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A57288 The Scots episcopal innocence, or, The juggling of that party with the late King, His present Majesty, the Church of England, and the Church of Scotland demonstrated together with a catalogue of the Scots Episcopal clergy turn'd out for their disloyalty ... since the revolution : and a postscript with reflections on a late malicious pamphlet entituled The spirit of malice and slander ... / by Will. Laick. Ridpath, George, d. 1726. 1694 (1694) Wing R1465; ESTC R28104 55,845 73

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THE Scots Episcopal Innocence OR The Juggling of that Party with the late King his present Majesty the Church of England and the Church of Scotland demonstrated Together with a Catalogue of the Scots Episcopal Clergy turn'd out for their Disloyalty and other Enormities since the Revolution And a Postscript with Reflections on a late malicious Pamphlet entituled The Spirit of Malice and Slander Particularly addressed to Dr. Monroe and his Journeymen Mr. Simon Wild Mr. Andrew Iohnston c. near Thieving-lane Westminster Rampantur Ilia Codri By WILL. LAICK Impavidum feriunt Ruinae London Printed in the Year 1694. To the Right Honourable and Right Reverend the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland Right Honourable Reverend and Worthy IT is not from any Opinion that the Author has of himself or what he can do that he presumes upon such a Dedication but only as a true Son of the Church of Scotland he finds himself oblig'd to espouse her Cause and obviate the false Calumnies which those of our own Nation do so industriously spread Abroad not only to the Disparagement of your Government and Discipline but even of your Doctrine and Morals And therefore he begs that what is well design'd may not be ill taken but that you would be pleased to accept of these weak Indeavours as a Testimony of his Zeal and Affection for his Mother-Church with that same Benignity that that Great Prince accepted of the poor Man's handful of Water which was offered him amongst a Crowd of more valuable Presents He is sensible that neither the Matter nor the Manner deserve the Patronage of such a grave Assembly but he hopes that you may thence be convinc'd of the Necessity there is that you should take such Measures as your Wisdom shall suggest to provide Antidotes for those poysonous Libels which fly abroad here against you in such Numbers by the United Endeavours of your Enemies You cannot readily imagine how much you lose by a Neglect herein and it 's not easy to express the Grief of your Well-wishers to hear the Church of Scotland made the Song of the Drunkard and the Ridiculous blasphemous Stories printed here against Her to be the common Entertainment of Debauchees who triumph in all publick Places over your silence May the great Shepherd of his Church whose Servants you are inspire you with such Counsels that as the Church of Scotland had formerly Nomen inter caeteras Celebre upon the Account of her singular Unity She may also be famous in Time to come clear as the Sun fair as the Moon and terrible like an Army with Banners to the Conviction of all those who oppose her upon the Account of the Purity of her Doctrine and Strictness of her Discipline And blessed be God who has not left her without this Testimony that her greatest and most avow'd Enemies are generally the most Vicious and debauch'd and visibly embark'd with an Interest altogether destructive to the Protestant Religion and the common Liberties of Europe The Scots Episcopal Innocence c. PART I. IT being undoubtedly his Majesty's Design as well as Interest to manifest a fatherly Concern for the Welfare of all his Subjects in General it 's unaccountable that there should not be found a sutable Disposition in them to concur with his Royal Intentions and be ambitious to out-do one another in their returns of Love and Zeal for his generous and impartial Administration by which like the Sun he dispenses the Rays of his benign Influence towards all Men whereof his admirable Temperament towards his Church of England and Dissenting Subjects are undeniable Demonstrations and do so clearly evince that Justice and Equability have the Ascendent in his Soul that it can be hid from none but those whose Interest and Passion blind their Eyes But my Thoughts being at present confin'd to his Government in Scotland I shall endeavour to keep within my Limits though I must confess it puts a Violence upon my Inclination when I have so large a Field wherein I could expatiate with delight From the sense of the Calamities under which that Kingdom hath for a long time groan'd upon account of their Differences in Church-matters it might have been reasonably expected that both Parties should have greedily embraced the opportunity of a Comprehension which his present Majesty hath done more to accomplish than he who coveted the Motto of Beati Pacifici or any other of his Successors had either Interest or Inclination to do but to the Amazement of all Good Men those who petition'd for it now when it is obtain'd stand aloof from it and as I hope to make it appear chiefly if not meerly