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A85832 Englands complaint: or, a sharp reproof for the inhabitants thereof; against that now raigning sin of rebellion. But more especially to the inhabitants of the county of Suffolk. With a vindication of those worthyes now in Colchester. / By Lionel Gatford B.D. the true, but sequestred rector of Dinnington, in the said county. Gatford, Lionel, d. 1665. 1648 (1648) Wing G332; Thomason E461_27; ESTC R205193 55,099 61

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the most inferiour of which companie carries better blood in their veines because untainted then the proudest Adversarie that fights against them and I trust God will preserve it as preciously and the Citie wherein they are High exceeding high alreadie is the Honour of that Citie for being the Citie wherein Lucius Helena and Constantine the first Christian King Empresse and Emperour in the world were borne And it may please the Lord in his mercie notwithstanding our multiplied iniquities crying so loud for the contrarie to rayse its honour yet much higher by making it the Citie wherein King Charles the most Religious of Christian Kings the Established Religion of the Church of England the Helena or Empresse of Christian Religion and the Incomparable Lawes and Liberties of this Kingdome which for equitie and Christianitie deserve the Crowne Imperiall of the World shall be preserved from ruine and be restored to their pristine glory The same Almightie God that wrought that first great Work in that Citie is all-sufficiently able there even there to accomplish this second And we humbly beseech him that neither their nor our sinnes may separate betweene his blessing and their Loyall and Christian indeavours to that purpose and whatever the successe be that that Citie nor those Worthies that are in it may never want their due honour nor his gracious protection and comforts But suppose the worst Suppose that by your ingagement against that Citie and those Worthies in it their Enemies should prevaile over them to their and this whole Kingdomes further weltering in blood must not their and the rest of the blood of this Kingdome be charged upon your score When as if you had but sat still and not ingaged against them as you were by many bonds never to be cancelled obliged to doe there had not beene in all probalitie at this time any Enemies to Peace or thirsters after Blood that durst to have showne themselves so throughout the whole Nation And therefore what will God say or doe unto you when he comes to make inquisition for blood to avenge it This is the bloody Countie that had Peace layd at their feet and trampled on it that had Peace brought home to their doores and not onely shut it out but called to bloodie Warre to enter in that had many thousands of their fellow Brethren and Neighbours that would have ventured their lives to have preserved them in Peace and they chose rather to lose many of their owne lives to take away some of theirs They loved not Peace therefore it shall be farre from them they delighted in Warre therefore shall it cleave close to them and they thirsted for blood therefore shall they be drunke with their owne blood Doe not thinke that I speake more in Gods Name then I have warrant from Gods Word for though ye have bin too long used so and abused by such lying Prophets Search the Scriptures and observe from thence what God speakes of the shedding of blood and you I find that I speak very sparingly as having regard to your infirmities For there God tells you That shedding of blood is one of those crying sinnes which makes a land to mourne and every one that dwelleth therein to languish Hos 4. v. 2.3 That blood defileth the land and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein or there can be no expiation for the Land but by the blood of him that shed it and that If a people would have God to dwell among them they must not so defile the land which they inhabit Numb 35. v. 33.34 That the shedding of innocent blood is such a sinne that of all other horrid sinnes the Lord will not pardon 2 King 24. v. 4. And therefore no satisfaction was to be taken for the life of a murtherer which was guiltie of death but he was to be surely put to death Numb 35. v. 31. with a multitude of other sayings on that subject that are to be trembled at by the Rebellious Subjects of this Kingdome 'T is true if a man killed any person unawares there were Cities of refuge appointed by God for such a one to flye unto from the avenger of blood but Oh my poore Countrey-men what Cities of refuge can ye fancie to your selves who wilfully murther your brethren And what lesse can the King say of you then this or to this effect The Countie of Suffolke 't is the most Rebellious Countie of all my Dominions For when one of my Kingdomes moved not against me when a second rose up for me and when the third Petitioned for me from almost all parts and tooke up Armes for me in most parts they of Suffolke neither Petitioned for me nor moved for me but rose up against me and when Rebellion was expiring its last poysonous breath they hazarded their owne lives to prolong its life and to preserve the lives of those Rebells that seeke nothing more then to take away mine When thousands of my Loyall Subjects were indeavouring to fetch me out of my Cruell Bondage and Imprisonment then they helpt to besiege and imprison to kill murther those very Subjects and when others with them were making what haste they could to set my Crowne againe firme on my head and to restore me againe to those Rights Honours and Comforts which I was wont to injoy they did what they could to throw my Crowne back againe to the ground and to keepe mine Honour still in the dust and me from all hopes of enjoying any Rights or externall Comforts here in this life Thus have they indeavoured to