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A63846 Moderation recommended in a sermon preached before the lord mayor and court of aldermen at Guild-Hall Chappel, May 12th, 1689 by George Tullie ... Tullie, George, 1652?-1695. 1689 (1689) Wing T3241; ESTC R38916 15,335 35

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the Apostles to come rather to a Temperament for they proceeded neither to an absolute prohibition of the Mosaique Rites after conversion wisely considering that they might thereby have exasperated the Judaizing Zealots into an absolute Apostasie from the faith nor were they so regardless on the other hand of the liberty of the Gentile Converts as to require any other observances of them than such as they presumed were requisite in that exigency of affairs in order to a perfect union and agreement amongst them that they might thereby prudentially remove such occasions of difference as might obstruct the growth and progress of the common Christianity in the world 3ly Be perswaded to the practise of this virtue because you thereby make the nearest approaches that the infirmities of Men and the circumstances of human affairs will admit to the Divine O●conomy it self for what I beseech you is God's whole Government of the world but a moderation of the rigour of his justice with a temperament of mercy For if he should be extreme to mark what is done amiss as we are should pursue things to their utmost rigour and extent take advantage of all the forfeitures we make him and not recede one jot from his just pretensions against us Who could live if God should do this and it appears to me a very hard case that we cannot be induced to treat one another with the same temper that our common God treats us all with And this naturally leads me to shut up all with the sequel of the Text. Let your Moderation be known unto all men the Lord is at hand He is not far off in his final judgment of all flesh and then I am sure the best of us all will stand in need of that temper and moderation in him which we deny to one another He is at hand again not far off possibly in the execution of some temp●●ary and heavy judgments upon this sinful Land of our Nativity Sure I am that if an unnatural ingratitude unchristian animosities ill grounded jealousies unreasonable dissatisfactions sinful murmurings if I say in a word one of the worst abuses that ever was of one of the greatest of mercies in possession be a fatal fore-runner of the forest of Judgments in reversion we of all Mankind bid the fairest for them For if after God has unexpectedly dropt his mercies in our mouths we shall u●gratefully throw them up again will not the Divine indignation have just reason to use the same passionate expostulation with us that he did with the dull murmuring Israelites of old What could I ha●e done more for my Vineyard that I have not done for it and to inflict likewise the same judgment upon us Behold your house is left unto you desolate If we will still persist to sacrifice our Holy Religion the interests of Truth and of the Gospel all in a word that is dear to us as m●n or Christians to our passions animositi●s s●lf-will private interests notions or to speak more properly to we know not what why then we fall as ridiculous as unpitied victims God our deliverer with all the Nations round about us will justly laugh at our calamity mo●k when our fear cometh and give us up to that destruction wherein we seem to delight In a word the Lord is at hand I hope in the midst of this present Assembly and when thou Lord shalt come to judg the World ' twil● not then surely be enquired who has most stiftly and vehemently asserted the little inferior opinions perswasions and interests of his own particular party but who in his life and conversation has most promoted the true Spirit and Genius of thy holy Religion for its own sake and most laboured the advancement of one of those great and glorious ends thou camest into the world for of Peace on earth and good will a mongst men FINIS Books lately Printed for Richard Chiswell THe Case of Allegiance in our present circumstances considered in a Letter from a Minister in the City to a Minister in the Country A Sermon preached at Fulham in the Chappel of the Palace upon Easter day 1689. at the Consecration of the Right Reverend Father in God Gilbert Lord Bishop of Sarum By Anthony Horneck D. D. The Judgments of God upon the Roman Catholick Church from its first Rigid Laws for Universal Conformity to it unto its last End. With a prospect of these ●ear approaching Revolutions Viz. The Revival of the Protestant profession in ●● Eminent Kingdom where it was totally suppressed The last End of all 〈◊〉 Hostilities The general ratification of the power of the Roman 〈◊〉 in all parts of