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A57599 Loyalty and peace, or, Two seasonable discourses from I Sam. 24, 5 viz., David's heart smote him because he cut off Saul's skirt : the first of conscience and its smitings, the second of the prodigious impiety of murthering King Charles I, intended to promote sincere devotion and humiliation upon each anniversary fast for the Late King's death / by Samuel Rolls. Rolle, Samuel, fl. 1657-1678. 1678 (1678) Wing R1880; ESTC R25524 110,484 255

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diffused power of the two last should happen to be equally divided as is possible for it to be and yet to have a power of determining it self and turn the Scales must not that be done by some one man will it not necessarily issue there For say All power were in a Senate consisting of a thousand men admit there be all the Members of that Senate present at a debate save only one by means of whose absence there being five hundred Votes on the one side there can be but 499 on the other upon this so great division you see the whole Affair is carried by but one voice Even amongst those who by their constitution have an equal share in Government is there not generally a Dominus fac totum a Chieftain or Superintendant a Leading-man a man that hath the casting voice generally given him in whose advice and counsel all the rest or the major part of them do acquiesce And what is such a man but a Monarch in his place and amongst those over whom he governs so absolutely so uncontroulably let him go by what name he will either of Justice Magistrate or Minister c. Kings themselves do not act without their Privy Council and other persons of Honor who are assisting to their Affairs but in conjunction with them their advice and assistance they do what they please And truly so do those petty invisible Princes or Kings that walk incognito and under disguise They in conjunction with some of the best Head-pieces that are about them and by the assistance of their party which adheres to them carry what they please carry all before them in spight of all opposition Thus it was from the beginning thus it now is and will be to the end of the world Were it not easie to say Who is in effect a Monarch amongst the Anabaptists and amongst the Quakers c So that all the Governments in the world are virtually and in effect Monarchies though the people see it not and their Votes are little more than for fashion-sake and to please them with a shadow of Power and Liberty when their real power is little more than to sit still He then that is an Enemy to Monarchy and to every thing that is like it will presently become an enemy to all sorts of Governments all the world over which are indeed and truth but so many Virtual Monarchies all things considered So men fly the Name whilst they continue the Thing and alter the Shadow whilst they accept the Substance of Monarchy over them Amongst those who are equal in power the wisest will always govern the weakest and they that by their Wealth or Prudence or otherwise can make the greatest Party will carry all before them If then the light of Nature and universal practice of the world hath determined Monarchy to be the best and most necessary form of Government who can sufficiently decry their sin who did not only destroy an excellent King and Monarch but also aimed at the destruction of Monarchy or Kingly Power throughout Europe that if it were possible the Name and Thing might be rooted out and might be restor'd no more And so I have made good the 12th thing which I charg'd upon them viz. an attempt to destroy Monarchy though it be the best Government in the world Thirteenthly It must needs be confest they were Self-murtherers or Felo de se's who murthered the late King For in taking away his life they forfeited their own If an Earl or a greater Subject do wilfully but murther a poor Foot-man or Beggar by so doing he forfeits his life according to God's Law yea and the Law of England too He then that kills a King had he a hundred thousand lives would by so doing forfeit every one of them and be made to pay his forfeiture too unless great clemency interpose I remember no one Regicide in all the Scripture but what is punished with death save only that of Jehu committed upon the person of Joram which being done at the express command of God ought not I think to be called Regicide But I pass on Fourteenthly The murthering of the late King was Animaecidium not only Self-murther as to each of their Bodies but Soul-murther as to every of them unless the infinite Mercy of God should step in and prevent it Is Hell-fire the wages of them that wilfully murder but a private person witness those words 1 John 3.15 And ye know no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him i. e. no wilful murtherer hath jus in re as to eternal life i. e. any present actual capacity to enter into life eternal as he that was under a Leprosie under the Law might not for that time be admitted to eat the Passeover though jus ad rem i. e. a dormant suspended right which may or shall be restor'd and redintegrated upon his repentance that he may have as David had when he defiled Bathsheba But divers do say If David had never actually repented of that great sin he had never had eternal life but had been everlastingly damn'd So Baronius in his excellent Book De peccato mortali veniali If the wilful murthering of one private man be enough to sink a Soul into Hell what will not the murder of a King do Will not God heat that Furnace yet ten times hotter for Regicides Korah Dathan and Abiram are called sinners against their own Souls Numb 16.38 for rebelling against Moses and Aaron i. e. for but murmuring against them though not one drop of blood was shed by their hands How greatly then have they sinn'd against their own Souls who have rebelled and resisted even to blood I have before quoted that Text Rom. 13.2 They that resist shall receive to themselves damnation I leave that word to fasten this head on their Consciences as a nail in a sure place and pass on to the next Fifteenthly The murthering of the King was Multicidium pardon the making of a new word in such a case as this or Caedes multorum or Homicidium multiplicatum complicatum i. e. it was a great many murthers in one First it was virtually so according to the computation which we read of 2 Sam. 18.3 But the people answered Thou shalt not go forth i. e. David should should not go forth to Battle thou art more worth than ten thousand of us c. Secondly It was actually so as the Complices in that violent action by encouraging and emboldning each other thereunto were guilty of the sin and death of one another Thirdly As the death of the late King was remotely the death of many persons and families I mean the ruine and destruction of multitudes of Families which depended upon him which was worse than d●ath its self Sixteenthly Putting of the late King to death was Legicidium as well as Regicidium i. e. the death of the Law as well as of the King For first By the King's death a stop was put to the
Vengeance upon Cities and Kingdoms like the sins of Sodom and Gomorrah which laid those famous Cities all in Ashes or like Davids numbring the People which exposed his Subjects to one of three dreadful Judgments choose him whether the least whereof was the Plague or Pestilence when Conscience smites for such things as these it even breaks Mens Bones it makes them Magor Missabibs that is Terrors round about to themselves ready to fall into the jaws of despair cursing the day of their birth as did Job Chap. 1.3 upon an other account and crying out as he v. 11. Why died I not from the Womb Why did I not give up the Ghost when I came out of the Belly When Conscience smites at this rate ah who can live But Fifthly and lastly to name no more Presumptuous sins that is sins committed against full Conriction of their real and hainous sinfulness against the Lord Out-cryes of Christian Friends Holy Ministers and above all of Mens own Consciences crying out and saying O do not this abominable thing which the Soul of God hateth sins against fairest warnings given by Gods signal Judgments executed upon sinners of the like nature sins against the highest obligations of stupendious mercies obliging men to the contrary and aggravated by whatsoever other circumstances do aggravate the sins of men These presumptious sins as I call them do make the Consciences of Men to smite till even themselves be sick with smiting and to give the sinner little or no rest day or night causing him to cry out My wounds stink and are corrupt because of my foolishness there is no soundness in my flesh because of my sin mine iniquites are gone over my Head and are a burthen too heavy for me to bear c. Now that Conscience should smite for such crying and crimson sins as these is no wonder but what should be the meaning of its smiting men as now and than it doth for small sins for motes in their eyes for meer Peccadillo's When poor Jonathans have tasted but a little Honey upon the tip of their Staves Why must they die for so doing Why must Vzza's Hand wither but for stretching it forth and that with a good intention to stay Gods tottering Ark Why must the Carkasses of so many Beth-shemites fall onely for the most pardonable curiositie as it may seem viz. To look into Gods Ark whilst the Angels of God themselves are allowed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to stoop down and to pry into Gods Misteries Why must David lose so great a number of his innocent Subjects as he call'd them when he said What have these Sheep done onely because their King and Shepherd made bold to number them Why since it is a Maxim in the Laws of England Lex non curat de minimis The Law troubles not it self with trivial faults I say Why doth the All-merciful God either smite himself or suffer Conscience to smite at so great a rate for small Transgressions for cutting off not the Head of a King but meerly the Skirt of his Garment Or how can he be said to be merciful that does so Hath he appointed Conscience not onely not to swallow Camels but to strain at Gnats Is this the manner of Men that are accounted mild and merciful Ans It were easie for me to take up the Authors of this objection very short saying no more than this Who art thou O man that repliest against God But since it may