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A10501 Vivat Rex A sermon preached at Pauls Crosse on the day of his Maiesties happie inauguration, March 24⁰. 1614. And now newly published, by occasion of his late (no lesse happy) recovery. By John Rawlinson Dr of Divinity, and one of his Maiesties chaplaines in ordinary. Rawlinson, John, 1576-1630. 1619 (1619) STC 20777; ESTC S115693 31,914 48

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is seene in the mouldering matter whereof hee is made so-likewise in the multiplicity of dangers wherwith he is encoūtered 1 SPIRITVAL enemies Dangers both of Spiritual and of Corporal enemies Spiritual enemies to the natural life of a King are either his owne sins or the sins of the people 1 HIS OWN SINS 1 His owne sinnes when he is not aswell a Personal King over himselfe as a Polisike King over others when he hath not aswell Regnum rationis a kingdome of reason within him to maister his owne passions as Regnum nationis a kingdome of people without him to rule as his owne subiects 2 HIS PEOPLES SINS 2 And as the Kings sinnes so are also the sinnes of the people spirituall enemies to the naturall life of a King The wiseman tel●●s vs Prov. 5. that sin is bitter as wormewood Prov. 5.4 I will add that it hath one quality of wormewood more For wormewood saith Dioscorides is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dioscor l. 3. c. 26. offensiue to stomach and to head both because the fumes thereof arising from the stomach offend the head and so oft times the King who is the head is chastised and punish't for the sins of the people To what purpose then shall it be for you to cry Vivat Rex Let the King liue if the out-cry of your sins sound nothing but Moriatur Rex Let the King dy In vaine do your tongues pray for his life if your sins plot treason against his life The Greeks haue one word that signifies Heaven and Hell both and that 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and they haue another word that signifies God and the Divel both and that 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And tell me I pray are there not many that liue as if they thought it all one whither they go to heaven or to hell all one whither to God or to the Divel To say nothing of lying and extortion the two beloved sins of your City do not the ruffians I say not of but about this Citie account drabbing and dicing swearing and swilling which indeed are foure Carnal Mortal vices to be their foure Cardinall and Moral virtues But as Iohn Baptist said of Christ Ioh. 3. He must encrease and I must decrease So Ioh. 3.30 if ye will haue the Kings life to encrease then must your sins decrease Your sins must be shortned that his dayes may be lengthned Moriantur peccata vs vivat Rex Let your sins dy that your King may liue Seeing then the death of sin is the life of the King Let me add to Viuat Rex Vivat Pro-rex Blessed be the godly and zealous care of him that is now his Maiesties Viceroy for the government of this honorable City who so carefully painefully laboureth to purge those more than Aug●● in Stables where these sins inhabit which indeed will not be purged but with a stiffe sircame Yea Let me also add one Vivat Rex more Let that other King liue a King but onely in name saue that hee is indeed a King of Preachers I meane the R. Reverend Bishop of this Dioecese than whom I dare say though God be blessed of late yeares there haue risen many yet there never arose among you a truer Iohn Baptist a man more zealous for the cause of the Lord of hosts and of his Soueraigne He as ready to cut downe ●n Gladio oris with the sword of his mouth as is his Maiesties Liefetenent Ore gladij with the edge of his sword Both resolving with S. Ierom Ierom. ep 61. that Ad tanta crimina patientem esse non oportet Where such sins reigne as reigne in and about this City there it 's a sin for either Magistrate or Minister to be patient every sin being a sworne-enemy to the natural life of a King 2 CORPORAL enemies But besides these spiritual enemies there are also corporal enemies to the natural life of the King sons of Belial that cast off the yoake of obedience to their Liege King and serue another King even the Prince of this world Io. 12.31 the Divell who is also their father and yet are they not so wise as to knowe their owne father like the Iewes Io. 8.33 V. 44. saying We are the seed of Abraham when yet Christ tell 's them Ye are of your father the Divell These be they that haue Vivat Rex God saue the King in their mouth but Vivat Papa God saue the Pope in their heart They say God saue the King but it is but only dicis causa for fashions sake like as roagues do when they are burnt in the hand they say it because they must say it With them Vivat Rex is but a false cry for even then when they say Vivat God saue him they rather wish Moriatur God haue him Aelius Spartian