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A27115 The royal charter granted unto kings, by God himself and collected out of his Holy Word, in both Testaments / by T.B. ... ; whereunto is added by the same author, a short treatise, wherein Episcopacy is proved to be jure divino. Bayly, Thomas, d. 1657? 1649 (1649) Wing B1514; ESTC R17476 64,496 181

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and so observe him all along through the whole tract of time we will consider how it dealt with the first Prince under whose Dominions it pullulated which was under the Prince and Bishop of Geneva and these two were both nullified in the same person as they were both here in England by the same Parliament verefying that max●m of ours with that fore-running of theirs No Bishop No King and then we will shew you how they dealt with our Princes here at home where ever they had a power viz. with Mary Queen of Scots and James and Charls the First Kings of England and of Scotland both and then usurpe a power themselves higher then Popes or Kings Calvin with his gladiators having expuls'd the Prince and Bishop of Geneva sets up a government so high and unexpected that the people would have nothing to do either with him or his government and thereupon they banished him the City Calvin in exile bethinkes himselfe how he might appease their fury and give them satisfaction and be invited in again Calvinus de tristibus thinks it his best course of endearing himself unto the people to make them sharers with him in the government whereupon he invented his new fangle of Lay-Elders and so all parties were agreed In comes Mr John Calvin whilst he was scarce warme in his seat I shall present you with a story of him and of his demeanour of himself towards the temporall Throne There was a Noble-man of Italy who liked the Reformation which he had begun so well that he forsook his Religion and Country sold his Lands and fortune converted all into money and took sanctuary in Geneva as soon as he came there great rejoycing insulting there was that their cause was honored with so high a convert The grand Seigniour fals a building directing his Masons he found one of them something more sawcy then to what his Lordship in his own Country had been accustomed little thinking that where there was promised so large a respect of souls there had been so little respect of persons this Noble-man hereupon gives this Mason a gentle tap upon the head the Mason flies upon him like a Dragon and fhakes him by the beard my Lord not being used to such course salutations stabs him with his dagger thinking nothing lesse but that so high a provocation would have pleaded his indempnity no such matter my Lord was soon ●aid hold on and brought to his triall Calvin upon the tribunall not as a ●emporall Judge in such cases take ●eed of him but only to be asked his opinion in cases of Conscience the Delinquent pleads for himself tels them ●ow insolently he was provoked and wonders considering such provocation he should be questioned for so vile a ●arlet Hereupon Mr Calvin soon starts up and tels him that with God whose seat they held there was no respect of persons and for ought he knew that man whom he despis'd to death was as near and dear to God and his favour as himself their Laws knew no such distinction as man-slaughter and murder but they were regulated by the Divine Law that told them that the man that shed mans bloud by man shall his bloud be shed that there was no exemption by greatnesse nor buying it off by favour the Noble-man replied that he had not been long enough amongst them to be acquainted with their Laws it was answered that the law of Nature did forbid that of which he could not be ignorant all this was well enough My Lord told them how hard a case it would be for a man out of his love and liking to the place and manners should seeke to it as a sanctuary for his conscience and so soon find it his grave that he was heartily sorry for what he had done and would give any satisfaction to his wife and children that the Court should order or his estate allow h● intended the man no hurt before such rough hands shook him out of himself that he knew not what he did and therefore he humbly begg'd their pardon assuring the● for the future that his waies should be so directly answerable to those paths they walked in that he would not by Gods grace hereafter step aside the temporall Judges wonne with his humble and submisse behaviour began to relent and desired Mr Calvin to abate a little of his rigour for the reasons before mentioned assuring him that his case was no common case and therefore it ought to have respect accordingly hereupon there grew a hot dispute between the spirituall and the temporall Judges Calvin remained stiffe in his opinion and would not be bent to the least mercy the Nobleman thought to throw one graine of reason more into the ballance that should turne the scales and that should be taken out of a consideration had of their own good for saith he if you shed my bloud hand