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A42472 A faithfull and faire warning humbly presented to the knights, gentlemen, clergie-men, yeomen, and other the inhabitants of the county of Suffolke ... / by Lionel Gatford ...; Faithfull and faire warning Gatford, Lionel, d. 1665. 1648 (1648) Wing G333A; ESTC R13983 55,462 60

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Worthies in it their Enemies should prevaile over them to their and this whole Kingdomes further weltering in blood must not their and the rest of the blood of this Kingdome be charged upon your score When as if you had but sat still and not in gaged against them as you were by many bonds never to be cancellod obliged to doe there had not beene in all probalitie at this time any Enemies to Peace or thirsters after Blood that durst to have showne themselves so throughout the whole Nation And therefore what will God say or doe unto you when he comes to make inquisition for blood to avenge it This is the bloody Countie that had Peace layd at their feet and trampled on it that had Peace brought home to their doores and not onely shut it out but called to bloodie Warre to enter in that had many thousands of their fellow Brethren and Neighbours that would have ventured their lives to have preserved them in Peace and they chose rather to lose many of their owne lives to take away some of theirs They loved not Peace therefore it shall be farre from them they delighted in Warre therefore shall it cleave close to them and they thirsted for blood therefore shall they be drunke with their owne blood Doe not thinke that I speake more in Gods Name then I have warrant from Gods Word for though ye have bin too long used so and abused by such lying Prophets Search the Scriptures and observe from thence what God speakes of the shedding of blood and you 'l find that I speak very sparingly as having regard to your infirmities For there God tells you That shedding of blood is one of those crying sinnes which makes a land to mourne and every one that dwelleth therein to languish Hos. 4. v. 2. 3. That blood defileth the land● and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein or there can be no expiation for the Land but by the blood of him that shed it and that If a people would have God to dwell among them they must not so defile the land which they inhabit Numb. 35. v. 33. 34. That the shedding of innocent blood is such a sinne that of all other horrid sinnes the Lord will not pardon 2 King 24. v. 4. And therefore no satis●action was to be taken for the life of a murtherer which was guiltie of death but he was to be surely put to death Numb. 35. v. 31. with a multitude of other sayings on that subject that are to be trembled at by the Rebellious Subjects of this Kingdome 'T is true if a man killed any person unawares there were Cities of refuge appointed by God for such a one to flye unto from the avenger of blood but Oh my poore Countrey-men what Cities of refuge can ye fancie to your selves who wilfully murther your brethren And what lesse can the King say of you then this or to this effect The Countie of Suffolke 't is the most Rebellious Countie of all my Dominions For when one of my Kingdomes moved not against me when a second rose up for me and when the third Petitioned for me from almost all parts and tooke up Armes for me in most parts they of Suffolke neither Petitioned for me nor moved for me but rose up against me and when Rebellion was expiring its last poysonous breath they hazarded their owne lives to prolong its life and to preserve the lives of those Rebells that seeke nothing more then to take away mine When thousands of my Loyall Subjects were indeavouring to fetch me out of my Cruell Bondage and Imprisonment then they helpt to besiege and imprison to kill murther those very Subjects and when others with them were making what haste they could to set my Crowne againe firme on my head and to restore me againe to those Rights Honours and Comforts which I was wont to injoy they did what they could to throw my Crowne back againe to the ground and to keepe mine Honour still in the dust and me from all hopes of enjoying any Rights or externall Comforts here in this life Thus have they indeavoured to continue and adde to my Miseries who have therefore indured such Miseries in such Extremities because I would not yeeld to the delivering up of them amongst others to extreme Slavery and Tyranny Thus have they not onely fought against me without a cause but for the love that I had unto them they take now my contrarie part and have rewarded me evill for good and hatred for my good will But I give my selfe unto Prayer Stirre up thy selfe and awake to my judgement even unto my Cause my God and my Lord Judge me O Lord according to thy righteousnesse and let them not rejoyce over me Let them not say in their hearts Ah so would we have it Let them not say We have swallowed him up Let them be ashamed and brought to confusion together that rejoyce at my hurt Let them be clothed with shame and dishonour that magnifie themselves against me Let them shout for joy and be glad that favour my righteous Cause yea let them say continually Let the Lord be magnified which hath pleasure in the prosperitie of his servant and my tongue shall speake of thy righteousnesse and of thy prayse all the day long Amen Amen But what then will all the other Counties of England say of you O bewitched besotted Countie of Suffolke They that had lived in peace and plentie all these times when in the most Counties of this Kingdomes like those Territories spoken of by Azariah 2 Chron. 