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A47584 The historie of the reformation of the Church of Scotland containing five books : together with some treatises conducing to the history. Knox, John, ca. 1514-1572.; Buchanan, David, 1595?-1652? 1644 (1644) Wing K738; ESTC R12446 740,135 656

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upon his Regall Seat To this same people from time to time he sent Prophets to reduce them to the right way of their God from the which oftentimes they declined by Idolatry And albeit for their stubborne contempt of Justice he was compelled to give them into the hands of their enemies as before he threatned by the mouth of Moses Insomuch that the holy City was destroyed the Temple burnt with fire and the whole land left desolate the space of seventy yeeres yet of mercy did he reduce them again to Ierusalem where the Citie and Temple were reedified and they against all temptations and assaults of Satan did abide till the Messias came according to the promise VI. Of the Incarnation of Christ Iesus VVHen the fulnesse of time came God sent his Sonne his eternall Wisdome the substance of his own Glory into this World who took the nature of manhood of the substance of a woman to wit of a Virgine and that by the operation of the holy-Ghost and so was born The just seed of David The Angel of the great councell of God The very Messias promised whom we acknowledge and confesse Emanuel very God and very man two perfect natures united and ioyned in one person By which our Confession we condemne the damnable and pestilent Heresies of Arrius Martion Eutiches Nestorius and such others as either denie the Eternitie of his God-head or the Veritie of his humane nature or confound them or yet divide them VII Why it behoveth the Mediatour to be very God and very man VVE acknowledge and confesse That this most wondrous conjunction betwixt the God-head and Man-hood of Christ Jesus did proceed from the eternall and immutable Decree of God whence also our salvation springeth and dependeth VIII Of Election FOr that same eternall God who of meere grace elected us in Christ Jesus his Sonne before the foundation of the world was laid appointed him to be our Head our Brother our Pastour and great Bishop of our soules But because that the enmitie betwixt the justice of God and our sinnes was such That no flesh by it self could or might have attained unto God It behoved that the Son of God should descend unto us and take himself a body of our body flesh of our flesh and bones of our bones and so become the perfect Mediatour betwixt God and man giving power to so many as beleeve in him to be the sons of God as he himself doth witnesse I passe up to my Father and your Father to my God and unto God By which most holy fraternity whatsoever we have lost in Adam is restored to us again And for this cause are we nothing afraid to call God our Father not so much in that he hath created us which we have common with the reprobate as for that that he hath given to us his onely Sonne to be our Brother and given unto us grace to imbrace him for our onely Mediatour as before is said It behoved further the Messias and Redeemer to be very God and very Man because he was to suffer the punishment due for our transgressions and to present himself in the presence of his fathers judgement as in our person to suffer for our transgression and disobedience by death to overcome him that was Authour of death But because the onely God-head could not suffer death neither could onely the Man-hood overcome the same he joyned both together in one person that the imbecilitie of the one should suffer and be subject to death which we had deserved and the Infinite and Invincible power of the other to wit of the God-head should triumph and purchase unto us life libertie and perpetuall Victory and so we confesse and most undoubtedly beleeve IX Christs Death Passion Buriall c. THat our Lord Jesus offered himself a voluntary Sacrifice unto his Father for us That he suffered contradiction of sinners That he was wounded and plagued for our transgressions That he being the clean and innocent Lambe of GOD was condemned in the presence of an earthly Judge that we might be absolved before the Tribunall Seat of our God That he suffered not onely the cruell death of the Crosse which was accursed by the sentence of God but also That he suffered for a season the wrath of his Father which sinners had deserved But yet we avow That he remained the onely welbeloved and blessed Sonne of his Father even in the midst of his anguish and torment which he suffered in body and soule to make the full satisfaction for the sinnes of his people After the which we confesse and avow That there remains no other sacrifice for sinnes which if any affirme we nothing doubt to avow That they are blasphemous against Christs Death and the everlasting purgation and satisfaction purchased unto us by the same X. Resurrection VVE undoubtedly beleeve That in so much as it was impossible that the paines of death should retain in bondage the Authour of life that our Lord Jesus Crucified Dead and Buried who descended into hell did rise again for our Justification and destroying him who was the authour of death brought life again to us that were subject to death and to the bondage of the fame We know that his Resurrection was confirmed by the testimony of his very enemies By the Resurrection of the dead whose sepulchres did open and they did arise and appeared to many within the City of Ierusalem It was also confirmed by the testimonie of Angels and by the sences and judgements of his Apostles and others who had conversation and did eat and drink with him after his Resurrection XI Ascension VVE nothing doubt but that the self-same Bodie which was born of the Virgin was Crucified Dead and Buried and which did rise again did ascend into the Heavens for accomplishment of all things Where in our names and for our comfort he hath received all power in heaven and in earth Where he sitteth at the right hand of the Father enthronized in his Kingdome Advocate and onely Mediatour for us which glory honour and prerogative he alone amongst the Brethren shall possesse till that all his enemies be made his foot stoole as that we undoubtedly beleeve they shall be in the finall judgement to the execution whereof we certainly beleeve that the same our Lord Jesus shall visibly and apparantly returne as that he was seene to ascend And there we firmely beleeve that the time of refreshing and restitution of all things shall come insomuch that those that from the beginning have suffered violence injury and wrong for righteousnesse sake shall inherite the blessed immortality promised from the beginning But contrary wayes the stubborn cruell inobedient oppressors filthy persons adulterers and all sorts of unthankfull men shall be cast into the dungeon of utter darknesse where their worme shall not die neither yet their fire bee extinguished the remembrance of the
THE ECCLESIASTICALL HISTORY OF SCOTLAND THE HISTORIE Of the REFORMATION OF THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND Containing five Books Together with some TREATISES conducing to the History Published by Authority JEREM. 5.1 Run ye to and fro thorow the streets of Jerusalem and see now and know and seek in the broad places thereof if ye can finde a man if there be any executeth Iudgement that seeketh the Truth and I will pardon it 2 COR. 13.8 For we can do nothing against the Truth but for the Truth LONDON Printed by Iohn Raworth for George Thomason and Octavian Pullen and are to be sold at the signe of the Rose in Pauls Church-yard MDCXLIV To the Reader Christian Reader HEre I present unto thee a Piece I dare promise worthy of thy reading wherein thou hast a true and plain Relation without disguising of many memorable Passages happened in the Church of God and likewise some notable ones in the State of the Kingdom of Scotland from the very first setling of State and Church in that Countrey But namely and chiefly thou hast here related what principally passed in Church and State in this our Countrey during the great Work of purging the Church from the Superstitions and Idolatry and freeing both Church and State from the Tyranny and Slavery of Popery untill the coming of King James our late Soveraign to the Crown of Scotland Further beside the true and faithfull Relation of many Occurrences that fell out in these dayes in Scotland thou hast unfolded unto thee and made plain the strong Reasons and necessery Causes that moved these men who are here named although infirm and weake in themselves to undergo the great Work of Reformation With the solid Grounds upon which they went on with this weighty Businesse willingly and cheerfully notwithstanding the great rubs and difficulties they met withall through the help and assistance of God who by them mean Instruments brought things to passe in despight of the malice and stratagems of Sathan with his agents for the good of his People and the setling of his Church in Purity and Liberty All these things are set down plainly and simply in familiar and homely Language Yet so that they may be with ease apprehended and understood by any one From what thou hast here written in this Volume although there were no other Writings in this kinde extant thou mayest see easily by what means the great Mystery of Iniquity from the very first Rise hath been set afoot and constantly ever since hath been carried on to wit By cunning Devices impudent Lyes continued and crafty Plots under specious Pretexts and open Oppression Tyranny and Cruelties within Scotland till the yeer of Christ 1567. After which time the enemies of God and of his People have not been sleeping till this present more then formerly Wherefore for thy good Christian Reader I have thought fit in this place to point at some main Occurrences from that time till now First then the adversaries of Truth and Goodnesse under the specious Pretext of restoring Queen Mary to her Liberty and of re-establishing her in