easily be done I shall gratifie them with a more full and satisfactory account of this matter in the following Particulars First of all God doth therefore punish small sins such I mean in comparison of others with great temporal Punishments and set Conscience at work sometimes to chide for them at a great rate to let the World know there is no sin small absolutely but comparatively For as much as every sin is committed against God who is infinitely good and in that respect is Ex parte objecti a kind of infinite evil As there is no wilful Murther Incest Sodomy Bestiality Perjury or Treason which is in it self a small crime yet there are some of all these which are small in comparison of other faults of the same denomination clothed with much more aggravating circumstances as we commonly hear of Petty Treason in opposition to High Treason so there are Petty Thefts Petty Oaths of which sins we may say as of the Stars of Heaven viz. They are all great though not all of the same magnitude for all Stars are not Stars of the first magnitude Secondly God sometimes smites severely both by himself and by Conscience his Vice-Roy for small sins to let men know that the smallest sins deserve though not the greatest of eternal yet of temporal Punishments though not the worst place in Hell yet the worst condition can be undergone in this World else God had been unrighteous in laying what he did lay upon Job whose sins were meer Motes in comparison of the sins of many other Men which were like Beams and yet his Afflictions were like great Beams whilst theirs were but little Motes or Atomes dancing in the Sun To punish any man one grain above his demerit were one grain of Injustice which is altogether incompatible with the Righteousness of God Surely the greatest of temporal Judgments are but finite and therefore the least of sins being infinitely evil Ex parte objecti or as it is against an infinite good cannot but deserve it Thirdly Therefore doth God suffer men to be smitten at a very great rate both by himself and their own Consciences for small sins which they use to call Zoar 's saying they are but little ones and their Souls shall live to declare his infinite Purity and Holiness as being so great a hater of all sin that he cannot behold the least without indignation as if the Apple of his Eyes were thereby touched and a very Mote will disturb the Apple of ones Eye Fourthly We may humbly conceive that God puts a Rod into the hands of Conscience in order to its smiting men for small sins for this merciful end that he may restrain them from committing greater He whose Heart smote him for cutting off but Sauls Skirt was in no danger of ever adventuring to cut off his Head Lastly God may be supposed by Conscience and by himself to smite men severely for small sins that thereby he may make other men afraid of committing greater and they who have committed greater to quake and tremble when they consider what God hath done by those whose sins were far less than theirs saying within themselves If this be done to the green Tree what shall be done to the dry And if Judgment thus begin as it were at the House of God where shall the wicked and ungodly appear I hope by this time my Reader is satisfied in the reasons why God doth sometimes punish sins comparatively but small with great and grievous Judgments and
three are met together as Papists say of his body natural The younger Brethren of Presbytery For saith one Our English Amsterdam was founded since our English Geneva They who cried down the Covenant as it was for Monarchy and for the preservation of the King's Life and Honour but did and do still cry up the Covenant against Prelacy and to upbraid all Conformists with Perjury who have declar'd the Covenant not to be obligatory The great Freeholders in point of Discipline who brook no Landlord in that point or to have any Authority over them The Hance-town Church-men who claim to have all Power and Jurisdiction within themselves and say Who is Lord over them That sort of men who of all sorts of Christians seem to have least regard to one Article of our Creed viz. I believe the Holy Catholick Church or they by whose practice one would think that were no Article of their Creed If there be no sort of men to whom the Characters aforesaid do agree sith no Party is nam'd none need to be concern'd but if any such there be or have been they were they who said of the King's death Ah! ah so would we have it The Limner who drew the foregoing Picture thought it a disparagement to write under it This is the Picture of such an one for if it be like no body it is good for nothing 'T is possible that some whom it doth not concern will out of a jealous humour apply it to themselves but let them be warn'd by what was said of one that did so I said the Author of a certain Character have made a Fools Cap and such an one has put it upon his head and fancies that it fits him But in good earnest if the Painter have not wrong'd those people whose Picture he meant to give us but such be their real Feature and Portraicture if it be as like them as can be they are a people worthy to be exposed chid and rebuked and most unworthy to be esteem'd by others at any such rate as they esteem themselves and one another Let those Characters be intended of whomsoever for I shall not pretend to know of whom they are intended but I have found them somwhere methinks the men of such a Complexion and Constitution as they seem to describe must needs be some of those men that were well-willers to the death of King Charles the Martyr For they can never love Kings well who would be Kings themselves John 19.12 Whosoever maketh himself a King speaketh against Caesar Fifthly Doubtless Fifth-Monarchy-men gave no discountenance to the death of the King for many of them thought long for the expiration of the fourth Monarchy which they supposed might be at the death of the King or soon after For when all was overturn'd overturn'd overturn'd then they thought he would come whose right it is Sixthly But that the Papists should be so hearty for the King's Murther as it should seem they or some of them were is not that the wonder of all wonders May not such a truth as that is be confirmed by the Testimony of two great Orthodox Divines If so they are forth-coming The first shall be Dr. Perrinshiefe pag. 195. For there mentioning Jesuitical Counsels he addeth whose Society it is reported upon the King's offering to give all possible security against the corruptions of the Church of Rome at a Council of theirs did decree to use their whole Interest and Power with the Faction to hasten the King's death which sober Protestants had reason enough to believe because all or the most of the Arguments which were used by the Asserters of this violence on his Majesty were but gleanings from Popish Writers Also pag. 213. the same Author saith thus How little the Papists credited what the Faction would have the world believe was too evident by the Conspiracies of their Father against his Life and Honour which the discovery of Hubernefield brou●ht to light They were mingled likewise amon●st the Conspirators and both heated and directed their fury against him They were as importunate in their calumnies of him even after his death as were the vilest of the Sectaries For his sake they continued their hatred to his Family abetted the usurpations of the following Tyrant by imposing on the world new Rules of Obedience and Government invent●d frrsh calumnies for the Son obstructed by various Methods his return to the Principality because he was heir as well of the Faith as of the Throne of his Father My next witness and two such witnesses may suffice as well as twenty shall be Dr. Mo●ul●n Prebendary of Canterbury in a Book of his called A Vindication of the Protestant Religion in the point of Obedience to Sovereigns c. pag. 58. The late Rebelion was raised and fostered by the Arts of the Court of Rome Jesuites professed themselves Independent as not depending on the Church of England and in the Committees forthe destruction of the King they had their Spes and their Agents The Roman Priest and Confessor is known who when the fatal stroke was given to our holy King and Martyr flourish●d his Sword and said Now the greatest Inemy that we have in the world is gone I 'll ●uote no more but rather commend that excedent Book to thy reading Thus have we made a competent discovery at whose door the death of the late King doth principally●ie Her upon methinks I hear some saying But what is the King's death to us who had not the least finger in the death of the murthered King What is that to us Let them look to it as was said to Judas when in despair Answ There are many ways and circumstances whereby a man that was not principally concern'd yet may be brought in as truly accessary to the Kings death or to any such thing as it was viz. 1. Connivendo 2. Non reprehendendo 3. Non praeveniendo 4 Non dolendo 5. Demerendo 6. Non deprecando 7. Imitando 8. Non detestando satis contra protestando 9. Provocando 10. Non puntendo cum possumus 'T is much to be feared that this whole Nation may come in for a share in the Kings death thus remotely or upon account of one or other of the foresaid particulars For 1. Some did as it were connive at it when it was in fieri or bringing about and dic not do all they could have done to prevent it Now to such that passage 1 Sam. 26.15 16. may be applied David said to Abner wherefore hast thou not kept thy Lord the King For there came one of the people in to destroy the King thy Lord. As the Lord liveth ye are worthy to die because ye have not kpt your Master the Lords Anointed And now see where the Kings spear is and the cruse of water that was at his Bolster Was not old Eli therefore charged with the sins of his wicked Children because his Sons made themselves vile and he restrained them not 1