because they are obliged to abjure all Interests which are opposite to his Majesty's who procured it which as I am confident there is no need of Rhetorick to perswade you is a piece of the blackest Ingratitude But to set this Matter in its true Light be pleased to read the following Address of the Scots Episcopal Party and then the Act of Parliament which his Majesty with no small Application hath obtain'd in Answer to their Request and I doubt not but you will discover that there is a Snake in the Grass To his Grace their Majesties Commissioner and the General Assembly met at Edinburgh We Vnder-subscribers for our Selves and our Constituents Ministers of the Gospel in Scotland Humbly shew THAT since Episcopacy is abolish'd and Presbyterian Government establish'd by Act of Parliament as it was establish'd in 1592 and we being desirous to exercise the Holy function wherewith we are invested in our several Stations for the Glory of God Advancement of Religion their Majesties Service and the Peace of the Nation Do therefore humbly desire that all Stops and Impediments may be taken off so that we may be permitted to Act as Presbyters in Presbyteries Synods and General Assemblies in concurrence with the Presbyterian Ministers in the Government of the Church as now by Law establish'd The TEST or Declaration to be Signed by all those who shall be assum'd I A. B. do sincerely declare and promise that I will submit to Presbyterian Government of the Church as it is now established in this Kingdom by their Majesties King William and Queen Mary by Presbyteries Provincial Synods and General Assemblies and that I will as becomes a Minister of the Gospel heartily concur with the said Government for suppressing of Sin and Wickedness promoting Piety and purging of the Church of all Erroneous and Scandalous Men. And I do further promise That I will subscribe the Confession of Faith and larger and shorter Catechism now Confirmed by Act of Parliament as containing the Doctrine of the Protestant Religion professed in this Kingdom ACT for setling the Quiet and Peace of the Church Edinburgh Iune the 12th 1693. OUR Soveraign Lord and Lady the King and Queens Majesties with Advice and Consent of the Estates of Parliament Ratify Approve and perpetually Confirm the Fifth Act of the
their Assertion if they should have admitted them into the Church upon such a bare-fac'd Equivocation for so the modest Gentlemen may subscribe to the Alceran as containing the Mahometan Doctrine in Turky or the Council of Trent as containing the Popish Doctrine in the Church of Rome Then certainly their Majesties and Parliament cannot be blamed if they have changed the words so far as to make the Subscriber own it as the Confession of his own Faith otherwise a Door had been opened to all Errors and Heresies whatsoever And seeing the Petitioners own that the Doctrine of the Protestant Religion as professed in Scotland is contained in the said Confession if they refuse to subscribe it as theirs it 's plain that they entertain some other than that Protestant Doctrine and if so it cannot justly be called hard Measure to exclude them from officiating as Ministers in that or any other Protestant Church seeing the Doctrine of that Confession is own'd by all except Lutherans and is every way agreeable to the Doctrine contained in the Articles of the Church of England Then as to the Oath of Allegiance and Assurance I confess there is reason enough to doubt their Sincerity if they should comply for never was there any thing conceived in Terms more express to abjure the lawfulness of resisting Kings or those commissionated by them upon any Pretence whatsoever than the Scots Declaration and Acknowledgment of the Prerogative And seeing that Doctrine was so much extoll'd and applauded and that the Party valued themselves so highly upon it I cannot conceive how they can without down-right Perjury own his present Majesty's Title except they have changed their Principles And seeing they have never by any publick Authentick Act renounced that Doctrine nor given us their Reasons why there is no great Cause to think that they will be any steadier in their Allegiance to King William than they were to King Iames and therefore Swear or not Swear there 's no Encouragement to trust them with the Conduct of Peoples Consciences But however if they refuse to swear Allegiance no Body can think the Government obliged to grant them Protection for that were but to nourish Vipers in their Bosom And if they should swear Allegiance and decline the Assurance it discovers that they act mala Fide with the Government and only watch for an Opportunity to declare against it For if they think that their present Majesties have not a Title de Iure they will never own their Right de Facto any longer than while they are not in a Capacity to rebel And at the same time such a Distinction denotes a Man of a very ill inform'd if not of a debauch'd Conscience For if their Majesties Title be not lawful it cannot be lawful for me to own it and if their Title be lawful it must needs be lawful for me to oblige my self to defend them in it against all Pretenders whatsoever So that a declining