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A33531 English-law, or, A summary survey of the houshold of God on earth and that both before and under the law, and that both of Moses and the Lord Jesus : historically opening the purity and apostacy of believers in the successions of ages, to this present : together with an essay of Christian government under the regiment of our Lord and King, the one immortal, invisible, infinite, eternal, universal prince, the Prince of Peace, Emmanuel. Cock, Charles George. 1651 (1651) Wing C4789; ESTC R37185 322,702 228

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may not be fit to be made publike yet the winding up as it is evident so the reasons of that issue may as some conceive fitly be accounted of at least to some specially appointed who are to be impowred to that particular end as the Ephori or Spartan Court who judged their Kings Actions the Tribunes at Rome and Democratie at Athens To this it is answered That the condition of the Commonwealth where the Rulers and Law givers are transient and personal are naturally inclined to more equality in dispensations then Kings who wholly labour to bring all to the power of their Successors Princes like them but the sons of the other are like to be under government The other reply that with all men present interest works and power present may if not bound and limited prove obnoxious and for private respects neglect publike profit in the Republike as in the Monarchick State for all are men nay experience hath manifested that many Senators have been corrupted to the betraying their estates to the Empire of a Foreigner never yet a King but to assure his Kingdom and so he was not corrupted The other return that these accidents of the world do not at all conclude more then what was done The ambition of most Princes hath made them true to themselves and the Covetize of some Senators made them false to their Country But the Question here is onely of the absolute judgement of the Supream Power and that is concluded positively to rest there in all dubious matters most unquestionably but for matters destructive to common good or to common Justice or against Reason they are allowed to be accountable Yet it is again replied these were the boundaries before to Kings and are the boundaries to all Powers all have generally broken in all sorts of Governments the examples of submissive accounting Supreams are rare one was found in Rome and one in Greece and to finde two more in all the world is difficult for who as these will be buried and have their daughters married of the publike purse when they have the Treasures of a Nation in their dispose and may benefit themselves much with little or no hindrance to the State Pitty it is the injustice of great men should give such cause of suspition and folly were it while men may not to set a bound and not to set it in the first setlements makes the proposal for the future difficult the establishment dangerous Therefore they propound that the Law be established as agreeable to the light of Nature examples of other States continued experience and not against divine institution The wise and just man will submit to that in himself which he holds requisite to require from an other The Parliament of England allowed the King a Judgement of the necessity but not che sole Judgement but that was because the Supremacy was not absolutely in him and all held fit not to vest absolutely Supremacy anywhere but in Law so that untill established by Law the matter is in question And though the time past when the Legislative power depended upon the Kings will and pleasure by his calling or not calling Parliaments as he pleased there might be some difficulty to settle dubious matters yet that Bar broken where can a let be unless we convert our mercy into a judgement Upon all this it is plain that there are many difficulties in the nature of Prerogative whereby to understand it clearly and truly All States that is the Supremacy of power do labor naturally to advance the so called Prerogative And the people generally ayme as much at liberty but Kings most and they more specially where the Crowns go by way of succession for the great part of personal Prerogative of a King dyes in a State except the Supream power will continue it but then it is requisite in such an alteration to settle justly and remedy fore-experienced and evidently foreseen evils therefore it is requisite that the continued complaints of men especially against the Kings Butlers the Clerks of the Pipe Chequer c. in their fees be setled for the paying and gaining of a Quietus upon a duty to the King is almost as much in Fees as the Rent it self Now I come to see 13. Whether the Supream power can grant the inferiour Prerogatives such as Wreck Forfeitures of Felons Royal Fishes Treasure Trove c. and How NOw for this it is plain first that the Kings have done it and these honours were never denyed for for most of them generally the charge of obtaining was as much to the Crown as the thing it self Therefore whereas they had Officers and Offices in every County attended upon every Court and some special Courts for Sea matters The Kings did give these as rewards to their Nobles and great men within special Precincts where in the primitive settlement of the Nation their dwellings were and so he was discharged of his Officers and the due Courts were let down and the Tryals were reduced all to his Court of Admiralty which as in all cases was and is a burthen intolerable to the Subject and to all impoverished persons Justice is by this turned into Gall and Vinegar especially to distressed persons by Sea for the poor people all along the Coast are like so many Harpyes wreck or no wreck all that comes to their net is fish and thus to save a little charge we are infinitely inhumane but by this it is plain all but the power of making Laws war and peace levying Moneys and some say Royal Mines are grantable by the Supream Power Provided that due means of Tryal of Right be preserved for the publique benefit otherwayes not Some say that this is generally true that is the Supream Magistrate hath power in all Laws meerly Civil but in cases religious or wherein properly the conscience may some say does scruple the Magistrates power ceases therefore it is fit to look a little at that and quaere 14. Whether the Magistrate be Keeper of both the Tables so called THey who make this controversie are not presently to be thought enemies to Magistrates nor enviers of Ministerial Dignity Some have admitted the Popes Primacy who have denyed his Supremacy others have given Princes all power some a Negative but not an Affirmative power in so called Ecclesiasticks or Church matters others take away the Popes Primacy for they take him away equalizing all Pastors and that that speciall designation befits no earthly person others bind up the Magistrates hands wholly some by denying Magistracie others by restraining him wholly to the name of Civils not sufficiently caring for by assured and preventive means those errors which have heretofore clouded the excellency of Magistracie by the pride of Church-men For were inherent holiness visibly and setledly and so infallibly tyed to either of these the Supremacy were determined but while they are all men they must have their bounds and limits Yet in the Kingdomes of the world the
power absolute and can punish have no rule but prudence in enlarging or restraining them they generally used banishment but this in successive or hereditary alterations upon the same ground of prudence cannot be safe therefore some have immured them and starved them some imprisoned them some cloystered them some privately murthered them but all these were acts of pure power and force and left but an implicite construction of Justice on their actions Our new and unparallelled Transaction doth I know to many seem Heroick and if established by Law upon this president would be an admirable adventure to hold an aw upon the spirits of great men and to that end they desire the explanation of the supream power or Magistrates Trusts and in what cases it shall be lawful to arraign them with the same legal provisions as King Charls tyed his own hands in the Act for a Triennial Parliament but I leave treating of this lest I grate to no purpose I come now to see 16. What are the Priviledges of Parliaments and in them of the Bars to the Supream Power FIrst we must consider that these meetings are according to the Rule of pure Native Law by the advice of many and those duly elected out of the people to avoid confusion to take care for the settlement of all those errors which intervening time produced since such an Assembly last Congregated and that both as to the Actions of the King in his Officers where the King was held unquestionable and therefore which was unjust in some part his servants were punished of the higher Magistrates and inferior Subjects either in a legal way according to the ordinary constitution of the Nation or extraordinary in case of emergencies for which no Law was provided The examples are manifest in both Now the priviledges of these men were and ought so to be whereever such bars are first that the due right of the subject might be preserved that those who were to be of the Parliament were duly chosen that is neither by fear nor favor which was from either open force or private warnings or requests to the friends or dependants of great m●… which were commands which how broken and still are even by Reformers themselves to their shame not of Reformation is evident The next priviledge is that being chosen they being now of special use and imployment for the publick themselves horses goods and menial servants were priviledged from Arrests distresses c. and only they for the law of entertaining by giving protections was a dispriviledge of the common Subjects for whose sake only they were priviledged and no more that other being but a meer Royal corruption by degrees to make them all seekers of interests upon that base Maxime that trusts were to their own benefit The next was to have free liberty to chuse their Speaker who was not to be disallowed but upon good Cause and that Cause they were Judges of for all see else the vanity of the formality if the approbation be upon meer will for then there is the power of Election and this Speaker they may also upon good Cause put out by the Votes of the greater number The next priviledge is That they have a free liberty to treate of all matters the assembling by Kings Writ the being called his great Councel are honors of Time and formal and cannot abridge their necessary liberty of free Treaty c. But their power appears in that they had the Guardianship of the peoples Lives Liberties and Estates and though in the variety of changes they did as all mortal Powers do sometimes submit sometimes inforce as the condition of Times were we must use a true foot and ascribe no more to them then is needful not plead presidents but Supream reason by which they therefore might and ought during the forty dayes Session a convenient time which by convention seems the time set during which the King could not dissolve them to receive Petitions from all places by turning themselves into Committees and hear how matters went with the Nation upon such Representations from the particular Counties Cities and Town therein addressed to the particular Members chosen by them for the aid of the whole Nation and upon these to call some say the Kings all agree all the