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A91933 Diapoliteia. A Christian concertation with Mr. Prin, Mr. Baxter, Mr. Harrington, for the true cause of the Commonvvealth. Or, An answer to Mr. Prin's (perditory) anatomy of the Republick, and his true and perfect narrative, &c. To Mr. Baxter's (purgatory) pills for the Army: and his wounding answer to the healing question. With some soft reflections upon his Catholick (or rather Cathulactick) key; and an examen of the late petition of the sixth of July to this Parliament. In all which we have a most necessary vindication of the cause; of the honourable persons now in Parliament and Council, from the venome and vilification of their pens. By Joh. Rogers, thorugh grace kept (under many sufferings) a faithful servant to Jesus Christ, his cause and the Commonwealth. Rogers, John, 1627-1665? 1659 (1659) Wing R1806; Thomason E995_25; ESTC R207812 125,898 138

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ΔΙΑΠΟΛΙΤΕΊΑ A Christian Concertation WITH Mr. Prin Mr. Baxter Mr. Harrington For the True Cause of the COMMONVVEALTH OR An ANSWER to Mr. PRIN'S Perditory ANATOMY of the Republick and his True and Perfect Narrative c. To Mr. BAXTER'S Purgatory PILLS for the ARMY and his Wounding Answer to the Healing Question WITH Some soft Reflections upon his Catholick or rather Cathulactick KEY and an EXAMEN of the late Petition of the sixth of July to this Parliament In all which we have A most Necessary VINDICATION of the Cause of the Honourable Persons now in Parliament and Council from the Venome and VILIFICATION of their Pens By Joh. Rogers through Grace kept under many Sufferings a faithful Servant to Jesus Christ his Cause and the Commonwealth Prov. 26. 18 19 As he that is Mad casting firebrands Arrows and Death So is the Man that hath deluded his Neighbour and saith Am I not in sport LONDON Printed for Livewel Chapman at the Crown in Popes-Head-Alley 1659. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE Council of State Sitting by Authority of PARLIANENT In WHITE-HALL HIGHLY HONOURABLE A Poor DUST as I am needs no great attendance and A servant of Jesus Christ needs no other CREDENTIALS to demand an Audience then his Message besides the Matter herein doth more concern your selves then me and the best PRUDENTIALS that you have If this Quadruple Discourse do but come to your Ears the Commonwealth is an object presented to your Eyes 1. As an ANATOMY but most miserably mangled yea cut up Quick by Mr. P. 2. As a PATIENT but as pitifully Physick'd by Mr. B. in the Preface of his Holy Commonwealth 3. As a Spartan Athenian or Venettan State upon orders EKDEMICK and differing with the nature of our Cause Climate Manners c. by Mr. H. 4. As a Christian Commonwealth in a Theocratick constitution and Cause of Christ upon orders ENDEMICK both to MEN and to CHRISTIANS as was contended for by the well-affected and is by J. R. In every corner of which Quadrangular is somewhat observable either from Mr. P's opening of his Stomach Mr. B's opening of his Spleen Mr. H. his Brain or my plain denudation of heart to your mature and wise judgements in the Promptuary and Larder of this Discourse So that these Papers as you accept them are your's if you reject them are mine though they more concern you then any men alive upon a twofold consideration Chilification or concoction of the whole Matter 1. Upon the account of that PUBLICK TRUST and confidence which the Commonwealth hath in you if Immanuel your Motto or GOD WITH US be GOD WITH YOU then Butter and hony shall be your food and you shall CHOOSE the GOCD and REFUSE the EVIL yea BUTTER AND HONY shall every one Eate that is left in the Land Isa 7. 15 22. under such a Government What is eligible I hope will be acceptable and upon your digestion profitable and nutrimental to the WHOLE BOBY it may be by this you may find out who are indeed the Gun-powder-plotters and which are the Grand Designs that would blow you up into the open Air. Some are so confident of carrying it yet that already they conclude the Commonwealth is but a firme Nihil or a meer Nothing without a foundation and it is hard to say whether they would propagate their work more by a Faux under or by a Fax in the Parliament House All I can do in that is but to tell you where and how their Barrels are laid and Instruments are at work In the next place I could not do less if not somewhat more then to present your Honours with the SPOIL of those GOODS that I have taken from your Enemies by way of reprisal or Letters of Mart in this Polemick susception for the service of the Commonwealth and therein the recovery made of the Honour and Reputation of your most worthy Members Sir Arthur Haslerige Sir Hen. Vane c. and others not lost but invaded by most Name-murthering and uncharitable Pickroons who have infested and ranged the Coasts of our Commonwealth now many months if not years together to rob you and us them and the Commonwealth as they have done And this I observed that as I hoised Sail and was in pursuit of the SPIT-FIRE Mr. P. I was set upon and so fell in with the HUNTER Mr. B who came in to assist the first and afterward I met with the FOX in the way Mr. H. though I cannot say of the same company yet at the same imployment All which I have with God's blessing BOARDED and without much Fiering on my part have brought them into this BAY before you as Prize in the RESOLUTION where I now am bent to live and die through Gods grace for the Good old Cause and a Christian Commonw 2. Upon the account of that late DEBATE had of me unknown to me in the COUNCIL wherein some would render me what I hope they shall never find me herein some shall find me what I fear they would never render me to be both for Principles and Practice as to Government which I presume are such as infirmities excepted you would be loath to eject or not affect And therefore Curvis Poplitibus with bended knees and a will broken and bowed to the foot of the Lord do I present my Requests to him for you and to you for him and from him that you may give us but a due incouragement that are ready to engage our utmost in your service for Christ and the Cause by a true judgement upon this Subject set before you viz. the HEAD i. e. Christ and BODY of the Commonwealth i.e. the adherents to the CAUSE as they are indeed the most sound sanable and sociable parts of it's Constitution and this 1. In the PHYSIO-LOGY of it wherein all things must be pondered that appertain to the essence or nature of our Cause and constitution viz. Parts Temperaments faculties functions most innate spirits qualities and the like for then I dare aver you will give us freedom to pay the TENTHS of all the SPOIL to our Melch●sedec as well as to feed upon his Bread and Wine and take the blessings yea to consecrate the gain unto JEHOVAH and the substance to the ADON of the whole earth Hacharamti the word is I will set it apart with an Anathema to any that shall alter that property of it Micah 4. 13. to retrieve and drive on this interest of Christ our ADON in all and of JEHOVAH above All as suits best with the very being and nature of our CAUSE It is your Honour to maintain HIS and your interest to espouse HIS and not to think worse then you need or too severely to censure such as peaceably piously humbly honestly in a holy manner with a gracious spirit and without any contempt to your Persons or Authority or to the Peoples just Rights and Liberty plead this CAUSE and justifie it as YOUR'S as THEIR'S as OUR'S and as
Arguments wherein is proved that in Sensu Composito every tittle and Punctilio of all those Declarations and Protest is kept in this Cause of the Commonwealth so far as it comprehends all in the sence end and equity thereof wherein the Letter or forme was incapable or incompatible besides the very words of the Covenant are for the person of the King in and no otherwise but in the defence of the true Religion and liberties of the people Now so far as any of these or all these can or could possibly consist together viz. in the liberties of the people they are conserved to this very day Therefore this Pill being the same with the other though it be a little bigger will work but little better and so I leave it His sixth Prop. which is the main That it was none of the old Cause that the people should have Liberty and the Magistrate have no power in all matters of Gods worship faith and Conscience And here I cannot but observe how unworthily or like the false witness M. B. deals with this honourable Author again after a superficial complement which he would never give before nor nothing like it in 's Key for Cath. saith he Without any exception restriction or limitation that I can find he expresly extendeth the Case to matters of Religion or that concern the worship of God p. 5. and to matters of faith and Conscience p. 6. yea all matters and that the Magistrates must fear and forbear intermedling with whereas he knows and saith it but a little before that the persons spoken of are the whole body of honest men adherents to this Cause and is that no restriction I believe Mr. B. thinks it one and a close one too to him for the truth is the Author of the Healing Quest is pleading for them especially that have adhered to the cause and for their Rights and Freedom of Conscience under different apprehensions and opinions yet in the general for that natural right freedom and liberty which Christ hath purchased by his bloud and may not that be admitted who dares hinder it does he say any more then so But to see how like a SOPHIST his Antagonist quotes him as if he had a mind to imitate the Grand accuser of the Brethren Mat. 4. 6. who left out IN ALL HIS WAYS Mr. B. leaves out the most significant and considerable Clause even of the SAME sentence to spoil the sence or play the Tempter with For the Healing Quest saith That all Magistrates are to fear and forbear intermedling with here M. B. skews out of the way now as if he were scared or feared that his FOLLY would appear to all men to proceed with the same sentence which he most rudely abruptly and ungrammatically Lacerates at the very preposition without the Case that follows it with giving rule or imposing in those matters Therefore nail up this counterfeit Reader upon the next Post lest it pass for CURRANT and then consider does this discharge the Magistrate of his duty or don 't he rather charge him with what is not his duty that would have the Magistrate to impose upon us in the worship of God and matters of Conscience that are out of a Civil consideration and meerly spiritual so that all the Healing Quest. offers p. 7. is The Magistrates forbearing to put forth the power of Rule and Coertion in things that God hath exempted out of his Commission This is all and these are the very words And is this so wicked a Cause as Mr. B. calls it or which deserves such a scarifying or Cauterizing brand and denomination of wickedness and falshood as he puts upon it But if I may give him the Brand for falsifying so for the Question is saith he whether the Magistrate may restrain them from propagating a false faith or Infidelity and drawing others into it But stay Sir Whose Question is it do you think to catch old Birds AUCUPIIS or with your chaff 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with empty words abusive nothings for who I pray makes this the Question but your self not the Healing Quest I can affirm for that which he saith is only about the Magistrates not compelling or imposing in the matters of God not about this restraining of Papists or Infidels though some there be that question the extent of his power meerly for their faith or worship yet it is not so much as mentioned by the Healing Quest. Upon this the poor man to finde himself work enough with his own pretty Paralogisms and Sophisms and so to make sport for our money lest we take him for a Pick-pocket he spends at one clap 6. or 7. pages very generously to prove what none denies that it was neither the Cause nor the good Cause to Countenance POPERY Mahumetism c. Notwithstanding it never entered into the Question and so his Answers are shot in the Air or at himself all the way being in nothing adequated or adapted to the Case But saith Mr. B. He hath not excepted Popery c. and if worship be out of the Magistrates reach then so is Mass Under due correction and with due respect to his gravity and the Ministry he Reasons neither like a Christian nor like a Logician 1. It is not like a Christian to traduce Sir H. V. so as if Popery c. were not excepted in the Healing Quest when the Case it's self is and the whole discussion both for matter and forme to the Body of ADHERENTS to the Cause most proximately exclusive of Popery infidelity and unchristianity in worship as fully as ever it was in the times of the Wars with the King and highest attempts or contests with the Biships before But Psal 50. 16. with 19 20. What hast thou to do to count up my statutes Thou givest thy mouth to evil thy tongue joyneth with deceit thou sittest and speakest against thy brother thou titten dophi givest a double mouth of thy mothers son 2. Nor like a Logician in his rambling from the verity of the matter and very principles of demonstration for that Propositions ought to be true de omni and the Predicate to agree with the Subject in every thing but to help the Reader a little out of the snare of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or fallacie which lies in the Ambiguity of the PROP. viz. If worship be out of the Magistrates reach then so is Mass to speak ad Rhombum and not to ramble from what the Healing Quest affirms it is out of the Magistrates reach of imposing or compelling us to Mass For all that honourable person saith is that the Magistrate might forbear Coertion in the worship of God Neither doth he say as Mr. B. by his fallacie would insinuate that Magistrates have nothing to do but that this they ought not to do viz. impel or impose in the worship of God upon our Consciences and so Mass Mahumetism and all false Religion is
