taken at the words Grievous to the Nation as being too restrictive without a farther interpretation But at length upon the second of July Explanations being added in the Statutory part to every of the clauses excepted against the Act was brought in and passed in the terms that follow The King and Queens Majesty considering that the Estates of this Kingdom have by their Vote declared their sence and opinion that such have in the former evil Government been grievous to the Nation or have shewn disaffection to the happy Change by the blessing God now brought about or have been Retarders or Obstructors of the good designs of the said Estates in their Meeting are not fit to be employed in the management of the Affairs of this Kingdom do with the Advice and Consent of the Estates in Parliament now Assembled Statute and Ordain that no persons of whatsoever rank or degree who in the said former evil Government have been grievous to the Nation by acting in the incroachments mentioned in the Articles of the Claim of Right which are declared to be contrary to Law or have shown disaffection affection to the happy Change by the Blessing of God now brought about by acting in opposition thereunto since the time that the King and Queen now raigning were Proclaim'd or who has been a Retarder or or Obstructor of the good designs of the said Estates viz. The securing the Protestant Religion the settling the Crown the establishing the Rights of the Leiges and redressing their Grievances by acting contrary to the good designs since the time they became publick by Votes and Acts of the Meeting be allowed to possess or be admitted into any publick trust place or imployment of whatever kind under their Majesties in this Kingdom But whither it were that some persons in power thought themselves too deeply within the reach of the Act or for what other cause is unknown neither would this Statute be admitted to the touch of the Royal Scepter So that instead of a Living Law it only became a dead peice of Writing Which was a surprize to many that were concern'd in the passing it as well as to several others that were zealous for the King and the Kingdoms interest that there should be men found who could spy out any thing in this Statute which deserv'd to be clamoured at or was worthy to be complained of more especially since every line breathed forth that lenity and moderation that it savoured rather of a defect then any excess of Justice and that the utmost thereby designed was only a disabling a few wicked men from ruining the Nation for the future but nothing of punishment for what they had done for that there were none excepted as to Life onely the few that were designed to be debarred from Offices were described and charactered after such a manner that the very employing them would dishonour their Majesties and disgrace the Government Then a draught of an Act was brought in for abolishing of Prelacy and all superiority of any Office in the Church above Presbytery and for the abrogating all former Statutes establishing Prelacy and all others contrary to the Act intended Reserving to their Majesties to settle the Presbyterian Government in the way most agreeable to the peoples inclinations and the Word of God Which being Read the Commissioner desired he might see the Act to consider of it against the next day The next day being the 3d. of July the same Act was Read again together with the Act of Parliament 1662. For the restoring of Prelacy with the second Act of the year 1633. and the fourth Act in the year 1681. Which were rescinded by the Act intended with some amendments in the Narrative part adjusting and fitting it to that Article in the claim of Right to which it related and the following clause was added to the rescinding part In so far Allenarly as those rescinded Acts are inconsistent with the present Act and do establish Prelacy or Superiority of Church Officers above Presbyters In the next place the Clause in the Act reserving to their Majesties and the Estates to settle the Government of the Church was taken into Consideration and it being agreed that the Word Presbyterian should be left out the Commissioner mov'd that in the room of the Words To settle the Government of the Church c. the alteration might be to settle such a Government c. upon which a debate arose upon the importance of those words which was put off till the next day Then the Act was again brought in and Read with the amendments and without the paragraph of the rescinded Acts. And after some debate concerning the Clause objected against the settling and Government of the Church being exprest in the terms following That they with the Advice and Consent of this Parliament will settle by Law that Church Governmenu in this Kingdom which is most agreeable to the Peoples Inclinations the Act was put to the Vote and Approved And then the Act ran thus Whereas the Estates of this Kingdom in their Claim of Right the Eleventh of April last declared that Prelacy and Supremacy in any Office in the Church above Presbytery is and has been a great Grievance to this Nation and contrary to the inclinations of the people since the Reformation they having reform'd from Popery by Presbyters and therefore ought to be rescinded Our Soveraign Lord and Lady the King and Queens Majesties do hereby abolish Prelacy and Superiority in any Office in the Church above Presbyters in this Kingdom and hereby rescind ease and annul the First Act of the Second Session of the First Parliament of King Charles the 2d And the Second Act of the Third Session of the Second Parliament of King Charles the 2d And the Fourth Act of King Charles the 2d and all other Acts Statutes and Constitutions in so far allenarly as they are inconsistent with this Act and do establish Prelacy or the Superiority of Church Officers above Presbyters And the King and Queens Majesties do declare That They with the advice of the Estates of this Parliament will settle by Law that Church-Government
in this Kingdom which is most agreeable to the inclinations of the People This Act was touched with the Scepter the 12th of July There was also another Act which had been made by another Parliament of K. Charles the 2d in the year sixty nine whereby the Parliament did enact assert and declare that the supream Authothority and Supremacy over all persons and in all Ecclesiastical causes within the Kingdom of Scotland by vertue of which the ordering and disposal of the external Government of the Church was properly lodged in the King and His Successors as an inherent Right to the Crown This was lookt upon to be such a Law that never any Law before gave a greater power to a Prince and the ill use of it in the Execution of King Charle's power by the Bishops of Scotland and by King James in claiming by it a power to introduce Popery made it so terrible to the Generality of the Scotch Nation that after the Estates had numbered it among the Chief of their Grievances the Parliament past an Act immediately after that for abolishing Prelacy whereby they declared That the first Act of the second Parliament of King Charles the 2d Intitled An Act asserting His Majesties Supremacy over all persons and in all causes Ecclesiastical was inconsistent with the Establishment of the Church Government then desired Therefore their Majesties with the Advice and Consent of the Estates in Parliament did thereby rescind abrogate and annul the foresaid Act and declared the same in all the Heads Articles and Clauses thereof to be of no force or effect in all time coming But notwithstanding this Act past