Kings of England and particularly of his gracious Majesty that now is for ever after Let us Ministers tell the people on that day how just and righteous God is how God is known by the Judgments which he executeth the wicked being taken in their own snare and in the pit which they digged for others how he causes mens sins to find them out and long forborn Murther and Regicides to pursue men like Blood-hounds how he brings the wheel upon ungodly men after long-forbearance how though he be long-suffering yet not ever-suffering and when he maketh inquisition for blood he will not forget the Blood of Kings or suffer the shedding of Royal blood to go unpunished Mind your people how dangerous the beginnings of publick Disturbances and Changes are even like sparks of fire in the midst of a Magazine of Gun-powder and may prove of as dangerous consequence When a King and his people are once ing aged against each other in a War ten to one but the issue will be either he will hang them if he have the better of it or they will behead him if the day be theirs Think of Solomons words Prov. 17.14 The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out waters therefore leave off contention before it be medled with Think also of the words of St. James Jam. 3.5 Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth Labor on that day especially to bring one French fashion into England viz. to cause the people of England to love and honour their King as universally as the people of France are said to do whose humour and it is a very good one is this as I am inform●d viz. If their King enjoy great renown and prosperity if he be victorious and successful a little matter else will content them they are content with any thing looking upon their happiness as bound up in his and that if he be happy they ought not to think themselves miserable A 30th of January is as good and sutable a day as can be to exhort the people as St. Paul doth 1 Tim. 1.1 2. That not only supplications prayers and intercessions but also giving of Thanks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be made for Kings and for all that are in Authority and in order thereunto to make them sensible how many and great mercies benefits and priviledges they enjoy under the Government of his Majesty that now is Doth not the blood and spirit of Justice if I may so call it freely and uninterruptedly circulate in all the veins of this Nation Was there ever less complaint of Male-administration in publick Courts than has been ever since his Majesties return What great numbers are there of able Lawyers Judges Sergeants and others Learned in the Law And possibly as many Gentlemen of honesty and integrity as have been known of that Profession in any one Age. How well furnished are both the Vniversities with good Scholars and good men though it cannot be expected they should all be such especially Masters and Fellows of Colledges And that I may instance in every of the Liberal and Learned Professions How many Learned Physicians are there in England far surpassing the number of Learned men of that Profession it may be in any part of Europe for so I have heard Nay how many scores of Pious and Learned Divines are there at this day in England doubtless in no age all Divines were such and amongst them how many painful and excellent Preachers acurate Disputants noble champions for the Protestant Religion mighty Goliahs to encounter the greatest Leviathan's and as rational clear-headed enemies to Atheisme Enthusiasme and Nonserse as ever drew sword against those Enemies I was about to fay If God had given us leave to bespeak a King after our own hearts or made one on purpose for us such as we desired he could not in sundry respects have excelled what he now is Ex. gr 1. In point of Mercy and Benignity I think he has forgiven more than any King did before him or may do after him a more unsanguinary Prince never was in the world Blame him not if he exact that Obedience which is due to him but he cares as little for Sacrifice as ever King did and as small a matter hath atoned him as ever did atone any Prince so provoked and injured as he hath been If he has not fed his enemies when he saw them hungry and clothed them when they were naked many men that were his enemies both in war and otherwise never did any man do it 2. In point of Peaceableness for all know him to be the true Grandchild of King King James He is none of those that delight in War and are ever and anon immersing their Subjects in Seas of Blood He loves not to quarrel his Neighbours round about him and to Hector them into War and to give up his people to the Sword to eat their flesh and drink their blood but had rather have them sit under ther vines and under their fig-trees none making them afraid 3. If Humility and Condescention be an ornament to a Prince and the advantage of his Subjects I am much deceived if his Majesty doth no abound therein and yet reserveth to himself the Majesty and Greatness which doth become his place What Prince in the world more affable more accessible than he 4. If it be a mercy to have a wise Prince who understands his own business as doubtless it is t is well known by this time of day that he is one none but a wise Pilot could steer safely in so great storms as his Majesty hath been in and preserve a Ship from being lost sayling amongst so many Rocks and Shelves and Sands as he has done The wisdom of his Grandfather King James as being one of the greatest Royal Scholars that ever was began early to appear for the warm Sun of so literate an Education quickly brought him to maturity But the wisdom of King Charles the Martyr did then most gloriously shine out when he himself was under a cloud of Adversity and was like Musick which makes the sweetest melody upon the waters So did his Piety and Wisdom upon the waters of Affliction As a man may bebold the Sun in a shady pit or well better than above ground for there is no reflexion from the earth to divert our eyes So they who beheld King Charles the First in the deep pit or well of Affliction saw his wisdom to greater advantage than it was taken notice of before and in him that Maxime verified viz. Vexatio dat intellectum Quite contrary it hapned to his Majesty that now is whom God bless for ever In the years of his Adversity his wisdom and other excellencies were better known to Foreiners than to us his natural Subjects for that he was then upon force-put a stranger to his own Country and Kingdoms and evil-minded men took the advantage of his Exile and absence to represent him as they pleased But
since his Return we have had as much assurance as we need to wish of the greatness and goodness of his Princely Intellectuals of his being endowed with excellent natural parts which brings to mind a Scotch Proverb viz. That one inch of Mother-wit meaning natural ingenuity is better than an ell of Clergy And those natural parts improved and exalted by forein Travel converse with all sorts of men Experience both of Adversity and Prosperity dispatch of business for many years together the constant and assistance of wise Counsellors and the advantage of his great office and Dignity and you know by how much higher any man standeth by so much farther off can he see So that now I know no man can question whether he hath great fitness and skill for the business and purposes of a King great understanding how to govern in all points and better skill to manage a Scepter than any man who hath not a Scepter to manage 5. If it be yet a further mercy or happiness to a people to have a King that is active or nimble not dull or sluggish so is he I had almost said that his Majesty seems to be as much an Vbiquitary when he pleaseth i.e. here and there and every where as his Affairs require his presence as any man that wears a body I had almost said he hath not only a body so agile and active as if it were a Soul but also a Soul so active as if it were an Angel rather than the Soul of a mortal man 6. Is not that King a great mercy and blessing under whom his Subjects do live as easily as freely and as much like men as any Subjects in the world do Where more liberty more peace more plenty than amongst English men who by their Representatives in Parliament may be said to carry the purse at their Girdles whilst his Majesty carrieth the Sword by his side Go but over Sea to other parts of Europe or of the world and when you see how it fareth with Subjects almost every where else what meer Slaves they are in comparison of Englishmen you will look upon England as the most temperate Climate that any Subjects do live in and think with your selves that if there were but a Bridge betwixt England and other parts of the world all Subjects would chuse to come and live here as is said in another case Verily the Subjects of England are little Princes to what the Subjects are in other parts and to them I may apply those words of the Poet Foelices nimium sua si bona norant We are too too happy if we did but know it If there be at this day a Canaan upon earth like that of old flowing with milk and honey I mean abounding with all manner of good things England is one not for Bodies only but for Souls also In England God is known and his Name great in England he hath not dealt so with every Nation nor have they known his Statutes as we have done Why then hear we such bleating of the sheep and such lowing of the oxen Why such murmuring complaining and not rather serving God with chearfulness in the midst of all the good things which we have in England Is it not a great wonder that we should be the most happy of all people and yet the least contented the least thankful If it be a happiness to a trading people to have a King that maketh it his business to promote the Trade and Traffique of his people we have such a one I could safely produce a person of great worth and eminency and of as much skill in Merchandize possibly as most men in the world who has told me time after time bona fide that no Prince to the best of his observation was ever so much concern'd for the good of Trade or had more denied himself for the advancement thereof than his Majesty that now is hath done which I doubt not but he is ready to demonstrate to every rational man But if after all this Trading be but dead as that is the great complaint and the very cardo controversiae hinc illae lachrymae may not his Majesty say to his people Am I in Gods stead If the Lord help ye not in that point as the King said to the woman of Samaria that cried to him for bread in the time of famine How should I help you So it fareth with many private Families they are but poor and yet the Master of the Family is a man of double diligence providence forecast rises early and eates the bread of carefulness Is it just and equal that his Children and Servants should be ready to stone him because he doth not grow rich upon