Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n day_n lord_n see_v 3,711 5 3.5921 3 true
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
A86304 The stumbling-block of disobedience and rebellion, cunningly laid by Calvin in the subjects way, discovered, censured, and removed. By P.H. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1658 (1658) Wing H1736; Thomason E935_3; ESTC R202415 168,239 316

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

majestie and fortified by so many Edicts from the Court of Heaven though sometimes an unworthie person doth enjoy the same and such a one as doth dishonor it by his filthie life Nor may we think because the punishment of licentious Princes doth belong to God that presently this power of executing vengeance is devolved on us to whom no other precept hath been given by God but only to obey and suffer De privatis hominibus semper loquor Nam si qui nunc sint populares magistratus ad moderandum Regum ●libidinem constituti quales olim erant qui Lacedaemoniis Regibus oppositi erant Ephori aut Romanis Consulibus Tribuni Plebis aut Atheniensium Senatui Demarchi qua etiam fortè potestate ut nunc res habent funguntur in singulis Regnis tres Ordines quum primarios conventus peragunt adeo illos ferocienti Regum licentiae pro officio intercedere non veto ut si Regibus impotenter grassantibus humili plebeculae insultantibus conniveant eorum dissimulationem nefariâ perfidiâ non carere affirmem quia populi libertatem cujus se Dei Ordinatione tutores positos norunt fraudulenter produnt But still I must be understood of private persons For if there be now any Popular Officers ordained to moderate the licentiousness of Kings such as the Ephori of old set up against the Kings of Sparta the Tribunes of the people against the Roman Consuls and the Demarchi against the Athenian Senate and with which power perhaps as the world now goes the three Estates are furnished in each several Kingdom when they are solemnly assembled so far am I from hindering them from putting a restraint on the exorbitant power of Kings as their Office bindes them that I conceive them guiltie rather of a perfidious dissimulation if they con●ive at Kings when they play the Tyrants or wantonly insult on the common people in that they treacherously betray the subjects Libertie of which they know they were made guardians by Gods own Ordinance and appointment But this must always be excepted in the obedience which we have determined to be due to the commands of our Governors and first of all to be observed that it draw us not from that obedience which is due to him to whose will all the commands of Kings must be subordinate to whose decrees their strongest mandates must give place and before whose Majestie they are bound to lay down their Scepters For how preposterous were it to incur his anger by our compliance with those men whom we are bound no otherwise to obey then for his sake only The Lord is King of Kings who when he speaks is to be heard for all and above them all We must be subject to those men who have rule over us but in him alone If against him they do command us any thing it is to be of none account Nor in such cases is the dignity of the Magistrate to be stood upon to which no injurie is done if in regard of the more eminent and supreme power of God it be restrained within its bounds Dan. 6. 22. In this respect Daniel denied that he had trespassed any thing against the King in not obeying his prophane and ungodly Edict because the King had gone beyond his proper limits and being not only injurious against men but lifting up his horns against God himself had first deprived himself of all Authoritie The Israelites are condemned on the other side for being so ready to obey their King in a wicked action when to ingratiate themselves with Jeroboam who had newly made the Golden Calves they left the Temple of the Lord and betook themselves to a new superstitious worship And when their Children and posteritie with the like facility applied themselves unto the humors of their wicked Kings the Prophet doth severely rebuke them for it So little praise doth that pretence of modesty deserve to have with which some Court-Parasites do disguise themselves and abuse the simple affirming it to be a crime not to yeeld obedience to any thing that Kings command as if God either had resigned all his rights and interess into the hands of mortal men when he made them Rulers over others or that the greatest earthly power were a jot diminished by being subjected to its Author before whom all the powers of heaven do trembling supplicate I know that great and imminent danger may befall those men who dare give entertainment to so brave a constancy considering with what indignation Kings do take the matter when they once see themselves neglected whose indignation is as the messenger of death saith the wise man Solomon But when we hear this Proclamation made by the heavenly Cryer Act. 5. 