without any contradiction yet was it never touched with the Scepter Which was the more wondred at in regard his Majesties instructions were express to his Commissioner in these words You are to pass an Act establishing that Church Government which is most agreable to the Inclinations of the people rescinding the Act of Parliament 1669. and all other Acts inconsistent therewith There were two great things more in Agitation during this Session the one was the settling of the Church Government since Presbytery was abolished and the other about admitting the Lords of the Session and Electing the President of the Colledge of Justice As to the first there were two draughts brought into the House and form'd into Acts for the consideration of the whole Parliament the One by the Lord Commissioner himself and the other by the Lord Cardross The first which was presented by the High Commissioner the 22th of July ran in these Words For as much as the King and Queens Majesties and the Estates of Parliament by their Act of the first of July Instant Abolishing Prelacy c. did declare That they would settle that Church Government which is most agreeable to the Inclinations of the People and considering that Church Government by General Provincial and Presbyterial Assemblies with the Sessions of the Kirk as it was established by the first Act of the twelfth Parliament of King James the sixth holden in June 1592 is most agreeable to the Inclination of the people Therefore the King and Queens Majesties with the Advice and Consent of the Estates of Parliament revive and renew the said Act of Parliament in all the Heads Poynts and Articles thereof with this express Declaration That the Necessity of Occasional Assemblies be first represented to His Majesty by humble Supplication And Statute and ordain That it shall be lawful for the Presbyters of this Church to admit Ministers upon presentation from the lawful Patrons or Jure de voluto which shall happen hereafter or into Churches which fall not under Patronages but were Mensal and Patrimonial Churches belonging to the Bishops and ordain all Ministers in this Kingdom to submit and conform to the Church Government established by the foresaid Act and to take the Oath of Allegiance under the pain of being deprived of their Churches and losing their Benefices And it is declared That all Ministers that shall submit and conform to the foresaid Church-Government and take the Oaths of Allegiance without being oblig'd to take any other Oath shall enjoy their Churches and Benefices c. in such manner and as freely as they ought or might have done before by the Act in the Year 1592. and to do all and every thing which before pertain'd to Presbyters and were exercised by Bishops except for Scandal or Insufficiency But in regard there were several Ministers deprived of their Benefices since the Year 1662. for not conforming to Prelacy and others since the Year 1681. for not taking the Test Therefore seeing that now Prelacy is abolished and all Acts relating thereto it is but reasonable that those Ministers should be restored Therefore the King and Queens Majesties with the advice c. Ordain the said Ministers c. to be restored And the King and Queens Majesties and Estates declare That they will take care to provide those Ministers now serving the Cure at the said Churches with other Benefices as occasion shall offer they submiting and confirming c. And it is farther declared that Intrants to the Ministry shall not be obliged to take any other Oaths at their admission then that of Allegiance and the Oath de Fideli And in regard that many Confusions and Scandalous Schisms have happened by Ministers meddling in Matters of State Their Majesties with advice c. do hereby discharge all Ministers of the Gospel to meddle with any State Affairs under pain of being held dis-affected to the Government and to be proceeded against accordly And declare That the Jurisdiction of the Church consists onely in Preaching the Word of Jesus Christ correcting of ill Manners by Ecclesiastical Censures and administration of the Sacraments conformable to the 69th act of James 6. Parliament 6. And to prevent that nothing be treated in the Church Judicatories that concern affairs of State or Civil matters it is declared that their Majesties if they think fit may have always one present in all the Provincial and Presbyterial Assemblies as they have their Commissioner present in General Assemblies to inhibit the proceeding in any such affairs if it should be offered at until their Majesties and Privy Council be first acquainted therewith And for that there are many things to he settled in relation to the Discipline of the Church c. their Majesties declare that they with the advice c. will enact such Rules as shall tend most to the curbing Vice and advancement of true Piety and Religion and the preservation of Peace and Vnity Their Majesties also with the advice c. rescind and annul the 1. Act of the 15. Parl. of King James the 6. for Prelates voting in Parliament and the 2. Act of the 18. Parl. of K. J. 6. for the Restor of Bishops the 8. Act of 19. Parl. of K. J. 6. about the Chapter of St. Andrews The 6. Act of 20. Parl. of K. J. 6. concerning the
the result of their Counsels were not happy to themselves and of national advantage he feared the present opportunity of doing well if neglected would prove a heavy charge against them in the day of their accounts After the Parliament immediately fell on business and the first matters of moment that they insisted on were the two Acts that were read and pass'd in the preceding Session of Parliament but were not touch'd viz. The Act about the Kings Supremacy the second was the Act to repeal and annul the Rescissory Act which abolished Presbytery which Rescissory Act was made presently after King Charles the Seconds Restauration and the question being put after some small debate Whether they should be presently Touch'd or Voted afresh It was carryed they should be presently touch'd which were done accordingly About this time happened an odd adventure at Elgen about 30 miles from Inverness the business thus 4 or 5 Gentlemen being in Company drinking making merry among other discourses they hapned to fall upon the times and some of them being persons not very well affected to the present Government in the heat of their Cups did not stick to express themselves according to their inclinations one was in great expectation of the late King James's speedy return Another very much doubted one believ'd it feazible another declar'd he thought it impossible for the late King to recover or make a Conquest of Scotland again at which expression one Thomas Tullock was so much enraged that upbraiding their diffidence with a great many reproaches he took a Pistol he had in his hand and wish'd that that Pistol might be his death if he the late King James did not return again and be Master of all his own and before he could speak a word more the Pistol went off and discharging it self into his breast shot himself clean thorough the heart which when related with all its circumstances gave cause of astonishment not only to his own Company but to all that heard it The Parliament had had several warm debates of the freedom that belong'd to every of the Estates in Electing their several Members for their Committees and after much time on several days spent therein it was urged that the better to proceed in chusing of the said Committees it was necessary that the Act concerning the repealing the former Committee of Parliament commonly called the Articles