all his labours Nay it is as God pleases for that matter witness Deut. 8.18 Thou shalt remember the Lord thy God for it is he that giveth thee power to get wealth If he that is poor in spight of all his diligence and care had been careless and slothful possibly his Family had been starv'd which now is only not rich So had we not had a Prince who had been such a Nursing-Father to Trade as his present Majesty is it may be by this time there had been no Trade at all or next to none 8ly If Kings be Defenders of the Antient Catholick Apostolick Faith The faith once delivered to the Churches of the true Christian Protestant Religion have we not cause to bless God for them as such And such an one is he whom God hath set over us Is not the Protestant Religion defended by him Are not Protestants by him defended and protected in the publick open and free exercise of their Religion So as Papists are not who fly about like Bats rather than otherwise Are not all the Preferments of the Church bestowed upon the Protestant Divines have not they all the Archbishopricks Bishopricks Deaneries Prebends Masterships of Colledges c. amongst them Are not good and learned Books against Popery licens'd from time to time and Popish Books suppressed whether they come from beyond Sea or endeavor to get out of our English Presses Are not all publick Ordinations Administration of Sacraments and other Church-Offices dispensed after the manner of Protestants Are not the Articles of the Church of England defended by his Majesty and are not they all purely Frotestant Those things considered who can deny his Majesty to be really a Defender of the Faith And why should any man go about to clip his Title any more than he dare to clip his Coin May he not be truly a Defender of the Faith though he be no Defender of Presbytery either Scotch or English nor yet of Independency nor of Anabaptism nor of Quakerism nor of Fifth-Monarchism I say though he be no Defender of any of them in the Abstract but only of their persons in the Concrete who are of those perswasions I say he may be a Defender of the Faith nevertheless and so he is
them murtherers each of other because they did abet and encourage each other in and unto the murther of the King in which was included their own consequentially If there were forty of them each of them was guilty of the death of forty not the forty only guilty of the death of one man viz. the King but each of them of forty murthers viz. each of other for that they strengthened each others hands in and unto the work Again If naked Murther be a damnable sin as hath been proved that murther which is cloathed with barbarous and inhumane circumstances must needs be so much more In Judg. 19.25 we read of a Levites Concubine not only killed but with circumstances that were very barbarous viz. forced to death by the Benjamites dwelling in Gibeah Chap. 20.5 But what dreadful things ensued ver 6. I saith the Levite took my Concubine and cut her in pieces and sent her through all Israel for they have committed lewdness and folly in Israel The product of this was what we read Judg. 20.34 35. And there came up against Gibeah ten thousand chosen men out of all Israel and the battle was sore And the Lord smote Benjamin before Israel and the children of Israel destroyed of the Benjamites that day twenty and four thousand and an hundred men all these drew the sword or were men of valour as is said ver 44. Though wilful murther it self cloathed with the most extenuating circumstances be a great sin yet the barbarous circumstances wherewith it may be cloathed may make it twice so great a sin as otherwise it had been and much more expose it to the Divine vengeance as appeareth by the instance aforesaid But to proceed 6thly Is Hypocrisie a damning sin or not It must needs be so because Hell or the place of weeping and gnashing of teeth is called a portion with the Hypocrite Matth. 24.51 intimating that Tophet was prepared of old as much for Hypocrites as for any sort of men Doth not our Saviour let fly as many Vae's or Woes against Hypocrites as against any sort of men Mat. 25.14 15 16 23 25 27 29. and does he not utter those dreadful words in the close ver 33. Ye Serpents ye generation of Vipers how can ye escape the damnation of hell Now with what direful circumstances of Hypocrisie the late King's death was managed I have told you before 7thly If it be a mortal damning sin to murther but one man especially if a King a Monarch or any thing so great is it not more so to murther a whole Kingdom Country and Monarchy at once The whole species of Monarchy is much more than one individual Kingdom or Monarchy Now I have shew'd before that was aim'd at in putting the King to death which was not only Monarchicidium but designed to issue in Monarchiaecidium or in the ruine of all Monarchy 8thly Is it not a horrid and damning sin to subvert and destroy the good and necessary Laws of a Nation all at once Yea. Not the Laws only but also the very Legislative Power or the Power of making more good Laws as the matter should require If they who resist or disobey the powers that are shall receive damnation as the Apostle speaks Rom. 13.2 What will become of them who in effect destroy and disanul all the Laws of a Nation at once and all the Law-makers Such were the Regicides For when there was no King in England arm'd with power no new Laws could be made nor the old ones executed neither Legally for who but a King has power to give Commission to Judges and other great Instruments of the Law upon all emergent occasions c What the Apostle saith of the Law of God viz. The Law is good if a man use it lawfully is true of the Law of England it is good if it be used lawfully or legally but how could that be done when there was no King in being 9thly Is it not a damning sin for a man to murther himself as did Judas Ahitophel c And did not they murther themselves who murther'd the King For besides that they were dead men in the Eye of the Law the first moment they did or attempted it did it not cost most of them their lives and expose them to an untimely and shameful death though no punishment could be so shameful as was their crime 10thly and lastly Is Deicidium or striking at the life of God himself a damning sin If that will not damn men without great repentance what will The murthering of earthly Kings in Person is it not a kind of murthering the King of Kings in Effigie For his Stamp and Inscription they bear and from thence are called gods in Scripture frequently not that they are equal to the true and living God yea not but that they shall die like men but because in point of Power and Authority of Honour and Majesty they do resemble God much more than Subjects do Now as he that should spit upon the Kings Coin or Picture would be dealt with as one that offered an affront and indignity to his Person and were highly disaffected to him so in this case Now all those Soul-damning sins that I have mentioned being in the womb of that one sin viz. the murthering of the late King let the Reader judge whether the Regicides did not take as direct a course to damn their own Souls as men could take And whether if any shall hereafter attempt to do the same thing to his Majesty that now is as they did to his Father which God forbid it will not prove as ready and certain a course not only to throw away their corporal lives with ignominy but also to damn their Souls and the Souls of their Confederates as any that men could take I am hardned against those that shall say if any such there be That this was done in favour of Religion and for the preservation thereof in power and purity by a Story which a noted Parliament-man and Purchaser of the revenues of a Bishoprick told me about the year 1648. Whereas saith he it is given out that all the change which hath been made has been in order to the preservation and Reformation of Religion there is no such thing For said he had there been Preferments enough in Church State wherewith to have gratified all men of parts interest who were ambitious of them I do assure you there had been no war He was as capable of knowing what he said as any man could be being at that time a Member of Parliament and a great man amongst them though more plain-hearted than some others were The discoveries which I have made of notorious Hypocrisie and blasphemous pretences to God and Religion whilst men did uti Deo at fruantur mundo i. e. use God that they might enjoy the world together with the little difference which I could ever discern betwixt the conversations of those that called themselves the Godly Party
was demollished Were ever any Temples build with Stone or Brick so sacred to God as he was Did the great God ever dwell so eminently so sensibly in any Temple mad● with hands as he useth to do in all Christian Princes who are the Temples of the Living God in a more noble sense than any thing without Life and Reason ever was or could be Could ever dead Temple be as it were a nursing Father to God Israel which Christian Princes are said to be Some have charged Belshazzer with Sacriledge for alienating the Vessels of the Temple only so far forth as to drink in them when he feasted a thousand of his Nobles at one time others have called the sin of Annanias and Saphira Sacriledge and so it was to keep back any part of that which they had dedicated to God and to his Church but sith the two first instances of Sacriledge are much more notorious than these two latter if I shall prove that Murthering of King Charles the First was greater Sacriledge than either of them viz. Than that of Eli's Sons and that of Achan by proving the greater I have certainly prov'd the less for Omne majus in se continet minus As for the Sacriledge of Eli's Sons it was but this They took a part of Gods Meat for so were Sacrifices as the Altar was Gods Table and whereas it should have been boil'd for Gods use they caused it to be rosted for their own They rob'd him of part of his Meat who if he were hungry would not tell us for his are the Beasts upon a thousand Mountains Psal 50.12 The World is his and the fulness thereof c. They were over-kind to themselves and over-bold with God which cost them dear as you have read but what is all that in comparison of being cruel to the Life of a Man a Christian a Prince and our own Prince The Sacriledge of Eli's Sons compared with that