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A46363 Monsieur Jvriev's judgment upon the question of defending our religion by arms, with reflections upon the affairs of England, in his ninth pastoral letter of the third year faithfully translated out of French.; Lettres pastorales addressées aux fidèles de France qui gémissent sous la captivité de Babylon. Année 3. Lettre 9. English Jurieu, Pierre, 1637-1713. 1689 (1689) Wing J1204; ESTC R15972 19,775 36

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divided into divers Parties as it was under Charles I It is apparent that the Anarchical and Independant Party have once gained the power over it so that we might have seen the Nation return to the same Estate it was under Cromwell and perhaps to a worse The King might very possibly have been exposed to the same Miseries which his Father suffer'd The Prince therefore for the Interest of the State for the Interest of the Princesses for his own and also for the King 's could not dispense with putting himself at the head of an Expedition which might have been ruin'd if it had not been govern'd by so great a Soul. And then for the pretended Obligations of Consanguinity they are meer appearances there are Obligations much more indispensable He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me We owe to God to the Laws to Religion more than to our Kindred It had been a cruel piece of Piety to have seen a Church and a Kingdom perish without relieving them for fear of offending one Person with whom we have some relation of Flesh and Bloud I know our Enemies will not scruple saying that it was not Piety but Ambition that gave life to these great Motions which this Great Prince was very sensible of But we who are near him and have known his sentiments for many Years are able to witness two things one is that he is truly touch'd with the Love of God and his Religion The other is that he did not undertake this Enterprize till the last Extremity And we know with the greatest certainty that the English were twenty times refused upon the Proposition which they made because he always hoped that God would open some softer Methods to protect Religion from the Oppression which was prepared for it Those that are near him can witness that there never was a Prince more Zealous and better affected to the Truth The Success which God hath given to his Enterprizes may convince us that he it is whom God is pleased to make use of for accomplishing his great Designs and for the establishment of the True Religion One might further say things much more considerable for Justification of this Great Enterprize with respect both to the Nation and the Prince but time will place them in a better Light and it shall be made known that those who have shed so much Bloud and have had no respect to the Laws of Consanguinity merit not regard upon their account Nevertheless the Prince has and always will have a regard to the King whose Destiny is so much lamented for he has no design against his Person or against his Dignity he would onely take away from him the means of hurting others and of hurting himself But this Unfortunate Prince by following the Inspirations of that unhappy Genius which hath animated him for so many Years has cast himself into a Precipiece and saught his Safety by forsaking his Palace and his Kingdom without having any just cause for it It cannot be said with any truth that the King of England could observe either in the Conduct of the Prince or the Lords or the Bishops or the People any design to attack his Person his Life his Liberty or his Dignity On the contrary every thing was so disposed that Affairs might be treated of with the greatest sweetness In the first Address which was presented to the King after the Prince's arrival by fourteen or fifteen of the Lords Ecclesiastical and Temporal they promise after they have entreated for a free Parliament to serve him with all their power and the power of their Friends And in the last great Council held Decemb. 9th constituted of all that were considerable at London it is certain that the King was only askt to call a free Parliament but this was done with such respectful and tender Expressions that 't is evident the Nation had no design against the Person or Dignity of the King. And the King having agreed upon the meeting of a Parliament upon the 25th of January the Prince accepted of it upon the most reasonable condition that can be imagined Which was that neither his own nor the King's Army should come within forty Miles of the place where the Parliament sate Here it appear'd that the King had no sincere intention in calling the Parliament and that it was only to gain time and to receive the foreign Assistance which he expected These Succours failing and his own Troopes declaring that they could not fight against the Laws and Religion of their Country he was resolv'd suddenly to play the part of quitting his Throne Choosing rather not to Reign than not to Reign over the Laws and to take the advantage of an odious imputation against the Protestants that they had driven him from his Kingdom But all Europe is witness to the contrary and if hereafter he looses the Crown 't is a loss for which he can only blame himself having drawn it upon himself partly by Violation of the Laws and partly by his Desertion If there had been any design violently to drive him from his Throne why was he so stopt in his Flight What an Object is a King Arrested as a Fugitive But why was he staid to do him Violence Was he not honourably entreated to return to his own Palace Had he not the liberty given to retire as he was best pleased I question not but all this shall be reflected upon us with the most malevolent Influences for 't is a common thing with the Papism in its rage to take hold of all that may any way serve its Revenge But be wise and Adore the profound Judgments of God. You see in this Event the first blow to the ruin of Popery which we have proposed apparently near out of the Prophecies of the New Testament This great and surprizing Revolution will without doubt draw others after it which shall be no less considerable The Empire of Antichrist hath not received so terrible a check since the last Age it rouls down to its Fall and God visibly pushes it upon the Precipiece Keep silence then my Brethren but do not suffer your selves to be carried down the stream of Outrages against him whom God hath chosen for the Instrument of his great Work. Remember the Injustice which the Papists have been guilty of at this time To violate Laws which ought to have been most inviolable to break their Oaths to trample under Foot the most sacred Engagements to seize upon the Miserable and force them to Abjuration to throw them into Prisons to send them to Gallies to Banish them and confiscate their Goods This is all good and lawful for advancing the Catholick Religion But to maintain the Reform'd Religion by maintaining Laws and to repress the Enterprizes of those that would violate them this is an horrible Attempt an infernal Action Is not this to weigh Actions in unequal Balances January 1 1689. With the Priviledge of our Lords the States Rotterdam at the House of Abr. Acher near the Bourse Books lately Printed for J. Lawrence at the Angel in the Poultrey I. A Discourse concerning the Nature Power and Proper Effects of the Present Conventions in both Kingdoms called by the Prince of Orange Quarto II. A Political Conference between Aulicus a Courtier Demas a Country-man and Civicus a Citizen Clearing the Original of Civil Government the Powers and Duties of Soveraigns and Subjects in a familiar and plain Way which may be understood by every ordinary Capacity Quarto III. Liberty of Conscience Explicated and Vindicated and the Just Limits betwixt it and Authority Sacred and Civil Cleared Quarto IV. The Triumphs of Grace or the last Words and Edifying Death of the Lady Margaret de la Musse a Noble French Lady Aged only Sixteen Years Twelves