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A33130 To the right honourable the Committee of Estates the humble remonstrance of the commissioners of the Generall Assembly, met at Edinburgh the 13 of October, 1647 Church of Scotland. General Assembly. Commission.; Ker, A. 1647 (1647) Wing C4271A; ESTC R35592 3,928 8

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TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE COMMITTEE OF ESTATES The humble Remonstrance of the Commissioners of the Generall Assembly met at Edinburgh the 13 of October 1647. EDINBURGH Printed by Evan Tyler Printer to the Kings most Excellent Majesty 1647. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE COMMITTEE OF ESTATES The humble Remonstrance of the Commissioners of the Generall Assembly met at Edinburgh the 13. of October 1647. AS there hath been very lately a publike an● solemn Thanks-giving for the great mercies and deliverances which God hath wrought for this Nation after hee had brought it very low So the dangers which are interwoven with our deliverances are very great and still growing greater and greater This also cometh forth from the Lord of Hostes who is wonderfull in Counsell and excellent in Working that we may not be secure or think that all our stormes are overpast but may serve the Lord in fear and rejoyce in trembling and be the more stirred up to watchfulnesse circumspection and zeal in all the duties which the condition of this time calls for We therefore in the discharge of that great trust which is committed to us and according to the dutie of Watch-men set upon this Watch-tower cannot be silent in a time of so great danger but hold it incumbent to us humbly and faithfully to report and Remonstrate to your Lordships That the dangers of the true Reformed Religion and Cause of God in this whole Island wereby the late Generall Assembly their Declaration communicated to your Lordships discovered to be in many respects so great and so imminent as m●ght justly minister occasion to your Lordships in your wisdome to think of some more effectuall meanes and remedies for preventing or removing such dangers although they could not now be aggravated by any new emergents Neverthelesse we have too great cause to conceive that the dangers of Religion are now growen greater then they were at the time of the Generall Assembly And even since the time of publishing your Lordships Act concerning the disbanding of the Armie in this Kingdome The wise and marvellous providence of God is making answer and proclaiming aloud in both our eares That the danger is become greater and more imminent for the waters of the present deluge are growen many cubites higher since that time for evidence whereof the Kings Majesties late answer to the Propositions of both Kingdomes may bee in stead of many demonstrations It is our great grief that we have cause to say so but we must speak to the matter as it is and unlesse we would shut our eyes we cannot but behold in that answer a threefold growing danger to Religion For first His Majesty professeth that as when the Propositions were offered to him at Newcastle he could not agree to some of them without violation of his Conscience and Honour so neither can he agree to others of them now conceiving them more disproportionable to the present condition of affaires then when they were formerly presented to him as being destructive to the principall interests of the Army So that his Majesties disagreeing being now more inlarged and of a greater latitude then before if his Majesties former answer to the Propositions was justly conceived to bee unsatisfactory in point of Religion this last doth much lesse satisfie for although his Majestie did not in his former answer agree to the Covenant and other materiall Propositions concerning Relegion yet there was in that answer some part of satisfaction even to the Propositions concerning Religion whereas in the late answer even that part of satisfaction is by the foresaid expression unsettled in stead of being adhered unto We shall passe that clause in the answer which owneth the interests of the Army so far as to prejudice the more publike interests of both Kingdomes in those Propositions agreed upon after mature deliberation by both Parliaments Secondly His Majesties waving the Propositions of both Kingdomes and pressing the Proposals of the Army to be the subject of a Treaty doth yet further encrease the danger of Religion seeing those Proposals as they omit and abandon the former desires of both Kingdomes in point of Religion so they cannot avoid as the words stand the continuing of Prelacy the toleration of Heresies and Sects and the taking away of the Ordinance injoyning the taking of the Covenant as is more fully expressed in the Declaration of the late Generall Assembly Thirdly His Majesties answer doth also divide that joynt and common interest of both Kingdomes in the Propositions which was formerly the ground of a joynt Treaty of both with his Majesty Hereby whatever may be the prejudice otherwise surely Religion will suffer not a little forasmuch as the Propositions concerning the Covenant of the three Kingdomes and the Uniformity between them in Religion are by this meanes in effect excluded from the Treaty the joynt desires and common concernments of the Kingdomes in point of Uniformity in Religion being no part of the subject of a Treaty with either Kingdome severally but of a Treaty with both joyntly Yet his Majesties answer to the Propositions is not the only danger to be now looked upon in this businesse for even since that answer was given this common Cause and Covenant hath been yet further weakened and dangerously wounded by the late strong endavoures in England to move the Parliament to establish by their Authority a toleration of Sectaries and to slight and lay aside such of the Propositions of Peace as concerne the Covenant and the joynt interest of the Kingdomes in Religion It addeth grief to our sorrow that wee have cause tormention the new persecutions raised there by meanes of the Sectaries against divers who have been zealous and active for the good of Religion King and Kingdomes Yea they who plead so much for liberty of conscience to themselves allow so little of it to others who differ from them that they can now make up a charge either of constructive Treason or of high crimes and misdemeanors against them for such particulars as do upon the matter amount to no more but zealous endeavours in opposing the way of the Sectaries Neither common sense nor Christian sympathie can suffer us to conceive that the cause of Religion is in no greater danger then before when persecution is growing daily more and more hote against such as have most appeared against or endeavoured to hinder the late unsufferable exorbitancies of the Sectaries While the danger of Religion is thus increased abroad we cannot say that 't is growen any whit lesse at home but rather greater for beside the dangerous influence which the growing power of the enemies of the Covenant in England is like to have upon this Kingdome the Malignant faction at home hath not so much decreased in profession as increased in designe and practise against this Cause and Covenant Surely they who are disaffected in this Nation being many are as malicious as before when very shortly after the expedition into England perceiving