full Authority and sole Power did disquiet and trouble both Church and State in Scotland both with open Force and subtill Plots for some yeers that is to the 1573 yeer But finding that all their Undertakings under this pretext proved to be in vain and without successe and standing to their main Designe of undoing Religion and Liberty they bethought themselves of another way in appearance more plausible for compassing their wicked Intents it was To deal by way of entreaty and request with the chief Ministers of State and Church then To have the Mother set at liberty and to be joynt in Authority and Power with her Son And for the obtaining of this was employed the credit of the French Court for the time with all its skill and cunning but to small purpose For these rude fellows who managed the publike Affairs then of State and Church could not be corrupted with the French Complements In this way the enemies continued till the yeer 1577 and did not then give over notwithstanding their bad successe but according to their wonted and resolved custome they went on with their Designe betaking themselves to a new course wherein they had indeed more successe then in either of the former two It was this They did set awork certain men who with fair words and flattering tales so craftily dealt with the young King hardly yet twelve yeers of age that they made him cast off as a yoke the counsell and service of those who ever since his Birth-day had carefully laboured for the good of State and Church with the pereservation of his Authority and safety of his Person And so the inconsiderate young King although of most nimble wit and knowing above his yeers under the shew of freedom put himself in the power of those who wished no good to his Person and Authority and as little to the Church and State making no scruple to trouble both for their own ends according to the Instructions of the Masters who set them awork So in very short time they gave unto the young King such impressions which did stick too much to him that not onely he became averse from those who had been so usefull to the publike and so serviceable to him but also he suffered them to be persecuted yea some by death and others by banishment While the enemies were thus working businesse with us in Scotland they were not idle with our neighbours in England for they were contriving and plotting under colour of setting the imprisoned Queen at liberty And were gone so far on in this way in both Kingdoms that to stop the course and progresse of the enemies both Countries thought it necessary to enter into a mutuall League and Covenant one with another for the defence of the Reformed Religion and Liberties of both Kingdoms with the preservation of the Persons and Authorities of both Princes King James and Queen Elizabeth against the common enemy This was done by the consent of both Princes in the yeer 1686. After this the enemy seeing the warinesse of both Kingdoms to be such that in a short time he was not likely to advance the main Designe according to his minde by craft and cunning leaveth off for a time to act the part of the Fox and openly declares himself to be a ravishing Wolf So the yeer 1588 the Armado cometh against both Kingdoms which God in his mercy unto our fathers and us brought to nought About this time and some yeers before the agents of the enemy were very busie with King James to break with England and to revenge the hard usage and ill treatment of his Mother But God did direct him so for his own good that he did give no consent to their evil counsell Upon this refusall of the Kings the agents of the common enemy do bestir themselves to trouble both King and Kingdom which they did in a
very simple people understood and confessed That as the Priests and obstinate Pharisees perswaded the people to refuse Christ Jesus and caused Pilate to condemne him So did the Bishops and men called Religious blinde the people and perswade Princes and Judges to persecute such as professe Christ Jesus his blessed Gospel This plain speaking so inflamed the hearts of all that bare the Beasts mark that they ceased not till the said Friar Kill●r and with him Frier Beaverege Sir Duncane Symson Robert Forester Gentleman and Deane Thomas Forrat Channon regular and Vicar of Dolour a man of upright life who altogether were cruelly murthered in one fire upon the Castle hill the last of February in the yeere of our Lord 1538. This cruelty was used by the aforesaid Cardinall the Chancellour the Bishop of Glasgow and the incestuous Bishop of Dumblane After that this cruelty was used in Edinburgh upon the Castle hill to the effect that the rest of the Bishops might shew themselves no lesse fervent to suppresse the lyght of God then he of S. Andrews was were apprehended two of the Diocesse of Glasgow The one named Ieronimus Russell a gray Frier a young man of a meeke nature quicke spirit and good Learning And one Alexander Kennedie who passed not eighteen yeers of age one of excellent wit in vulgar Poesie To assist the Bishop of Glasgow in that cruell judgement or at least to dip his hands in the blood of the Saints of God were sent Master Iohn Lawd●r Master Andrew Olyphant and Frier Meitman servants of Satan apt for that purpose The day appointed to the cruelty approached The two poore Saints of God were presented before those bloody butchers grievous were the crimes that were laid to their charge Kennedie at the first was faint and gladly would have recanted but while the place of repentance was denied unto him the spirit of God which is the spirit of all comfort began to work in him yea the inward comfort began to burst forth as well in visage as in tongue and word for his countenance began to be cheerfull and with a joyfull voice upon his knees he said O eternall God how wonderfull is that love and mercy that thou bearest unto mankinde and unto me the most caitife and miserable wretch above all others For even now when I would have denied thee and thy Son our Lord Iesus Christ my onely Saviour and so have cast my self into everlasting damnation Thou by thine own hand hast pulled me from the very bottome of hell and made me to feele that heavenly comfort which takes from me that ungodly feare wherewith before I was oppressed Now I defie death do what ye please I praise my God I am ready The godly and learned Ieronimus railed upon by these godlesse Tyrants answered This is your houre and power of darknesse Now sit ye as Iudges and we stand wrongfully accused and more wrongfully to be condemned but the day shall come when our innocencie shall appeare and that ye shall see your own blindnesse to your everlasting confusion Go forward and fulfill the measure of your iniquity While that these servants of God thus behaved themselves a variance ariseth betwixt the Bishop and the beasts that came from the Cardinall For the Bishop said I thinke it better to spare these men then to put them to death Whereat the idiot Doctors offended said What will ye do my Lord will ye condemne all that my Lord Cardinall and the other Bishops and we have done If so ye do ye shew your selfe enemy to the Church and us and so we will repute you be ye assured At which words the faithlesse man afraid adjudged the innocents to die according to the desire of the wicked The meeke and gentle Ieronimus Russell comforted the other with many comfortable sentences oft saying unto him Brother fear not more mighty is he that is in us than he that is in the world the pain that we shall suffer is short and shall be light but our joy and consolation shall nevea have end and therefore let us contend to enter in unto our Master and Saviour by the same strait way which he hath taken before us Death cannot destroy us for it is destroyed already by him for whose sake we suffer With these and the like comfortable sentences they passed to the place of execution and constantly triumphed over death and Sathan even in the midst of the flaming fire And thus did those cruell beasts intend nothing but murther in all the quarters of this Realme for so far had they blinded and corrupted the inconsiderate Prince that he gave himself to obey the tyrannie of those bloodie beasts and he made a solemne Vow That none should be spared that was suspect of Heresie yea although it were his own son To presse and push him forward in this his fury he lacked not flatters enow for many of his Minions were pensioners to Priests Amongst whom Oliver Synclare yet remaining enemy to God was principall And yet did not God cease to give that blinded Prince documents that some sudden punishment was to fall upon him if he did not repent and amend his life and that his own mouth did confesse For after that Sir Iames Hamilton was beheaded justly or unjustly we dispute not this Vision came unto him as to his familiars himself did declare the said Sir Iames appeared unto him having in his hands a drawn sword with the which he stroke from the King both the arms saying to him these words Take that till thou receive a finall payment for all thy impiety This Vision with sorrowful countenance he shewed on the morrow and shortly thereafter died his two sons both within the space of 24 hours yea some say within the space of six hours In his own presence George Steill his greatest flatterer and greatest enemy to God that was in his Court dropped off his horse and died not saying one word that same day that in audience of many the said George had refused his portion of Christs Kingdom if the prayers of the Virgin Mary should not bring him thereto How terrible a Vision the said Prince saw lying in Lintlightow that night that Thomas Scot Justice Clerk died in Edinburgh men of good credite can yet report For afraid at midnight or after he called aloud for Torches and raised all that lay beside him in the Pallace and told that Thomas Scot was dead for he had been at him with a company of devills and had said unto him these words O we to the day that ever I knew thee or thy service for serving of thee against God against his servants and against Iustice I am adjudged to endlesse torment How terrible voyces the said Thomas Scot pronounced before his death men of all estates heard and some that yet live can witnesse his voice ever was Iusto Dei judicio condemnatus sum that is I am condemned by
