Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n destitute_a faithful_a great_a 28 3 2.1254 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29746 An apologeticall relation of the particular sufferings of the faithfull ministers & professours of the Church of Scotland, since August, 1660 wherein severall questions, usefull for the time, are discussed : the King's preroragative over parliaments & people soberly enquired into, the lawfulness of defensive war cleared, the by a well wisher to the good old cause. Brown, John, 1610?-1679. 1665 (1665) Wing B5026; ESTC R13523 346,035 466

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

that both they the Minister whom they heare may be apprehended punished according to the pleasure of these persecuters And thus the honest Zealous servants of Christ are either put from making mention of the name of the Lord at all whether in publick or in private Or brought into great trouble hazard thereby Is it not a very sad astonishing thing that when whole countrey sides are almost laid waste people wandering from place to place seeking the word of the Lord Thousands are perishing for want of knowledge multitudes deluded with false teachers such Ministers as were driven from their own flockes might not lay out themselves for the good of perishing souls do what they could for instructing strengthening comforting of the poor afflicted persecuted people of God May not this be matter of admiration that any upon this account should be put to suffer And certanely none with any shew of reason will condemne those Ministers if they take notice of these few particulars following 1. Though they were banished by the sentence of a civill judge Yet they remained still Ministers no such sentence of a civil Magistrat can depose a Minister from his office The spirit of the prophets as to this is subject to the Prophets only It is true it followed upon their banishment as a necessary consequence that they could not exerce the Ministeriall function in that place out of which they were banished But notwithstanding of any Act of banishment they remained Ministers for there is no such connexion betuixt their being Ministers their being in such a place And all the sentence of the Magistrat reached only to their being or not being in such a place All this will be beyond disput with such as are not grosse Erastians for no reformed divine will acknowledge that the civill Magistrat can immediatly depose a Minister far lesse can he do it by the sole Act of banishment So then this is clear that those Ministers who were banished from their owne parishes remained still Ministers of the gospell yea as hath been said in the fore-going section Ministers of the Church of Scotland 2. It is no lesse clear unto all such as have not drunken in independent principles That all such as are Ministers have a relation unto the Church universall and unto the nationall Church wherein they are and so may wherever they are discharge the duty of Ministers in preaching administrating the Sacraments 3. Not only may they do so but there is a necessity laid upon them to preach the gospel woe is due unto them if they do it not 1 Cor. 9 16. If once they have given up themselves unto Christ as serva●…ts to him they must resolve to be imployed for him to the out most of their power must not think of laying up their talent in a napkin lest they get the wicked slothfull servant's reward They have a divine command to preach in season and out of season to lay out themselves to the yondmost for Christ and his interest This will also be undenyable especially considering in the next place 4. That there was never greater necessity for their bestirring of themselves as faithfull Ministers of the gospel then now when there are so many thousands left destitute so many led away with false guides who make it their work to deceive people to pervert the right wayes of the Lord so many ready to faint under persecution sore affliction Is not the harvest now great are not the labourers few when a man shall goe many miles before he shall heare any honest Minister And should such on whom God is calling aloud to teach exhort comfort be silent now Is not Sa●… bussy leading some away to Atheisme others to Prophanity some to popery others to Quaker●…sme And doth not this call aloud on all who would be faithfull to their master to be actively bestirring themselves now for the good of s●…uls for the glory of God Are there not many honest followers of Christ lying under sore oppression bondage their spirits being grieved their souls wasted with hearing seeing what they do hear see And have not these need to be comforted cheered up under the crosse Doth not God allow consolation to such is he not calling on his servants to speak comfortably to such Are there not many almost fainting by reason of their weaknesse the continuance of the tryall should not Ministers minde that command 1 Thes. 5 14. Comfort 〈◊〉 feeble minded supporte the weak Are there not many in hazard to be led away with the temptations of the time hath not Satan many instruments wearying themselves in this service of seduceing poor people drawing them into their nets snares should not Ministers be doing what in them lyeth to keep out of the snare such as are in hazard to recover such as are already insnared out of the hand of the devil Great then is the necessity that poor people are into double must the woe be that abideth such Ministers as are silent at such a time when all things call upon them to lift up their voice like a trumpet to shew people their transgressions their hazard to be burning shineing lights that such as walke in darknesse may see their way be comforted 5. Such a practice is aboundantly warranted by the Apostles other Church officers in the primitive times For they went to severall places preached the Gospell When they were persecuted in one city they went unto another still preached the gospell where ever they came The history of the acts of the Apostles aboundeth with instances of this kinde so that it is needlesse to cite any If it be said that these were extraordinary officers Apostles prop●…ets 〈◊〉 who were not fixed to any one place as the ordinary officers were It is answered That preaching of the Gospell was not the Charactersticke of unfixed officers but common to them with fixed pastors doctors preaching unfixedly was not alwayes their note essentiall mark because in times of persecution pastors doctors might have preached wherever they came as the officers of the Church of Ierusalem did who being scattered abroad upon the persecution of Stephen act 8. 1. Did goe every where preaching the word v. 4. Those who were scattered behoved to be the fixed officers of the Church of Ierusalem for it is not probable that the Apostles would have left that Church of Ierusalem so long without preaching officers fixed for preaching administrating the sacraments seing they had instituted Deacons who were lesse necessarie Act 6 1 2 3 4. seing themselves were not fixed there but were to goe thorow the world according to Christ's appoyntment the direction guideing of the Spirit 6. So is it warranted by the practice of the faithfull honest servants of Christ
AN Apologeticall Relation Of the particular sufferings of the faithfull M●…nisters professours of the Church of Scotland since August 1660. Wherein severall questions usefull for the time are discussed The King 's prero●…gative over Parliaments people soberly enquired into The lawfulnes of defensive war cleared The supreme Magistrats power in Church matters examined Mr Stilling fleet 's notion concerning the divine right of formes of Church Government considered The author of th●… seasonable case answered other particulars such as the hearing of the Curats appearing before the high commission court c. canvassed Together with the rise reigne ruine of the former 〈◊〉 lats in Scotland Being A brieff account from History of the Government of the Church of Scotland from the beginning of the many troubles which Prelats have created to her first last For satisfaction of strangers incouragement of present 〈◊〉 By a well wisher to the good old cause JER 50 34. Their Redeemer is strong The Lord of hosts is his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall thorówly plead their cause that he may give rest to the land 〈◊〉 quiet the inhabitants of Babylon MIC 7 9 10. I will bear the indignation of the Lord because I have sumed 〈◊〉 him untill he plead my cause execute Iudgement for me ●…e 〈◊〉 bring me f●…rth to light I shall behold his righteousnes then she●… that 〈◊〉 mine enemy shall see it shame shall cover her which said unto me 〈◊〉 is the Lord thy God Mine eyes shall behold her now shall she be 〈◊〉 down as the mire of the streets ISA. 51 22 23. Thus saith the Lord thy God that pleadeth the cause of his people Behold I have taken out of thine hand the cup of trembling 〈◊〉 the dregs of the cup of my fury thou shalt no more drink it again But I ●…ll put it into the hand of them who afflict thee which have said to thy soule 〈◊〉 down that we may goe over thou hast laid thy body as the ground 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…reas to them that went over Printed in the Yeer 1665 The Epistle to the READER Christian Reader This is a time wherein little or nothing is heard from the Churches of Christ all the world over but lamentation woe●… partly by reason of grievous afflictions sore persecution which is none of the worst conditions partly by reason of woefull and shamefull defection falling from former zeale integrity occasioned either by the temptations which usually attend sharpe tryalls of affliction whereby the weakness of many perversness of heart in moe is discovered Or without any such force of externall temptation from an inward decay of life love wearying of God his wayes the Worst condition that a Church can be in which is now the Epidemicall plague of this age Hence it is that the Lord seemeth to be angry with all ready to reject some of his Churches which to him are as a generation of his wrath Have not his people set up their abominations in the house which is called by his name to pollute it And may it not be feared that the curse shall devoure the earth they that dwell therein shall be made desolate because they have transgressed the lawes changed the ordinances broken the everlasting Covenant There appeareth now hanging over the head of the poor little flock of Christ a black dreadfull cloud threatning no lesse then utter ruine overthrow or at least speaking a loude alarme for awaking the secure sle●…ping Bride It is most sad to behold how little the Churches of Christ in every place are affected with this imminent stroke ready to light on all to see some of them quiet at rest singing a requiem to themselves as if though dispensations from the Lord doe speak the contrary to all who will but open their eyes their mountaine stood so strong as never to be moved This deadness deepe security when all things speak an approaching storme as it doth evidence a great Judgement spirituall plague from God upon the Spirits of people so it dothpresage no less then remediless ●…uine if God in the riches of his mercy prevent it not What a dreadfull night of confusion astonishment must be at hand when there is such blackness without And such deadness prodigious security within Are not the enemies of the Church as Gebal Ammen Amalek The Philistines those of ●…yre Assur the Children of Lot who are early late at their master's work devising plotting the ruine destruction of the interest Kingdome of Christ Are they not all combined together acted with the same Spirit of Antichrist for this very end purpose to helpe forward as with one shoulder to raise up his fallen interest heale his wound And are they not setting themselves to thrust King Iesus from his throne to put the crowne from his head the scepter out of his hand so to prey upon devour his little flock that if it were possible they should be no more a nation nor their name remembered any more And are they not about the swallowing up of the protestant interest as in a moment And what is the Church of Christ doing all this while Doth she stir up her selfe to call upon her head husband or to awake the watch man of Isreal who neither slumbereth nor sleepeth Is she upon her watch-tower looking out guarding against the approaching enemy or observing his motions Ah not so She is fast a sleepe while the enemy is within the walls And which is more sad lamentable with her own hands she hath helped to make the breach in the wall at which the enemy hath entered now hath faire advantage given him to accomplish his bloody designe against the protestant cause interest So little hath she gained by her sinfull compliance with the opinions practises of Antichristian men whether through base feare or carnall prudence even the cutting of it off And the bringing of his people back againe unto Babylon Who knoweth but though the Lord's enemies shall at last be troden under as straw for the dunghill he shall spread forth his hands in the midst of them as he that swimmeth spreadeth forth his hands to swim bring down their pride together with the spoiles of their hands lay low in the dust bring to the ground even the high fortresse of their wall so make all his enemies know that there is a King in Zion who shall must reigne untill all his foes be made his footstoole the onely wise God who knoweth how to turne every thing to the best may suffer the adversaries to prosper in their device designe so give up many of the people called by his name to the sword of the enemy that others may be alarmed awaked from their sleep put to their prayers even to calling upon God with their whole heart
not fainedly O that they were wise would speedily prevent this deadly blow by repentance by serious considering how they have fallen from their first love have forgotten their first workes O that they would think of returning to the most high with fasting weeping mourning renting their hearts not their garments of turning unto the Lord their God who is gracious mercifull slow to anger of great Kindness repenteth him of the evill However his people are called to minde that word Isa. 26 20 22. Come my people enter thou into thy chamber shut thy doores about thee hide thy self as it were for a little moment untill the indignation be over past for behold the Lord cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity The earth also shall disclose her blo●…d shall no more cover her slain In these following sheets there is some account given thee of the sad deplorable condition of the Church of Christ in Scotland It is wonderfull to see how variously Satan doth assault the Churches of God some one way some another That crasty cunning adversary doth suite his baits snares to the severall complexions of people Churches against which he opposeth himselfe Some have the tryall of cruel mockings scourgings others meet with bonds imprisonment and others with triall of some other Kinde Against some Satan doth raise cruel bloody persecutions others he endeavoureth to draw away from their stedfastness zeale by ensnareing allurements a third sort he invadeth with all his troupes forces at once And thus is the lately glorious Church of Scotland tried this day Upon the one hand he raiseth up against her men of corrupt mindes destitute of the truth who make sharpe their tounges like a Serpent under whose lips is the poison of adders These have vented doe vent most bitter slanders reproaches against her the way of reformation which the hand of God wrought in her On the other hand he hath raised within her a most cruel persecution by a popish prelaticall malignant party setting them on with rage against all who desire to keepe themselves unspotted free of the contagions of this evill time forceing some by cruel sore persecution ensnareing others that are more simple deceiving drawing them into their n●…t thereby causing many to comply with them in their wicked wayes to run with them unto the same excesse of sin wickednes Yet hithertill for which the name of the Lord is alone to be Magnified the designes devices of these Matchiavellian Ahitophels bloody persecuters have not taken such effect as they either wished or expected It is true many Alas too too many have been carried away with the streame and willingly walked after the