Kings Officers of all sorts to their Accounts as Treasurers and that both for Land and Sea yea Officers of Peace as all Iudges c. and of War as General or Lord Marshal or by what other name or names on Land or Admiral or c. at Sea Captains of Forts and all others who managed the Revenues so called of the Crown that is for the publike benefit and this power is coincedent to every Bar to Supremacy And truely where this is not it is easie to believe the Supream Majesty may soon pretend all is intrusted to his own Will and for his particular benefit then they may adjudge and sentence but not in Committees but in the whole house otherwise there is no legal proceeding and really and purely this did and was to rest principally in the Representatives of the people who are the Commons the separation of the Houses as with us and the single power of the Lords to Iudge the Commons to accuse yet one Court is much differing from excellent Reason if not contrary to it that so right might be done to the whole Commonwealth against the out-breakings of the King and also to every particular person by restitution against the wrong doer yea though by the Kings Command or Commission if not agreeable to the Law Now the limited times of Parliament were necessary lest otherwayes they should abuse their Power or usurp Supremacy absolute and also become desperate debtors because of priviledge And lastly that while being men and capable of erring their false judgements if any were may be rectified by a new for it was and must be the priviledge of these highest Courts not to have ought done there by any of the Members questioned in any other Court onely Treason Felony and the Peace which being flagitious the excellency of Reason admitted no priviledge to for how could such enormous Transgressors of the Law be righteous Law-Makers The last priviledge is to have pay for their pains by a it should be equal rate upon all the Freeholders in the County that is they who legally had or might have had a Vote in the Choice and this allowance was to be set by Parliament and who could they better trust with a little of their estate then they whom they had formerly instrusted with the whole and this was not due till the end of Parliament So jealous is Reason of all Supremacy in the corrupted state of mankinde And surely none that is not actually in this height but will agree to this just Reason and he that is in if he intends onely a due use of it cannot deny it this is just betwixt these powers and them for whom they are intrusted for
draw all the world by the Clew of evident Reason and demonstrative Justice much more Authorities and when my reason could not prevail I would at utmost lift up my voyce in prayer with one hand and my heart and hold my sword in the other for my defence All that I say is be English men still war us not into slavery whom you were made souldiers to redeem from bondage but especially you Officers let not promotion cause you sit still because at case I cannot but give out one word of advice to the great and eminent City of this Nation you were sensible of evils past pride made you fat and you kicked with the heel Though the greatness of Trade be broken repine not break not out there is more lost in a day then can be gotten in a year vex not Strangers from your Potency nor Citizens by your Power Petition not against Will instead of Law in others and use far more irregularity and upon less ground your selves you heretofore gained the whole trading of the Nation into your company we are all English men shew us your Charter of Priviledge amongst the immunities of common Subjects will you admit that a particular Company in your City should of the Grant of the King have a priviledge to the detriment of your general Charter why should you then to the dammages of the whole Nation Agree therefore to just things give God the glory to part with quietly from the convictions of just Reason what you might happily hold either by Law or Power from your Grants if the Grant be now evil though not originally so for Reason making things lawful and being the bounds of Supream Monarches in general it cannot be excluded their particular Grants I know this will grate hard upon some among you but if Christians they will hear it were better to be less rich and less populous so more honest and better regulated you are at present yea after so long sitting under the Sword of the Vengeance of the Lord the sinke of abominable open prevailing sins you that should be the Head to the Body and the Eye to the Head in the greatness of Blessings going before others and being a Pattern and Example to all the rest as a Mother City as you have been stiled in the Nation you are not active for that glorious Regiment of divine Reason which as Christian is held forth to us in the Old and New Testament of our Lord and Saviour the Lord Christ Jesus you labour not in what is established by Law then sure it can be little expected that you should endeavor the Settlement of more it is a work of difficulty the opposition of the world will be but the world is overcome and this gives hopes of Conquest when we fight an Enemy that hath been beaten it s the course of the world to plead Presidents and then the highest are the best you are able do the work you have done much in settling a Magistracie in Chief set to the design this is of interest publike but cease not here fit them to the general end of Government as well as to the particular one of Opinion It s the way of all Corporations this may not be evil in Politicks but there is a better in States much more in Christianity And from you I pass to all Cities and Corporations You have evils every day which need remedy you spy errors in your Charters whereby you see you are no way able to act for publike benefit endeavour the Settlement by due consideration of just laws present them as is due to the Supream Magistrate let them settle the due priviledges and so enable by a standing Law the Rule of your Christian Government in a social frame Emulation may be hereby a spur to excellency of Order while the improving the same priviledges more or less will evidence the excellency of men which particular honor is the Bellows to blow up the spark of outward Vertue to a flame in a zealous or ambitious spirit And you rich men and men of parts in all places improve your Talents hold forth the Light God imparts to you for the healing of this languishing Nation The poor increase so vastly through continued and unrepaired losses at Sea and from the deadness of trading at Land that unless some course be taken all must to wrack besides the mercilesness of Wretches who sell the poor for a pair of Shooes some by forging Judgements and making folks to compound some under colour of Warrants breaking open of houses being Bayliffs and that at midnight and then by the Justice its said Justices of the Peace let go with onely restoring the goods again and this since acted in several places they passing unpunished otherwhere a Bailiff upon a Judgement of one hundred and eight pound upon a debt of forty pound out of the Common Pleas whereby ten pound sixteen shillings is due to one Officer for one Fee as dammage clear out of their estate who are not worth one farthing comes and makes seisure of a whole Shop of goods worth by estimation above two hundred pounds in Grocery and other small wares of Silk Buttons Lace Ribbonds Linnen and Woollen cloath c. besides all the Housholdstuff not leaving a bed to lie on or stool to sit on and these are by whole Sale as they say without any Inventory or due apprisal carryed away and yet no Judgement satisfied that is not fully forty six pounds is all can be made out of these goods Men constantly Arrested onely to force them to compound for stand out a Suit they are undone yet who becomes careful to give or crave relief in these matters Thus the poor and miserable people are daily utterly undone from Forms of Law and the priviledge is in the Form O Englishmen deceive not your selves and others with shadows These so more then evident errings wandrings failings and unreasonable unjust procedures of so called and proud of as striving for the name of best purest holiest c. Christians are the gaps and inlets to all those strange unheard of Opinions those Blasphemous and unnatural bestial actions and audacious Printings which there is such a stir withal in the world lay ought to their charge they recriminate and bespatter fouly and soyl hangs For the letter of the Scripture if Christians plead that they are gone it is as killing under the Gospel as the Law for the letter of Scripture and the lives of Christians are as different as life and death hell and heaven This in contemplative heads convinced of duty works high and assuredly brings forth all those Enthusiastick Rapsodies which so amaze the world these urge them by degrees to greater heights of so called zeal for Gods Truth and then after a Prophetick strain they utter things hard to be understood I cannot see any ground why any should be led away after them nor give any credit to their sayings No I rather believe it to be the
Nimrod who notwithstanding he had elder brothers yet took the power of government upon him yet it s conceived he went no further then the government of his own family the heads of families appearing in the same age with him in the offspring both of Shem and Japhet and t is not probable that in those times the government was mostly such for they might have enough in one family for one man well to govern considering the many hundreds of years those ancients lived and the mind of man might well then be contented with it the profit was care and the honor duty and the end only safety against brutish invasion which course is as most natural so most conjectural untill the contrary be proved And most assuredly as their families increased even after the dispersion so divided they the land as well as in the dayes of Peleg and though it may be conceived that in this dispersion and confusion of languages the seed or occasion of future Discords Wars Jars and such like was sown yet it is probable that the earth in the fulness thereof being before them and the remembrance of kindred being fresh they did not immediately break out into blood by forcing a disseising or putting them out of possessions who were in but those unprovided sought out habitations and their numbers in their respective progresses increasing they sent out what we call Colonies The chief leader or Colonel of which was as is most likely the most Ancient who also gave forth to them the general law of their fathers whether traditional or otherwaies and the next in degree of age as the fathers of many children were accounted as chiefs next that cheif or King and these by Scripture according to that phrase in the time of Moses writing when now the world was grown to some setlement in disordered order were called Princes But these soon wax out the remembrance of their neerness of blood for surely where God was not regarded man was neglected forgetting God and his Law and private interest increasing the issue was divisions Wars and Jars The just might separate and divide as did holy Abraham and just Lot but the wicked fought for it and by power obtained their will and that law or liberty of blood-letting once admitted there was no stint of strife they renewed the Wars as the season of the year gave opportunity and with this strife out of all question came in against the law of nature the servitude of man to man and therewith