continue and adde to my Miseries who have therefore indured such Miseries in such Extremities because I would not yeeld to the delivering up of them amongst others to extreme Slavery and Tyranny Thus have they not onely fought against me without a cause but for the love that I had unto them they take now my contrarie part and have rewarded me evil for good and hatred for my good will But I give my selfe unto Prayer Stirre up thy selfe and awake to my judgement even unto my Cause my God and my Lord. Judge me O Lord according to thy righteousnesse and let them not rejoyce over me Psal 35. Let them not say in their hearts Ah so would we have it Let them not say We have swallowed him up Let them be ashamed and brought to confusion together that rejoyce at my hurt Let them be clothed with shame and dishonour that magnifie themselves against me Let them shout for joy and be glad that favour my righteous Cause yea let them say continually Let the Lord be magnified which hath pleasure in the prosperitie of his servant and my tongue shall speake of thy righteousnesse and of thy prayse all the day long Amen Amen But what then will all the other Counties of England say of you O bewitched besotted Countie of Suffolke They that had lived in peace and plentie all these times when in the most
be avouched and will be by those that know them of the rest of those Worthies that are with them infinitely beyond what can be affirmed of the most select Regiment yea Troop that the adverse Army can cull out But I speake only of those two because the people have spoken most of them and they are best knowne to mee and indeed so well knowne are they to mee that I should have been more guilty of bearing false witnesse then they of raising such a false report had I not vindicated their Honours from such a notorious calumnie And now that they are named suffer me to interpose this one word more concerning them If there be any thing besides their known loyaltie that does exasperate the factious seditious party against them 't is their eminent and approved firmenesse and immoveablenesse in the Protestant Religion And if they should miscarry in this action which I shall with all earnestnesse and constancie as all that wish well to this languishing Church and state ought to do pray that they may not the Protestants would find as great a losse in them as in any of their Peeres within the three Kingdomes But I have severed them too long from their honourable and ever to be honoured society and fellow-Souldierie Are they not all or the most of them men of known tried integrity and honesty and many of them your very next neighbours and have they not so proved themselves by their Declarations Remonstrances and actions Do they not all professe clearly that they have and do ingage themselves in this present undertaking only for the defence and preservation of the established Protestant Religion for the delivering their Soveraigne from bondage and imprisonment and from being murdered therein for the restoring of his Majesty to his lawful Government just rights and throne in Parliament for the maintenance of the known Lawes of the land and the rights Liberties and properties of their fellow-subjects and for the procuring and setling of a firme and happy peace in this miserably divided and all most utterly ruined Kingdome would to God that the Army which call themselves the Parliaments when they please had declared or would but yet declare halfe so much and give such assurance for the performance thereof as those Worthies will give and then it might be hoped that these unnaturall warres would soone be ended But when so many of that Army have so openly declared and proclaimed the contrary to all these and some of them have been bold to say that they fought neither for King nor Parliament and that they had above sixty thousand to be at eight houres warning to fight both against King and Parliament and have given very observable earnests of their having too many in a readinesse by their sudden raising such considerable Troopes and Regiments of such and wholly such within very few daies It is high time for all those that would not bee gull'd cheated or forced out of all those forenamed comforts and honours to betake themselves to their armes for their defence maintainance and continuance And what a staine shame and reproach will it be to you of this Countie and to your Posterities after you That when such men of such knowne honour and integritie and of such approved firmnesse and fidelity to their Religion King and Countrie like those renowned Worthies eternized by the Spirit of God to memory and imitation jeoparded their lives to death in the high places of the field for the defence and maintainance of those very truths and rights Judg. 5. which ye your selves have often sworne and protested and doe still pretend and professe to defend and maintaine and that against the most base perfidious pernicious seditious trayterous bloodie tyrannous professed and proclaimed Enemies thereof yee not onely deserted them and came not out to their helpe To the helpe of the Lord against his and their adversaries but rose up and came out against them and cast in your lot with those Adversaries that lay waite for blood for the blood of Kings Princes Priests and people Prov. 1. and lurke privily for the innocent without a cause not considering that by so doing ye lay wait for your owne blood and lurke privily for your owne lives And so my poore Countrey-men I come a little closer yet to your selves and to the consideration of your owne state and condition and then I shall commend you to Gods mercy if by your repentance ye shall render your selves capable thereof How little you of this Countie have beene sensible of the miseries and distresses of your fellow Subjects and Brethren and how much you have contributed to