before it is plain That after the Kings death and during the Cardinalls life whosoever guided the Court he gate his secret businesse sped of that gracious Lady either by day or by night Howsoever the tidings liked her she mended with as great expedition of that daughter as ever she did before of any son she bare The time of her Purification was sooner than the Leviticall Law appoints but she was no Jew and therefore in that she offended not The noyse of the death of King Iames divulgate who departed this life the 13 day of December in the yeere of God 1542 aforesaid the hearts of men began to be disclosed All men lamented that the Realme was left without a male to succeed Yet some rejoyced that such an enemy to Gods Truth was taken away He was called of some A good poore mans King of others he was termed A murtherer of the Nobility and one that had decreed their whole destruction Some praised him for the repressing of theft and oppression others dispraised him for being much given to women The Prelats and Clergie feared a change in the Kings minde as he had expressed himself some few yeers before And thus men spake even as their affection led them and yet none spake altogether besides the truth for part of these aforesaid were so manifest that as the vertues could not be denied so could not the vices by any craft be cloked Yet to speak truth of him his vices may justly be attributed to the times and his breeding and not any wickednesse in his nature for he gave many expressions of a good nature namely in his sobriety and justice c. The question of Government was thorow this Realme universally moved The Cardinall proclaimed the Kings last Will and therein were expressed four Protectors or Regents of whom himself was the first and principall and with him were joyned the Earls of Huntley Argyle and Murhay this was done on Munday at the Market Crosse of Edinburgh But the Munday following took the whole Regents remission for their usurpation for by the stout and wise counsell of the Laird of Grange did the Earle of Arran then so neer to the Crown cause assemble the Nobility of the Realme and required the equity of their judgements in that his just suit to the Government of this Realm during the minority of her to whom he pretended to succeed failing of her and of her lawfull succession His friends convened the Nobility assembled the day of decision is appointed the Cardinall and his faction opposes them and are against the Government of one man and especially of any called Hammilton For who knowes not said the Cardinall that the Hammiltons are cruell murtherers oppressors of innocents proud avaritious double and false and finally the pestilence in this Common-wealth Whereto the Earl answered Defraud me not of my right and call me what ye please whatsoever my friends have been yet unto this day hath no man cause to complain upon me neither yet am I minded to flatter any of my friends in their evill doing but by Gods grace shall be as forward to correct their enormities as any within the Realme can reasonably require of me And therefore yet again my Lords in Gods Name I crave that ye do me no wrong nor defraud me of my just Title before ye have experience of my Government At these words were all that feared God or loved honesty so moved that with one voyce they cryed That Petition is most just and unlesse ye will do against Gods Iustice and Equity it cannot be denied And so in despight of the Cardinall and his suborned Faction was he declared Governour and with publike Proclamation so denounced to the people The Kings Pallace Treasure Jewels Garments Horse and Plate was delivered unto him by the Officers that had the former charge and he honoured feared and obeyed more heartily than ever any King was before so long as he abode at God The cause of the great favour that was born unto him was That it was bruted that he favoured Gods Word and because it was well knowne that he was one appointed to have been persecuted as the Scroll found in the Kings pocket after his death did witnesse These two things together with an opinion that men had of his simplicity bowed the hears of many unto him in the beginning who after with dolour of hearts were compelled to change their opinions but hereof we will after speak The variety of matters that occurred we omit such as the order taken for keeping of the young Queen of the provision for the mother the calling home of the Douglas and other such as appertain to a Universal History of the time For as before we have said we minde onely to follow the progresse of the Religion and of the matters that cannot be severed from the same The Earle of Arran thus being established in the Government godly men repaired unto him exhorted him to call to minde for what end God had exalted him to be Governour out of what danger he had delivered him he being in the bloody Scroll as we saw before and what expectation all men of honesty had of him because they saw him a soft man they conceited goodnesse of him At their instant suit more than of his own motion was Thomas Guilliame a black Frier called to be Preacher The man was of sound judgement of reasonable letters as for that age and of a prompt and good utterance His Doctrine was wholsome without great vehemency against superstition Preached also sometime Iohn Rough who after for the verity of Christ Jesus suffered in England albeit not so learned yet more simple and more vehement against all impiety The Doctrine of these two provoked against them and against the Governour also the hatred of all such as more favoured darknesse than light and their own interest more than God The gray Friers and amongst the rest Frier Scot who before had given himself forth for the greatest Professor of Christ Jesus within Scotland and under that colour had disclosed and so endangered many These slaves of Sathan rowped as they had been Ravens yea rather they yelled and roared as devills in hell Heresie heresie Guilliame and Rough will carry the Governour to the devill The Towne of Edinburgh for the most part was devoured in superstition Edward Hope young William Adamson Sibilla Lyndsay Patrike Lyndsay Francis Aikman And in the Cannongate Iohn Mackaw and Nivian Browne with few others had the burit of knowledge in these dayes One Wilson servant to the Bishop of Dunckell who neither knew new Testament nor the old made a despightfull railing Ballad against the Preachers and against the Governour for the which he narrowly escaped hanging The Cardinall moved both heaven and hell to trouble the Governour to stay the Preaching but yet was the Battell stoutly fought for a season for he was taken and put first in Dalkeyt
knowing that Calder Younger and Brunston were with Iohan Cocburne Laird of Ormeston sent back with expedition to apprehend them also The noyse of Horse-men being heard the servants gave advertisement That more then departed or was there before were returned And while that they dispute what should be the motive the Cardinalls Garrison had seized both the outer and inner Close They called for the Laird and for the Laird of Calder who presenting themselves demanded what their COMMISSION was To bring you two and the Laird of Brouneston to my Lord GOVERNOUR They were nothing content as they had no cause and yet they made faire countenance and intreated the Gentlemen to drinke and to baite their horses till that they might put themselves in readinesse to ride with them In this meane time Brounston conveyed himselfe first secretly and then by speed of foot to Ormiston wood and from thence to Dundallon and so escaped that danger the other two were put into the Castle of Edinburgh where the one to wit Calder Zounger remained untill his baud of Manred to the Cardinall was the meanes of his deliverance And the other to wit Ormiston freed himselfe by leaping off the wall of the Castle betwixt ten of the clock and eleven before noon And so breaking Ward he escaped prison which he unjustly suffered The servant of God M. George Wischarde was carried first to Edinburgh thereafter brought backe for fashion sake to the house of Hailles againe which was the principall place that then the Earle Bothwell had in Lothiane But as gold and women have corrupted all worldly and fleshly men from the beginning so did they him For the Cardinall gave gold and that largely and the Queen with whom the said Earle was then in the Glunders promised him favour in all his lawfull suites to women if he would deliver the said M. George to be kept in the Castle of Edinburgh He made some resistance at the first by reason of his promise But an effeminate man cannot long withstand the assaults of a gracious Queene and so was the servant of God transported to Edinburgh where the Cardinall then had a convention of Prelats wherein somewhat was said of redressing the abuses of the Church and reforming the lives of the Clergie but it tooke no effect M. Wischarde remained but few dayes in Edinburgh For that bloodie woolfe the Cardinall ever thirsting after the blood of the servant of God so travelled with the abused Governour that he was content that Gods servant should be delivered to the power of that Tyrannie And so small inversion being made Pilate obeyed the petition of Caiaphas and of his fellows and adjudged Christ to be crucified The Cardinall seeing it was forbidden by the Canon Law to Priests to sit as Judges upon life and death although the crime were Heresie sent to the Governour desiring him to name some Lay-Judge to pronounce Sentence against M. Wischarde The Governour had freely condescended to the Cardinalls request without delay if David Hamilton of Preston a godly and wise man had not remonstrated unto him That he could expect no better end then Saul since he persecuted the Saints of God for that Truth which he professed once with such