that have been most despised are as ready as Any to offer up our Lives and sacrifice our all for the service In the choice of Tribunes the Romans were wont to pitch upon them that could shew the most Marks Scars or Wounds in the service of their Country and some there be yet alive though little look'd upon who can like Veteranus whom Sueton. in Aug. C. tells us of but open their Garments and shew you the GASHES which they gladly received either in suffering or doing for this Cause that had rather a thousand times see the Bloud spin out of their own Veins then drop out of Christ's by another Agony Et totum hujusce rei consilium non periculo meo sed utilitate Reipubl metiar and for my own part I will not measure my business by my danger which is as great as most mens but by the benefit of the Publick 2. A stander by may see more of the Game which the Enemy is playing with Art and with Arms too and the great advantages which our friends may give them in their dealings then they see themselves so that I hope such diligent observers who have ever betted on your side and to the Cause may without offence or the brand of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inform you the best they can of those that are peeping into your hands and do make their Game by it accordingly or endeavour it for the interest of a Single Person or of Charles Stuart It was said of Queen Elizabeth that like an ill House-wife she swept the house and left the dust behinde the door but we hope you will not sweep the door as you did at your first entry to our great rejoycing and now leave the dust within the House to breed Spiders and Cobwebs which will be sure to hang in the highest places And therefore as we do in times of danger and robbery be pleased first to search well within doors and then without in every corner seeing the Enemy may steal in at so many secret and imperceptible ways 3. The grounded jealousies and certain fears that if this Cause should miscarry CHRIST the Gospel and good People of the Commonwealth would all suffer slavery do nib my Pen with the more Promptness and Acuteness in the presence of Him that is higher then the highest to call upon your Prudence and utmost care to preserve it in its Purity Nor am I herein beyond my line whiles in pleading the Cause I plead for Christ the Gospel and his Saints the best support columne and interest in the Whole World 4. The great and growing desires which I have to be serviceable to the Publique ere I die Secundum singulas species Evangelii Christi necnon Reipubl both as a Minister and a Man with the deep resentment of that desperate Design of the Enemies now on foot to the utter extirpation of us and of all whom they call Sectaries as well as perplexing of your Councils if they can effect it set forward from those very Principles that I have opposed and which they had calculated for the total interfection of the Cause interruption of the Parliament and infection of the People from 1. Principles of Falshood 2. Confections of Calumny and 3. Concoctions of Crudity The first in Mr. Prynne's Perditory Anatomy of the Commonwealth which is no more to be followed then the School of Alexandria in Gallen's time who did use to quarter Bodies for their Scholars and not allow them the dissection or discovery of the Whole Body neither doth P. to his Followers onely in this against his will we may commend him for an Artist that he hath found out the most sound solid and untainted parts of the whole Body to shew his SKILL upon i. e. of cutting and calumniating Psal 10. 8. 50. 20. 89. 51. The second in Mr. B's Purgatory Art of curing the Army whose Pinion or Pen is hardned into his own Opinion for the Government of a single Person and recovery of the Kingdom again and not so for a due and equal Temperament of the whole Body by an even Balance and proportion of the four Elements and so Aliments of this Politic. Body conducing to the most concinnate and right use of all the Functions in it as for the Mastery of the One above the other and all the Rest which would be the inevitable Ruine of All at last and all the OPERATION of his Pills is but to cast the Commonwealth out of an Acute into the most Chronick and irrecuperable Diseases But the 3. is in Mr. H's Pulsatory Method which tends more to the maintenance of the Diastole then of the Systole of the Commonwealth i. e. for the promoting then expurging the putrid humors of the Body By the first sort or P's is the Commonwealth considered quatenus immedicabilis and so he cuts it all to pieces as the Levite did his Concubine Judg. 19. 29. and sends them into all Quarters to raise the Rebellion By the second sort or Mr. B's is the Commonmonwealth considered quatenus est Sanabilis or restorable to a Kingdom and so he gives his Pills his Powders and his Portions that by strange operations they might enervate and deforce the Vitals of the Commonwealth but animate and revive the spirits of the Cavaliers and corrupt ones for Kingship in the Nation and accordingly are the humours spirits and armies of the Enemy up By the third sort or Mr. H's is the Commonwealth considered quatenus Mutabilis and so he exhibits new Forms Platforms Orders and Foundations in the first Concoction Heathenish but in the second Concoction Popish which he presumes will be as easie of digestion as the Jusculum or decoction of an old Cock ere he has cook'd it Now although these last have done the least hurt and are our Friends yet the Enemy might presume upon it that we judg'd our State very unsetled to hang by Geometry like Mahomet's Tomb in the Air or by a Charm or without a Foundation which is a great mistaste And by all these have I learned in Politicks that Non minus est corrigere Rem Public jam institutam quam ab initio instituere c. It is nothing less to govern well a Commonwealth when it is instituted then to institute a Commonwealth when it is not as yet governed or as yet a Commonwealth So that your Lessons most Noble Senators are no less difficult which you learn ex post facto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then those that you learn antè post facto wherein we had all need and hope we shall help you all we can with our prayers counsels and endeavours and none to Hinder you in the least nor yet You to Hinder one another And therefore though from a worm and no man I beseech you RIGHT HONOURABLE to admit of a few praevious Considerations for the better Settlement of the Commonwealth to the satisfaction
c. Mr. BAXIER seconds him with as agile a Notion in his head and Motion from his heart to the Army for their Re-admission The truth is it is all the way observable how PRINIAN Mr. Baxters words and Arguments are for Law and how BAXTERIAN Mr. Prynne's proofs are for Scripture yet as Plato once said of Diogenes Illum esse Socratem insanum furentem c. he is no other then Socrates raging and mad and Socrates is but a sober Cynick or Diogenes so indeed Mr. B. is but Mr. P. in more sobriety and Mr. P. is but Mr. B. in more bitterness and asperity But sure neither of them could think us so far out of our wits or beside our senses and Nescient of the History and State of the Commonwealth whatever they conceive of others whom they carry as Faulconers on their fists do hooded Hawks that we should be perswaded this can consist with the Sanity or Sanctity of it and of the Cause Muchless can they induce us or any alive who are but Masters of their own Reason to believe a right they have to sit as members of this present Parliament But had M. P. been an Artist in Anatomy he would have learn'd of Hippocrates first To look into those things that are alike to one another and SIMILARY Members of the whole and then into those things that are so unlike and DISSIMILARY I mean of that Parliament that was then in being for of THIS that sat since An. 1648. they never were neither in the one sence nor in the other Thus Aristotle teaches That which is right and strait must be first because it doth not onely measure and manifest it's self but it also measures that which is oblique crooked and contrary to it and to the Body This Mr. P. should have done and this was done when they were secluded They were first measured in their Affections and intentions and so found oblique to the Publick yea professed and avowed enemies to the Free-State and GOOD CAUSE by such as have infinitely more skill in that Art of true Anatomy then either Mr. P. or I can pretend to And that this is so it hangs upon Record so as that a little Revise of the PARLIAMENTS necessary Resolves and Votes about them with the GROUNDS and REASONS of the Votes for their Seclusion will satisfie any well-willers to the Cause and felicity of the WHOLE that Mr. P. doth labour but in vain to rescue that with Wit which they lost in Worth Besides 2. Their SECLUSION and expulsion was from the House of Commons indeed or that PART OF THE PARLIAMENT which were called and convened by the King's Writ of Caroli 17. An. 1640. which Parliament Mr. P. himself determines and hath resolved to have been actually Dissolved at the Death and Decollation of the late King according to Law and REASON and this he so learnedly proves from p. 24. to 34. that I am ready to say with Appelles upon the 7. years elaborate piece of Protogenes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Labour is great and the work too but alas the Grace and Beauty of it which is the formale is wanting and how needless that long discourse is to prove what we never denyed let the Reader judge but that which we deny and which Mr. P. must prove is that the MEMBERS for whom he and Mr. B. are such Advocates ever were or are Members of this PARLIAMENT of the Commonwealth or Secluded from it viz. the Parliament of the Commonwealth without King Single Person or House of Peers Which neither Mr. P. Mr. B. nor any man alive with all his Art of Anatomy Calumny Law or Logick can be able to do or to evidence the least RIGHT they had or have to sit in this present Parliament as he would suggest it or indeed any at all but what grounded and precipitate presumption in any other might as much pretend to And therefore with his leave those Honourable Persons that his Pen dashes upon in p. 10. of his Narr viz. Sir Arthur Hasilerige and Sir Henry Vane rendered him such Reasons for his not sitting in the House as might have satisfied the Writer as well as the Reader him or any that had not been quite bank-rupted and as void of Reason as of Right 3. The Bustling Blustring noise which Mr. B. and he makes of the Majority is a meer SOUND and mistake Had he been pleased to have made known to the Reader how many were Delinquents how many left the Parliament and sat in the Juncto at Oxford 200. or more that never return'd again and of those that remain'd in the HOUSE it must needs follow that the Secluded Members were the lesser Number and those that sat since 1648. are the greater Number being now about 200. besides those that are dead of them But whether it be more the folly of a wise man or wisdom of a fool to make this loud noise of a Majority I know not only this I know that the Decision of a difference by a fool in Paris was not without that equity and justice which is due to Mr. PRYNNE and them of his Humour for when a Cook fell out with a poor man that had been in his SHOP and eaten never a bit but satisfied himself with the smell of the meat that was rosted he would make him pay but it was referred to the NEXT that came which was the fool who determin'd it thus that as the Man had been fill'd with the Smoak of the Meat the Cook should be pay'd with the jingling of the Money And it is as just if a fool may say it to men so wise that M. P. and M. B. who do fill our heads with FUME be paid with the tinkling gingle of that FAME for which they are never the better nor will be richer at the last I pray God not much the worse with a Mat. 5. 2 5 16. Verily I say unto you They have their REWARD 4. Mr. P. confesses that had he been admitted to sit with the rest of the Secluded members their design was p. 22. propounded to resummon the long since defunct House of COMMONS which hath been buried and out of mind almost eleven years Notwithstanding by his own words there was no such thing in being since the Kings Death and how these could be the Antecedent without the Relative of King or House of Peers or made demonstrable and practicable by his own LAW or responsible to the Writ Summons of a Parliament as he accounts LEGAL I understand not but this is easie to be understood that if these Secluded Members had pretended as fair at first as Cleomines the Laconian did once to his friend Archonides they intended as foul and with like Policy at last 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He swore to him that he would do all things joyntly with him and transact nothing without his HEAD were in it but he watch'd his time
the world that have the Supremacy is forbidden subjects on pain of damnation But the best Governours in all the world that have the Supremacy have been resisted or deposed I mean saith he the Secluded Members secondly the Powers that were last put by c. So that his conclusion is DAMNATION Are these his Lenitives Though the minor of his Argument is an errant untruth yet his MAJOR ought to have been explain'd and not so applyed until he had told us what the Apostle means by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damnation and whom he meant by SUBJECTS and where the Supremacy indeed is and then was But with such a preposterous zeal too poor Hugh Peters did offer them his Potion in his Letter to a great one of the Army thus The Protector and the two Houses were the hopefullest way in the whole world to settle these Nations and the crossing thereof the most dangerous So a little after he saith The Authority of the best Parliament and most freely chosen trampled upon yea such a sort of men gathered together as would have been a defence and establishment against all evils c. thus Hugh Which Potion because they would not indeed could not accept he drank off himself and poor Wretch is become starke MAD. Wherefore I would earnestly wish that Mr. B. in all such Acute corrosives and threats of Damnation which I think he uses too often to poor sick Patients and tender Consciences will for future lenifie them with the love of Christ and tenders of Gospel-grace with so much Cassia of charity and Manna of mercy amongst them as may make them worke more kindly upon the Patients Neither let him think to correct his Lenitives with Astringents or with binding of them up to his opinion way or apprehensions for we have seen it by sad experience that such narrow spirits in their binding contracting and Astringent Means which some Good Men whether Presbyterian Independent or others are propense unto and do propose for the only means of Curation viz. to set up their own forme and judgements but to cast out others that differ do rather detain then drive out the most knotty rigid HARSH Clammy and Viscous humors in their so recovering Patients or Proselytes under that forme of godliness or colour of being cured But fourthly Mr. B. must be Better advised in the clapping on of his Applications for the future he might as well have applyed Hepaticks or Liver-medicines to the Feet or Cephalicks accommodated to the Head unto the Bowels and yet such improper and impertinent Prescriptions are common in our days which tend more to the destruction of the Commonwealth in it's natural strength that so through it 's excessive weakness they may Refund confound us into Kings Lords and Commons then to kill or expell any putrid and Peccant humors that have appeared so high for a Single Person by the late Apostacy or before it which it seems to our sorrow and danger are like to be left in the BODY still if a better PURGE then Mr. B's be not gently given them and such a one at least as may reach to the remotest places of this BODY of the Commonwealth otherwise from causes inward and outward I profess unfainedly I fear the fatal issue and danger of the next CRISIS if the great PHYSITIAN of Heaven and Earth do not miraculously help us and prevent it Therefore watch and pray 2. Mr. Baxter deals very disingenuously to insinuate this viz. that an exercitation or excitation to such a confession and return as the Army have made would have been from another called a SECOND GANGRENA or a scandalum MAGNATUM seeing himself knows that the occasion of that expression was quite contrary upon his most imprudent I had almost said impudent but I would be modest calumniating of the Commonwealth and most worthy members of it Expresly declaring in his Key for Cath. p. 323. that he left it to Posterity that the putting the King to death was the work of Papists Libertines Vanists Anabaptists c. and that no Protestants had hand in it So p. 355 356. If you take Vanists Levellers c. who were the chief Agents for PROTESTANTS you might as well say PAPISTS are Protestants p. 321 322. Calling this Army since the new Moddel a Jesuited corrupted Army c. and in p. 341. and in 's Epist Dedic he stirs up the Single Person and them that were in Power against some of the most constant adherents to the Cause and living Members of the Commonwealth under the Bear-skinny Notion of MASKED PAPISTS or men far worse then the OPEN Papists for whom he professes he has less charity then for open Papists branding them to Posterity with new names of his own inventing viz. Vanists Hiders Seekers Juglers Sectaries c. besprinkling his whole Book with such flaming fire-balls of defamations abusive passages and through God's goodness abortive instigations to a Perscution as could merit no less if not much more then a second Gangrena At such a time too when some were like wild Boars a whetting their Tuskes and had as he could not but know their Teeth an Edge to be so doing and as ready to take at the least spark of fire as Gun-powder or Brimstone and to be then irritating to it was very evil and ungospel-like Besides as the matter is most scandalous scurrilous and untrue so is the forme thereof very unbecoming Man Minister or Christian like the ACCUSER of the BRETHREN to be levying of so high a charge against the Lord's dear servants and Commonwealth's friends without once so much as admonishing them for their Errours he judges them under or using means of conviction and recovery of them which is not only against Humanity but Divinity and the very Scriptures Rom. 14. 4. Eph. 4. 31. Jam. 4. 11. Psal 50. 20. So Gal. 6. 1. You which are spiritual restore such 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the spirit of kindness and mildnesse it's self not of madness considering thy self lest thou also be tempted not as if thou wer 't exempted For beest thou ere so spiritual or strong a Christian thou hast in thee faeces as well as flores excrements as well as excellents and art as capable of being cast by others into the like if not the very same furnace of infamy and obloquy which thou hast heat for the honest innocent and upright in heart And one day thou wilt see thou needest every inch as much their pity prayers charity as they do thine Ah! and wilt thou insult over others for those things that thou art subject to thy self Periculosè maledicit Alteri saith Erasmus Cui vel idem vel simile vel diversum sed deterius vitium possit objice It is a mad and most dangerous thing of any man for him to speak evil of another against whom may be objected the same or the like or another but a worse fault And of all