of the Latter is an infallible Demonstration of my doubting the Former And if those who call their Majesties Right in question be fit to be intrusted as Leaders of the Subjects let common Sense and Reason determine Now that the greater part of the Scots Episcopal Clergy disown their Majesties Title is evident from the Practice of all their Bishops to whom they have sworn Canonical Obedience from the practice of the most part of themselves seeing some hundreds of them were turn'd out by the Convention on that Head and by their Behaviour now seeing they universally refuse the Assurance though many of them formerly had sworn Allegiance which is in plain English no other than a granting of the Premisses and a denying the Conclusion Or according to the Example of a certain Gentleman in England granting the Abdication and denying the Vacancy And in truth their offering to swear Allegiance and declining the Assurance is much such another Trick upon the State as by their Formula they have put upon the Church they would subscribe the Confession of Faith as that of the Nation but not their own And so they would also swear that King William and Queen Mary are King and Queen of Scotland but not theirs Their Prevarication in this Affair puts it out of all doubt that their Design to be admitted into a Share of the Government of the Church was not according to the specious Pretences in their Petition but meerly to imbroil both Church and State and by our Confusion to make way for the late Kings in whom that they still design to keep an Interest is manifest by their sh●●●●ing with the Government as to the swearing Allegiance which they put off from time to time with frivolous Pretences till they see the Success of the late King's Endeavours to reinthrone himself So last Year they pretended that they would take the Oaths if they were imposed upon the Presbyterians as well as them And knowing that that could not be done without an Act of Parliament they and their Party stav'd off this Session as long as they could Which in the mean time shews that it was Humour and not Conscience which kept them from complying And now that there is an Act enjoining the Presbyterians to take the Oath and Assurance and that they conform almost universally to the Confusion of those who reproached them as Enemies to Kingly Government yet the Episcopal Clergy keep off still and not above two of them have subscribed them because the E. of L w and Viscount T t c. advised the contrary on this Pretence forsooth that their Petition was not answered at first and the Comprehension taken in hand immediately on its being tendered Which a certain Minister of State did wisely defer till the last as reasonably imagining that that Affair would create Heats and disappoint his Majesty's other Affairs which were to be treated of in Parliament So that before ever the Church-Affairs were meddled with they sent their Agents to disswade the Northern Clergy from taking the Oaths because there was no Comprehension and tho that Objection be now vacated yet they persist still in their Obstinacy So that it 's evident they have Interest at Bottom and it 's but rational to conclude that the said Managers intend to make their Court with the late King by keeping the Clergy from abjuring him or swearing Allegiance to their present Majesties But to return to our Petitioners They were so disingenuous and so little sincere in their Application that when required to attend the Committee of Security to whom they were referred by the Parliament they not only declined all Communing with them but did in contempt of their Majesties and the Parliament load the Members of the Committee with Obloquy and Reproach And as I am informed from a very good Hand resolve to continue in their Churches without qualifying themselves according to the late Act. I shall forbear insisting upon their Ingratitude to their Majesties and the Parliament till afterwards
Second Session of this current Parliament Entituled Act Ratifying the Confession of Faith and settling Presbyterian Church-Government in the whole Heads Articles and Clauses thereof And do further Statute and Ordain That no Person be admitted or continued for hereafter to be a Minister or Preacher within this Church unless that he having first Taken and Subscribed the Oath of Allegiance and Subscribed the Assurance in manner appointed by another Act of this present Session of Parliament made thereanent do also Subscribe the Confession of Faith Ratified in the foresaid Fifth Act of the Second Session of this Parliament declaring the same to be the Confession of his Faith and that he owns the Doctrine therein contained to be the true Doctrine which he will constantly adhere to As likewise that he owns and acknowledges Presbyterian Church-Government as setled by the foresaid Fifth Act of the Second Session of this Parliament to be the only Government of this Church and that he will submit thereto and concur therewith and never endeavour directly or indirectly the Prejudice or Subversion thereof And their Majesties with Advice and Consent foresaid Statute and Ordain That Uniformity of Worship and of the Administration of