commandement to the great dishonour of God amazement of nations about rejoycing of the heart of the ungodly to the great stumbling grief of the truely tender godly in that land so as the defection of that Church may be matter of astonishment to the present after generations Yet it is her mercy that there are not a few in her whom conscience Christian tenderness in their walke hath exposed to sad sufferings who therow grace have resolved to keep their garments cleane to preferre the peace of a good conscience to all the treasures of Egypt holding faith a good conscience of which many make shipwrack in the Lord their master's strength to hold fast their integrity to maintaine their ground though bonds afflictions should abide them The justification defence of such is the intended scope of this following treatise Which how well managed is left to thy discretion to Judge It is like such a worthy noble cause may suffer prejudice through the weakness of him who here doth appeare in its defence wherefore it is wished that some more able pen be engadged in this worke for clearing to the world the present sad case of that Church And vindicating her from aspersions calumnies which her adversaries laboure to fasten upon her To speak in the justification of such a mother would well become the most eminent of her Children It would be so far from being below them a disparagement that they might justly account it their glory to lay out themselves in the out most of their strength parts for the defence of such a cause when so few doe avow openly declare their owning of adherence to it But untill the Lord shall be pleased to stir up set on worke some more able to prompt them with a spirit of zeale courage for such an undertaking thou must rest satisfied with this poor essay for the time Only thou mayest give charity to the author that it was not his intention to wronge in the least so glorious a cause But seeing none else did undertake or appeare in it for any thing known to him He desired in a few words that something though it should prove little better then nothing might be said in for it to make it known how worthy it were the thoughts paines of a more able head hand to deale in Many It is like will be the exceptions taken at this piece moe then can now either be thought upon or obviated such as are most obvious wee shall endeavour to remove by briefly touching answering them Some may think it strange that a piece of this nature intended as appeareth from its straine for satisfaction of Churches abroad cometh not forth in a latine-dresse It is true it was intended at first so moulded drawn up as it might be published to the world in latine for the satisfying of strangers Churches abroad But upon second thoughts When the case of the suffering people in that Church Kingdome was considered It was thought expedient that it should first be published in English That such as had hithertil valiantly resisted to the losse of their meanes liberty might be strengthened confirmed in their resolution And the more encouraged to endure afflictions when they should see that they did suffer for righteousness sake that they were called thereto of God that others might be quickened to fol low their footsteps who had so cheerfully gone before them in the way Having hereby their doubts cleared scruples removed their judgements convinced in the point of duety this was found even necessary at such a time when their temptations did abound their faintings were like to grow when such as were able to give advice in difficult cases to encourage the weak were thrust away So the consulting of their present necessity did hasten it forth in this dresse Besides that many both in England Ireland may receive information edification hereby of which they should have been deprived if it had been published in latine Afterward if it be thought
who sometime could not only have beene a member but a president of any judicatory in Europe have spoken for the cause interest of Christ before Kings to the stopping of the mouths of gainsayers He was triumphed over particularly by the Archprelat Sharp who then with the black crue of his false brotherhood did sit in Parliament as constituting the third Estate And was condemned to die in the manner abovementioned So that that Parliament which was consecrated with the blood of two Noble witnesses in the entry was shut up and closed with the blood death of this worthy witnesse But which is to be remembered with admiration behold this half dead man when the day of his death came had a wonderfull reviving was beyond the expectation of all graciously visited mightyly assisted of God hearing the many prayers of his people put up in his behalf So as hee gave a noble testimony to that honourable cause worke In carrying on of which he had been honoured of God to be a worthy instrument from the beginning And Christ triumphed in him over all his enemies that watched for his halting as the reader may see by his speech carriage on the scaffold set down in Print But he may have hereafter more full satisfaction both concerning him the Noble Marquis of Argile famous Mr Guthry when the world shall see their Processes their defences in Print or when these following sheets shall be reprinted if that shall be thought expedient necessary not only for these now mentioned particulars but also for further explaineing confirming vindicating of any or all of the rest of the purposes here spoken to after fuller information had in those particulars Till then let the reader rest satisfied with the hints that are given here in the following sheets of the case carriage of those worthies pardone what is spoken short unsuitable to their worth As to those who have appeared before the High commission court induced thereto by the evil counsell of some others or the not thorow narrow examination of the complex-case as circumstantiated or being otherwayes circumvented And are now suffering upon some other account wherein they found more clearness satisfaction And as to others also who have not fully seen the evill of some things which in the following debate are clearly demonstrated to be sinfull yet as to other particulars are endeavouring to keep their former integrity to guaird against complyance Let none of those think that any thing here is said intentionally to put them to shame or to proclame before the world their weakness defection or to make glad the heart of the wicked for if there had been any other way for vindicating such as doe suffer upon the account of these particulars and for preventing the fall of others into the same snare this way had never been made choise of therefore seeing nothing is said upon any sinfull or sinister designe these brethren Christians will take this smiting as a Kindness these reproofs as an excellent oyle that will not break the head They will not take in evil part the discovery here made They are of another spi●…it then to be embittered at such free full ●…iping up of the evils of the course which many in this hou●…e of darkness do follow Yea it cannot but be hoped certainly expected that such as truely feare the Lord will blesse his name with all their heart for such things made known to them that in time they may repent of the same see cause of wondering at his goodness mercy in not leaving them to themselves in other particulars of tryall notwithstanding of their sailing of duty in that their begun tryall And who knoweth but serious mourning and repenting before the Lord for fainting so far would open a doore for a great in-come of joy and consolation to the sweetning of the bitterness of suffering to the strengthning and bearing up of their soules under their mighty pressures So then the designe both Operantis Operis being good let no tender Christian be displeased with the way of the pros●…cution of these particulars or think that there is too much sharpness used that the consequences are drawn too strait For if in the Particulars themselves truth be maintained as may be supposed will be granted the arguments made use of can give no just offence especially such as are drawn from the Covenants which now are trampled upon by this sinfull backslyding Generation upon which many otherwise not ill minded think not much especially now when it is reckoned a crime once to name them as standing in force obligeing the lands And when the Spirit of these who carry on with violence this woefull course of defection are so enraged at the same that they cannot endure to heare a Covenant so much as named though it were even the Covenant of grace This however incrediblei●… may seeme to be will hardly be received by a Christian eare is a well known truth Now at such a time to put people in minde of their ingagements unto God to discover how such such practises are contrary to their Covenant obligations vowes cannot justly be condemned but approved of all who desire to stand fast in this houre of temptation It is beyond all question the Particulars here asserted shall meet with much contradiction from men of corrupt mindes whose principles will lead them to oppose what here is spoken in vindication of truth of the honest sufferers of Christ And upon that account it may be expected that the same honour shall be done to this which hath been done to other more worthy pieces viz. that it shall be committed to the fire there to receive a quick dispatch answer which will be so far from lessening the credit of the booke that it will render it much more desireable confirme the weake concerning the truth of the Particulars here spoken to of the unanswerableness of the arguments here made use of so the authors expectations shall be fully answered But if they shall doe it the justice to commit it to examiners one or mo●… who with sobriety moderation shall publish their exceptions to the contrary shall examine these papers by the word of God right reason the fundamentall municipall lawes of Scotland the particulars here spoken to shall be revindicated The Lord granting life strength liberty from all their exceptions Only let not such as undertake this taske improve the advantage of authority now on their side so far as to doe nothing but raile at randome stuff their reply with unbeseeming to say no worse And Unchristian expressions outcries of treason treason for in that case it will be thought expedient not to answer such in their folly A good cause is a mighty second to a weak man And so being perswaded that the cause is
noble just much owned honoured of God There is the greater ground of hope that God will helpe such as shall undertake the defence thereof the cavils of men who may be looked upon as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in most of these particulars are t●…e lesse to be feared But Christian reader what entertainment so ever it shall have with these who have out lived their zeale integrity have shamefully declined in the day of tryall And have betrayed the cause interest of Christ therefore shall looke upon themselves as not a little concerned herein pinched hereby being unwilling to have their evils ript up laid open to the view of the world Let it have a Christian entert●…inment with thee though it come late to thy hands through the injurie of the times let it not be the lesse welcome If the Lord shall be pleased to blesse it it may be of use for thy strengthning in this growing storme upon severall accounts grounds whereof I hint but a few 1. By what is said here thou mayest see that the cause thou sufferest for is the good old cause That same Spirit which acted the Prelats other enemies of the Church of Scotland from the beginning is now raging in her present enemies The same designe is hath been endeavoured driven on all a longs How various so ever the pretexts colours have been under which they have sought to cover themselves the covering hath proved too narrow for them first prelacy then popery was intend first last It is the same cause in the defence of which Christs worthies of old did act suffer so long as they could stand in the defence whereof they were not afrayed to beare the displeasure of King court to hazard life liberty all which wa●… dear unto them If then the same Spirit doth act worke in the enemies of the Church now which did act worke in their predecessours of old pray thou that the same Spirit of God may act thee all the faithfull of the land which did appeare in the worthy valiant Champions of old whether thou be called to act or suffer for his sake 2. Thou mayest know from what is here related that the cause for which thou art now suffering was brought very low before these times And that the adversaries thereof have often got up to a great height yet the good cause hath got above them And how Acts of Parliament one after another all the devices of the adversary to seale the grave And to make it sure could not keep this cause of Christ from a glorious resurrection Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth might the Church of Scotland then have said many a time have they afflicted me from my youth yet have they not prevailed against me The plowers plowed upon my back made long their furrowes The Lord is righteous he hath cut asunder the coards of the wicked And shall it not yet hold true that all they who hate Zion shall be confounded turned back be made as the grasse upon the house topes which withereth be fore it be grown up There is no cause of despondency of spirit or of giving over the cause as lost there is hope in Israel concerning this matter his people may still hope trust in his name who hath wrought salvation of old He who did put that wicked party to shame confusion of face in former times made the name of Prelats to stink their posterity to be as cursed vagabonds wandering up down bearing the marks of god's displeasure still liveth reigneth doth no more approve of the Ungodly of this generation Nor of their more then barbarous carriage who have laboured to out strip their predecessours in perfidious treachery Then he did them who of old did set themselves against the Lord his Christ yea much lesse It is true the men of this generation think they have pins for stopping of such holes which their predecessours could not stop but he who sitteth in the heavens doth laugh at them hath them in derision He seeth that their day is coming It is easie with him to cause the sword which they have drawn to slay such as are of upright conversation enter into their own hearts to break the bowes which they have bent to cast down the poor needy Our God liveth reigneth shall reigne let Kings of clay rage as they will Therefore cast not away your confidence which hath a great recompence of reward for yee have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye may rece●…ve the promise For yet a little while he that shall come will come will not tarry 3. Thou mayestsee that this cause work against which the wicked have conspired set themselves hath been signally owned approved of by the Lord for which he hath fought 〈◊〉 his right hand done valiantly whereby he hath got himself a name among the nations And who knoweth what God will yet doe for his great name which in this day of rebuke blasphemy is greatly reproached Hath he begun will he not finish his worke It is true the provocations of his people doe keep them long in the wildernes yet he who hath frequently wrought for his names sake that it should not be blasphemed amongst the heathen will still be tender of the same sith at this day there is much blasphemy belched forth by persons of all ranks against the great glorious works of God as much if not more then at any time or in any age wherein hath been lesse light The people of God need not be hopelesse much lesse conclude That God who is jealous of his own glory will not give it to another will suffer it now to be given to the devil on whom his work is fathered But rather will certanely be avenged on those prodigiously unparallelably impious sacrilegious persons How dreadfull a thing is it to say that Christ casteth out devils by Beelzebub the prince of devils 4. Thou mayest see clearly that the cause for which thou dost now suffer is the cause of Christ His enemies would pul the crown from off his head the scepter out of his hand by this meanes make him no King in over his Church consequently no mediatour For as mediatour he is a King in over his Kingdome that is his Church in which he dwelleth over which he ruleth with his scepter of righteousnesse They will not have his Kingdome a free Kingdome consequently they will not have him a free King They will not allow to him the liberty of appoynting or instituteing his own officers or to rule his Kingdome by his owne lawes courts ordinances censures Nor will they suffer Church-administrations to be performed in his name authority as in
