Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n abandon_v religion_n sect_n 28 3 9.3377 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A34156 The Complaint of the kingdome against the evill members of both Houses who have upon designe brought in ruine under a pretence of reformation, relating to that former complaint made by the citie and counties adjacent. 1646 (1646) Wing C5616; ESTC R17392 35,451 48

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

good graine in this life and therefore hath reserved the thorow-purging of his floore till his owne comming unto Judgement A little breaking in of the salt waters makes our helds more fruitfull Our chief care must be to keep out Inundations and the way to doe that is to keep the bankes up and to keepe them sound not to levell them The Houses did once thinke it convenient to declare by Votes which we see religiously observ'd in other things that they intended the abolishing neither of the Liturgy nor of the Church-Government And truely if wee perceive Vote● which have presum'd ●o challenge so much respect and veneration from us created onely to serve turnes upon occasion and carried Pro and Con as emergent advantages are administred they will presently lose their repu●ation amongst us of being infallible and gives us hopes that upon the more mature deliberation of second thoughts at least all groundlesse Votes apparently and experimentally d●structive to the Kingdome shall bee recalled And for the Government of the Church being purg'd of some abuses wee professe wee like the Preachers ●dvice so well and have found their principles so pestilent that we would not willingly meddle with them that are given to change unl●sse we can see better Arguments produced though this last of the sword hath been the strongest to move us We are of their opinion that having dranke old Wi●e cannot desire new for they know the old is better And it is not an idle observation that since they fell from pruning to rooting up their endeavours have been almost miraculously blasted by an immediate and remarkeable curse upon them If there be any that thinks this order in the Church is not worth the strife about it and that our Religion may consist without it let them with a sad and serious heart ponder these Considerations 1. That instead of these by the independent way a Pope and however a Bishop will be set up in every Parish 2. That there was no other Government though perhaps some other qualifications in it heard of in the Church of God till about 100 yeares since insomuch as some of no small note for learning and piety stand in great doubt whether there can be any lawfull Ordination and consequently any lawfull Ministry without it These who make up a farre more considerable party in this Church then those who have already separated and therefore ought in the first place by all the rules of Christian charity to have their scruples satisfied upon the rooting out of this Ancient Government must needs abandon our Communion 3. That the true Protestant Religion establisht in the Church of England was never so much undermin'd and blemisht whilest some of the Bishops slept and others were too active as it hath been by new sprung up Sects and monstrous opinions since their office was suspended 4. That the next Orders like to be quarrel'd at if it be not too evident they are quarrel'd at already will be the Nobility and the Gentry and if we should allow the argument against the Order of Bishops that the Protestant Religion and the generall safety of the Kingdome may consist without them may not the same argument with as good reason be taken up against the other by the meaner sort of people who shall have hopes to share their estates amongst them till all degrees be levelled Lastly That the argument of the dispute is not so much whether Bishops or no Bishops as wheth●r a King or no King for we must hold the negative if Subjects may be allowed by force of Armes when they cannot get the Kings consent to pull downe any piece of his settled Government With the Fathers they pretend to thrust out the Children and those are commonly deciphered under the notion of scandalous Ministers The truth is it were well for the Church of God if all that were such were thrust out of her bosome But they have stretcht the Word to such a latitude that if they should goe on there would scarce be found an Orthodox man in the Kingdome out of this Catalogue For there are a company of scorners and terrible ones That watch for iniquitie that make a man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth in the gate aud turne aside the just for a thing of nought Isa 29. 20 21. Is hee loyall according to the obligation of divers oaths sundry times repeated by him He is a scandalous Minister Is he a man well affected to the present Government c. or to peace he is a dangerous man and scandalous In the interim they set up their railing Rabshachaes that blaspheme God and slander the footsteps of his Annointed in such sort as their Prayers and Preaching are a very scandall except enmities seditions reviling of Gods Ordinances and Ministers when practised by them with the countenance of a party in both Houses cease to be workes of the flesh If we should forme comparisons wee should find moates in some mens eyes made greater by the multiplying-glasse of malice which they make too much use of then the b●ames that are most conspicuous in the eyes of others In some men they persecute their humane frailties and indiscretions whilst they protect others whose offences are died in graine Master Pigott amongst other such like Articles was accused by some few seditious men of the Parish of S. Sepulchres for drinking a Beere glasse of White-wine with a Lemmon and Sugar and though vindicated by the testimony of 600 of the a●●est men had his reputation blasted with no credit to his witnesses by Master Corbet who sate then in the chaire of Examinations I had like to have called it the seat of the scornfull and gave his hand afterwards that he was unworthy to exercise his Ministry by which meanes he hath since been put by two Lectures at Alhallowes Berking and Broad-street I make no question they have met with some scandalous enough I doe not excuse them But others they have prosecuted whom they might with much more honour have acquitted and given a checke to their too officious and troublesome neighbours Look we upon such as are in most favour and esteem with them we shall find they have trode their shooes awry aswell as others We may ●et Doctor Burgesse in the front and because he was so busie to pick holes in the coates of his brethren and rackt up the very ash●s of the dead to discover their corruptions we shall be the bolder to remember him not only of a man that was a Pluralist but of one that the High-Commission looked upon for Adultery And of one that with continuall suites of Law vext two Parishes and must have been calculated in the Black-bill if he had not taken himselfe off by his good service against Bishops Doctor Downing a reputed weathercock that turns which way soever the wind of his owne humour or ambition blowes him sometimes a great suitor to be the Earle of Straffords