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A47055 Christvs dei, or, A theologicall discourse wherein is proved that regall or monarchicall power is not of humane but of divine right and that God is the sole efficient cause thereof and not the people : also, that every monarch is above the whole common-wealth and is not onely major singislis, but major vniversis : written in answer to a late printed pamphlet intituled Observations upon some of His Majesties late answers and expresses. Jones, John, d. 1660.; Morton, Thomas, 1564-1659 Supposed author. 1642 (1642) Wing J961; ESTC R14104 9,563 20

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And all this not only for their owne particular but also for the harmonious Accommodation and preservation of the Vniverse the great and most excellent worke of nature wherin shee doth nothing in vaine But in vaine had man been if he also had not been provided of necessary meanes towards the Preservation of his kind For which cause God said it was not good for man to be alone and therfore gave him a Woman to be his Helper that so by meanes of generation he might propagate his ofspring to the worlds end This Preservation then of mankind is the maine naturall and secondary end of man And to this end God gave him his blessing to increase and multiply from whence ariseth that of necessity there must be at least private families But man and Woman finding by woefull experience most true what God said to Adam and Eve that Hee should eate his bread in the sweat of his browes that shee should bring forth her children in paine found also presently that every private family is not sufficient of it selfe to maintaine this worke of Preservation without the helpe of one another For first to say nothing of womens deliveries in child-birth which cannot possibly alwaies and every where be performed requisitely by themselves and their families without the helpe of some other or others and yet even upon this the Preservation of mankind holds a most necessary and principall dependance I will only speake of mans part who with the sweat of his browes with extreame toile and labour must provide food and cloathing and all other necessary supports and sustentations for his family But to doe this he must of necessity I speake not of barbarous inhumane people have some certaine place of aboad and in this he must have some peculiar right some propriety of possession by virtue wherof he may reape the fruites of the earth and maintaine his Cattel And how shall every private family be able to doe this with Securitie will not every one strive for the best possession will not the shepheards of Abraham and Lot and of Isaac and Gerara fall to contention for water pastures and such like other necessary elbow roome And in these uncivill and unsociable quarrels must not all private families be made like to the fishes of the sea Hab. 11 13. 14. where the stronger must devoure the weaker Secondly God endowed man in his Creation with an understanding and a will This understanding is of that infinite capacitie that it hath for it's Adaequate Object omne ens as it is verum And man therefore is in perpetuall and restlesse search of knowledge to perfect his understanding by experience and learning The will also hath for her adaequate Object omne ens as it is bonum And man therefore is in perpetuall pursuite of Reciprocall love to perfect his will by friendship and Justice Over and above these God gave to man the facultie of speech to be the Reciprocall conveyance of learning and friendship So as for this verie reason Arisiotle said excellently well that man is by nature a sociable Creature for neither learning nor friendship nor justice in which consists essentially mans Civill or Politicall happinesse nor safety or securitie which is the only preservative of mans verie being can possibly be acquired and maintained in the division of men in their private families And therefore for this verie end it was naturally necessary for men to unite and associate themselves into Civill Societies and Communities that soe they might preserve their Kind From the learning Experience and Industrie of the understanding proceed all Arts Tillage Manufactures Trade and Traffique which bring in Gaine and that brings plentie from the freindship and justice of the will proceed Peace and Securitie in which secure peace and plenty consisteth Perfect salus populi now since this cannot be had in divided private Families and without this there can be no preservation of mankind it followes that Civill Societies or Commonwealthes are naturally necessary Whose naturall finall cause is truely and only in the manner as I have explicated Salus Populi Now furthermore seeing that a Commonwealth is not the designe of Art and Invention of particular men nor of any positive law of theirs but proceeds from the Common necessity of all mankind intimated unto them by the law of nature of which God is the sole cause and Author it followeth that the officient cause of all Republiques is onely God §. 3 Of the Finall and Efficient cause of Civill Power in a Common wealth As for the finall cause there is little or no difficultie for seing that the finall cause of every thing must needs be that which that thing necessarily referres unto as to it's end for which it is done or hath it's being it is manifest that since Civill societies have for their naturall and secondary finall cause Salus Populi the power also which must not be ad destructionem but ad adisicationem to maintaine those Civill Societies can have no other finall cause but that whereunto they direct and are directed which is Salus Populi The materiall cause in which this power originall resides and inheres as the forme to make up a compleat Body of a Common-wealth is the People And so the Observer saith verie well in this kind of cause power is originally inhaerent in the People most certaine then it is that even at the very first uniting themselves into a Civill Societie there is an inhaerent power in the People to governe themselves and by such government to preserve themselves in safetie For this is the onely necessary naturall end for which they met as I have shewen before that they might be able and powerfull to secure themselves and preserve their kind But this meeting would have beene in vaine and this preservation wholly made frustrate if there were not this Power inhaerent in them If in the naturall Body of man there were not an Interiour Directive Governing Power to guide every particular member in the operative use of it's function and to contrive those operations to the mutuall good of one another and the conservation of the whole man that Body could not possibly but suddainly perish For if the teeth will not chew nor the throat swallow nor the hands reach nor the feete stirr nor the eyes look out when nature requires her necessary food she and they all must sterve So in a Politicall Body if all members should doe but what they list and should not be compelled by some absolute Power to contribute their strengthes and endeavours to the preservation of one another and the whole Communitie it would be but Regnum in se divisum that of necessity must fall to desolation as the Holy Ghost confirmes also elsewhere saying Proverb 11. 14. Ubi non est Gubernator dissipabitur Populus The maine difficulty is who is the efficient cause of this Power Wherein not to be tedious to my Reader but to yeild him the