135. l. 33. decrees r. doores p. 137. l. 30. Sect. 22. p. 145. l. 25. r. 1572 p 159. l. 31. they r. them p. 176. l. 27. belonging p. 183. l. 5. essentiall p. 186. l. 17 one r. once p. 187. l. 28. guiltlesse 〈◊〉 191. l. 11. 〈◊〉 p. 193. l. 22. taking p. 207. l 28. prohibition ib l. 32. pastours p. 224. l. 9. length p. 225. l. 1. be beleeved p. 239. l. 20. yeelded p. 248. l. 4. pastor p. 260. l. 5. is r. as ib. l. 16. ever r. over p. 280. l. 31. wrestle p. 289. l. 26. known p. 293. l. 21. civis p. 305 l. 5. ●…all r. call ib. l. 6. omce r. come p. 312. l 26. further p. 322. l. 31. though p. 331. l. 32. should p. 349. l. 18. which p. 350. l. 19. I will p. 351. l. pe●…lt how the Carthaginians p. 362. l. 16. they r. their acts p. 364. l. 25. it is r. it s p. 366. l 3. his r. this ib. l. 8. twice here r. her p. 372. l. 34. way r. may p. 373. l. 30. his r. is p. 382. l. 9. his r. this p. 383 l. ●…3 made r. make p. 385. l. 8. the r. he p. 386. l. 22. countrey p. 387. l. 22. ib. l. 35 worldly p. 404. l. 9. no r. on pag. 419. 〈◊〉 10. ever over P. 126. l. 2. close the other parenthesis after Agust 22. p. 304. l. 6. in ●…ome copies r. may be most free Pag. 329. l. 21. 330. l. 8. 324. l. 25. 353. l. 10. dele lib. 5. Others of lesser moment through a letter wanting or redundant or one for 〈◊〉 or through a comma colon or the like misplaced or wanting thou mayest correct a●… thoureadest An Apologeticall Relation Of the particular sufferings of faithfull Ministers Professours of the Church of Scotland since Agust 1660. IT hath been the common lot of all the afflicted persecuted people of God in all ages to meet with sad bitter reproaches as a constant concomitant of their other sufferings Satan thinking it for his advantage to adde affliction to the afflicted to use his outmost endevour to break them with one sad exercice at the back of or together with another is not satisfied with stirring up sore persecution against them but endevoureth likways to load them with such reproaches calumnies as are able to break the heart of ingenuous single hearted persons And for this cause the Lords people in all ages have been put to intreat that he would clear vindicat them their actions from such foule aspersions make their innocency breake forth as the noon-day would direct them unto such ways means as might tend through his blessing to their rationall vindication befor the world Hence have proceeded the many Apologies defences which have been used of purpose to clear to the world the true ground cause of their sufferings to discover how groundless unjust those reproaches calumnies were which men whose hearts were full of wickedness tongues dipt in gall had vented for this end alone to render both them their just righteous cause odious to strangers And at this time there may be just cause to fear that the malice of that old enemy is not asleep that he is leaving no mean un-essayed to make the suffering Church of Scotland her cause odious in the eyes of forraigne protestant Churches to the end she may not onely misse be disappointed of that Christian sympathy fellow feeling which is expected of all the true membres of Christs body but also which is far worse be condemned through her sides the cause truth of God which ought to be more pre●…ious to Christians then any thing else be put to suffer by this means the great works of God wherby he convincingly even to enemies did testify his approbation of the work of Reformation begun caryed on there these yeers bygone be called in question fathered upon the Devill which would be the hieght of iniquity being or at least bordering upon that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost charged upon the Pharisees Math. 12. But notwithstanding of all this travail which this old enemy his indefatigable under-agents are or have been at according to their custome to get the prejudices against that Church which they have laboured to beget in the mindes of strangers fomented so deeply rooted as that there'shall be no place ●…or her or any in her name to publish to the world any Apology or defence or a justification of her cause ground of present suffering It is expected that Christian Churches abroad have reserved one eare open to Christ his suffering followers that a true representation of the present case condition of that suffering Church shall be heartily welcomed by them whose eares have been hithertill filled with the clamorous outcry●…s of men who make no conscience of oaths let be of words who have learned exactly that lesson Ca●…umniare audacter semper aliquid h●…rebit Heap up many slanders vent them with boldness audacity something will slick Though there be no ground for any to thinke that nighbour protestant Churches have so far drunken in prejudices against that Church or rec●…eived such an impression from the misreports misrepresentations which her malitious adversaries have made as that an attempt of this nature shall seem altogether useless Yet this is certaine that the most lively demonstration representation of the present case condition of that Church that can be fallen upon shal not hold forth unto strangers forraigners such convincing light evidence of all maters there as a few days being ear ey-witnesses to all her present calamities compared with the days of old when the glory of the Lord appeared in the midst of her would do And therefor though as to such who are indeed strangers unto the great things which the Lord hath wonderfully begun carryed on in that Church small successe can be expected to follow such an interprise yet as to others whether Churches or persons of whom it cannot be but that there is a great number who have both heard wondered at the works of the righthand of the most High there have received much soul-refreshment from the report wishing earnestly supplicating for the like unto themselves longing for the day wherin they might see the Lords arme streached out with the like Reformation salvation unto other Churches about this undertaking will have its own use advantage And without all question silence at such a time as this might do much both to sadden the heart to stumble such as would be glad to hear of the stedfastness of the faithfull followers of Christ in that land for if there were none to open a mouth for her now nor any to plead her cause it might be thought that all had so far changed with
Andrews Nov. 25. 1617. At this assembly no more could be gotten yeelded to but private Communion that ministers should give the Elements in the Lords supper out of their own hands to each Communicant But all this did not satisfy his Maj. therefore he wrote sharpe letters to the Archbishops commanded them to preach on Christ-masse day to celebrat the Lord's supper with all the solemnities Anno 1618 there is another meeting called at Perth August 25 unto which the king sent seven Noblemen fifteen Barons Gentlemen Spotiswood took upon him to moderate read the kings minacing letter named a Committee for the articls nothing regarding the liberty of the assembly to gratify the king The honest party offered reasons both for a delay against the Ceremonies but all in vaine Spotiswood told them that he would send all the names of such as refused unto the King asked the votes of many who had no Commission so obtained what the desired for all accorded unto the five articles viz kneeling at the Communion private Communion private Baptisme observation of Holy dayes Confirmation of children except one Nobleman one Doctor 45. ministers But when the honest party looked back to the many informalities at this meeting 1. No lawfull premunition but onely 20 dayes by which meanes many were absent 2. No liberty to choose a moderator 3. No free disputing or voteing but members overawed 4. The assembly prelimited by the votes of the articles 5. Such as wanted Commissions did vote others who had Commissions were not suffered to vote c. they looked upon it as no lawfull Generall assembly published their reasons in print After the dissolving of this meeting Spotiswood to make all sure ratifieth all these things in the High Commission though he others had said that if they would give way to the passing of the act to humore his Maj. no man should be compelled to obey yet now by the power of their High Commission they force many to obey under the paine of deposition imprisonement confinement so they rage without all law But at length Anno 1621. there is a parliament conveened unto which the Honest ministers give in a supplication for safe liberty to enjoy the true Religion as Reformed in Doctrine Saoraments discipline openly professed sworn practised by Prince Pastor people of all ranks without Innovations and that they would not suffer the faithfull honest ministers to be smitten the stocks to be committed to wolves blinde guides But Iuly 24. they were all discharged forth of the towne by open proclamation The presenter of the petition Mr Andrew Duncane minister ar Crail was incarcerated When the ministers remove conforme to the proclamation they leave in write behinde them strong reasons why the Parliament should not ratify the acts of the pretented assembly at Perth shew both the nullity of the assembly in point of formality the illegality of any such Ratification as being against severall acts of Parliament his Maj. proclamation published printed the Nationall Covenant upon severall other grounds As also they leave a most Christian faithfull admonition to the well affected Nobility Barons burgeses members of Parliament unto constancy faithfulnesse Yea moreover in case all this should not prevaile they leave a Protestation in write but the minister who had it to present gote not accesse so was forced to affix Copies thereof upon publick places of the towne But notwithstanding of all this there is a fixed resolution to have these articles ratified which made some honest members with draw severall informalities are used contrary to the usuall freedome of Parliament much pains taken to gaine some after the report was made to go that the Parliament would not rise for severall dayes to come which made severall members the more secure Saterday the 4 of August was pitched upon as the fittest time for closeing of the business all the articles are put together the question stated Aggree or Disaggree what by one way another the acts are ratified But observable it was how the Lord did give his Protestation against this ratification from heaven though Spotiswood blasphemously paralleleth it unto the Lords shewing of himself at the giving of the Law for at the very instant when the kings Commissioner arose to touch this act with the Scepter there came in at the windowes a great lightening after that another greater then a third most terrible Immediatly there followed an extraordinary darknesse astonishing all The lightenings were seconded with three terrible claps of thunder then their came an extradinary great showre of haile after all this such a terrible showre of raine that made the streets to run like rivers by which meanes the parliament was constrained to stay within doores an howr an half went home thereafter without their robes Upon the 20 of August when these acts were published at the Crosse the minister who was intrusted with the Protestation affixed a copy thereof upon the Church door another upon the Crosse a third upon the Palace gate of Haliroodhouse took Instruments in these words Here in the name of the brethren of the ministry professing the Religion as it hath been practised in our Church since the Reformation of the same I protest against all these things that have been concluded in prejudice of our privileges since the first Reformation thereof adhere to my former Protestation made fixed on the Tolbooth door other places to all the Protestations made in favours of the Church in the time of the preceeding Parliaments And God from heaven did declare his dissent for dureing the time of the reading of these acts there was nothing but thunder fire lightenings raine And thereafter the Lord made the whole countrey feel the weight of his anger for the cornes did rott through excessive raines waters became so great that they sweeped away in severall places cornes cattell houses plenishing people all The great bridge of Perth where these acts were first concluded was taken away never repaired to this day yea the whole towne almost drowned many of the Sea-townes which favoured the Articles received great dammage by Sea And there followed three years dearth famine Epidemick diseases wherof many died Thus did the Lord plead from heaven his controversy testify his displeasure against those courses But notwithstanding of all this the Prelats having now all power in their hands prosecute their worke tyrannize over all ranks so as the inhabitants were more affrayed of crossing their commands then the commands of the king himself for they banished out of their bounds such gentlemen as they pleased imprisoned what magistrates they thought fit upon any light occasion were it but the hearing of their own old minister after he had been silenced by the bishop or the not sisting
of one though their own father before their tyrannicall Court Now is there a black cloud over the Church for many years piety is dayly decaying formality profanity increasing the godly are mourning lamenting the wicked rejoyceing But the Prelats have not yet ended their purpose For Anno 1633. when King Charles was present at a Parliament there is an Act carried through but not without some opposition made thereunto by some of the Nobles granting power to his Maj. to command what habits he pleaseth for all men in office whether in Church or State that as a priviledge annexed to the Crowne by this means a door was opened to bring in the Surplice the Corner cap other trash These worthies being traduced by the Prelats as contemners of authority sowers of sedition in Church State procure the kings displeasure by their freedome For the king did not onely chide them openly but with his own hand he wrote down their names as disloyall subjects which made these Nobles thinke of drawing up a supplication which being drawn up by William Haig his Maj. solicitour was committed to the trust of the Earle of Rothes Lord Loudoun to present it as they found conveniency but they perceiving that it would not be well accepted resolved to keep it up But at length some way or other a copy thereof cometh to the Bishops hands they deliver it unto the king withall complaine of those Noble-men as standing in the way of his subjects yeelding chearfull obedience And upon their importunat requeests there is a Commission granted to certaine persons as a committee to proceed against the Authors abettors of that supplication as guilty of sedition treason Whereupon William Haig fleeth all his goods are confiscat Some Noblemen are questioned the Lord Balmerino who had the supplication in his custody is imprisoned at length condemned to die but obtaineth pardon Now the prelats do reigne there being none who durst peep or move a wing against them The Achprelate of Saint Andrews was Chancellour other eight of the prelats were in great places being either Lords of the privy Councell or Lords of the Exchequer being thus lifted up in power honour they are puffed up with pride what durst they not attempt now thinke they Therefore they proceed to do more wickedness draw up a book of Canons which was printed approven by the Kings Maj. all were commanded to obey the Bishops in all points By this book that which remained of presbyterian governement is taken away Parochiall Sessions Classicall Presbyteries are accounted Conventicles Ruleing Elders Deacons are cast out of the Church all Ecclesiasticall causes are brought only to the Pelats tribunall So were they about the drawing up of a Liturgy a Book of Ordination against which before ever they were printed or seen all were discharged to speak under the pain of Excommunication And at length the book of Common Prayer is published