Antonin Geta. And as Bassianus Caracalla said of his owne Brother whome hee had slaine Sit Divus dum non sit Vivus Let him in God's name be a Saint so he be not a Man So I wish we had not too-good cause to be perswaded that they could be content to make out King St Iames so they might vnmake him King Iames to put him into their Kalender of Saints so they might put him out of the Catalogue of Kings The Frenchmen haue a proverb that Romam ad quaerendum sanctum Petrum eunt qui eum ante fores suas habent There are that goe to seeke S. Peter at Rome when they haue him before their dores And may it not likewise be said of vs that Antichristum Romae quaerimus domialimus we seeke Antichrist at Rome but we cherish him here at home Nay I pray God we haue not some of Solomon's Spiders among vs that take hold with their hands and are in Kings palaces as it is Prov. 30. Some in Court aswell as in Countrey that are of the poysoning Prov 30.28 and of the stabbing and of the fiering Religion who it were good they were soone swept downe with the besome of discipline Esa 14.23 lest in the end they sweepe downe all with the besome of destruction They haue learn'd of the Seedesmen of the Romish doctrine forged in the shop of that either Tricoronis or Tricornis Episcopus that three-crown'd or three-horn'd Bishop of Rome that treason against a King not Catholike by their Copy is no sin against God These these beloued the worse Subiects they are to their Prince the sitter subiects are they for you that shal bee Parliament-men to worke vpon Buisy not your heads in plotting and devising how to limit the poore Clergy to a stint of competency For where there is Competency in the tongue there is covetousnesse at least if not irreligion in the heart Study not how ye may curb Christ in his Ministers but rather how ye may subdue Antichrist in his members Remember nay I know ye cannot but remember the children of Edom Psal 137.7
long life because he is the cause of his owne ill No more can the people wish themselues any greater good than the life of the King because he is the cause of all their weale A King then being Totum populi the total-summe as I may say of all the peoples welfare good reason that Totus populus not some but all the people should iointly pray for His welfare that both Vox Votum their voice and their wish Chordula Cor their tongue-string and their heart-string Clamor Amor their loude shoute and their loue should sound in an vnison to make vp this sweet consort of Vivat Rex God saue the King that they should doe as the people doe in my text Clamare as it were rend and teare the very clouds with the cry and shoute of their prayers that they may pull downe a blessing of long life vpon the head of the King crying both vnâ voce with one voice that they haue Vnum Regem but one King vivâ voce with a loude on liuely voice that they may haue Vivum Regem a huing King Vivat Rex Thus far of Vivat Rex as it is a supplication It 's now more than time I should speake of it as it is an Acclamation or a voice of ioy and thanksgiuing vnto God and therefore now this second acception shall onely serue me for Application to the day Vivat Rex PART 2. ACCLAMATION fereuing for APPLICATION The ioints and passages of our ioy and thanksgiuing may be three 1 That we haue Regem a King 2ly That we haue Talem such a King who for his matchlesse Graces and virtues may more truely bee call'd a None-such Ps 118.24 3ly That this is the day Quem fecit Dominus which the Lord hath made nay rather In quo factus ast Dominus Wherein King Iames was made our Lord. It is the day of our reioycing for his Crowne and ought therefore to be the Crowne of our reioycing REIOICE that we haue 1 REGEM 1 First then reioice we that we haue a King Vixit Ragina we had a Queene who had shee liued wee should haue thought we had had no need of King Iames But now Vivit Rex we haue a King and while He liues we haue cause to say we haue no need of Queene Elsabeth Both of them so incomparably excellent that it must be the commendation of both that either of them was like the other Hieron epist l. 3. ep ad Eustoch She was a Queene of whom we might truly say as St Ierom said of that Roman Paula Vnius contempsit gloriam vrbis totius orbis opinione celebratur She contemn'd the glory of one City her name is pretious throughout the whole World Eurip. Hecub Or rather as Euripides said of Polyxena 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 setting aside her mortality she was a Goddesse here on earth Insomuch that Grammarians did even blush at their old rule of Masculinum dignius est Faminino The masculine gender is more worthy than the faeminine till King Iames as on this day came as our Dayes-man to arbitrate the matter and to vindicate the credit of His sexe It was not without cause that during the time of that short Inter-regnum or enter-space of reigne betweene the