also a confusion of families as to pure discent But let us pass on and hast the Lord makes now his family in the houshold of Abraham by especiall Covenant of promise with him and his seed rejecting all other Nations Yet how that rejection wrought is difficult for Melchizedech Abrahams contemporary was a holy man and assuredly kept purely the law of his fathers supposed of Shem though living amongst the accursed Cananites so Pharoah King of Aegypt to whom the Lord communicated his error in taking Abrahams wife and more especially Abymelech King of Gerar who apprehensive of Gods indignation for the same thing prayeth as one and that not only of himself but as of a Nation that knew and kept the Covenant of the Lord Wilt thou also destroy a righteous Nation said he not she is my sister But to proceed This Abraham is called a mighty Prince yet Arms but three hundred and eighteen this confirms what was before asserted shewing what Kings and Princes then were for these were to fight four Kings and manifestly proves the generality to be but heads of families though the Assyrian had now conquered many families mark also Abrahams complaint for lack of an heir urging his power and estate to difcend to Eleazar his chief servant These things are inserted only to lead the weak reader in a plain path way of historicall narration therefore this one example might suffice but this must be more then seconded both in Isaac the child of promise and Jacob and his progeny Isaac was Abrahams heir both of goods and graces yet falls into the offence of Abraham his father and for safeguard of his life denieth his wife And as a King governing his family hath issue Esau and Jacob Twins and although the birth right of divine blessing is by Isaac given to Jacob yet the temporall inheritance was to Esau which primogeniture is several waies and in the right of it acknowledged to Esau by Jacob whose substance was the gift of his God in and for his faithfull service he performed to Laban But le ts hast to see Jacob in his full grown family discended into Aegypt and there continued the time appointed by Gods promise during whose servitude while the yoak of Pharoah gauled the necks of his off-spring the way which God used to perform and fulfill his promise of freedom t is strange to flesh and blood you can look for no other government upon their shoulders then the whips of the Taskmasters untill the time of deliverance from the Lord comes who raiseth up Moses to be their saviour and leader but the judgements of his mouth during the whole course of his government were for the greatest part extraordinary even from the mouth or Spirit of the most high God which although it shews how nigh a relation holiness and obedience can work betwixt man and God yet so far it sheweth not ought as exemplary to us in our present Magistracy either the superior or subordinate in ordinary jurisdiction neither the Acts or judgements of any of those Judges afterwards in such special causes of evident supream either direction or assistance neither during their forty years peregrination in the wilderness nor in their daies of rest untill they called for a King nor indeed at any time That is we are not to take what ever one judges supream or subordinate in ordinary jurisdiction or legall government say as a binding word issuing from an infallible spirit or accompanied with such divine directions But according to the respective laws and customs of the place and Nation wherein we live ordered according to the reason and necessity of intervening accidents wherein those general rules which nature teacheth of self preservation and of preferring generals before particulars and general and common good before particular alwaies presumed nought be done contrary or destructive to any part of Divine rule must by all men as was by them be observed But seeing all that Moses did was not extraordinary let us a little view his behaviour in the course of this narration even of that man with whom so extraordinary a spirit rested for his first actions I leave the reader wholly to Scripture only this he was under persecution from his infancy being then exposed to the mercy of the waters only for what I shall specially aim at shall be and are his acts judicial and those either in referenre either to Church or Common-wealth The first law of Moses mouth was not only
otherwise He that will rule let him be servant be not like the Princes of the world but yet this as most cohering with naturall reason and the custome of Princes and that the decree might be fulfilled was accepted by the Princes of the earth and now the Crozier and the Crown went together in England for the Princes were generally zealous of the Law after once admitted it may be politickly but I judge not although that from the power of the Romanes here so long ruling there was a foundation laid of good and just Laws and holding much consonancy with the Judicials of Moses yet the many barbarous and irrational customes and usages especially those that were unchristian were by the Kings with the consent of their people abolished and extinguished and there was one generall Law received which was That nothing was to be done taken or holden for Law which was contrary to the Law of Almighty God meaning the Law of Moses which they took to be the speciall Rule of Morall Wisdom and if once sanctiated by the Bishop undenyable if not infallible and though it is like as in all other Ages and places the alterations of old and long received Laws and introduction of new was difficult and dangerous yet this Age being a warring Age and Souldiers little book learned and yet the Princes of the earth the vulgar people were far less so that the many followed the mighty and obedience was more pure then then now though more easie to be corrupted so that the Kings beleeved the Bishops the Lords the King and the people the Lords and thus it was that whole Nations even on a sudden became professors of Christ I say not Christians and though the Monks of Bangor would not seeing the pride of Augustine submit to him yet the King converted power effected what prayer would not but this bred a worse stir after for these Monks still living in their simplicity and preaching faithfully requiring nothing but being contented with what the people gave were more pleasing to the people then they who were not only imperious and proud but covetous also so called in requiring and enforcing Tythes according to the Mosaical Law and this was tryal enough for generally men love to be of that Religion that costs them least Parishes were not yet known they had not in these dayes nor many hundred years after such clear light in Christs Discipline as to finde that civil prudential thing in the book of Religion but men gave who would give their Tythes to the Ministry these in each County or Diocess or Precinct notwithstanding all learned oppositions of the so called Clergy were treasured in common the Bishop if any were as the High Priest or Priest had his portion or Tythes out of the whole and the Pope was to have his Tyth afterward called Annate or yearly Offering from him besides first fruits paid originally by every Minister or Monk for they then generally were the Ministers though not only to the Bishop upon his introduction and the Bishop to the Pope all pretending s●…ill after the pattern of the Jewish Church So also was it in their Courts by way of gradation admitting appeals and that at last to the Pope himself which though upon the first ground each Prince ought to have allowed yet some Princes finding the evils in time by alienating the hearts of their Subjects from them subjugating purse and person to a stranger for so high these Popes at last went other Princes spying the rents in other mens Dominions avoided it in their own so that they either never allowed or sought to avoid if before admitted such appeals upon this nevertheless at length sprung up controversies not only between the Pope and other Princes but also between the Princes of the Earth in the respective Nations of the world and the Bishops both also using the same arguments of duty and allegiance the Pope by reason of being the Vicar of Christ the King the same the difference was the one was in Spirituals the other in Temporals this hath made the Bishops not only combine against their Soveraign for the Popes Cause but even the people for some pretending conscience have served the Popes and Bishops lusts against their Soveraign and many times either for necessity or necessitated by superstition against their own as well as the Kings Interest And thus by degrees what the Spirituality as they termed themselves had obtained in other places is granted in England and the marvaile was not so much at what was granted but that no more was when even the Crown it self was holden in homage at last of the Popes Holiness so called And now were the people all fitted to receive even what should be imposed upon them I cannot but observe again that these Ages were very ignorant so that the Church-men for want of others were without scruple commonly if not generally admitted the Seats of Judicature in the ordinary Law Courts of the Kingdome and were the prime men of the Kings Councel so that there was nought to hinder but only the pride and power of some warlike Noblemen who in emulation still opposed the Bishops and as the Age grew more knowing began to stickle against them But now the pride of Rome come as it were to the highest pitch even as all other things have their rises stops and declinings even so had this but that it might not fall alone nor want strong supporters against the pride of Princes which Rome thought would be ready to push at her she drives on a fury in spurring the people to depose their Princes upon her Excommunications the dire effect of which all Christian Nations so called felt more or less though more especially Germany so this our England and truly the people might well be apt enough to it for that most Princes had as their Rights of Prerogative taken from all but their Souldiers whose swords upheld them in their Majesties and so they upheld them in their acquests be they good or bad and from the Priesthood then generally so called whose superstitions should work an awe upon their spirits all that could be called an immunity much more the Rights of a free people and that people should be slaves to their Prince is not found in Reasons Lesson and that any prime Nation in Europe was the Conquest of any of their Kings I read not true it is Castile conquer'd all the rest in Spain so the French were reduced into one so others and so our England the conquer'd yet in length of time enjoying almost like grace with their fellow Subjects but with us in Wales we were made one This caused oft and dangerous tumults wherein still a Priest bare his part but things of long date being incertain we shall now come to look at the last great mutation in this our England and carry along the business of the Commonwealth from the time of William the first sirnamed the Conqueror as principally eying