imposed on the Church by the kings command as the onely forme of publick divine worship Every Parish is commanded to have two at least of these books under the paine of horning being punished as rebells And a strict command cometh forth enjoyning the same to be used from Pasch forward Anno 1637. But some of the Prelats as of Rose Dumblaine did anticipate the day made use of it in their Cathedralls Others of the Prelats propone the matter to their Synods but the Ministers replyed that such a change should not be made without a Nationall Assembly but it was answered that they were the Representatives of the Church However some prelats gave Ministers liberty to advise untill Octob. but through the furious importunity of some a letter is procured from his Maj. commanding the useing of the Liturgy with all expedition in the Churches of Edinburgh The Ministers being called to see what they would do such as refused are presently suspended SECTION II. The way how the Lord brought down these Prelats the History continued IT was sad lamentable to see what a face the Church of Scotland had now No hedge of Discipline to keep the vineyaird from foxes wilde boars all the Discipline which was was tyrannie over consciences over mens persons estates profanitie was not curbed but encouraged Prelats themselves being chief in all those crying abhominations as will be cleared ere long yea that poor Church was now posteing fast to Rome The Prelats their underlings beside the points of Arminianisme which were accounted speciall pieces of their qualification did avow openly severall points of Popery so that it was taught publickly in the chief Citie That the Pope was not Antichrist And thus all things were growing worse the worship corrupted like to be corrupted more the mindes of people were filled with feares that God would depairt leave that Church altogether so thattheir case looked most deplorable desperat like But asoftentimes the Church people of God have found him who was the hope ofIsrael the Saviour thereof in times of trouble a ready help in time of need so did the poor Church of Scotland finde it now by experience that whē the storme was sorest it was neerest an end that this was as the darke houre before the dawning of the day for now the Lord awaketh as one after wine looketh through the cloud with Compassion on a long tossed sorely afflicted Church which had groaned under oppression of cruell task-masters till they could do no more sheweth that his hand was not shortened that it could not save but that he was the hearer of prayer that now his appointed time was come to take vengeance on his adversaries even the vengeance of his Temple And as ordinariely the Lords great works appear to carnall reason to be despicable at the beginning so the Lord began this great change alteration of affaires in that poor Church in a way that seemed not to promise much yet such a way it was as the hand of God was to be seen in it and seen carrying of it on wonderfully as shall appear In obedience to his Maj. last letter which commanded the reading of the liturgie in all haste the Bishop of Edenburgh the first sabbath day thereafter resolved to do it when he beginneth there ariseth a tumult among the people begun by some women which encreased so as that the prelate when he came out of the Church did hardly escape in the rest of the Churches of Edenburgh the reading was stopped Immediatly after dinner the Secret Counsell did meet resolve to search out the authors of this tumult commanded the use of the service book all to speake reverently of the Bishops but notwithstanding of this the people rage more then ever against the Prelats after the afternoons sermon they set upon the Prelate with stones forced him to
was contrary to the dissent protestation of this kingdome now removed by a violent death and that by the Lords blessing there was left a righteous heire lawfull successour Charles Prince of Scotland VVales now king of Great britane france and Irland did unanimously and chearfully in recognisance and acknowledgement of his just right title and succession to the Crown proclaime and declare to all the world that he was king of great britan c. their Soveraigne Lord and king at the mercat Crosse of Edenburgh with all usuall Solemnities in like cases ordaining the same to be done in like manner in all the brughs Royall Immediatly there are Commissioners sent over to his Maj. while at the Hague in Holland when these returned without satisfaction there are againe the next year 1650 Commissioners sent to him while at Breda At length he promised to publish testify by solemne oath his approbation of the Nationall Covenant of Scotland of the solemne league Covenant And accordingly before he came a shoar in Scotland being in Shipboard at the mouth of Spey on the Lords day the 23. of Jun 1650 in presence of the Commissioners of the kingdome Church of Scotland severall others both Scots English after Sermon the Nationall Covenant the solemne league Covenant being read by the minister that preached He standing lifting up his right hand swore the same in the words following which had been determined by the Parliament by the Commissioners of the Generall assembly of the Church of Scotland in their Instructions to their Commissioners subjoyned to Both the Covenants I Charles king of Great Britaine France Irland do assure declare by my solemne oath in the presence of the Almighty God the searcher of hearts my allowance approbation of the Nationall Covenant of the solemne league Covenant above writen faithfully oblidge my self to prosecute the Ends thereof in my station calling that I for my self successours shall consent aggree to all acts of Parliament enjoyning the Nationall Covenant solemne league Covenant fully establishing presbiteriall governement the Directory of Worship confession of faith Catechismes in the kingdome of Scotland as they are approven by the Generall assembly of this kirke Parliamet of this Kingdome And that I shall give my royall assent to the acts of Parliament enjoyning the same in the rest of my Dominons And that I shall observe these in my own practise family shall never make opposition to any of these on endevour any change thereof And immediatly subscribed the same And thereafter August 16. 1650. he emitteth a Declaration from Dumfermeling wherein he expresseth much of his affection to the Covenan●… Covenanters dèclareth that he hath not sworne subscribed these Covenants entred into the oath of God with his people upon any sinister intention crooked designe for attaining his own ends but so far as humane weakness will permit in the truth sincerity of his heart that he is firmely resolved in the Lords strength to adhere there to to prosecute the ends thereof c. In order to which he doth in the first place professe declare that he will have no friends but the friends of the Covenant And therefore as he doeth now detest abhorre all popery Superstition Idolatry together with prelacy all errours heresy schisme profaneness resolveth not to tolerate much lesse allow any of these in any part of his Maj. Dominions but to oppose himself thereto to endeavour the extirpation thereof to the outmost of his power So doth he as a Christian exhort as a King require all such of his subjects who have stood in opposition to the Solemne League Covenant worke of Reformation upon a pretence of kingly Interest or any other pretext whatsoever to lay down their enmity against the cause people of God to cease to prefer the Interest of man to the Interest of God which hath been one of these things which hath occasioned many troubles calamities in these kingdoms being insisted in will be so far from establishing of the Kings Throne that it will prove an Idole of jealousy to provoke unto wrath him who is King of Kings Lord of Lords The king shall alwayes esteem them best servants most loyall subjects who serve him seek his greatness in a right line of subordination unto God giving unto God the things that are Gods unto Caesar the things that are Caesars resolveth not to love or countenance any who have so litle conscience piety as to follow his Interests with a prejudice to the Gospell kingdom of Jesus Christ which he looks not upon as a duety but as flattery as driving self designes under a pretence of mantaining royall authority greatness he resolveth to live die with his loyall subjects in prosecution of the ends of the Covenant He doth esteeme the service of those who first engadged in the Covenant have since that time faithfully followed the ends thereof to be duety to God loyalty to him So Jan. 1. 1651. on the day of his coronation the Nationall covenant the Solemne league covenant being read unto him he swore them in this following oath which he took in behalf of himself his successours kneeling holding up his right hand which oath with both covenants he afterward did subscribe I Charles King of Great Britane France Irland do assure declare by my solemne oath in the presence of Almighty God the searcher of hearts my allowance approbation of the Nationall Covenant of the Solemne League Covenant above writ●…h And faithfully obleidge my self to prosecute the ends thereof in my station calling And that I for my self Successours shall consent aggree to all Acts of Parliament enjoyning the Nationall Covenant the Solemne League Covenant fully establishing Presbyteriall Governement the Directory of worship Consession of Faith Catechismes in the kingdome of Scotland as they are approven by the Generall Assemblies of this kirk Parliament of this kingdom And that I shall give my royall assent to Acts and Ordinances of Parliament passed or to be passed enjoyning the same in my other Dominions And that I shall observe these in mine own practise and family and shall never make opposition to any of those or endevour any change thereof Thus had the Church of Scotland all the security imaginable from a Prince that Prelats should never have footing againe within that kingdome that the begun worke of Reformation should be still carried on through the other Dominions But when Scotland out of conscience to their covenant had sent for the king the Sectarian party in Iuly 1650 approach their borders with an Army thereafter overcome them in battell shedeth much of their bloud leadeth many both commanders
souldeours away captives keepeth them in bondage full ten years Under which oppression they lay groaning wishing for a day of delivery At length after ten years exile the Lord returned their prince without stroake of sword and setled him upon his throne which occasioned great acclamations of joy through the whole land seing that now the yoke of the oppressour was brocken and the Lord had restored to them in a wonderfull unexpected maner their law full judges and governours Now were people filled with hops of good and desirable dayes both for Church and State But alace how suddainly are all their hopes turned into fears and their joy into mourning how are their faces filled with confusion because of the sad disappointment which now they did meet with Their yoke beginneth now to be wreathed more straitly about their necks then ever their bondage and oppression in conscience groweth they see with their eyes the glorious worke of Reformation which had been wonderfully carried on by the mighty power of the most High cemented with the bloud of his Saints who spared not their lives in the defence maintenance of that cause both against malignants Sectaries razed to the very foundation the carved worke thereof brocken down with axes hammers at once and all things growing dayly worse worse Some particulars where of though the calling to minde making mention of such sad doolfull things will occasion fresh sorrow grief to the people of God as the purpose in hand will suffer shall be mentioned in the following Sections SECTION III. The grounds of the sufferings of such as were incarcerated by the Committy of Estates the 23 Day of Agust 1660. discovered AFter God had broken the yoke of the oppressours had restored their own governous it might have been expected that justice should have flowed down as a river and when the committe of Estates which had been nominated Anno 1651. Were commanded by his Maj. to sit order the affaires of the Kingdome untill the ensueing Parliament should meet every one might have been in expectation of some good following their governement But alas their little finger becometh heavier then the loyns of the former oppressours A litle taste of which there is given on the very first day of their sitting downe for upon the 23. Day of August 1660. While there were some faithfull Zealous servants of Christ to the number of Ten Ministers with one Gentleman met in a private house where they resolved to meet that they might give the lesse offence for the drawing up of a supplication unto his Maj. wherein after their congratulating his Maj. returne they in all humility presse exhort him in the fear of the Lord to minde his oaths unto covenants with God a very necessary seasonable work The committee of Estates sent thither some of their number to apprehend those persones to take them to the castle of Edenburgh where they abode for the space of some weeks were afterward except Mr Guthry confined to their chambers in the towne for some considerable time This was a terrible alarme unto the hearts of the godly presaging sad doolfull dayes to follow when at the very first there is so much cruelty exerced against these faithfull zealous servants of Christ who were evidenceing their love respect unto their Prince in mindeing him of his vowes which he had made unto the most high of his duty which he did owe unto God who had so wonderfully delivered him for which no colourable pretence could be allaidged save one of those Either that their meeting was not warranted by the lawes of the land or that they were about a sinfull work The first could not be allaidged with any colour of law because there was no standing law then in force against such meetings for whatever law ther was of that nature before was made null void by posterior acts of Parliament which posterior acts were not as yet resci●…ded and further what great wrong was it for so many ministers to meet together in a privat chamber for such an end when as many moe prophane persones will be suffered to meet dayly to drink debauch and what could these worthies have suspected now seing the like liberty was enjoyed while the land was under the feet of oppressours might not they in reason have expected as good quarters at the hands of their own governoursas they gote from stangers enemies But it is like the work they were about gave offence it is true they were pleased to brande it with the names of treason sedition but whether it was so or not the reader will be better able to judge when he hath pondered considered the true copy of their supplication which is here following Most gratious dreed soveraigne We your Maj. most humble subjects considering the duty which as Christians we owe to our Lord Iesus Christ who is king of kings Lord of Lords and which as subjects we owe unto your Maj. as our native lawfull king under him We do hold ourselves bound to tender unto your Maj. this most humble addresse supplication How hatefull the actings of the late usurped powers in offering violence to the Parl. of Engl in their unchristian barbarous murthering of your royall father in their insolent changeing of the ancient civill goverment of the kingdome of Engl. and by armed violence unjustly secluding your Maj. there from In their most unjust invadeing of the kingdome of Scotland inthralling of the same in subjection to themselves and beyond all their impious incroaching on the kingdome of Iesus Christ the liberties thereof and in promoteing establishing a vast tolleration in things religious throughout those nations unto the perverting of the precious truthes of the Gospell defaceing of the ordinances of Iesus Christ opening a wide door to all sorts of evill heresy schisme imprety prophanenesse How abhominable these things were to us the Lord who searcheth the heart tryeth the re●…es doth know against which we gave many publike testimonies before the world to witnesse our abhorrence thereof And the same Lord knoweth that as we did earnestly pray for breath after his appearing to witnesse against those so saveing that Christian pity and compassion we owe to the persones of men though our very enemies we rejoyce in his putting down of them that did set up themselves in staineing the pride of their glory in breaking the yoke of their power from off the necke of these Kingdomes We hold our selves also bound thankfully to acknowledge the Lord's signall preserving of your Maj. person in the middest of many fold dangers designes threatening the same these years past And that after long Exile from your own house people he hath been pleased to bring you back to the same And when the foundations of the ancient civill goverment were overthrown againe