15. there was no peace to him that went out nor to him that came in but great vexations were upon all the inhabitants of the Countries and Countries was destroyed of Countrey Citie of Citie and that might still have enjoyed those mercies themselves and have bin the happie instruments of restoring the like mercies to their Brethren in other afflicted distressed Counties They even they have pulled Warre and all the miseries and calamities that attend it upon themselves and have prolonged and increased the afflictions and distresses of other Counties They who were formerly honoured with that Eulogie of being alwayes forward in promoting the Gospel and had now an oportunitie offered them of being the preservers and deliverers of the Gospel from such blasphemous hereticall Antichristian reproachers opposers and impugners thereof as scarce any Nation since the promulgation of the Gospel were ever invested with the like They and few others but they at that time have joyned in a Confederacie with those reproachers opposers and impugners of the Gospel against those who indeavoured with their lives and estates the vindicating and re-establishing of it They that had bin informed beyond further questioning and assured beyond all doubting of the horrid Plots Conspiracies and resolved Designes of that Armie called the Parliaments and their abettors against the Libertie and Life of their Religion
committed they shall not be mentioned unto him They do best that doe avoyd the committing any thing worthy of shame but when any such thing is committed the next best is to acknowledge it and to be ashamed of it to the abhorring of it and themselves for it And where God hath any love to any people he will never leave them when they have committed 〈◊〉 ●…orious sins till he have brought them to an humble acknowledgement of them and to a true loathing of themselves for them and that is an act of his mercy by how many judgements soever it be effected as the longer that men hold off from it the more and the more severe judgements does God inflict till he have brought them to it as is easily collected from that twentieth of Ezech. and other scriptures But then there is another acknowledgement and shame of sinne which God brings upon men by way of vengeance which though the former be terrible enough is yet more terrible as having confusion alwayes attending it and there is no way for the avoiding either but a voluntary acknowledging of sin and taking the shame thereof to themselves before God scourge them to it or confound them by it T is a saying very often repeated in sacred writ in the closes of Gods denun●iations of judgements and 't is to be trembled at wheresoever 't is so mentioned Then shall they know c. or And they shall know c. Happy are they that know those things before they are so made to know them In the first place then be forewarned of the putting off the acknowledging your sinnes till God force you thereto by his judgements least whiles a foolish feare of shame fained to your selves by such an acknowledgement scare you from it and a terrible shame and confusion of faces caused by God for want of such an acknowledgement seize upon you to your unspeakable torment Oh but will too many reply would you have us now to acknowledge our selves guilty of Rebellion and of the Blood which hath been shea in the prosecution thereof and of all those other horrid crimes that have accompanied the same We have long since again and again charged those crimes upon the adverse party upon the King himself and all those that have taken part with him And if we should now take them upon our selves how would all ●enjeer at us and they of the other party insult over its Nay what would become of us and ours and all that we have Surely therefore now t is our best course to stand upon our own justication and to go on as hitherto we have done or else we are out in a miserable condition Thus when the Devil and Devilish men have tempted and seduced any to commit any foule notorious wickednesse the next thing they endeavour is to draw or carry them on therein as farre and as deep as possibly they can and if the s●ouced doe but begin to consider what they have done and how farre they have gone and so think of breaking off and returning from their wickednes then feare shame and dispaire are presently represented unto them to scare and hurry them on or at least to keep and ●●sten them where they are When Zed●kiah King of Judah had disobeyed Gods word by the Prophet Jeremiah and began upon after thoughts to listen to what that Prophet had advised