all Publick Ordinances within this Church be observed by all the saids Ministers and Preachers as the famine are at present performed and allowed therein or shall be hereafter declared by the Authority of the same and that no Minister or Preacher be admitted or continued for hereafter unless that he subscribe to observe and do actually observe the foresaid Uniformity And for the more effectual setling the Quiet and Peace of this Church the Estates of Parliament do hereby make an humble Address to Their Majesties That they would be pleased to call a General Assembly for the ordering the Affairs of the Church and to the end that all the present Ministers possessing Churches not yet admitted to the exercise of the foresaid Church-Government conform to the said Act and who shall qualify themselves in manner foresaid and shall apply to the said Assembly or the other Church-Judicatures competent in an orderly Way each Man for himself be received to partake with them in the Government thereof Certifying such as shall not qualify themselves and apply to the said Assembly or other Judicatures within the space of thirty days after meeting of the said first Assembly in manner foresaid that they may be deposed by the Sentence of the said Assembly and other Judicatures tam ab Officio quam à Beneficio and withal declaring That if any of the saids Ministers who have not been hitherto received into the Government of the Church shall offer to qualify themselves and to apply in manner foresaid they shall have Their Majesties full Protection ay and while they shall be admitted and received in manner foresaid Providing always that this Act and the benefit thereof shall no ways be extended to such of the said Ministers as are Scandalous Erroneous Negligent or Insufficient and against whom the same shall be verified within the space of thirty Days after the said Application but these and all others in like manner guilty are hereby declared to be liable and subject to the Power and Censure of the Church as accords And to the effect that the Representation of this Church in its General Assemblies may be the more equal in all time coming Recommends it to the first Assembly that shall be called to appoint Ministers to be sent as Commissioners from every Presbytery not in equal numbers which is manifestly unequal where Presbyteries are so but in a due proportion to the Churches and Parochines within every Presbytery as they shall judg convenient And it is hereby declared That all School-Masters and Teachers of Youth in Schools are and shall be liable to the Trial Judgment and Censure of the Presbyteries of the Bounds for their Sufficiency Qualifications and Deportments in the said Office And lastly Their Majesties with advice and consent foresaid do hereby Statute and Ordain That the Lords of Their Majesties Privy-Council and all other Magistrates Judges and Officers of Justice give all due assistance for making the Sentences and Censures of the Church and Judicatures thereof to be obeyed or otherways effectual as accords Extracted forth of the Records of Parliament by Tarbat Cls. Regist. God save King William and Queen Mary By their Petition it 's easy to perceive that Presbyterian Government as now established in Scotland is none of the Stops and Impediments which they desire to be taken off seeing they promise a Submission to it and a Concurrence with it And therefore the Ratification of this Government in the Comprehension Act cannot be that which they scruple especially seeing it doth not enjoin them to own it submit to it and concur with it as the Government of the Church by Divine Institution but as the only Government of the Church of Scotland And if any should object That this may bear hard upon their Principles who may reasonably be supposed to think that Episcopacy still remains in Force I answer 1. The Petitioners can have no such Objection for they own in Terminis that Episcopacy is abolished So that this can be no Subterfuge except they have some such Jesuitical Equivocation or Mental Reservation couch'd under that Term as that late Distinction of a King de Iure and de Facto 2. If they do not believe the Abolition of Episcopacy de Iure they must be de Facto very bad Men to offer Submission and Concurrence with it seeing whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin and he that doubteth is damned if he eat 3. If they question the Legality of its Abolition then it 's plain they must disown the Authority of their Majesties and the Parliament which makes them justly unworthy of their Protection and liable to the Lash of the Law But 4. and lastly I am very well assured that the far greater part of the Scots Episcopal Clergy did always pretend to believe That no particular Species of Church-Government was of Divine Institution but that it was alterable according to the Pleasure and Conveniency of the State And this I have heard asserted by some of the most Learned of their Communion Then it remains that the subscribing the Confession of Faith as their own together with the Oaths of Allegiance and Assurance and their being enjoined to an Uniformity in Worship according to the present Administration and making Application to the General Assembly thirty Days after their meeting to be admitted upon the Conditions aforesaid must be what they scruple seeing these are all the other Terms required of them by the Act of Comprehension Then as to the subscribing of the Confession of Faith they offer it in their Petition But how Why truly as containing the Doctrine of the Protestant Religion professed in Scotland They have indeed laboured to perswade the World that the Scots Presbyterians were Fools And truly they would have had very good Reason for
