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A17300 For God, and the King. The summe of two sermons preached on the fifth of November last in St. Matthewes Friday-streete. 1636. / By Henry Burton, minister of Gods word there and then. Burton, Henry, 1578-1648. 1636 (1636) STC 4142; ESTC S106958 113,156 176

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neere affinity or rather consanguinity they being sensible of the smart of his whip tooke it all upon themselves and so as Iudges in their owne cause passed their Episcopall censure upon him yea although he not only in his booke but openly before the whole Court professed and protested that hee medled not with those Prelates who received and acknowledged their Episcopall Iurisdiction from Kings and Princes and withall he alleadged and read in the audience of the Courts sundry Statutes as in King Henry the eight Edward th● sixt and Queene Elizabeth which doe annex all Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction unto the Crowne of England So as no Prelate or other Person hath any power to visit Ecclesiasticall persons c. But he must have it immediately from the King and confirmed by Letters Patents under the great Seale of England This Iurisdiction annexed to the Crowne of England Doctor Bastwicke alledged in Court against that usurped Iurisdiction of the Hierarchy of Rome which they challenge from Christ. Notwithstanding they alledged for themselves that they had their Episcopall authority from Christ and if they could not proove it they would cast away their Rochets So they may cast their caps too for any such proofe they can bring for it But stopping the Doctors mouth that he might not plead his cause they proceeded to a most grievous censure of him in 1000. pound fine to the King for maintaining the Royalty of His Crowne against the Prelates usurpation who would plucke away that gemme from it Imprisonment Excommunication suspension from his practise in Prison and the many miseries depending thereupon and devolving upon his Wife and children So as it is plaine they usurpe professe and practise such a jurisdiction as is not annexed to the Imperiall Crowne of England but which with the Pope and Prelates of Italy they claime from Christ. And this is cleere by a threefold practise of theirs 1. Their censuring of Doctor Bastwick for this very cause that hee impugned all Episcopall Iurisdiction over Gods Ministers claimed from Christ or the Scripture So as they make it their owne cause with the Pope and his Prelates as all holding by that title and not from the authority of Kings and Princes And this is according to that in Dr. Pock●●ngtons Sunday no Sabbath where hee saith pag. 48. Hereby wee may by Gods mercy make good the trueth of our Church For wee are able lineally to set downe the succession of our Bishops from St. Peter to St. Gregory and from him to our first Archbishops St. Austin our English Apostle downward to his Grace that now fits in his Chaire Primate of all England and Metropolitane So hee Thus wee see how our Prelates have no other claime for their Hierchie then the Popes of Rome have and doe make which all our Divines fince the Reformation till but yesterday have disclaimed and our Prelates cannot otherwise assume but by making themselues the very limbes of the Pope and so our Church a member of that Synagogue of Rome Secondly the constant practise of our Prelates proveth this for they neither have at any time nor have sought to have any the Kings Letters Parents under the great Seale of England for their keeping Courts and Visitations c. But doe all in their owne names and under their owne Seales contrary to the Law in that behalfe Thirdly in that they labour by all meanes possible to maintaine this their absolute and independed Iurisdiction as no way depending on the King and namely by stopping the ordinary course of Law that the Kings people may bee cut off from all benefit of the Kings good Lawes and of their native ancient Liberties so as it is become very geason and a rare matter to obtaine a Prohibition against their illegall practises invexing oppressing the Kings good Subjects nay they are growne so formidable of late as if they were some new generation of Giants that the very motion of a Prohibition against a Prelate or their Proceedings in the High Commission makes the Courts of Instice startle So as good causes are lost and Innocents condemned because none dare pleade and judge their cause according to the Kings Lawes whereby wee ought all to be governed For example the Ministers of Surry who are suspended from their Ministery and outed of their meanes and freeholds against all Law or Conscience yet are so disheartned and overawed that they dare not contend in Law against the Prelate for feare of further vexations and they are out of hope of any fayre hearing in an ordinary Legall way Nay when Doctor Bastwicke had procured a Hab●as corpus to remove him out of the Bishope stincking prison in the Gate-house unto the Kings Bench. and thereupon was removed thither-yet notwithstanding they procured the reversing of this Legall Order and brought the Prisonner backe againe with avengeance and triumph to his old lodging Thus wee see they have gotten such a power into their hands as doth overtop and countermaund the Kings Lawes and the peoples Liberties Now this power they have not from the Imperiall Crowne according to the Lawes of the Land but it is a meere usurpation So as being a power not derived from the King as the immediate fountaine of it it proves to bee at least a branch of that forraigne power altogether excluded in the Statute of 1. Elis. cap. 1. And it is flatly against the Oath of Supremacy in the same Statute which all Prelates take wherein they professe and promise faith and true allegiance to the Queenes Highnesse her Heires and lawfull Successors and to their power to defend all Iurisdictions Priviledges c. granted or belonging to the Queenes Highnesse her Heires c. Now all Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction which the Prelates have authority to exercise being annexed to the Crowne as is cleere by the foresayd statute either they must not claime it by another title or if they doe they are all in a Tramunire and under the guilt of perjury And whither they bee not also in a Praemunire for practising their Iurisdiction as keeping of Courts visitations c. in their owne names not having the Kings Letters Patents under the Great Seale of England I leave to the learned in the Law to judge But some will say that they defend and maintaine all Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction to bee from the King For in the visitation Articles for Norwich by Mathew their Lord Bishop this is one Be there any in your Parish that have denyed or perswaded any other to deny withstand or impugne the Kings Majesties Authority and Supremacy in causes Ecclesiasticall within this Realme First I answer this is a faire colour and pretence as if it were against Papists Secondly it is against their ordinary practise as in the former examples And thirdly admit they doe sincerely professe that they have or hold no Ecclesiasticall Iurisdiction but from the King yet the question is whither they will say that all those outrageous courses they how hold and
of my body which is every day threatned by Pursuivants to bee haled to Prison if Your Majesties Iustice and good Lawes doe not all the better safeguard mee But prison or not prison I heartily thanke my Lord Iesus Christ who hath accounted mee faithfull and called me forth to stand for his cause and to witnesse it before all the World by publishing my said Sermons in Print that thereby also I might cleere both the cause and my credit which they haue publikely before hearing branded with sedition All which I humbly commit to Your Majesties Royall Patronage as Who next under God are most interessed in the Cause Now the Lord Iesus Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords so unite and combine your heart unto Himselfe that You being guided by His Spirit of Wisedome and Vnderstanding of Councell and strength and of the feare of the Lord You may doe Valiantly and prosper in stopping the course of all Innovators and Backe-sliders into Popery that so with and under Christs Kingdome Yours may be established in Righteousnesse to You and your Royall Posteritie untill time shall be no more Which is the daily Prayer of Your Majesties dutifull Servant and Subject HENRY BVRTON FOR GOD AND THE KING PROVERBES 24. 21. 