of Murthering the King seems if I may so speak to have been lighter than vanity and nothing Nay doubtless it did far exceed that Sacriledge of Achan which was greater than that of Eli's Sons For what was it that that Achan who for his sin was stoned to death and burn'd and called the troubler of Israel because of the sad consequence of it did steal from God Was it not only a Garment some Silver and one wedge of Gold Now what trifles what meer bawbles are all those things if weighed in a ballance against the Life of the King I thought to have wholly passed by the instance of of Annanias and Saphirah their Sacriledge which together with the lie that attended it was punished with present death How much less was their Sacriledge than theirs who put the late King to death They rob'd the Church but of a sacred estate if I may so call it because devoted to God but these of a sacred Life nay they stole away but part of an estate these destroyed a precious Life not in part but in whole They with-held but what themselves had given and might have chosen whither they would have given and could give again but the Murtherers of our King withdrew that which they never did or could give and which when they had once withdrawn they nor all the World could never give again They destroyed but one small sinew of the Church if money may be so called as it is called the sinew of War yea did but strike that one little sinew but these cut off the temporal Head of the Church for so we own the King of England to be next and immediately under God Supream Head and Governor How great then was that Sacriledge which hath clearly outdone that of Annanias and Saphirah that of Eli's Sons that of Achan yea the most notorious of all the Sacriledges recorded in Scripture if not all those Sacriledges put together Who now cryes not out as the Prophet Jer. 9.1 Oh that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountain of tears that I might weep day and night for the slain c. slain with the Aggravations of multiplied perjury high Treason horrid Rebellion transcendent Sacriledge And so I have made good the four first Articles exhibited against the Murtherers of King Charles the First c. 5. The putting of the late King to death was Homicidium i. e. down right Murther I need not fear to say greater than that of David in the matter of Uriah For there a King murthered a Subject but in this case Subjects murthered their King and Servants their Master What is Murther but taking away the Life of Man without just cause and without a just authority If so to do be not murther I wonder what is If either of these be in the case it is single murther as I may call it but if both do meet it is murther upon murther if I may so phraise it or redoubled Murther Now they both meet in the case of King Charles the First For First If he had done any thing worthy of death who but the King of Kings had authority to punish him for it or to inflict upon him the death which he had deserved If equals have no power of each other as the Law tells us that Par in pares non habet potestatem What power can Inferiors have upon their Superior Now he must needs be Superior to all the people of England and they all his Inferiors whom the Nation sweareth to own as the Supreme The Law of England being such as alloweth of no man to be put to death but by his Peers whither Lords or Commons doth surely suppose that no man hath any legal authority to put a King of England to death for what Fact soever sith he hath no Peers as that word signifieth equals for every body else in and of the Kingdom is his Subject Flagitious Princes such as Nero whatsoever become of their evil Servants and Counsellers must be left to the justice and judgment of God but our hand must not be upon them Did not Saul by the hand of Doeg whom he imployed for that purpose kill in one day 85 persons wearing Linnen Ephods 1 Sam. 22.18 for which and for many other things he had well deserved to die Yet I no where find David who of all men was most provokt to do it attempting upon his Life yea I hear him saying The Lord forbid that I should stretch forth my hands against him seeing he is the anointed of the Lords 1 Sam. 24.6 Muthology represents Achilles to have been impenetrable and invulnerable so far as he was anointed with Ambrosia but Kings in a sense are anointed all over with the ointment of Divine Authority and Power therefore impenetrable and inviolable dejure whatsoever they may be de facto Give me leave to change the mode and cry instead of Plectuntur ●lectantur Achivi If Princes err for want of good advice from those Subjects of theirs who ought to give it them let Subjects pay
for it but presume not to meddle with the persons of Soveraigns whom God hath reserved to his own immediate Justice Let them stand or fall to their own Master and who is that but God Almighty Would it not be murther in him who is no Executioner nor appointed by the Magistrate thereunto to put to death the fowlest Malefactor that was ever brought to a Gaole because he has no authority so to do To be sure they who put the late King to death neither had or could have any authority or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for what they did for we have no such Law or Custom in England thanks be to God as to put our Kings to death if they do not please us They may be free in their own perswasion to do such things if commissioned from Rome for that purpose who doubt the Supremacy of all Princes but the Pope to whom they apprehend all other Princes to be of right in subjection but we Protestants have not so learned Christ and Religion as to think that the Heads of all Secular Princes are at the Popes Devotion and their lives in his hands and that they are to hold them but durante illius beneplacito During his Holiness Pleasure Therefore I am amaz'd to think what kind of Heteroclite degenerate Protestants they were if we may call them Protestants who took the boldness to behead King Charles the Martyr Sixthly The sixth Article which I exhibit against the Murtherers of the late Royal Martyr is that their fault was Regicide the murthering not of a private person or subject but of a King which gave a great accent to their crime and made them as it were double-died in blood Though the blood of Jesus Christ may and will upon true and lively repentance wash away the Guilt of Royal Blood so as to prevent the eternal damnation of them that shod it and oh the virtue and value of that Blood that can do so yet I know no Laver that God hath appointed to wash out the stain thereof I mean the blot and stain which it always leaves upon the names and memories of them whose hands have been so imbrewed To attempt that were to wash a Blackamore All injuries become greater by the greatness of the object or party against whom they are committed Read the greatness of their sins in the greatness of the punishments which God hath inflicted on them as the Scripture tells us who have so much as resisted or rebell'd against their Kings but more against them who have put their Kings to death When the Moabites who had paid tribute to King Ahab rebell'd against his Son Jehoram 2 Kings 3.5 They were sorely beaten and the King of Moab brought to such distress that he took his Eldest Son that should have reign'd in his stead and offered him for a burnt offering upon the Wall v. 27. Again we read how Ho eah the King of Israel was punished and the Israel it es carried away Captive though the Governours were Heathen and the Subjects the People of God 2 Kings 17. because after he had made himself servant and tributary to Shalmonezer King of Assiria he afterwards denied him tribute c. In like manner Zedekiah King of Judah was punished as you may see 2 Kings 25.1 compared with chap. 24.20 Thorow the anger of the Lord it came to pass in Jerusalem and Judah until he had cast them out from his presence viz. giving them up to Famine Desolation Captivity Destruction of their City and Temple chap. 25 c. that Zedekiah rebell'd against the King of Babylon yea see what is added chap. 25.7 They slew the Sons of Zedekiah before his eyes and put out the Eyes of Zedekiah and bound him in Fetters of Brass and carried him to Babylon Lord what a dismal train of Consequences insued upon a Jewish King his rebelling but against a Babylonish King Instance we next in Sheba who rebell'd against David and drew all the ten tribes after him was he not by him besieg'd in Abel had his head cut off by the advice of a Woman and thrown out to him 2 Sam. 20.22 The Amalakite that said he had slain Saul though he had not slain him and though he said that Saul bid him was notwithstanding presently put to death at the command of David saying this to him 2 Sam. 1.14 How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thy hand to destroy the Lords anointed Yea David was so incensed at it that he cursed the Mountains where Saul was slain v. 21. Ye mountains of Gilboa let there be no dew neither let there be rain upon you nor fields of offerings for there the shield of the mighty is v●lely cast away the shield of Saul as though he had not been anointed with oyl The meer murmurings of the Israelites against Moses are both spoken of and punished as murmurings against God Exod. 16.8 So Num●● 20 13. it is said the people chode with Mose● for water and yet v. 13. it is said that th● water was called the water of Meribah be cause the Children of Israel strove with th● Lord. Hannaniah perswaded the Jews to revolt from the King of Babylon only an● yet it is said that he taught rebellion again● the Lord Jer. 28.16 Was not Miriam punished with Leprosie but for speaking again●● Moses Numb 12.10 Mind what God said and did upon that occasion ver 8. were y●● not then afraid ye viz. Miriam and Aaron to speak against my servant Moses ver 9 And the anger of the Lord was kindled again●● them and he departed v. 10. And the Clo●● departed from off the Tabernacle and behold Miriam became leprous Nay we find disobedience to the very Priests and Lovite● threatned with Leprosie Deut. 24.8 9. Tak● heed of the plague of Leprosie that ye take heed diligently to observe and do according t● all that the Priests and Levites shall teach thee ver 9. Remember what the Lord thy God d●● to Miriam viz. who was strucken with Leprosie for murmuring against Moses who was no Priest To perswade men to revelt from those Princes whose subjects they are is yet a farther Crime than bare murmuring and see how God punished it in Ahab and Zedikiah who were rosted to death by Nebuchad-nezzer Jer. 29.22 And how Shemaiah's whole Family was likewise extirpated v. 32. Hear David's Sentence against Saul's Servants for not using their utmost indeavours to preserve his Life 1 Sam. 26.16 As the Lord liveth ye are worthy to die because ye have not kept your Master the Lords anointed See how miserably Rachab and Banah two of Ishbosheth's Captains came off who murthered their Master and carried his Head as a present to King David hoping for a reward v. 12. David commanded his Young Men and they slew them and cut off their hands and feet and hanged them up possibly in Chains as a terror to others Had Zimri peace who slew his Master Elah King of Israel Surely no for when