a shew of earnestnesse the profession thereof being the onely cause of his advancement to that high degree wherein he was The Governour moved at this Speech of David Hamiltons answered the Cardinall That he would not meddle with the blood of that good man and told him That his blood should be on him for he himselfe would be free of it At this the Cardinall was angry and said he would proceed and that he had sent to the Governour of meere civility without any need And so the servant of God delivered to the hand of that proud and mercilesse Tyrannie triumph was made by the Priests The godly lamented and accused the foolishnesse of the Governour For by the retaining of the said M. George he might have caused Protestants and Papists rather proud Romanists to have served The one to the end the life of their Preacher might have been saved The other for feare that he should have set him at liberty again to the confusion of the Bishops But where God is left as he had plainely renounced him before what can counsell or judgement availe How the servant of God was dealt withall and what he did from the day that he entred within the sea Tower of S. Andrews which was in the end of January in the yeere of God 1546. unto the first of March the same yeere when he suffered we cannot certainly tell except we understand he wrote somewhat in prison but that was suppressed by the enemies The Cardinall delayed no time but caused all Bishops yea all the Clergie that had any preheminence to be called to S. Andrews against the seven and twentieth day of February that consultation might be had in that question which in his minde was no lesse resolved then Christs death was in the minde of Caiaphas But that the rest should bear the like burden with him he would that they should before the world subscribe whatsoever he did In that day was wrought a wonder not unlike that which was at the accusation and death of Jesus Christ when Pilate and Herod who before were enemies were made friends by consenting of them both to Christs condemnation differs nothing except that Pilate and Herod were brethren under their father the Devill in the estate called Temporall And these two of whom we are about to speake were brethren sons of the same father the Devill in the estate Ecclesiasticall If we interlace merrynesse with earnest matters pardon us good Reader for the fact is so notable that it deserveth long remembrance The Cardinall was knowne proud and Dumbar Archbishop of Glasgow was knowne a glorious foole And yet because sometimes he was called the Kings Master he was Chancellour of Scotland The Cardinall cometh even the same yeere in the end of harvest before to Glasgow upon what purpose we omit But while they remaine together the one in the Towne the other in the Castle Question riseth for bearing of their Crosses The Cardinall alleadged That by reason of his Cardinalship and that he was Legatus natus and Primate within Scotland in the kingdome of Antichrist That he should have the preheminence and that his Crosse should not onely go before but that also it should onely be borne wheresoever he was Good Gukstone Glakstone the aforesaid Archbishop lacked no reasons as he thought for maintenance of his glory He was an Archbishop in his owne Diocesse and in his owne Cathedrall Seat and Church and therefore ought to give place to no man The power of the Cardinall was but begged from Rome and appertaineth but to his own person and not to his Bishoprick for it might be that his successour should not be Cardinall but his dignity was annexed with his office and did appertaine to all
Scotland published by them in Parliament and by the Estates thereof Ratified and Approved as wholesome and sound Doctrine grounded upon the infallible Truth of God MATTH 24. And this glad Tydings of the Kingdom shall be preached thorowout the whole world for a Witnesse unto all Nations and then shall the end come The Preface The States of Scotland with the Inhabitants of the same professing Christ Jesus his holy Gospel To their naturall Countrey-men and unto all other Realmes and Nations professing the same Lord Jesus with them Wish Grace Mercy and Peace from God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ with the Spirit of righteous Judgement for Salvation LOng have we thirsted dear Brethren to have notified unto the world the sum of that Doctrine which we professe and for the which we have sustained infamy and danger But such hath been the rage of Sathan against us and against Christ Iesus his Eternall Verity lately now again borne amongst us that to this day no time hath been granted unto us to clear our consciences as most gladly we would have done For how we have been tossed a whole yeer past the most part of Europe as we do suppose doth understand But seeing that of the infinite goodnesse of our God who never suffereth his afflicted utterly to be confounded above expectation have we obtained some rest and liberty we could not but set forth this briefe and plain Confession of such Doctrine as is proposed unto us and as we believe and professe partly for satisfaction of our Brethren whose hearts we doubt not have been and yet are wounded by the despightfull rayling of such as yet have not learned to speak well And partly for stopping the mouths of impudent blasphemers who boldly condemne that which they neither heard nor understood Not that we judge that the cankred malice of such is able to be cured by this simple Confession No we know that the sweet savour of the Gospel is and shall be death unto the sons of perdition But we have chief respect to our weak and infirme Brethren to whom we would communicate the bottom of our hearts lest that they be troubled or carried away by diversity of rumours which Sathan spreadeth against us to the defeating of this our most godly enterprise Protesting That if any man will note in this our Confession any Articles or sentence repugning to Gods holy Word that it would please him of his gentlenesse and for Christian charities sake admonish us of the same in writing and we upon our Honours and fidelity do promise unto him satisfaction from the mouth of God that is from his holy Scriptures or else Reformation of that which he shall prove to be amisse For God we take to Record in our consciences That from our hearts we abhorre all Sects of Heresie and all teachers of erroneous doctrine And that with all humility we embrace the purity of Christs Gospel which is the onely food of our soules and therefore so precious unto us that we are determined to suffer the extremest of worldly danger rather then that we will suffer our selves to be defrauded of the same For hereof we are most certainly perswaded That whosoever denieth Christ Iesus or is ashamed of him in presence of men shall be denied before the Father and before his holy Angels And therefore by the assistance of the mighty Spirit of the same our Lord Iesus we firmly purpose to abide to the end in the confession of this our Faith The first Article Of GOD. VVE confesse and acknowledge one onely God to whom onely we must cleave whom onely we must Worship and in whom onely we must put our trust who is Eternall Infinite Unmeasurable Incomprehensi●le Omnipotent Invisible one in Substance and yet distinct into three Persons The Father The Son And the holy Ghost by whom we confesse and believe all things in heaven and earth as well Visible as Invisible to have been Created to be Retained in their being and to be Ruled and Guided by his inscrutable Providence to such end as his eternall Wisedom Goodnesse and Justice hath appointed them to the manifestation of his own Glory II. Of the Creation of Man VVE confesse and acknowledge this our God to have Created man to wit our first Father Adam of whom also God formed the Woman to his own Image and Similitude To whom he gave Wisedom Lordship Justice free-Will and clear Knowledge of himself so that in the whole Nature of man there could be no imperfection From which Honour and Perfection Man and Woman did both fall the Woman being deceived by the Serpent and Man obeying to the voice of the Woman both conspiring against the Soveraigne Majesty of God who in expresse words had before threatned death if they presumed to eat of the forbidden Tree III. Of Originall Sin BY which transgression commonly called Originall Sin was the Image of God utterly defaced in Man and he and his Posterity of Nature became enemies to God slaves to Sathan servants to Sin insomuch that Death everlasting hath had and shall have power and dominion over all that hath not been are not or shall not be regenerate from above which Regeneration is wrought by the power of the holy Ghost working in the hearts of the Elect of God an assured Faith in the Promises of God revealed to us in his Word by which Faith they apprehend Christ Jesus with the Graces and Benefits promised in him IIII. Of the Revelation of the Promises FOr this we constantly believe That God after the fearfull and horrible defection of man from his obedience did seek Adam again call upon him rebuke his sin convince him of the same and in the end made unto him a joyfull Promise to wit That the Seed of the Woman should breake downe the Serpents head that is He should destroy the works of the devill which Promise as it was repeated and made more cleer from time to time so was it embraced with joy and most constantly retained of all the faithfull from Adam to Noah from Noah to Abraham and from Abraham to David and so forth to the Incarnation of Jesus Christ who all we mean the faithfull Fathers under the Law did see the joyfull dayes of Christ Jesus and did rejoyce V. The Continuance Encrease and Preservation of his Church VVE most constantly believe That God Preserveth Instructeth Multiplieth Honoureth Decoreth and from death called to Life his Church in all Ages from Adam till the coming of CHRIST JESUS in the Flesh For Abraham he called from his fathers Countrey him he instructed his Seed he multiplied the same he marvellously preserved and more marvellously delivered from the Bondage of Pharaoh to whom he gave his Lawes Constitutions and Ceremonies Them he possessed in the Land of Canaan to them after Judges and after Saul he gave David to be King to whom he made promise That of the fruit of his Loynes should one sit forever