the Parliament of Scotland had gone near to have branded some of those who are Tools to the said Englishmen with perpetual Infamy had it not been out of respect to his Majesty who hath honoured them with an eminent Character and might have proceeded further to have declared such Proceedings as they advis'd to in relation to the General Assembly Arbitrary and Illegal and a demand of Justice against such as advised to those Measures would have thereupon followed of Course But notwithstanding of all this favourable Procedure towards our Scots Prelatists yet their Clamour does not cease and particularly against those Ministers of State to whom his Majesty intrusted the Management of Affairs though it be Evident that if any Party be abridged by the Act it is the Presbyterians who are now obliged by Law to receive the Prelatical Clergy on such and such Terms with certification if they refuse that the Episcopal Clergy shall have their Majesties Protection So that if our murmuring Gentlemen will but evidence so much Loyalty to his Majesty as to abjure all those who pretend a right to his Crown and promise neither to molest the Government Civil nor Ecclesiastical they have it in their own Power to be secured in the execution of their Office and enjoyment of their Benefices whether the Presbyterians will or not if they cannot in thirty Days time prove them either Heterodox or Scandalous And seeing as I said before the Test to prove their Soundness in the Faith is no other for the Matter than what the Church of England imposes upon her Clergy we hope that that Venerable Society will find no cause to complain that the Terms of our Communion are too Narrow if they do but consider what our Episcopal Party have conceded whereby indeed they have abandon'd the Church-of England-Government and Discipline which I suppose will gall their Patrons more than if they had disown'd her Doctrine which it's plain they must also do if they refuse to subscribe the Confession of Faith as injoin'd by the Act. This brings me naturally to observe the Unstedfastness and hateful Prevarication of that Party both with God and Man which will appear uncontrovertably true if we consider their subscribing the Solemn League and Covenant when that was uppermost and their abjuring it again after Charles the 2 d's Restoration their swearing of the Self-contradictory Test in his Reign as also to Passive Obedience and yet their offer to swear Allegiance to their present Majesties which now again they retract Nor is their Shuffling less notorious with their own Church They were sworn to maintain Episcopacy in the late Reigns and by their pretended Zeal for it make their Interest with the Church of England in this and yet offer'd to submit to and concur with Presbytery in their Petition which now again they retract So that the Church of England have no more reason then we to put Confidence in these Men seeing as has been said its plain that they have offered to relinquish her Government and Discipline and by their refusal to sign the Confession of Faith It 's evident that they have also relinquish'd her Doctrine and whether King William have any reason to trust to their Loyalty who contrary to their Oaths and pretended Principles have offered to swear Allegiance to him when they have without any Recantation of their former Doctrine offer'd to abandon King Iames let the World Judg. But that they are not to be trusted in relation to King William appears yet more fully by their Shuffling and refusing to comply with the present Act. And I must ingenuously confess that of the two I think the bare-fac'd and stedfast Iacobite the honester Man though I am apt to be of Mr. B y the blind Parson's Mind when one told him that Mr. S the Iacobite Parson would bring an Odium upon their Party by his avowed Dissatisfaction to this Government He answered that Mr. S was a Fool and did act too much above-board but that Dr. C es would notwithstanding his Compliance with the Government be much a greater Man with King Iames than S or such as he Which was a plain Declaration that let them pretend what they will as the Motive of their Compliance with the present Government it 's by virtue of a Dispensation from the late King that they may undermine it The Scots Episcopal Innocence c. PART II. TO let the World see how little Reason our Scots Prelatical Clergy who are outed of their Benefices have to complain of the Administration of their Majesties Government in Scotland in relation to themselves I have been at the Pains and Expence to procure this following Abstract from the Records of the Committee of States