29. that we ought to obey God rather then men let this consideration be a comfort to us that then we yeeld that obedience unto God which he looks for from us when we rather choose to suffer any thing then to deviate from the way of godliness And lest our hearts should fail us in so great a business S. Paul subjoyns another motive 1 Cor. 7. 23. that being bought by Christ at so great a price we should not re-inthral our selves to the lusts of men much less addict our selves to the works of wickedness 6. These are the very words of Calvin from which his followers and Disciples most extreamly differ both in their doctrine and their practise First for their practise CALVIN requires that we should reverence and respect the Magistrate for his Office sake a Sect. 22. and that we entertain no other then a fair esteem an honorable opinion both of their actions and their Counsels His followers like filthy dreamers as they are do not only despise dominion b Jude 8. but speak evill of dignities that is to say they neither reverence the persons of their Supreme Magistrate nor regard their Office and are so far from cherishing a good opinion of those higher powers to which the Lord hath made them subject that their hearts imagine mischief against them all the day long and though they see no cause to condemn their actions they will be sure enough to misconstrue the end CALVIN requires that we should manifest the reverence and respect we bear them by the outward actions of obedience c Sect. 23. and to the end that this obedience should proceed from the very heart and not to be counterfeit and false he addes that we commend their health and flourishing estate in our prayers to God d Ibid. His Followers study nothing more then to disobey them in every one of those particulars which their Master speaks of refusing to obey their laws and to pay them tribute and to undergoe such services and burdens as are laid upon them in reference to the publick safety spare not as occasion serves to manifest the disaffection of their hearts by such outward acts as disobedience and disloyalty can suggest
THE STUMBLING-BLOCK OF Disobedience and Rebellion Cunningly laid by Calvin in the Subjects way Discovered Censured and Removed By P. H. ROM 14. 13. Offendiculum fratri tuo ne ponas Let no man put a Stumbling-block or an occasion to fall in his brothers way 1 SAM 24. 6. And David said to his men The Lord forbid that I should do this thing unto my Master the Lords anointed to stretch forth my hand against him seeing he is the anointed of the Lord. LONDON Printed by E. Cotes for Henry Seile over against St. Dunstans Church in Fleet-street 1658. THE PREFACE IT will appear to any who shal read this Treatise that it was written in the times of Monarchical Government but in the later and declining times thereof when the change of that Government was in agitation and in part effected In which respect I doubt not but the publishing of this Discourse at this present time may seem unseasonable unto some and yet it may be thought by others to come out seasonably enough for these following reasons 1. To give warning to all those that are in Supreme Authority to have a care unto themselves and not to suffer any Popular and Tribunitian Spirits to grow amongst them who grounding upon Calvins Doctrine both may and will upon occasion create new disturbances 2. To preserve the Dignity of the Supreme Power in what Person soever it be placed and fix his Person in his own proper Orb the Primum Mobile of Government brought down of late to be but one of the three Estates and move in the same Planetary Sphere with the other two 3. To keep on foot the claim and Title of the Clergy unto the Reputation Rights and Priviledges of the Third Estate which doth of right belong unto them and which the Clergy have antiently enjoyed in all and to this day in most Christian Kingdoms 4. To shew unto the world on whose authority the Presbyterians built their damnable Doctrine not only of curbing and restraining the power of Princes but also of deposing them from their Regal Dignity whensoever they shall please to pretend cause for it For when the Scotch Commissioners were commanded by Queen Elizabeth to give a reason of their proceedings against their Queen whom not long before they had deposed from the Regal Throne they justified themselves by those words of Calvin which I have chosen for the Argument of this Discourse By the authority of Calvin as my Author hath it they endeavoured to prove that the Popular Magistrates are appointed and made to moderate and keep in order the excess and unruliness of Kings and that it is lawful for them to put the Kings that be evill and wicked into prison and also to deprive them of their Kingdoms If these reasons shall not prove the seasonableness of this Adventure I am the more to be condemned for my indiscretion the shame whereof I must endure as well as I can This being said in order to my justification I must add somewhat of the Book or Discourse it self in which the canvassing and confuting of Calvins Grounds about the Ephori of Sparta the Tribunes of Rome and the Demarchi of Athens hath forced me upon many Quotations both Greek