man commendeth or that commendeth himself is approved but whom the Lord commendeth And the Lord justifies who shall condemn Isai 50. 8 9. Rom. 8. 33 34. Yet I think there be but few that are so malicious as to hate this Gentleman for his own sake but many indeed that are envious at him for our sakes and the Commonwealths In whose Memory and Posterity I nothing doubt but that his indefatigable endeavours and deserts from the Publick will out-live the most irrefragable anger of all his enemies or rather ours Justum Tenacem propositi Non civium ardor prava jubentium Non vultus instantis Tyranni Mente quatit solida neque Auster Dux inquieti turbidus Adriae Nec fulminantis magna Jovis manus si fractus illabatur orbis impavidum ferient ruinae was the song of the Heathen which I mention to our shame and not with much delight in reading Heathen Authors that we should be so ungrateful as not to commemorate in our minds at least the worth of such men as neither Turns nor Times Tyrants nor Tempests Troubles nor Thunderbolts that have rent the heavens crackt the clouds and split the very foundations could ever remove or slacken in their constancy to the cause and Commonwealth Now that Mr. B. who of any hath so little knowledge of this so honourable a person must be the man to abuse him or us rather with such black reports of him to the world and at such a TIME too wherein he was and is wholly taken up with that which he prefers above his daily food or I think his life viz. the service of the PUBLICK is an Argument sufficient that he went to the Philistimes to make and to whet his TOOLS because he could finde no SMITHS in Israel that could make such a KEY or a Key with such wretched Wards in it as I fear if the Lord prevent not will let more into Hell then into Heaven or happiness And whether some that were ingaged for the King or against the Cause Commonwealth and this Parliament did not prompt him to it or were the bellows of his forge to blow up the sparks of his discontent into such open flames and luculent firebrands of malignity is to me a Question almost out of Question if I look but into his Preface and see in the Margin of it how highly he extols the E. of Lauderdale as his helper in it Yea whether it were not designed and TIMED on purpose to perplex this person of honour as well as others in Parliament or to give them a Diversion from the PUBLICK into a private vindication of themselves and of their unblemished names had they thought it worthy and thereby to have left the House whiles the Adversaries should have carried all therein more without opposition for the interest of a single Person and against the Commonwealth or otherwise that these ulcerous defamations might pass uncontrouled spread further and further amongst the credulous vulgar upon their silence and want of leasure to rescue their reputations from such horrid impeachment But these Gentlemen perferring their Christian names above their Sir-names have left their innocence to the omniscience of God and the testimony of it to the Multiscience of us who know them without the least vacillation of their restored lustre whose wonderful constancy is a most worthy Antidote to the poison of the Pens and Parts of their enemies I am not for my own Part of any party sect nor faction nor am I of that number Mr. B. charges or covers with his blackest clouds of contumely Neither have I any mans person in admiration nor am I put on by any but the Lord and I hope his own Spirit for love of the truth and of the PUBLICK lest that should suffer by it to ward off such Cowards blows as come behind them so unworthily and bite them so unwarily whiles they are swallowed up in the insuperable necessities and inseparable affairs of the Publick Weale so as that without palpable injury thereunto they have neither leasure to minde nor make answer if they would without it be with the blessed Patience of Christ who opened not his mouth Isai 53. 7. in Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he So opens not his mouth Who when he was reviled he reviled not again but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously 1 Pet. 2. 23. and with the commendable Patience of Pericles that could not be provoked by an Enemy but when one went railing upon him to his very door in the night he bid his man to light him home with his own TORCH and of another that said O! that these men could rule their tongues as well as we our ears their pens as we our spirits Now that it may appear to Mr. B. that he had need to be forgiven his traducing of them and his seducing of others as well as be redeemed from the great evils and temptations of BOTH I hope it will not be imputed presumption or unkindness if I present him for the present with a little tast from his own words of the notorious wrong that he hath done to that wise and worthy Knight with others And 1. from his own description of a Protestant though I think it a very Lame and defective one and not plena pari ratione saith he p. 130. It is a title that accrewed to our Religion from the PROTESTING AGAINST the Romish Innovations and corruptions If those that have protested against the Romish Innovations and corruptions be Protestants then these who in his vain eye and foolish fansie of Boys-play are called Vani are Protestants having protested as far as any Protestants that Mr. B. accounts Orthodox have done Yea further then ever Mr. Baxter himself did against Romish innovations which makes him so offended and therefore to use his own words in p. 393. Scarce a man that crosseth or displeaseth i. e. dissenteth from and disobeyeth the uncharitable Clergy but he is stigmatized for an Heretick and charged with almost as much wickedness as their mouths are wide enough to utter and the ears of other men to hear These out of his own Book whereby no man can absolve him of self-condemnation in the justification of this honourable person by his own pen. 2. From his Description of a Papist in p. 392. As soon as ever any man hath received this opinion of the necessity of an universal Visible Head of the whole Church he is either a Papist or of an opinion equivalent so a little after This Errour about the necessity of an universal visible head is the very thing that turneth most to Popery Now those that he calls SEEKERS and in a Satyrical Vane VANISTS Anabaptists Sectaries c. hold no universal visible head nor any other over the Church but Jesus Christ And therefore are not within the compass of his description of a Papist Nay are further off with his leave
then himself according to his own Characters of them in his Treatise 3. From his own Grounds of Communion he is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or condemned of himself for his uncharitable censoriousness upon Sir Hen. Vane and those he calls Sectaries c. p. 440 441. Where peace and holiness may be carried on together there unity and peace must be sought as a means to holiness these are his own but amongst them that he calls Sectaries peace and holiness may be carried on together so p. 441. Hence it is saith he that wicked livers do turn Papists But those that I know who lie under his merciless Lash are not wicked Livers but very excellent examples many of them of Peace and Holiness and particularly for Sir H. V. his virtuous Lady and godly Family of any that I know in the World of that quality though I hear the like of others as of my Lord Fleetwoods c. they may be called in themselves as once was the Family of George Prince of Anhalt an Ecclesia Curia and Academia a Church a Court and an University of the highest best and most Liberal Sciences that appertain to men or to Christians Mr. B. in p. 442. saith further 442. It is but a carnal stir that Papists and some Reconcilers make to have unity so general as shall take in the most impious Rabble therefore in some cases we are called to seperate And yet because of a separation from those that are so impious or are such reconcilers must the poor sectary be branded by himself and his followers for Masked Papists 4. From his own detection of Masked Papists p. 343. he may be convinced of the horrid liberty that he hath taken to traduce his own words are The Jugling Papists may be known by this that they are alwaies LOOSENING people from Religion and LEADING them into a dislike of what they have been taught But Sir H. Vane is far from being within this Character I have heard him often open apply the precious Scriptures to my great Comfort and to the best of my judgement who have been 14. or 15. years in the Publick but sweet labour of the Gospel with sweat and swinck day and night with prayers tears watching thereunto I do profess I never could perceive his Doctrine for LOOSENING but ever for FASTNING the people of God in pure RELIGION and undefiled and yet I have heard with prejudice enough too upon reports of others till I was convinced of my errour his constant scope is to the power and principles of godliness to fix us in the everlasting holiness under the benefit of the Mediatory Covenant and in the benefits of the Covenant of Grace electing and Eternal Love LEADING them or rather the Lord by his Spirit into the most holy and optable relish of what they have been taught of that nature Expressing himself so clearly soundly and discriminatively in the principles of the New-creature or Regeneration from the common mistakes of men that rest in a meer Reformation outward Purification or a first-Adam-renovation and so shewing the difference between a Christian per saltum and per altum as profitably as ever I heard Also upon the points of justification and Perseverance and that it is the first Adam and first Covenant-spirit which is the subject of falling away and upon Sanctification the life of Christ the Mediatorship of Christ and all his Offices also upon the excellency certainty and felicity of COMMUNION with God and acquaintance by Jesus Christ c. and are these loosening Doctrines I do verily believe had Mr. B. but heard him as I and others have done in Carisbrook C. and elsewhere he would have said incomparably more for him not only then I do but then he either doth or can say against him yea have blessed the Lord for him more abundantly and have wept at this incogitancy such charity I have for him with a Laconian Country-man saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not the cause but my nature or as the APOSTLE It is no longer I but sin that dwelleth in me which breaks out thus at lips and in my lines with spots like leprosie unclean unclean and in the mean time we need no more then his own Argument in p. 119. They that are sanctified justified have the love of God in them are members of the TRVE CHVRCH 5. Mr. B. himself proves them in the true Religion in opposition to the Papists thus p. 118. That Religion which has all the essentials of Christianity is the true Religion Now let him name any one essential of Christianity if he can that Sir H. V. or those that he calls Sectaries Vanists c. do not hold and lay aside for shame those Boyish fansies and youthful tricks to play with mens Names and Reputations so and as if he were but at Hat-farthing he hath found out a company of Hiders too for so he calls them to play with and though the Question be between him and them who Hide first yet he calls for the Magistrate to help him to play his GAME over the Consciences of his brethren and to thrip up a CROSSE or a PILE upon them as upon the HIDERS or he 'll wrangle for it he is resolved and so tells us before-hand 6. From his very Description of the Seekers as to their work saith he p. 331. The Papists work by the Seekers is to take us from all or from our former Religion But those Gentlemen so unjustly accused and calumniated by Mr. B. are not taken off from all Religion he knows Do they not preach pray expound meet confer together and wait upon the Lord in publick in private and often in a week in the use of his holy Ordinances and doth Mr. B. more Besides he goes beyond all bounds of Logick or reasoning both in his Definitions Propositions and Descriptions of things or Persons as particularly in this where there is not an adaption reciprocal of the Description to the described and to make this a mark either of Seeker or of Papist viz. the taking us off of our former Religion is to lay the charge rather upon them that took us and our fathers off from Popery which was the former Religion or us off from Episcopacy which was our former Discipline then upon the Seekers And so indeed is he pleading for the Papists not against them 7. From his own Conc●ssion p. 293. That true PROTESTANTS are no more a Sect then the Patients in an Hospital who are almost healed or then the higher forme of Scholars in a School but still acknowledge them of the lowest forme even them that learn the A. B. C. in the same School If these be true Protestants and not Papists then is Sir H. V. and so those worthy Gent. farther off from that wicked impeachment then any I know of so large healing comprehensive and condescending to the least and lowest formes
the Protestants with Mr. P. Sectaries 9. Q. Whether it had not been wisdom to have kept out the company of gabling Geese or Scriblers that noise it so in Mr. P's Chamber during the time of his Travel hard labour and unprofitable pains to be deliver'd of Campanella's Bastard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or head-long And whether they had not better have perswaded Mr. P. to have kept his Terms still then to have fallen in with such filthy interests to commit sin with or conceive séed from for the trouble of the Nation or so to sell himself to the next KING that comes for so little profit and for less credit 10. Q. Whether in all this Mr. P. and Mr. B. have not made a more exquisite and Artificial Section or discovery of themselves their party parts and principles then of the true Cause or of the Commonwealth through all the Meanders intricate and abstruse notions and designs to obtrude or exalt the interest of the Stuarts and debase our Cause Let the Reader judge for in Publicos Hostes Omnis Homo Miles saith Tertul. Apol. c. 2. It is every mans case and all the Country will up when wild beasts are broken loose to that I leave them and their followers I have been the longer upon these things they being the very hinges or the Axle-trées of all their Polemick Disceptations against the present Government in four books which for substance are answered and their fallacies discovered to the Readers only Mr. B's wounding Answer which is truly his own to the Healing Question comes under our present consideration his Politick Aphorisms if occasion serve for future which he adds in the Preface of ' s Holy Commonwealth to the Army that they may not be kept up in impenitency i. e. from returning to King Lords and Commons I would say this for the Healing Question and its honourable Authour that is of such a Healing Spirit and Frame whiles Mr. B. is professedly of a Wounding That the Almighty God hath made it and him so great a Means of Blessing towards the Recovering and Healing of this poor ISLAND as our Children after us may live to reap remember and bless GOD for indeed I do think there is in that little Treatise such Apples of Gold if well considered as were taken from the Lord Jesus that Tree of Life Prov. 3. 18. whose Leaves are for the Healing of the Nations Rev. 22. 1 2. And to speak rationally It was as properly called a HEALING Question as his Antagonist would call it a WOUNDING Answer after Gallens understanding of Healing in a Physical Consideration in the beginning of Lib. de Ossibus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. All things that concern the Action of HEALING have that for their scope and direction to it that agrees best with the Nature and Constitution of the body or part which must be HEALED i. e. the Commonwealth Now whether Mr. B. by 's WOUNDING or Sir H. V. by his HEALING comes neerest to the nature and constitution of the Commonwealth or Free-State let us diligently enquire and duely preponderate without respect to persons but to principles and to the matter The healing Question saith he placeth the cause in two things pag. 3 4 5 6. 