over head without any the least respect had to my years to my birth to my education to the little time I had of being acquainted with your Laws nor to the provocation it self nor to the suddennesse of the action nor to the surprize of all my senses nor to the satisfation I would have given nor ro the repentance of my very soul who will come amongst you what Lord or Gentleman will live within your wals wherefore if you will have no consideration of me yet consider your selves consider what a blow it wil give to your Religion how many this very thing will stave off from ever having any thing to do with you by this time they were all prone to mercy but Calvin alone who stands up and cries fiat justitia ruat Caelum neither could he be brought to give his opinion that the Jury as we call them might not passe upon him but out went the Jury and contrary to their owne Law hearing the Noble-mans plea and observing well the inclination of the Bench in generall they brought in their verdict not guilty whereupon the Noble-man was acquitted hereupon John Calvin rises from the Bench and whilst the rest proceeded to their matters cals all the Ministers within the Wals and liberties of Geneva who appear before the Judgement sets with white wans in their hands which they laid down telling them that with those wans they laid down their offices protesting that they would never preach the Gospel to a people whose humane Laws should run contrary to the Laws Divine and suddenly turned about and took their leave which being acted with so much gravity wrought so much upon the beholders that they presently sent for them back againe and hanged the Noble-man This story I have read in their own History in Geneva then which my thoughts were then as they are still that never any Pope of Rome did act as Pope of Rome or so much as claime halfe that authority over the Civill Magistrate as this anti-pope did virtually act and yet was not ashamed to make lesser matters then this the
successe I pray you had the imprisonment of Richard the 2 it cost the Kingdome whole ages of miseries 80 of her Nobility and 100000 of her Commons the disposing of all her Royall Roses in their budds and before they were halfe blown untill they was but one of a colour left in the Royall Garden of Great Brittaine and they being Married made such a composure of Red and White as blushing at the former mischiefs and it is worth your observation how that the last two Kings to save their lives resigned their Crowns and so lost both whereas the former by keeping his Crown upon his head escaped the blow Let all these base begotten meteors appear glorious for a time till by their yeilding more and more to aire they fall to earth whilst Kings like Suns in firmaments look biggest when they are going down with confidence that they shall rise againe Lastly Henry 6. and his son must be Imprisoned and murdered to make way for Edward 4. and Edward 4. his two Sons and heires must be Imprisoned murdered to make way for Richard 3. and Richard 3. murders these two little Children and Henry 7. slayes Richard 3. with infinite of his followers for his usurpation if you go on with your worke you see your wages Gods hand is not shortned but stretched out still and he is as great an enemy to such proceedings as ever he was He is yesterday and to day and the same for ever Do ye thinke that ever ye shall have Peace till the King be restored ye may as well expect the needle of the Compasse to leave its treppidation before it point at the North Pole as to find quietnesse in the Land before the hearts of the people turne to their Soveraigne Do you not see that the Parliament cannot bring any thing to maturity and what 's the reason but because their labours will not admit a Treaty with the Sun Good men should endeavour to take off not verefie that saying of Maximilian the Emperour as Johannes Aventinus witnesseth de bello Turcico viz. that the Emperour of Germany was Rex regnum because his Princes were so great the King of Spaine was Rex hominum because his people were so obedient that the King of France was Rex asinorum because they bare such heavie burdens but the King of England was Rex Diabolorum because the people use to treat their Kings so wickedly Now Reader whether thou be'st christian or kind or courteous or otherwise whether thou be'st for one or other or neither or both yet as thou art an English-man suffer not thy self to be so abused and thy Country so ruined by the names of King and Parliament Religion and Liberty Priviledges and Properties for many a Snake lies under the strawberry leaves of such pretences and stings you ere you be aware and feeds you with poisons instead of dainties but return to your old obedience if you would return to your old Peace and if you would have God speed the Plough begin to cry GOD SAVE THE KING that we may once more hear the voice of joy and gladnesse amongst us that our Oxen may be strong to labour that there may be no decay no leading into captivity and no complaining in our streets that every man