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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A49129 A resolution of certain queries concerning submission to the present government ... by a divine of the Church of England, as by law establisht. Long, Thomas, 1621-1707. 1689 (1689) Wing L2980; ESTC R21420 45,635 72

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true Mother of the Child had greater tenderness of its life than the pretended Mother so the true Prince may be presumed to have a greater regard to the welfare of the People than the Vsurper Claudian to Honorius Tu civem patremque geris tu consule cunctis Non tibi nec tua te moveant sed publica vota As a Mariner is supposed to intend the guiding of his Ship to a safe Harbor and a Physician to intend the Health of his Patient so is a Prince presumed to intend the prosperity of his People which is the great end of Government Bishop Bilson goes farther speaking of the Roman Cruelties says They are such as are able to set good men at their wits end and make them justly doubt since you refuse the course of all good Laws Divine and Humane whether by the Law of Nature they may not defend themselves against such barbarous blood suckers For whatever is attempted on us without Law is force and we may vim vi repellere as in the case of a Sheriff taking possession on a Judgment if a Prince should commission armed men to oppose him in the execution of his Office he may lawfully resist them and the Law doth indempnifie him the Princes Private Will cannot make void his Publick Will formerly declared and published in his Laws This hath been the sence and practice of our own and other Protestant Nations of our own in the Case of the Queen of Scots who brought French Forces into Scotland to withstand the Reformation endeavoured by the Nobles the Clergy of England gave a Subsidy of 6 s. in the Pound to defray the Charge of that War and call it her using all prudent and Godly means 5 Eliz. ch 24. ch 27. The Temporalty call it The princely and upright preservation of the Liberty of the Realm and Nation of Scotland from eminent Captivity and Desolation And for abating Hostility and Persecution within the Realm of France there were Forces sent under the Earl of Warwick to New-haven to assist the French Protestants which was then accounted a Godly and prudent means to abate Hostility and Persecution practised against the Professors of God's Holy Gospel And in the 35 of Eliz. ch 12. was another Subsidy granted by the Clergy for the Queen's Charges in the prudent and needful prevention of such Attempts as tended to the Extirpation of the sincere Profession of the Gospel both here and elsewhere And Ch. 13. the Temporalty gave this Reason for their Subsidy Besides the great and perpetual Honour which it hath pleased God to give your Majesty abroad in making you the principal Support of all Just and Religious Causes against Vsurpers besides the great Succours in France and Flanders which we conceive to be most Honourable in regard of the ancient League the Justice and Equity of the Causes c. And in 39 Eliz. ch 27. they say This Land is become since your Majesty's days both a Port and Haven of Refuge for distressed States and Kingdoms and a Rock and Bulwark of Opposition against the Tyranny and ambitious Attempts of mighty Vsurping Potentates And in 43 Eliz. ch 17. The Clergy say Who hath or should have a livelier sense or better remembrance of your Majesty's Princely Courage and Constancy in advancing and protecting the free Profession of the Gospel within and without your Majesty's Dominions than your Clergy And we cannot doubt but they would have acted the same thing for their own Preservation which they approved and encouraged others to do The Protestants of Saxony and Lantgrave being seven Princes and Twenty four Cities declare That the Emperor was reciprocally bound to them as they to him and that he had dissolved their Obligation of Allegiance by casting them out of their Possessions and endeavouring to destroy their Religion which unjust Attempts have not God for their Author Nor are we otherwise bound to Caesar than on his performing the Conditions on which he was created Caesar Sleidan lib. 18. The Magdeburg Divines affirm the same Sleidan l. 22. Where the Laws and Constitutions of a Government allow of a defence the Gospel doth so too for it doth not alter the Laws of a State which may be an Answer to what is urged from Rom. 13. for the Obligation of all Subjects is such as the Laws under which they live do require The Oath of the Subjects of the King of Poland hath this Salvo in the Oath of the King Quod si Sacramentum meum violavero incolae Regni mei nullam nobis obedientiam praestare tenebuntur In Richard the Second's time the Parliament declared in a Statute of Praemunire That the Crown of England hath been so free i. e. from the Incroachments of the Pope at all times that it hath been in no Earthly Subjection but immediately subject to God in all things touching the Regalty of the Crown and God defend say they that it should be submitted to the Pope and the Laws and Statutes of the Realm be by him defeated and avoided at his pleasure in perpetual destruction of the Soveraignty of the King his Crown and Dignity and of all the Realm and therefore they declare That they and all the Leige Commons of the Realm will stand with their Lord the King and his Crown and Regalty in the cases aforesaid viz. purchasing of Bulls from Rome executing Judgments given in that Court Translating of Bishops c. and in all other cases attempted against him and his Crown and Regalty in all points to live and to dye And they pray the King and him require by way of Justice to Examine all the Lords in Parliament as well Spiritual as Temporal severally and all the Estates of the Parliament how they think of the causes aforesaid which be so openly against the King's Crown and in derogation of his Regalty and how they will stand with the King in upholding the Rights of the said Crown and Dignity And we find by a Letter of King John's to the Pope That if the King would yet the Barons would not submit to King or Pope in those cases How contrary to this Statute of Praemunire did they act that instead of a strict enquiry after such as endeavoured to subject the Nation to the Usurpations of Rome did closely and particularly examine both Lords and Commons whether they would submit to the introducing that Usurpation and upon their Refusal were presently discharged of their respective Offices and excluded from the Prince's favour Was not this to subvert a Fundamental Constitution of the Government And by that Act to incur a Praemunire Carpzorius an approved Author de Capital Caesarea says c. 1. p. 15. There is no King or Supreme Prince in the Christian World whose Power some certain Compact made with the several Orders of the People may not restrain and limit and which are not bound by the Capitulation Reinkinck says the same of the Emperor de Reg. Secul l. 1. Class 3. p. 76. That Caesar