22. My sonne feare thou the Lord and the King and meddle not with them that are given to change For their calamity shall rise suddenly and who knoweth the ruine of them both THis time is a time of sorrow and humiliation but this day a day of joy and festivity to bee celebrated in this our anniversary thankfull remembrance of a great and memorable deliverance as on this day 31. yeeres agoe So as this day falling in so sad a season is like a starie peeping and shining forth through the cloudes of a dolesome duskie night and by and by ready to be overclouded againe Such is our joy such is our sorrow this long that short this a summer and a winter plague that a widowes joy a blaze and away Yet sith God is pleased in the midst of judgement to remember Mercy there is no reason that this calamitous time should so farre dampe us as to deprive both us of our comfort and God of his glory this day Therefore wee may say with David Why art thou cast downe o my soule I shall yet praise him who is the health of my countenance and my God Or as Psal. 101. I will sing of Mercy and Iudgement And surely that joy is soundest which is seasoned with some sorrow As saith the Psalmist Serve the Lord with feare and rejoyce with trembling It 's good to be merry and wise as saith the Proverbe Sadnesse is as salt that seasoneth our mirth and preserues it from corruption Well blessed be God who in the midst of many sad dayes hath sent us this joyfull day to sing praise unto him for that mercy which hath made it a day of joy unto all good Christians and all good Subjects in this land Sutable therefore to the occasion of this day and season I have made choice of this Text It comprehends one of those wise Sentences Counsells or Proverbs which King Solomon a Preacher also inspired with the spirit of Wisedome from God hath left recorded for instruction of the Church of God in all ages If wee seeke to find the coherence or dependance of these words wee may quickly loose our selues and our labour For this Booke of the Proverbs is fitly compared to a bagg full of sweete and fragrant spices which shuff led and shaken together or taken single doe yeeld forth a most pleasant and comfortable odour Or to the Starres in the firmament each in itselfe glorious and independent of another yet all receive their light from the Sunne Like as Eccles. 12. 11. The words of the wise are as goads and as nayles fastened by the Masters of assemblies which are given from one Shepheard This one Shepheard is Christ the Sunne of Righteousnesse who inlightens all the Prophets Or heere are studds of silver in borders of gold Cant. 1. 11. Or apples of gold in pictures of silver Prov. 25. 11. And these things belong to the wise v. 23. The words recited containe three things in generall 1. an Exhortation 2. an Admonition 3. a reason of the admonition The Exhortation in these words My son feare thou the Lord and the King The admonition in these words And meddle not with them that are giuen to change the reason of the admonition in these words For their calamity shall arise suddenly and who knoweth the ruine of them both In the Exhortation these particulars are considerable 1. The Person Exhorting and that is King Solomon instructing the people as from Gods owne mouth 2. The persons exhorted to wit all Gods people represented heere in the singular number under the name of one sonne and this by a neere bond of relation by a strong cord of affection distinguishing him from others and appropriating him as Gods owne peculiar My Sonne The duty exhorted unto is feare the object of this feare is twofold 1. The Lord. 2. The King In all which we are to observe three things 1. The order of this feare first the Lord and secondly the King 2. the connexion of these two as things inseparable in this duty of Feare Feare the LORD and the KING 3. The speciall property of this duty as peculiar to the child of God above all other Mysonne feare THOV the Lord and the King as if Solomon should have said My sonne how ever the sons of Belial the men of the world cast off all feare both of God and man yet feare THOV the Lord and the King This is the resolution of the Exhortation 2. In the Admonition wee are to note three things 1. The admonition it selfe meddle not 2. Who they be of whom Gods children are admonished namely such as are said here to be giuen to change 3. The antithesis or opposition betweene these changlings and them that truely feare God and the King 3. In the reason of the admonition annexed which is taken from the dangerous condition that these who are given to change are obnoxious unto wee observe 1. The matter of their danger in these words Calamity and ruine then the manner of their calamity and ruine set downe 1. In it's suddennesse and 2. in its certainty It shall rise suddenly and lastly the unexpected meanes of their ruine contrary to all outward appearance And who knoweth the ruine of them both That is though there be no outward appearance of ruine to these men but that all things prosper with them and seeme to be on their side yet their ruine shall be from both these as wee shall further open by and by Now having distributed the words into their severall parts and that without curiosity taking them as they lie naturally in the text come wee briefely to give you the sence of the words First My sonne a compellation frequent and familiar
property peculiar to him So Psal. 25. 12. What man is HEE that feareth the Lord Find me such a man give wee such a man Why what of him Hee is in speciall favour with God Him shall he teach in the way which hee shall choose Yea God will acquaint him with his Secrets as accounting him his most intimate friend For v. 14. The Secret of the Lord is with them that feare him And these are so rare like to rich and rare jewells that Solomon himselfe could find but one man of a thousand But especially doth the eminency of that man that truely feares God appeare when other feares stand in opposition against it as feare of cruell men losse of liberty livelyhood and the like As Moses his rod was not so famous for being though miraculously turned into a Serpent for even the Magitians of Egypt by their inchantments could in show turne their rods also into Serpents but herein it was admirable in the eyes of all the Beholders that thus being a Serpent it devoured all the Magitians Serpents And such is true feare in Gods Child when it stands in emulation or opposition with other feares though they seeme never so terrible as the Magitians Serpents yet it overcomes and devoures them all Such was Daniels feare devouring the terror of the hungry Lyons which could not devoure him such the feare of those 3. Children who feared neither the Kings bigge and furious threats nor his seven fold heated fiery fornace Such was Nehemiahs who being threatened mooved to fly answered should such a man as I fly So as indeed the true feare of God is true fortitude and magnanimity For this who will not admire Elias when hee retorted K. Ahabs words upon him I have not troubled Israel but thou and thy Fathers house c And Elisha who being brought before the King of Israell said to him Were it not that I regard the presence of Iehoshaphat the King of Iuda I would not looke toward thee nor see thee Such a spirit of holy feare was in the Martyrs and Confessors Maris Bishop of Chalcedon being blind and cōming before the Emperour Iulian the Apostata called him Atheist Apostata and a desertor of the faith And when Iulian objected to him his blindnesse and asked him upbraidingly If his God the Galilean meaning Christ could not cure his blindnesse he replied But I thanke my God that I am blind that I may not behold such a wretched and Impious Apostata as thou art It were endlesse to recite examples in this kind except to convince the cowardise of our times But yet this Parrhesia this liberty and freedome of speech in such cases is not without the feare of God but is a branch and fruit that springeth of it And this feare showeth it selfe in sundry manners according either to the present occasion or the naturall disposition of a child of God being seasoned and sanctified and guided by Gods Spirit Sometimes it showes it selfe in meeknesse and mildnesse sometimes in a greater measure of zeale and roughnesse and yet all from the selfesame spirit of godly feare Of this latter kind are those former examples Of the former that of a poore English Bishop whom when Theodor the Grecian Archbishop of Canterbury without any just cause deprived of his Bishopricke saying Although wee can charge you with nothing yet that wee will we will Sic volo sic jubeo the poore Bishop humbly replyed Paul appealed from the Iewes to Caesar and I from you to Christ. And how many godly Ministers in these our dayes being most unjustly and illegally yea and in canonically also and that in a most barbarous and furious insolent manner suspended excommunicated outed of their livings and so deprived of all livelyhood and meanes to maintaine themselves their wives and children and withall rayled upon and reviled and most outragiously used as if they were dogs and not men have cause and occasion so to answer those that thus use them Paul appealed from the Iewes to Caesar and we from you to Christ. But what care these miscreants for Christ who thus persecute him in his members and Ministers Yet this is a comfort to all such Ministers as stand for Christ that as they appeale and commit their cause to him whose cause it is so hee will certainly vindicate both his righteous cause his faithfull servants in due time When Stephen was stoned he saw Christ standing at the right hand of God as ready to revenge his cause which not long after he did upon all the obstinate and rebellious Iewes in Ierusalem Vse 1. Now for use of this point it first gives occasion to Christians in these dayes of lukewarmenesse and apostacy to make proofe of their graces and especially of