to make way for repaireing of the ruines building up the breaches thereof for establishing the same on right sure foundations in your Maj. person family and to do those things when they were so litle expected in so quyet peaceable a way and without the effusion of Christian blood imbroyling the Kingdomes in the misery calamities of a new war And as we adore the wonderfull wise hand of God blesse his name who hath done these things so it is not only our practice for the present but our sincere resolution for the time to come to pou●… forth the fervent desires supplicatio●… of our soull unto the most high by whom kings reigne for the preservation saiftie of your Maj. person for the multiplication of his spirit increase of it upon you that you may imploy your power to his praise the comfort of his people for the Establishing of your just power greatnesse in subordination to him to be faithfull loyall rendering all the dutyes of honour subjection obedience to your Maj. that are due from humble loving subjects unto their native lawfull prince soveraigne And we desire to be perswaded with confidence to promise to ourselves that your Maj. will accept of those our professions as proceeding from loyall honest hearts allow us the protection countenance incouragement in our station callings that may be expected from a gracious king And considering the great happinesse that ariseth both to kirk and state all the members thereof by the mutuall good understanding betuixt the supreme Magistrat the faithfull of the land when it pleaseth divine providence so to dispose the many calamities miseries that in the holy justice just indignation of God do attend the separating or violating of these only sure foundations of states and 〈◊〉 kingdomes We are bold in the integrity of our hearts in the zeal of the glory of the Lord of the good of his church of your Maj. honour happinesse from the sense of manifold great obligations that be upon us before the Lord so to do particularly that of the Covenant That what lets we are not able of our selves to suppresse and overcome we shall reveal and make known that they may be prevented remedied Humbly to presente unto your Maj. and make known the great danger that threateneth religion and the work of reformation in the churches of God in these kingdomes from the desires and endeavour of the remanent of the popish prelaticall and malignant party therein which is begining to lift up the head not only to render hatefull but to bear downe many of your Maj. good subjects who have been imployed as instruments in the work have keeped within the bounds of their duty in promoveing preserving the same so far as humane frailty would permit but also to overthrow that blessed work it self and to reintroduce prelacy the ceremonies the service book and all these corruptions which were formerly cast out as inconsistent with that pure and spotelesse rule of church governement discipline and divine worshipe delivered to us in the word of God as a yoke of bondage that neither we nor our fathers were able to bear and though we know that that Spirit will not want its specious pretences plausible insinuations for compassing these ends yet as there cannot readily be greater disservice to the church of God to these Kingdoms to your Maj. honour happinesse then actings of that nature so we cannot without horrour of Spirit astonishment of heart think upon what dreadfull guiltinesse King Princes Ministers People shall be involved into what fearfull wrath shall attend them from the face of an angry jealous God if after all the light that he hath made to shine in these kingdomes from his blessed word for discovery of the error Impiety of these things after his hand hath been lifted up so high for casting out of the same after solemne vowes engadgments taken upon themselves before God angels men against them if they should againe lick up the vomit thereof God forbid that we should either hear or see such heart astonishing bitter things which would turne the mirth of the Lords people into mourning their songs into most sad lamentations Neither are we lesse apprehensive of the endeavours of the spirit of errour that possesseth Sectaries in these Nations which as it did at first promove a vast tolleration in things religious and afterwards did proceed to the frameing of mischief into a law so we doubt not but it will still be active unto the promoving procuring of the same under the specious pretext of liberty to tender consciences the effects whereof have in a few years past been so dreadfull that we cannot think of the continuing thereof but with much trembling fear Therefore knowing that to Kings Princes Rulers Magistrats appertaineth the purgation preservation of religion that nothing can contribute more unto the preserving and promoveing of religion the work of reformation then that all places of power trust be filled with men of a blamelesse christian conversation approven integrity known affection to the cause of God We your Maj. most humble supplicants subjects with bowed knees bended affections humbly supplicat your Maj. that you would imploy your royall power unto the preservation of the reformed religion in the church of Scotland in doctrine worship discipline governement for the reformation of Religion in the Kingdome of England Irland in doctrine worshipe discipline goverment and to the carrying on of the work of uniformity of religion in the church of God in the three Kingdomes in one confession of faith forme of church goverment directory of worshipe catechis●…ing and to the extirpation of popery prelacy superstition heresy schisme prophanesse whatsoever is contrary to sound doctrine the power of Godlinesse And that all places of trust under your Majest may be filled with such as have taken the Covenant are of approven integrity known affection to the cause of God If in a matter that so much concerneth the honour of God the good of his Church your Maj. honour happinesse we be jealous with a godly jealousy we know your Maj. wisdom lenity to be such as will easily pardon And the sense of our duty to God to your Maj. the fear of those kingdoms transgressions by building up againe the things that were destroyed constraineth us to be petitioners against the same earnestly to intreat that any beginnings of stumbling which already have been given in those things especially in the matter of Prelacy ceremonies the Servicebook in your Majesty chappell and family and other places of your Dominions may be removed and taken away And that there may be no
fit necessary it is for the honour service of almighty God the good quyet of the Church the better government thereof in unity order That there be a National Synod Assembly duely constitut within this kingdome Hath therefore appoynted declared by these presents appoynts declares That there shall be a National Synod of the Church of Scotland And that this Synod for the lawfull members thereof shall consist be constituted of the Archbishops of St Andrews Glasgow the remanent Bishops of these two Provinces of all Deanes of cathedrall Churches Archdeacons of all the moderators of meetings for exercise allowed by the Bishops of the respective dioeceses of one Presbyter or Minister of each meeting to be chosen elected by the moderator plurality of the Presbyters of the same And of one or two from the University of St Andrews one from Glasgow one from the King's colledge one from Marshells colledge of Aberdeen one from Edinburgh And this Synod thus constitut is to meet at such times in such places as his Maj. by his proclamation shall appoynt And is to debate treat consider consult conclude determine upon such pious matters causes things concerning the doctrine worship discipline governement of this Church as his Maj. under his Royal hand shall deliver or cause be delivered to the Archbishop of St Andrews president of the said Nationall Assembly to be by him offered to their consideration The Estates of Parliament do humbly recognosce acknowledge his Maj. Royall power prerogative afore said with the piety justice prudence of his Maj. resolution therein Like as his Maj. with their advice consent doth hereby establish ratify confirme this constitution of a Nationall Assembly as the lawfull constitution of the Nationall Synods Assemblies of this Church His Maj. or his Commissioner without whose presence no Nationall Synod can be keeped being alwayes present declareth that no Act canon order or ordinance shall be owned as an ordinance of the Nationall Synod of the Church of Scotland so as to be of any effect force or validitie in law to be observed keeped by the Archbishops Bishops the inferiour Clergy all other persons within the realme as far as lawfully being members of this Nationall Church it doth concerne them but that which shall be considered consulted agreed upon by the president major part of the members above specified It is alwayes hereby provided that nothing be enacted or put in execution by authority of a Nationall Synod within this Kingdome which shall be contrary to his Maj. Royall prerogative or to the lawes of the Kingdom that no act matter or cause be debated consulted concluded upon but what shall be allowed approved confirmed by his Maj. or his Commissioner present at the said Nationall Synod In which Act these things are remarkable 1. That Church Assemblies may not meet without his warrand 2. The King or his Commissioner are essentiall constituent members thereof 3. That the King hath power to appoynt the very constituent members of the Synod 4. Ruleing elders are excluded out of Church judicatories 5 That the constant moderator hath a more then ordinary voice in the exercise for the member to be chosen there must be elected by him the major part of the rest 6. Nothing can be agreed upon without the consent of the Archbishop of St Andrews thus he hath a negative voice 7. Nothing must be debated either concerning doctrine worshipe discipline or government but what his Maj. pleaseth 8. Nothing must be concluded but what his Maj. or his commissioner doth approve confirme 9 All this is founded on his supremacy 10. And his supreme authority over all persones in all causes his prerogative royall are declared to be all one 5. There is another commission granted for the heigh commission a part whereof followeth Our Soveraigne Lord ordaines a commission to be passed exped under his Maj. great seall of the Kingdome of Scotland making mention That in consideration of the multiplicity weight of Church affaires of the Estate incumbent upon the Lords of privy councell so as they cannot attaine the due execution of the lawes to the effect that the disorders contempt of authority may be timeously suppressed His Maj. by vertue of his prerogative in all causes over all persons as well ecclesiastike as civill has given granted like as his Maj. by the tenor hereof giveth granteth full power commission to the Archbishop of St Andrews The Lord chancellour L. treasurer archbishop of Glasgow Duk Hamilton Marques of Mon●…se c. or any five of them an Archbishop or Bishop being one of the number To summon and call before them all contemners of the discipline of the Church for that cause suspend deprive and excommunicat all keepers of conventicles c. to appoynt ministers to be censured by suspension and deposition and punished by fineing confineing and incarcerating them and all other persons who shell be found transgressours as aforesaid c. Out of this Act these things are remarkable 1. Here is a mixed court made up of Church men civill men 2. A court medling both with civil ecclesiastick punishments for they have power of deposeing excommunicating fineing and imprisoneing 3. A court founded upon his Maj. prerogative in all causes over all persons as wel ecclesiasticke as civil 4. An Archbishop or Bishop is s●…e quo non one of those with four others may do all themselves By what is said something of the meaning of this oath according to their sense who tender it may be discovered the bussinesse being so clear much time needeth not be spent in handling that long tedious controversie concerning the Magistrats power in Church matters Onely a hint at some few things as reasons why this oath thus tendered explained could not be taken will be sufficient 1. By this meanes they should upon the matter have affirmed that the King was head of the Church for it is clear that he assumeth to himself power of appoynting new officers in Christ's house new courts judicatures which Christ did never appoynt of committing Church power to whom he will of appoynting what forme of Government in the Church he thinketh fit modelling the constitution of Church idicatories appoynting who shall be members who not who members siue quibus non of limiting the bounds of their procedour by appoynting what they shall treat of what not of puting life in their canons constitutions c. Thus all Church power shall flow from him he shall become the head of the Church under Christ the same way that he is head of the commonwealth under God And indeed the prelate their creatures are not ashamed in their publick prayers to stile the King head of the Church Now could any faithfull
their own belly not the glory of Christ. And how well this agreeth unto those men now spoken of any who know them may judge And therefore seing it is their designe intended work to deceive the hearts of the simple by their bold consident assertions to cause them beleeve things contrary to the Doctrine which they have already learned received it must be a necessary duty for poor simple people to avoid such So the Apostle writting to Titus cap. 1 14. forbiddeth to give head to jewish fables commandements of men that turne from the truth who are these who teach such things See v. 10 11. unruly vaine talkers deceivers teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake It cannot then be lawfull to obey this act So writing to the Philippians cha 3 2. He sayeth beware of dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision by whom the false teachers of these times are to be understood Now he commandeth to beware of those that is shun them forbear to hear them follow them not And againe v. 17 18 19. he sayeth Brethren be followers together of me Marke them which walk so as ye have us for ensample for many walk of whom I have told you oftin now tell you even weeping that they are enemies to the crosse of Christ whose end is destruction whose God is their belly who minde earthly things So he would have them following such as taught as he did walked as he walked not such as were enemies to the crosse of Christ And certanely when Paul would have the Ephesians cap. 4 14. No more carryed about with every winde of Doctrine by slight of men cunning craftinesse whereby they lie in waite to deceive he would not have them following or attending the Ministerie of such concerning whom the question is So when he willeth the collossians cap. 2 v. 8. to beware least any man spoile them through Philosophy and vaine deceit after the tradition of men after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ he would not have people give obedience unto this Act to attend the Ministery of such who teach false Doctrine By slight cunning craftinese whereby they lie in waite to deceive seek to spoile people of the truth by their Philosophie such as it is vaine deceit after the traditions of men not after Christ seek to beguile with enticeing words So in his first Epistle to Timothie cap. 4. v. 1 2. He sayeth that in the later times some shall depaire from the faith giving head to seduceing spirits speaking lies in Hypocrisie having their consciences feared with a hote yron It must then be hazardous most dangerous to give head to such seduceing spirits as speak lies have their