may sit quietly under his own vine and his own hands pluck his own grapes that the mowers may fil their sithes with their own rights and the reapers bind up their sheaves in the bonds of justice One word to thee O thou Great City the pantapolis of all miseries the seminary of Rebellion the magazine of Gunpowder Treasons the treasury of the wages of iniquity the Tower against David wherein hangs so many shields and bucklers the Mart Towne for conspiracies you nursed up this Rebellion when it was but tender you both fed and taught it when it was but young you maintain'd it in its wantonnesse when it was in its youth when it came unto its full strength ye gloried in your production and now Rebellion is in its declining age you ceres its wrinkles you lend it artificiall eyes leaden its gray haires lend it your staffe for fear it should fall and now at last you help it to crutches when it cannot otherwise go take my advice and judge not salubrity by sweetnesse a plaine dealing friend is like those sawces which a man praises with teares in his eyes though you have brought it to this yet cast off the old man of sin and put on the new man of righteousnesse An Eagle reneweth her age saith David David saith so and therefore you must believe it but how it is done you must be advised by Plyny when the Eagle hath surfeited by reason of her age not being able to digest so great a quantity of bloud as formerly shee was wont shee bathes and molts her self in a fountaine untill all her feathers fall away and beats her beak against a rock untill it loosens and fals off and thus with renewing of her bill and feathers in a manner shee becomes young againe Now after seven years sucking of the bloud of innocents if ye find your aged stomakes to be fil'd up to your consciences like the Eagles bath and molt your selves in the tears of repentance untill your Peacocks plumes come downe and strike with the fists of contrition upon your hard and stony hearts so you shall become new men new to God new to his Vicegerent new to your selves which will be the best newes that hath been cried in your streets these many years And as you have been principium caput so be but finis hujus rebellionis and habebis laudem ex illa Rom. 13. and as it hath been your fault to begin this Rebellion so let it be your vertue to make an end of it for if you will not make an end of it there will be an end of you THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. GOd himself was the first founder and the first that instituted the Office of Kings pag. 1 CHAP. II. The people cannot make an Anointed King 9 CHAP. III. The meaning of the Anointing of Kings 11 CHAP. IV. The reason why they are called the Lords Anointed 19 CHAP. V. Bad Kings are the Lords Anointed as well as good 25 CHAP. VI It is not lawfull upon any pretences whatsoever to depose or so much as touch the Lords Anointed 29 CHAP. VII What is meant by touching the Lords Anointed 39 CHAP. VIII That Kings now adayes are to be had in the same veneration and esteeme as the Kings of Judah and Israel were notwithstanding our Christian Liberty 50 CHAP. IX That a King failing in his duty and not performing those things which he hath sworn unto at his Coronation so solemnly yet the people are not dis-obliged in their obedence unto him 57 CHAP. X. Touch not mine Anointed Psal. 105. meant by Princes and not otherwise 65 CHAP. XI The Objection of the ten Tribes revolting from Rehoboam Answered 72 CHAP. XII The
goodnesse that is in all ●hese three kind of Governments of Monarchy in the King of Aristocracy ●n the Peers of Democracy in the House of Commons where the acerbities of any one is taken away by their being all three together but if one will be all ●hen all will be nothing This stupendiously wise and Noble way of Government had its dissolution by inverting the course it took in its originall When the first William had Conquered the Nation the Normans would not admit that any Laws should be observed or rules obeyed but only the will of the Conquerour and why so but because thereby the Conquerour might take away the Estates of any English-man and give them to his Conquering Normans But in process of time when these Normans became English they began to insist a little upon m●um and tuum and would know the what that was belonging to the King as a King and to themselves as Subjects for by the former rule the King might as well take away the Estates from one Norman and give it to another as he did formerly from the English and give to his Normans wherefore they would have no more of that but joyntly and unanimously Petitioned the King to the same effect the King thought it reasonable condescends to their desires consultation was about the premises the result of the consultation was that the King should issue out Writs to the Lords Spirituall who in those dayes were thought the wisest and most Consciencious to reason with the King and advise with him as well concerning the bounding of the Ocean of Soveraignty as bridling in the petty Rivers of private interest These