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A45352 A sermon preach'd in the cathedral and metropolitical church of St. Peter in York on Friday the fifth of November, 1697 being the anniversary-day of thanksgiving for that great deliverance from the gunpowder-treason, and also the day of His Majesty's happy landing in England : with a postscript and two letters, which clearly discover the Roman designs against the English church and nation / by George Halley ... Halley, George, 1655 or 6-1708. 1698 (1698) Wing H456; ESTC R40936 15,514 33

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Second Epistle to the Corinthians 11.23 St. Paul tells us That he suffered more than any of the very Twelve Apostles in Labours more abundant in Stripes above Measure in Prisons more frequent in Deaths oft that is in eminent Perils of Death it is an Hebraism the Hebrews express great Dangers Afflictions Conflicts or Agonies by the Name of Death thus Psalm 18.4 5. the Royal Psalmist when his Blood-Thirsty Enemies were ready as a Torrent to overwhelm him complains the Sorrows of Death compassed me and the Floods of ungodly Men made me afraid the Sorrows of Hell compassed me about the Snares of Death prevented me And thus in Deaths oft that is in Deadly Accidents and Dangers And what they were the Verses following sufficiently declare Of the Jews five times received I forty Stripes save one thrice was I beaten with Rods once was I stoned thrice I suffered Shipwrack a Night and a Day I have been in the Deep 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There are some who according to Theophylact assert this to have been the Name of a Well in which he hid himself after his great Danger at Lystra Acts 14.19 Or else it imports some deep filthy noisom infamous Prison A Night and a Day I have been in the Deep in Journying often in Perils of Waters in Perils of Robbers in Perils by my own Countrymen in Perils by the Heathen in Perils in the City in Perils in the Wilderness in Perils in the Sea in Perils among false Brethren in Weariness and Painfulness in Watchings often in Hunger and Thirst in Fastings often in Cold and Nakedness And at the 32d and 33d Verses in Damascus the Governour under Aretas the King kept the City with a Garison desirous to apprehend me and thro a Window in a Basket was I let down by the Wall and escaped his Hands God delivered him from so great a Death Such were the Sufferings of the Holy Apostle St. Paul thus God was pleased to try him and many other his principal Favourites in the Fiery Furnace of Affliction God for such wise Ends and Purposes as are best known to himself peradventure for an Exploration or Trial of his Faith and Constancy or lest he should be exalted above Measure lest he should be too much elevated with the high transcendent Revelations vouchsafed unto him or for the more effectual Propagation of the Gospel God permitted him to sail through a Sea of Blood to be toss'd with Storms and Tempests of Trouble and Affliction And oh how did he endure them with an undisturbed Patience and an entire Resignation to the Divine Will How did he bear up against them with all Christian Courage with a vigorous and undaunted Resolution How perfectly pleas'd with how did he glory of his Infirmities that is his Sufferings He very well understood that the Sufferings of this present World are not worthy to be compar'd to the Glory that shall be revealed Tho' the Floods of Sorrow arose tho' the Winds of Persecution blew and vehemently beat upon him yet he fell not he had in Prospect the beautiful and fair Haven of Eternity His sole Trust and Confidence was in the Lord his God whom the Winds and the Seas obey Thus tho' he was troubled on every side yet not distressed tho' perplexed yet not in despair though he was persecuted yet not forsaken tho' cast down yet not destroy'd no! God delivered him from so great a Death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet also deliver us And this brings me to the Second thing namely That God in this as well as in the Apostolical Age doth still deliver from Death In the 13th Chapter of the Hebrews Ver. 8. we read Jesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for ever The Faith in him the entire Religion of Jesus Christ is not only unchangeable constantly the same throughout all measures of time but also his Care and Love to his Mystical Body and all the Members of it is immutable throughout all Times and Ages of the World with the Lord our God is no Variableness neither Shadow of Turning God never did leave God never will forsake such whose Lives are conformable to his Laws as are Pure and Holy in all Manner of Conversation God hath in all Ages doth now and ever will cover such as fear him with the Wings of his Divine Providence will give them his immense Favour and Almighty Protection so long as the Sun and the Moon shall endure It is God who made who governeth preserveth and taketh Care of the World he sees all the Springs of Motion all Transactions here below all Things are naked and opened to the Eyes of him with whom we have to do Tho' his glorious Residence and Habitation be in the Mansions of Bliss above yet he so far