consciences seared with an hote yron as being the cause of departing stom the faith so that such as will guaird against departing from the faith would take heed whom they heare So in his second Epistle to Timothie cap. 3 v. 5. he speaketh of some whom he would have all honest people turne away from these he describeth first from their corrupt conversation v. 2 3 4 5. thus men shall be lovers of their own selves covetous boasters proud blasphemers disobedient to parents unthankfull unholy without naturall affection false accusers incontinent fierce despisers of these that are good treatours heigh minded heady lovers of pleasures more then lovers of God much time needs not be spent in shewing how fitly all these agree unto the persons now spoken of such as know them can best judge But then secondly he describeth them from their Doctrine v 6 8 13. They creep into houses and lead captive silly women us Ia●…es and I●…mbres withstood Moses so do these also resist the truth men of corrupt mindes reprobat concerning the faith evil men and seducers all which particulars without contradiction agree to these now spoken of And therefore the Apostle's command standeth in force from such turne away By all these passages It is clear that the Ministerie of false corrupt teachers should not be attended 7. If it were lawfull to hear these in obedience to this Act it would be also lawfull upon an Act to attend the Ministerie of Anabaptists Antinomians Socinians Arminians or Iesuits And if it would not be lawfull to do this no more can it be lawfull to attend the Ministerie of these in question who seek to pervert the right wayes of the Lord labour to subvert the simple people to turne them away from the truth 8. Such as their Doctrine is such are the prayers not only stuffed with errour but larded with blasphemy as might easilie be shown were it fit here to mention what their expressions are As their Doctrine tendeth to reproach the work of reformation the power of godlinesse so do their publick prayers as such as hear them can showe They pray for a blessing on the prelats under the name of Reverend right Reverend fathers on their wayes courses which God will curse blaste not to mention their unsound parasitick expressions concerning the King's supremacy calling him head of the Church c. Now seing tender consciences can not joyn with them in those prayers how can they attend their Ministerie Are not all present bound to joyn in prayer with them who should be the mouth of all the congregation unto God pray with them when out of the corruption of their heart they ordinarily utter expressions savouring of blasphemy errour can godly tender consciences goe alongs with them And seing they cannot how can they be bound to attend their Ministerie There are snares in Prayer no lesse then in preaching Yea particular persons concurre more with the minister in prayer then in preaching there fore they may more saiflie hear errour preached then joyne in an erroneous prayer for in the one they are purely passive But in the other they are some way active therefore unquestionably there is sin in constant attending the Ministerie of such with whom if they concurre in prayer they must sinne 9. Yeelding obedience unto this Act were upon the matter a consenting unto the great incroachment made upon the privileges of the Church The Church hath this power privilege from the Lord to make choise of her own officers as the frequent examples thereof in the dayes of the Apostles do cleare this would be the greater sin now after the Lord hath graciously delivered that Church from that yoke put her in possession of her power privileges after that the power of patrons which was a piece of cruell bondage oppression unto the Church is removed to consent againe unto wreething of that yoke about her neck were no small transgression And it is clear that the attending of the Ministerie of such must be an accepting of them as Ministers lawfully called notwithstanding that they want the election of
of truth as new born babes they desire the sincere milk of the word that they may grow thereby 1 Pe●… 212. So that any who are offended with them for this must be offended with them for being Christians must be offended with new born babes for desireing the breast is it not cruelty to smite punish poor young babes for seeking the breast What cruelty must this be then to punish such for this to which their nature as Christians leadeth them 3. They have oftentimes through the breathing of the spirit of God upon such exercises found a rich in-come as they gote life quickening grace that way at the first so have they oft found their souls revived their hearts enlairged their eyes inlightened their drouping spirits encouraged their feeble knees lifted up their doubts answered cleared and their souls lifted up in the wayes of the Lord strengthened to turne the battell to the gate to stand against corruption c. And can any blame them for seeking after those watters that they have been so often refreshed by formerly 4. There was never greater necessity for upon the one hand temptations abound darknesse fainting discouragment grow And upon the other hand they have no other to goe to unlesse they would resolve to drink of fouled watters which their soul abhore let none say that they thereby drive at separation for they desire not to separat from the Church not from the publick ordinances whereever they can have them without sin they love the ordinances only they can not owne such men as their Ministers who have so palpably betrayed their trust nor can they attend the ordinances here they cannot enjoy them to edification the sheep must be a lowed to choose wholsome food not to take poison But is it not a strange thing that they will not suffer Christians to meet together for prayer It would seem they look on that God to whom the saints do pray as their enemie that they are afrayed of prayer And indeed the time hath been when the prayers fasting of the saints of God have been terrible to the great enemies of God in that land yea more terrible then Ten thousand men as themselves have professed But what is this else then to banish Christianity to professe enmity unto Christian exercises And sure no Christian will condemne Christians for flocking together as birds of one feather do for prayer other exercises in this evil time seing 1. It hath been constantly practised especially in evill times in all ages why should it be condemned now Learned Voetius de Polit. Pag. 969. Sheweth that by this meanes true religion was preserved propagated both of old of late how this course is followed where popery reigneth or where there is such formality as the truely tender cannot conforme themselves unto Further he cleareth the lawfulnesse of this practice from that meeting in the house of Cornelius Act 10. that other Act 12 12. 2. God hath approven such promised to rewarde them that in such an evill time wherein the proud were called happy they who did work wickednesse were set up Yea they that tempted God were delivered Did speak often one to another Mal. 3 16 17. the Lord hearkened heard it a book of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord that thought upon his name they shall be mine sayeth the Lord of hosts in that day when I make up my jewels I will spare them as a man spar●…th his own son that serveth him would not this encourage Christians to meet together What will do it if this will not do it 3. The Apostle writting to the Hebrews cap. 10 25. sayeth not forsaking the assembling of yourselves together as the manner of some is this is a warrand for privat Christians to assemble to gether for he is there pressing du●…es on Christians in reference to other privat Christians as considering one another provokeing one another to love to good works And for this end presseth their frequent assembling together not only to the publick ordinances but even also to privat exercises whereby they may the better consider one another as it followeth may exhort one another Therefore this is a commanded duty God must be obeyed 4. Their necessitie calleth for it that every one should be helpfull to another therefore they should joyn together as one for the mutuall relief supply of one another vis unita fortior Eccles. 4 9 10. two are better then one for if they fall the one will lift up his fell●…w v. 12. if one prevaile against him two shall withstand ●…m a threefold cord is not quickly broken who then can condemne this practice 5. There are some generall comprehensive dutyes required of Christians which will necessarily require their meeting together or by good consequence cleare the lawfulnesse thereof as 1. They are commanded frequently to love one another Ioh. 13 34 15 17 12. Rom. 13 8. 1 Thes. 4 9. 1 Ioh. 3 11 and 4 7 12. Ioh. 13 35. 1 Thes. 3 12. Now as love in other societies necessarily effecteth a frequent assembling together So will this Christian love draw Christians together for these ends purposes which love setteth them on work to do each to other 2. They must be Kindely affectioned one toward another Rom. 12 10. as parents to Children is it not ordinare to see parents children together And where there ought to be such affection can any condemne their assembling together 3. They must be of one minde and of one m●…uth Rom. 15 5 6. 2 Cor. 13 11. 1 Cor. 1 10. Phil. 1 27 and 2 2 10. 1 Pet. 3 8. And how is this possible unlesse they meet together to communicate their mindes unto other to pray to God for light in any poynt of difference c. 6. There are some particular duties pressed upon Christians which will include their assembling together as 1. They must consider one another so provoke unto love and to good works Heb. 10 24. And this will necessarily imply their familiarity with other their frequent assembling together to provoke to love c. 2. They must exhort one another Heb. 10 25 and 3 13. can this be done if they may not conferre together assemble for this end 3. They must comfort one another 1 Thes. 4. last and 5 11. must they not meet together speak together for this end pray that God would blesse the meanes beare home the words of comfort 4. They must edifie one another 1 Thes. 5 11. And is it possible for them to do this duty live as strangers one to another this duty of edifying one another is a very comprehensive thing doth necessarily imply the saints assembling frequently together that one may be helpfull strengthening encourageing to another 5. They must
5 2. 7 9. Ezek. 16 59. 17 16 17 18. Hos. 10 14. Zech. 5 3 4. 8 17. Mal. 3 5. Many precedents in scripture cleare it to be duty to stand to oaths As these Gen 21 31. 24 9. 25 33. 26 31. 31 53. 47 31. compared with Cap. 50 5. So Gen. 50 25. compared with Exod. 13 19. Iosua 2 12. comp with Cap. 6 22. So Ios. 9 15 20. 1 Sam. 24 21 22. 2 Sam. 19 23. compared with 1 King 2 8. 1 Sam. 20 17. compared with 2 Sam. 21 7. 1 Sam. 30 15. 1 King 1 13 30. Neh. 5 12. Now shall Christians make no more of all these them Sampson did of the new ropes Shall neither law of nature law of nations nor yet the law of God be of any binding force If so they declare themselves not only to be no Christians But to be no men Sure then it must be a hainous iniquity for any who are engaged in this Covenant to cast it behinde their heels contradict what they have there sworne It is a great sin to break a promise but it is a greater sin to break an oath because an oath is a greater ground of security in an oath the dreadfull name of God is invocated to attest the sincerity of the promises purposes of the promisers this maketh the obligation stronger so the breach of this bond must be the sader 3. There is in this a clear breach of a vow for in these covenants there is a promise made unto God that is a vow Now the obligation of a vow is no lesse then the obligation of an oath For in every vow there is an implicit calling of God to witnesse a vow is of the like nature with a promissory oath so should be performed with the like faithfulnesse sayeth the confession of faith at Westminster cap. 22. Sect. 5. That lawfull vowes ought to be observed with all carefulnesse many both precepts precedents in scripture do cleare as Num. 30 v. 2 4 8. 1 Sam. 1 21 Deut. 12 11. 23 21 23. Ps. 76 v. 11. Eccles. 5 4 5. Gen. 28 20. Numb 6 21. 21 2. Iudg. 11 30. compared with Levit. 27 28 29 Ps. 132 2. 22 25. 56 12. 16 5. Prov. 20 25. Isa. 19 11. Iona. 1 16. 2 9. Nah. 1 15. So then the sin of violating these oaths or covenants being likewise the violation of a solemne vow made unto the Lord after which it is not lawfull so much as to make inquirie must be great 4. There is in this a clear breach of a Covenant made with man for in the league and covenant The King the Parl. the people of the three Kingdomes do mutually covenante each with other for the performance of those things which do concerne them in their severall stations either as to the work of reformation or as to the preservation of each others mutuall rights privileges King and Parliament do Covenante to preserve the peoples liberties King and people Covenante to preserve the privileges of Parliament Parliament people Covenante to preserve his Maj. person honour authority And all the people stipulat engadge each to other so that here without all doubt there must be a clear breach of a Covenant and this must be a grievous sin for very heathens looked upon the breach of a Covenant as a hainous uncouth thing did abhominat the same Hence Collicrates did disswade the Ach●…ant from hearkening to Perseus the King of Macedon who intending warre against the Romans was seeking to make peace with them Because it would be a breach of the Covenant which they had made with the Romans see Liv. lib. 41. To break Covenant is a sin against the law light of nature so condemned amongst very heathens Rom. 1 30. for which the Lord gave them up to a reprobat minde v. 28. The obligation of a Covenant is the highest assurance greatest ground of security that natures light could finde out betwixt nation nation or betwixt man man in matters of greatest concernment And this ground of assurance is generally rested on by all unlesse they have to do with a Hannibal or with the Samnites whom no Covenant could binde Hence is that saying sides supremum rerum humanarum vinculum est faith is the highest assurance in humane matters It is spoken to the dishonour of Philip King of Macedon that none could call him a good King because that usually he despised oaths and broke his promise upon any light occasion so that no mans promise was lesse esteemed of of Hannibal that in warring against Rome he did wadge warre more against his owne faith and promise and rejoyceing in lyes and deceit as so many excellent arts he resolved to leave behinde him a notable memory of himself but so as it should be uncertane whether as of a good man or of an evil man The Trojans accuse themselves of this iniquity apud Homer As rendered by one thus Rumpentes foedera sacra ●…uratamque fidem pugnamus non quibus est fas Who sacred leagues annihilate Their faith though sworne do violate 'Gainst those on whose side stands no right We do may with courage fight Yea it is reported that the Romans would not break Covenant even to such as had broken unto them therefore when Sergius Galba would have cut off 7000 of the Lusitanians who had broken Covenant in a most perfidious way he is accused by Libo a tribun of the people for wounding the honour of the Romans in recompensing perfidiousnesse with perfidiousnesse sayeth Appianus persidia persidiam ultus contra Romanam dignitatem barbaros ●…abatur It was a great evidence of basenesse in the Sax●…s when the pick●…s refused to make any Covenants with them because that with them Covenants which with others were the surest bond of friendshipe were but snares for the simple So Buchan in vi●… Gorani So that natures light teacheth the obligation of Covenants to be inviolable And also the light of the scriptutes teacheth the same Ios. 9 19. Neh. 9 38. 2 King 11 17. Ezek. 17. throughout Ier. 34 18. c Gen. 21 27. 1 Sam. 18 3. 20 16. Gen. 31 36. 44 49 50 52. Neh. 5 11 12. 1 King 5 12. 20 34. 5. There is in this a breach of Covenants whose tye obligation is sacred religious of Covenants which God will owne as his he being called to witnesse therein by an oath which was interposed All Covenants confirmed with an oath whatever the things be religious or civill concerning which they are made are owned of God as his hence the Covenant betwixt David Ionathan is called the Covenant of the Lord 1 Sam. 20 8. upon this account the violating of those sworne Covenants must be a hainous great transgression therefore Zedekiahs fault in breaking his Covenant with the King