1. In a Freedom by way of dutiful compliance and condescention from all parts and members of this Society to set up meet persons in the place of Supreme Judicature and Authority amongst you Enlarged pag. 10 11. 2. Freedom in matters of Religion that concern the service and worship of God enlarged pag. 5 6 7. The PERSONS that he supposes have this Soveraign power sayes he are sometimes said to be the Whole Body of Adherents to the CAUSE p. 3. to which they have a double Right 1. Natural 2. Conquer'd and Recover'd and sometimes the whole BODY OF THE PEOPLE pag. 4. But here Mr. B. begins already to deal unfaithfully and dis-ingenuously with the Healing Question and its Author for pag. 4. it tell us of the natural right and Freedom due to the whole Body of the People for whose safety and good Government its self is ordained which the Norman by Lust and force of Arms kept them from This is their natural Right indeed not but that they may forfeit it and lose it as a man may forfeit his Liberty and his Life which he hath a natural right unto by Theft Treason Rebellion Murther or the breach of good and equal Laws But when he treats of the Goodness and the Nature of the Cause p. 3 4. then it is that he tells us the unforfeited and undoubted Power of chusing c. lies in the body of Adherents to the CAUSE who have contributed their counsels purses pains affections prayers and united strength unto it And these have not onely their foresaid natural Right but through Gods blessing their conquered and restored Right unto it Which others have not that fought against the CAUSE the PARLIAMENT to destroy both it and us These that have forfeited it are not said to have the Soveraign Power of chusing persons fit for Supreme Trust by this two-fold Right that the Adherents to the Cause have And therefore the Healing Question pag. 3. speaks of Restoring This THIS whole Body to it's just Rights in Civils and in Spirituals But Mr. B. would jumble them both like a jusculum of Hodg-podg or Galleymaufrey into our mindes by a fallaciâ compositionis taking them together as he in his Wounding and not as the Author in 's Healing Question states and exhibits them Also it is observable that in lieu of any lucid or clear Replication he would have the Reader subjugate his Reason to his Dark Lanthorn or abstruse implication in some ten PROPOSITIONS which he offers as his Purging-Pills or Troches to the Armies Consciences but let them first examine the INGREDIENTS of them and the hand that gives them if he have skill and if there be no danger in receiving of them His 1. Prop. is That it was none of the Old Cause which we contended for in the Wars viz. the free choice of Parliaments Answ We shall then appeal to all Records living and dead yea to Mr. P. himself whether Priviledges of Parliament and peoples Rights were none of the Old Cause contended for 1. saies he the King granted it but at the first he denied it And what if he did by word acknowledge it if he by force hindred them the benefit of it which is the thing the Heal. Quest. sayes But for B's satisfaction he may see it recorded in History That in the very first four yeers of his Reign he dissolved three Parliaments one after another and by Proclamation forbid the people to speak of any more Parliaments after that so that in the Intervals they were miserably enslaved oppressed both in Consciences and Estates taxed fleeced with Monopolies and illegal sufferings had no visible Remedy left them All thoughts of ever
having a Parliament being banished for many years and the ordinary discourse of the Courtiers then was against Parliaments as injurious to the Kings Prerogative This continued until Firebrands that had been kindling by it were laid together in Scotland and there began first to FLAME about the ears of the Clergy and their Liturgy An. 1637 8 and 9. The King raised an Army against them and notwithstanding the Pacification of 18 June 1639. he resolved to have War with the Scots told some Lords about him Decemb. following he would call a Parliament in England the noyse of which made the People amazed I so long had they been without it and so little expectation had they of it whiles the King sends his bosome and Cabinet-Counsellour Strafford into Ireland to call one there to raise him monies but on the 13th of April it was convened and on the 5th of May dissolved again and some of the Members vizt Sir John Hotham Mr. Crew Mr. Belliesis imprisoned the Lord Brooks Plundred and the King goes on with the War against the Scots until about 20. of the English Earls Lords and Barons Petitioned to him at York to call a Parliament that might continue until Grievances were redressed c. By which means and his unavoidable necessities together he could not help it but summon the Long Parliament who seeing the people so miserably robbed of their Rights drew up a Bill for triennial Parliaments which the King signed 15. Pebr. 1640. Also an Act of Parliament was passed by King Lords and Commons then in being That this Parliament shall not be dissolved without it be by Act of Parliament and the Ground is exprest in it viz. The fears jealoustes and apprehensions that His Majesties Subjects have that this present Parliament may be adjourned prorogued or dissolved before Iustice be executed Grievances redressed c. With what confidence then can Mr. B. put in such an ingredient and so dangerous a one to make up his first Pill or Prop. to purge the Army with and to scour their Consciences To his second Prop. It was not the old Cause for the People to have right to choose a House of Commons to exercise the whole soveraignty c. Answ And who saith it was I pray not the Healing Quest. I am sure neither do the Commonwealths-men say it that the people have any Right to choose any House of Commons at all seeing it is utterly inconsistent with the Free-State and principles of it to have any such House as a House of Commons and more to have them as such exercise the whole Soveraignty of the Nation But here he contends with himself alone As I have seen a Puppy play prettily with his own tail weary himself and lie down when he has done For to what purpose is this Pill of Fumitory unless to fetch away Melancholy Fumes and make us laugh a little at all their weakness and folly To his third Prop. It was none of the old cause to assert the peoples Soveraignty Answ But it was their old cause to assert their Rights I am sure both as men and as Christians and this is one the Healing Quest saith and a natural one which all the Adherents to this Cause against the King have recovered through mercy if they can but keep it viz. to keep the Primary power under God and Jesus Christ or the power of chusing their own Rulers into the Supreme trust And this was we find by a little Retrospection declared for both by Parliment and Army Act of Parl. March 17. 1648. St. Albans Remonstrance in the Scotish Declarations and a many others So that this his salt Pill of poly-podium will serve for nothing but to make a man cough complain or else to choak him quite To his fourth Prop. It was not the Cause to change the constitution of the Commonwealth into any other form of Government then what we found in it Answ What ever was the Cause that was the effect and an inevitable EFFECT of the Wars I am sure though I confess the CAUSE of it lay in my judgement more on the Kings part according to the Parliaments own words of 20. March 1642. That whensoever the King maketh War that it tendeth to the dissolution of his Government So that Sublatâ Causâ tollitur effectus had he not made the War he had not destroyed his Government it is like Nor doth this lay the Guilt of the bloud upon the Parliament as he pretends but upon the King and his evil Counsellours who destroyed him and his posterity as well as that Constitution of Government by it And albeit no one part had authority to destroy the other and set it self in the room of the whole as King to destroy the Commons or Commons the Lords and set it self up as HOUSE of COMMONS yet had they a Power to destroy one another and to kill themselves if they would as the King did and so consequently the Lords and then the House of Commons as the Commons-House which are all dissolved with that CONSTITUTION of GOVERNMENT by a Felo de se indeed 2. Nor is the Platform of King Lords and Commons the Fundamental Constitution but rather imposed upon the people as has been often proved by the learned in History And 3. Though this were not the ULTIMATE in our eye yet the Peoples Rights and properties which fell in naturally to them were in their eye ULTIMATELY and intentionally amongst other things of higher concernment viz. the Kingdom of Christ throughout the management of this cause Now where the people have the greatest propriety and interest to out-balance as it was in this cause they must naturally fall into that Balance which is in a Commonwealth and can fix for security and satisfaction in nothing less be it ever so beyond our first intentions or second But for my part I cannot find one word in the Healing Quest that saith it was our cause intentionally to alter that constitution though that effect was given in as a blessing supplement and success unto this cause but that we have a Right to a Civil incorporation and society distinct from that of the old constitution now dissolved by its self and it's inorable adherents So that as the CYNICK ran to the mark for fear the Archer should hit him when he shot at Rovers we may run to the Healing Quest and never fear that he will hit or hurt us or can come neer us for ought I see This is his fourth Pill as bitter as Aegrimony it may serve to make a body sick and to make him stare but not to cure or comfort him in the least His fifth Prop. is of the matter asserting the Parliaments Declaration for the Kings person Priviledges of Parliament c. which is fully answered in Mr. P's Cause stated and stunted p. 5 6 7 8 10 11. to the very same Declarations and
Christ ought not to be in the whole body of the people Adherents to the Cause which from all it 's Integrantia Membra must and may set up persons to execute exercise it for the benefit of the whole Hence in Dan. 7. 27. it is that the Kingdom Authority shaltana in Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under every part of heaven is to be given leyam kaddishe to the People of the Saints or of the Holy ones of the Most High not immediately to the Saints as if all Saints or none but Saints should be in Power but that their People Deputies and Representatives shall be in Power and rule for their interests in the Cause and concernments of them and of the whole People that adhere to the Cause and go on with them joyntly for a Godly Commonwealth Now this whole People cannot give what they never had if they have not a Humane Soveraignty or Supreme Power under Christ they cannot give it to their Deputies or Representatives But the Argument is if they can give it derivatively then they have it But they can give a Humane Supreme Power or trust and Soveraignty under Christ to their Deputies and therefore they have it in themselves We might further Argue that where the lawful power of choosing and rejecting Rulers lies there the Supremacy or Humane Soveraignty under Christ lies but in this body of the people Sane and well-affected the lawful power of chusing and rejecting lies And this Mr. B. admits that they have the Vim eligendi or of chusing And by the same reason or law of Nature they have the Vim rejiciendi Ejiciendi of putting by and out as well as of putting in or of setting up in the whole Body We speak of Government as it is with Gods approbation the ordinance of man amongst us so the peoples but as it is the Ordinance of God amongst us so Christs It is a Rule in Natural Philosophy Cum aliqua virtus Duobus inest Uni essentialiter Alteri Accidentaliter or Contingentèr minùs principaliter Where a power is in two it is in one more principally and essentially in the other less and more contingently Thus it is between the people and the Parliament in the first the same power which the Parliament have viz. the visible Supreme or natural Soveraignty under Jesus Christ is more principally and essentially as to the being of it viz. in the People collectively but in the other secondarily accidentally derivatively or but contingently and pro tempore And therefore it cannot be the false Cause or that which subverteth the foundation of Government as Mr. B. saith in this 7. Prop. A Pill prepared of Assa foetida for the Warming of their stomacks to swallow down the better those secluded members and all such as have not owned but are enemies to the CAUSE and Commonwealth His 8. Prop. That Conquest neither gives them any Soveraignty nor right to deprive them of their liberty that disown that Cause Answ It is true that Conquest did not give them the Right because they had it before as their Right but it gives them the freedom of their Right which was denied them and obstructed As the Healing Quest. told him p. 3. and 5. Their just natural Right which they never forfeited as others have done restored unto them by success of Arms so that they need not run to Conquest to prove their Right but to preserve their Rights and to claim their Liberties in exerting and exercising of their just Rights 2. Some kinde of Soveraignty is obtained by Conquest viz. over enemies conquered and captivated ones at least to keep them from ruling over us or ruining of us who are Enemies to us Therefore this Prop. is false to say it gives not any Soveraignty at all For a Sword-soveraignty or a Law of Force and aw over the unexorable and inexuperable enemies of the Commonwealth is obtained thereby and the Lords blessing it together But that we affirm is 3. That Conquest hath fortified and ratified us in our natural Rights and in the expectation of our spiritual too and helps us to hold them the faster by far both in civils and spirituals so as that we might rather expect the enlargement of our Borders then the confinement of our Liberties either in the worship of God or immunities and benefits of the Commonwealth 4. Conquest with his favour doth keep up in us a right of distinction between friends and foes between well and ill-affected between them that owned and them that never owned or rather that ever disowned and appeared against the Cause which both as men and as Christians we are concern'd to keep up with the most lively Remembrance of those distinguishing mercies Answers of prayers and Appeals and Victories which the Lord hath given us almost miraculously as in the days of Egypt Exod. 8. 23. and 11. 17. and 15. 1. Judg. 11. 27. Micah 7. 15. And shall we most unthankfully loose or confound the sence of such discriminating appearances of God with us in Pihahiroth or mouth of our greatest dangers in the days of our greatest distress and this we shall certainly do if these two last Prop. were true or Mr. Harringtons and such mens designs should take effect viz. To put all back again into the spirit of the Nation upon the single account of bare natural right without any respect at all had to this Right of distinction which God hath so miraculously given us in to the bargain by the late Wars and Conquests of them that have adhered to the Cause If this be an equal Commonwealth or tends ad sanam constitutionem Rei-publicae to the Sanity or Sanctity of the Body is worthy the consideration of the wisest Physicians And if they please they may feel the pulse of Oceana as well as of Mr. B. with what Vibrate Motions that beats upon the Arteries of our Cause and then tell us whether it had not better beat as it does though it be not well yet with less sign of danger viz. EQUALLY inequal then so inequally equal as he would have it But thus far for Mr. B's Prop. or Pill composed è Scoriâ ferri to work upon the Spleen His ninth Prop. They that pretend the inward Warrant of Righteousness as the Healing Quest speaks he sayes p. 9. the inward Reason and Spirit of Government for the violation of Laws Constitutions and resisting of Authority as being above the Letter c. do reject the Government of the LORD and become their own But must Mr. B. still be traducing and Tenterhooking the words of the Healing Quest which p. 9. saith no such matter as he makes up his Prop. with viz. for violation of Laws Constitutions and resisting of Authority But thus speaking of the Capacities wherein the faithful Adherents to the Cause have acted he saies Sometimes in one Form and sometimes in another and very seldome in all points