should be first sent for and considered in which Act it was agreed that the Officers of State might sit make Overtures and Proposals and debate in the Committee but not to Vote now the House looking on this as a grievance had heretofore in the last Parliment Voted and annulled the said Act and agreed that in lieu thereof the Bench of Noblemen might chuse the Officers of State to be Members of the Committee notwithstanding their being Ministers of State which being a while argu'd was at length carried by the Vote of the house and approv'd of and immediately had the Royal assent After which the Three Estates proceeded to the choice of their several Committees the Estate of Lords as customarily withdrawing into the inner Session house by themselves The Estate of Barons continued in the Parliament house and the Estate of Burroughs retired to the Commissaries Bench in the lower end of the Parliament house Where after a considerable time they chose their several Committees as follow Committee for Election and Freedom of Speech Noblemen The Marquess of Dowglass Earl of Eglingtown Lord Forrester Lord Belhaven Lord Rollo Barons The Laird of Blackbarrony Laird of Cragivar Sir George Munro Sir Andrew Agnew Laird of Dun Burroughs Sir John Hall Sir Robert Mellvill Mr. William Erskine Mr. John Ross Mr. George Gourdon Committee for the Supply Noblemen Duke Hamilton Earl of Argyle Earl of Cassils Earl of Forfar Earl of Tarras Earl of Kintore Barons Sir John Maitland Laird of Anstruthero Laird of Knocks Sir Thomas Burnet Laird of Craigens Laird of Carrick Burroughs Mr. James Fletcher Mr. Alexander Gourdon Mr. James Lawder Mr. John Cuthbert Mr. James Mardock Sir Patrick Murray Committee for settling the Church Government Noblemen The Earl of Crawford Earl of Southerland Viscount of Arbathnet Viscount of Stairs Lord Cardross Laird of Carmichel Barons Sir John Maxwell Sir Patrick Hume Laird of Brody Sir Archibald Cockburn Sir John Munro of Fowlis Mr. Adam Gourdon of Dallfolly Burroughs Sir Thomas Stewart Mr. William Higgins Mr. James Smith Mr. John Anderson Mr. James Kennet Mr. Patrick Mardock Committee for Reducing of Forfaultures and restoring of Fines Noblemen The Earl of Morton The Earl of Lothian The Earl of Leven Viscount of Kenmuire Lord of Bluntire Lord Torpichen Barons Sir Robert Sinclare Laird of Garthland Laird of Grange Dumbar Laird of Culloden Forbes Laird of Pitliver Laird of Rusco Burroughs Mr. James Smallet Laird of Lewchold Mr. John Murray Mr. Robert Cleeland Mr. John Boswell Sir William Hamilton Thus the Committees being settled and return'd to their several places the high Commissioner according to his priviledge appointed them to meet the next day and so to adjourn from time to time in the intervals of Parliament The Rebels in the mean time though they were narrowly watched by their Majesties Forces had yet made a shift to muster up fifteen hundred choice and select men and were come down and and encamped at the Foot of the Hills near Straithspey in the County of Murray commanded in chief by General Buchan and Colonel Canon and during their stay there had sent orders wherein they resolv'd to burn and destroy all that would not come out joyn with them and assist them of which Sir Thomas Levingstone having timely notice without more deliberation took along with him eight hundred Foot six Troops of Dragoons and two Troops of Horse and with all convenient speed marched towards them and encamped that night near Brody where he was forc'd to attend two whole days the coming of his Baggage Horses On the 30th of April he receiv'd a very good account of the Rebels Camp numbers and posture and resolving to take them napping if possible he immediately Decamps and Marching all that night he made a shift before the break of day to reach Ballagh Castle from whence he could easily discern the Enemies Camp by their Fires and having receiv'd a very good account of the nature of the ground and the danger of the Waters which run along the North side of the Enemies Camp and perceiving a resolution in his Souldiers to engage suitable to his own inclinations he thought fit to let them rest for half an hour and refresh themselves then enquiring about the Fords for there were two whereof one lay within two Musket shot of the Rebels Camp and guarded by a strong party of the Enemy the other was near a mile up the River and left unregarded and secure by the Enemy To this he forthwith marches his Army and in all imaginable silence passes without the least opposition having before left
him very uncivilly giving him very opprobrious Language and taxing him with the beggarly appearance of him and his Men whereupon Keil being provok't with a lusty Cane he had in his hand struck Lendal to the ground whereupon some other inferiour Officers made up and laying hold of Kiel they presently made him prisoner and carried him forthwith to the Main-Guard Keil being a man well known and belov'd in the Town had hundreds of the Mobile presently resorting with sticks and staves and threatning to pull down the Guard-house unless they did presently release Keil in the mean time comes up a Magistrate of the town and immediately got Keil releas'd but the Gentlemen Mobs blood being up they would not be satisfied without doing some injury to the Guard which occasioned the Souldiers to stand to their Arms and to threaten extremity to any that would dare to approach all this however would not serve but pressing on with vigorous insolence on them the Centinels were obliged to defend themselves and hapned to kill two of the daring Fellows and wounded others the Magistrates hereupon went up to the Guard and prevailed with them to go in and keep themselves close and in the mean time got two or three Companies of the Earl of Levens Regiment who were quartered in the Cannongate to come up and immediately shutting the City Gates they in a little time clear'd the streets and drove the Sparks into their Houses without further harm though they were obliged to keep Guards in many parts of the City for that Night for fear of a relapse The Captains are both of them confin'd and 't is believed he that gave the first provocation will be severely punished The Earl of Pearth had been long a Prisoner in the Castle of sterling for his high misdemeanours in the last Reign together for his disaffection to the present establishment and but now by the representation of the Earl of Crawford it was mediated that he might have his liberty provided he would procure the coming back and safe return of the young Lord Drummond his Son the Earl of Wigtown and his brother who during the Guardianship of him the said Earl of Pearth and the Earl of Melfort were sent over Seas by their especial order on purpose to be bred up in the Romish superstition and that the Earl of Pearth should give allowable security to do so as also for his peaceable behaviour without plotting or conspiring against the present Government And now at last the long expected Act for settling of the Church Government came to be passed and touch'd with the Scepter Which is at large as followeth An Act Ratifying the Confession of Faith and Settling Presbyterian Church-Government in Scotland In a Parliament at Edinburgh the 7th of June 1690. OUR Soveraign Lord and Lady the King and Queens Majesties and Three Estates of Parliament Conceiving it to be their bound Duty after the great Deliverance that God hath lately wrought for this Church and Kingdom As first To settle and secure therein the true Protestant Religion according to the truth of Gods Word as it hath of a long