him presently feare and shame were presented to his fancy and by them was he scared off from hearkening to the Prophets counsaile And when all the people of Judah were admonished by the same Prophet to break off their Idolatry and their other iniquities and to return to the Lord and doe their duty and had so much told them to that purpose that they had nothing to say for themselves then despaire furnished them with this desperate answer There is no hope say they but we will ●●lk after our own devices and we will every one doe the imagination of his evill heart But to answer more particularly to each part of this objection That many have charged both this Rebellion and all the blood that hath been spilt in the pursuance thereof upon the King and those faithfull subjects of his that adhered to him is too well known and t is pretty well known that this way of shifting off sinne from themselves to others is of all the many other wayes the most impudent and detestable I hat others perswaded them tempted them incited them scared them or forced them to commit such and such sins have been frequent excuses that we read of in severall sacred and other stories but this shifting off sin wholly from themselves when they know themselves fouly guilty and charging it upon others whom they known to be in that respect most innocent is never practised but by men of brazen faces Adamantine foreheads black tongues and blacker hearts And if God will bee a swift witnesse against any then surely against such as doe not onely bear false witnesse against but condemn the innocent and if he will plead the cause of any or execute judgement for them so as to being them forth to the light that they may behold his righteousnesse and others theirs then without all peradventure he will doe it for them that are so palpably and unjustly slandered and accused and have so just and cleare cause of appealing to his Justice for it But why ●tay I so long upon a recrimination so foolish and ridiculous as well as false and odious I dare appeale to the Consciences of them themselves that have so charged it as cauterised as they are for the unjustnesse of the charge If the Rebellion and Blood guiltinesse of this Nation I joyn them together because they that are guilty of the Rebellion are without all further dispute guilty of all the blood that hath been shed in it can be charged upon the King and his loyall Subjects why have not the other party all this while put it upon that issue and when they had the King as to our unspeakable griefe they have and the most of his loyall Subjects in their power why did they not legally charge them therewith and urge the Lawes and indite them I mean the Subjects though they blush not to talke of inditing the King himselfe by those laws and so proceed to tryall against them according to the laws of the Land the true and onely rules whereby Rebellion and Murther is to be tryed and judged here in this Nation Was it their mercy Why then have they waved that way of trying and judging those particular Persons of the Kings party upon whom they have exercised their power to the height of cruelty and proceeded against them onelyby Votes and Ordinances or by illegall Judges and unwarrantable Juries and other unheard of proces Or to bring the answer yet closer If the Rebellion and Blood guiltinesse of this Nation be to be charged upon the King and his loyall Subjects
will neither see nor heare or if they doe dare not speak what they see or heare how prejudiciall or destructive soever it be to Religion or ought else that good is I shall in the cause of Religion adventure a little further in the discovery of the designes of those professed enemies thereof I have been assured by a person of Honour that the Protestants of France had towards the beginning of these unnaturall and unchristian wars resolved upon a Declaration against the Parliament and Subjects of England their taking up of Arms against their King and had published it had not the forenamed Cardinall dashed it and underhand wrought them to too much approbation thereof rendering by that one subtill act of his the said Protestants odious to their own Soveraign for approving such Antiregal Antimonarchicall attempts and also advancing thereby his own designe of fomenting our destructive divisions But to return neerer home Who but the Jesuites and Jesuited Papists began that Rebellion in Ireland And who but their favourors here in England drove it on to that height by making those Rebels desperate in selling their lands and Voting them and theirs to ruine past all hope of mercy by detaining the King from going thither in Person to quiet that Rebellion when he so graciously offered it and so piously endeavoured it by diverting those fair full free running streames of bounty and liberality flowing all this Kingdome through towards the reliefe of the distressed Protestants of Ireland into those foule black bloody rivers of Warre and Rebellion overflowing this whole Kingdome to the wasting and weakening if not to the ruining and destroying of the now despised Protestants of England