according to the Rule of former Laws and constitutions as to be justified by them any longer then they had the Law of outward Success and of inward Justice and Righteousness to incourage them So that without tawing or stretching his lines like Leather into what length or shape he please they amount but to this 1. That the Adherents to the Cause were not without an inward Rule of Righteousness as well as outward But 2. when the outward failed or that they were not justified by the Letter of the Law they had an inward line of Righteousness and Justice to measure their Actions by which the Most High blessed and accepted and that was a RULE far more perfect and straight then the letter alone of the old Laws which were made most of them for the interest of a single Person nor was this to the Violation but to the Vindication of the equity sence and meaning of all good Laws not to the Resisting but Recovering of all true Authority from the Griffen-Gripes and Talons of all Tyranny the Usurpation and violence of the Norman Race or of any other Family or Interest whatsoever innoculated into such a Stock or Stump 2. Is this any more then what the PARLIAMENT when it consisted of King Lords and Commons as Mr. B. would have it did justifie to be good and consonant with the CAUSE then in that very action of taking away the Militia from the King which being contrary to the letter of the Law they resolved it thus There is in Laws an Equitable and a Literal sence when there is a grounded suspition the letter of the Law shall be improved against the Equity of it i. e. the Publick Good it gives liberty to obey the Equity of it and to disobey the Letter Now where was the Rule of Righteousness was it in the Letter of the Laws which gave away all the Militia to the King or was there such a thing as an inward Warrant of Justice to do that Action for the publike Good Thereby Defending and not Deflowering the Equity of it 3. Yet the Spirit Reason and inward Rule of Righteousness is to be preferred with his leave before the written Rule or letter as more inerrable inalterable radical where the one is repugnant to the other as the Orator Cicero hath it Non SCRIPTA sed NATA Lex against Tarquin si Regnante Tarquinio Nulla erat Scripta Lex de Stupris c. Tamen vera Lex est Recta Ratio Naturae Congruens diffusa in omnes Constans Sempiterna c. it is not a Written but an innate Rule which is as Chrysostome Rhetorically tells us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The self-Disciplining or Fundamental Law that is planted in the very Being of Mankinde and from thence it buds blossoms fructifies and dilates into the fairest BRANCHES of Morality So that if there were no Law written sayes the Orator during the Reign of Tarquin to check his Lust yet Right Reason is a sufficient Law of an Excellent Complection and Congruity with Nature and of as admirable a Latitude diffusion and extent to the Good of all and which never fails nor fades PHILO as elegantly gives his Testimony 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Right Reason is the certain and unshaken Law not written in corrupt PAPER or on a Lifeless stone like a dead Letter by the greatest Art or greatest Industry of any creature but ingraved in the most retentive and living understanding of Man as with the finger of God himself or of an eternal or immortal Spirit Plutarch tells us as much tooa s a Moralist can tell of any Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The LAW it's self is not shut up in Paper or Writings or limitted to any outward Letter or expression of it in Tables of Stone or the like but living and situating like the soul in the body in a Rational Being or in Reason its Self Hence came that ancient Adage Inter Bruta silent Leges Amongst Brutish and Irrational Creatures Laws are mute muzzel'd and unintelligible why because they have not this inward Rule Reason and Spirit of the Laws The Formality and Letter of our Laws did indeed flow from the Interest or Power of some particular men but the strength and life of humane Laws must be found and founded under GOD in Reason and Natural Right which when the Letter or written Rules oppose they become no longer Laws but Flaws in a Commonwealth lose their vigor and are but as a dead letter 4. Both together so long as they can consist together and are in their vigor vizt the Inward and outward wee make a Rule for Righteous Actions between Man and man and not the Inward warrant as sufficient without the outward in such a case viz. where they agree together nor yet the Outward as Mr. B. would have it without the Inward Reason and Spirit of it which the other indeed is deducted from and is more Radicaliter in intellectu So that this Mr. B. might have better said That where the Outward is deficient inconsistent or corrupted Not to use the Inward Warrant or Rule of Reason and Righteousness is to reject the Government of the Lord and to become our own Murtherers and Tame-Slaves Brutified to the Lusts and interests of Men rather then beautified for the Common Good as Hos 5. 11. Ephraim is oppressed and broken in Judgement because he WILLINGLY walked after the Commandments of men Thus far for his 9th Pill and a pitiful dry one to drink up the Radical Moisture with under pretence of a Pill Lucis Majoris to evacuate the humour of the head with His tenth Prop. hath little in it onely a fallacious conclusion from what the Healing Q. predicates in p. 10. That to the wisdom of the Laws and Orders of the Supreme Judicature the sword must become subservient Therefore sayes he your sword should have been so to the Parliament that was violated the late Parliament But the Healing Q. speaks not a word of a Parliament consisting of King Lords and Commons which Mr. B. means he speaks of the Representatives of the Commonwealth chosen by this Body of the Sound and well-affected to the CAUSE So that Mr. B. contrary to all Catholick Laws of Reasoning Eartheth or Roots his disceptation in an Homonymy and thence concludes it for the late Parliament that was dissolved Telling the ARMY that no small fruits would be procured upon their CONVICTION by these reasons to a repentance i e. of returning to the secluded Members and old constitution of King Lords and Commons So that this is the Nature of his Diacatholicon or tenth purging PILL if it operates as he and those of his mind would have it they would bring them first by Lenitives Anodines and Emollients to the Stool of Repentance And then to ply them with more asperity till they make them like Arrius purge out their very bowels and all
and then brand them with the like Infamy for the veriest that ever breath'd on English Earth or in English Air. And now let the Parliament Army and all good people that are sound in their sences judge it seriously Whether it is the Honourable Author of the Healing Question as much as he is maligned and menaced by all Parties or Mr. B. in 's Wounding Answer that hath asserted the Ill Cause and deserted the Good And which of them come neerest to the constitution of a Free-State and which of the TWO it is that hath given away that worthy Argument by which he should prove himself an honest man to use Mr. B's own words vizt his Charity But in the winding up of our Discourse I am surprized or way-laid with Mr. Harringtons correspondence with him against an Oligarchy I wish it had been as much against Anarchy and Atheisme if he means by it the present Parliament or such a Parliament or the Body of Adherents to the CAUSE as one of them I believe he must and some say All wherein Mr. B. and he agree but when he tells us his meaning without mumping or scoffing which we must understand before we reply He may hear further And at the present in the words of Hen. 8. but on better grounds From their Old Mumpsimus and his New Sumpsimus Good Lord deliver us But I shall give you my grounds seeing Mr. B. hath brought him to hand as his confederate and shall modestly discuss it with him and them of the late Petition July 6. to the Parliament many of whom I dearly respect and yet I cannot but wonder how busie some are in this work of refunding retunding and confounding us in our Cause not onely with old Popish Mumpsimus's but with new Sumpsimus's and Idea's exhibited to the Parliament like the CHAOS indeed but to enucleate first the Preamble of that Petition 1. I judge it is a little too positive and reflective though couchant under smooth and candid expressions as if we had been hurried after an appearance or shadow in lieu of our undubitable Rights and as if that since the dissolution of that form of Government by K. Lords and Commons a new constitution viz. of Free-State had not been provided for which was evidently done and setled in several Acts of Parliament as Jan. 20. 1648. March 17. 1648. May 14. 1649. July 17. 1649. The words of one are these Whereas the Parliament hath abolished the Kingly Office in England and Ireland c. And having Resolved and Declared that the People for the future shall be governed by its own Representatives and National Meetings in Council chosen and intrusted for that purpose hath setled the Government in a Commonwealth and Free-State without King or House of Lords Be it Enacted c. And yet say these Friends in their Petition p. 4. Your mindes are not Setled on any known Constitution of Government or Fundamental Orders according to which all Laws should be made wherein they are too positive and upon such mistakes and pre-occupations might gratifie our Enemies too too much had they upon this false conception come up to any maturity by the late Apostacy or in this NEW-CONSPIRACIE against the Commonwealth For Mr. Harrington and that Petition strike at the very Root Fundamental and Constituting Acts of Parliament as well as at the very BEING integral Parts of our Cause so long contended for and crowned at last through the Lords blessing I cannot proceed without precaution seeing as Cic. says Omne malum nascens facile opprimitur inveteratum fit plerunque Robustius it is easie to crush Evil in the Egg and as Solomon says Eccles 8. 5. A wise man discerneth both the time and the Judgment 1. At the Foundation of our Settlement in Anno 1648. for that they propound Two Houses of Parliament under new names indeed viz. of a Senate and of a Popular Assembly so Oceana p. 13 14. and Petition p. 8. which appears to me repugnant and Diametrick to our dear Cause to the Acts of Parliament and to our Engagements viz. To be faithful to the Government as it now stands without King or House of Peers Now Aristotle in 's Politic. 5. lib. c. 4. tells us of two waies to destroy a COMMONWEALTH Quandoque per vim Quandoque per dolum Per Vim aut statim aut posteà compellendo Per Dolum non nunquam enim decepti ab initio Suâ demum sponte Recipiunt alium Gubernandi Modum c. Sometimes it is done by Force and sometimes by Fraud in the last sence when mistaken at the first laying it they by perswasion or voluntarily fall into another manner of Government This is a dangerous CRISIS and the Athenians had the sad experience of such Commutations through proclivity to Noveltie and New Changes as Act. 17. 21. They spent their time in it So AELIAN Lib. 5. c. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Athenians were given to change in the State of the Commonwealth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But I can't commend it it is an OMEN which shall never have my AMEN so long as I see it conduceable to the dissolution of the Whole if they have not special care to preserve the Constitution which with two such Bodies I do not so well understand And I wonder which is more monstrous in Nature a Vast Body with two Heads or a Head with two Huge Bodies and how prodigious and dreadful will their motions be if one go one way and the other another like the Amphisbaena let right Reason judge But besides this that which hath the most impression is the easie Access of a Single Person called with us the Third State by it And this is evident not onely in Reason but in Practice as in the Lacedemonian and Athenian Commonwealths For in the First after Lycurgus's death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lacedemonians instituted the Court of the Ephors who had the chief Power in the Commonwealth for none stood or were raised up but a King and the Ephor So that a single Person had an Executive Power there But if a nimble Wit will without ground object that this Commonwealth was imperfect or degenerate we might instance in Athens the Pattern of all that they set before us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In like manner the Athenians instituted eleven men to take the care of Prisoners and nine Archons of which were the Thesmothets who were throughly tryed and sworn to do righteously in the Magistracie not to take Bribes nor to set up again the Golden Image But the King who is said to be one of the Archons did administer the Laws which belong'd to Sacrificing and to Warring So that after this Platform are we exposed to the open Danger of a Single Person or a King and of giving the Power of Religion and Worship into the hands of the Magistrate not answerable to the Rules of Christ our Cause nor
a Christian Commonwealth but of Heathen Law-givers or Nomothets 2. In my apprehension submitting to better judgement it casts it's keenest Arrow at the very being principal and integral parts of the Cause which we have proved to be our Rights in civils and in spirituals without imposing upon Conscience by a National-worship For 1. In Civils they have not stated their Aequale cum justitiâ neither in Righteousness to the Cause nor indeed to the Reasons or Prudentials of their own Authors I mean the Heathens whom Mr. Har. most follows for they admit not the Holy Scriptures or our heavenly Politicks ad Theocratiam though it is like they have said it often Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven as the Woman used to say her Prayers and feed her Hens together Our Father which art in Heaven Coop coop coop coop c. Nor vouchsafe they such a value upon the series of Mercies Providences Prayers and Victories all along the late Wars as to give in one Word for Iesus Christ or his Interest in the Nations Nay leave him like a Pelican and account it Ridiculous some of them having scoffed at it openly and therefore to make my self intelligible even to Barbarians if they will be such I shall sum up an evidence against them out of Mr. Har. own Oracular Tutors and begin with Arist. in lib. 1 2 3 4 and 5. for his Correction in that most inequally equal Liberty that he and they allow to the Kings Party and them that have forfeited all not laying justice in the Foundation of their Commonwealth but planting it upon the whole multitude and community yea Oceana p. 46. saith plainly That the Royalist for having opposed the Common-wealth in OCEANA can neither justly for that cause be excluded from his full and equal share in the Government nor prudently for this that the Commonwealth with consist of a Party But how imprudently and differently from his own Authors as well as how irrationally and unjustly as to the cause Mr. H. would call the Malefactors from the Bar to the Bench and so in little time worm us quite out of our Possession and Rights that have adhered to the Cause by their Majority of Votes throughout the Nation that have not is worth considering That so if that Thesis be true in 's Prerog of Pop. G. lib. 1. ch 10. That a Commonwealth well fixed can never be conquer'd by force yet this Hypothesis is as true that not fixed but inconstant it may be conquer'd by fraud and the Cavalier may win it at the last Game though they lost it at the first Wherefore this I find was their first Policy and care at Athens as it ought to be in England 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THEMISTOCLES Aristides and the Senate of the AREOPAGITES were able to do much in the Commonwealth and first of all Care was taken of this That none should unsettle the State or exceed the limits laid to it This is not the Policy they follow I am sure and it is obvious