time been professed within this Land as also the Government of Christ's Church within this Nation agreeable to the Word of God and most condusive to the advancement of true Piety and Godliness and the Establishing of Peace and Tranquillity within this Realm And that by an Article of the Claim of Right it is Declared That Prelacy and the Superiority of any Office in the Church above Presbyters is and hath been a great and insupportable Grievance and Trouble to this Nation and contrary to the Inclinations of the generality of the People ever since the Reformation they having Reformed from Popery by Presbyters and therefore ought to be abolished Likewise by an Act of the last Sessions of this Parliament Prelacy is Abolished Therefore their Majesties with the Advice and Consent of the said three Estates do hereby Revive Ratifie and perpetually Confirm all Laws Statutes and Acts of Parliament made against Popery and Papists and for the Maintainance and Preservation of the true Reformed protestant Religion and for the true Church of Christ within this Kingdom in so far as they confirm the same or are made in favour thereof Likewise they by these presents Ratify and Establish the Confession of Faith now read in their presence and Voted and Aproved by them as the Publick and a vowed Confession of this Church containing the sum and substance of the Doctrine of the Reformed Churches which confession of Faith is subjoyned to this present Act. As also they do Establish Ratify and Confirm the Presbyterian Church-Government and Discipline That is to say the Government of the Church by Kirk-Sessions Presbyteries Provincial Synods and General Assemblies Ratified and established by the 114 Act Ja. 6. Parl. 12. Anno 1592. Intituled Ratification of the Liberty of the true Kirk c. And thereafter received by the General consent of this Nation to be the only Government of Christs Church within this Kingdom Reviving Renewing and confirming the foresaid Act of Parliament in the whole Heads thereof except that part of it relating to Patronages which is hereafter to be taking into Consideration And Rescining Annulling and making void the Acts of Parliament following Act anent Restitution of Bishops Ja. 6. Par. 18. Cap. 2. Act Ratifying the Acts of the Assembly 1610. Ja. 6. Par. 21. Cap. 1. Act anent the Election of Arch-Bishops and Bishops Ja. 6. Par. 22. Cap. 1. Act Intituled Ratification of the five Articles of the General Assembly at Pearth Jam. 6. Par. 23. Cha. 1 Act Intituled For the Restitution and Re-stablishment of the antient Government of the Church by Arch-Bishops and Bishops Cha. 2. Par. 1. Sess 2. Act 1st Act anent the Constitution of a National Synod Ch. 2. Par. 1. Sess 3. Act 5. Act against such as refuse to Depone against Delinquents Charles 2. Par. 2. Sess 2. Act Intituled Act Acknowledging and an Asserting the Right of Succession to the Imperial Crown of Scotland Ch. 2. Par. 3. Act. 2. Act Intituled Act anent Religion and the Test Ch. 2. Par. 3. Act. 6. With all other Acts Laws Statues Ordinances and Proclamations and that in so far allenary as the said Acts and others generally and particularly above-mentioned are contrary or prejudicial to inconsistent with or derogatory from the Protestant Religion and Presbyterian Government now Established and Allowing and declaring That the Church Government be Established in the hands of and exercised by these Prebyterian Ministers who were Outed since the first of January 1661. for Nonconformity to Prelacy or not complying with the Courses of the Time and are now Restored by the late Act of Parliament and such Ministers and Elders only as they have admitted or received or shall hereafter admit or receive And also that all the said Presbyterian Ministers have and shall have Right to the Maintenance Rights and other Priviledges by Law provided to the
quite out of doors besides that the Vote of the Assembly upon the Advice brought in by their Order would sufficiently decare their Opinion which being seconded by the Earl of Sutherland and the Lord Cardoss Sir Patrick acquiesced in it and so the Assembly unanimously Voted the following Advice To His Highness the Prince of Orange WE the Lords and Gentlemen of the Kingdom of Scotland assembled at your Highness's Desire in this extraordinary Conjuncture do give your Highness our humble and hearty Thanks for your pious and generous Vndertaking for preserving of the Protestant Religion and restoring the Laws and Liberties of these Kingdoms In order to the attaining these ends our humble Advice and Desire is That Your Highness take upon You the Administration of all Affairs both Civil and Military the Disposal of all the Publick Revenues and Fortresses of the Kingdom of Scotland and the doing every thing that is necessary for the Preservation of the Peace of the Kingdom until a general Meeting of the States of the Nation which we humbly desire your Highness to call to be holden at Edinborough the Fourteenth day of March next by your Letters or Proclamation to be published at the Market Cross of Edinborough and other Head Boroughs of the several Shires and Stewarties as sufficient Information to all concern'd and according to the Custom of the Kingdom And that the publication of these your Letters or Proclamation be by the Sheriffs or Steward-Clerks for the Free-holders who have the value of Lands holden according to Law for making Elections and by the Town-Clerks of the several Boroughs for the meeting of the Burgesses of the respective Royal Boroughs to make their Elections at least fifteen days before the meeting of the Estates at Edinborough And the respective Clerks to make Intimation thereof at least ten days before the meeting of the Elections And that the whole Elections and Members of the said meeting at Edinborough qualify'd as above express'd be Protestants without any other exception or limitation whatsoever to deliberate and resolve what is to be done for securing the Protestant Religion and restoring the Laws and Liberties of the Kingdom according to Your Highness's Declaration Dated at the Council-Chamber in Whitehall the Tenth day of January 1689. This Advice being subscribed by above Thirty Lords and Fourscore Gentlemen was presented they being all present by Duke Hamilton their President at St. James 's to his Highness the Prince of Orange who return'd them Thanks for the Trust which they had reposed in him but desir'd some time to consider upon so important an Affair Upon the Fourteenth of January His Highness met the same Lords and Gentlemen again at St. James's at what time he thus delivered himself My Lords and Gentlemen IN pursuance of your Avice I will until the Meeting of the States in March next give such Orders concerning the Affairs of Scotland as are necessary for the calling of the said Meeting for preserving of the peace the applying of the publick Revenue to the most pressing Vses and putting the Fortresses into the hands of persons in whom the Nation can have just confidence And I do further assure you that you will always find me ready to concur with you in every thing that may be found necessary for the securing the Protestant Religion and restoring the Laws and Liberties of the Nation At the same time the Eal of Crawfourd made it his Suit to His Highness that himself the Earl of Louthian and others who came to Town since the Advice was presented might have the Liberty to subscribe it also which was done accordingly This Answer of his Highness gave great satisfaction to the Lords and Gentlemen who tendered the Advice so that every thing being prepared