and Religion often into their mouths for their having nothing of either in their hearts Commend me to a famous Story which I heard from a Reverend and dignified Divine not far off and not long since which was to this purpose An excellent Knight told me saith he that a year or two before the late War betwixt the King and Parliament broke out there were several Meetings held at his house then in Covent-Garden betwixt some great Officers of State that were then in play and other popular Gentlemen who had a great mind to their places The late King was privy to all their Conferences if not sometimes present and finding where the Cardo Controversiae or Hinge of the Controversie was viz. that some Popular but yet private and unpreferr'd Gentlemen thirsted to get into publick Offices such as Mr. of the Court of Wards c. and that they would never be quiet till it were effected yielded that all of them save one to whom he had some particular and unpardonable exception should have and enjoy the Places and Offices which they sought for but the King refusing him and they being resolved upon one and all hit or miss the meeting was quite dissolved and not long after the War broke out which saith he could every one of those great Seekers have found the Preferment which he sought for had been prevented But that which the Author of this Story said most of all to my purpose was this Whilst we were thus bandying at this our meeting from time to time one half to hold the places which we were possest of or parta tueri the other half of the Company to throw us out and get themselves into our places without those Walls nothing was talkt of but Religion what great contrivances there were at that time for reforming and settling Religion whilst God knows within those Walls there was not all that while one word spoken concerning Religion but some of us were willing to hold our Preferments and others to get them away from us O Nation sweetly cheated O thou blessed Name Religion how oft hast thou been misus'd and made use of to christen the most horrid Villanies For the Proverb has prov'd too true In nomine Domine incipit omne malum Was it not under pretext of Religion because Religion as was alledged could not be preferr'd if he were suffer'd to live that that Martyrs blood must be made shed for the Church that the King's Head was said to be cut off As if to cut off the Head of the Church of England were the only way to keep life in the Body thereof Now how fond and irrational a thing was it how groundless and malicious a slander and censure to say or think that the life of King Charles the First could not consist with the true Christian and Protestant Religion Moreover they knew no more than their heels when the Religion established in the Church of England by Law was gone what to put in the room of it for they themselves were not of one Religion nay what if many of them were of no Religion What think you of St. Martin and St. Scot were they not pure Saints with several others of those Aeacus's and Radamanthus's who gave Sentence against the late King Oh how did they burn Was it with zeal for Religion A man would hardly think that Religion to be chaste and honest which such men courted or seemed to court What Religion I beseech you in pulling down all the fences of the Church and letting in all sorts of little foxes and wild bores to spoil God's Vineyard If this were Reformation it was not unlike that in Egypt when the whole Land did swarm and was over-run with Frogs and Lice and Flies Exod. 8. Whilst these men pretended to the honour of Religion who ever disgraced it more to the preservation of true Religion who indangered it more to the Reforming of Religion who ever deform'd and undid it more Look how the Ivy whilst it creeps into the wall and clasp's close about it embracing it as it were with greatest kindness doth mean time rot decay and perish it or look how the Ape so hugs her young ones as that she kills them with her kindness so kind and no kinder were those bloody Reformers to true Religion which they could have as ill afforded to have lookt in the face as a Debtor his severest Creditor or a Malefactor his Judge Surely they were never intended by God for Reformers considering what God said to David 1 Chro. 28. Thou shalt not build an House for my Name because thou hast been a man of war or hast shed blood Who could expect a Reformation of such men's making worthy the cost of that Royal Blood wherewith they purchased it That which they gave us was to dear by every drop which the purchase cost them When I am convinc'd that Jezebel took the course which she took with Naboth upon a Religious account that a zeal to reform Religion put her upon writing Letters in Ahab's name and sealing them with his Seal as it is 2 Kings 21.8 9 10. saying Proclaim a Fast and set Nabal on high among the people and set sons of Belial to bear witness against him saying Thou didst blaspheme God and the King and then carry him out and stone him that he may die I say when I believe that a true zeal against blaspheming of God made her do as she did who 't is most certain did all this meerly in order to what we read ver 15. When Jezebel heard that Naboth was stoned and was dead Jezebelsaid to Ahab Arise take possession of the Vineyard of Naboth which he refused to give thee for money for Naboth is dead I say when I so believe then and not till then shall I think that an unfeign'd desire to promote true and undefiled Religion to keep out Popery and to reform Protestantism as practised amongst us was that which prompted the unhappy Judges of King Charles the Martyr to send him packing out of the world How hypocritical and false was the name that was given to the Court which tried him called The High Court of Justice For 1. we know it was no Court for it was not any such thing legall● and nothing is a Court but what is legally so and moreover his Majesty would never own it for a Court 2. It was no ways High● but in ●ride presumption and Arrogan●e to undertake what they did 3. It was to be sure no Court of Justice for it was called together only to serve one turn like Jezeb●ls Court that was summoned against Naboth aforesaid to do one wi●ked job or feat that is per fas aut nefas right or wrong to cut off the Kings Head and there was to be the end of it But do men think that God will always be thus mocked When Ananias and Sapphira added as little Hypocrisie as this comes to to their Sacriled●e did it not cost them
meer Parricides yea and the worst and most flagitious of all Parricides The Scripture foresaw some such would be 1 Tim. 1.9 The Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. for murtherers of Fathers and murtherers of Mothers c. But what punishment short of Hell its self can be thought great enough for those that are such Sith Death the greatest of all temporal punishments had wont to be inflicted upon Chiidren who were only disobedient to their Parents yea since there is such a passage as that of Solomon Prov. 30.17 The Eye that mocketh at his Father and despiseth to obey his Mother the Ravens of the Valley shall pick it out and the young Eagles shall eat it i. e. Such persons as these shall not live out half their days but shall come to untimely and shameful ends as to be hang'd or such like and so their Bodies exposed to be devoured by such revenous Creatures as are Crows or Eagles which are observed to aim especially at the Eyes of dead People whether because a very tender part and grateful to their palates or for what other causes I know not what then shall be done to those who not only mock but murther Kings who are their Fathers in a more eminent sense than were they who begat them We propagate to the Children of our Bodies original sin and actual misery which yet they ought to excuse us for as because no man can help it so likewise because they will do the same by their Children when they come to have any and so will all men in all ages and we must not set the whole World a quarrelling so do not Kings to their Political Children i. e. their Subjects Kings as Kings are Fathers to us only for our good and real benefit therefore called the ministers of God to us for our good Rom. 13.4 a terror not to good works but to them that do evil v. 3. i. e. Whosoever therefore shall ravish the Lives of them that are such Fathers by Office but especially if such by a due execution of their office punishing Vice and encouraging Vertue what may or can they expect to use and allude to the Apostles words Heb. 10.27 But a certain fearful looking for of Judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries Tenthly Neither was their Crime meer Parricides as great a sin as that is but also Patriaecidium if I may have leave 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or to make a new word upon this occasion Now by Patricide I mean the murthering of their Native Countrey putting that to death for which they ought to die if need were The phrase of killing ones Countrey may seem harsh but will be rendred more soft and suitable if we call to mind an ancient wise saying viz. That England is a great Animal which can never die unless it kill its self If it may be call'd an Animal it may be kill'd for whatsoever Creature here below is possest of Life may also be dispossest of the same but that none but its self could kill that Animal was a great mistake unless they took the word Self synecdochically i. e. for a part of its self for by a part of its self it was indeed destroy'd or brought to the very brink of destruction