the feare of the Lord in them whither it be such as devoures and swalloweth downe all worldly feares Secondly sith this feare is so excellent and rare wee should be the more earnest in getting it as he in the Gospell was to buy the goodly pearle He gave all he had for it And surely it was richly worth it For as Christ saith What shall it profit a man if he shall win the whole world and loose his owne soule Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soule A man may by his discretion or Christian Prudence as they call it so carry the matter as to secure himselfe from feare of the world for he can give way and conforme himselfe quietly to all humaine impositions and can commaund his conscience to beare with them notwithstanding it doe secretly whisper in his eare that this ought not to be done as being an intollerable dishonor to Christ a disgrace to his Ministry a forfeiture of his Christian liberty a Scandall to Religion and a base betraying of the cause of Christ and of the salvation of his owne soule But yet he wants not reasons for it Thereby he shall preserve his Ministry and his credit too in not being accounted refractory hee shall thus purchase his peace and retaine his meanes for him and his without which he and they must begge and the like Alas poore soule what 's thy Ministry worth when thou hast abased it and inthralled it to be impious inventions and impositions of men or when thou injoyest it with the losse of its vigor power dignity authority or when thou retainest it together with thy outward liberty livelyhood peace credit with the misjudging world and loosest thy Christ thy peace of conscience thy credit with all good and wise men yea heaven and all what will all thy discretion and Christian prudence advantage thee O let us rather learne to bee fooles for Christs cause let us feare the Lord and not men not the world It 's Christs counsell to all his that are his friends saying I say unto you my friends Bee not affraid of them that kill the body and after that can doe no more but I will forewarne
my course preaching upon the whole Chapter It was objected to me that therein I did contrary to the Kings Declaration To which I answered that I never take the Kings Declaration to be intended by him for the suppressing of any part of Gods truth neither durst I ever conceive a thought so dishonourable to the King at to thinke him to be an instrument of suppressing Gods truth And have I not good ground for it For in his Majesties Declaration to All his loving Subjects of the cause which mooved him to dissolue the last Parliament Published by his Majesties speciall Command his Majesty mentioning Richard Mountagues Appeale which did open the way to those Schismes and divisions which have since insued in the Church expresseth himselfe in these words we did for remedy and redresse thereof and for satisfaction of the consciences of our good people not only by our publick Proclamation call in that Book which ministred matter of offence but to prevent the like danger for hereafter reprinted the Articles of Religion established in the time of Queene Elizabeth of famous memory and by a Declaration before those Articles we did tye restraine all opinions to the sense of those Articles that nothing might be left for private fancies and innovation For we call God to record before whom we stand that it is and alwayes hath been our hearts desire to be found worthy of that title which we account the most glorious in all our Crowne Defender of the faith neither shal we ever give way to the authorising of any thing where by any innovation may steale or creep into the Church but preserve that vnity of Doctrine Discipline established in the time of Queene Elizabeth whereby the Church of England hath stood florished ever since These be his Majesties expresse words Well for all this I was suspended from my Mistery Thus when they would insnare or oppresse us they lay all the burden upon the King which how injurious and dishonorable it is to his Majesty I referre to them that are best able to judge of matters of such moment Take another instance Another time namely then when I was brought to the High Commission board at London-house about that Booke of mine formerly mentioned though they had nothing at all against mee but rayling and reviling and charging me with sedition which I retorted upon themselves whereby I put them to silence for the time yet they recovering breath one of them sayd I must to prison If I must sayd I I desire to put in baile in regard of my Ministeriall charge being within three dayes of Easter No quoth my Lord of London that then was the King hath given expresse charge for YOV that no ●ale shall bee taken for YOV No my Lord Then I desire to know by what Law or Statute of the Land you doe imprison 〈◊〉 if it bee according to Law I humbly submit my selfe Otherwise I doe here claime the right and priviledge of a Subject according to the Petition of Right Well for all this to prison I must and if I found my selfe agrieved I might bring a writ of false imprisonment To the Fleet I went where I was a prisonner twelve dayes And when they sent for me forth to make me amends they put me into the High Commission out of the frying pan into the fire But blessed be God and my King by the benefit of whose good Lawes I obtayned a Prohibition against their illegall proceedings which fetcht mee off those shelves where else with the threatned storme of their Censure I must have suffered shipwracke But now I referre it to the sad consideration of the sagest whither that which hee fathered upon the King was not a most dangerous and seditious speech tending to possesse both me and the many by-standers and consequently all the people in the Land with a sinister opinion of the Kings justice constancy in keeping his solemne Covenant with his people as in that Petition of Right Though I blesse God I could never intertaine such a thought of my King that he should utter such a word as to deny his old Servant the hanfell-benefit of his gratious hand wherewith but a little before he had signed the Petition of Right for the maintenance not onely of myne but of every good Subjects just and honest cause Take yet another instance and that also at the high Commission Court where I was attending as a poore Client or rather an Innocent at the barre waiting for my Censure There a Rule for a Prohibition for Master Prinne being cendered in Court according to the course of the Kings Lawes in that behalfe presently my Lord of London then President of the Court stands vp and flyes in the face of Master Prinne and his Prohibition with great heat of passion even almost unto fury and after many threatnings to him hee uttered these words that whosoever should dare to bring the next Prohibition hee would set him fast by the heeles This was spoken alowd in open Court Now as I conceive this did not a little reflect and trench upon the Kings honor the Lawes of the Land and the Liberty of the subject What for any man to dare with open mouth and that in open Court to out-dare the Kings just goverment of his Subjects according to his good Lawes Or upon what ground did hee thus boldly beare himselfe Vpon the King His Majesty had not long before signed ●he Petition of Right Also his Majesties Declaration to all his loving Subjects of the causes which mooved him to dissolve the last Parliament Published by his Majesties speciall commaund 1628. Speaking in his name that for the Parliaments full satisfaction and security Hee did by an answer framed in the forme by themselves desired to their Parliamentary Petition confirme their ancient and just Liberties and Rights which saith his Majesty Wee resolve with all constancy and justice to maintaine Whereupon then did this man dare to utter such an insolent speech Not from the King I am sure Wee have his Royall Word and Hand to the contrary And yet some perhaps might surmise that hee durst not speake thus in open Court had hee not some better ground for it than his owne desperate boldnesse Or the best Apology hee can make is that his tongue did runne before his wit and that in the flames of his passion he sacrificed his best reason and loyalty To these Instances wee will adde two or three more very remarkable and whereof wee all at this very time are eye-witnesses for they are still in acting The first is That most outragious practise of the Prelates in making havocke of the Church and of Religion by suspending excommunicating outing of Ministers from their freehold and the like because they cannot dare not read the booke for sports on the Lords day Now the Prelates and their officers herein most insolently and with a high hand proceeding neither according to Law nor