in order to the Elections and the several Members being returned according to the Methods prescribed the Convention consisting of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons of the Kingdom of Scotland assembled at Edinborough the Fourteenth day of March all in one House according to the custom of that Realm The Bishop of Edinborough said Prayers in which he prayed to God to have compassion upon King James wherein he did well had he not gon on with his Supplications to restore him however it shewed the Temper of the Man Upon the choosing of their President and Clerks the Bishops and some others were for the Marques of Aihol to have been President but Duke Hamilton carried it by Forty Voices The first thing they took into consideration was the security and safety of their Sitting in regard the City of Edinborough where they sat was then at the mercy of the Canon of the Castle which was in the hands of the D. of Gourdon a Roman Patholick Thereupon they passed an Act That in regard the Duke of Gourdon and some others of the Popish Religion under him entrusted with the keeping of the Castle of Edinborough were not qualified by the Law of this Kingdom they did therefore grant a Warrant to the Earls of Lothian and Tweddale to repair immediately to the Castle of Edinborough and require both Him and others of his Perswasion there in the Name of the States of the Kingdom to remove out of the said Castle within twenty four Hours after the Intimation and to leave the charge thereof to the next Commanding Officer being a Protestant And he and they doing the same the Estates gave assurance that he and they were and should be exonerated and secured as to any thing they have acted in that or any other Station contrary to Law as being Papists While those Lords were doing their duty in pursuance of the Act of the Convention the Meeting of Estates went on and in the first place named a Committee of Elections consisting of Fifteen that is to say five out of each State This gave an occasion to a debate Whither the Lords Spiritual were a distinct Estate or only a part of the same Estate with the Lords Temporal But in regard the House inclined to the Negative the debate was let fall However by the naming of this Committee the people began to make a Judgment of the Meeting for that of Fifteen which were of it at least twelve were shrewdly supposed to be inclined to follow the methods of England besides that the Houses rejecting a Protestation made against the Earl of Argyle 's sitting among them till his fathers Attainder should be reversed was no small confirmation of what the people conjectured But nothing more availed to give the people a true notion of the Noble designs of the Meeting then the following Speech which was spoken by a Member at the opening of the Convention which being so well received as it was was a clear evidence that they were not met to favour the Interest of King James WE are now said the Gentleman called together by His Highness the Prince of Orange to Consult and deliberate what methods will be most proper to secure our Religion Laws
and Liberties in Order to which the first thing that will fall under our consideration is the settling the Soveraign Power I take it for granted that you are fully convinced that King James the seventh by his many violations of the Fundamental Laws by his endeavouring to establish a Despotic and Arbitrary Power and introduce Popery though he himself had confirmed all the Laws that were enacted in favour of the Protestant Religion has left us at a time when we needed his Protection most The Eyes of all Europe are upon us and it is in our power to make our selves and our Posterity either happy or miserable by making a choice either to call back K. James and hazard once more all that men account dear to his Mercy or to settle the Government on some other under whom we may live peaceable lives without the perpetual Terror of being swallowed up by Popery and Arbitrary Government which all good Men hoped were now banished and yet behold a new off-spring is sprung up which eagerly pleads for both under the mistaken names of Duty and Allegiance 'T is strange that any man can be so far degenerate as to prefer Slavery to Liberty and that they should be so much in Love with chains that when they were fairly shaken off they should run furiously to find them again As if the Ottoman and French Government were so charming in our Countrey that we cannot live without it though we have so lately groaned under the dismal burden of it And it might have been supposed that even they who had been instrumental in the Enslaving their Fellow brethren and were grown fat with sucking the Nations Blood would have taken another method to reconcile themselves then by perswading us to purchase their safety at so vast an expence as the ruine of more than three parts of the Nation If we do but a little reflect upon the motives which those men blinded by self Interest make use of to delude the Nation into a security that wanted but very little of proving fatal to it and compare them with the strong reasons we have to perswade us from being so imposed on they will be found so weak and impertinent that we may judge it next to impossibility to suffer our selves to be twice deceived But if the experience of our former Miseries the very thoughts of renewing which cause all good men to tremble has not made us wiser and be not of Efficacy enough to deter us from venturing another Shipwrack and exposing all again to the disposal of the Roman Catholicks 't is more then probable that God has abandoned us to believe strong Delusions They will eadeavour to perswade us that Kings are exempted from punishment here on Earth and that nothing they do can be quarrelled by their Subjects which indeed might be urged among the Turks who reserve nothing from the power of their Sultans and where 't is death to dispute his Commands though never so Arbitrary and Tyrannical But with what impudence can such siuff be imposed upon us who never admit our Kings to the Government till they swear to Rule us according to Law and no otherwise The Laws are the only security we have for our Lives and properties which if our Soveraigns break Subjects cannot be blam'd for making use of the ordinary means to preserve them and since that cannot be done without withdrawing Obedience from such a Magistrate as goes about to destroy them such an Act cannot be said to punish because we take nothing from him to which he has a just claim but only shun the occasion of making our selves miserable The Speculative Doctrin of Passive Obedience has done too much mischief among us and what has befallen the King may be justly attributed to it for the believing he might do what he pleased without Opposition encouraged him to take those measures which have drawn all these Misfortunes upon him Others are so fond as to believe they may be secure in calling back the King provided they so limit him that it may not be in his power to hurt them But what Restrictions of our contrivance can bind the King For most certainly they can never be voluntarily condescended to and what is constrained and done by force the Law declares to be null and void to the assistance of which the Popes dispencing Power being joyned would quickly blow up those Sampsons Cords and the Royal power would again revive with all its lustre and vigor In the next place the King is of a Religion that in a famous Council has Decreed That there is no Faith to be kept with Hereticks much less with Subjects whom the King looks upon as so