with such others of the French faction who had openly spoken That they had refused all portion of Scotland unlesse that it were under the government of a French-man Recompence them O Lord as thou knowest most expedient for thine owne glory and for the perpetuall shame of all Traitours to their Common-wealth The certain knowledge of all these things came to our eares whereat many were afraid and divers suspected that England would not be so forward in times to come considering that their former expences were so great The principall comfort remained with the Preachers for they assured us in Gods Name that God would performe in all perfection that worke in our hands The beginning whereof he had so mightily maintained because it was not ours but his own And therefore exhorted us That we should constantly proceed to reform all abuses and to plant the Ministery of the Church as by Gods word we might justifie it and then commit the successe of all to our God in whose power the disposition of Kingdoms standeth And so we began to do for troubles appearing made us give eare to the admonitions of Gods servants And while that we had scarcely begun again to implore the help of our God and to shew some signes of our obedience unto his Messengers and holy Word Lo the mighty hand of God from above sent unto us a wonderfull and most joyfull deliverance For unhappy Francis husband to our Soveraigne suddenly perished of a rotten eare But because the death of that young man was not onely the cause of joy to us in Scotland but also by it were the faithfull in France delivered as it were from the present death We think expedient to speak of the same somewhat more largely These cruell and conjured enemies of God and of all godlinesse the Duke of Guise the Cardinall of Loraine and their faction who then at their owne appetite plaid the Tyrants in France had determined the destruction of all that professed the true knowledge of Jesus Christ within that Realme What tyrannie late before they had used at Amboyse the History of France doth witnesse now in Orleance in the moneth of November conveaned the King unhappy Francis the Queen our Soveraigne and the Queen mother of the King the Duke of Guise with all his faction The King of Navarre and the Prince of Condie his brother So that great was the confluence of the Nobilitie but greater was the assembly of the murtherers for there was not a Hang-man in all France which was not there The prisons were full of the true servants of God The King of Navarre and the Prince of Condie were constituted Prisoners The Sheriffe of Orleance a man fearing God was taken and so were many others of the Towne Briefly there was none that professed God or godlinesse within that Towne that looked not for the extremity for the Walles and Gates were night and day kept with the Garisons of the Guysians miserable men were daily brought in to suffer judgement but none was suffered to depart forth but at the devotion of the Tyrants And so they proceeded till the tenth or twelfth of December when that they thought time to put their bloody councell in execution and for that purpose conclusion was taken That the King should depart out of the Towne and lie at a certaine place which was done to this intent That there should no suite be made to the King for the safetie of any mans life whom they thought worthy of death And so was the Kings house in Orleance broken up his beds cofers and tapistrie sent away his owne bootes put on he sitting at the Masse immediately hereafter to have departed and so their tyrannie to have begun When all things we say were in this readinesse to shed the blood of innocents the eternall our God who ever watcheth for the preservation of his owne began to worke and suddenly did put his own work in execution for as the said King sat at Masse he was suddenly stricken with an Aposthume in that deaf ear that never would hear the Trueth of God and so was he carried to a void and empty house laid upon a palliase unto such time as a Cannaby was set up unto him where he lay till the fifteenth day of December in the yeere of God 1560. When his glory perished and the pride of his stubborne heart vanished in smoke And so was the snare broken The Tyrants disappointed of their crueltie Those that was appointed to death raised as it were out of their graves And we who by our foolishnesse had made our selves slaves to strangers were restored againe to freedome and libertie of a free Realme O that we had hearts deepely to consider what are thy wondrous works O Lord that we might praise thee in the midst of this most obstinate and wicked generation and leave the memoriall of the same to our posterities which alas we feare shall forget these thy inestimable benefits Some in France after the sudden death of Francis the 2. and calling to minde the death of Charles the 9 in blood and the slaughter of Henry the 2. did remark the Tragicall ends of these three Princes who had persecuted Gods servants so cruelly by their instruments the Guisians and by their Pens both in Prose and Verse did advise all other Princes not to authorize any Persecution or wrong done unto Gods servants left they should have the like end And indeed the following Kings of France unto this day hath found this true by their infortunate and unexpected ends The death of this King made great alteration in France England and Scotland France was erected in some esperance that the tyranny of the Guisians should no longer raigne above them because God at unawares had broken the staffe whereupon they leaned but alas they were deceived For the simplicity of some was so abused that against the Lawes of the Realm to the Queen mother was committed the Regiment which lifted up as well the Duke of Guise as the cruell Cardinall for a season The Queen of England and the Councell remitted our Ambassadours The pride of the Papists of Scotland began to be abated and some that ever had shewn themselves enemies unto us began to think and plainly to speak amongst whom the old Sheriff of Ayre was one That they perceived God to fight for us The Earle of Arrane having suffered repulse in his designe to marry the Queen of England he began to fancie unto himselfe that the Queen of Scotland bare unto him some favour And so he wrote unto her and sent for credit a Ring which the said Queen our Soveraign knew well enough The Letter and Ring were both presented to the Queen and by her received Such answer was returned to the said Earle after the which he made no further pursuit in that matter And yet neverthelesse he did bear it heavily in heart and more heavily then his friends would have wished for grief he
of Adultery of Witchcraft and to seek the restitution of Gleibes or Manses to the Minister of the Church and of the reparation of the Churches and thereby they thought to have pleased the Godly that were highly offended at their slacknesse The Act of Oblivion passed because some of the Lords had entresse but the Acts against adulterie and for the Manses and Gleibes were so modified that no Law and such a Law might stand in eodem predicamento To speak plain no Law and such Acts were both alike The Acts are in Print let wise men read and then accuse us if without cause we complain In the progresse of this corruption and before the Parliament dissolved Iohn Knox in his Sermon before the most part of the Nobilitie began to enter in a deep discourse of Gods mercies which that Realme had felt and of that ingratitude which he espied in the whole multitude which God had marvellously delivered from the bondage and tyrannie both of body and soule And now my Lords said he I praise my God through Jesus Christ that in your own presence I may powre forth the sorrows of my heart yea your selves shall be witnesse if I make any lie in things by-past from the beginning of Gods mighty Works within this Realme I have been with you in your most desperate temptations Aske your own Consciences and let them answer you before God if that I not I but Gods Spirit by me in your greatest extremity willed you not ever to depend upon your God and in his Name promised unto you victory and preservation from your enemies so that onely ye would depend upon his protection and preferre his glory before your lives and worldly commoditie in your most extreme danger I have been with you Saint Iohnstou● Cowper-More and the charges of Edinburgh are yet recent in my heart yea that dark and dolorous night wherein all you my Lords with shame and feare left this Town is yet in my minde and God forbid that ever I forget it What was I say my Exhortation unto you and what is fallen in vain of all that ever God promised unto you by my mouth ye your selves live and testifie There is not one of you against whom death and destruction was threatned perished in that danger and how many of your enemies hath God plagued before your eyes shall this be the thankfulnesse that ye shall render unto your God To betray his Cause when ye have it in your own hands to establish it as you please The Queen sayes you will not agree with us aske ye of her that which by Gods Word ye may justly require and if she will not agree with you in God you are not bound to agree with them in the Devill Let her plainly understand so farre of your mindes and steal not from your former stoutnesse in God and he will prosper you in your enterprises But I can see nothing but a recalling from Christ Jesus that the man that first and most speedily fleeth from Christs Ensigne holdeth himselfe most happy yea I hear some say That we have nothing of our Religion Established neither by Law nor Parliament Albeit the malicious words of such can neither hurt the truth of God nor yet us that thereupon depend yet the speaker of this Treason committed against God and against this poore Common-wealth deserves