its Dominions In Explication of the Trumpets and Vials of the Apocalypse upon Principles generally acknowledged by Protestant Interpreters By Drue Cressener D. D. A Breviate of the State of Scotland in its Government Supream Courts Of●●●●s of State Inferiour Officers Offices and Inferiour Courts Districts Jurisdictions Burroughs Royal and Free Corporations Fol. S●me Considerations touching Succession and Allegiance A Discourse concerning the Worship of Images preached before the University ●● Oxford By George Tully Sub-Dean of York for which he was Suspen●ed Reflexions upon the late Great Revolution Written by a Lay-Hand in the C●●ntry for the satisfaction of some Neighbours The History of the Dissertion or an Account of all the publick Affairs in Eng●●● from the beginning of September 1688. to the Twelfth of February following With an Answer to a Piece call'd The Dissertion discussed in a Letter to ● Country Gentleman By a Person of Quality ● William and K. Lewis wherein is set forth the inevitable necessity these Nations lie under of submitting wholly to one or other of these Kings And that ●●● matter in Controversie is not now between K. William and K. James but ●●●een K. William and K Lewis of France for the Government of these Nations An Examination of the Scruples of those who refuse to take the Oath of Allegiance by a Divine of the Church of England A Dialogue betwixt two Friends a Jacobite and a Williamite occasion'd by ●● late Revolution of Affairs and the Oath of Allegiance Two Sermons one against Murmuring the other against Censuring By Sy●●● Patrick D. D. An Account of the Reasons which induced Charles the Second King of En●●●● to declare War against the States-General of the United Provinces in 1672. And of the Private League which he entred into at the same Time with the French ●●●● to carry it on and to ●stablish Popery in England Scotland and Ireland as 〈◊〉 are set down in the History of the Dutch War printed in French at Paris with ●●● priviledg of the French King 1682. Which Book he caused to be in mediate●●●●ppress'd at the Instance of the English Ambassador Fol. An Account of the Private League betwixt the late King James the Second 〈◊〉 the Fren●h King. Fol. The Case of Oaths Stated 4to The Answer of a Protestant Gentleman in Ireland to a late Popish Letter of N. N. upon a Discourse between them concerning the present posture of that Country and the part fit for those concern'd there to act in it 4to An Apology for the Protestants of Ireland in a brief Narrative of the late Revolutions in that Kingdom and an Account of the pr●s●●● State thereof By a Gentleman of Quality 4to A Letter from a French Lawyer to an English Gentleman upon the present Revolution 4to Mr. Wake 's Sermon before the King and Queen at Hampton Court. His Fast-Sermon before the House of Commons Jun. 5. 1689. Dr. Tenison's Fast-Sermon before the House of Common● Jun. 5. 1689. Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Historia Literaria a Christo nato usque ad Se●●ium XIV Facili ethodo digesta Qua de Vita illorum ac Rebus gestis de Secta D●gmatibus Elogio Styl● de Scriptis genuinis dubiis supposititiis ineditis-de●erdi●●s Fragmentis deque variis Operum Edi●ionil us perspicue agitur Accedunt Scr●●●res Gentiles Christian ● Religionis Oppugnatores cujusvis Saecvli Breviarium Irseruntur suis locis Veterum aliquot Opuscula Fragmenta tum G●ae●a tum Lati●● bactenus inedita Praemissa denique Prolegomen● quibus plurima ad Antiq●●●●●● Ecclesiasticae st●dium spectantia traduntur Opus Indicibus necessariis instructum Autore GVILIELMO CAVE SS Theol. Profes Canonico Windeso●iensi Accedit a● Alia Man● Appendi● ab ineunte Saeculo XIV ad Annum usque MDX VII Fol. 1689. ADVERTISEMENT Whereas a Book Intituled FASCICULUS RERUM EXPETENDARUM ET FUGIENDARUM with a large Additional APPENDIX was promised by Richard Chiswell the Undertaker to be finished in Michaelmas Term last This is to give Notice That by reason of the Sickness of ●he Printer and some necessary Avocations of the Publisher it has been re●arded But for the Satisfaction of Subscribers the Book will be forty or fifty Sheets more than was promised in the Proposals which will cost the Undertaker 100 l. extraordinary yet in Consideration thereof he will not expect one penny above the first Subscription price only craves their patience till the Book can be done which is now going on with all possible speed and so so●● as finished Notice shall be given in the Gazette In the mean time there being some few of the Impression not yet subscribed for such Gentlemen as please to take the Benefit thereof may be admitted Subscribers and may have Printed Proposals for sending for at the Rose and Crown in St. Pauls Church-Yard or at most Booksellers Shops in City or Country