of Babilon is aggraiged upon this score Ezek. 17 19. so●… judgments are threatened therefore Therefore thus sayeth the Lord God as I live surely mine oath that he hath despised and my Covenant that he hath broken even it will I recompense upon his owne head The oath is called God's oath the Covenant God's Covenant which v. 16. is called the King of Babilon his oath his Covenant And upon this account the sin is aggraiged he is the more assured of judgments because of his breach of this Covenant So likewise that Covenant mentioned Ier. 34 8 9 10. wherein th●… princes the people did sweare to let their Hebrew servants goe free is called God's Covenant v. 18. upon this account sorer judgments are threatened v. 19 20. And I will give the men that have transgressed my Covenant which have not performed the words of the Covenant which they had made before me into the hand of their enemies So then the breach of this Covenant which was sworn with hands lifted up to the most high God in an eminent way before the Lord must be the breach of a Covenant which God will owne as his Covenant as his oath therefore the greater sin 6. It will be the breach of Covenants made with God for they containea vow a promise confirmed with an oath made for doing of such things as God commandeth in his word therefora greater sin for Covenants made with God should be more bindeing inviolable then Covenants betwixt man man For in Covenants betwixt man man there may be dispensations in remissions of the obligation moreover the ground of those Covenants may faile Now none can either dispense with or grant remissions in the matters of God Moreover Covenants made with God are more absolute lesse clogged with conditions so more obligeing And therefore the sin of breaking such covenants must be the greater all may be sure that God shall avenge the quarrell of these Covenants which are his owne he being in them not only judge witnesse but also altera pars contra●…ens the party with whom the Covenant is made Lev. 26 15 16 17 25. 7. It will be the breach of Covenants made with God about morall duties It is a morall duty to abjure all the poynts of popery which was done in the nationall Covenant it is a morall duty to endeavour our own reformation the reformation of the Church which was sworne to in both Covenants It is a morall duty to endeavour the reformation of England Irland in doctrine worshipe discipline and Government which was sworne to in the league Covenant It is a morall duty to purge out all unlawfull officers out of God's house to endeavour the extirpation of heresy schisme whatsoever is contrary to sound doctrine which was sworne to there also It is a morall duty to do what God had commanded towards superiours inferiours equalls which by the league Covenant all were bound unto And therefore the Covevenants are strongly obligeing being more absolute then other cov because they binde vi materiae vi sanctionis both by reason of the matter by reason of the oath so are perpetuall Ier. 50 5. And therefore a breach of these must be a greater fault then the breach of such Covenants as are about things not morally evil which only binde vi sanctionis so it is beyond all doubt that the breach of these Covenants is a most hainous crying sin 8. It will be a breach of such Covenants as are so framed as that they cannot be made void though they should be broken buried forgotten Because they are Covenants about morall indispensable duries such duties upon which dependeth the glory of God the advancement of the Kingdome of our Lord saviour Jesus Christ The honour happinesse of the King's Majesty his posterity the true publick liberty saifty peace of the Kingdomes the good of posterity in all time coming the Lord's being one his name one in all the three Kingdomes And so the transgessing of such Covenants must be a greater fault then the b●…each of such which are of that nature as to be made void after some period of time or after a failzy by the one party Therefore seing those Covenants must binde though all had broken them brunt them also so long as ●…fe lasteth It must be a hainous crime to break them 9. It will be a breach of Covenants reall hereditary such as reach not only the persons themselves entering into Covenant but likewise their posterity like that betwixt David Ionathan 2. Sam. 9 7. 21 7. that betwixt Iosua the Gibeonits that mentioned Deut. 29 14 15. For this Covenant is of that nature as shall appear if that which Grotius de jur ●…el pac lib. 2. c. 16. § 16. Sayeth concerning these Covenants be considered where he giveth this as one evidence of such Covenants viz. When the subject is of a permanent nature addeth albeit the state of a commonwealth be changed into a Kingdome the Covenant must binde quia manet idem corpus etsi mutato capite though the head be changed the body of the commonw●…alth is the same And againe he sayeth as grving another evidence of such Covenants When there is such a clause in the Covenant as that it should be perpetuall or when it is such as is made for the good of the Kingdome addeth When neither ma●…er nor expressions can certanely determine then favorabiliora creduntur esse realia the most favourable advantagious are reall Covenants So that by these marks evidences it is clear that these Covenants are reall Covenants obligeing not only them but also their posterity for 1. The subject or the person who did first enter into this Covenant was the body or universality of the people themselves then their Parliaments in their Parliamentary capacity like the oath of Iosua the princes which did binde the people in all time coming notwithstanding of what they might have said for themselves as not owneing the same but murmureing against it Yea the King in his princely capacity sitting on his throne with the crowne on his head in the day of his solemne inauguration this though there were no more will make it a reall Covenant binding the people according to that imperator foedus percussit videtur populus percussisse Romanus As King Zedekiah's oath to the King of Babilon did oblige the people Now then seing where either the body of a land their Parliaments or their prince in their severall capacities do Covenante the Covenant becometh reall perpetually obligeing much more must it be so where all these three are so theseoaths being Regall oaths Parliamentary oaths nationall oaths covenants they must be covenants perpetually obligeing so that as long as Scotland
hath a King or a Parliament Yea though there should be none of those this obligation would stand because mutato capite maneret idem corpus The subject would be permanent therefore the faith of Scotland being Engaged so long as Scotland is Scotland the Engagement standeth will not be dissolved The faith of the Medes being Engaged made it fare the better with their tributary cities even after the Medes did obtaine the Empire had their state changed So the publict faith of Scotland being Engaged by all persons in all capacities as long as there are any scotish men to succeed in those capacities the obligation standeth 2. Consider the very expressions of the covenant the ●…nd thereof it shall appear to be perpetuall reall publick in the preface there are these words having before our eyes the glory of God the advancement of the Kingdom of 〈◊〉 our Lord savi●…ur Iesus Christ the honour happinesse of the King's Maj. his posteritie the true publick liberty saiftie peace of the Kingdoms wherein every ones privat condition is included sure all this is a publick good a publick nationall good to be endeavoured by the Kingdom of Scotland in all future generations againe it is added for preservation of our selves our religion from utter ruine destruction So in the first article there are these words That we our posterity after us may as brethren live in faith l●…ve the Lord may delight to dwell in the middest of 〈◊〉 And in the second article there are these words That 〈◊〉 Lord may be one his name one in the three Kingdomes in the fift article there are these words we shall each one of us according to our place interest endeavour that these Kingdomes may remaine conjoyned in a firm●… peace and union to all posterity So that it is beyond all question that the scope intent of the covenant is publick nationall 〈◊〉 Consider the matter of the covenant this will yet further appear The very matter sheweth this for as was said it is about morall duties so though it were true that juramenti obligatio personam tantum obstringeret Yet ipsa promiss●… haeredes obligaret for in ipsa promissione satis est efficaciae such a promissorie oath is of ●…orce to binde the posteritie So then this being a publick reall nationall covenant It must be a hai●…ous offence to transgresse it such an offence as their posteritie after them were bound to mourn for when they renewed as they were bound in conscience to do the same ●…fter the example of those mentioned Ezra 9 10. Neh. 9 10. 10. It will be the breach of covenants obligeing perpetually by the very persons who did solemnely sweare enter into these covenants This cannot but be a great aggravation of this crime If it would be a sin for their posteritie some 〈◊〉 of yeers after this to transgresse these covenants will it not be a greater sin for them to beak them in their own dayes's How unspeakably hainous must it be that the very persons who lifted up their hands swore as they ●…hould answere to God in the great day do run counter their own oath transgresse that Covenant Was it so great a sin for Saul to break that Covenant made with the Gibeonits as did provoke th●… Lord to send Three yeers famine his anger to burne sore against the land till Seven of Saul's posteritie were hanged up before the sun when this was Three hundred yeers or more after the Covenant was made would it not have been a greater sin if in Iosua's dayes he the very princes who made the Covenant had broken it Sure the posteritie after some hundereds of yeers might have said more for themselves have pretended ignorance or forgetsulnesse of the thing or some one thing or other which for shame the self same persons who entered into Covenant could not once mention So then it is beyond all question that this doth aggraige the guilt of this generation that it is the same generation for the most part which did sweare these Covenants that doth now break them seing they cannot yet be ignorant or forgetfull of the many evident demonstrations which God gave of his owneing of these Covenants both at the swearing of them afterward so long as people made any conscience of standing by them 11. It would be the breach of Covenants sworne with the greatest solemnities imaginable whether or not that be true That quanto crescunt c. as the solemnities do grow so groweth the oath Shall not be now debated though it seem a truth that solenne juramentum non magis obligat exse naturâ suâ quàm simplex that an oath accompanied with solemnities hath no stronger obligation of it self and in its own nature then a simple oath wanting such solemnities Yet as Doct. Sanders sayeth de jur Prom. obl Prael 5 § 12. The solemnities of the oath do aggraige the sin of perjurie necessaryly and inseparably for which he giveth two reasons 1. Because of the greater deliberation for these externall rites solcmnities are used of purpose to strike into the minde a greater reverence of the Action and a greater sense of religion that so the man might goe about the Action with greater attention deliberation and every sin caeteris paribus is the greater that it is done against a deliberat Act of the will 2. Because of the greater scandall for the more solemnely any thing 〈◊〉 done it is the more observed bymoe therefore the scandall is the more notorious pernicious Scripture is likewise clear for this as may be seen Ezek. 17. where the perjurie of that King is aggravated from this among other things v. 18. when l●… he had given the hand that is when he had solemnely engadged himself by this rite ceremony of giving his hand So 〈◊〉 34 19. when th●… sin of the breach of Covenant is spoken of this is mentioned that they passed between the parts of the calfe a rite used in making of solemne Covenants it was to have some beast or other divided in two the Covenanters were to passe thorow betwixt these parts And therefore the breach of those Covenants must be a horrible provocation for in them they gave as it were their hand to God when they lifted it up swore what more solemnity can be used about the making of a Covenant then was used at the making of these was there not here as may appear to any who will but look back to what is said upon this subject in the second Section a swearing unto the Lord with a loud voice with shouting and with trumpets and with cornets as it were as 2. Chron. 15 14. The transgressing of those Covenants must then be a sin unparallelable 12. Adde to these That it would be the breach of such Covenants against which
solide peace agreement for the time to come offered to K. Iames. 5. Then unmarried his doughter to make him King of great Britane after his d●…ath in the mean time to give him the stile of the Duk of yorke King Iames pleasing these proffers assenteth c●…descendeth on a day on which he should meet with the King of England accord upon all matters But at the instigation of the popish-Church men other courtiers who were driveing on their own d●…signe he breakeh his promise with the King of England And when Anno 1540. Ambassadours were sent againe from England to desire that the King would goe to York there treat with the King of England conforme to the last agreement The priests stood in the way here also with which the King of England was offended resolved to raise warrs against Scotland The result of which war was that at length the scottish forces were all scattered broken at the report of which defeate the King was so grieved vexed that within few dayes he died Againe when King Iames 5. Dieth the King of England communeth with the Scottish prisoners whom he had taken at the last battell concerning the marrying of his sone with the young Queen King Iames his doughter when they promised to do what they could without wronging either the publick good or their own credite he sent them home appoynting them to leave some pledges in their room at New castle This was in the end of the year 1542. when the Parl. conveened in March next the businesse was concluded thereafter the contract was signed by both Kingdoms solemnely subscribed in the abbay of Halirood house the sacrament was broken as the forme was betwixt the Governour of Scotland Mr Sadler Ambassadour from England But the old Queen the Cardinall being against the match stirre up all to a breach perswade those who had been prisoners in England not to return thither to relieve their pledges only the Earle of Cassiles from whose constancy faithfulnesse the Earle who now is is not degenerated but as his predecessour was sole in keeping Covenant so is he singular went according to his promise relieved his owne pledges being approven by Henry for his constancie faithfulnesse was freely set at liberty sent home But what followed upon this breach of Covenant Many sad intestine broiles and commotions tending to the weakening breaking of the Kingdom at length King Henry took occasion to avenge this breach of Covenant sent his Navy towards Scotland landing ten thousand men at Leth who did burne Edinb many places thereabout againe his army did enter the borders waste burne all about Kelso jedburgh thereafter they spoile waste all the Mers Teviotdale Lauderdale some yeers thereafter viz. Anno 1547. He sendeth a great army againe into Scotland when it lay about Pinckie there was a letter sent unto the scottish forces shewing the ground of the war not to be avarice hatred or envy but a desire of a firme ●…asting peace which could not otherwise be had then by the marriage which was proposed assented unto by the Estates an agreement thereupon sworne subscribed But the scottish army would not hear of this but resolve on battell at length were overcome suffered great lose For almost all the young nobleman of Scotland with their friends followers were killed This 10. of Septemb. 