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A48852 A sermon preached before Their Majesties at Whitehall, on the fifth day of November, 1689 being the anniversary-day of thanksgiving for that great deliverance from the gunpowder-treason, and also the day of His Majesties happy landing in England / by the Bishop of St. Asaph, Lord Almoner to Their Majesties. Lloyd, William, 1627-1717. 1689 (1689) Wing L2713; ESTC R20308 14,855 38

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necessary either to finish their work or to justifie it when it was done This advantage they had by their Secrecy and profound Dissimulation to make themselves unsuspected and trusted and so to do that which they could not so well have done otherwise And by this means they came so very near the effecting of their Design which I noted as a Second degree of our danger We were as near being catcht as David was in the Case which he describes the Trap was laid for him and he bowed down to it he was just falling in when he saw a Pit ready to receive him even ready to swallow him up This was the Case of our whole Church and Nation The great Representative of These the King and his Parliament were to have met in the usual Place and there this Net was prepared there was a Pit provided for them even there under the House where they were to sit there was a Vault dug a Magazine of Powder laid in great Iron Bars were laid over There was an Engineer at hand the Match was ready laid it was siz'd for an hour a fatal hour of this Morning the Fifth of November in a minute of which in a moment all the Governing part of this Nation and God knows how many more all that came within the reach of it were to have been blown up Lord what a Thunder Clap had it been to this poor Church and Nation What an Earthquake would it have made through all Europe What a Fatal blow to the Protestant Religion both here and all the World over It was a blow that would have been felt to all Posterity How many of the greatest Persons now living would never have been born And how many more would have had Cause to wish themselves of the Number It would have made a strange alteration in the World and especially here in England It would even turn ones head to think of all the Particulars But some of the principal things I must consider now in the third place to shew how Fatal a blow it would have been And here I ought in duty to begin with the King and Royal Family I shall do it the rather to shew how little reason they have to brag of their Loyalty They I mean of the Roman Catholick Religion who not only excuse but do little less than worship them that were the prime Authors of this First I say that if this Plot had taken there had been an end of the Reigning Family This King and Queen had never been born No nor any that descended from King Charles the First of blessed and glorious Memory That Prince though he was very young at that time yet he must have taken his Lot among the rest such was the Indulgence of his Father that he would have both his Sons to be with him at his entring into that Parliament and so they were all to have been blown up together For the Lady Elizabeth who was afterwards Queen of Bohemia she was then in the Country and to seiz upon her they had framed a hunting match at which she was to have been taken for what use I cannot say probably to have been put into a Nunnery But that none of that Family was to have Reigned it was determin'd before by that Pope in whose time all this business began He was resolved upon the Exclusion of King James before his coming into England and had set out his two Breves for that purpose which Act of the Popes as Garnet himself said was that which put them upon this Treason They thought it their Duty to throw out him whom the Pope had commanded them not to receive Well! but the Crown must be placed somewhere and which way would the Pope have disposed of it That appears in the Letters of Cardinal d Ossat who was then at Rome and inform'd the King of France of this Mystery He tells him that by Father Parson's contrivance who at that time govern'd their Counsels for the English Affairs the Pope would have found a way to have marryed his Nephew to the Lady Arabella to give him at least some Colour of a Title to the Kingdom We find in these Letters what means were then used to engage the Kings of France and Spain to put him in Possession I do not remember the end of this matter nor I am no farther concern'd in it than to shew that the Pope was in very good earnest in those Breves to throw out the now Reigning Family It is no great matter whom they would have set up in the stead It must have been one that was throughly made for their purpose One that would have gone through with them in their Design of Restoring their Catholick Religion and in order to that in their methods of governing the Kingdom And for the Government of the Kingdom it appears what course they design'd We have a large Account of it in Father Parsons's Model of the Reformation I mention him again as one that govern'd the Counsels of those Times He proposed in the first place to set up a Council of Reformation that should have the Conduct of all things for five or six years That Council should have been composed of Popish Bishops and other Zealous Catholicks to be sure such as would have been ruled by the Jesuits They were to have granted some kind of Toleration at first till they could settle things to their mind Then they were to have a Parliament of which all the Members were not to take a Test take heed of that by all means but only to make a Profession of the Catholick Faith and to bind themselves to it with an Oath without which they were not to be admitted to be Members Then this Parliament should have made it Treason for any Member to propose any change of Religion for the future Having thus secured the Votes they were next to have repeal'd all the Laws against Popery and they were to have revived and put in full Authority these are his words all the Laws that ever were in ure here in England against Heresie After that we may be competently sure there should have bin no more Toleration Then the Parliament should have restored all the Church Lands They should have cleerly taken in all that Hereticks had in Possession but for those that were held by Catholicks they should only have paid the old Rents and so held them still as their Tenants There were many other particulars upon which I have not time to enlarge But he comes to this at last that when all things were settled their way by Act of Parliament then there should be an Inquisition settled likewise But because that is an Odious name it should have bin called something else but it should be the very same thing which at Rome they call the holy Inquisition And when they had settled that in this Kingdom then England would have bin as Catholick as Spain or Italy And so having secured this Kingdom to