kill'd out-right or brought within one step of death Witness the grand and signal symptomes of death which they brought upon it for in that number are they reckoned by Physicians Magnae Jactationes multae bigiliae motus convulsivi ipsissimae convulsiones Pulsus Intermittens Facies Hippocratica c. All whichill symptoms or what was analogous to them were found upon England in the time of their raign who cut off the Head of King Charles the Martyr Let me add two or three more viz. Deliquium or frequent Lipothymies Faintings or Swoonings Also Delirium Doting and Phrensie I might have brought in Singultus or Hiccops as another deadly sign but that it is one species of Convulsions Now give me leave to say our Ruling Regicides had brought upon this poor Nation and their Native Countrey all the conclusive signs of death aforesaid whereby it appeareth they had given England its deaths wound but that God who killeth and maketh alive who bringeth down to the grave and saith return again yea God who raiseth the dead was pleased most miraculously to restore it to life again A short proof may serve for each of the particulars aforesaid they being so much known to all ingenious men that have either seen or read of the affairs and transactions of the late times the truth is the names of symptomes which I mentioned because by Metaphor applied to politicks or morals may need some little explication but when that is done they will easily command assent and acknowledgement Briefly then were there not Magna Jactationes that is great tossings and tumblings up and down in those days as dying men turn from side to side sit up lie down again call to rise and to be removed from bed to bed and chamber to chamber finding themselves uneasie in every posture seeking rest in change of posture though they find none How oft did we shift and change Governments in one year pull down one and set up another and pull down that again Sic cum voluit fortuna jocari So were we banded as it were by fortune or male-administration rather from end to end so reell'd we too and fro like drunken men or like a ship ready to be overset with stiff and contrary winds so sound we no rest for the sole of our feet and it was most easie to make the prognostick that nothing but a miracle of divine power and goodness could save us from sudden death and ruine Such Governments as they then set up seemed to be things that would not keep above a month or two or little Gourds which had a Worm at their root which caused them to wither presently And as the Nation had at that time little rest in one sense so little sleep in another for were not the minds of men continually kept awake with fears and sad apprehensions like people that live in an old rotten decay'd house who cannot sleep in tempestous nights for fear the house they dwell in should fall upon their heads These were the magnae vigiliae which I spoke of or rather the causes why men could not sleep in those days as they desired to do and ought to have done Again whosoever knows what State-Convulsions mean must needs understand that we had a great many of them in those days There are particular and universal Convulsions spoken of by Physicians i. e. some of particular parts only as of the eyes when they are distorted of the mouth when that is drawn awry c. Others again of the whole body whereby a man is rackt as it were from head to foot we had of both sorts in those unsettled times
duty of Subjects towards Kings and Rulers Possibly your Children and your Servants will be more obedient to you than now they are when you have learnt to be more obedient to those whom God hath set over you in the Church or State Nay some good and pious women whilst they are teaching their Children and Servants obedience to the King may reflect and learn more obedience to their own Husbands Vpon that day let every thing that is under Government be taught to obey I do really think it a very great defect in Parents not to train up their Children in Loyalty amongst other Principles of Religion for that is one head of the Fifth Commandment not to train them up in that way of their youth that they may not forget it when they are old Perhaps some Parents had kept their Children from those untimely ends which their Disloyalty hath brought them to if they had done so Let us possess our Families with awful apprehensions of Magistracie and the necessity of obeying those whom God hath set over us in all lawful things and this especially upon every 30th day of January For want of this many are undone by scrupling what they need not viz. indifferent things and not scrupling what they ought viz. Rebellion Is it not to little purpose generally for men to give their Children Learning unless they instruct them in Loyalty for if they are to seek as to that where and in what capacity shall they use their Learning What shall be the Sphere of their activity A little Learning would serve the turn to preach to so few hearers as the Law will afford or allow them who are not instructed in obedience How many Lads of excellent parts and hopes having suckt in d●sloyal Principles as it were with their Mothers milk have been put to mean and Mechanick Trades and forced to live by their hands who could have liv'd by their heads or head-pieces as well as most men had they not been denied that Education that should have inabled them so to do It might prevent the ruine of thousands if such Texts as some that I could name were preached upon on every 30th day of January and handled as they should be I mean so as that the Reason and Consciences of men might feel what the Minister saith and go away more fixed in Loyalty and Obedience than they came thither Ex. gr one of the Texts I mean is Prov. 24.21 22. My Son fear thou the Lord and the King and meddle not with them that are given to change For their calamity shall rise suddenly and who knows the ruine of them both What we translate given to change some render by the word Rebellibus Rebels others by nova Molientibus such as project or attempt new things i. e. new Governments There are two expressions that bid fair for the sense of those words who knows the ruin of them both 1. Who knows what ruine may fall upon them who honour not God and the King from them both i. e. both from God and the King 2. Or the words may be rendred who knows Sheneicem i. e. terminum annorum the end of their years and days who are given to change and overturn Governments how soon they may perish in their Rebellion as did Corah and his Complices Another Text which I wish that Parents would mind their Children and Masters their Servants of upon every 30th day of January is Prov. 17.26 To punish the just is not good nor to strike Princes for equity Methinks at the first hearing the words do sound as if the meaning of them were That it is not good to strike Princes under pretence of bringing them as Delinquents to condign punishment of trying them by a pretended Court of Justice or Process of Law as Jezebel tried Naboth Surely if a man be either a just man or a Prince he ought not to be stricken by the hand of any man If just because he deserves it not if a Prince or King because if you could suppose him to have deserved it he is to be reserved to the judgment of the King of Kings as David said concerning Saul 1 Sam. 26.10 The Lord shall smite him or his day shall come to die or he shall descend into battle and perish The Lord forbid that I should stretch out my hand against the Lords Anointed ver 9. And David said to Abishat who said to him Let me smite Saul once with a spear to the earth and I will not smite him again for who can stretch forth his hand against the Lords Anointed and be guiltless Cause your Children and Servants to read such Texts as these upon every 30th day of January A disloyal Education I perswade my self hath been the temporal ruine of many a hopeful Person Let no Parents convey those groundless prejudices into the minds of their children which may prove the seeds of Rebellion in time at leastwise of Faction and Sedition which will ever keep them from ever signifying any thing in this world and consign them over to the woful temptations of want and beggery and what if Parents when they have compassed Sea and Land to make their Children Froselytes to their own perswasions have proved but ignes fatui to their own children meerly misled and misguided them And whilst they being blind themselves as to those matters lead their children as blind as themselves both of them fall into the ditch God secure all conscientious Loyalty and Obedience in this and all following Ages and let all good and wise Parents cause their Childrn to suck it in with their Mothers milk that such days of Rebellion Treason Perjury Sacriledge and Murther as our eyes have seen may never return upon us again Tell your Children that in such a year begun a Civil War in England which ended in the murthering the barbarous murthering of a good King say that and you need say no more to make any conscientious person tremble at the thought of another Civil War o● of contributing thereunto Let the murther of the King be exposed to deter all after-ages from ever thirsting more after the blood of Kings or at leastwise daring to gratifie and quench that their thirst c. If Ministers will please to lay aside all invective language if any be prone thereunto of which I can charge no man particularly upon each 30th day of January and whatsoever may give people just occasion to say they railed in the Pulpit using as one expresseth it soft words and hard Arguments whereby to convince all gainsayers that the putting of the late King to death was an action monstrously wicked an unaccountable sin to God or men if people will be so obedient to Authority and so true to themselves as to attend publick preaching and prayer on that day the Anniversary Fast may with the blessing of of God turn to a very good account namely of securing the Peace and Safety of the Nation and of the respective
