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A30357 The ill effects of animosities among Protestants in England detected and the necessity of love unto, and confidence in one another, in order to withstand the designs of their common enemies, laid open and enforced. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715. 1688 (1688) Wing B5802; ESTC R11786 28,124 24

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conformable Divines who have triumphed over it in elaborate Discourses and who have beaten the Romish Scriblers off the Stage Nor can it be thought that they who have so accurately related and vindicated the History and asserted an desended the Doctrine of the Reformation should either tamely relinquish or be wanting in all due and legal ways to uphold and maintain it And tho one or two Fanaticks have with sufficient strength and applause brandished their pens against Arbitrariness and in detecting the Designs of the Royal Brothers yet they who have generally and with greatest honor appeared for our Laws and Legal Government against the Invasions and Usurpations of the Court have been Theologues and Gentlemen of the Church of England Nor in case of further attempts for altering the Constitution and enslaving the Nation will they shew themselves unworthy the having descended from Ancestors whose Motto in the high places of the Field was Nolumus leges Angliae mutari They who have so often justified the Arms of the united Netherlands against their Rightful Princes the Kings of Spain and so unanswerably vindicated their casting off Obedience to those Monarchs when they had invaded their Priviledges and attempted to establish the Inquisition over them cannot be ignorant what their own Right and Duty is in behalf of the Protestant Religion and English Libertles for the security whereof we have not only so many Laws but the Coronation Oaths and Stipulations of our Kings And those Gentlemen of the Church of England who appeared so vigorously in three Parliaments for excluding the Duke of York from the Succession to the Crown by reason of a jealousie of what through being a Papist he would attempt against our Religion and Priviledges in case he were suffered to ascend the Throne cannot be now to seek what becomes them towards him tho actually Regnant having seen and felt what before they only apprehended and feared For if the Law that entalleth the Succession upon the next of Kin and obligeth the Subjects to admit and receive him not only may but ought to be dispensed with in case the Heir through having imbib'd Principles which threaten the safety and are inconsistent with the happiness of the People hath made himself incapable to inherit we know by a short Ratiocination how far we stand bound to a Prince on the Throne who by transgressing against the Laws of the Constitution hath abdicated himself from the Government and stands virtually deposed For whosoever shall offer to Rule arbitrarily does immediately cease to be King de jure seeing by the Fundamental Common and Stature Laws of the Realm we know none for Supream Magistrate and Governor but a limited Prince and one who stands circumscribed and bounded in his Power and Prerogative And should the Dissenters entertain a belief that the Conformists are less concerned and zealous than themselves for the Protestant Religion and Laws of the Kingdom they would not only sin and offend against the Rules of Charity but against the measures of Justice and daily Evidences from matters of Fact. For neither they not we owe our Conversion to God and our practical holiness to the Opinions about Discipline Forms of Worship and Ceremonies wherein we differ but to the Doctrines of Faith and Christian Obedience wherein we agree 'T is not their being for a Liturgy a Surprize or a Bishop that hath heretofore Influenced them to subserve the Court in Designs tending to Absoluteness but they were seduced unto it upon Motives whereof they are now ashamed and the ridiculousness and folly of which they have at last discovered Nor is the multitude of profligate and scandalous persons with which the Church of England is crowded any just impeachment of the purity of her Doctrine in the Vitals and Essentials of Religion or of the Virtue and Piety of many of her Members For as it is her being the only Society established by Law that attracts those Vermin to her Bosom so it is her being restrained by Law from debarring them that keeps them there to her reproach and to the grief of many of many of her Ecclesiasticls Neither is it the fault of the Church of England that the Agents and Factors for Popery and Arbitrary Power have chosen to pass under the name of her Sons but it proceeds partly from their Malice as hoping by that means to disgrace her with all true Englishmen as well as with Dissenters and partly from their Craft in order thereby the better to conceal their Design and to shrowd themselves from the Censure and Punishment which had it not been for that Mask they would have been exposed unto and have undergone And I dare affirm that besides the Obligations from Religion which the Conformists are equa●ly under with Dissenters for hindering the introduction of Popery there are several inducements from Interest which sway them to prevent its establishment wherein the Fanaticks are but little concerned For tho Popery would be alike afflictive to the Consciences of Protestants of all Perswasions yet they are Gentlemen and Ministers of the Church of England whose Livings Revenues and Estates are threatened in e●se it come to be established Nor wou'd the most Loyal and Obsequious Levites provided they resolve to continue Protestants be willing that their Parsonages and Incumbencies to which they have no less Right by Law than the King hath to the Excise and Customs should be taken from them and bestowed upon Romish Priests by an Act of Dispotical Power and of unlimited Prerogative And for the Gentlemen as I think sew of them would hold themselves obliged to part with their Purses to High-way Padders t●ough such should have a Patent from the King to rob whomsoever they encountred upon the Read so there will not be many inclined to suffer their Mannors and abbey-Abbey-Lands to which they have so good a Title to be ravished from them either by Monks or Janizaries tho authorized thereunto by the Prince's Commission Even they who had formerly suffered themselves to be seduced to prove in a manner Betrayers of the Rights and Religion of their Country will now being undeceived not only in conjunction with others withstand the Court in its prosecution of Popish and Arbitrary Designs but through a generous exasperation for having been deluded and abused will judg themselves obliged in vindication of their actings before to appear for the Protestant Religion and the Laws of England with a Zeal equal to that wherewith they contributed to the undermining and supplanting of them For they are not only become more sensible than they were of the Mischiefs of Absolute Government so as for the future to prize and assert the Priviledges reserved unto the People by the Rules of the Constitution and chalkt out for them in the Laws of the Land but they have such a fresh view of Popery both in its Heresies Blasphemies Superstitions and Idolatries and in the Treachery Sanguinariness Violence and Cruelty which the Papal Principles mould