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A43670 A sermon preached before the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and citizens of London, at Bow-church on the 30th, of January, 1681/2 by George Hickes. Hickes, George, 1642-1715. 1682 (1682) Wing H1864; ESTC R12553 30,557 44

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a Wolf 17. That Kings Jus populi p. 1. 1644. Princes and Governours have their Authority from the people who may take it away from them as men may revoke their Proxies and Letters of Attorney 18. That Noblemen were ordained to bridle Princes Ruthersord's Lex Rex p. 177 and that they have their honour of the people to revenge the injuries of their Kings 19. That there is a mutual obligation betwixt the Prince and his Subjects See Lysim Nican p. 11 12 13 and that if he perform not his duty they are discharged from theirs 20. That to disobey Princes Covenanters instruction for defensive arms Naphtali p. 157. Lex Rex p. 267. which submit their Scepters to Christs Scepter and act in subordination to him is indeed rebellion but to resist and rise up against Princes which do not do so is not to disobey him but to obey God who in this case becomes their Superiour and Liege Lord. 21. That Judges ought by the Law of God to summon Princes before them for their crimes Bancr Dang pos p. 36. and proceed against them as against other offenders and that * L●x Rex p. 173 175. the Sanhedrim ought to have put David to death 22. That wicked Kings The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates 1649. Buch. de jure regni Goodman in dang pos b. 1. ch 1. and Tyrants ought to be put to death and that when Magistrates cease to do their duty as to this particular the Sword falls into the hands of the people and that if neither the Magistrate nor the people will do their office then the Ministers or any one Minister may excommunicate such a King after which the rest of the people who are willing to do their duty may go to any Moses or Othniel to be their Captain and he ought not to refuse them Nay in such a case a private man having an inward motion from God may kill a Tyrant as Moses did the Egyptian Phinehas Zimri and Cozbi and Ehud King Eglon. 23. That * Mr. Robert Blair at the Colledge of Glascow Monarchy is an unlawful government and ‖ Calderwoods altare Damascenum Not unlike unto which is that of D. Owens in his Fast Sermon April 19. 1649. p. 22. The Kings of the earth have given up their power to Antichrist how have they earned their Titles Eldest Son of the Church The Catholick and most Christian King DEFENDER OF THE FAITH Do not the Kings of all these Nations stand up in the room of their ●rogenitors with the same Implacable enmity to the power of the Gospel that there is naturally in all Kings an hatred to Christ 24. * Covenanters information for defensive arms arg 3. and so saith Bellarm. de Laicis ch 7. as they are parallel'd Lysim Nican p. 17. That there were no Kings before Cains dayes that the Church of God was well governed before there was any Christian King and ‖ Dr. Henry Wilkinson of Ch. Ch. in a Sermon at Oxford a little before his Majesties Restauration See Spotswood 423 424. that God gave the Jews their first King in his wrath At large in Presbytery displayed See Bramhall's fair warning to England Spotsw hist l. 6. Sions plea. Rutherford's Preface to Lex Rex Covenanters answer to the Marq. of Ham. Declaration Lysim Nic. p. 18. Who compares them in this to the Papists p. 32. King's larger Declaration fol. 407. Th. Cartwright p. 645. 25. That the Church in Ecclesiastical Assemblies hath power to make Laws without the King 26. That the King hath no power to call or dissolve those Ecclesiastical Assemblies nor to Ordain a Fast or Festival nor to silence or deprive any Minister because every Minister in his Ministerial capacity is subject unto none but Christ See Spirit of Popery p. 9. 27. That the Oath of Supremacy is destructive of Christs Prerogative that it un-kings him and makes a mortal sinful man supream in his house that it is blasphemy a cursed Oath contrary to the second Psalm and the Doxology of the Lords Prayer Lex Rex which calls Mariana the Jesuit an approved author p. 178. Duglasses Coronation Sermon See Kings large Declaration p. 409. and that whosoever takes it doth declare he hath no King but Caesar 28. That it is lawful for the people to enter into Leagues Covenants and Associations without their Prince and that a King cannot be a King but by a Covenant with his people 29. That the Solemn League and Covenant was Christs marriage-contract Mr. Cases book of the Covenant in Evangelium Armàtum p. 42 Zac. Crostons answer to Dr. Gauden 3 edit p. 22. See Spirit of Popery 7. 26. 42. Mr. Caryl in Evang. arm p. 26. that to act against it is to do despite to the Holy Ghost that it obliges the people of these Kingdoms as much as the Mosaick covenant obliged the Jews that all Acts of Parliament against it are damnable that to break it is to revolt from God that it obliges children in the Loins of their Parents who ought to baptize their children into it that * Poor mans Cup. the last great Plague and Fire of London were judgments of God for burning of it by the hand of the common hangman and that his Majesty having revolted from it hath no right to rule 30. That those who engaged in it were unjustly charged with rebellion Mr. Calamy in his Sermon before the Lords Dec. 25. 1644. 31. That the * Mr. Calamy ib Mr. Jenkins in his humble Petition printed Octob. 15. 1651. Political Catechism p. 7. 1679. See Mr. Baxter in Evang. arm p. 16 17 18 19. and Mr. Herle p. 28. Parliament without the King was the Supream power of this Nation and ‖ Mr. Marshall Evang. arm p. 7. that as Josiah put those to death who followed Baal so might they those who will not return to the Lord and leave their Anti-christianism which was sworn in the Covenant to be rooted out 32. That when Providence depriveth a King of his understanding or suffers him to turn wicked Mr. Baxter in his H. C. W. where there are many more such Jesuitical Theses See also the 2d part of the unreasonableness of Separation which shews him to have been a man of Rebellion and blood or disables him from executing the Law and protecting his Subjects that it renders him uncapable and so deposeth him 33. That it was lawful to take up defensive arms Stephen Marshall Evang. arm p. 21. after the example of David who had sworn Allegiance unto Saul 34. That those who fought in the late Rebellion M. Marshall fought the Lords Battels M. Calamy Evan. arm 22 23 24. Mr. Love to the Commons Nov. 25. 1646. in Dedic to Lord Fairfax and at Uxbridge Jan. 30. 1644. p. 7. Tisdal to the Commons p. 14. Leech his Sermon 1644. Case to the Commons 1644. p. 13. and that the war was the cause of