out of their own Authors how ill they would found the Commonwealth that take so little notice of the Cause of the interest of Christ or of the distinction that is made between Delinquents and Adherents thus Arist. Pol. Horum igitur Principium est magis quàm Patrimoniorum exequatio civitatem sic instituere Ut boni quidèm Viri plus sibi quam competat habere non quaerant Improbi autem etsi quaerant habere non possint c. That the beginning of them viz. such Governments ought to have more in it then a meer equality or exequation of Patrimony or of Natural rights viz. that good men may not seek to have more then is fit for them Nor bad men have it though they seek it So in the 4. lib. c. 11. he speaks ad omnem rem rhombum to the Case in hand from the Laws of Lycurgus Charondas and others That if any Risings Tumults Seditions aut Pugnae fiunt inter Multitudinem opulentes quibuscunque Vincere contingit Hi neque Communem amplius habent Rem-public neque Equalem or Wars be waged between the People and the Rich ones such as the King's Party were and therefore called Cavaliers and it happens to them to have the Day these that were conquered have neithe● common nor equal Commonwealth priviledge after that And this he de optimâ Repub. affirms to be of the best Commonwealths in the World For otherwise saith he not only the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the little Deliquents or offenders in small things but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 very great offenders and greatest Enemies in the Nation will be ever and anon doing mischief and most capable of it do what we can This may invite them from beyond the Seas with a change of Projects but not of Principles Coelum non scelus ii mutant qui trans-mare currunt and 't is a pretty toy for fools to play with to think that frames of mens making can keep them in like Cats when the Laws of Gods making cannot hold them without new hearts But a prettier sport for the mimick Ladies by half to laugh at after the Italian mode if our English-men were put into frames like Cats to turn their SPITS and bast their MEAT and in the mean time they fall a MEWING and a MADDING till they have broken loose tore all off of the Spits and serv'd themselves with it in the first place As sure enough they will seeing such Cats are strong and for all his frames will be Cats still nor can they be made to turn the Spit without a Rack and when they are enraged I would be loath that Mr. H. should be basted as they will bast him to make up the Mumming Nor can we trust that Maxime of his p. 48. Oceana Give us good orders and they will make us good men so much as give us good men they will give us good orders and Government too with Gods blessing Tristes Quaerimoniae Si non Supplicio Culpa reciditur Quid Leges sine moribus Vanae Proficiunt Therefore if the Petitioners mean with Mr. Har. by the free people p. 6. of the Pet. all the Nation without any distinction or Cognizance of any difference between Royalists and Realists Delinquents and Adherents such as have forfeited and such as are well-affected that have waded through their own bloud to recover and hold these their Rights they strike Mortally at the Cause the Bloud the Treasure spent the Prayers Tears Skulls Bones and Limbs of thousands in the Cause yea at all the distinguishing Mercies manifestations and Victories that we have had And when by this fraud the Cause is thus far gone and all the Bloud in the Veins of the Commonwealth mingled with ten times more corrupt then is sound forsooth what serves your Rotation for but for Rottation and inevitable ruine to the Commonwealth Besides
with their Bobbins they may bob our ears bravely with a Garrulous Rule and when they lag in their Bone-lace they may lace our bones for Logger-Heads to let them lay down the Distaff and take up the Scepter leave the Spindle and divide the Spoil yea then sit like Meg-Pies at their doors Dumb Saints in their Idols Churches Goats in their Gardens Devils in their houses Angels in the Streets and Syrens at their Windows as they say of the Italians for when they can live no longer by their Work they shall live by their Wits in Mr. Har's Commonwealth that sifts our the best and keeps in the worst to make his Cake with But in Lacedemon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lycurgus the Son of Eunomus willing to endow the Lacedemonians with their dues in Righteousness and Justice took not away any worthy or good Reward from any one And the Thebans to incourage Dignity and keep up the Honour of Magistracie from contempt made a Law Vt nemo habilis esset ad Honores Reipublic suscipiendos nisi Decem Annis à Mercatur â destitisset c. That no man should be accounted qualified for the Honours of the Commonwealth i.e. in Magistracy unless he had first left his Merchandizing ten years Such a care had they to keep out the Joans and Toms which M. H. admits by turns and times as the Rotation boults them into the Government and their Betters out And what was said of Clisthenes an Athenian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might possibly be applied to Mr. H. were their Rogation effected that he was one of the first that introduced this Government by Ostracisme and one of the first that felt it and would have retro-duced it The first that brought it in and the first that it wrought out Therefore let him secure his own Bull before he baites anothers and take his Play 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly I would willingly be informed how his New Platforms or Principles Paganish or Popish fetch'd from Athens or from Venice can without cruciating extremities and applications be adequated to our Commonwealth under Christian profession so that Quae semel possidebant Papiste semper possideant Rapiste what the Papists once had Rapists and Ravenous ones would ever have viz. our Rights and Liberties from us Nor could it be acquired I think without greater Advantages to Papists Atheists then to us seeing the very interest of the Son of God and Saints in the Nation the best and noblest Cause on earth in all the integrating Parts thereof and Adherents thereto is not taken Notice of in his Platforme neither in the Balance nor the Wheel in the Ballot nor Rotation or Rogation of it so that Differs curandi tempus in Annum Quicquid delirant Reges Plectuntur Achivi I may conclude with Mr. B. p. 240. That God having already given us the best Fundamental Laws Let us have but good Magistrates and we shall have good Derivative Laws or humane It was a Law amongst the Cretians that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that their children should learn their Laws with Melody that from the MUSICK they might take great pleasure in them and more easily commit them to memory We need no such Law to endear or dulcifie our Cause or the Laws of it in the Commonwealth If the foundation of it be that which the Hand of the Almighty hath laid amongst us both for Church and State from Christian principles rather then from Paganish or meer Morals it will make most excellent Harmony in the ears and Hearts of all men and Christians And the Governours of Judah shall say in their heart The Inhabitants of Jerusalem shall be my Strength in the Lord of Hosts their God Zach. 12. 5. Thus our Governours thought of them in the days of straits and will again see it one of their best interests to have their Prayers and their God as well as their Purses and Bloud engaged for them and not disoblige them upon jealousies suggested by the enemy who for their virgin-fidelity and untainted adherence to the Cause may be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Lacedemonians did their wives after their innocency did break out and get above the clouds of suspicion and reproach But if after all they will be planting and founding us again in the spirit of the Nation as if God had owned no Cause or made no signal discrimination or shaken no such foundations of the earth c. which their Lord General pretended as one ground of their interruption which Mr. H. others would hurry them into to the endangering of the Cause and the disobliging the Adherents Then will the Iehovah that keepeth Covenant with his people and not alter the thing that is gone out of his lips Psal 89. 34. Acts 2. 30. and 3. 20 21. raise up others in their stead to carry on this his cause both in the civils and the spirituals and to forme another People for himself to shew forth his praise Isa 43. 21. Then they that Rule over men shall be just ruling in the fear of God and they shall be as the light of the morning when the Sun ariseth A Morning without clouds and as the tender grass that springeth out of the earth by a clear shining after rain 2 Sam. 23. 3 4. which that these may be agrees better with my Prayer then with his Proposals I am sure But thus I leave him whom Mr. B. had Coyted as a stumbling-block before me whom I am not only gotten over but I presume have given a good lift to the removing of him out of others way as to the right foundation of the Common-wealth and stating of the Cause So that from this time forward we need no Luxuriant wit or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him a vomitting as Mr. P's followers Pamphlet it a Commonwealth and others qui sputum lingunt who lick up any thing as haurient and attractive of the stuff as Galaton did picture out Homer in his strains and other Poets a supping up what he so exuberously vomited out Neither need we answer him with much more then the German Min. wrote in his Study when the Devil did disturb him and look over his shoulder But the Son of God came to dissolve all the works of darkness which his enemy no sooner read but vanished Now to conclude with Mr. B. for Mr. H. I met with but in the way with his Mummers and those that ride in post use to take fresh horses for present Service but look no more after them thus does Mr. B. make use of Mr. H. no otherwise I would if he were capable of hearing me for the noise of DRVMS assure him that not a desire to rake into any Mans failings having so many of mine own by which the Lord is pleased to keep me most busie at home under the sence and burthen of them or to pick out the evils without due
now they are this will one day appear when we are a little wiser and better skilled in the state of the whole body And if Cor as Arist. will have it be à Currendo we can tell you that no men in England did more if so much move run write meet Counsel pray sit up night and day to effect your return into the Places of Trust where you now are then those whom you grieve slight frown upon and do least for in point of justice Conscience and encouragement Now this is grievous and must needs prove dangerous to the whole at the last to see no better an understanding or correspondence kept up between the natural faculties and the nervous or spirituous viz. the Liver Heart and Head of the Commonwealth i. e. in the common or natural rights and in the special and spiritual rights concerns of Christ and the people until which the Canker-worm of faction will be sure to eat into the most excellent parts and life of the Commonweal Now when this inward means of setling all viz Natural Animal or Political and vital motions of the Commonwealth as men as Magistrates as Saints in a good correspondency and consistency together in the state and constitution of the whole body comes to be effected then the outward means may be used to good purpose viz. such as these are Sage-water or wise Counsels and Reasonings and Herb-of-grace which through corruption is called Rue or godly and gracious reasonings and White Wine or Cheary hearty reasoning well-boilded untill the scum be off and it be cleared from all frothiness and dregs And if you will you may mix therewith the Burnt-Allom or experiences of them that have passed through the FIRE of sufferings being much refined and the more fitted to kill rather then to keep up this Canker of faction or of Party-interest But it is in vain to use the outward means till the inward have effected or prepared the way of it Both together being the most probable if not infallible means of cure not only of the present faction but a Preservative from the future And this is in a most peculiar manner to be observed in Theocracy under one head Jesus Christ Hos 1. 11 Isa 4. 1. to serve him with one consent Zeph. 3. 9. seeing the Magistrates Trumpet is but one Numb 10. 4. and is made all of one piece or of the whole piece Ver. 2. and not to be bandying of it by Parties and Factions lest they be broken all to pieces Isai 8. 9. 3. CONSIDERATION That the Liberty which loose pens or tongues take to traduce and revile our Worthies in Parliament to the prejudice of the State and hindrance of them in their Publick faculties actions and functions may be provided against According to this Rule the Anatomists make provision against unskilful mangling butchering Akrotomists of which number Mr. P. might Commence Master for his cutting calumniating wounding and slandring The like care is taken in the Colledge of Physicians against Empericks Mountebanks and such like Impostors whose practice is most in undervaluing or vilifying of their BETTERS to gain the more credit to themselves that every stinking stuff might go off for a rare secret or mystery of Art Mr. B. and P. are both guilty of this Arti-tomy or most cutting false accusations So in all concinnate orderly and well-setled Governments or Polit. Bodies was there ever a most vigilant eye over such as in the Lacedemonian Petatism and Roman Turpilian Not but that a just and lawful liberty be admitted to charge any man orderly and before a lawful Authority For Maxime interest Reipubli libertate ut libere possumus civem aliquem accusare c. it concerns the interest and liberty of the Publick very much to maintain that freedom and to keep all men accountable and responsable But yet an unjust unlawful License of Slandring and Butchering the Reputations of our honourable Patriots to the view of the World and shame of our Government must have a remedy suitable to the constitution of it And so in a Theocracy is most excellent Provision made against it as we find not only in the Canons of Israel Exod. 22. 28. Numb 12. 1 9 10 11. but in the New Testament 2 Pet. 2. 10. Jam. 4. 11. Speak not evil of one another brethren he that speaketh evil of his brother and judgeth his brother speaketh evil of the Law and judgeth the Law but if thou judge the Law thou art not a doer but a Judge So Jude 8. 10. we must not speak evil of Dignities or of persons in Government such an ill tendency it hath to the disturbance of the Peace as well as defamation of the State It was an excellent Oration of the P. Scipio to the Senate of Rome upon this Subject in Ans to Q. FABIUS Neutrum faciam P. C. si nullâ aliâ re Modestia certe temperamento linguae adolescens senem vicero c. So that wide meuths may be in fashion in Cumena but not so in the Commonwealth to complain of Freckles as sore as of Plague-spots which some do very indiscreetly 4. Consideration That the Lapse of the Commonwealth into a Kingdom so much threatned from Causes inward and outward requires the utmost skill wisedom care and vigilance that can be to keep it off and to secure it from the Causes of it How agreeable and obliging this Rule of preventing a Lapse is for the perfect Sanity and Recovery of the Body is obvious from the daily practice of all skilful Chirurgeons Anatomists and Physicians who ought to take as much care and use as much judgement to keep off the Lapse as to recover the Patient of a dangerous Disease and this is usually by an Universal Evacuation of those vitious humors out of the Body that caused the Distemper that so the same peccant malignant spirits may neither revive return nor yet retire into any place of the same body be it the remotest and so the Body will be the better secured both from the reversion and revulsion of those morbifick Causes And it is as necessary in the body Politick to be observed and preserved if we value the examples of the wisest men that ever laid a Common-wealth or serv'd in it Zaleucus for the Locrians Archytas for the Tarentines Solon for the Athenians Bias and Thales for the Ionians Gleobulus for the Rhodians so Charondas Socrates Xenophon a many others which Thucydides recounts in Hist l. 3. particularly when the Mityl●ans left the Athenians and in later Republ. what extraordinary care was alwaies taken to keep off a defection we find by the abundance of terse and quick Orations made by P. Scipio to 's Souldiers but especially M. T. Cicero in the Roman Senate and to the People after Caesar was slain when he moved for an Amnesty for Brutus Cassius and others that were fled into