clearly evince that those national meetings were and are not only the most natural and prudent means of composure of civil differences but also proper to this Nation the due rights of which were alwaies contended for This contest wrung away from the King those two great Charters of priviledge called Magna charta charta de foresta being the express limit and boundary of the Prince that he might not upon occasion fly out after upon his title of conquest the subject matter of them are evident to each mans veiw they are generally consonant none contrary to right reason they are restraints of the Princes absolute will or of Governing according to his own lust and declarative to the subject what he might trust to establishing indeed the right of property meum and tuum against that high point of levelling which the Princes of this Land as of all other Nations sought after not only the great men Mountains Lords but even the Mole-hills the meanest Subjects to the nod beck word of this man God the King The Lords and others saw this wherefore they bound the King by oath but what coard is able to hold a covetous much less an Ambitious spirit first therefore they plead duress or constraint and I must ingenuously acknowledge there was force against force another King confirming it in his minority or under the Age of twenty one years he thinks this a loose to his oath as if he were old enough to vow but not to perform and to these refuges of the Princes the Lawyer could give excellent colours and now the master-piece was to set the work afoot in a legal way and the Judges of the land were to determine this part they were sworn to the King and therefore they must give their advice and afford their best assistance to him the histories publike say it was an enforced opinion whereby they annihilated all the principal priviledges in the grand Charter putting at once the sword and purse of the kingdom into the Kings hand upon necessity making him to be judge of the necessity for the great trust reposed in him as King for the benefit of the Common-wealth and of this faithfulness there must be no doubt this was in the time of a weak wilful yong Prince so that the Lords in Parliament for who else durst budge or stir question the Judges as betraiers of their trusts and the liberties of the people and make them examples by hanging them at the common Gallows There were then men whose judgements and opinions were as absolute for this King and his actions these men and their determinations as might be who cried out upon the Lords and the Parliament as Rebels Subverters of the Law the setled Law and that by the opinion of sworn men the Judges magnifying the King as one that did but intend to take away the Root Spawn and seed-plot of Rebellion for while a power of contest or visible cause thereof remained which these Charters had often manifested themselves to be there would be no visible security for a setled peace if the Lords might judge of one right or privilidge of one part of the Kings prerogative why not of all if so as good be no King this was the Court dialect and of their dependants and this controversie ceased not till at last the King had ruined all the power of the Lords and now all was safe the Kings therefore to divert the stream of affection in the people from seeing into the invasion of their liberties propound Wars in France wherein being successful they please the people with smal things and take away great but especially curtail the Lords of that absolute dependance which was upon them by their under-Tenants granting the use of Magna Charta and the other Charter as Law but breaking it upon all occasions in times of War and then complying in times of peace and truly this was the State of England for the space of about three hundred years after the Conquest But you will say why did the Pope suffer this why did not he as the common and spiritual father of the whole Christian flock use his power both over the great Ram the King and the lesser cattel and younglings of the flock what such devastations murderings perjuries and other evils as must of necessity follow so many Warlike conflicts under Christs kingdom the Lion and the Lamb were to feed together and the Wolf and the Kid to lie or couch together Truly the Pope had ever an Oare in the Boat of the Common-wealth But know Rome was now the Princess and Queen of Power she raised up the people to scourge Princes disobedient to her not those obedient they should whip the people to the bare bones and this juggling appeared and there were open complaints even to Princes against the Vicar of Christ But as the Princes to appease their Subjects propound War against a neighbour Prince yea though Christian for now great men and Princes being become Christians it was hard to know whether Christians were Christians yea or not their actions were so far different from their professions So the Popes to take the Christian Princes off of their intentions to look into his Court and customes propound War against Turks and Infidels a holy and specious pretence to redeem Hierusalem from the hands of heathens still the Jewish pattern by this he hath a double advantage for his chief Enemies gone that is the most active and most zealous Princes for reformation he propounds the same to others but discharges them of their oath for they that went did so for many others he employed against his private Enemies that is Enemies of his leudness wickedness and apostacy from the faith of God the Kings of the earth making a league with the whore and drinking of the cup of her fornications and shall no doubt of her destruction also so that they who should and ought being taken off from punishing her God raised up poor despicable Creatures yea taught Babes and Sucklings to vindicate his truth as the so called Waldenses Albingenses poor men of Lyons in France and boundaries of Italy Wickliff with us John Huz and Jerom of Prague with the Germans and others with others thousands of which the Pope in the teritories of France caused to be murdered by souldiers sworn for Hierusalem Now as the Popedome was corrupted so was the generality of all the Bishops Doctors and Priests in all places they had an abundance of riches fat paunches and lean pates they had now found out an easie method of serving Christ they were in the years of the Churches prosperity that themselves agree and we believe that was the great reason they took so little pains The Kings had reserved donations of Bishopricks to themselves and riches and honor the nourses of ease were what all strove for these dependances held the generality close to the Kings if any opposed it was pride stirred up anger that they were omitted and
others either preferred before or above them yet even in this time the name of religion was venerable and truly the faith of many or rather the credulity or superstition of most with abundant charity was everywhere perspicuous love of God drew some but Pride Lust Covetize Ambition Ease and such like drew a multitude to speak of the multitude of vain and superstitious attractives I count needless as fitting rather itching ears then solid heads yet this gangrene over spred the whole body of the Christian Common-wealth and it was no miracle for miracles were become common and now the Church slept in greater security then before for who durst oppose the word of the Pope and the sword of Princes for seeing fire and faggot the ax and halter were now in the hands of the chief Christians what cause of fear to the servants of Christ and what need the Kings fear if they had the Pope to their friend yet divers of them repined seeing so much of the temporall estate each day slipt away under Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction so called as that in the time of Henry the fourth of England when it was complained of in Parliament that the third part of the Land and revenue of the whole kingdome was in the Church-mens hands and it was petitioned to take some away the first publick act of the people of England against the jurisdiction and estate of the Bishop of Rome although in the case of Johns grant of the kingdome to the Pope to hold in fee of him The Lords dis-owned the power of the king to grant as having no more but a trust in the kingdome but they did not hint that his Holiness could not take and it was vain when they saw he gaped for more then he took and took more then was his due The succeeding Kings were either so given to forreign wars or troubled with the intestine divisions of the houses of York and Lancaster that now they were forced to own Parliaments yea to take the chief strength of their Title from their determinations There had been a Law made formerly to have Parliaments once a year for as the Kings of England sought to avoid those publick conventions of the most potent Lords and popular Commons for divers most evident reasons as they conceived and upon their unjust grounds truly destructive to their Royalty for there their actions were continually questioned the actors by personal command of the Kings against Law or labouring the abolishing the Laws either fined or hanged or otherwise punished and though some Parliaments went cross to others some even justifying the acts of kings against Law and their abettors this invalidates not the power of the Parliament but confirms it for by these Acts the kings after made Title so that here the Parliament got into their hands and that upon motion of the kings even the power of appointing the king and this arose from that bloody contention between those two houses But you will ask was not the Title clear yes without doubt but the Estates that is the Parliament upon the great dislike of the present Government their hearts being alienated from a dissolute and riotous Prince sought out the man among them of the Race with whom the potent men could drive the best bargains for Riches Honor and promotion and ever or mostly though the love and zeal of the Laws Liberties but especially of Religion gave the first blow to the quarrel and suited it yet interest espoused wedded owned and enjoyed it so easie are the best natures to be corrupted and depraved by outward excellencies or esteemed excellent things But it may be Quaeried what all the succession of Princes all this while did for the Church truly all they could both by themselves and Subjects multitudes of Churches Monasteries Fryeries Nunneries Abbies Chappels all planted in the most pleasant delicious places of the Nation admirable and costly structures richly furnished largely endowed both with lands and yearly profits of Tythes onely to send a brother to preach and now the common maintenance of the Church or Church-men ceased and was made proper and after was drawn into that civil order which we now call a Parish being a limitation of the bounds of the Church for care of souls and maintenance and though indeed there was so great a sufficiency yet even then many of the Clergy were in want it may be the Pope thought it fit some of Christs Servants should be like their Master I mean of that so called and justly at first the Fryers of Saint Francis Order according to their stile commonly called the Begging Fryers for so they did upon conscience of the Rule of our Saviour Go forth into all the world take no care for any thing one coat no money not a staffe no nor sandalls these went bare-foot preached diligently expecting onely what God moved peoples hearts to bestow upon them for they beleeved that God that said The labourer is worthy of his hire would not suffer them while they laboured to want That Rome testified against Rome admitting truth for truth though living in Errour yea many of these preached against the Errours I say not of the Church but of the Court of Rome wisely as it was beleeved covering their mothers nakedness with the Fig-leaves of their temporal acquests but all were not so politick some spake plainly against the Bishop of Rome in all Ages and preached Rome Babylon and the Pope Antichrist and it might well be for Rome come to the height of outward greatness so that the Mahumetans who look for an earthly Paradise excelling and abounding in all carnall delicacies could not have desired more it fell into the sink of enormity all debauchery riotousness and prophaneness and exalted it self not onely against God kicking with the heel now she was fat but above God under the power of the Keyes for she dispensed with the very Commandments of the Almighty giving licence not onely to unlawful but even to incestuous marriages which hath filled Christendom so called with all those horrible and direful effects of wrath upon all Nations which now of late years have fallen out especially upon the Kings Princes and great men the great Merchants whose lusts would admit no denyal and so traded with this spirituall harlot for some of her trash and paint to give a colour to all their incests murders perjuries lyes adulteries rapines thefts extortions and such like and let all the families of Europe look to themselves they boast to be descended of Kings ally'd to all the great Princes of Europe but have they not therewith an allyance to the judgement which will it is probable follow these sins till the blot be utterly worn out and let them look to it they hold not but by this beast and will be destroyed with her mistake not I say not all Kings or kingly power or Rule or Government but the issue of Incest and the spawn of unlawfull Lusts I must now return to the