and Council which doth exhibit a List of all those turn'd out during the E. of Crawford's being President And not only vindicates that noble Lord from the malicious Aspersions wherewith his Enemies traduc'd him and which they continually buzz'd in his Majesty's Ears till he was pleased to give the said Earl his desired Quietus but justifies the Moderation of the Presbyterians in general towards their most implacable Enemies For here the Reader will clearly see that their Principles as Episcopalians was never made the Test and that not one was turn'd out but such as were proven guilty of refusing to comply with the Order of the State to pray for King William and Queen Mary And herein also the Council c. proceeded with so strict a regard to Justice that they acquitted or to use their own Term assoilzed such as could not be proven guilty of Disloyalty by sufficient Evidence Although at the same time it was proven against them that they had been Persecutors of the Presbyterians as ........... number .... ... And to evince this further we find divers acquitted though accused of very heinous Crimes as at N o. 8 58 59 84 93 94 102 103 124 125 126 133 138 164 165 170 177 because the Proof was not clear But so great a Number being turn'd out as appears by the following Catalogue upon the Account of their Disloyalty it was no wonder that the Scots Episcopal Party should be concerned to find not only the Head but also the Hands and Fingers of their Prelalatical Dagon cut off for their espousing the Interest of a Popish Prince whom the Convention of States had laid aside for his Male-administration according to former Precedents And therefore for the Credit of their Cause and to wipe off that horrible Scandal they open their Throats and raise the Cry that they were turn'd out because of their adherence to the Church-of England-Discipline by which means they procured abundance of Friends in this Nation and so great Interest at Court that they though disowning their Majesties Authority are given out to be the best of the Subjects and his Majesty's real Friends brought under Obloquy and Reproach whence came those Changes amongst Counsellors and Ministers of State and those Proceedings against the General
no Sect Antient or Modern that ever broke the Peace of the Christian Church but may be more plausibly defended than the latest Edition of Presbytery in Scotland By the latest Edition they must mean as it is now established since the late Revolution in Doctrine and Discipline Now for the Doctrine of the Presbyterians it is establish'd by Act of Parliament as contained in the Westminster Confession which is granted by every one to be the same as to the Matter with the Doctrinal Articles of the Church of England Then as for their Discipline which is establish'd by the same Authority it is that of their Government by Parochial Consistories made up of the Minister and Elders Presbyteries which consist of a greater number of Ministers and Elders associated Provincial Synods which are composed of Delegates from the several Presbyteries and General Assemblies which are form'd of Commissioners from all the Presbyteries of the Kingdom Now any that have perused the Learned Arch-bishop Vsher's Treatise to reconcile Episcopacy and Presbytery or that have ever considered the Concessions made as to the Government of the Church by Charles I. in his Treaties may easily be convinc'd whether our Learned Authors were not possessed with the Spirit of Calumny and Slander even in the sense of the Moderate Episcopalians when they publish'd the Proposition above-mentioned But this will appear more evident still if we do but enumerate some of the Antient and Modern Sects who have broke the Peace of the Church To begin with the Gnosticks who were so Antient that Dr. Hammond Diss. Proem de Antichr thinks that the Apostles saw the first Authors of their Opinions and that St. Paul alludes to them in 1 Tim. 6.20 They are charg'd with denying the Godhead of Jesus Christ maintaining all manner of Impure Lusts polluting the places where they met accordingly and foasting barbarously on the Children begotten in such Impurity after they had pounded them into Mortar which they esteem'd a most religious Act as is related by Tertullian Epiphan Theodoret c. In the next place we shall name the Arians who begun about 290 and infected most of the Christian World They held Christ to be a Creature and the Holy Ghost the like rebaptiz'd the Orthodox and baptiz'd all their Disciples only from the Navel upwards as thinking the inferiour Parts unworthy of it The Donatists flourish'd in the 4 th Age and held that the Son was less than the Father and the Holy Ghost less than the Son That it was lawful to kill themselves rather than fall into the Hands of the Magistrates and to kill others who were not of the Faith The Armenians in the 6 th Age who held that Christ took not a Humane Body from the Virgin that his Body was immortal from the Minute of his Conception that there was a quaternity of Persons and that the Divinity suffered In the 11 th and 12 th the Bong●milit rejected the Books of Moses and aledged that God had a Humane Shape But to make haste