and lastly by the with-holding and delaying all along from the first to the last the necessary supplies of men moneys armes and other provisions from that Kingdome notwithstanding the Kings often and often calling upon the Houses to be mindefull thereof and conjuring them thereto as appears by his many Messages and Declarations to that purpose and notwithstanding the loud and dolefull cryes of the Protestants of that Kingdome from the greatest to the least so constantly ecchoing in their ears If the Jesuites and Jesuited Papists of this Kingdome had not their hands deep in all this and too prevalent a power with those that had the power of ordering that businesse better let any man that knowes one hand from another judge But to come yet nearer those incendiaries of Nations and perturbers of the peace of Christendome are fowly belyed by one whose brother hath been one of them these many yeares and he himselfe is now theirs and was then litle better If there were not in and about the Citty of London and in and neere the Armies about 3 weekes or a month before that heavy blow at Nazeby above sevenscore Jesuites and other Romish Priests known the most of them to him which kept correspondence diverse of them and gave intelligence to them at Westminster and served them both in keeping off assistance from the King from Princes of their Religion and in betraying the Kings counsels and the resolutions of his Army which they by their instruments and favourers crowded into those quarters got knowledge of to the adverse party so that they could draw the kings Army into what part of the kingdome they pleased and there fight them or not fight them as they saw the advantage Insomuch that a Noble Colonell of the Kings Party and a man of good estate and credit being then a Prisoner in the Counter in Southwarke and having there fed at his table and preserved the author of this information that had been a prisoner in the same prison but was then by his Brothers meanes set at liberty was about that time before mentioned advised upon those grounds and some other by the said informer and that in gratitude as he affirmed knowing no other way of acknowledging his bounty and liberality towards him forthwith to make his composition and peace with the Parliament for that the King would without all peradventure yet the King was at that time in as high and hopefull condition as ever he had been in from the beginning of these warres be brought very low Strange propheticall counsaile at that time had not the counselour had too strong presumption to conclude from And now to speake a litle upon mine own more immediate knowledge Travelling beyond the seas in the company of a Romish Priest borne in England and another English Gentlemen of the same religion after some warme dispute between us I was told by the Priest that I need not be so hot and zealous for my religion for so said he we have now as good cardes to shew for our Religion in England as you have for yours for we perceive you are a Protestant of the established Church of England and if you and such as you doe ever enjoy your Religion there againe it must be by a Tolleration and so shall we enjoy ours I replyed that I hoped God would disappoint them of their hopes but since that I found they had too much cause so to presume for I was no soonet arrived here in England but being constrained to attend some Parliament men at Westminster I heard a Gentleman who by his habit and discourse seemed one of credit and trust among the Romanists soliciting another Gentleman whose Father had been a Parliament man but was then dead for the assisting him by his friends in the promoting of a Petition for a Toleration of their Religion and he told him amongst other discourse what progresse he had made therein both with some prime Commanders of the Army and with divers members of the House of Commons whose names for the present I conceale and that he had delivered three Petitions to that purpose into the hands of three of the House of Commons who had u●dertaken the recommending them to the House and promised him the●… best furtherance therein so that he did not much doubt of the successe but yet should be obliged to him if he would be pleased to contribute thereto 〈◊〉 party solicited replied He should do● him any servic● and the Petition desired no more then he apprehended to be according to the judgement of the times in point of liberty of Conscience when I heard this and observed how liberty of Cons●●●nce was every where contended for I no longer wondered at the cooling Cards which ●h● Priest gave me for I p●●ceived they of his part had plaid their Cards so well that they might afford●d any of us the knowledge of su●h a triumph not did I then th●… it strange which but a few dayes be●ore I admired that so many Jesuits and oth●r Priests did daily flock into this Kingdome from France Flanders and the Countries adjacent and all by the way of H●lland there having been nine or ten such newly shipt at the Bri●● under the same ●onvoy if not in t●e V●si●li that Master Stric●la●d t●e Parliaments Agent for H●llan●