the pranks that they play in many places of the Kingdome are by speciall warrant from the King or whither the King by some generall warrant dormant hath given them this unlimited power which they at their pleasure doe exercise For instance Will Mathew Lord Bishop of Norwich say that hee hath any warrant from the King speciall or generall for making such havocks and hurliburlies in those two great Counties of Norfolke and Suffolke to the intollerable dishonour of God injury to his Ministers and people and tending to most dangerous consequences If hee have not any warrant but doth it of his owne head or by the instigation of any other Arch-Prelate then let him looke to it least he come to suffer as an usurper a bringer in of a forraigne power an Innovator Oppressor Persecutor and troubler of the peace of the Church and Kingdome If he say he hath warrant for 〈◊〉 let him 〈◊〉 it But I hope hee will not father his desperate courses upon the King What will hee say that the King gives him a power to exercise such unheard of tyranny and injustice upon the Kings peaceable Subjects and Christs faithfull Ministers and that against the Kings Lawes and peoples Rights all which the King hath sworne againe and againe and solemnly protested to maintaine inviolable as his owne Crowne Never therefore let any man dare to pretend any such thing so dishonourable to his Majesty Againe suppose which yet is not to bee supposed that the Prelates should so farre prevaile as to procure a grant from the King to doe all those things which of late they have done tending to the utter overthrow of the Religion by Law established Yet whatsoever colour pretext or ●ow could they make for this the King to speake with all humble reverence cannot give that power to others which hee hath not himselfe For the Power that is in the King is given unto him by God and confirmed by the Lawes of the Kingdome Now neither God in his Law nor the Lawes of the Land doe allow the King a power to alter the State of Religion or to oppresse and Suppresse the faithfull Ministers of the Gospell against both Law and Conscience For Kings are the Ministers of God for the good of his people as wee shewed before But what doe I speake of this If all the Prelates in England did never so boldly affirme that what they doe in these extravagant courses of theirs it is by warrant from the King I would be so fat from giving any credit unto them herein that I should be the first that should addresse my humble complaint to his Majesty of such dishonour done unto him and humbly petition his Majesty to vindicate his honour from the least suspition of his giving way to or countenancing the Prelates in such their practises as cry up to heaven for vengeance upon their heads This I have urged the more both in reverence to his Sacred Majesty whose honour I cannot indure should receive the least blemish and also in reference to the point in hand because such usurpation of the Prelates cendeth directly to make a division betweene the King and his subjects cantrary to that which we teach here that good Subjects must cleave to their God and King without separation and defection which is by the ligaments of good Lawes which being broken they are as the resolution of the nerves in the naturall body or the cutting in sunder of the sinewes whereby the head and members are united and compacted in one intire body And therefore this claime which the Prelates make of their Prelation and Iurisdiction over Christs Ministers jure divino being repugnant not only to the cleare Scripture forbidding all such domination as they practise as Math. 20. 25. c. Marke 10. 42. c. 1. Pet. 5. i. c. for which they have neither the example of Christ nor of his Apostles nor of any ancient Bishops but principally of Diotrephes 3 Iohn 10. whom they imitate in affecting of preeminence in opposing Iohn the Apostle in exommunicating the Preachers in prating against them with malicious words and the like but also to the Kings Crowne to the Lawes of the Land and consequently to the Liberties of the Subjects I know not with what warrant or Conscience any Minister of Christ can submit to the Practises of these men tending to the ruine of the Kingdome of Christ in this Land and consequently of the whole Kingdome and State Now all these instances alledged are so notorious some of them fresh in memory and many witnesses of them yet living being done but the other day and others yet present before our eyes that they cannot bee denyed and their notoriousnesse makes them the more pernicious as tēding to corrupt the Kings good peoples hearts by casting into them feares and jealousies with sinister affections towards their King as if hee were the prime cause of all those grievances which the Prelates in his name doe oppresse the Kings good Subjects withall But Trust in the Lord as it is my dayly prayer that hee will preserve the hearts and affections of his people closse and intire to their King and that he will discover both to the King and his people these treacherous practises of the usurping Prelates that so neither the King may thinke evill of his good people nor they have the least jealousy that his Maiesty approveth and countenanceth much lesse willeth and commaundeth his Prelates to cōmit these their intollerable outrages Well come weenow to a second use which is of Exhortation and admonition to all good Subjects above all things to beware of those that cunningly insinuate themselves betweene the barke and the tree that labour to divide the head from the body and the body from the head by casting bones betweene the King and his good Subjects And here Beloued let me in the name of the Lord admonish you that whatsoever passages or outrages you see to bee done by the Prelates although they doe never so boldly pretend the Kings name for it yee believe them not Let never any Sinister opinion concerning his Sacred Majesty creepe into the closset of your brests and as a Snake either sting or poyson your true loyal hearts towards him And therfore beware of all those Factors for Antichrist whose practise is to divide Kings frō their Subjects subjects from their King that so betweene both they may fairely erect Antichrists throne againe where it had beene in a good measure throwne downe and cast out yea by this time utterly rooted out of this Land if he had not had such strong Sticklers as his Iesuites and Priests yea the Prelates themselves as their practises plainly show to keep him in life and to set him upon his feet againe But yee Beloved abhorre these Factors And if ever they should so farre prevaile as to open a wide breach to let in a forraigne enemy which these their practises and proceedings pretend and tend unto then
shew your selues like those faithfull servants of David sticke close to your King and if any danger come neere his sacred Person step betweene and let the losse of your owne precious life rescue and secure his who is worth ten thousand of us And so much for this point The next point ariseth from the order of these words Feare thou the Lord and the King That is First Feare the Lord and then the King It imports thus much That all our obedience to Kings and Princes and other Superiors must be regulated by our obedience to God Wee must so obey men as wee doe not there in trench or dash upon Gods Commandement God must first be served Therefore in all Commandements of man wee must consult with Gods Commandements or Law that it be not repugnant unto it This is also intimated in the order of the two Tables the First concerning our duty to God and the Second to our Neighbour And Christ tell that Questionist in the Gospel This is the first and great Commandement to wit to Loue God with all our heart and the second is like unto it Thou shalt loue thy Neighbour as thy selfe And the like orders it set downe 1. Pet. 2. Feare God Honour the King First feare God And this stands with good reason For First the King is Gods Minister and Vicegerent and commands as for God so from God and in God So as it is his office to command nothing against God Secondly If Princes shall commaund any thing against God and his Law then we must remember that we are Gods servants too and therefore must obey man in nothing that stands not with our obedience first to God For this cause the same word of God is a rule both for the King how to cary himselfe in governing and for every Subject how to cary himselfe to the King and first unto God Thirdly otherwise to obey or feare man before God and so above or against God is to make an Idol of man in placing him in a throne above God This is that feare of man which bringeth a snare Pro. 29 25. but who so putteth his trust in the Lord shal be safe So as the feare of man which brings a snare argues a failing of faith in God And this is a plaine defection and falling from God when man is obeyed against and above God The vse hereof is manifold 1. For reprehension 2. For Instruction 3. For Consolation 1. For reprehension of refutation of these that so advance mans ordinances and commandements as though they be contrary to Gods Law and the funda mentall Lawes of the State yet so presse men to the obedience of them as they hold them for no better then Rebells and to deserue to be hang'd drawne quartered that refuse to obey them And the chiefe Masters of his Mystery are the Iesuites in their blind obedience and they have gotten too many Doctors to bee their Disciples and broachers of this new Doctrine New I call it because it is flat contrary both to the expresse Scriptures and to the judgement of all Divines in all ages of the Church And because this their doctrine is So briefe now adayes I will set downe some Examples of the ancient Doctors