we shall come to the German Anabaptists of the 16 th Century whose Opinions and Enthusiasms are known to every one And the Socinians who deny the Divinity of Jesus Christ c. For the Arminians I know it 's in vain to name them most of the Party being infected with their Leaven But if any Man will be at the pains to compare the Doctrine of the Church of England in her Articles and the Westminster Confession which agree in the Matter with the Sects here mentioned he may quickly be satisfi'd whether those Gentlemen may not justly be charged with a Spirit of Malice and Slander in saying That they know no Sect Antient or Modern c. but what are more plausible than Presbytery in the latest Edition They have no other Hole to creep out at but either that they knew not of those Sects or else that those Hereticks did not break the Peace of the Church and then we shall know what Judgment to make of their Learning and Ingenuity But if they insist upon the Comprehension Act let them answer what I have already said on that Head However we may quickly be satisfied that those Gentlemens Veracity and Learning are much of a-piece if we consider the amiable Character which they bestow upon the Presbyterians in the Scots Presbyterian Eloquence viz. That they are void of common Sense never scruple any Perjury before a Judg that may seem to advance their Cause That they think Murder a Vertue when the Work of the Covenant requires it That they generally discountenance Morality glory in Lying Cheating Murder and Rebellion to fulfil the Ends of the Solemn League That they look not upon a Man as endued with the Spirit of God without a loud Voice whining Tone broken and smothered Words and such canting deformity of Holiness Their Ministers they say are a proud sowre unconversible Tribe looking perfectly like Pharisees having Faces like their horrid Decrees of Reprobation are without Humanity void of common Civility Never preach Christ nor Eternity are Firebrands the Scandal of Christianity and Disgrace of the Nation Now I would fain in the first place ask our Gentlemen Whether this be not an Arraignment of the King and Parliament who have lodged the Government of the Church in such Mens Hands and established Presbytery to please such a sort of People And if this Character be true Whether King William be not the greatest of Tyrants to have establish'd such a Church by the touch of his Scepter in contrariety to such a Learned Holy and Innocent Party as the Scots Episcopalians And if this Character be not true Whether the Libellers and Bookseller be not obnoxious to the Government and guilty of seditious Designs in accusing his Majesty of having concurred to the settling of such a Church Or whether the Ministers of State in Scotland have not cause to demand Justice for this Indignity put upon their King and Parliament In the next place Who deserve most to be charg'd with Falshood Malice Slander and Forgery the Authors of the Scots Presbyterian Eloquence who charge the whole Presbyterian Party of Scotland with those odious Crimes in general or the Answerer who proves the Prelatical Persecution by Acts of their own Parliaments and their Murders by uncontroulable Instances And his Charge in general against their Clergy by the Vote of this present Parliament when a Convention That they were the great and insupportable Grievance of the Nation To which the Prelatists can oppose nothing but Sir George Mackenzie's Vindication of Charles II's Government in Scotland which the Answerer hath made appear to be a malicious Libel or else the Cause of King William's Undertaking was unjust and He and his Parliament of Scotland abominable Liars in declaring those Acts which Sir George defends to be impious And last of all I would ask those Gentlemen Whether they think that any thing which they invent or suggest against the Answerer can justly deserve any Credit
l'Assemblée des Pretres conjointement avec l'Eveque cola a duré tant qu'il n'y a en dans chaque Ville qu'une Eglise qu'une Assembleé des pretres jointe a son Eveque Mais Aussitot qu'il fut necessaire d'augmenter le Nombre des Eglises il y ent a craindre que ceux qui les governoient ne S'attribuassent aussi la qualite d'Eveques ce qui fut cause que les Eveques commencerent a s'attribuer quelque autorité sur eux P. Sim. Supplement Ch. 4. Hist. des Revenus Ecclesiastiques Now Doctor I hope you will allow Father Simon to be as well vers'd in Rabbinical Learning as your self You see that he only insinuates their Imitation of the Jews but nothing of a Divine Warrant and plainly owns that the Superiority of Bishops over Presbyters is meerly of humane Original But I must tell you further Doctor that your Argument from the High-Priest of the Jews will be more conclusive for a Pope And if this be not argued like a Gentleman of his Guard it 's however argued like one that wishes him well For your brag as to St. Ierome reconcile it to his Commentary on Titus or your own Opinion with Dr. Holland's K. Iames the 6 th's Professor at Oxford Arch-bishop Whitgift's Dr. Fulk's and others of the Church of England The first in an Act at Oxford July 9. 