humbleth himself as to behold the things done upon Earth and therefore tho' wicked Men encourage themselves in Mischief and commune of laying Snares secretly and say who shall see them tho' they imagine Wickedness and keep it secret among themselves every Man in the Deep of his Heart yet God shall suddenly shoot at them with a swift Arrow that they shall be wounded yea by his good Providence their own Tongues shall make them fall insomuch that whoso seeth them shall laugh them to Scorn Thus Prov. 19.21 Solomon tells us there are many Devices in a Man's Heart nevertheless the Counsel of the Lord that shall stand There are many Designs and Contrivances in the Minds of Men which they think are so well laid that they cannot miscarry but are all defeated by the over-ruling Counsel of the Lord. No! it is not the most refined Policy it is not the most subtle Stratagem it is not the most strong and invincible Contrivance of Man that can out-vie the Strength of Heaven nothing can stand in Competition with the Divine Favour and Protection This the Great Politicians the Hellish Projectors of the Gunpowder-Treason found to be infallibly true The Arch-plotter Garnet who was at that time superior of the Jesuits here the Jesuits a wicked Generation or Men how hath this Church and Nation of ours been and still is plagued by them They are under a Holy League and solemn Oath to pursue our Ruine and the Destruction of our excellent Religion and to effect this they have all along acted and still do act under any Masque they turn themselves Proteus like into any Shape to enkindle Strife and Contention amongst us Alas all our Schisms and unhappy Divisions flow from this bitter Fountain Oh that we would become wise and suffer our selves no longer to be cajol'd and deluded by them Oh that we may see in time the Things which belong to our Peace Oh that we would strive to answer the illustrious Character of the Primitive Church to be all of one Heart of one Mind and of one Soul to meet together with one Accord in one Place But to return I say it is not the
A SERMON Preach'd in the Cathedral and Metropolitical CHURCH OF St. Peter in York On Friday the Fifth of November 1697. Being the ANNIVERSARY-DAY of THANKSGIVING for that Great Deliverance from the Gunpowder-Treason And also the Day of His Majesty's Happy Landing in England With a POSTSCRIPT and Two LETTERS which clearly discover the Roman Designs against the English Church and Nation By GEORGE HALLEY A. M. and Prebendary of Ripon London Printed for and Sold by Tho. Baxter Bookseller in Peter-Gate York 1698. TO THE Most Reverend Father in GOD JOHN By Divine Providence Lord Archbishop of York His GRACE Primate of England and Metropolitan MY LORD WHEN I first compos'd this Discourse I had not the least Thought of sending it abroad into the World But partly thro' the Importunity of such as gave it a patient and favourable Audience and partly thro' the Reflections of some who without cause are Enemies to our Great and Triumphant Prince and partly thro' the Incredulity of others touching a Principal and Necessary Branch of true Repentance Restitution as also thro' the Hopes of its proving in some measure a happy Instrument to bring back into the Fold such Sheep as are gone astray I have adventured its Publication And now My Lord this humbly begs the Honour of Your Grace's Patronage and implores the Favour not to interpret the prefixing of Your Great Name to so mean and defective a Piece as great Boldness and Presumption but to accept it as a Specimen of Gratitude and Sincere Affection for all Your Kindnesses unworthily conferr'd upon me I am My Lord incapable of making Your Grace any other Return than this Publick Acknowledgement of them with Fervent Prayer to the Great Shepherd and Bishop of Souls to protect You and Yours and to continue so Great a Blessing as Your Grace is amongst us I am sure all the Flock committed to Your Pastoral Care have the Highest Obligations to render unto Almighty God and His most Excellent Majesty their hearty Thanks as well as gratefully to commemorate the late most Pious and Incomparable Queen for sending so burning a Light so bright and shining a Luminary amongst them In what an Ocean of Peace and Tranquility doth the Great Ship Your Large Diocess now Swim of which God and the King have constituted You the Supreme Commander You not only Direct and Govern but You pull at the Ropes and Sails with as much Vigour as any Common Mariner that Sails therein So Great is Your Lordship's Talent so Indefatigable is Your Industry in Preaching that Your Grace might justly with the late Lord Archbishop of Armagh make this the Motto of Your Archiepiscopal Seal Woe is unto me if I Preach not the Gospel That a Prelate so singularly Eminent for Great Parts and Abilities for Piety and Vertue Care and Diligence Meekness and Humility for Love and Charity may long Preside over and Adorn the Church of God is the Affectionate Desire and Ardent Prayer of My LORD Your Grace's most obliged Dutiful and Grateful Servant GEORGE HALLEY 2 COR. I. 10. Who delivered us from so great a Death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us THE Conjunction of Mercies