that he found not absolutely buxome that is without any scruple to yeild compliance to his absolute will he by his power removed and displaced to this end after one contest with one he changed the stile of the Pattent this raised an odium and at least he must bear the blame for by whose insinuations or abuses so ever it was done Yet while no man can force a resolved man who can force a King and the last and great Act being his the whole was adjudged to him yet not alone An other Act of great judgement to his end was the constant use of proclamations declarative not only of the Law but his pleasure in other lands called Edicts or Acts of the King alone or his saying or will resolved into Law these were at first put out upon things benificial for the Subject and were as it were a temporary Law of exigency or provision by the King for what the Law was either being antiquated and now revived or els that for which there was no Law in the case yet necessary to be provided for and so was a time of Tryal or an Act of probation against the next Parliament And these powers were never denyed Kings formerly or but seldome being but seldome used and generally upon good grounds so that no disobedience followed but at last his proclamations were divers of them though carrying a colour of Law slighted But he being of a very quiet spirit could not enter a contest but sought to work his end an other way and that was to call Parliaments And to create new Honors and so over-vote and consequently over-power the Parliament debasing Spirits by dependance and this having a strong influence upon the Gentry dulled now with long peace a natural politique of this Prince and not the least conducing to his end if he could or would have known when to have taken up the sword as he supposed they would for they were generally so besotted of these Court bables of honor that upon his or a great mans letter who their Lordships pleased was made a Parliament man and the House of Lords and Commons the Bar or Clyff against the Torrent of Tyranny was become an inlet to that Ocean but there was one great jealosie still which was a bar and this was the Kings excessive prodigality to his own Nation who were as greedy to aske as he to give so that the English grew a little I may say a great deale discontented especially the understanding sort But more upon the judgement so called given concerning the naturalization of a Scot ipso facto by the Union of the Crowns in one person as if all the rights priviledges and immunities of the free-born people of England were become hereditary to the Scottish Nation by one born in Scotland being next of blood and so inheriting the Crown of England And though great and wise men had their hands in this work and saw no evill in it yet they that were as wise though not so great and more uninterested and so less questionable were otherways minded supposing that this extraordinary favour to that Nation the seconding and approving of it by so many wise men and supposed affectionate patriots zealous of the liberty of the English Nation though it seemed to them as but a wise and civill policy and Act of munificence not much to be supected of danger carried hay in the Horn namely by this and such like plots fitted them to introduce and continue quietly what they all thought fit of necessity to be done the order of episcopacy in that Church and with that the whole liturgie of the Church of England with all those rites and ceremonies thought requisite as in the Church of England which the King upon petition of some Ministers at his first coming to the Crown was fully resolved in I mean in the conference at Hampton Court and the consequence of it By which he was resolved not to alter what the late Queen Elizabeth had established But these men believed that as this was indeed aimed at and this aime publikely allowed so that there was an other intention which lay hid and undiscovered and that was to force Scotland in case of opposition by English Armes and to provoke each other to these several works by a short kind of policy the Scot was engaged so as he must yeild what was his chiefest glory And if he yeilded not the English thus disrellished would be quick to the quarrel This I say not to be the Kings aime No I believe he might see no more then the plain surface matter and never be able to discover either this intended by some or that other politique which I now relate intended by others who yet drove on the same design but as supposing that it was a certain way to involve the two Nations in a War which their conditions required but his resolution was to keep all quiet and truly knowing of the Scotch temper he urged but inforced not commanded but compelled not and though he better approved Englands Hierarchical order he would not utterly reject the rigidity of the Scotch Presbytery though he had found some cross dealings at their hands which in England would have been called the scandal of the Crown and were not altogether savouring of a Christian modesty and humility were it but for the Kirk to command a Fast on that day the King had appointed a solemn Feast of State and that after the Feast was publikely known and divulged I mention but a peccadillo and that under a supposition because I would not apply that to things which may be was and will be only the errour of persons during the reign of these two princes Elizabeth and James notwithstanding the many complaints of the excess and defects of the Laws in their several respects yet nothing was done truly worthy the supream powers by them claimed there were some particular streams or rivulets of errour amended or at least pretended by particular Statutes both in giving Laws where none were and amending what was amiss but out alas the Ocean whence all these had their rise was still the same Three special Statutes I must here remember of James one to punish with death him or her that had two wives or two husbands but not made death to commit Adultery yet as I have heard canvassed at the same Parliament this Statute severely executed The second as rigidly which was concerning them that were or are delivered of Bastards pretended dead born and having no witness present to be taken as murderers The last was the regulating of the number of Attornies for good cause there specified which never was so much as in the least observed nor a Judge ever questioned for it yet this as to the world and in carnall respects of as necessary concernment as the other I shall not progress further here concerning ought being now come to the portall of the Theater of all Quaeries in the multitude of questions
performed or otherways adorning Churches the several Manners Places Times of bowing gesture and order of pronunciation at or in reading all not only discoursed of but applauded and generally practized adoration at the entery of the Church and also at departure and that to the East all for uniformity the great and special pretence of the so called Church that is the Bishops the Fathers of the Church according to their own stile Bowing or Genuflexion or Adorations to at or of the name of Jesus Extream unction Confirmation Pennance all practised yea a Nuntio of the Pope but not so owned yet well known and which troubled the people most of all a raile of wood or other partition betwixt the so called Priest and people at the receiving the Sacrament so called of the Altar and this of necessity and the words of administration purely Popish as yet in the directory But all persons without question in the parish admitted to the Sacrament as by Law was established these things setled they haste for power to the further setlement of the Church in power and purity and by the Kings power they are convened and called the sacred Synod where they Act with large commission and fearing counter-buffs of Providence by them called Fortune they denied the Pope but admitt Popery in its full height and to evidence the Antichristianisme they establish their Hierarchy with an oath with that famous clause of c. labouring as the brood of old Rome to bring all Temporal jurisdiction under ecclesiastick censure and this was the condition of the Church or Churchmen or Clergy men so called I shall now as shortly give you a veiw of the civill State as the necessity of perspicuity will well permit You have heard upon what a politique Basis William so called the Conqueror founded his Empire which yet from evident causes declining even in the space of his own and Sons Raign did evidently shew the frailty of all humane wisdome and therefore might well in the space of six hundred years be brought to nothing and truly once for all to say it I am in my conscience perswaded that King Charles did see the want of Law in this land to govern the Nation rightly and upon that foundation sought to mould the kingdom to the similitude of other Nations for it is a sure and certain principle that States grow old and Laws c. And if not reduced by reformation there is a necessity of a new formation Now the chief thing which a Prince looketh at is the power of War or the Sword and this so far as the power rested in the King which was his Tenure was clean lost and gone for the many transmutations of possessions had made many litigious questions partly through the corruption of officers not duly awarding process against alienators without license partly other defects of certain boundaries and partly the evill of time which had through divers discents parcelled great estates into many persons So that there were many Tenants but few Knights and what was at first an honor to hold of the King or by Knights service because the Tenants Son and Heire should yet come to the education of a Lord paramount or higher then the Father and so should be bettered both for Arts and Arms the Kings of late years had made them absolutely but the fees of their Servants and the Heirs of gallant men were as bad as slaves to the will of the Kings Grantee whereby they were yoaked unequally in marriage or their estates were generally