death of that blessed Queene and the entring of our blessed King to this kingdome Ios 7.5 our hearts did melt like water as did the hearts of the Israelties For what euils had we not then iust cause to expect But when the wine of all our comfort failed vs when the pitchers and vessels of our hearts ouerflowed with the water of sorow and compunction then did God euen the God of Iacob who is a most praesent and extemporary helpe in the needfull time of trouble of his owne free bounty and mercy turne our water our salt water into wine Then did our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or King grow vp as it were in an instant like the herbe Basil call'd Basilica or Regia berba which by some is also call'd Ocymum of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the celerity and sodainnes of it's growth His title contrary to the hope of our foes and feare of our friends taking firme and peaceable footing in our land before his person and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the effusion or shedding of any one drop either of bloud or of sweate So that as Iacob said to Laban Gen. 30.30 Gen. 30 Benedixit tibi Dominus ad introitum meum The Lord hath blessed thee by my comming So may our Iacob say to this land of ours And in a better sense may this Land of ours sing SOL RE ME FA that is SOLus REx ME FAcit It 's the King onely vnder God that mak'sane than could one of the Popes of whom the same song was set vp as a Pasquil in Rome meaning that onely the King of Spaine had made him Pope by giuing a Spanish fig to some of his praedecessors in that See And so as St Austin speakes of the sorowes ioyes of the righteous Tristitia nostra habet Quasi Aust in Ps 48. sed Laetitia nostra non habet Quasi Our sorow for Queene Elisabeth was but as it were sorow but our ioy for King Iames is ioy indeed 1 NOT A PLVRALITY Ioy indeede and greate ioy that we haue not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a plurality of Kings For Kings they say are impatient of copartners and kingdomes I am sure are as impatient of them as Kings themselues The world at some times can hardly endure the heate but of one Sun but certes if there were two Sunnes they would quite burne it vp It 's an old and for the most part a true rule in Oeconomy that hee that hath but one servant hath a whole servant he that hath two hath but halfe a servant but he that hath three hath never a servant And no lesse true is it in Policy of Kings who are Servipublici publike Servants for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A ruler Max. Tyr. dissert 20. ●ub fin or a King saith Max. Tyrius is seruant to many Masters One King a whole King two Kings halfe a King three Kings and never a King In 1 Macch. 1 we reade 1. Macch. 1.10 that after the death of King Alexander his seruants shared his kingdome among them and so the Macedonians in steed of one King had many Kings But see what followes in the very next words Et multiplicata sunt mala in terrâ and much wickednes encreased in the land O how happy then we that haue not Regem vnum in pluribus a King that is but one among many but Plures in vno many Kings in one The King of England the King of Scotland the King of France the King of Ireland all foure Kings in our one King So that he is not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys de divin nom l. 4. but
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vnus but vnitivus one King or a singular King but a King that makes one of many Yea the English and Scotish Nations which before were diuided no lesse in heart than in kingdome hath hee now so concorporated or rather coanimated into one that in thē is fulfilled what was promised as a blessing to the people of Israel Ezech. 37.22 Ezech. 37 I will make them one people in the land vpon the mountaines of Israel one King shal be King to them all they shal be no more two peoples neither bee divided any more henceforth into two kingdomes Here then is matter of greate ioy that we haue not a plurality of Kings but one sole entire and absolute Monarch 2 NOT A NVLLITY And yet behold matter of greater ioy than this That as wee are freed from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a plurality of Kings which is bad so likewise from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Nullity which is worse It was a greate punishment to them when they had no Smith in Israel 1 Sam. 13 but far greater 1 Sam. 13.19 Iudg. 17.6 when they had no King in Israel Iudg. 17 for then as it presently followes Euery man did that which was good in his owne eyes that is when there was no King then would euery man be a King to do what he lusted Such ataxy or disorder because it vsually follow 's vpon anarchy or lack of a King it is therefore noted of the Persians that they were wont for fiue dayes after their Kings death to let their Lawes sleep without execution and