judgement in this point And I will relate them out of Gratian himselfe As out of Augustine It is not alwayes evill not to obey the Commaundement when a Lord commaundeth those things which are contrary to God Then he must not be obeyed And Hierome If a Lord command those things which are not contrary to the holy Scriptures let the Servant bee subject to his Lord but if hee commaund contrary things let him obey rather the Lord of his Spirit then of his body And a little after If it bee good which the Emperour commaundeth execute the will of the Commander If evill Answer It behooveth to obey God rather then men And this also concernes Servant to their Masters and Wives to their husbands and children to their Parents that they ought in those things onely to obey their masters and husbands and parents which are not contrary to Gods Commandements And Ambrose Iulian the Emperour although he were an Apostate yet he had Christian Souldiers under him to whom when hee said bring forth your army for the defence of the Commonweale they did obey him but when he sayd unto them Draw out your weapons against the Christians then they acknowledge the Emperour of heaven Againe Aug. Hee which resisteth the Power resisteth the Ordinance of God But what if that be commanded which thou oughtest not to obey Here surely regard not the Power Observe the degrees of humane Lawes If the Substitute shall commaund that which ought not to bee done Yet if the Proconsul command the contrary thou doest not contemne the power if thou choosest to obey the greater Nor ought the lesser bee angry if the greater bee preferred Againe if the Consul himselfe commaund one thing and the Emperour another If the Emperour commaund one thing and God another what thinkest thou the greater power is God Pardon O Emperour Thou threatenest a prison He hell Here then thou must take thy faith as a Shield wherein thou mayst quench all the fiery darts of the enemy And another Father If any consent to anothers error let him know he is to be judged as equally culpable with him And Isidor If any forbid you that which is commaunded of the Lord or againe commaund that to be done which the Lord forbiddeth let him be execrable to all that love God Also hee that ruleth if hee either prescribe or commaund any thing besides the will of God or besides that which hee evidently commandeth in the holy Scriptures Let him bee accounted as a false witnesse of God or a sacrilegious Person When therfore the people are excommunicated even because they cannot bee compelled to evill then they are not to obey the sentence because according to that of Gelasius neither with God nor with his Church doth a wicked sentence bind any man So in Gratian. I will adde one more out of Bernard O spouse of Christ so obey man as thou offend not the will of God In evill workes never be obedient Do not obey in evill any Power although penalty compell if punishments be threatned if torments bee set before thee It is better to suffer death then to fulfill wicked commands It is better for a man to bee killed then to be adjudged to eternall damnation So Bernard I shall need to say no more to convince the novell impiety of those who doe with all rigor impose and the sinfull infirmity at least if not base cowardise of them that obey such commaunds as not only Gods word but even their owne Consciences tell them they ought not to doe Blush then and be ashamed O all ye Iesuiticall novell Doctors that suspend excommunicate persecute with all fury Gods faithfull Ministers and all because they will not they
not abandon the Priviledges thereof from himselfe seeing hee conferres onely the exercise of ruling Seeing the direct dominion of the Empire is resident in God and consequently in the Pope And Iohn à Capistrano or of the halter saith It is for humility sake that the Pope is moved to say that he will not usurpe the regall dignitie nor the Imperiall authority Let every knee bow to the Pope as unto Christ. And Hee the Pope may excommunicate deprive the Emperor and absolve any man from his allegiance which he oweth to man by the plenitude of power which hee hath And Angelus Rocca in his Vaticana Bibliotheca pag. 5. The Chiefe Pontife or Pope is crowned with a Tiara or round bonnet which they call the Kingdome of the World and his 3. Crownes doe represent the Imperiall Regall and Sacerdotall that is the plenary and universall authority of the whole world By the round Bonnet the Imperiall power is signified by the Miter the Pontificall spirituall So hee Thus wee see this great Antichrist exalts himselfe above all that is called God or that is worshipped Thus hee intercepts from the King that feare and obedience which is due vnto him from the Subjects and takes it to himselfe And thus hee not onely separates the feare of God and of the King but destroyes them both in assuming and usurping them both to himselfe as being both God and the King Secondly They separate Gods feare from the King in this that they altogether free all their Votaries and infinit Orders from the terrene power of Kings and Princes As the Pharisees did nose-wipe Parents of the obedience of their Children by their device of Corban And as our Prelates right chips of the old blocke doe labour tooth and nayle to withdraw their necks from under the yoake of the Kings Lawes which their practise plainly prooveth as we touched before A second sort come here to be reprooved that on the other side separate the feare of the King from the feare of the Lord and those are such as attribute to Kings such an unlimited power as if hee were God Almighty himselfe so as hereby they would seeme to ascribe that Omnipotency to the King which the Pope assumes and his Parasites ascribe to his Holinesse And this these Parasites and paramours of Kings Courts doe not for any true love or reverence they beare to the King but in speciall for these ends 1. That they may by this meanes nourish a heart-burning betweene the King and his good Subjects that so they may never meet together in Parliament for the redressing of those many enormities and grievances both in the Church and commonweale whereof these make-baites are the principall causes and so least they might bee brought Coram Secondly that so they may by their intoxicating flattery so indeere the King unto them as to his most intire and intimate friends and the onely Supporters of the Prerogative royall for as much as they have justly incurred the hatred of the whole Land and so lye open to all the hazards which envy may bring them into Thirdly by this meanes they are bold tousurpe a lawlesse and unlimited power over the Kings good Subjects as if their advancing of Kingly power above its limites were but to serve their owne turne in executing their lawlesse tyranny by a kind of borrowed and abused regall power And lastly that they may by this meanes trample the Lawes and Liberties of the Subjects under their feet and in fine bring the whole State of the Kingdome King and all under their g●●dle For they must be true to their Principles whereof this is one principall Episcopus non debet subesse Principibus sed praeesse A Bishop ought not to be subject to Princes but to rule over them And this they have sufficiently proved by their late practises wherein they exercise a transcendent power over all Lawes both of God and man but whence they have it I suppose themselves want good evidence and I hope will be afraid to say the King hath given them that Power which himselfe would never either practise or yet challenge as which God never dispensed to any humain Creature and which his Majesty hath so often solemnly protested against as we showed before And thus I say these men crying up and exacting universall absolute obedience to man they doe hereby cast the feare of God and so his throne downe to the ground Let this then in the least place teach men how to keep this knot of the feare of the Lord and of the King inviolable For to separate them destroyeth both And this is both the doctrine practise of true Christians and that of old For Tertullian saith that though the Christians were traduced to the Emperour as if they were enemies to the State yet those traducers as the Albiniani Nigrani c. Were found to be those enemies But a Christian saith hee is enemy to none much lesse to the Emperour whom knowing to be ordayned of his God hee must of necessity both love and feare and honour and wish him safe Wee therefore love the Emperour so farre as it is both lawfull for us and expedient for Him as a man next under God And whatsoever he is he hath it of God being lesse then God alone And this hee himselfe willeth For hee is so greater then all while hee is lesse then the onely true God Therefore we Sacrifice for the safety of the Emperor but to our God and his but as God hath commanded by pure prayer For the Propitiatory Sacrifice of the Masse was not knowne in those primitive times And againe the same Author in another place speaketh to this purpose thus Placing the Majesty of Casar beneath God I doe the more commend him to God to whom alone I subject him and I doe subject him to whom I doe not equall him For I will not call the Emperor God either because I know not how to lie or because I dare not deride him or because neither himselfe will bee called God if hee bee a man It behooves man to give place to God Let it suffice him to bee called Emperour This also is a great name which is given of God Hee denyes him to bee Emperor that calls him God Vnlesse he be man he is no Emperor But saith he what need I speake more of Christian Religion and Piety towards the Emperour Quem necesse est suspiciamus c. Whom wee must of necessity honour as Him whom our Lord hath chosen that I may truely say he is the more our Caesar as hee is appointed of our God therefore as being mine I doe the more labour for his safety So Tertullian So wee also And herein may all true Christians triumph and make a holy boast against all Iesuiticall Sycophants that doe traduce them to Kings and Princes as enemies to their goverment What one Protestant can they bring that ever committed treason