squeised of sometime a third sometimes a fourth or fifth part in the Court of Wards so that they that should have been the Princes guard as it were being thus prejudiced in their minority and drinking in hastily the complaints of their friends bewailing their Wardships as an insufferable vassalage could not heartily seek to maintain that power whose subsistence was their ruine to eternity in all their progeny and through the long tract of time it was grown to this that almost any great or rich mens Son must be a Ward all Titles of Lands being so exceedingly intricated that it was almost impossible to clear it and this rigor was never higher then in the daies of this King so that it is evident for a setled Militia for his own defence he had none but had left himself naked to the strokes of any timely opposition Next as he had robbed himself thus of power so had the example of all the Kings in part and the power from jealousie in other part devested the Lords of all power military by dependencies of Knights service The Oathes of homage and fealty the Kings had respited them to enhanse a revenue and the Lords were not willing to urge that which had been so fatall to many their predecessors through their dependencies and being now grown generally loose lazy or worse from the long peace we had enjoyed they had no contests but at Tennis Drinking Dicing or worse sports and sometimes a Law suite These yet sunk many of their estates and they had no waies of raising them but by the Kings sole favour for there were no Lords now that had absolute power in any County this made them wholly quiet and the rather because to be of an active warlike spirit gave cause of jealousie to a Prince especially of any who were not meerly his creatures namely of ancient popular Nobility that is their Ancestors of great repute with the people Many therefore retired themselves lived privately and quietly in respect of the Court but few of them with great love in the Countries where they were resiant carrying too severe a hand towards their Tenants by racking of Farme-rents and otherwaies as Lords of Mannors enhansing fines as all the Gentry also at their own wills enclosing of Commons for private profit and by the evill example both of themselves Servants and Retainers bringing a general Lewdness Looseness ād debauchery in religion and civill manners into all the quarters of the Nation For the Country still at least as far as it may or can imitates the Court and so downward by this means a general almost universal pravity and corruption stole upon and got possession of the English Nation not that I think to speak once for all that England was worse in any respect eirher for civill or Ecclesiastick government then any other Christian kingdom no but that it had departed from that purity of Government which it self held forth and had in some measure exercised yet was then taxed to hold forth little of a true Christian Government at all for first though the Sabboth was held moral yet it was prophaned and that by publique authority as by the book of sports which also gave such a loose to the power of the master of the family that he could not govern by an exact rule that power being before too much broken and this opened a gap to all inordinate walking towards magistracy in other both superior and
chargeable this is destroying property in honest English for cutting up young Timber felling young stands underwood and the like with many other wrongs no law no remedy evident or practised Alter but the Law of hanging for Felony and this and a thousand things will the learned make Felony streight if you give but two-fold restitution or servitude for a set time to be by you appointed But especially look to give speedier Law in the proper places to at least the poor or small matters it is necessary to Commissionate some for the speciall Counties and that to determine all suits both in Law and equity the want of this is the main root of growing poverty and that upon Petition without formalities of Bill and Answer Declaration and Plea give a stop to cursory Writes of Error and regulate executions for under Sheriffs and their Officers have need of it if any I love the Reason of our Laws and am as much against Tyranny or pure Arbitrary Government as any man I honor the learned and upright Lawyer and would have vertue learning yea and service in all due Offices should be regarded and rewarded I allow the necessary dependances of inferiours in all ranks upon the supream or absolute powers respectively it is but the unnecessary fruitless or destructive interests that are opposed which every just man will stand for both with life and estate And by you Right Honorable in your prosecutions thereof let no private respect take you off it is not only reason but necessity calls to you for it therefore on in the excellency of strength fear not a clash with any corrupt interests whatsoever onely what is just let it be done justly it is the eminencie of Vertue alone can make your enemies hearts yours though power may conquer their persons By this time it is time to winde up my Clue of History wherein I profess in the presence of God I have to the utmost of my skill and knowledge waved all bitterness and what ever might justly give occasion of offence I yet know some will be taken by men of all tempers I nor no man that will speak truths in such a season of interests can expect to please all if it be hardly possible at any time I shall as God shall enable me go on the assistance of whose gracious Spirit I humbly crave and hold forth what the Law of pure reason agreeable to the divine word hath established to be the Rule for the exercise of Justice and of Righteousness among Christians But some will expect that I should speak one word to our so much pleaded boundaries to Preregative and Rule of Priviledge Magna Charta so called and the Petition of Right more then what hath been said I suppose needless to shew that they respectively in their seasons were but the beginnings of that freedome which the Subjects of those times breathed after they are to us or were before these divisions brake out but the reducing as I may say of speculative or notional Liberty into a way of practicall or real Freedome for what was before only in the breast of the Judge was now in English letters made obvious to each mans sense so that they after pleaded that Letter against any contrary walkings whether in the King or his Officers So that Magna Charta is not pleaded as the utmost due of the English Subject nor the Petition of Right but as those things which are so essentiall in the generalty to any Nation that even the Kings must afford them or they are not just And the Rulers must act accordingly or they are betrayers of Trust And if it be impartially discussed it will appear that the private interest of Princes or the power intrusted for publick benefit abused for self-ends hath been the ground of the principal opposition to Prices for where hath the excess of power or stretching the Law for publick benefit or honor of the Nation or against publick visible offendors been impugned no the lives of many Citizens and the confiscation of their estates not to speak of taxes or restraint of Liberty have been by the generalty praised and allowed though some prudent one might Stoically out of the fore-sight of mis-improving these presidents by evill men disallow such Liberty If a free-spirited understanding Englishman look upon the first Chapter of Magna Charta unless enforced through necessity to make use of any shaft to wound an Adversary yea though it flyes in his own face and wounds him what will he say to it for after the freedome granted to the so called Church the Preface or Assumption on the Kings part is That he having God before his eyes for the salvation of his own soul and the souls of his Predecessors and Successors of his own free will did give and grant c. the Liberties following to be holden of him his Heirs and Successors c. And these Liberties are there called Franchises which intimates the Kings gave them the freedoms there set down now who before had none and let any uninterested man look upon them and he will see they indeed hold a reason of policy but still subservient to the first settlement of the Bastard William there are many notable just things in it and surely such as by which the people were judged before the Charter granted but the people not having ought assured and before the power of the King the interest of Nobles the corruption of Iudges other matters rendring the Law then wholly incertain they sought this to clear up and assure their right as far as might be for Iustice ought to be like as the Elements are by the first intention wholly free Therefore the true understanding wise man saith That he inforces not Magna Charta as the boundary to English Laws or just Freedom or Christian Liberty but as a Catalogue of such immunities as were granted by the Kings to the Subjects formerly according to the then light the Nation had to ask and power to inforce for so they were pleaded by the Grantor many of which are now wholly ceased by time others have been altered some enlarged by subsequent judgements so called and Statutes and it is evident that the English now long and thirst after a rational setled Law in all the parts in the whole body taking the Law of God for the Rule as the Charter-Grantor did though the face of man was the visible Engine to draw the pleasant streams of Liberty out of the Ocean of Royal Power and although that succeeding Princes did never keep the Law wholly yet it was alwayes evident that a noble Prince that sought not himself so much as the glory of the Nation the Acts of such a one were seldom if at all questioned So that to give satisfaction according to the deep and often reiterated Engagements of the Nation it is requisite that some selected impartial honest understanding Religious Patriots be set apart as a Committee wholly to attend the collecting