and Latine which to the learned Reader will appear neither strange nor difficult And for the sake of the unlearned which are not so well verst and studyed in forein Languages I have kept my self to the direction of St. Paul not speaking any where in a strange tongue without an Interpreter the sense of every such Quotation being either declared before or delivered after it Lastly whereas the Name of Appius Claudius doth many times occur in the History of the Roman Tribunes it is not always to be understood of the same Man but of diverse men of the same Name in their several Ages as the name of Caesar in the New Testament signifieth not one man but three that is to say the Emperor Tiberius in the Gospels Claudius in the Book of the Acts and that most bloudy Tyrant Nero in the Epistle to the Philippians Which being premised I shall no longer keep the Reader in Portch or Entrance but let him take a view of the House it self the several Rooms Materials and Furniture of it long Prefaces to no long Discourses being like the Gates of Mindum amongst the Antients which were too great and large for so small a City The Argument occasion of this following Treatise Joh. Calvini Institution Lib. 4. cap. 20. sect 31. NEque enim si ultio Domini est effrenatae dominationis correctio ideo protinus demandatam nobis arbitremur quibus nullum aliud quam parendi patiendi datum est Mandatum De privatis hominibus semper loquor Nam siqui nunc sint Populares Magistratus ad moderandum Regum libidinem constituti quales olim erant qui Lacedaemoniis Regibu● oppositi erant Ephori aut Romanis Consulibus Tribuni Plebis aut Atheniensium Senatui Demarchi qua etiam forte potestate ut nunc res habent funguntur in singulis Regnis tres Ordines cum primarios Conventus peragunt adeo illos ferocienti Regum licentiae pro officio intercedere non veto ut si Regibus impotenter gr●ssantibus humili plebeculae insultantibus conniveant eorum dissimulationem nefaria perfidia non carere affirmem qua populi libertatem cujus se Dei ordinatione tutores positos norunt fraudulenter produnt NOr may we think because the punishment of licentious Princes doth belong to God that presently this power is devolved on us to whom no other warrant hath been given by God but only to obey and suffer But still I must be understood of private persons For if there be now any popular Officers ordained to moderate the licentiousness of Kings such as were the Ephori set up of old against the Kings of Sparta the Tribunes of the people against the Roman Consuls and the Demarchi against the Athenian Senate and with w ch power perhaps as the world now goes the three Estates are seized in each several Kingdom when they are solemnly assembled so far am I from hindring them to put restraints upon the exorbitant power of Kings as their Office bindes them that I conceive them rather to be guilty of a perfidious dissimulation if they connive at Kings when they play the Tyrants or wantonly insult on the common people in that they treacherously betray the Subjects Liberties of which they knew they were made Guardians by Gods own Ordinance Syllabus Capitum CHAP. I. The Doctrine of Obedience laid down by Calvin and of the Popular Officers supposed by him whereby he overthroweth that Doctrine I THe purpose and design of the work in hand II The Doctrine of Obedience unto Kings and Princes soundly and piously laid down by CALVIN III And that not only to the good and gratious but even to cruel Princes and ungodly Tyrants IV With Answer unto such Objections as are made
been employed in the like affairs under the Gospel of Christ and that too in the best and happiest times of the Christian Church In search whereof it is not to be looked for by the ingenuous Reader that we should aim fo high as the first 300 years after Christs Nativitie The Prelates of the Church were suspected then to have their different aims and interesses from those who had the government of the Civil State and therefore thought uncapable of trust and imployment in it But after that according to that memorable maxime of Optatus Ecclesia erat in Republicâ i Deschismat Den●●●st l 3. the Church became a part of the Common●wealth and had their ends and aims united there followed these two things upon it first that the Supreme Government of the Church depended much upon the will and pleasure of the Supreme Magistrate insomuch as Socrates observeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 k Socrat. Eccl. hist lib. 5. c. 1. that the greatest Councels have been called by their authoritie and appointment And 2 ly that the Governours and Rulers of the Church of God came to have place and power in disposing matters that appertained to the well ordering of the Civil State And this they did not out of any busie or pragmatical desire to draw the cognizance of secular causes into their own hands or to increase their power and reputation with the common people but meerly for the ease and benefit of those who did repair unto them for their help and counsel and to comply with the command of the Apostle who imposed it on