the Gallows for our Religion being commanded and so established by God is received with this Realme in publike Parliament And if they will say That it was no Parliament we must and will say and also prove That that Parliament was also as lawfull as ever any that passed before it within this Realme I say if the King then living was King and the Queen now in this Realm be lawfull Queen that Parliament cannot be denyed And now my Lords to put end to all I hear of the Queens marriage Dukes Brethren to Emperours and Kings strive all for the best gain But this my Lords will I say note the day and beare witnesse after Whensoever the Nobilitie of Scotland who professe the Lord Jesus consents that an Infidell and all Papists are Infidels shall be Head to our Soveraigne ye do so farre as in you lyeth to banish Christ Jesus from this Realme yea to bring Gods vengeance upon the Countrey a plague upon your selves and perchance you shall do small comfort to your Soveraigne These words and this manner of speaking was judged intollerable Papists and Protestants were both offended yea his most familiars disdained him for that speaking Placeboes and Flatterers posted to the Court to give advertisement That Iohn Knox had spoken against the Queens Marriage The Provest of Glencludan Douglas by sirname of Drumlangrig was the man that gave the charge That the said Iohn should present himselfe before the Queen which he did immediately after Dinner The Lord Uchiltrie and divers of the faithfull bare him company to the Abbey but none past in to the Queen with him in the Cabinet but Iohn Arskin of Dun then super-intendent of Angus and Mernes The Queen in a vehement fume began to crie out That never Prince was used as she was I have said she born with you in all your rigorous manner of speaking both against my selfe and against my Uncles yea I have sought your favours by all possible means I offered unto you presence and audience whensoever it pleased you to admonish me and yet I cannot be quit of you I Vow to God I shall be once revenged and with these words scarce could Marnocke one of her Pages get Handkirchiefs to hold her Eyes drie for the Tears and the howling besides womanly weeping stayed her Speech The said Iohn did patiently abide all this fume and at opportunitie answered True it is Madame your Majesty and I have been at divers controversies into the which I never perceived your Majestie to be offended at me but when it shall please God to deliver you from that bondage of darknesse and errour wherein ye have been nourished for the lack of true doctrine your Majestie will finde the libertie of my tongue nothing offensive without the preaching-place Madame I thinke few have occasion to be offended at me and there Madame I am not Master of my selfe but must obey him who commands me to speak plaine and to flatter no flesh upon the face of the Earth But what have you to do said she with my marriage If it please your Majestie said he patiently to hear me I shall shew the truth in plaine words I grant your Majestie offered unto me more then ever I required but my answer was then as it is now That God hath not sent me to awaite upon the Courts of Princes or upon the Chamber of Ladies but I am sent to preach the Evangell of Jesus Christ to such as please to hear it hath two points Repentance and Faith Now Madame in preaching repentance of necessity it is that the sinnes of men be noted that they may
I say thus authorized by God first did excommunicate Ieremy for that he did Preach otherwise then did the common sort of Prophets in Ierusalem And last apprehended him as you have heard pronouncing against him this sentence afore-written from the which neverthelesse the Prophet appealed that is Sought helpe and defence against the same and that most earnestly did he crave of the Princes For albeit he saith I am in your hands do with me as ye think righteous he doth not contemne or neglect his life as though he regarded not what should become of him but in those his words most vehemently did he admonish the Princes and Rulers of the people giving them to understand what God should require of them as if he should say Ye Princes of Iuda and Rulers of the people to whom appertaineth indifferently to judge betwixt party and party to justifie the just man and to condemne the malefactor you have heard a sentence of death pronounced against me by those whose lips ought not to speak deceit because they are sanctified and appointed by God himself to speak his Law and to pronounce judgement with equity but as they have left the living God and have taught the people vanity so are they become mortall enemies to all Gods true servants of whom I am one rebuking their iniquity apostasie and defection from God which is the onely cause they seek my life But a thing most contrary to all equity law and justice it is that I a man sent of God to call them his people and you again to the true service of God from the which you are all declined shall suffer the death because that my enemies do so pronounce sentence I stand in your presence whom God hath made Princes your power is above their Tyranny before you do I expose my cause I am in your hands and cannot resist to suffer what ye think just But lest that my lenity and patience should either make you negligent in the defence of me in my just cause appealing to your judgement either yet encourage my enemies in seeking my blood this one thing I dare not conceal That if you murther me which thing ye do if ye defend me not ye make not onely my enemies guilty of my blood but also your selves and this whole City By these words I say it is evident That the Prophet of God being condemned by the Priests and by the Prophets of the visible Church did seek ayd support and defence at the Princes and temporall Magistrates threatning his blood to be required at their hands if they by their Authority did not defend him from the fury of his enemies alleadging also just causes of his Appellation and why he ought to have been defended to wit That he was sent of God to rebuke their vices and defection from God That he taught no Doctrine which God before had not pronounced in his Law That he desired their conversion to God continually calling upon them to walke in the wayes which God had approved and therefore doth he boldly crave of the Princes as of Gods Lievtenants to be defended from the blinde rage and tyranny of the Priests notwithstanding that they claimed to themselves Authority to judge all matters of Religion And the same did he when he was cast in prison and thereafter was brought to the presence of King Zedechias After I say he had defended his innocency affirming That he neither had offended against the King against his servants nor against the people at last he made intercession to the King for his life saying But now my Lord the King take heed I beseech thee let my prayer fall into thy presence command me not to be carried again into the house of Jonathan the Scribe that I die not there And the Text witnesseth That the King commanded the place of his imprisonment to be changed Whereof it is evident That the Prophet did ofter then once seek help at the Civill power and that first the Princes and thereafter the King did acknowledge That it appertained to their Office to deliver him from the unjust sentence which was pronounced against him If any man think that Ieremy did not appeal because he onely declared the wrong done unto him and did but crave defence according to his innocency let the same man understand That none otherwise do I appeal from that false and cruell sentence which your Bishops pronounced against me Neither yet can there be any just cause of Appellation but innocency or suspition to be hurt whether it be by ignorance of a Judge or by malice and corruption of those who under the title of Justice do exercise Tyranny If I were a thief murtherer blasphemer open adulterer or any offender whom Gods Word commandeth to suffer for a crime committed my Appellation were vain and to be rejected But I being innocent yea the Doctrine which your Bishops have condemned in me being Gods Eternall Verity have no lesse liberty to crave your defence against that cruelty then had the Prophet Ieremy to seek ayd of the Princes and King of Iuda But this shall more plainly appear in the fact of Saint Paul who after that he was apprehended in Ierusalem did first claim the liberty of the Romane Citizens for avoyding torment when the Captain would have examined him by questions Thereafter in the Councell where no righteous judgement was to be hoped for he affirmed that he was a Pharisee and that he was accused of the Resurrection of the dead and last in the presence of Festus he appealed from all knowledge and judgement of the Priests at Ierusalem to the Emperour Of which last Point because it doth chiefly appertain to this my cause I will somewhat speak After that Paul had divers times been accused as in the Acts of the Apostles is manifest at the last the chief Priests and their faction came to Cesarea with Festus the President who presented uuto them Paul in Judgement whom they accused of horrible crimes which neverthelesse they could not prove the Apostle maintaining That he had offended neither against the Law neither against the Temple neither yet against the Emperour But Festus willing to gratifie the Iews said to Paul Wilt thou go up to Jerusalem and there be judged of these things in my presence But Paul said I stand at the Iustice Seat of the Emperour where it behoveth me to be judged I have done no wrong to the Iews as thou better knowest If I have done any thing unjustly or yet committed crime worthy of death I refuse not to die But if there be nothing of these things true whereof they accuse me no man may give me to them I appeal to Caesar. It may appear at the first sight That Paul did great injury to Festus the Judge and to the whole Order of the Priesthood who did hope greater equity in a cruell tyrant then in all that Session and learned company which thing no