many Rebels and will not miss to treat them as such when ever they give him the Opportunity of doing it Then we may lament our Miseries but it will not be in our power to remedy them For a Prince of Orange will not be always ready to rescue us with such vast Expence and so great hazard to his Person Again What Argument has the King given us since he left us that he will be more faithful in observing his Word and Oaths then hitherto he has been Does he not in a Letter lately Printed here expresly say he has Ruled so as to give no occasion of Complaint to his Subjects Is not the same Letter signed by one who sacrificed both his Honour his Conscience to Interest whose pernicious and headstrong Counsells posted him to his Ruine though all that has been done cannot make him sensible of it Is K. James the seventh by breathing the French Air become less a Bigot to Popery It were a Dream to fancy it For so long as the Vatican Thunders out Excommunications against all that use not their utmost endeavours to extirpate Heresie a Roman Catholick must have no Religion at all if they be not terrible to him But say they the Peace of the Nation cannot be otherwise secur'd nor Factions and Divisions be extinguished but by calling in the King But what Factions do you observe but what they themselves foment on purpose to disturb our Harmony All which would immediately dye if the Government were settled on those who best deserv'd For then if these Fops continued still fond of Tyranny and Popery they would be chastized as disturbers of the publick Peace If the King return we must burst out into a flame and England that has already declared will quickly be upon us an Enemy too Potent and too numerous for us although we were united besides that we cut off all hopes of a Vnion with that Nation and deprive our selves of an unspeakable Advantage which would redound to all sorts of people and would be the only means to support an impoverisht and sinking Nation The happy Success the Prince 's Enterprize has met with has made a considerable alteration in the Affairs of Europe For thereby the Great Enemy of the Protestants and even of Christianity it self is so
from His Majesty of England Upon which a Debate arose about the reading of the Letters at what time the Earl of Lothian mov'd That since they were met at the Desire of his Majesty of England they ought to give his Letter the Precedence which being put to the Vote was carried in the affirmative and the King of England 's Letter was read the Contents of which were as follow The Direction was To the Meeting of the Estates of Scotland My Lords and Gentlemen WE are very sensible of the Kindness and Concern which your Nation has evidenced toward Vs and Our Vndertaking for the preservation of your Religion and Liberty which were in such imminent Danger Neither can we in the least doubt of your Considence in Vs after having seen how far so many of your Nobility and Gentry have own'd our Declaration countenancing and concurring with us in our Endeavours and desiring Vs that We would take upon us the Administration of Affairs Civil and Military and to call a Meeting of the Estates for securing the Protestant Religion and the Ancient Laws and Liberties of that Kingdom which accordingly we have done Now it lies on You to enter upon such Consultations as are most probable to settle You on sure and lasting foundations which We hope you will set about with all convenient speed with regard to the publick Good and to the General Interest and Inclinations of the People that after so much Trouble and great Suffering they may live happily and in Peace and that you may lay aside all Animosities and Factions that may impede so good a Work We were glad to find that so many of the Nobility and Gentry when here in London were so much inclin'd to a Vnion of both Kingdoms and that they did look upon it as one of the best means for procuring the Happiness of both Nations and settling of a lasting Peace among them which would be advantagious to Both they living in the same Island having the same Language and the same common Interest of Religion and Liberty especially at this Juncture when the Enemies of both are so restless endeavouring to make and increase Jealousies and Divisions which they will be ready to improve to their own Advantage and the Ruin of Britain We being of the same Opinion as to the usefulness of this Vnion and having nothing so much before our Eyes as the Glory of God Establishing the Reformed Religion and the Peace and Happiness of these Nations are resolv'd to use Our Vtmost Endeavours in advancing every thing that may conduce to the effectuating the same So we hid you Heartily Farwell From our Court at Hampton the seventh day of March 1689. His Majesties Letter being thus read the next debate was whither the late King James 's Letter should be read or no. And here to remove all Heats and disputes the Lord Lothian again stept up and propounded an Expedient to which the House agreed That is to say that before the reading of it they should pass an Act which should be subscribed by all the Members That For as much as there was a Letter from King James the Seventh presented to the Meeting of the Estates That they before the Opening thereof declar'd and Enacted That notwithstanding of any thing that might be contain'd in that Letter for dissolving them or impeding their Procedure yet that they were a Free and Lawful Meeting of the Estates and would continue undissolved until they had settled and secur'd the Protestant Religion the Government Laws and Liberties of the Kingdom This Act was sign'd by the whole Meeting except only six or seven and then the following Letter was opened and read overwritten James Rex My Lords and Gentlemen WHereas we have been inform'd that You the Peers and Representatives of the Shires and Boroughs of that our Ancient Kingdom who are to meet together at our good Town of Edinborough some time in this Instant March by the Usurp't Authority of the Prince of Orange We think fit to let you know That we have at all times rely'd upon the Faithfulness and Affection of You our Ancient People so much that in our greatest Misfortunes heretofore we had recourse to your Assistance and that with good success to our Affairs So now again we require of you to support our Royal Interest expecting from you what becomes Loyal and Faithful Subjects Generous and Honest Men that will neither suffer your selves to be cajol'd nor frighted into any Action misbecoming true-hearted Scotchmen And that to support the Honour of the Nation you will contemn the base Example of Disloyal Men and Eternize your names by a Loyalty sutable to the many Professions you have made to us in doing whereof you will choose the safest part since thereby you will evite the danger you must needs undergo the Infamy and Disgrace you must bring upon your selves in this World and the Condemnation due to the Rebellious in the Next and you will likewise have the Opportunity to secure to your selves and your Posterity the gracious Promises which we have so oft made of securing your Religion Laws Properties and Rights which we are still resolved to perform as soon as it is possible for us to meet you safely in a Parliament of our Ancient Kingdom In the mean time fear not to declare for Us your Lawful Soveraign veraign who will not fail on our part to give you such speedy and powerful Assistance as shall not only enable you to defend your selves from any Foreign Attempt but put you in a Condition to assert our Right against our Enemies who have depressed the same by the