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A70539 Pia Fraus, or, Absalom's theft being a sermon preached to a country-congregation on the thirtieth of January last, being the anniversary fast for the martyrdom of King Charles the First / by R.L., M.A. Lawe, Robert, b. 1617 or 18. 1684 (1684) Wing L637A; ESTC R43031 12,974 34

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such persons firm to their Loyalty might be made evident by a multitude of Instances amongst our selves To apply this to our present occasion This day fell the best of Princes by the bloudy and barbarous hands of his own Subjects There were many Absaloms and Achitophels proud ambitious covetous subtle malicious wretches that conspired to shed his innocent Bloud and to this end stole the hearts of his beguiled Subjects and by plausible pretences decoy'd them into a Rebellion against their lawful and gracious Soveraign that so they might rob him both of his Crown and Life at once Unnatural Miscreants whom no reverence to his sacred Person no fear of that great God whose Vicegerent he was no sense of their own Duty nor shame of the World could restrain from the open impudent impious and villanous shedding his Royal and Sacred Bloud What Morsters were these that durst deal so barbarously with a King their own King who offered them all the pledges of his Love all possible security for their Lives Liberties Laws Religion or whatsoever was dear to or might abundantly satisfie all good and loyal Subjects * This the King grievously complains of in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I had formerly declared to sober and moderate minds how desirous I was to give all just content when I agreed to so many Bills which had been enough to secure and satisfie all if some mens hydropick insatiableness had not learnt to thirst the more by how much the more they drank Chap. 6. A King famous for his Parts Piety Patience Devotion and all other Christian Graces which will make him admired to all Generations when the name of these wicked ones shall rot Prov. ●0 7 and stink in the nostrils of all those that have any sparks of Ingenuity or Humanity left in them But what assurances could satisfie those that were resolved not to be satisfied with any thing but his Crown and Life and therefore wretchedly staved off all offers of Accommodation for Peace † Or else offered such unreasonable terms as he could neither in Honour Reason or Conscience yield to Witness the 19 Propositions the Treaty at Vxbridge which proved unsuccessful says the King in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the treacherous obstinacy of those men with whom it was a grand Maxime to ask something which in reason and honour must be denied that they might have some colour to refuse all that was in other things granted ch 18. For these Miscreants had a bloudy Tragedy to act an execrable designe contrived which they were resolved to carry on against all Laws of Scripture Nature Nations against their own publick Declarations against their solemn Oaths Vows Covenants and I am perswaded the checks of their own Consciences too unless they had as wilfully seared them as they had impudently brazened their faces to act such a prodigious Villany in the face of the Sun and view of the whole World who stood amazed to behold the impudence and impiety of those graceless wretches who had made such publick and frequent Professions and those confirmed by sacred and solemn Oaths of their Loyalty to that innocent and excellent Prince whose Bloud afterwards they so barbarously spilt If we enquire into the Means and Methods by which they effected this monstrous Villany we shall find that they traced exactly the steps of this bloudy Absalom in their Fraud Hypocrisie Calumny false and impudent Slanders cast upon that Kings Person and Government as appears by that Remonstrance set forth in 1641. pretended to be for the information of the People but intended by some at least for their seduction and indeed proved the source of all our ensuing Miseries and the prologue to that woful Tragedy acted on this day As also by their frequent and false Declarations wherein they wrest all his Expressions and Concessions to the worst sence charging him with the Irish Rebellion and the guilt of all the Bloud that was spilt in the three Nations * The tenderness and regret I find in my soul for having had any hand that very unwillingly God knows in shedding one mans bloud unjustly c. may I hope be some evidence before God and man to all posterity that I am far from bearing justly the vast load and guilt of all the bloud which was spilt in this unhappy War which some men will needs charge on me to ease their own fouls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chap. 2. Of the Irish Rebellion see chap. 12. Though themselves had no ground for the raising that bloudy War but their own pretended and groundless fears and jealousies and offering the highest indignities to his Royal Person and Family Their usual Expressions were Blacken him blacken him i. e. load him with Reproaches defame him amongst the People make him odious by false Accusations malicious Slanders infamous Libels c. † Those foul and false Aspersions were secret Engines at first employed against the love of my People towards me that undermining their value of me mine Enemies and theirs too might at once blow up their Affections and batter down their Loyalty Chap. 15. And so they did Some of them spit their hellish Venome upon his Name as others in imitation of their Forefathers the Jews Mark 14.65 did their aspish Poyson in his face a Barbarism unheard-of in token of their greatest Contempt and Abhorrence But his Name like a pretious Oyntment will yield a sweet savour Eccl. 7.1 when their Memorial shall perish with them or if any thing remain of it it shall be noted with a black mark Nigro carbone fit onely to be fixed upon men famous for infamy and render them an hissing a by-word and an astonishment to all succeeding Ages * I am well assured that as my Innocency is clear before God so my Reputation shall like the Sun after Owls and Bats have had freedom in the night and darker times rise and recover it self to such a degree of Splendour as these feral Birds shall be grieved to behold and unable to bear Chap. 15. But the grand Cheat lay in the pretence of Religion and Reformation Popery was coming in upon us like a Floud Popery a terrible word and which of late hath been made use of by some subtile Underminers of Monarchy as a Bugbear to affright silly people out of their wits But were they really such Enemies to Popery as they pretended who connived at least at the most infamous Hereticks and Heresies that ever started out of Hell or else Mr. Edwards belyes them in his Gangrene And Mr. Prynn in his perfect Narrative undertakes to demonstrate to them that their new Commonwealth or Good Old Cause they are his own words was originally projected by the Jesuits and other Romish Emissaries To destroy our Protestant Religion Church King Kingdom Parliament Laws Liberties c. And Papists and Popish books were grown so numerous and audacious under their government that the Stationers of London thought themselves bound