1547. may yet preach unto Scotland how God will avenge perfidy all the nobles and others of Scotland who have now broken Covenant may remember pinckie field The french History sheweth us what way the Lord avenged the bloody perfidiousnesse of Charles 9. who had broken five or six severall pacifications conclusions of peace solemnely made ratified betwixt him the protestants For he was smitten with a vehement desease causeing him to wallow in his own blood which he vomited out in great abundance by all the conduits of his body for divers houres till he died And how Henry the 3. Who had been perfidious in breaking the articles of peace concluded with the protestants first about the year 1576. where among other things he avowed by solemne declaration that the Massacre committed Anno 1572. was against all right law of armes then againe An. 1580. Was stabbed in the belly with a knife by Iames Clement a Iacobin Friar in the very chamber where the former King contrived that Barbarous massacre on S. Bartholomew's day Anno 1572. Any who is well versed in History may fill up many pages with such sad lamentable Histories concerning Gods avengeing Covenant breaking these which have been mentioned may suffice for a taste SECTION XXII The solemne league Covenant vindicated And the author of the seasonable case caet Answered THe last thing which remaineth is to shew the vanity of their pretensions who plead the nullity or non obligation of those Covenants It is matter both of admiration of grief sorrow that there should be any found within the Church of Scotland who had so far forgotten themselves as now to turn not only enemies to piety Christianity but enemies also to very humanity not only break Covenant-tyes themselves but also teach others to do the fame that without any fear of punishment either from God or man But God who is Jealous will not be mocked let men dream of exemption as they please by sophisticall chifts think to blinde their owne eyes the eyes of others God who will not hold them guilt lesse that take his name in vaine will no doubt by sad answers from heaven discover the impiety folly of these patrons of prophanity inhumanity Severall in the Kingdom of Engl. have vented their skill in that blake art of looseing the bonds of sacred Covenants But their principles tending to all prophanity have been sufficiently discovered answered by Ms Crofton Timorcus there is one in Scotland who in a late pamphlet intituled The seasonable case of submission to the Church Government c. tryeth how far his skill will reach in this art O how fitly may that of Plautus be applyed to this generation Nostra ●…t as non mul●…um fidei g●…rst Tabulaeotani●…r adsunt 〈◊〉 d●…odecim Tempus ●…cumque s●…bit actuarius Tamen inven●…r Rh●…r qui factum negat But who the author is who can tell For though the pamphlet be published by order●… so countenanced by authority Yet he putteth not to his name being as would appear ashamed to patronize such a bad cause least of all can he be known by the description he giveth of himself in the frontispiece 〈◊〉 lover of the peace of this Church Kingdom unlesse he meane such a peace as is the plague of God upon the heart filling it with senslesnesse stupidity lulling it asleep in his iust judgment
quod sicri non debuit factum valet nor knowing well how to guaird against this deceit which he hideth with a multitude of words his challenges must be answered All which he sayeth on this head is some thing to these three particulars 1. The want of authority in the imposeing 2. The generality of the termes in which it is conceived 3. Some incongruitie in the 3d article The summe of what he sayeth unto the first of these is this To carry on a publick oath without the soveraigne power is without any example among jewes or Christians It is a speciall royalty of the King to have power of imposeing an oath on all his subjects especially where the oath hath a direct aime for raiseing armes Such leagues are inhibited by the lawes of the land Ia. 6●… Parl. 10. Act. 12. Mary Parl. 9. Act. 75. Now this Covenant was carryed on in England by a meeting of Parliament excludeing one of the Estates and in Scotland by a committee of Estates Ans. what if all this be granted Will it therefore follow that the obligation of the Covenant is loosed Nay himself dar not say so for he addeth Now although this could not nullify the obligation of the Covenant were the matter of it undoubtedly lawfull and otherwise still obligeing yet it were well if unlawfulnesse in regaird of this defect were acknowledged So that all which he would have of the Covenanters now for proof of their sincerity is that they would give as publick testimony against the sinfull way of entering into that bonde as against that si●… as they suppose of breaking it But what would this advantage his cause And seeing he saw that it would not advantage his cause why did he spend time paines in vaine He is at a weak passe now when he can bring no arguments but such as himself must needs answere discover the weaknesse of But it is like out of a desire to have it going well with the Covenanters he would have them repenting of the misse which was made But by his favour they must first be convinced of the errour ere they can say that they have erred and ere they be convinced of an errour in that Particular they must see more cogent arguments then any which he hath yet brought For as for that committee of Estates which he sayeth did carry on that Covenant in Scotland it had power for that effect from the convention of Estates their deed was approven in all poynts by the next meeting of Parliament Anno 1644. the lawfulnesse of which convention Parliament hath been shown above and as for the Parliament of England Mr Croften Timorcus have sufficiently spoken to that and as for Scotlands entering into a league with England without the King's consent it hath been vindicated before So hath it been showne how the Parliaments of Scotland do partake of the soveraignity with the King and have power of warre so all which he here sayeth is answered already Only because he desireth some examples of the like among Iewes or Christians though there be no great necessity for this businesse yet some few instances shall be brought first among the Iewes there are two eminent examples one in the dayes of Asa King of Iuda 2. Chron. 15. where many strangers of Ephraim manass●…h Simeon fell to Asa out of Israel in abundance when they saw that the Lord his God was with him v. 9. And entered into a Covenant to seek the Lord God of their fathers with great solemnity v. 12 14. that without the consent of their own King Another in the dayes of Hezekiah when he came to the throne which was in the third yeer of Hoshea King of Israel 2. King 18 1. In the first year of his reigne 2. Chron. 29. 3. this was six yeers before the Kingdome of Israel was wasted destroyed by Salmanass●…r King of Assyria 2. King 17 6. beginneth a work of reformation said it was was in his heart to ma●…e a Covenant with the Lord God of Israel 2 Chron 29 10. And he sent to Israell writting letters to Ephraim Manasseh desireing them to come up to the house of the Lord accordingly diverse of Asher Manasseh Zebulon 2. Chron. 30 1 11. joyned with him in that Covenanted work of reformation here are some of the subjects of Basha Hoshea without their consent or approbation joyning in a Covenant or bond with another King Kingdom which would seem more treasonable like then for the subjects of one King to joyn together in Covenant for the good of King Kingdome to carry on a work of reformation no doubt this advocat darre not condemne this deed of those subjects of Hoshea or Basha As for such Covenants among Christians instances in abundance may be given some have already been named as that betwixt the first reformers of Scotland the Queen of England these in France Germany the Low countreyes Helvetia piemont c. so a few moe shall suffice If he had read the History of the reformation of the Church of Scotland he had seen there severall examples of Covenants entered into by Christians without the consent of the supreme Magistrat viz. one Anno 1557 subscribed by Argile Glencarne Morton Lorn others Another at Perth Anno 1559. subscribed by Argile Iohn Stuart Glencarn Boid Vchiltree c. A third at Sterlin that same yeer subscribed by many A fourth at Leth Anno 1560. subscribed by all the nobilite barons gentlemen others professing Christ Iesus in Scotland a fift at Aire Anno 1562. subscribed by severall noblemen gentlemen In Sleidan's commentaries Lib 7. Anno 1529. there is a Covenant betwixt the city Strausbrugh which was under the command jurisdiction of the Emperour three of the cities of Helvetia viz. Tigurum Berna Basil about assisting dese●…ding one another in the cause of religion this was without the consent approbation of the emperour as appeareth by the letter written to Strausbrugh from the dyet of the Empire againe An. 1530. there was a Covenant betwixt the La●…dgrave of Hesse those three cities Tigur or Zurich Basil Strausburg anent mutuall defencein the cause of religion That same yeer the protestants meet at Smalcald draw up a Covenant for mutuall defence in religion it was subscribed by Albert Gebert of Mansfeldt by the cities of Magdeburgh Breme Sleidan sheweth also lib. 19. That in February 1547. the nobles of Boheme meeting at Prague entered into a Covenant among themselves for the defence of their liberty whether Ferdinand would or not The second particular is about the generality of the termes wherein the Covenant is expressed The summe of what he sayeth here is this The Covenant was purposely framed in generall and homonymous termes that all the sects might lurck under it And so the Sectarian army when they invaded Scotland did pretend the
God to have a tender conscience to make this their exercise to keep a good conscience both towards God man will be loath to condemne them in the least Yea or if they saw what a deluge of prophanity is now broken in upon these lands what unparalleled wickednesse is there perpetrated what abhomination of all sorts reigneth since this course of defection was begun Their hearts would tremble they would scar at such a course as is so destructive to the Kingdome of God within so advantagious for the promoveing of the maine interest of Satan never acknowledge that to be a divine truth which is not after Godlinesse Sure there is a principle in all the godly which will incline them to affect that course best which is most for promoveing the work of grace in souls abhore that which openeth a gap to all prophanity licentiousnesse And though they could disput none against such a course this were enough to make their gracious souls abhore it Let none say that such precisenesse refuseing to cede in a little will prove destructive to the Church by incenseing the civil Magistrat the more For God's way is alwayes the best both for particular persons for Churches an instance cannot be showne where a Church by her faithfull adhereing to the truth of God standing to her principles refuseing to goe back in the least hath ruined herself But upon the other hand it hath frequently been seen how a Church by her yeelding unto the snares of her adversaries through fear or prudence falsely so called hath brought ruine destruction insensibly upon herself The yeelding unto a little in the beginning of a defection hath proven the bane neck-break of Churches cedeing to little formes at first hath brought in the masse at last But now it is hoped that such as shall duely Christianly ponder the premisses shall not account the grounds of the sufferings of that Church people punctilioes or inconsiderable triffles whatever such as do not weigh●… matters in the ballance of the sanctuary but according to their owne phancies may judge And therefore it may be thought that strangers who shall judge of matters according to the truth shall rather stand astonished wonder at the pusilanimity fainting of heart which hath there appeared at this time enquire what ●…s become of that Spirit of boldnesse zeal courage for the cause truth of God which formerly did act the faithfull ministers professours of the Land And where are all those worthies who set their faces against greater stormes then any that hath appeared of late And how is it that so many have out lived their own zeal faithfulnesse by silence at such a time when God in his dispensations did call upon th●… to cry aloud not to spare have betrayed the precious interests of Christ which their predecessours valued beyond their lives And how is it that this generation hath degenerated so far as their predecessours might be ignorant of them not acknowledge them have forgotten their former zeal May not the world wonder at this But what wonder is it that it be so when now their rock hath sold them the Lord hath shut them up when now the Lord hath been displeased and hath made them to drink the wine of astonishment for their provocations hath taken spirit courage from them that they may know at length how evill bitter a thing it is that they have forsaken the Lord their God And therefore this dispensation of the Lord unto that Church may ought to be improved by other protestant neighbour Churches as a warning from the Lord to repent returne unto him for because of her backslideings hath the Lord brought all this upon her he is a jealous God who will spar●… none but the greater their injoyments have been when these are abused to licentiousnesse not improved for the glory of God the advancement of the work of reformation of Churches of particular persons the sor●… will the plagues judgments be with which he will visit such It concerneth all about all who hear of the Lord 's dealing with her to repent remember from whence they are fallen to do their first works for because of her departing from the love of her espousals the kindenesse of her youth the Lord is now visiteing her with sore sharpe rodes Professions yea large professions will not save in the day of God's anger He searcheth the hearts the reines he loveth truth in the inward parts therefore the faire flourishes of outward professions will not satisfie if there be not more Covenanting with the Lord will not hold off judgments when conscience is not made of these covenants And now it hath not been Scotland's Covenanting with God that hath brought all this upon her But Scotlands dealing deceitfully in the Covenant For so long as she was with some singlenesse of heart aimeing honestly at the promoveing of the ends of the Covenant the Lord made her ●…errible unto all her adversaries made one chase an hundereth But so soon as this vow was forgotten the ends thereof not sincerely minded sought after then the Lord departed from her she could not shake her self as before Finally it would become all neighbour reformed Churches to be upon their guaird for the same Spirit that troubleth that Church now is the Spirit of Antichrist seeking to re-enter there after he hath been cast out with all his appurtenances in a most universall solemne manner the door bar●…ed with solemne Covenants oaths made unto the most high And indeed hath gained great footing already for there is more pop●…ry openly professed this day then hath been openly avowed almost these hundered of yeers And if Antichrist shall againe get possession there any may judge what hazard other Churches are into what cause they have to withstand the same if they can do no more for that effect to pray to him who will hear at length that he would hasten that day in his own time wherein it might be said Babilon the great is fallen is fallen is become the habitation of devils the hold of every foule Spirit so that the Kings of the earth who have Committed 〈◊〉 lived deliciously with her may bewaile her lament for her when they shall see the smoak of her burnings for he will at length judge the great whore which did corrupt the earth with her fornications will avenge the blood of his servants at her hand then shall that Church being fully freed from the yoke of prelacy other abhominations with others be glade rejoyce when that wicked with all his appurtenances shall be consumed with the Spirit of his mouth shall be destroyed with the brightnesse of his coming Even so come Lord Iesus AMEN The Contents THe INTRODUCTION Pag. 1. Sheweth