the Capitol and in his Orations against Catiline his Philippicks against M. Antony And de Lege Agrariâ against P. Servilius Rullus the Tribune and others to all which we might add Brutus's practice to prevent the Lapse by obliging the Romans in an Abjuration of KINGS and so they disposed of all the Crown-Lands to the Publick sale and tore down Tarquin's statues The like did the Hollanders by an Oath of Abjuration and the like did you before the late Apostacy but alas alas though this shews your care yet somewhat more must go to shew your skill before you perfectly cure us of this disease or of the danger of it which in the judgement of some of your mourning friends can never be by Mr. P's B's or H's Advice nor so long as the very same Humors and some of the most dangerous remains of the late Apostacy are so far from being evacuated and expulsed that they are returned again into their former Places and Capacities yea seated about in several and some in the eminentest parts of the whole body which are shrewd Symptomes of our returning again to folly if the Lord prevent not for in a course of Reason what will the aforesaid outward means signifie if these inward causes shall remain Corruptioni conservatio est contraria saith Arist. Not that the Parliament ought to use the utmost rigor or severity in all cases of mal-administration or the like This Austerity in the Gracchi's Livy tells us did keep up the deadly feud between the People and the Senators of Rome till the Rupture of a down-right War And indeed Cleon's Oration for the utmost severity upon the Apostates from the Commonwealth of Athens viz. the Mitylenaeans after they were brought under Vt omnes Mitylenaei Puberes capitis supplicio afficerentur Venderentur pro Mancipiis conjuges liberi that the very flower and Cavalry of them be wholly cut off their wives and children sold for slaves c. was as quickly revoked by others for the utmost lenity and clemency they could shew them that did consist with the safety and tranquillity of the Commonwealth when they saw the inconvenience of extremity on either part in another Oration At nos nunc contriarium faciemus si liberos homines qui indomiti repetiverunt libertatem rursus oppressos crudeliter puniamus Oportebat autèm non post Defectionem in homines liberos saevitiam exercere sed ante eos valdè custodire cavere ne consilia talia instituant post recuperationem quam minime eis hoc delictum exprobare But now let us do the contrary if they who were so unruly have repented and re-petitioned or desired their liberties as frée-men in the Commonwealth we may let them have them and if they offend again may punish them the more severely But it did not so much behove us after their defection or Apostacy to be cruel to them that are free-men but before rather to beware and watch lest such Counsels should establish them in their way then after their recovery to upbraid them with their Apostacy And the like Counsel was given about others whom the Athenians decreed should loose a finger or a thumb of their right hands for their defection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they might be disabled from using a spear against them yet able to work or Row with their Oares 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. but the Mitylenians were worse used and their youth slain So that such severity we abhor but withall we wish that the Parliament would be wary if not weary of them that yet do and will do what they can retain the same spirit of malignancy and Malevolence to the Cause and suffering servants of God that they had before so as to eye them diligently lest they settle and involve a Lapse to the Commonwealth either by revuision or reversion For what Physician to this body Polit. that sees not these the very signs of a Lapse into the late or like disease or Apostacy which arose up in this very manner from the same seat of black choler and shall we ever forget by what steps their late General mounted to the top of temptation and slept upon the top of a Mast Prov. 23. 34. when he had procured that Act of Indempnity and gotten an interest in that Party and is not this this over-iudulgence of vitious corrupt and inimical spirits in the body that which hath shortned the lives of many excellent Commonwealths was not the Roman Republick in continual fluctuations motions and a thousand hazards daily of being destroyed by the Tarquinian Parties keeping up an interest in the Commonwealth opposite to the interest of the Commonwealths and of all Governments they are most alterable and unstable Arist lib. 5. c. 12. that nourish such spirits and humors as are all for a Single Person and Ran-counter the true state of the Commonwealth to effect it So in Corinth it is true Cypselus was the longer up through his interest and favour which he had with the People as a Popular man and Periandrus his son after him being he was a brave Souldier and kept the Sword girt about him but Pisistratus who succeeded him was twice driven out of his Government and the People restless till they had secured themselves from the like attempts of a Single Person So among the Syracusans some had a mind to keep up the interest of a Single Person which the Commonwealth could not endure and until secured from such attempts was never without commotions particularly by Hieron and Gelon the last of whom got in for seven years and the first for ten years and all that ever after that attempted it brevi tempore duraverunt saith the Historian were but shot-lived How many instances might I give besides to secure us from the Lapse by a rout of those malevolent humors Heterogenean spirits and inward causes which endanger the Commonwealth and are inconsistent with it at least from PLACES most considerable or neer the heart of the Commonwealth until which no outward means will or can be a Preservative sufficient And as in Politicks so in Theocracy it is a sure Rule and requires the highest diligence industry and insight that can be Josh 24. 22 23 24. 2. Chron. 15. 2. and the promise is Dan. 2. 44. His kingdom shall never be destroyed nor left to other people Because Prov. 17. 15. He that justifies the wicked and condemneth the just even they both are an abomination to the Lord. Besides the saddest Tragedies we might tell you amongst men have had their rise from an over-indulging I mean nourishing and impowering inimical spirits in the Commonwealth as of Brutus's sons for his fathers sake Maelius and Manlius and so Sylla and Marius and a many others in the Roman Republick besides Agathocles in Sicily Cosmos and Savaranola in Florence Castrucio in Luca and of late years it is observable how the Jesuites served the King of France Hen.
4. who to gratifie the Pope and the People recalled the Jesuites that were before exiled and a monument of it set up for posterity into that Nation again by the Parliament of Paris but to his own cost for they stabb'd him quickly so dangerous is a Lapse or a Revocation of them again into trust that are or ought to be evacuated the Body Wherefore a Commonwealth in aequali must first be considered ex quali as to the quality of them that rule and are intrusted in it and not first ex quanto as Mr. H. and others would if ever we mean to keep it stable sound and immovable in it's foundation and constitution 5. Consideration That all extremities be wisely avoided and particularly this of falling into an Ochlocraty by flying out of an Oligarchy pretended As this Rule of Mediocrity is requisite in the Anatomist to make a curious and compleat Section so in the Physician as to every Potion he gives the Patient so corrected and composed as may at once both kill the Disease and keep up the spirits So in Politicks it is the Golden Rule and that which saith Arist Polit. lib. 4. c. 12. hath ever been the Cause of the long continuance of a Commonwealth Mediocritate quadam durationis causa fuit and it is observable all the time that Corinth flourished it was said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to administer a most righteous and Moderate Government as Ovid saith Medio tutissimus ibis Now it is very often that a sickly or distempered bodie doth fall out of one extremity into another out of one passion humour or danger into another Incidit in Scyllam qui vult vitare Charibdim so to shun the Sands OCEANA would cast us upon the Rocks in his Platforme or for fear a few should Rule us he would to run wide enough flinch us quite out of the way and put it into the hands of the meer Multitude or Confusion together without discrimination of friends and enemies Whereas an Oligarchy indeed is not meant the Rule of a few as p. 76. but the Tyranny of a few as in the Triumvirs and Decemvirs of Rome whom Livy describes lib. 2. to have been rather Butchers then Rulers Tormentors then Magistrates keeping up a Monarchick-interest and spirit repugnant and repudiant to a Free-state so that Mr. H. and those friends so afraid of Oligarchy would do well to tell us if such a thing rightly defined be in being or no amongst us Such were the thirty Tyrants or Oligarchy in Athens rising from the corruption of a Free-state who to use the Historians own words Non solum Improbos ac Seditiosos è medio repellerent sed etiam bones maximè ditiores aut necarent aut ex urbe repellerent were so cruel and unjust that not only wicked and seditions but good men and the best were cut off or banish'd which made Socrates complain so to Antisthenes of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. When he saw so many men of repute and worth rich and of great esteem in the Commonwealth to be made away insnared or cruelly slain by the ill Government of the thirty Tyrants he said to Antisthenes Now brother let it not trouble us that we have hunted after nothing great or considerable in our kind of life seeing such Tragedies are daily perpetrated and bleeding before our eyes Such a Government of a few or Tyranny rather was an Oligarchy indeed which MALICE it's self cannot say of this Parliament or of any now in Power This was that which Theramenes one of the thirty a wise and prudent man did oppose very elegantly and gallantly hortari collegas suos caepit ut moderate non insolenter concessâ sibi potestate uterentur sed eam ob causam à Critia apud collegas reliquos accusatus fuit quasi perfide ageret 30. Tyrannorum proderet causam partes populi tueretur ideoque puaiendus è medio tollendus esset c. and began to exhort his colleagues that they would use the power granted them moderately and not so imperiously but for this cause was the good man accused by Critia to the rest as if he had done perfidiously betrayed the cause of the thirty Tyrants or Oligarchy in defending the Peoples Rights and Liberties and therefore would have had him punished and put to death But his Oration and Theramenes his defence though worth our reading I think not fit to commend to writing but refer to lib. 2. Xenoph. Junii orat 3. pt p. 29 30 31 32 33. The main Argument being taken from the example of the Lacedem Ephors By all which we finde an Oligarchy far different from what good people are apt to take it and so through mistake to hazard us with a meer confusion or Ochlocraty i. e. the Tyrannical and unruly spirit of the Multitude which hath no more mercy nor bounds in it then the Sea when broken loose And this the sad experience of old Rome hath left upon Record the people in the days of the Decemviri to avoid that Oligarchy ran into it like mad committing the most flagitious outrages of any that they might be revenged upon them of the Oligarchy And in the State of Florence one Soderino and some others kept themselves up in a Monarchick spirit of Oligarchy over the people which to avoid they ran into Tumults and fell at last like the Flounder out of the dish into the fire into a remedy as bad or worse then the disease by calling in the Spaniards It is out of doubt that an Ochlocraty is little better then a daily Massacre of the most eminent Worthies that the Commonwealth has and it saddens my Spirits to see how eager upon Mr. H. his Principles some are to put it on under a pretended danger of an Oligarchy In Theocracy there is nothing more obvious obnoxious or liable to disturb the Peace and order of the Commonwealth and it occasion'd that notorious Rebellion of Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16. 2 3. who with two hundred and fifty others in anger like the Secluded Members of the chief rose up against Moses and Aaron c. as against an Oligarchy saying Ye take too much upon you seeing all the Congregation are holy every one of them So that they fell into such an Ochlocraty as cost not only the two hundred and fifty dear but the lives of 14700. in the tumult by the hand of the Lord against them so little pleasure hath he in such extremities and under the colour of flying from an Oligarchy to involve us in a worse 6. Consideration That you be exceeding wary how far you relie upon that broken reed of REASON of STATE or trust to that deceitful BOW either against your enemies or for the Cause and Adherents thereof seeing it has destroyed so many that have gone before you We mean not here the Publick Reason or right reason Reason it 's
de civitate ex turpiter enim loquendi licentia sequitur turpiter facere potissimum igitur statim à pueris neque dicant neque audiant quicquam turpe c. Obscene naughty words actions or any such filthy thing that would not be approved or admitted in the good Government of a City or a Commonwealth must not here be suffered for if they take a liberty to speak evilly they will quickly take it to do evilly And therefore of all things this must be most strictly eyed in children brought up for a Christian Commonwealth that they neither speak any thing nor hear any thing that is filthy or shameful if any do that they be forthwith punished fined or degraded their honour and put into a more servile seat office and capacity Many such Rules might be given in the education of youth that a Commonwealth of all Governments may be the most destreable to them and they see it to be their very Interest indeed to keep up that Government in opposition not only to Charles Stuart as it is de facto offered in the late Book call'd Interest will not Lie at whose Author I had almost said Scripta pudet recitare c. but to any Single Person or Family whatsoever nunc adhibe puro Pectore verba puer nunc te melioribus offer 8. Consideration That a wide and welcome door may be set open and kept so to the merit of those Persons who climb up into the Chair of honour and dignity of the Commonwealth by steps of publick virtue wisdom fidelity fortitude and ability That this Rule is observed by the masters of Anatomy Physicks and other Sciences we all know platting wreathes of honour upon the heads of the most deserving able and experienced in those faculties and he must be as monstrously ignorant of History as of the Minerval that knows not this to be the very PATH in all Politicks and well-govern'd Commonwealths aut virtus Nomen inane est Aut decus pretium rectè petit experiens vir Seeing honours and places were not exposed to sale or given away by favour but purchased and possessed by virtue and merit to the Great Renowne of those Nations and Common-wealths As first among the Greeks men of mean parentage and of extreme poverty most of them that were raised meerly by merit to the highest pitch of Honour and preferment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The best and most famous of all the Grecians were very low and mean as Aristides renowned at home and abroad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Epaminondas a General of the Thebans against the Lacedemonians so low in the world that when his Garment was mendding or at the Fullers he was glad to lie in bed all day-long for want of another to put on So Phocion who when Alexander sent him an hundred Talents ask'd the reason of it the Messenger said Because of all the Athenians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he thinks thee alone to be the honest and good man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then saith he let him suffer me to be such a one and to keep so for I scorne his Bribes Thus Pelopidas the Theban Lamachus the Athenian Socrates Ephialtes and a many others that all rose into honour by merit and exceeding worth The like we find in the Roman Commonwealth as Attilius Regulus Quinctus Cincinnatus Paul Aemylius Lucius Tarquin not the Tyrant Horatius Cocles Fabricius and abundance more then came into request and renowne by meer worth and excellency for Publick-spiritedness and service being men of very mean descent and estates if any And that this is the Rule in a godly Commonwealth or Theocracy we have it highly exemplified in the holy Scriptures as 1 Chron. 