Lawgivers 6 Why they pretended to receive their Laws from their gods and that both in respect of Magistrate and people p. 106 7 That Christians ought to live under Laws and the reason 8 Authors waved and the reason why Reason is onely allowed 9 The inference that the Magistrate in Legislative power ought to make Laws by a Head Rule and the Judicial propounded and the reasons for it examined by several Instances specially in life liberty and goods and this proved by the New Testament 10 That the Judicials did not properly mislead us but the Ceremonials Chap. 10. p. 112. Wherein is shewed 1 That the Magistrate keeping his Head Rule his power extends all vice 2 In that liberty his boundary generall manifested by an example Chap. 11. p. 112 113 114 Wherein is cleared 1 What the general acceptation of Prerogative is 112 2 What it intends as looking at the Supream Magistrate and that either in absolute Powers or limited 3 The vertual power of Supremacy is ubiquitary 113 4 How its intended in Law that the King can do no wrong 5 The error causing our Divisions heightning giving to the person what was proper to the Power 6 Several benefits given to the Supream Magistrate by Laws and called Prerogative 7 The reason why lapse of time did not prejudice the King 114 8 The reason why the King was admitted to be deceived in his Grant 9 The insufferable abuse of these 10 And of the Kings dispensing with a non obstante in a Statute and not so bound unless named 11 A further grant of profits to the King 12 Some Honorary Grants yet used to profit 13 How the King takes or parts with ought legally as King 14 Some unfitting profits evidenced 15 Deodands a meer allusive Judicial 16 Of the special Judges to try his Rights 17 Three abuses of Prerogative in not having judgement final against him acting all particularly for which no Law was granting Charters and priviledges 115 18 The special badges of Supremacy what and incommunicable 19 That these were never in the King of Englands hand Chap. 12. pag. 116 117. Wherein is shewed 1 That the Supream Magistrate is Judge of Publike good p. 116 2 That this must yet in the issue be evident to others 3 The abuses and benefits of Monarchies and Republicks further debated 4 How Englands Laws admitted her King Judge of publike good 5 Some complaints against meer Prerogative Officers remembred 117 Chap. 13 p. 117. Wherein is treated 1 That the Supream Magistrate may grant inferior so called Prerogatives 2 How he may grant them and the benefit and necessity thereof Chap. 14. p. 117 118. Wherein is declared 1 That there alwayes have been diverse Opinions of the Magistrates and Churches Power with the Reasons of it 117 2 That the Magistrates Power is chiefly preservation of the Peace 3 That much of the Duty of the first Table lies upon the Magistrate and how but not solely nor principally and the reason 4 A touch of Christs Blessing left to his Church the Apostles and their Successors in Doctrine Chap. 15. p. 118 119 120 121. Wherein is treated 1 Of the end of Magistracie 118 2 That evil men may be good Magistrates therefore obedience is still due to them 3 The necessity of this or good Magistrates will be ousted by evil men p. 119 4 That the Pope through the abuse of this difficulty became the sole umpire of all controversies 119 120 5 Limited Magistrates or that rule by Law must not go beyond their rule and the reasons of it 6 Absolute Monarchs questionable onely by the whole community 7 How dangerous an evil this is and therefore waved 8 Christian Princes from the Kings of Judah especially have all pleaded to be absolute 120 9 In limited Monarchies the Assemblies Dyets c. may judge the Monarch 10 The way to distinguish absolute and limited Monarchy 11 The necessity of well tempering popular States 12 There are evils in having as in not having barrs to Supremacy 13 The punishments used formerly to them called Kings or Monarchs 121 14 The benefit of such punishments Cap. 16. p. 121 122. shewing 1 The original end of Parliamentary meetings 121 2 The priviledges given to the persons met and the reasons thereof 3 Protections to other then meer menial servants in ordinary unlawfull 4 Their Speaker not to be disallowed but upon good cause 5 They have a liberty to treat of all matters freely c. 122 6 They are the Guardians of the peoples Lives Liberties and Estates c. 7 The necessity of them to keep Kingdoms from devolving into Tyrannies 8 These to be limited to time lest they grow Tyrants or as bad 9 That their errors if any committed by them might be amended 10 They are to be paid by an equal rate upon all that chuse and ought to do if they had not dispriviledged themselves Chap. 17. p. 123 124 125 126 127. Wherein is shewed 1 The necessity of Magistracy 123 2 The principal ends manifesting wherein the Priviledge of the Subject generally consists Examples given thereof first negatively then affirmatively 3 Affirmatively to be governed by righteous Laws righteously 124 4 That these Laws extend to persons in all places at all times c. and that in respects requisite to common or more publike peace or safety 5 That its requisite the Supream Magistrate set the example to others 6 The Supream Magistrates neglect a ground to hinder Reformation 7 Ill Customs or Laws to be altered 125 8 Matters of publike grievance especially if arising from particular interest not to be continued 9 Placs of publicke Judgements to be fitly setled and not altered but in case of necessity 10 Priviledge wherein respecting the Subjects generally wherein it consists illustrated in many particulars heretofore questioned 11 Priviledge not to be pleaded to them convict of crime 126 12 A general Law can be no dispriviledge 13 Exempting particular persons for particular and special reasons can be no priviledge or dispriviledge 14 To be Master of Arms or admitted into Military trust a special priviledge 127 Chap. 18. p. 127 128 129 130. in which 1 Nature gives like priviledges to all men 127 2 We lose them either by compact of force 3 Iust that force should be submitted to And that to equals obtaining Supremacy by power 128 4 In rational subjection or subjection by compromise or agreement there is to be no difference betwixt the Prince and Subject concerning good better or best for of that the Prince is absolutely judge and so on the contrary but in manifest evil or good 5 The absolute Powers Christian are under a Law 6 Powers must look to be just 7 Self-safety considered in a queried particular 8 Opposition makes Conquerors hard-handed in the first settlement 9 Providence considered and where it s to be allowed where not 129 10 Nations not to make others their Pattern without a just rule 11 Nations subject Nations as men do men and
presume must be from the hand of a Heathen rather then from the word of promise is the fruit of strong contemplative zeal for the punishment so it holds its due proportion take it from the Turk if you will or Persian it matters not The Turks punishment so it be not Torture may suit best the spirit or genius of the Nation for to burn hang behead or stone all is but death and this difference had Ceremonies so called been lawfull to be enjoyned might have stinted our controversie of old between the then so called Protestants and Puritans for the receiving the gestures set formes of Prayers Ornaments and Formes of and in Church-Service so called And assuredly it ever hath been one of the Devils gyns to fright men from truth and right by miscarriages in the manner c. hence cometh the scandals of profession from the errors if but of one or two hypocritical or mis-led professos we may as well refuse the Scriptures because Heretiques use them and that they lead to Judaisme is a great error for surely Judaising was intimated in no part of the Judicial Law of which any question can be For the exception in Fornication things strangled and blood the last two being meats we are now freed from There is a holy jealousie which is for God and is commendable and there is a pertinacy from interest which is Idolatrous and wicked the Lord open mens eyes especially those in Authority rightly to distinguish that they be not found fighters against God Now who are to expound this Law and settle it and how far their power extends is our next task 10. Who have the power to make Laws and how far that power extends SOme may think that the Judicials being laid down to be the fittest rules for Christians or any men to live by That this Quaere is needless For what have we to do with Law-makers of or among men when God himself hath fitted the work to our hand But these men must know that time brings to light new inventions of sin Satan goes about in variety of shapes and deceives daily and these offences many of them will be difficultly referred to the proper head of Transgression therefore it is requisite that there be a superintendency to oreview these errors and apply a remedy in time according to their rule yet to punish life with life goods with goods c. Now these are various according to the either condition or constitution of the Nation or both the constitution according to setled Law and constantly received the condition time of war or peace Now the time of war being only accidental we are specially to consider acts done according to the setled constitution of the Nation be it by Monarchy absolute or limited or Republique Republiques of all or any sort and their boundary is common and publique good and that either according to emergent necessity as in case the elders of Gibeah had consented to have all their eyes put out for National advantage for in such a case the elders had turned evident Traytors to their trusts but to lose one or either eye This will receive somewhat more ample satisfaction if we consider seriously 11. What are the proper Rights of the supream Magistrate so called Prerogative NOw in the handling of this Question it is fit a little to open what is Prerogative now this simply taken is the Priviledge or preheminence that one party hath either above or before another and so is no more then to have that of right and duty which others have by accident or by favor as to have the most honourable place to be heard first and such like But to take it in the proper latitude it is the sum of all those powers priviledges Rights and Immunities necessary to the Supream Power whether person or persons according to the strict rule that thereby the people may be the better governed according to the loose rule that the people may be kept in subjection and the glory of the King or Ruler exalted and that as to absolute Power over both body and goods Now therefore to treat of Prerogative in such a sence is vain for Prerogative is absolute power and what the Prince pleaseth is his Prerogative and this was assuredly aymed at here Now Prerogative according to the strict Rule is of two sorts that is more or less strict as for example some Prerogatives primarily usurped by time are agreed to and after constituted such as our vassalage of Tenures whether in Capite or that by grand or petite Serj. Escuage Knights Service Soccage or Villenage all which the estates of the Nation have looked upon and not annulled but regulated and the Kings sought to avoid those Regulations Now the more strict Rule of Prerogative is to give the dues necessary and that both for honour and order and safety which both the other are but as handmaids to for the etymologicall fautaries I pass them intending to hold out truth in her native simplicity without the ammusive garnish of needless witty vanities This then agreed what Prerogative is in general from hence it may be collected that what ever is necessary or rather of necessity to the well being of the whole is to be in the Supream Power Now this which is by some and generally alledged as proper to Kings yet must be also in all Supream Magistrates as Dukes Earls c. yea though Vassals or Tributaries to other Princes and must be also in Republiques or where the supremacy of power rests in more then one person whether Aristocratical Oligargichal or the pure Republique viz. the Democratique State For the Prerogative is incident naturally to the Supremacy of power and that of necessity for they are the Superintendents of the whole body and are to have requisites to that Office as necessarily as the father of a Family or any inferiour Magistrate under him ought to have to govern in their bounds precincts limits and places and therefore the Law of England justly in the matter however in the attribute or that to admit comparison with the Almighty might or may offend some mens eares by way of illustrative Analogy gave a kind of ubiquity or omnipresence to the King and so to the supream Magistrate as the first part of his Prerogative his diffused power for common good so ordered manifesting it self in all Offices whereby the publick peace so called the Kings peace was preserved and was necessary every where But as more necessary so more apparent in the Courts of Justice all of which were called the Kings Courts and the Process the Kings c. Now we being ruled by Laws for to avoid the inconveniencies afore-mentioned of pusillage and folly and alterations accidental to the best of men depraved through the fall make this supream power vertually to rest in setled Laws and by them they rule and so neither death folly nor any kind of wrong or injury can by the estimation of Law be done