1608. concluded That it was contrary to the Scriptures Fathers Doctrine of the Church of England and Schoolmen to say that Episcopatus est ordo distinctus à Presbyteratu coque superior Iure Divino And in the next place Doctor as a further Answer consider That there was no standing Officer appointed in the New-Testament-Church above a Deacon but a Presbyter And Clemens who lived in the first Century in his Epistle to the Corinthians telling them That God in the Jewish Church appointed a High Priest Priests and Levites names no other Orders of Ministry in the Christian Church but Bishops and Deacons His words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Pag. 57. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Note this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because Pag. 57 58 he shews that the Controversy was not about the Name but Dignity of Episcopacy because they were about deposing their godly Presbyters or Bishops But Doctor my next Attaque shall be upon your Evidence Sir William Paterson who is pleased to treat Mr. Ridpath with the genteel Terms of Villain Rascal Varlet c. though at the same time Mr. Ridpath is content to refer it to any Herald in Scotland Whether the Family whence he is descended or Sir William's be the best It can be very well instructed that the Family of Ridpath is of the same Original with the Gordons both by the Heralds Books their armorial Bearings and constant Tradition And I think there 's none will deny that the Family of Gordon is one of the eldest and greatest Families in Scotland The History of Douglas does also own that their Princely Family did not think it below them to espouse the Quarrel of that of Ridpath the best Families of the Mers as those of Swinton Cockburn c. will not disown their having been allied to them And there 's yet a Monument in Cranshaw's Church at the Head of that which was formerly the Baron of Ridpath's Seat demonstrating that one of our Kings did not think it below him to be the Guest of that Family and to honour them with his Company to Church This I have much ado to prevail with Mr. Ridpath to let pass as being of the Opinion that all such things are but Vanity and that sola Virtus nobilitat nor would he have indeed suffered it but that his malicious Enemies think it their Interest to revile and vilify him because forsooth he was a Servant though at the same time he was never Servant to any Man but in a Station becoming a Scholar and thinks it no disgrace to be so still And as for being Servant to the two Sons of one Mr. Grey it 's false he had no concern but with one of the Greys and that was as an Assistant in his Studies and that Gentleman did then and does still treat him as his Companion nor is he asham'd to own that he serves Mr. Grey now As for Dr. Cant's having found the Bond of Combination as he calls it upon Mr. R. it 's also false nor was ever the Original Bond found by any of your Party though Mr. Massey who was his Regent had a foul Copy of the Bond from Mr. Grey which must be that if there be any that is in the Council Office And if it be there he dares refer to it to prove Sir William's Falshood as to that Clause inviting Prentices and all others to join in the Association for there was never any such in it But lest Sir William or any of his Gang have corrupted it I shall by and by exhibit an attested Copy to prove what I say And it is as false that any Ring-leader of the Presbyterians or any other were concern'd in framing the Design besides the Students themselves Nor was it ever design'd as a Prologue to any Rebellion as Sir William does aver Neither has Mr. R. any reason to believe that he would have been spared could the Law have reach'd him or could they have found a Jury to have condemn'd him for the Proceedings against him on that Head were universally abhor'd by all Protestants in general those of Sir William and the Doctor 's Kidney excepted As to the Benefit which Mr. R. had by the D. of York's Clemency we shall hear anon And as to the falseness of his Answer to the D. of Rothes and other great Lords he defies Sir William to instance in one But to set this whole Matter in its true Light take this short but true Narrative of it Mr. R. having upon reading the account of the Pope burning at London moved it first himself to some of his fellow Students the Design was so laid afterwards that it could not well nor did not miscarry though the two Mr. Greys Mr. Guthry Mr. R. and others were taken up the Night before the burning of the Pope on design to prevent it and after the Business was done examined by Sir George Mackenzie the King's Advocate but Mr. R. being sufficiently possessed with the Apprehensions of the then raging Tyranny he refus'd to answer though threatned with Torture till he was perswaded thereunto by his Regent Mr. Massey who told him in a very Friendly manner by himself that my Lord Advocate only desir'd to know whether any other than the Students were concerned in the Contrivance for if it happened to be so that it was only a Project of their own the Council would pass it over as a puerile Business whereupon Mr. R. confessed that he drew the Bond and after several Questions upon that Head was discharged which