11. 6. And David said Whosoever smiteth the Jebusites fi●st shall be chief and Captain So 2 Sam. 23. 8. to the end of the Chapter all Davids Worthies and honourable ones were such as won their honour and preferment by merit and worth It is observed that Moses Numb 3. 38. when he setled the People in eight Wards as the Hebrews say in order and dignity did not so much as prefer his own Sons into any high places so much respect he had to worth and dignity in the Commonwealth And Nehemiah Chap. 7. 2. would not give his Brother Hananiah a Commission but for this that he was a faithful man and feared God above many By this Rule all such Lori-pedanean Parasites pitiful Time-servers and splayfooted Suitors for Places or preferment upon the account of kindred friendship interest in persons or any thing else but worth and honour should be sent back re infectâ for a better Testimonial then that in Prov. 30. 20. She wipeth her mouth and saith What evil have I done and by the Parliaments most excellent Vote to be otherwise qualified which O! that it were put in practice and written upon a Pillar of Marble Luxuriantia compescet nimis aspera sano Levabit cultu virtute carentia tollet to put an end to our Controversie raise up the Renown of our Nation and open the door of preferment to the faithful of the Land to the depression of Vice and Luxury but to the highest pitch and emulation of Virtue and Desert Psal 101. 3 6. Mine eyes shall be upon the faithful of the land that they may dwell with me Some there be like Heart of Oke have stood to it in all turns for the Cause and have not warped in the least Now shall our Renowned SENATORS make a staff of Osiers to lean upon that will bend any way or are little worth Time will come When time shall be no more Rev. 10. 6. this may be sad to them that serve the Time but sweet to them that serve Eternity How can ye believe saith Christ Joh. 5. 44. which receive honour one of another and seek not the honour that cometh from God only Virtus repulsae nescia sordidae Intaminatis fulget honoribus Nec sumit aut ponit secures Arbitrio Popularis aurae 9. Consideration That the temperature of this Body Politick or the Commonwealth may be such as that the spirit of Tyranny and injustice may not pass out of one forme into another to persecute the people or any of the parts with either in Civil or Religious matters For as in Anatomy the body is to be opened according to the Structure conformation and constitution of every part wherein as the substance is considered both from the forme and matter of it by sensible qualities so also is the Temper that depends upon and seats in substance in all which Mr. P's Anatomy is most defective So in Physicks the whole body as I said before is the Patient and not this or that part only as Mr. B. makes it now as a disease may be driven out of one part of the body into another where it may as certainly kill it as before So it
is in the BODY POLITICK And of this had Athens the sad experience in the Oligarchy of the thirty as I said before for when they laid aside Kingly forme as Tyrannical they let the same spirit rise up again in the thirty to their cost Also when Tarquin was turn'd out of Rome and the people had declared for a Free-State they wanted wisdom to evacuate the Monarchick spirit quite out of the whole body but they let it rise again in another forme of Government viz. the Consulary so that saith Livy Lib. 2. Regni quidem Nomen sed non regia potestas Româ fuit expulsa The name of a King and Kingdom was expelled with him but alas yet Kingly Power and spirit was retained in the CONSULS whom he calls Carnifices non Consules rather Hangmen and Tormentors of the people and so tells us Consules immoderatâ infinitâque Pratestate omnes Metus Legum in Populum c. the Consuls by an immoderate and boundless Power turn'd all the dread and fears of the Laws upon the People And after that they had laid aside this forme succeeded the Decemviri in the same spirit of Tyranny and imposing still keeping up a Monarchick spirit and power of presecuting And after that was laid aside arose the Consuls with Dictators and also Tribunes as bad as any before So that it is not the laying aside of any one forme of Government so much as of the spirit Tyranny injustice private interest and self-seeking in every forme seeing Potentes Potenter torquebuntur preferring the Publick good and freedom of the sound body of Adherents to the Cause above life ease honour or any thing And to make up a Theocratick Temper of Government it is of all things expected both from God and men that in every forme iustice righteousness and freedom be administred by the Plumb-line Amos 7. 7 8. and the measuring-line Zach. 2. 1. to all the people suitable to the nature of the establishment Isai 9. 7. and 1. 26 27. and 32. 1. and 58. 2. and 59. 4. Psal 85. 11. and 97. 2. Gen. 18. 19. Deut. 33. 21. Eccles 5. 8. Prov. 8. 5. and 21. 3. Jer. 31. 23. c. So Amos 5. ●4 and 15. Hate the Evil and love the Good and establish judgement in the Gate seeing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Caesar himself was then glad to frequent the gates of Aristones and Pompey of Cratippus prefessing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they desired not so much to Rule as to rule well worthily and with righteousness 10. Consid That the special means for preservation of what is recovered be kept up and maintained seeing we have as much need of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helps to keep health as of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 helps to procure health to the Commonwealth when it is in danger This is one of the special Ends of Physick so that the Patient must be as careful after he is recovered of his Diet Air Motion Rest and of the Temper of his Body and Pathemata or passions of his mind as may be so it is in the Commonwealth it is not enough to have health but to hold it to be re●●ored to it but to be secured in it and corroborated with suitable Aliments such as consubstantiate into the whole with temperate clear and nitid air and moderate motions such as may conserve health in an almost recovered Patient with such rest and refreshing of the spirits of the Commonwealth as will further the concoction of the whole body And not to fall in again or feed upon the very same corrupt hurtful and unwholesome trash as hath spoiled the bloud endanger'd the life of the Commonwealth or generated maligne humors in it The Locrians observing how many sickned and were in woful hazard with a wine they drank made a Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that if any one of the Locrians sick should drink any of that Wine yea although he were in a way of recovery he should forthwith be put to death because he did it without command So there must be a most strict order to keep us off of that wine which did lately poyson so many in the Apostacy and as Aristotle saith to the very Case Respublicas autem videmus specie differre alias esse posteriores alias priores Quae enim aberraverunt ac prolapsae sunt necesse est ut posteriores sint integris incorruptis c. Commonwealths we see to differ in specie some are so at first and some at last for those Commonwealths that have Apostatized slipped erred and fallen it is necessary that at last or after that they consist of such as are sound untainted intire uncorrupt and faithful both as to persons and things or else they are never like to stand long Now this is the Way to preserve the health after it is recovered and restored Cicero tells us in orat 1. in Catil about the end that the danger of a Commonwealth is more within it then without it or from open invasions So orat 2. Intus insidiae sunt intus inclusum periculum est intus est host is c. So orat 1. Periculum autem residebit erit inclusum penitus in Venis atque in Visceribus Rei Publ. ut saepe homines aegri morbo gravi cum aestu febrique janctantur si aquam gelidam biberint primo relevari videntur deinde multo gravius vehementiusque afflictantur sic hic Morbus qui est in Republ. c. the danger of the Commonwealth lies close in the veins or bowels of it As oftentimes a man that is sick drinks that which may a little refresh for present but inrage for future the Disease so it is with the Commonwealth The evil and danger of this in a Theocratick Government is evident by the Lords own complaints of Israel after he had restored that State Psal 78. 8 9 10. 36 37 41. again and again so Hos 7. 1. When I would have healed Israel then the iniquity of Ephraim was discovered and the wickedness of Samaria c. And therefore seeing you are made whole again Sin no more lest a worse thing befal you Narrares Medicis quòd quanto plura parasti Tanto plura Cupis Nulline Saterier audes Si vulnus tibi MONSTRATA radice vel Herbâ Non fieret levius 11. Considerat That it is very dangerous for a Common-wealth to be in a fluctuating and uncertain State of Establishment or proclive to any or many alterations either in the forme or FOVNDATION of it As in Anatomy there is a Nimium an over-doing as well as underdoing which puts the part as well as body into many or any shapes and not into it's proper neither according to the Structure conformity nor Constitution or Composition of it neither in a Mathematical sence in a Coherence of Quantities nor yet in a Physical in the adherence of qualities use and union of life with the
with the Outward and also where the Outward is deficient 2. The Kingdom-Parl in An. 1642. did go by this very Rule 3. The Inward Rule of Righteousness hath the Right hand of the outward as the Root of it and the Fundamental Right Reason is the Law and Rule of Righteousness Laws are silent among unreasonable Creatures for want of this inward Rule 4. Both inward and outward together where they agree But where the outward fails not to use the inward Rule is to reject the Government of the Lord. M. B's 10th Prop. in fallacia Homonymiae His 10. Pill or Diacatholicon to haste them to the stool of Repentance Vide my Plain Case of the Common-wealth neer the Desper Gulf of the common w● Mr. Harrington introduced by M. B under colour of ingaging against an OLIGARCHY Mr. Har. and the Petition of July 6. to the Parliament The Preamble of that Petition upon a Prolepsis and Presumption for the Parliament provided for a Free-State and laid a foundation for it in several Acts of Parliament Dangerous to insinuate that the Parliament are SETLED on no Foundation of GOV as well as Erroneous M. T. Cic. in M. Ant. Philip. 5. 1. Two Houses of Parliament under what names soever is inconsistent without settlement laid by Parliament Anno 1648. Two wayes to destroy the commonwealth The Danger of a Single Person to rise as a Third Estate or to Head those two Bodies Ex Heraclid de polit Athen. The Pet. strikes at the cause 1. In Civils giving away our cause to the Kings party or spirit of the Nation This agrees with M. B's Prop. to the Army Heathens deny such a foundation of Common-wealth as too evil for them Lib. 5. c. 2. de Carthag Republ The Conquered have lost their Rights His Reason for it why they have not equal priviledge with others Unruly spirits of men not to be kept in like Italian Cats to turn Spits To put the Government into the spirit of the Nation is destructive to the Cause Then the Rotation will be a meer Rottation to Parl. adherents and the Cause Contrary to all true formes of a Common-waalth to lay the equality as Mr. H does Some under tempt of running out of one extream into another from Oligarchy into Ochlocraty What Oligarchy is and what it is not The Saints to Rule how not and how They admit not so much in the foundation and equality of it as the Heathens Arist Pol. l. 3. c. 3. What Government wicked and unstable Equality to lie in the multitude or meer number is injurious to the Commonwealth This will certainly rob us of all at last Lib. 1. Prolus 2. Host In M. Anton Philip. 2. 2. Part of the Petition wrongs us in our cause which requires equilibrity at Gods worship The danger of committing to Parliaments chose by the spirit of the Nation the worship of God National Their two Expedients defective in diverse particulars The Order of Their Rotation And in the Timing of it unequal Arist Polit. Lib. 3. Chap. 9. Danger of an Ostracisme by this Rotation Mr. Har's Cake made by this boulting Oceana p. 13. His Platforme would more gratifie Popery Athiesm and Paganism then the Platforme of a Christian Commonwealth * His holy Commonw from p. 224. to p. 240. What our Governors in Parl. once thought of those called Sectaries the poor despised servants of Christ The Author 's impartial and respective close with Mr. Baxter Counsel to Mr. B to scum his own POT first Ezek. 24. 6 11 12. The most probable way to reconcile us ALL IN ONE The present Cloud over us what it is made up off Jer. 8 20. What Enemy is most dangerous The Authors Address on the behalf of Christ and his interest in the Nations Prov. 29. 26. The first Ground of this humble Application and warning unto them Our readiness to give up our lives to the Publick service with all alacrity 2. Ground is the Enemies Art or endeavour to make a Game out of your hand 3. Ground If this cause miscarry Christ Gospel and all suffer Slavery 4. Ground is the Enemies use of these Princip here opposed to intricate the Counc of Parl. to carry on their work with 1. Mr. P's Perditory Anatomy 2. Mr. B's Purgatory-Art 3. Mr. H's Pulsatory-Method By the 1. sort the Repub. is handled quatenus immedicabilis By the 2. sort quatenus est Sanabilis By the 3. sort quatenus est Mutabilis Arist lib. 4. c. 1. 12 praevious Considerations presented to the. Parl. for Settlement 1. For an equal certain Balance 1. By Mr. P's Rules of Anatomy 2. Mr. B's Rules of Physick 3. Mr. H' s Rules of Politick constit Vid. Case of Common-wealth neer the Gulph of Common wo. 4. In our humble tender of a Theocratick Balance 2 Consideration to avoid faction 1. This Rule agrees with true Anat. or cutting up a body 2. With true Physicks and methods of cure or recovery of a body 3. It is a special Rule in Politicks and Governments Few can find the Art of curing a faction M. P' s Prop. M. B' s Prop. M. H' s Prop. The Authors Prop. or way to cure a faction 1. The inward means to cure the Canker of faction * In plain Case of Common-wealth neer gulph of common wo p 20 22 23 The Liver goes along with the Head and Heart of the Commonw altogether A Symptome of danger to see so little Harmony between the Naturals Animals and Spirituals of the Commonw or men as men Mag. as Mag. and Saints as Saints all in their places and yet joynt in the Commonw 2. Outward means of curing this Canker of faction is by wise godly hearty sober experimental reasonings Both the inward and the outward must go together 4. It is a most peculiar rule in Theocracy to avoid faction or Parties 3. Consid to stop the horrid flux or looseness of pens and tongues 1 Anat. care to keep out manglers 2. Physitians care to keep out Empericks 3. Politicians care in all Governments Vide Thucid Hist li. 3 Livii lib. 28. Tacit. Hist lib. 15. 4. In a Theocratick constitution are excellent Laws against it Livii Hist lib. 28. 4. Consid to secure us from a Lapse 1. A Rule with Chirurgions Anatomists 2. With Physicians which Mr. B. practises contrary unto 3. With all the wisest Statesmen Grecians and Romans Ex. 11. lib. Polybii Ex. l. Dion Rom. Hist 45. Livii lib. 28. Not only by outward means but by taking away the inward causes Lib. 5. c. 4. Thucyd. Hist l. 3. Sad symptomes of a Lapse into the late disease Till the inward causes be removed the outward means will never cure us in the Commonw 4. In Theocracy special care to secure us from the Lapse 5. Consid all extremities avoided both an Oligarchy and Ochlocraty Mediocrity in Anatomy and in Physick and in Politicks Danger in running from one extremity to fall into another Oligarchy in the meaning of it is the