thosethings unto which throughout their whole life they had bene accustomed So he And although but a few Ceremonies were retained and so limited by Act of Parliament yet old Doctors popishly affected doe so doate upon their humane inventions and their old mother of Rome her superstitions that they cannot bee in quiet till res novas moliendo they may set up Popery againe in her full equipage though thereby they hazard not only the peace and welfare of the State which every good Patriot ought to bee more tender of then of his owne life but themselves too as followeth in the next reason For thirdly its dangerous to meddle with these Novellers because such doe bring commonly an old house upon their owne heads and so consequently upon them that joyne with them First upon themselves Ecel 10. 8. Hee that diggeth a pit shall fall into it and who so breaketh an hedge a Serpent shall bite him So Hos. 5. 10. Princes of Judah were like them that remoove the bound therefore will I powre out my wrath upon them as water And Esay 29. 16. Surely your turning of things upside downe shall be esteemed as the Potters clay What befell Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16 What Achitophel What Absolom And not only the principall actors but the fautors and complices such as partake with them are served with the same sawce the same punishment Therefore Moses warneth the people to avoid not to come neere the tents of those rebels least they be swallowed up with them As the voyce from heaven warnes Gods people to come out of Babylon saying Come out of her my people that yee be not partakers of her sinnes and that yee receive not of her Plagues It is historied of Tarquinius Superbus that because hee went about to turne the Regall governement into a Tyranny and so committed many outrages the Romans for that cause banished the very name of Tarquinius out of their dominions And King Iames doth in two words excellently expresse both the nature and event of such as would turne the Regall goverment established upon good lawes into a lawlesse Tyranny by terming them as was touched before Vipers and Pests Vipers eate through their dams belly and Pests the Pestilence destroyeth not onely the house where it is but all that adjoyne unto it And Esay saith They hatch Cocatrice egges and weave the Spiders webbe hee that ea●th of their egges dieth and that which is crushed breaketh out into a Viper Nothing but destruction and calamity is in their paths The Spiders webbe is to catch the flyes And notwithstanding the Spider loves to be in Princes Palaces as Salomon sayth where shee may fasten her netts on high and bee out of the reach of the broome Yet as the Lord saith though they make their nest as high as the Eagle in the rocks or among the Starres thence will hee bring them downe All Hamans Cobwebbs could not preserve him from his owne gallowes but make a halter for him And the calamity and ruine of these innovators is described in the 22. verse first by the suddainenesse unexpectednesse of it for their calamity shall rise suddainly 2. By the manner of it shall rise as it were from beneath them whereas their heighth seemes to secure them from all danger as trampling all under their feet and who shall be able to bring them downe yet by that which seemes to them most contemptible shal they fall from that which is below them shall their calamity arise as we see Hamans did frō Mordechai whom he so scorned 3. By the certainty of it It shal arise there is no preventing of it and 4. By the efficient causes of it And who knoweth the ruine of them both where as was opned before ruine actively understood as noting whence it cometh namely from them both to wit both from God and from the King as in the former verse who shall both jointly bring ruine upon those that bee given to change As we see in the example of Haman whom God did ruine by so ordering the Kings heart and so disposing of things as all conspired thereunto For the Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the rivers of water he turneth it whither soever he will Histories furnish us with infinit examples in this kind but this suffice A fourth reason why good Christians and subjects should not meddle with them that be given to change is because they feare not God but are enemies unto him For here wee see how these are set in opposition to those that feare God My sonne feare thou the Lord and meddle not with them that are given to change implying that they which are given to change doe not feare the Lord. And yet who make fairer pretence in their kind of way of Religion devotion and the feare of God How holy would they seeme to bee in their new guise of devotion and in a curious formality and punctuall observance of their holy rites as in a lowly bowing at the name Iesus in an humble adoration to the Altar in standing bolt upright at the Gloria Patri and at the Gospel and the like Would not the world believe these men to be very regular very religious deuout holy Surely if true religion and holinesse stood in outward rites of mans devising and in false showes and will-worship in a kind of Courtship in a complement in a Congee in making of a legge in bowing of the body or the like these were very religious men And ignorant persons who are not able to judge of colours take them to bee so and have them in great admiration But bring these counterfeit coynes to the touch and by and by they are discovered And the touch is Gods Word which saith In vaine they worship me teaching for doctrines the Commaundements of men Yea if we compare their showes of devotion to their other practised there need no other triall to discover them They pretend great love and reuerence to Iesus while they are so zealous and devout for bowing to his Name and so to their Altar as who so refuseth to doe it Minister or people must bee excommunicated Pious men sure But while they pretend such extraordinary respect to Iesus and persecute and crucify Christ in his Ministers and members also in his Word and the Ministry of it by labouring tooth and nayle to oppresse and overthrow it and in the power of religion by crying downe all true piety and in the worship of God by corrupting it with their Superstitious and Idolatrous rites and so trampling under their feet Christs Kingdome that they may set up Antichrists throne againe If this bee piety if this holinesse then is Popery piety and Superstition holinesse as they would faine make it as wee shall see anone But all their holinesse is but Pope-holinesse The last reason why we may not meddle or partake with these men is because they are also enemies to the King
ready way that would not faile to bring a curse upon Israel by inticing them to Idolatry with Moabs wiles And this is the course that the Balaamites of Rome and their confederates have holden lesse or more ever since the Gunpowder Treason untill this very day And in tracing their foot-steps and graduall proceedings weshall obserue how they have kept the same order for the reerecting of the throne of the Beast in this Land which hath beene observed by the founders and builders of the Spirituall Babilon in former ages And that wee may not expatiate beyond those narrow bounds within which wee have proposed to our selues to limit this our short discourse wee will instance in the Antichristian Hierarchy to the top whereof by what degrees it hath ascended I referre the Reader as to the Centuries and other Histories of the Church so in speciall to the Lord of Plessie his Mistery of iniquitie Also of the Masse the whole body whereof was imped with the feathers and patched with the pieces of sundry Popes inventions in their severall ages for which also See the same Author his learned discourse of the Masse Polidor Virgil de inventoribus rerum with others Also in the Sacrament Transsubstantiation was not knowne among the ancient Fathers for above 600. yeeres afterwards it crept in by degrees and was indifferent to be holden or not at last Pope Innocent 3. decreed it in the Councel of Lateran as a matter of faith necessary for all to beleeve So for the Sacrament in one kind anciently it was in both kindes untill the Councell of Constance but by degrees the people came to be nose-wiped of the Cup by a custome of omitting it in some places before it came to bee made a Law Besides both these authors