for none of these are the Faith These are but Mint Annise and Cummin in respect of the great things of Religion the Magnalia Dei the two Tables of the Law of which he is Keeper Those are but the arbitrary Modes Habits and Dresses of Religion Clothes do not belong to the essence of a man A man is a man to all intents and purposes whether he wear a Cloak or a Coat or neither or both Christianity is the same thing in all good men whether they wear Gowns or no Gowns Cassocks or no Cassocks and who are called either Episcopal Presbyterian Independent or whatsoever else So long as the essentials Vitals and Fundamentals of Religion are guarded by the Laws of England and the vigilant care of his Majesty what becomes of those little airy vehicles of disciplinary names divisions and distinctions is the least thing of a thousand For so long as a man lays no other foundation than that which God hath layed viz. Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 building upon him by faith love and obedience if he should chuse besides Gold and silver and precious stones to build upon the foundation wood hay and stubble that his superstructure would be burnt yet himself should certainly be saved If a man may go to heaven out of the Church of England as well yea more readily than from Geneva or Amsterdam and from under the Discipline of any of those places let him look to it that he be a good Christian exercising himself to have a Conscience void of offence towards God and men one that worshippeth God in the spirit rejoyceth in Christ Jesus and has no confidence in the flesh as it is Phil. 3.3 and my Soul for his having thus his fruit unto holiness his end will be everlasting life So a man come to Heaven at last fighting a good fight finishing a good course and having kept the faith i. e. having been true to the great Doctrine and Rules of Christian Religion defended by the Church of England and his Majesty more especially the Supreme Governor thereof under God by a sincere life and practice thereof I say if a man persevering thus to do come to Heaven at last whether he come in the Kings high way as I may call it I mean in the more eminent and beaten Road of Episcopacy or in the more private narrow and unfrequented paths the matter is not great But I make account no man can ever come there who shall live and dye an incourager of known Schisme in others which is as truly a damning work of the flesh as Adultery or Murther or a wilful allower of it in himself 'T is no complement much less flattery or blasphemy to call him Defender of the Faith by whom as much of Religion as is necessary to Salvation is defended or rather we his Subjects in the free and safe exercise thereof though the same favour be not shewn to those who turn aside from the only established Discipline for but one Discipline can be established in one place as to those who conform thereunto If a man travel upon the Kings high way betwixt Sun and Sun and be rob'd he may sue and recover his Money but so may not he that travelleth in By-roads or cross the Country or over hedges and ditches I say if any man rob them that shall chuse to travel in such by obscure and unguarded paths no amends is made him only if he chance to be kill'd or murder'd in any wood or wilderness the Law will lay hold on him that did it Let who will govern or the Government be what it will be they who conform thereunto will always find more regard and countenance than those who do not though others may be tolerated and protected also And so much of our Kings being Defender of the Faith truly and properly so called upon account whereof we have cause to bless God for him 9thly We have cause to give thanks to God for those Kings by and under whom all the great ends of Government are provided for and therefore for his Majesty that now is By him all the great ends of Government are provided for What are they but in two words Religion and Property How Religion ot the preservation thereof and our protection in the profession and practice thereof are provided for I shew'd under the 8th and last head 'T is manifest that care is taken that we may lead a quiet and peaceble life in all godliness and honesty as it is 1 Tim. 2.2 Also how Property is secured to us may be gathered abundantly out of the formentioned particulars Now if you have any thing more to expect from a King declare what it is For I confess I know nothing else that there is for him to do as a King for us or for us as his Subjects to expect 10thly and lastly I do solemnly appeal to the discontented people of the Nation and to those whose mouths are most full of complaints I say I appeal to them in two cases which I shall propound in the two following Questions 1. Quest If you meet with less misery enjoy more mercy under his Majesty that now is than ye did expect or look for have you not cause to bless God for him Quest 2. Do you not really meet with less misery and more mercy under his Majesty that now is than you thought you should have done How oft have I heard many that were Parliamenteers say If ever the King were restored they should not be left worth a morsel of bread there would be no being for them then in England he would make the Land too hot for them and all such as they They had as good buy Bishops or Deans and Chapters Lands as not for if a change came they should as certainly lose their Lands of Inheritance and what they got by their own labour and was as free as any in the world as Kings and Bishops Lands if they intended to buy them I know that many did look upon the King's return as the giving up the Ghost of all their joys and comforts possessions and enjoyments But did it prove so Have not many of them seen as good days as ever they saw before Where is the Popery you prophesied of that would come in presently For you saw it flying towards us as upon the wings of the wind Where has been the bloody Persecution the Marian-days which your minds boded to you Have you not since that seen days of Grace and Peace and of the Son of man Is the Ark taken as you thought it would be Is God gone Is the Glory departed Is the Gospel extinguished and the Sun set as it were at Noon day as you fancied it would be O leave your dreaming of Dreams and divining of Divinations away with those hypocondriack vapours which turn to new Light and Prophecy Silence and slight your mistaken fancies Your eyes yet see your Teachers and your ears hear them Now even now there is
save in a few instances here and there one c. and of them whom they censured as carnal and ungodly or but moral people at the best for that the morality of some of them did much outstrip their own has put me out of conceit with what had wont to be called The Good Old Cause more than any thing else has done And then to see that the Chieftains and greatest Bigots of and for the good old Cause as they call'd it could swallow such a Camel as was the murthering of the King yea be themselves some of the Camels that murthered him or caused him to be murthered whilst they seem'd to strain at meer Gnats could say This is the heir come let us kill him and the inheritance shall be ours Those I say are the things which have made me think cheaply of those times those men and their pretensions to suspect if not more than so a very grand cheat and a bottomless-pit of worldly interest and carnal design in and under all those things and to wish heartily that the Church and State might always continue as now it is much rather than to fall back again into the hands of such Tinker-like Reformers as were in those days making ten holes where they mended one and be re-invaded by hypocritical Vsurpation Sacriledge Enthusiasme and Confusion If I know any thing of my own heart I do at this very day sincerely love every body that I know or think to be truly good and possibly my charity is as large as most mens and my censoriousness as little but as for those who make the highest pretences to Religion and seem to be Piety-like Calomelanos as Physicians call it six or 12 times sublimed or like the Pharisees of old who said to other men Stand off I am holier than thou who rather blaze and blare like great Comets than shine like Stars in the Firmament of Religion if I find them playing the Knaves becoming the Ring-leaders of Murther embrewing their hands in Royal blood under pretence of abhorring Idols committing Sacriledge and bringing all to confusion and under colour of Reforming Church and State to design nothing but the feathering of their own Nests getting wealth and power into their own hands per fas nefas overturning overturning overturning till they themselves whose right it is not come and take all and when they have done all entitling God and Religion to all their Villanies like those with whom the great God doth thus expostulate Jer. 7.9 Will ye steal murder and commit Adultery and swear falsly and come and stand before me in this House and say we are delivered to do all these abominations c. I say the people to whom this Character is due whose Inscription this is are to my Soul as one calls it the first-born of Abominations Now after all that hath been said of the exceeding sinfulness of their bloody fact who were the Murtherers of the late King and of the woful hazard which their precious and immortal Souls did incur thereby give me leave to hope that if the same opportunities should ever come again which God forbid i. e. if ever the now dissenting people of England should have so puissant an Army at their back as then they had and so subtile skilful and resolute a General to conduct them and so many covetous people at their heels waiting to enrich themselves by the spoil of the Kings and Churches Lands so dividing the Lions skin when once he were dead from a real dread of thereby plunging themselves into everlasting flames they would rather burn at a stake than have their hands in such another business To shut up all I have been induced to insist so long upon the heinousness and danger of their sin who put the King to death because a thorow belief and due consideration of what I have said and I do aver it is all true might and would in my opinion be a very great security against all publick Mutinies Insurrections and Civil Wars hereafter For if the people of England did universally and all as one man dread the thoughts of Regicide as of a sin next to that which is unpardonable there would be no cause to fear Rebellion for then would men be govern'd and over-aw'd by this Dilemna If the King against whom we rebel shall always keep his head we shall lose our lives first or last but if he lose his head by our means and contrivances we shall be in great danger to lose our Souls which is worse For what will it profit a man to gain the whole world and to lose his own Soul FINIS