blackest of Usurpations the most unjust as well as most unnatural of all Attempts which the Almighty God may for a time permit and let the Wicked prosper yet then must bring Confusion upon such Workers of Iniquity We farther let you know that we will pardon all such as shall return to their Duty before the last day of this Month Inclusive and that we will punish with the Rigor of our Lawes all such as shall stand out in Rebellion against Us or our Authority So not doubting that you will declare for us and suppress whatever may oppose our Interest and that you will send some of your number to us with an Accompt of your diligence and the Posture of our Affairs We bid you Heartily Farewell Given on Board the St. Michael March the First 1689. By His Majesties Command Melfort This Letter being directed to Persons at that time sitting who either lay under the Ignominy of his Attainders or had else severely otherwise suffered either themselves or their nearest Relations the dilacerating stripes of his Tyrannical severity could not so soon forget the anguish of their Sufferings as to be sugar'd up into a Reconciliation by the fair Promises of a Person that had lost the Reputation of being true to his Publick Word Besides that there was so little Majesty in the Style of the Letter
altogether precarious and answerable to the Lowness of his Condition only like a plant at the latter end of Autumn putting forth some fruitless Buds of vain Assurances So that as the one altogether slighted it so those that were most inclin'd to favour it were altogether out of Countenance to see the Vanity of such an unseasonable Secretary Rhetorick A Committee therefore was appointed to draw up an Answer to the King of England's Letter but no man so much as mov'd for an Answer to that of King James onely the Man that brought it beg'd a Pass to go to him in Ireland where he landed the Twelfth of March at the Port of Kingsale the Messenger offering Security not to carry to him any Letters or Papers from any Person whatsoever But neither would that be granted on the other side he was first secur'd then enlarged upon Bail till at length not thinking him worth the keeping they dismissed him with a Pass instead of an Answer Nor indeed could King James expect better if he may be thought to hope for better who had no more significant a Messenger to send to a Convention of Estates of a Kingdom than something like a Gentleman Usher to his Queen While the Answer to His Majesties Letter was drawing the Meeting fell upon other Business and ordered a Proclamation to be issue forth for bringing in the Arrears of the Publick Revenue The first draught of this Proclamation did not please purporting That the Money was to be employ'd for raising Forces for securing the Protestant Religion however after some debate it was agreed that the Alteration should be made by leaving out the Words For Raising Forces and so it pass'd This Proclamation was the more requisite to be one of their first Considerations in regard of the great occasion which then they had to secure themselves and beleaguer the Castle which still held out to which purpose they were forc'd to make use of the City Train'd Bands and the Country Militia which could not well be dismiss'd without pay or a Generous Gratuity But then in pursuance of the main Affair which they were upon of Addressing themselves to the King they thought it but requisite as a forerunner of what themselves intended to give their Approbation of the Address and Proceedings of the Nobility and Gentry that had been at London and had there made it their Request to His Highness then Prince of Orange to take upon him the Administration of the Government which was done with that Respect which the Occasion and Quality of the Persons Merited And to shew that they were not in the mean time unmindful of the Distresses of their Neighbors upon reading some Letters from several Noblemen and Gentlemen in Ireland craving Assistance of Arms and Ammunition Four Thousand Muskets Two Thousand Fuzee's and Six Hundred Barrels of Gunpowder were order'd to be bought and sent away At the same time the Meeting was informed that Viscount Dundee had stoln the opportunity of a Conference with the Duke of Gourdon at the Postern Gate of the Castle notwithstanding that the Convention had forbid all correspondence with him under the Penalty of Treason more over that Dundee who now came no more to the Convention was seen near the City with about fifty Horse This somewhat alarumed the Convention so that they immediately ordered him to be summoned but understanding that he was Marched Westward toward Linlithgow which was the Road to Sterling and fearing least he might have some design to surprize that Castle which commands the Pass of Communication between the Northern and Southern parts of Scotland they ordered a Major with fourscore Horse to follow him and the Earl of Marr who was then Governour of Sterling Castle was sent away by their Order to secure that Important Garrison against any Attempt or surprize And well knowing that small sparks many times kindle violent Conflagrations therefore that they might be in a Posture to make opposition where ever the flame brake out they ordered all persons from sixteen to sixty to be in a readiness to take Arms when the Convention should find it requisite for the publick safety Several suspected Officers of the Militia were turned out and others put in their places and Sir Patrick Hume who was excepted out of the late Kings Indempnity ordered to command the Militia Horse of his Countrey And farther that eight hundred Men should be Levyed and Arm'd under the command of the Lord Leven which was no sooner intimated but the Men came in within two hours time Great care was also taken for the Western Countries that lye next to Ireland where as in all other parts orders were directed for dis-arming the Papists and settling the Militia in trusty Hands But notwithstanding all this care and vigilance and the extraordinary Unity of the generality of the Nation the adherers to King James were not without hopes of having another game to play for their lost stakes Which made Dundee still dance about the Countrey like a Winter Exhalation to intice unwary followers which made the Duke of Gourdon farther perhaps encouraged by some bouncing Promises from Ireland to send as he called them his last Proposals and withall a Monitory Letter to the Convention minding them to what Honours and Dignities K. James's Predecessors had advanced most or many of them to and what marks of Royal Favour and Bounty he had conferred upon them and which ought not to be forgot for the Errours and Miscarriages of poor four years Raign so that if they would allow him Liberty to go over into Ireland he would endeavour an Accommodation between King James and the Estates of the Kingdom to have Religion Laws Liberty and Property restored and established But both the Admonition of the Duke and his undertaking were rejected with that scorn that they would not suffer the Monitory to be entred in their Journals to signifie that they had either received or read it His demands were An Act of Indempnity for all Papists and Protestants that serv'd under him in the Castle and for four or five Priests That he might be secured against all Strangers or Cameronians by which he meant the Rabble in and about the Town at his coming out and that he might have a Guard of forty Horses for a safe Convoy The Convention though they slighted his Monitories yet desirous to have the Castle in their own hands made answer to his demands That they would give security to himself and others in their lives and fortunes so far as they had acted as Papists and that the Priests should have Passes to depart the Kingdom upon condition never to return again That he should have the Guard and Convoy he demanded till he were over the water to Brunt-Island And that a like number of Guards should Convoy him from thence homeward which should be disbanded within twenty four hours after his Arrival he giving security to live peaceably and not to disturb the Peace of the Kingdom