passe over the Tyrants of old time whom God hath plagued let us come to the Tyrants which now are within the Realm of England whom God will not long spare If Steven Gardener Cuthbert Tunstal and Butcherly Bonnar false Bishops of Winchester Duresme and of London had for their false Doctrine and Traiterous acts suffered death when they justly deserved the same then would arrant Papists have alleadged as I and others have heard them do that they were men reformable That they were meet Instruments for a Common-wealth That they were not so obstinate and malicious as they were judged neither that they thirsted for the blood of any man And of Lady Mary who hath not heard That she was not sober mercifull and one that loved the Common-wealth of England Had she I say and such as now be of her pestilent Councell been dead before these dayes then should not their iniquity and cruelty so manifestly have appeared to the world for who could have thought that such cruelty could have entred into the heart of a woman and into the heart of her that is called a Virgine that she would thirst for the blood of innocents and of such as by just Laws and faithfull witnesses can never be proved to have offended by themselves I finde that Athalia through appetite to Reign murthered the Seed of the Kings of Iudah and that Herodias daughter at the desire of a whorish Mother obtained the head of Iohn the Baptist but yet that ever a woman suffered her self to be called the most blessed Virgin caused so much blood to be spilt for establishing of the usurped Authoritie of the Pope I think the like is rare to be found in Scripture or other History I finde that Iezabel that cursed Idolatresse caused the blood of the Prophets of God to be shed and Naboth to be murthered unjustly for his own Vineyard but yet I think she never erected halfe so many Gallows in all Israel as mischievous Mary hath done within London alone But you Papists will excuse your Mary the Virgine Well let her be your Virgine and a Goddesse meet to entertain such Idolaters yet shall I rightly lay to her charge that which I think no Papist within England will justifie nor defend And therefore O ye Papists here I will a little turn my Pen unto you Answer unto this Question O ye Seed of the Serpent Would any of you have confessed two years ago that Mary your mirrour had been false dissembling unconstant proud and a breaker of promises except such promises as she made to your god the Pope to the great shame and dishonour of her noble Father I am sure you would hardly have thought it of her And now doth she not manifestly shew her self to be an open Traitoresse to the Imperiall Crown of England contrary to the just Laws of the Realme to bring in a stranger and make a proud Spanyard King to the shame dishonour and destruction of the Nobilitie to the spoile of their Honours Lands Possessions chief Offices and promotions of them and theirs To the utter decay of the Treasures Commodities Navie and Fortifications of the Realm to the abasing of the Yeomandry to the slavery of the Commonalty to the overthrow of Christianity and Gods true Religion and finally to the utter subversion of the whole publike estate and Common-wealth of England Let Norfolk and Suffolke let her own Promise and Proclamation let her fathers Testament let the Citie of London let the ancient Laws and Acts of Parliaments before established in England be judges betwixt mine accusation and her most tyrannous iniquity First her Promise and Proclamation did signifie and declare That neither she would bring in neither yet Marry any stranger Northfolk Suffolk and the Citie of London do testifie and witnesse the same The ancient Laws and Acts of Parliament pronounceth it Treason to transferre the Crown of England into the hands of a forraigne Nation and the Oath made to observe the said Statutes cryeth out That all they are perjured that consent to that her traiterous fact Speak now O ye Papists and defend your monstrous Masters and deny if ye can for shame that she hath not uttered her self to be borne alas therefore to the ruine and destruction of noble England Oh who would ever have beleeved I write now in bitternesse of heart that such unnaturall crueltie should have had dominion over any reasonable creature But the saying to be true That the usurped Government of an affectionate woman is a rage without reason Who would ever have thought that the love of that Realme which hath brought forth which hath nourished and so nobly maintained that wicked woman should not have moved her heart with pitie Who seeth not now that she in all her doings declareth most manifestly that under an English name she beareth a Spaniards heart If God I say had not for our scourge suffered her and her cruell Councell to have come to Authority then could never these their abominations cruelty and treason against God against his Saints and against the Realm whose liberties they are sworn to defend so manifestly have been declared And who ever could have beleeved That proud Gardener and treacherous Tunstall whom all Papists praised for the love they bare to their Countrey could have become so manifestly Traiterous not onely against their solemne Oathes that they should never consent nor agree unto that a forraigne Stranger should reigne over England but also that they would adjudge the Imperiall Crown of the same to appertain to a Spanyard by inheritance Lineall discent O Traiterous Traitours how can you for shame shew your faces It cometh to my minde that upon Christmas day Anno 1552. preaching in New-Castle upon Tine and speaking against the obstinacie of the Papists I made this affirmation That whosoever in his heart was enemy to Christs Gospel and Doctrine which then was preached within the Realm of England was enemy also to God and secret traitours to the Crown and Common-wealth of England for as they thirsted nothing more then the Kings death which their iniquity could procure so they regarded not who should reign over them so that their Idolatry might be erected again How these my words at that time pleased men the crimes and action intended against me did declare But let my very enemies now say their conscience if those may words have not proved true What is the cause that Winchester and the rest of his pestilent sect so greedily would have a Spanyard to reign over England The cause is mafest for as that Hellish Nation surmounteth all other in pride and Whoredome so for Idolatry and vaine Papisticall and devillish Ceremonies they may rightly be called the very sons of superstition And therefore are they found and judged by the Progeny of Antichrist most apt Instruments to maintain establish and defend the Kingdom of that cruell Beast whose head and wound is lately
confession neither yet did I for that purpose adduce the History But onely to let us see how constantly God kept his promise in increasing of his people and in augmenting of his true knowledge when that both they that were the seed of Abraham and that Religion which they professed appeared utterly to have been extinguished above mens expectation I say he brought freedom out of bondage light out of darknesse and life out of death I am not ignorant that the building of the Temple and reparation of the Walls of Ierusalem were long stayed so that the work had many enemies But so did the hand of God prevail in the end That a decree was made by Darius by him I suppose that succeeded to Cambises not onely that all things necessary for the building of the Temple and for the Sacrifices that were to be there brent should be ministred upon the Kings charges but also That whosoever should hinder that work or change that decree that a balk should be taken out of his house and that he should be hanged thereupon yea that his house should be made a dunghill and thereto he addeth a Prayer saying The God of Heaven who hath placed his Name there root out every King and People O that Kings and Nations should understand that shall put his hand either to change or to hurt this house of God that is in Ierusalem And so in despight of Sathan was the Temple builded the walls repaired and the City inhabited and in the most desperate dangers it was preserved till that the Messias promised the glory of the second Temple came manifested himself to the world suffered and rose againe according to the Scriptures And so by sending forth his Gospel from Ierusalem did replenish the earth with the true knowledge of God and so did God in perfection encrease the Nation and the spirituall Seed of Abraham Wherefore dear brethren we have no small consolation if the state of all things be this day rightly considered we see in what fury and rage the world for the most part is now raised against the poor Church of Jesus Christ unto the which he hath proclaimed liberty after the fearfull bondage of that Spirituall Babylon in the which we have been holden captives longer space then Israel was prisoner in Babylon it self For if we shall consider upon the one part the multitude of those that live wholly without Christ and upon the other part the blinde rage of the pestilent Papists What shall we think of the small number of them that do professe Christ Jesus but that they are as a poor sheep already seized in the claws of the Lyon yea that they and the true Religion which they professe shall in a moment utterly be consumed But against this fearfull temptation let us be armed with the Promise of God to wit That he will be the Protector of his Church yea That he will multiply it even when to mans judgement it appeareth utterly to be exterminate This Promise hath our God performed in the multiplication of Abrahams Seed in preservation of it when Sathan laboured utterly to have destroyed it in deliverance of the same as we have heard from Babylon He hath sent his son Christ Jesus clad in our flesh who hath tasted of all our infirmities sin except who hath promised to be with us to the end of the world He hath further kept Promise in publication yea in the restitution of his glorious Gospel Shall we then think that he will leave