Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n body_n soul_n whole_a 1,465 5 5.4082 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25844 The armies vindication of this last change wherein, is plainly demonstrated, the equity, power and right of the army to settle these nations upon the foundations of righteousnesse and freedome : together, with answers to the most material objections made against them. 1659 (1659) Wing A3719; ESTC R13587 14,976 25

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

s beyond question to ask by what law or Authority the Army could dissolve the Parliament they were obedient while they set them in Power over them but when they thought of changing their Masters they might do it without breach of any law where there is no law there is no transgression And had the good People known the bottom of the Parliaments proceedings and how they were about to espouse a National Interest intending to have thrown the Government upon the spirit of the Nation no question but all unbyassed good men in the Nation would have concurred as much with the Army in this last breach as in the former but here one precipitant action draws on another and many mens judgments were surprised in this last action of dissolving the Parliament more than in the former But when good men have their eyes open to see that their Lives and Liberty their safety and security is wrapt up with the Armies Interest as ever the peoples did in King and Parliaments No question but as one piece as one body as one soule and spirit they will agree to such a Government as may best secure their own safety and the good of the whole Nation That which causes men of carnall and earthly minds to rage and fret and to strive like a Bull in a net because we setle not upon a worldly foundation a Constitution that may take in the spirit of the Nation in all its filth and corruption in all its malignity and enmity that we may not make up a Heterogeneall body a mixture of Iron and Clay What were this but to return to Aegypt to the Oynions and Garlick a going back to the house of bondage to be intangled with the customes and manners of Aegypt this were but to be brought to the place where we first begun and so to suffer loss yea all the price of Blood and Treasure the fruit of all the Prayers and Teares that have been spent but the way is to go forward we must to Canaan the Land of peace and truth of righteousness and justice and short of this we must not sit down Object 2. In the second place Some charge the Army of a second Apostacy and back sliding which they seemed of late to repent off and that they confessed they lost the presence of God ever since they first interrupted the Parliament Answ That the Presence of God went a long time with the Actions of the Parliament this is acknowledged by all good people as well as by the Army and this was one of the grounds of the Armies inviting it to sit this last time but that they lost the presence of God by breaking the Parliament or ever since they were broken this was never acknowledged by the Army they must then have been fals to their own experience for all know that the good people did as much rejoyce at the Parliaments first breaking as at any act of Providence that had been done amongst us and the presence of God appeared much more in the time of the Little Assembly than in the latter end of the long Parliament But the Apostasies and backslidings the Army did bewaile was for dancing after the pipe of a single Person and together therewith espousing a worldly Interest and so building up the broken walls of the City Jericho that they made them a Calf in the Wildernesse this was the sin of the then General and the Army though most of the Army were passive as to the setting up of such a Single Power But the last act of Apostacy in the Army was to give a new Resurrection to this Parliament which was so signally disowned of God and his people long before not but there were good things and good men found in it but what was this but to return to Aegypt for help Why doe we speak so high for a Parliament is it not a worldly Constitution a Body sitted for a King the Interest of the Nation not of the people of God and every whit as Babylonish as Kingship it self at best the most of them are men of estates under some prudent qualifications This Constitution hath been excellent in its season and while there was life and power in it we could not but honour it but that having been the hand that brought us out of Aegypt into the Wildernesse it must die at mount Nebo it cannot carry us into the land of Rest and Settlement to strive about it is to raise the body of Moses to honour a dead Carcasse to repair a broken Idoll that can no longer be the Interest of the kingdome of Christ or his people I would not be mistaken as if I had not great respects for those Members in this last Parliament that were worthy I speak not against their Persons but am only shewing the weaknesse of a worldly Constitution I do desire in my heart that those who were Members would come a little beyond that old form of Government and espouse themselves with the Cause they have heretofore managed and to act under such a Form of Government that Providence shall designe which by love and union may prove much more comfortable and safe both for them and us Object 3. Again it s commonly said that the Army is bound to subject to such as raise monies and pay them Answ For Answer hereunto It s well known that this Army for the most part of them took up Arms out of Judgment and Conscience and not as a Mercenary Army but who goeth a warfare at his own charge If the Pay of the Army should make them serve the wils and lusts of men and let go the Interest of good men they could not answer the end of their pay it is rather the end should commen surate the action and will more doe so than the means can direct to the end and it is not so considerable who pays the Army as for the Army to consider wherefore they are paid If they keep their eye to the right end the safety and Liberty of honest men this will more crowne their actions then to serve the humours of such as pay them The Malignant Neuter and malecontent cry out against Taxes excise not so much from the Burthen of them as from their enmity against the Army who are as a girdle of strength to the righteous in the Land and a bank to keep out that sea of misery that an inraged enemy would inflict upon them But when shall we hear any of these men complaine of the corruption of the Courts of Justice or of the oppression of the common Lawyers Who sell the poor for shoos and the needy for silver Little complaint is made of these though I am very confident they pick as much monies out of the pockets of poor people as would in a very great measure maintain the Armies in the three Nations this oppression men love and plead for as being most natural to them as most suitable to an old corrupt interest But I