to let euery man do what he pleased that in those fiue dayes men seeing the rage and tyranny of sin and iniustice for lack of gouernment might more willingly obey their King euer after 2 THAT we haue TALEM But that which is indeede matter of our greatest ioy is that wee haue not onely Regem a King but Talem such a King if yet I may call him Talem who hath neuer a Qualem to aequal him Hieron ad Pammachan prolog l. 2. in Hose Of whom may be verified that which St Ierom testifieth of Cato out of Liuy that Eius gloriae neque profuit quisquam laudando neque vituperando quisquam nocuit cum vtrumque summis praditi ingenijs fecerint though M. Cicero C Casar both of excellent parts writ the one in his praise the other in his dispraise yet neither did the praise of the one add any thing to him nor the dispraise of the other detract any thing from him For what can all those black-tongued Parrets or foule-mouth'd railers of Rome for their bitternesse like those blacke styes in Theophrastus bred ex absynthij semine Theophrast de caus Plant. l. 4. c. 16. of the seede o● Worme-wood I say what can all of them with all their Caninae facundia or barking cloquence detract from his Maiestie Or what can the very best Orat●rs among those that are his best subiects add vnto him It was the opinion of a greate Orator how sound I now dispute not that Kings would Isocr●● for the most part be better than private men St Reges electio non successio faceres if they were made by election not by succession But say our King had not come vnto vs by succession as He did but that our selues had beene to make the election I would faine know where wee could haue made such another choice For is not King Iames like the Adamant Gemma Principum Princeps Gemmarum the Gemme of Princes and the Prince of Gemmes euen the most pretious Gemme in the Ring of this round World A Gemme all whose brightnesse and beauty is from within A Gemme which is somuch the more resplendent because it is set in gold and a Gemme whose far and neare-shining virtues shall hereafter be as so many pretious Gemmes in his caelestial Diademe Is he not as St Ambrose saith of the Sun Oculus mundi Ambros he xaemd 3. c. 1. the Ey of the whole world nay hee on whom the eyes of the whole world are cast Iucunditas diei the Ioy not of this day onely but of all the dayes of our life and Naturae Gratia the very grace and ornament of Nature A King descended of so many noble and royal Progenitours 1 NOBILITY that if hee had but one drop of bloud-royal from euery one of them it were almost bloud enough for his whole body And as if hee had beene borne onely to bee a King he began both his Life and his Reigne at once and therefore hee came into our Land with a Crowne vpon his head Non tam factus quàm natus we rather found than founded him a King And which is not somuch the fruite 2 VIRTVES as the roote of his Nobility a King so virtuous that he is like the Philosophers Medium morale or moral meane in which they place onely virtue and no vice And which is the fruite of his virtue a King so peaceable that as Pliny write's of the bird Halcyon 3 PEACE Plin. 1. 2. c. 47. or the Kings-fisher that while shee makes her nest in the sea the sea is becalmed so since He hath nestled himselfe in this our kingdome which we fear'd at the death of that Noble Queene would haue proued a Sea of troubles wee haue had none but Halcyontan dayes dayes of calme and of peace And which is the fruite of peace a King so learned 4 IEARNING that whither he speake he speak's so elegantly that like another Palamedes he may well be call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Nightingale of the Muses or whither hee write write's so inspiredly so diuinely as if hee wrote with a pen out of the wing of that sacred Doue the Holy Ghost I may say for the vniversality of his knowledge that we haue a Head not inferiour to that brasen-Head made by Albertus Magnus and placed in his Study which if we will beleeue Tostat could readily answere Ad omnia quasita Tostat in lib. Numer c. 21. quast 19. to whatsoeuer quaestions were demanded of it Since the beginning of the world was it euer seene that any King but He turn'd Cathedram Regis his Chaire of Estate In Cathedram Regentis into a Moderator's Chaire and publikely moderated in our Vniuersity Acts and that with such applause as was able to turne Envy it selfe into Admiration And which is the fruite of his learning a King so religious 5 RELIGION Polychtonic that as Constantine the Emperou● bare clay vpon his owne shoulders to the building of St Peter's Church so hath his Maiestie in his owne Person and with his owne pen manfully maintein'd the cause of Religion so manfully that as the Adversaries of Religion haue just cause to be more afraid of his pen than of his launce So hath hee iust cause to be more afraid of then launce their stab their gun-powder than their pen.