which the Almighty so eminently and peculiarly wrought on this Day for our Church and Nation makes this Day an High Day a very great and glorious Festival A Day which upon a double Account ought to be had in everlasting Remembrance Not only for the Providential Discovery of the Snares of Death laid this Day for our Ancestors but for the late happy and astonishing Deliverance of us their Posterity from the imminent Danger of Popery and Arbitrary Power The impure Streams of Idolatry and Superstition had gone even over our Souls the proud and insulting Waves the Romanists had triumph'd over us for they began to rage horribly and swell they gnash'd upon us with their Teeth when their small Stock of Arguments was spent and by this time of Day we should have found their Teeth Spears and Arrows and their Tongue a sharp Sword the Romanists I say had triumph'd over us had not God sent us on this blessed Day a Deliverer to rescue us from Popish Tyranny when we were so near sinking under it Great Reason therefore have we to say with St. Paul God deliver'd us from so great a Death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet also deliver us In which Words consider we I. The great Death from which the Holy Apostle was delivered by God II. I will endeavour to shew you that God in this as well as in the Apostolical Age doth still deliver from Death III. What Method we must of absolute Necessity take to indear the Lord our God to oblige him still to protect and deliver us from Death Who deliver'd us from so great a Death and doth deliver in whom we trust that he will yet also deliver us But first In the first Place consider we the great Death from which the Holy Apostle was delivered by God By Death may be understood Troubles and Afflictions extream or uttermost Dangers Troubles and Afflictions in a Superlative in the highest Degree He was press'd out of Measure above Strength insomuch that he had almost black and desponding Thoughts he despair'd even of Life If he had not found more than ordinary Assistances of the good Spirit of God he had certainly sunk under them This is the doleful Account which he himself gives us at the Eighth Verse with the place too where those Troubles came upon him namely Asia What the Troubles were which he met with in Asia we are informed by St. Luke in the 19th of the Acts and the 23d Verse where we read of a Riot or unlawful Assembly a great Stir raised by one Demetrius a Silver-smith and the Workmen of like Occupation about the Doctrine of the Gospel because St. Paul had preach'd against the Images which they made and worshipp'd as confounded be all they that worship carved Images and that delight in vain Gods worship him all ye Gods because he had persuaded much People that they be no Gods which are made with Hands they came upon him in a furious and tumultuary Manner Further In the first Epistle to the Corinthians 15.32 we read if after the manner of men I have fought with Beasts at Ephesus what advantageth it me if the dead rise not Some interpret those Words of his Conflict with the same Demetrius and the Silver-Smiths who were like Beasts in their Conditions and Manners Others are of Opinion that he really was exposed in the Theatre to furious Beasts tho' peradventure he was only so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Purpose of Men the Magistrates had sentenced and condemned him to that Death but Divine Providence interpos'd and rescued him from the Execution of the Sentence Thus probably these Words of my Text relate to his Sufferings at Ephesus when God delivered him from so great a Death Further In the
been pleas'd to deliver our Glorious Prince from Death and in him us for if this our Light our Lamp had been quench'd in Battel What a Day of Darkness and Gloominess what a Day of Clouds and thick Darkness would there have been He may very justly be call'd the Light of our Israel for the Splendor and Greatness the Beauty and Glory the Conduct and Direction the Comfort and Safety the Welfare and Happiness of us his People flow from and depend upon him How often I say hath the Lord been pleas'd to deliver him from Death From Perils in the Field from Perils in the Sea from Perils by his own Subjects from a treacherous and bloody an horrid and barbarous Assassination And God will still deliver him and us if we be but obedient and conformable to his Divine Laws But if we will not be obedient if these manifold Favours and Mercies of the Lord will not influence and persuade us to Purity of Life and Holiness of Conversation how fatal will the Consequence be What can we look for but Ruine and Destruction Oh! We shall be consumed both we and our King We may assure our selves that all Engines are now at work to disturb our Repose our Peace and Tranquility Oh! that all such as move in sublime and honorary Orbs would have a vigilant Eye upon all the Enemies of our Constitution Oh! that all Magistrates would unanimously resolve to watch and study to preserve the People committed to their respective Charges in Peace and Godliness We may assure our selves there will be Hellish Plots and damnable Contrivances so long as there is either a Devil or a Jesuit in the