them S. Austin tells us of S. Ambrose with how great difficultie he obtained an opportunitie of conversing with him privately and at large as his case required Secludentibus ●um ab ejus aure atque ore catervis negociosorum hominum the multitude of those who had business to him l August Confes l. 6. c. 3. and suits to be determined by him debarring him from all advantages of access and conference Which took up so much of his time that he had little leasure to refresh his body with necessary food or his minde with the reading of good Authors And Posidonius tel●s us of S. Austin causas audisse diligenter piè that he diligently and religiously attended such businesses as were brought before him not only spending all the morning in that troublesome exercise m Posidon in vita August c. 19. but sometimes fasting all day long the better to content the suitor and dispatch the business The like S. Austin tells us of himself and his fellow Prelates first that the Christians of those times pro secularibus causis suis nos non raro quaererent n August in Psalm 1 8. serm 74 Epist 147. did ordinarily apply themselves unto them for the determing of secular causes and cheerfully submitted unto their decisions next that the Prelates did comply with their earnest solicitations and desires therein Tu multuosissimas causarum alienarum perplexitates patiendo o Id. de ope●e Monach c. 29. by intermitting their own studies to ingage themselves in the determining of such secular causes as were brought before them for the contentation of the people and the discharge of their own duty both to God and man And this is that which both S. Ambrose and S. Augustine tell us in their several writings viz. that they did undergoe this trouble for no other reason then out of a conformitie and obedience to the words and intimation of S. Paul 1 Cor. cap. 6. touching the ending of such suits and differences as did arise amongst the Faithful S. Austin saying Constituisse Apostolum talibus causis Ecclesiasticos cognitores p Id. in Psal 118. serm 174. and iisdem molestiis eos affixisse Apostolos q Id. de opere Monach. 29. S. Ambrose that he had undertook the businesses which were brought before him Secundum sacrae formam praeceptionis qua eum Apostolus induebat r Amb. Epist 24. which did impose such a necessitie upon him that he was not able to decline it Both of them doe agree in this and Posidonius doth agree with both in the same particular s Posidon in vita August c. 19. that they were not only warranted but obliged by S. Pauls injunction to undertake the cognizance of such secular causes as were from time to time committed to their care and trust and that they had not done their dutie had they made any scruple of the undertaking But these being only private matters let us next see whether their service was not used in affairs of State and we shall finde that Constantine did always take some Bishops with him when he went to war not only for their ghostly counsel in spiritual matters but for advise in matters which concerned the occasion t Euseb in vita Constant l. 4. c. 54. the prosecution of the war which was then in hand that Ambrose was twice sent Ambassadour from Valentinian the younger to the Tyrant Maximus which he performed to the great contentment of his Prince and the preservation of the Empire u Amb. Epist 27. lib. 5. whereof he gives us an accompt in an express unto the Emperour that when Firmus had rebelled in Africk and saw himself too weak to resist the Forces which were raised against him under Theodosius Antistites ritus Christiani pacem oraturos misit x Ammian Marcel hist l. 29. he sent the African Prelates his Ambassadours to treat of peace that Marutha Bishop of Mesopotamia was in like nature sent to the Court of Persia y Socrat. Eccles hist l. 7. c. 8. in the time of the Emperour Honorius I. as after that Epiphanius Bishop of Ticinum which we now call Pavie employed from the Ligurians to Athalaricus King of the Gothes in Italy from him unto the Court of Burgundie as Cassiodorus and Ennodius doe describe at large that James the godly Bishop of Nisibis a frontier Town against the Persians was also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both Governour of the place and Captain of the Souldiers which were there in Garrison z Theodoret. hist Eccl. l. 2. c. 30. and did most manfully defend it against all the force and fury of the Persian Armies An. 338. or thereabouts and finally which was an argument of great power and trust that the Bishops in Justinians time were by him appointed to oversee the Civil Magistrates and to give notice to the Emperour if they failed in any thing which did concern the Government o● the Estate in their several places of which the very Edicts are still extant in the Book of Novels a Novel 56. in Append. ad Novel 8. 5 The Prelates being grown into this esteem for their integritie and wisdom with the Roman Emperours it is no wonder if they were imployed in the greatest Offices of trust and counsel after the Empire was dismembred and shared betwixt such several Princes as grew