them I leave to your owne conscience to examine and to your selves to judge your selves for them Only take these two conclusions along with you as two inseparable consequents of those two premises First That mers not being sensible of their brethrens miseries Amos 6. from v. 2. to v. 12. Isa 22. v. 12 13 14. Jer. 4. v. 8 10. u. and chap. 12. v. 11. and so not taking warning by them pulls so much the more certaine and sore judgments upon themselves they that remember not Texts of Scripture enough to that purpose consult those in the margent Secondly That when God hath made use of any people to scourge others by for their sinnes and iniquities as he usually does of the worse to scourge the better he does constantly cast that his rod into the fire and punish that people the more severely by whom he hath severely punished others and one principall Reason thereof is because they whom God makes use of as his scourge to others doe with Gods chastisement or vengeance for their sinnes constantly intermix their owne malice and other iniquities in chastising and taking vengeance on them And this conclusion you have confirmed in each circumstance by many remarkable and cleare examples as one of the Bookes of the Prophets namely in Ezekiels Prophesie As in Gods dealing with the Ammonites the Moabites and those of Mount-Seir the Edomites and the Philistines Ezek. 25. with those of Tyrus chap. 26. with those of Zidon chap. 28. with Pharoah and all Egypt chap. 29. and with the rest of the heathen chap. 36. All which people had beene at severall times scourges to the people of Israel and Judah and are in that relation there called to an account adjuged by God to those judgements And though you may from these sad conclusions see evidence enough of your hastning Calamities yet there are other visible symptomes of your approaching Miseries which may perchance more awaken you as crying yet somewhat louder unto you and at lesse distance either to repent speedily or to expect swift destruction suddainly As first What thinke ye will be the inevitable consequents of your late ingagement against those Worthies of our David before but never too often named to their honour and your shame those English Heroes those Lords Knights Gentlemen Yeomen and others in renowned Colchester
I had much more to have written but I feared that my enlarging this warning might render the time of presenting it lesse seasonable and the particulars themselves so presented lesse acceptable and successefull And for that which I have written I shall be ready through Gods inabling me further to confirme by my Pen against all gain-sayers and if there be cause to seale with my bloud against all opposers If ought of circumstance hath slipt from me that shall be thought by any sober Christian either too plain or too bold let that partie consider that he that speakes to men in a deep and almost a dead sleep must not only speak plain Isa 58.1 but cry aloud and spare not lifting up his voyce like a trumpet● And he that will shew a people their transgressions and their sins must call each sin and transgression by its proper name and doe his utmost to set it forth in its own colours A reprover to an impudent and rebellious generation had need to beseech God to make his face strong against their faces Ezek. 3. v 7 8 9. and his forehead strong against their foreheads And if that considered there shall still remaine ought that may seeme to any such unbeseeming or uncharitable I shall upon information thereof humbly beg pardon for it both of God and that man how meane soever whom it shall offend I know well the danger of appearing in this manner in these times and in these parts especially and I could as easily have avoided it having otherwise given ample testimony of my dutie and of my conscienciousnesse to perform it in spight of opposition But I remembred and often ruminated that complaint of God Ezek. 13. v. 4 5 6 c. O Israel thy Prophets are like the Foxes in the deserts Ye have not gone up into the gaps or breaches neither made up the hedge for the house of Israel to stand in the battell in the day of the Lord. They have seen vanitie and lying divination saying The Lord saith and the Lord hath not sent them and they have made others to hope that they would confirme the word c. The Fox-prophets and the Lying-prophets are in that complaint coupled together And therefore as I have alwayes abhorred Lying and Lying-prophets so I ever thought it my dutie to detest Shifting and playing the Fox-prophet and rather as I first said then I would be found guiltie of others bloud by not giving them warning I resolved to hazard mine own in the giving it thinking it an eternall staine shame to us the Clergy of this County that so many amongst us of that Calling should ply you so close incourage you so much to the shedding of your Brethrens blood and that not one of us should appeare to deter you from it by shewing you the infinite danger of it and the miseries that are attending it And now my fairly-warned Countrey-men Ezek. 25. Deut. 30.19 Whether ye will heare or whether ye will forbeare ye shall know that there hath bin a Prophet among you who hath set before you this day life and death blessing and cursing But my prayer shall be that ye may so heare what hath been told you by your unworthy but faithfull servant that ye may choose life that you and your seed may live and so live in obedience to your God in constancie to your Religion established in Allegiance to your King and in love to your fellow Subjects and Brethren that you may out-live your Nations miseries in much peace and comfort your names out-live you in much sweetnesse and honour and your soules out-live or live with your names in eternall blisse and glory So prayes and remaines at your commands and service so farre as consistent with Gods Yours LIONEL GATFORD FINIS