his Church destitute in this most dangerous age Onely let us stick to his Truth and study to conform our lives to the same and he shall multiply his knowledge and encrease his people But now let us hear what the Prophet saith more Lord in trouble have they visited thee they poured out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them The Prophet meaneth that such as in the time of quietnesse did not rightly regard God nor his judgements were compelled by sharp corrections to seek God yea by cryes and dolorous complaints to visite him True it is That such obedience deserveth small praise before men for who can praise or accept that in good part which cometh as it were of meer compulsion and yet rare it is that any of Gods children do give unfained obedience untill the hand of God turn them For if quietnesse and prosperity make them not utterly to forget their duty both towards God and man as David for a season yet it maketh them carelesse insolent and in many things unmindefull of those things that God chiefly craveth of them which imperfection espied and the danger that thereof might ensue our heavenly Father visiteth the sins of his children but in the rod of his mercy by the which they are moved to return to their God to accuse their former negligence and to promise better obedience in all times hereafter as David confesseth saying Before I fell in affliction I went astray but now will I keep thy Statutes But yet for the better understanding of the Prophets minde we may consider how God doth visite man and how man doth visite God and what difference there is betwixt the visitation of God upon the reprobate and his visitation upon the chosen God sometimes visiteth the reprobate in his hot displeasure pouring upon them his plagues for their long rebellion as we have heard before that he visited the proud and destroyed their memory Other times God is said to visite his people being in affliction to whom he sendeth comfort or promise of deliverance as he did visite the seed of Abraham being oppressed in Egypt and Zachary saith That God had visited his people and sent unto them hope of deliverance when Iohn the Baptist was borne But of none of these visitations speaketh our Prophet here but of that onely which we have already touched to wit when that God layeth his correction upon his own children to call them from the venemous Breasts of this corrupt world that they suck not in over-great aboundance the poyson thereof and doth as it were wean them from their mothers Paps that they may learn to receive other nourishment True it is That this weaning or spaning as we terme it from worldly pleasure is a thing strange to the flesh and yet it is a thing so necessary to Gods children that unlesse they be weaned from the pleasures of the world they can never feed upon that delectable Milk of Gods eternall verity For the corruption of the one doth either hinder the other to be received or else so troubleth the whole powers of man that the soul can never so digest the truth of God as that he ought to do Albeit this appeareth hard yet it is most evident For what liquor can we receive from the Breasts of the world but that which is in the world what that is the Apostle Iohn teacheth saying Whatsoever is in the world is either the lusts of the eyes the lusts
now O would God that the Nobility should yet consider The first of the Nobility The constant request of the Protestants of Scotland Note the duty of Noblemen Note Probation against the Papists Against such as under colour of authority persecute their brethren Difference betwixt the person and the Authority Note Note diligently Pharaoh his fact Note The fact of King Saul The second sort of the Nobility Note Let both the one part and the other judge if God have not justified the cause of the innocents From whence this courage did proceed the issue did declare Note The Earle of Glencarne his resolution Speakers sent by the Queene to S. Iohnston Note the answer The false suggestion of the Queen Regent Let the Papists rather ambitious Romanists judge The diligence of the Earle of Glencarne and of the brethren of the wast for the relief of S. Iohnston The Petition of the Protestants for the rendering of S Iohnston The answer of the Earle of Argyle and L. Iames Prior of S. Andrews The promise of the foresaid Note 1559 The first slaughter at the entry of the French-men Idolatry erected against the appointment Against the appointment the second time Second answer of the Queen Regent The third an●wer The departure of the Earle of Argyle and Lord Iames from the Queen Regent The answer the Earle of Argyle The Bishops good minde towards Iohn Knox. Iohn Knox his answer to the Lords and the rest of the brethren The Reformation of S. Audrews For the old Earle of Argyle was dead Cowper-Moore M. Gawin Hamiltons Vow First answer at Cowper-moore The second answer The delivery of S. Iohnston The summoning of S. Iohnston Communing at S. Iohnston Huntly The Bishop of Murray The destruction of Scone The cause of the burning of Scone Speaking of an ancient matron when Scone was burning The taking of Stirlin Lord Shaton The coming of the Congregaon to Edinburg Let the Reader marke how this agrees with our time The third Letter to the Queen Regent The craftines of the Queen Regent may yet be espied 1559. Accusations Mark the craftie calumnies The communing at Preston The demand of the Queen Regent and answer of the Protestants The last offers of the Protestants to the Q. Regent The scoffing of the Queen Regent Note The death of Henry King of France Note how this agrees with our times Answer to the calumnie Note Nobles Leith left us the congregation The Lord Erskin and his fact In contemplation of these Articles arose this proverb Good day Sir John till Ianury Welcome Sir John till Ianuary Note The promise of the Duke and Earle of Huntly Answer to th● complaint of the Papists The third Bond of mutuall defence at Sterlin Note ●he first knowledge of the escaping of the E●rle of Arran out of France Let this be noted The just reward of the Du●e for leaving God Brags ●now Note Note Note The residence of Iohn Willock in Edinburg Note The Queen Regents malice against poore men Note The practise of the Queen Regent See how this agreeth with our times The arrivall of th French Note The division of the Lords lands by the French How like to the Procl●mations of our times this is let the Reader judge Let the Bishop of Amians Letters and Monsieur de la Brosse Letters written to France witnesse that Confer this with our times Few dayes after declareth the truth of this Confer this with our times Let the Nobility judge hereof Let Sir Robert Richardson and others answer to this See how this agrees with our times The cause of the Frenchmens coming with wives and children Note A proverbe Note The doctrine of our Preachers concerning obedience to be given to Magistrates Let such as this day live witnesse what God hath wrought since the writing and publication hereof Note The Prophets have medled with policy and have reproved the corruptions thereof The coming of the Earle of Arran to Scotland and his joyning with the Congregation Letters to the Queen Regent The Petition of la Brosse The answer Note The tyranny of the French Note how this agrees with our times Note Let this be noted O cra●ty flatter●r Note Elizabeth was come to the crown of England the yeere before by the death of Mary False lying tongue God hath confounded thee God hath purged his people of that false accusation Note The avarice of those of Loraine and Guise Note The title that the Queen hath or had to Leith The Laird of Lestarrig sup riour to Leith Note Note diligently The wickednesse of the Bishops The cause that Broughtie Craig was taken Let all men judge The Dukes answer Note Note Note The quarrell betwixt Frauce and the Congregation of Scotland The Lord Seaton unworthy of Regiment Optim● collatio Let the Papists judge if God hath not given judgement to the displeasure of their hearts Note The causes that moved the Nobility of this Realme to oppose the Q. Regent The s●me minde remaineth to this day This promise was forgot and therefore God plagued Wha spirit could have hoped for victory in so desperate dangers Note Note how calumnies prevail upon the world for a time Now the Duke seeing the Queens partie decline and the Protestant party grow strong he once more changeth the profession of his Religion and joyneth with the Protestants as strongest How true this is the whole and constant course of the family can tell Let this be noted and let all men judge of the purpose of the French and how good and wise Patriots they w●re who sold our Soveraign to France for their private profit and they by name were 〈◊〉 Hamiltons The order of the suspension of the Queen Regent from Authority within Scotland The discourse of Iohn Willock The causes The judgment of Iohn Knox in the deposition of the Queen Regent Let no man then for privat ends and by-wayes do any thing against their Prince ●nder pre●ence of the publike 1559 The enormities committed by the Queen Regent Her daughter followed the same for to Davie was delivered the Great Seal Note Note Note Note All done in the Soveraign● Name as they do now a-day● Note Treason among the counsell The Duke and his friends fearfull The ungodly Souldiers The Queen● Regents practises The fact of the councell The treason of Iohn 〈◊〉 Note the kindnesse of the English in need The E. Bothwe●l false in promise and his treasonable fact Note The first departing of the Congregation The cruelty of the French Note this diligently The Earle of Argyle Lord Robert Stewart The Castle shot one Shot The Queen Regents rejoycing and unwomanly behaviour The counsel of the Master of Maxwell The last disc●m●●tu●e upon Munday The death of Alexander Haliburnton Captaine How and why William Maitland left Leith The Lord Erskin declared himself enemy to the Congregation The despight of the Papists of Edinburgh The worst is not yet come upon our enemies Note Note Note diligently Note Speciali● Applicatio Let Scotland