Jurisdiction given to Bishops The 1. Act of 21. Parl. of K. J. 6. concerning the Ratification of the Acts of the Assembly at Glasgow Anno 1610. and the 1. and 2. Acts of the 22. Parl. of K. J. 6. Anno 1617. concerning the Archbishops and Restitution of Chapters and the 1. Act of the 23. Parl. of K. J. 6. An. 1621. about the Ratification of the Articles of the assembly of Perth And all Acts and Constitutions whatever prejudicial to the Church-Government by General Provincial and Presbyterial Assemblies and Kirk-Sessions or so far as they are in favour of Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors or other Prelates whatever c. or in favor of the civil places and power of Church-men their ruling and voting in Parliament c. by vertue of their Titles or any other pretence whatever c. And all other Acts inconsistent with this present Act. Concluding with an appointment of the Time and Places for the first meeting of the Presbyterial Assemblies and empowring them to choose their Moderator with orders to give him the Oath of Allegiance and to return the Oath taken and subscrib'd to the Clerks of the Privy Council The Act presented by the Lord Cardross was the same for the settling the Church Government by General Assembles Presbyters and Provincial Synods but made no mention of rescinding the many Acts mention'd in the Lord Commissioners draught It was the same for restoring the deprived Ministers but differed in the addition of Clauses for sentencing and depriving all that gave not Obedience to the Act against the owning the late King It also made void all Patronages and Presentations to Churches an Intolerable servitude upon the Church of God with all Laws made in favour of them and particularly the 9th Act of the 1. Parl. of Charles the Second Nevertheless that the Tithes of the said Churches whereof the Patronages were abolished should belong to the Patrons and be inserted in their Infeoffments in lieu of the said Patronages with the burden always of the Ministers Right and Stipend There was also another Clause for suspending all Ministers called Conform Ministers who entered by and still continued under the Prelacy from the Exercise of any part of the Presbyterian Government only that they might continue to exercise their Pastoral Charge within their respective Parishes and hold their Kirk-Sessions for Discipline therein till farther order Declaring in the last place that their Majesties and the Estates would with all conveniency take the advice of such Ministers as were known to be of the Presbyterian Perswasion and by their advice lay down such methods as should be judged most effectual for purging the Church of all Scandalous Erroneous insufficient and disaffected persons and providing for the particular Churches with able and well qualified Ministers and establishing the Exercise of the Presbyterian Government according to the true intent of the Act. While the settling the Church Goverment was thus in debate an Address presented from the Presbyterian Ministers and Professors to the Kings Commissioner was by him given into 〈◊〉 House and there read upon the 〈◊〉 of July Wherein after they had made all due acknowledgements to God and his Majesty for their wonderful and unexpected deliverance from the Great Oppressions which they had suffer'd under the Cruelty and Ambition of the Prelacy of that Kingdom they humbly beseech the Commissioner and the Estates of Parliament seeing the King had declared and their Lordships with him had zealously appeared for the Protestant Religion That they would be graciously pleased by their Civil Sanction to establish and ratifie the late Confession of Faith with the larger and shorter Catechisms which contained the Substance of the Doctrine of the reformed Churches the directory of Worship and Presbyterial Church Government all agreeable to the Word of God and formerly received by the General Consent of the Nation And in regard that Prelacy and all who had entered under Prelacy had been imposed upon the Church without her Consent in any of her free General Assemblies and that Presbyterian Government could not be safe in the hands of those who were of contrary Principles therefore they humbly petitioned that the Church Government might be established in the hands of such only who by their former carriage and sufferings were known to be sound Presbyterians and well affected to His Majesties Government and that those Ministers yet alive who were thrust from their Churches might be restored They also pray that they might be allowed by Civil Sanction to appoint Visitations for the purging out of insufficient and scandalous Ministers and that Patronages which had their Rise from the most corrupt and latter times of Christianism might be abolished and the Church establish'd upon its former good foundations confirmed by many acts of Parliament 1560. And that all Acts ratifying Ceremonies and imposing Punishments upon Presbyterians for Non-conformity might be abolish'd and lastly that their Lordships would take care that learned sound and Godly men might be put into the Universities and Seminaries of Learning humbly submitting to their Lordships wisdom the method of considering and effectuating these their desires But neither did either of the two draughts please neither could the farther consideration of the Address be at that time entered upon For the House had made an order the day before by reason of a Letter from the King to the Privy Council and a Proclamation thereupon by them issued forth for opening the Signet not to proceed any farther in the affair of Church Government till the Letter and Proclamation were considered that in the mean time there should be a stopt put to the opening of the Signet Only they were so farr willing to gratifie the Addressers that they Voted and approved an Act for restoring Presbyterian Ministers to their Churches which was presented by Sir William Hamilton To this effect That whereas in pursuance of the Claim of Right Prelacy c. was abolished and that many Ministers of the Presbyterian perswasion since the first of January 1661. had been deprived of their Churches or banished for not Conforming Therefore their Majesties with advice of the Estates ordained that those Ministers should forthwith have free access to their Churches and exercise the Ministry in those Parishes without any new call thereto and enjoy the benefits and stipends thereto belonging with som reserve to the incumbent of the last years rent as if the Churches were not vacant But then the business of the Lords of the Sessions coming on the Question was put Whither the Nomination of the Lords of the Sessions made by His Majesty in case of a Total vacancy required the Authority of Parliament And whither it were requisite by the consitution of the Colledge of Justice that the President of the Session should be Elected by the Lords of the Session These two Points occasioned a long debate at the end of which the draught of an Act was brought in declaring the methods of naming and admitting the