World The Romanists will always bear us the same implacable Hatred we shall find them of the same diabolical Temper and malicious Disposition Now who can confound their Devices Who can deliver us from their Machinations but God and nothing can challenge or oblige him to do so but Piety and Vertue Alas if we do wickedly if we do not leave off our Ingratitude and Impiety our unreasonable Murmurings and Repinings if we still provoke him by Sins and Transgressions what terrible Effects will not these Things produce Oh! we shall be consumed both we and our King For search the lively Oracles of God the holy Scriptures and you will find there that God hath all along darted the Rays of Prosperity hath showr'd down all imaginable Blessings upon such Nations as feared him and wrought Righteousness and on the contrary God hath pour'd down the fiercest Instances of his Anger and heavy Displeasure upon such Kingdoms as trampled upon his Laws as affronted him by Wickedness and Impiety this hath been the constant Course of Divine Providence and in all probability will be so to the end of the World That was good and wholesome Advice which Achior gave Holofernes concerning the Jews Judith 5.21 22. My Lord and Governour If there be any Error in this People and they sin against their God this shall be their Ruine but if there be no Iniquity in their Nation let my Lord now pass by lest their Lord defend them and we become a Reproach before all the world And this salutary Advice we find confirm'd by Judith her self in the 11th Chapter and the 9th and 10th Verse As concerning the Matter which Achior spoke in thy Councel we have heard of it O Lord and Governour reject not his Word but lay it up in thine Heart for it is true our Nation shall not be punish'd neither can the Sword prevail against them except they sin against their God And indeed consider how God dealt with his own peculiar People the Children of Israel When they walk'd in his Statutes and kept his Commandments how transcendently great then was their Affluence and Prosperity the inestimable Blessing of Peace was then within their Walls and Plenteousness within their Palaces Quietness and Ease Unity and Love all imaginable Happiness they enjoy'd at home and the Almighty made them victorious and triumphant abroad they rejoyc'd under the Shadow of his Wings But when they became corrupt and abominable in their Doings when there was a general Declension from the Faith and Practice of True Religion then they ceas'd to be a happy and a prosperous People they were then led into Captivity their Enemies then oppressed them and had them in Subjection put upon their Necks the Chains of Bondage and intolerable Slavery Now these things happen'd unto them for Ensamples these things are written for our Learning and Admonition If we constantly walk before God in Holiness and Righteousness we shall then enjoy Happiness and Tranquility Peace and Plenteousness But if we apostatize from God and Goodness he will then have a Controversie with us Fire and Famine Sword and Pestilence his Judgments will then rage amongst us For if God spar'd not the natural Branches how can we expect he will spare us If we continue not in his Goodness that is if we stand not fast if we persevere not in the Faith in such a Faith as worketh by Love as lives and acts by Charity as is productive of all noble and vertuous Actions thus St. Paul argueth Rom. 11.21 22. It is infallibly true that Wickedness and Vice draws down God's Wrath and Vengeance upon any People that Looseness of Life and Corruption of Manners brings the most flourishing People to Ruine and Decay Oh! then let the Consideration of this important Truth oblige and enforce us to live up to the Precepts and Institutions of our excellent Religion God then will be our constant Friend and Benefactor God then will stablish the wonderful Things He hath been graciously pleas'd to work for us God then will continue to deliver our Sovereign Lord the King and us his People from Death from all the impious Plots and Conspiracies of his and our Enemies both at home and abroad God then will bless him and us with Temporal Peace and Happiness in this World and with eternal Peace and Happiness in the World to come Which God of his infinite Mercy grant for Jesus Christ his sake to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost be ascrib'd as is most due all Honour Glory Praise Thanksgiving Might Majesty and Dominion from henceforth and for evermore Amen THE POSTSCRIPT IN part of the fore-going Discourse I have slightly touch'd upon the unhappy Schisms and much to be lamented Divisions which now furiously rage amongst us and have shewed you the Spring from whence they flow namely the Jesuits and other Emissaries of the Church of Rome It is that Church which hath ever since our Blessed Reformation industriously sown the Seeds of Contention amongst us and it is much to be feared She hath now more than ever a pleasing Prospect of a plentiful Harvest It was that Church which was the Source and Origin of all the late Troubles and Confusions and She still endeavours with the same implacable Malice to set us at Variance and Strife amongst our selves This