and instances the like is observed by Dr. Whitakers of the graduall growth of Antichrist as also of the abuse of Images in Churches how they crept in first to be mute teachers of the blind and then to be dumbe gods to be worshipped Thus I say as of old the Mistery of iniquity could not be produced in one day but as the Elephants broode was many yeeres a hatching before it came to any perfection So our new refounders of Popery could not accomplish their worke in one day but it requireth some longer time although a man would wonder to see in so short a space such a monstrous and suddaine alteration notwithstanding the long establishment and cleare light of the Gospell and the strong sence of good Lawes whereby it is hedged about So if ours would set up the Masse-God in our Churches they cannot effect it all at once They must first downe with Tables and up with Altars For that cause all Seats must downe at the end of the Chancell that the Altar may stand closse to the wall because as their Oracle saith none must sit above God-Almighty And if Ministers bee so stiffe as not to yeeld to this innovation at least the Table must be rayled about that none touch it as being more Sacred then Pulpit Pew or Font. Then some adoration as lowly bowing must bee given to it Then the second Service as dainties must bee said there as being more holy than the Readers Pew And what then Surely a Priest is not farre off But where is the Sacrifice Stay a while that service comes last and all these are preparations unto it as the trimming of a Rome and spreading of the table bodes the banquet to come anone So as all these preambles doe at length usher in the great God of the Host so soone as it is well baked and the peoples stomacks sitted to digest so hard a bit But what bee those Changes and how came they What they be wee shall shew by and by but how they come it cannot be imputed to any other cause than to that Spirit which rules in the ayre and which doth usually haunt the Pallaces of Prelates And such a poyson hath this spirit infused into the Chaire of the Hierarchy as that man who fits in it had need to bee strongly fortified with preservatives and antidotes of true Reall Grace not nominall and titular that is able to overcome the infection of it For demonstration hereof wee begin with those Reformers of Religion in King Edward 6. his Raigne who yet prooved Martyrs in Queene Maries Is it not to bee admired that Archbishop Cranmer and Bishop Ridley of London should bee so stiffe against holy and learned Hooper who being by the King chosen Bishop of Glocester and having obtained the Kings favour not to weare the Rochet square Cap as being offensive to his Conscience yet they would not yeeld unto it although both the King himselfe and a great Harle in the Kings name did earnestly write unto them for the same Mr Foxes words are But I can not tell what Sinister and vnlacky contention concerning the ordering and Consecration of Bishops and of their apparrell with such otherlike trisles began to disturbe the good and lucky beginning of this goldly bishop For notwithstanding that godly Reformation of Religion that began in the Church of England besides other Ceremonies more ambitious then profitable or tending to edification they used to weare such garments and opparell as the Popish Bishops were wont to doe First a Chymere and under that a white Rochet then a Mathematicall Cap with Foure angles dividing the whole World into Foure parts These trifles tending more to Superstition then otherwise as hee could 〈◊〉 abide so in no wise could hee bee perswaded to weare them For this cause hee made Supplication to the Kings Majestie most h●●bly desiring His Highnesse either to discharge him of his Bishopricke or else to dispence with him for such Ceremoniall orders Whose Petition the King granted immediately c. But I say the Bishops would not Yet at the length the fire reconciled them all when they laid aside their Pontificall robes and offered up their lives in sacrifice for the Truth Now if such a spirit did cleave to the very Chaire then when those pious men sate in it who were Reformers of Religion for the Substance of it and who afterward were persecuted and suffered Martyrdome for the faith of Christ What may wee expect in those Prelates that shew themselves such enemies of that Religion for which those suffered and persecute the faithfull Ministers thereof and are not content with those ceremonies limmited by the Lawes of the Land but bring in a number of other Superstitious and Idolatrous Ceremonies of Rome to the intollerable burthening of mens consciences and insnaring of their Soules Bodies and estates both against the Law of God and the Liberty which Christ hath purchased for us and also the Lawes of the Land Nor let our present Prelates glory that they can shew us such Predecessors Prelates who were Martyrs unlesse they themselues will therein be their Successors Bellarmine makes it one note of their holy Mother Church
for the extinguishing and remaunding to hell those damnable Heresies which then began to spring up among them by the meanes of those Seeds men Arminius and Vorstius And were not the learned Workes and Writings of those Worthies of the Reformed Churches next after the Scriptures the most fit to cope with those Heresies as being better exercised against them And doth not the King pag. 377. call that the Orthodox faith which the reformed Churches did professe and whereof Calvin Beza Zanchie Iunius and others were the planters and founders amongst them And in particular did not King Iames commend Calvin as the most judicious and sound Expositer of the Scripture Nay can any man bee so impious as to imagine King Iames should doe any act in prejudice of Calvin Zanchie Beza P. Martyr and the rest whose names and reputation Arminius himselfe laboured tooth and nayle to disgrace that so hee might advance his owne cause Did not King Iames write to the States against Arminius calling him that Enemy of God How then can any man be so injurious to the memory of that Orthodox King as to thinke hee ever intended to inhibit young Students the reading of those excellent judicious learned illustrious lights of the Church and to restraine them to the ancient Fathers and Schoole-man in whose writings though many things be good and excellent yet their workes are not without their navi or spots so as they that reade them must Margaritas è caeno legere Gather Pearles out of the mud as Virgil saith of the reading of Ennius And young Students have not the maturity of judgement to put an exact difference to make choise of the things that are excellent and to leave the refuse And 〈◊〉 the same King Iames applies that old Verse to this purpose Quo semel est imbuta recens seruabit odorem Testa diu The vessell will tast a long time after of that liquor wherewith it is first seasoned And what shall become of the little brooks if their fountaine bee corrupted So the King And wee know that the Fathers and Schoole-men being commended and presented to young men in the habits of venerable antiquity are apt to beget in them the greater reverence and credence to their writings in comparison of those that are moderne and as it were but of yesterday And therefore young Students had need rather to bee admonished not to meddle with Fathers and Schoole-men till they come to riper yeeres and bee well seasoned with the pure liquor of Trueth both immediately drunke in from the fountaines of the Scriptures and derived by those uncorrupt Conduit-pipes the Divines of the Reformed Churches An unexpert Sea-man must not adventure his vessell on the Seas without an experienced Pilot that knowes the Shelues or shallowes and Rocks least he commit ship-wrack before he be aware Againe wee know what a learned Champion King Iames was against Popery Now an injudicious Reader not being well grounded aforehand comming to read some Fathers and Schoole-men may in some passages perhaps foysted in by the false fingering of the Monks as many of the writings in the volumes of the Ancients are factious and spurious bee infected with the poyson of Popish error and Superstition before hee be aware Therefore how can wee imagine that any such Order was the Kings but rather that it proceeded from some of the Prelates about him thereby the more easily to make way for the accomplishing of their plot so long a hammering for the reinducing of Popery And to this purpose they procure another order in King Iames his name for the inhibiting of young Ministers to preach of the Doctrines of Election and Predestination and that none but Bishops Deanes shall handle those points And after that there is set forth a Declaration before the Articles of Religion in King Charles his name which though as wee noted before it was farre from his Majesties pious intention to inhibit any part of Gods truth to bee preached but the contrary heresies yet the Prelates perverted and extended it to an universall silencing and suppressing of all those saving Doctrines of Election Predestination effectuall vocation by grace assurance perseverance in opposition to the contrary Arminian heresies so as neither Prelates nor Presbyters must meddle with them Thus the Doctrines