Spirituall Lords thought it a work of too high a nature for their private undertakings wherefore they supplicated his Majesty that the Lords Temporall might be also summoned by Writ and joyn with them in the same Authority 't was done accordingly being done they both thought it a businesse so transcendent and of so universall concernment that they found a way to involve the whole Nation in a joynt consent which was that all Free-holders in the Kingdome in their severall precincts might by the election of two in every County disimbogue all their suffrages into theirs and to remaine the Countries proxies to Vote for and to be directed by their several Countries and thus the Commons were brought in but behold the Viper that eats through the sides of its own Parent behold the Asses foale who when she hath done sucking kicks her own dam The King brings in the Lords Spirituall the Lords Spirituall bring in the Lords Temporall both bring in the Commons the Commons destroy both both destroy the King Neither was Kingship as they call it and Episcopacy better rewarded for being the principall and so zealous reformers of the Gospel to have both their Crowns and Miters broke in pieces by the same hammer of reformation and the wals of their Pallaces mingled with Abby dust casting thereby such a blot upon the very name of Reformation that it will scarce be legible by Christians except what went before and what may follow after may help the future ages to the true sence and meaning of the word thus Rivers run backwards and drowne their own Head thus the monsterous Children who are borne with teeth in their mouthes bite of the nipple and starve themselves for lack of sustenance thus blind Sampsons revenge themselv●s upon their enemies by pulling downe the house upon their own heads thus the formes of the most glorious government of a Church State are wounded to death through the sides of Reformation If you are not I am sure you will ere it be long be satisfied that all the specious pretences of popular Government Free-State Liberty of the Subject are but figments and delusions of the people obtruded by vaine-glorious and haughty men who knowing that they could not be that one Governour of all the rest yet they hope to be one of many thus foolish children set their fathers barnes full of Corne on fire to warme their hands when they are ready to starve for lack of bread who had not rather live under a Government wherein a man i● only bound to submit to him whom it is honour to obey then to live under a Government where every man is a slave because every one is a Master Finally my opinion is this I had rather have my liberty to kneel before a Throne then 〈◊〉 be the tallest man in a crowd and should ●●inke it more for my ●ase and honour CHAP. XIV That there is no such thing as a Free-State in the World IF by a Free-State you mean a people who have shook off their Allegiance to their Prince there are many such Free-States to be found but a beggars-bush or a company of Gipsies who propound to themselves new Laws renouncing the old and yet chuse a King and Queen amongst themselves pleasing one another with a selfe-conceited opinion of a thing they call Liberty which is no otherwise then an ignoble bondage of their own chosing preferring the correction of a bundle of rods because their own hands have made them before the sway-meant of a Scepter which God himself hath put into their Soveraignes hand is as good a Common-wealth or Free-State as the best but if you mean by a Free-State a freedom from Tyranny you will be as far to seek for any such thing in rerum natura as for a reason why tyranny may not be in many as well as in one But if you mean by freedome an exemption from all such tyrannicall oppressions as are expressed in the Petition of Right I see not why such a Free-State may not be under a Monarchy certainly I have seen such Petitions and insistances during the late Kings Reigne as having relation to Free-born people of England and should thinke that the Magna Charta defended by one who had power to make it good against the infringement of many breakers and by a Parliament of many authorized to the same purpose against the pessundation of it by any one be it by the highest may not be as good a way to make preserve and keep a Nation free as well as the intrusting of a Nations freedome into the hands of a few whose Independency deny all remedies to be either above them or below them It may be it will not be thought tedious if I entertaine your eye and consideration with some observations of my owne in those Free-states of Christendome as they call themselves wherein I have been I shall begin with the Free-State of Genoa wherein I have been resident some time and the rather because whilst England was a Kingdome they could not have the face to stand in any competition with us but now the Kings armes were cut off as well as his head how should we do to make a distinction between them and us for both the State of Genoa and the State of England give the very same coat of Armes and