of the Gospell must be for ever husht layd a sleep Thus our Articles of Religion to which all our Ministers subscribe are hanged up upon the wal and cashered as the heathen Oracles of old Thus the Ministry of the Gospell is at once overthrowne and nothing but orations of morality must be taught the people And herein doe our Prelates follow the rule of Cont●en the Iesuite in his Politicks who prescribes this rule of silencing Controversies as an excellent way for restoring their Roman-Catholicke Religion in the Reformed Churches For if truth and error bee both suppressed truth by and by vanisheth but errour doth by necessary consequence come instead thereof and prevaile As if a man should bee hoodwinck it for the space of 24. houres that hee should neither see the day nor the night by this meanes all is night to him Nor is this a devise of yesterday but Satan had broached it long agoe For the Centuriators observe that the Authors and Advocates of corruptions and errours procuring by their flattery and faire showes to great men an opinion of great learning and so much the greater by reason of their high Grace and dignity which makes them the more admired and being the Patrons of great mens vices therefore those errors being opposed by the Orthodox they labour to compose all Controversies with an Amnestia or silencing of all disputes and by that meanes they wickedly presume to reconcile Christ with Belial Truth with Errour a believer with an infidell So as the Emperor Anastasius being a favourer of the Arrian heresy was mooved by such counsels to bury the Controversies of the principall heads of Doctrine under an Amnestia But in vaine This counsell is not of God but of men Vnder this cloake and patronage of Amnestia doe corruptions and other plagues of the Church of God increase Let therefore all Potentates of this world learne that the most waighty Controversies of the Articles of faith cannot be abolished or quieted by Amnesties but rather let them be determined by the Word of God c. So they The like did the Arrian Bishops in a Councell at Seleucia called by Constantius an Arrian Emperor who did therein suppresse by a perpetuall Amnestia the mention of homousios and homotousios that so they might coyne a new faith and utterly extinguish that of the Councell of Nice Thus wee see the antiquity of this practise But wee have before sufficiently cleared our gratious Soveraigne from having the least intention of Suppressing any part of Gods truth by that his Declaration but only of the cōtrary errors although the Prelates do pervert presse it upō
this last it saith Christ ordained the authority of the Ke●es to excommunicate notorious sinners and to absolve them which are truly penitent They abuse this power at their owne pleasure as well in cursing the godly with Bell Booke and Candle as also in absolving the reprobate which are knowne to be unworthy of any Christian society And what can the Prelates and their Court say for thēselues why that of Bernard may not be applied to them which hee spake of the Prelates in his time Quem dabis mihi de numero Episcoporum qui non plus invigilet subditorum evacuendis marsupijs qua● vicijs extirpandis Vbi est qui flectat iram Vbi est qui praedicet annum placabilem Domini Propterea relinquamus istos quia non sunt Pastores sed traditores imitemur illos qui viventes in carne plant●verunt Ecclesiam sanguine suo Successores omnes cupiunt esse imitatores pauci Whom wilt thou shew mee of all the Bishops who is not more vigilant to empty the peoples purses then to root out their vices Where is hee that seekes to appease wrath Where is hee that preacheth the acceptable yeere of the Lord Wherefore let usabandon these men because they are not Pastors but Traytors and let us imitate those who living in the flesh have planted the Church with their blood So hee I will not speake of their domesticall discipline but for the present and for brevity sake passe it over But from the beginning it was not so Hierome saith A negotiating Clerke and of poore rich of ignoble glorious fly from as from a kind of plague The 3. Change is in the worship of God which they goe about to turne inside outward placing the true worship which is in Spirit and Trueth in a Will-worship of mans devising consisting in some externall complements and gesticulations as cringing crouchings bowing or standing upright at some Scriptures more than at others also a punctuall observance in these formalities as in bowing to the name of Iesus to the Communion table or rather Altar as to the Mercy-seat as they teach in their books praying with their faces towards the East thus tying God to a fixed place standing at reading of the Gospell and the like Also reading their second service at their Altar as we touched before many the like And who so wil not worship after their new fashion their new discipline is to excommunicate them or to bring them into the High-cōmission a place which they make worse thē Purgatory it selfe Al which oppression being an innovation is directly contrary to the Act of Conformity before the Cōmunion Booke bringing the Prelats into little lesse then a Praemunire The 4. change is in the civill govermēt which they labor to reduce transferre to Ecclesiasticall while they seeke to trample upon the Lawes of the Land step between the King his people exercising such a lawlesse tyranny over their bodies goods as also over their cōsciences as is more intollerable then the Egyptian servitude of Israel under their Taskmasters in regard wherof the Prelates power over-swaying the subjects right in the free use and benefit of the Lawes the people of the Land are used rather as vassals slaves to the Prelates then as the free subjects of the King And this is the case of all England at this day the people every where groaning sighing for this their bōdage their miserable vexations in the Ecclesiasticall Courts Well could they but cry mightily to the Lord and make their just complaints to his vicegerent their King as their cause requireth hee would quickly send a Moses to deliver them And so much the more should they bee sensible of this evill by how much the glory of the Kings governement over a free people according to his righteous Lawes is lamentably eclipsed his power infringed and his regall Prerogative undermined The fifth innovation is in the altering of Prayer-Bookes set foorth by publicke authority And first in the Communion Booke set forth by Parliament and commaunded to bee read without any alteration and none other they have altered Sundry things as in the Collect for the Queene and the Royall Progeny they have put out Father of thine elect and of their Seed as it were excluding the King Queene and Seed Royall out of the number of Gods Elect. Also in the Epistle for Sunday before Easter That in the name of Iesus they haue turned into At the name of Iesus that so it may make the fairer colour for their forced bowing to the name of Iesus for which there is neither Scripture nor ancient Father The second Booke is the Prayers set forth by authority of Parliament for Solemne thankesgiving for our deliverance from the Gun-powder Treason of the Papists on every Fifth of November where in stead of this passage Root out that Babilonish and Antichristian Sect which say of Ierusalem c. They in the last Edition 1635. set it downe thus Root out that Babilonish and Antichristian Sect OF THEM which say of Ierusalem c. Now whereas the words of the Originall copy doe plainely meane That all Iesuites Seminary Priests and their confederates are that Babilonish and Antichristian Sect which say of Ierusalem c. This latter Booke either restraines it to some few that are of that mind or else mentally transferres it to those Puritans that cry Downe with Babilon that is Popery which these men call Ierusalem and the true Catholike Religion Againe in the same Prayer the old copy hath these words And to that end strengthen the hands of our gracious King the Nobles and Magistrates of the Land with Iudgement Iustice to cut off these workers of iniquity whose religion is rebellion whose faith is faction whose practise is murdering of soules and bodies and to root them out of the confines of this Kingdome c. But the new Booke hath it thus And to that end strengthen the hands of our Gratious King the Nobles and Magistrates of the Land with Iudgement and Iustice to cut off these workers of iniquity WHO TVRNE RELIGION INTO REBELLION AND FAITH INTO FACTION Thus these Innovators would not have the Popish Religion to be termed Rebellion and their faith Faction as the ancient copy plainly shewes it to bee but turne it off from the religion to some persons which turne religion into rebellion and faith into faction So as by this turning they plainly imply that the religion of Papists is the true religion and no rebellion and their faith the true faith and no faction Thus with altering of a word they have quite perverted the sence and so turned the Cat in the Pan so as the blame is quite taken off from the Church of Rome and laid upon a few who ever they bee who turne Religion into Rebellion and Faith into Faction Thus what dare not these men doe that are not afraid to alter those things which are