or suffered by the supremacy of power so that truly the Law saith the King can do no wrong that is the Law by the supremacy of power enables him not to do wrong and to speak out the whole truth to men of the meanest understanding This law and the right understanding and executing of it is the highest Prerogative of any of Gods Vicegerents in higher or lower sphears and is the agreed Rule of common good as before-said Now our great error and delusion of late was to give that to the person which was due to the Office and to subjugate the Office to the person and not the person to the Office which the Law would never admit for the Law that is the purity yea tanscendencie of Reason leaves the person of the Prince naked in case of Male Action though it censures not in all male administration where it admits him positively to judge I shall give you an example to illustrate for if the King enters a mans house disguised and offers to vitiate his wife daughter c. and be slain of the father husband c. it is but as the death of an ordinary person and truly by the principles of the setled Law be he known it is no more I shall put but one Example more A Traytor is by vertue of the Kings Writ brought before the Judge Arraigned and Condemned the King grants no pardon which I suppose he in such Cases cannot generally though it was done customarily nor uses no legal peaceably way but by force personal sets himself in Act by his Guard to take this Traytor out of the hands of that Justice to which in his Politick capacity he hath Sentenced him and the Sheriffs men defending the Law and the Guard by the personal command of the King seeking the overthrow of it by taking away illegally the prisoner and they fighting about it and the King running in he is slain it is no murder by the principles of the Law which owns not the King in this Act of Tort and Force and takes no notice of the death of that person as King who in Law dies not for the Law cannot now take notice of it because out of his Sphear by this it is evident to what end the Magistrate is cloathed with so called Prerogative namely the advance of publike interest Now as in this sort it gives to the supream Magistrate the glory of the Courts of Justice and the disposings of them as one part of Prerogative so knowing the honor of the Supream Power cannot be maintained but by some set way as it seems the Ancients provided here so much of all sorts of provision both for the Kings Family as also for his Stable at the so called Kings price exceedingly abused besides the so called setled revenues of the Crown namely Crown lands Fee-Farm Rents c. So it also provided for Emergencies and that both for charges upon the sea and also for the land by Customs now so called Fines Forfeitures wrecks of the sea how unjustly soever land deserted of the sea lands of Ideots Treasure found goods without owners Tythes of lands out of Parishes and the like And upon these or any other matter if any debt did accrue it was satisfied to the King that the Commonwealth might not lose before any private person could be satisfied one penny the abuse of this was grown intolerable but I here treat of Settlements and how long since it was in the Kings case it matters not for no slipping of time could prejudice the Kings Title as in case of a common person who was tied to sue within such a time or the time might be pleaded in Bar as was justly enacted Now the reason of this was just and good preferring publike and universal good before private and particular yet this proved offensive oft-times because it was made the instrument to absolute Injustice while restitution was made to the King to the evident destruction of a stranger that is a third person whom the Law left remediless yea though utterly undone and begging from door to door It was also for the same reason construed to be Law that in all Grants made by the King they should be taken most beneficially for him and that they should not erre to any other construction then what was manifested in the body of the Grant that is the plain letter must be taken and no implicite construction of Law shall be taken advantage of against the good of the Commonwealth as against a particular party And lastly In case of Grants it is void if it appears that the King was deceived in his Grant truth these originally just things after the fatall wisdom of the Law was politickly perfected came to be made the Mystery of Iniquity for it was said the Grants were made according to these received Rules for the Kings sole benefit whereby he that was once made the Kings Officer was ever after scandalized for a Knave and he that was once the Kings Farmor Grantee or Debitor his estate was alwayes after esteemed incombred Now this was more feared when it was granted to him by Judgement of the Judges that he in Temporals might by a Clause of Non obstante dispence with any Statute Law and that though the Statute saith such dispensations should be utterly void as it was in the time of Henry the seventh the beginning was in Edward the fourth not so plain Acts of Parliament bind not the King unless especially named Now these unhinged all our Liberties for by the one he was not bound except named and by the second he might dispence how-ever named therefore these how ever used I cannot reckon as legal Prerogative I now proceed with Prerogative called Just that is That the King or Supream Power for the benefit of the Commonwealth have the estates of those that die without heir for no private or particular heir being the publike is rightly preferred so if they purchase who have no right as Aliens they have also given him those Royal Mines of gold and silver lest such things in Subjects should raise them so high as they should be able by leavying Arms to contest for the Supremacy and attempt a Tyranny Now this if agreed as agreed is most just They gave him some honorary respects meerly as for example That the Lord should not seise his Villein in his presence how justly may well be Quaeried For if just to be done why not more just before him To which may be added That Amerciaments Fines c. which had no exact literal Rule as offences made by Statute punishable by the Justices at Sessions with unlimited Fine or Amerciaments were said to be by vertue of his Prerogative as his Iustices that is they were to Fine at discretion that is according to the nature of the fact respect had to the Law that is saving his Freehold or not to the value of his Freehold or so that he should not for to pay that Fine be
put to sell his Freehold all which are argued for with much nicety little Christianity Now as for the benefit of the Commonwealth the Law put the King into possession of others though by matter of Record so it kept him in the State of the Commonwealth for for Lands Jure personae or hereditary at Common Law the rule of Law extends not to it as I conceive therefore the King cannot be disseised and many other such things as the goods of Felons murderers c. which is or may be just in murder in some sort but in no case in Felony but they ought to go to the person wronged and in manslaughter and defence of a mans own person there ought to be no right to the Checkquer not in the Self-defence at all and in the others it ought to go to the party for if the Law in forceable strikeing give dammage and more in wounding and more in Maihem then most in killing where the life of the criminal is saved That of Deodands is in the Law and I see no warrant for it but the meer allusive equity of the Judicial It is also said to be a part of the Kings Prerogative to have special Iudges to try the right of his revenues as is the Checkquer and the differences of his immediate Officers and servants as the Steward and Marshal of his house and instead of Action against his person The Law by the Ordinance of Edward the third for honor sake framed it in nature of a Petition but the Process was as against an other person and so if Iustice be upon that it is just otherwise not it will also admit no wager of Law against him and which proved a great abuse and was unjust and is no way either honorary or necessary he did take men under pretence of being his debitors into his protection to the overthrow of many particular persons and universal detriment thus was Derogative Again Judgment was never final against him but with a figmentitious advantagious evasion of a saving his right and this was also new and not necessary I come to two main and principal steps to the eminency of Prerogative alwayes afforded the Supream power which are first That the King hath by his publike trust power to do whatsoever there is no Law against So that from hence hath arisen the obstructions to Laws upon new Causes namely setling that in the Law which was before in the King and so abridging the Royal Tenure By vertue of this he created Corporations and made Denizens The other was from Gods appointment to Moses surely to appoint places so called of Priviledge like Cities of Refuge but undoubtedly this was a civility betwixt the Kings and Popes to raise a benefit to the King by priviledging That Charter had many Fees and then the Pope made it by allowance a Sanctuary and so secured by both powers what can be doubted that must be just where Moses and Aaron joyn and these men both Pope and Prince did well they saved the life but squeised the purse and none affoord such milke more freely then Rogues and Whores as all Histories evidence This is the summ of all the Prerogative so called that I in this haste remember just or unjust that the Laws of England hold forth The three main pillars upon which the Edifice of Prerogative stands all these being but the Ornaments thereto are the absolute power to make Laws War and Peace and raise moneys Except in some few scattered judgements arising upon Emergencies and are not indeed worthy the name of Prerogative though in our Topical heads of Laws they be so ranked but rather priviledges or Royalties many of which were obtained by Subjects for what a Subject may enjoy I count not Prerogative therefore not Copning of money c. nor Royal fishes nor a hundred matters of the like nature and wreck is generally detestable and the Royalty of grandage abominable but the generalty of them are justly belonging to all men with the Supream Majesty especially those favors of errors in pleadings c. Now this Legislative power was never in the King nor no reason it should which alone shews the Kings in England never was since the establishment of the three estates the Supream power for the makeing of Laws was alwayes since in them as the body Representative of the Nation and so the Lords and Commons were put as a Bar to invading Prerogative Next for war or peace it was not in the Kings power his Knights were bound according to their Tenures but not otherwayes and the special of them not performing their service were to be fined nowhere but in Parliament The last of them which are the sinews of the war were always in the peoples hands never denyed by any King however subtilly obtruded upon as by loans privy Seals c. which were always declaimed against and damned by Parliaments These were and are necessary to the Supream Power but never trusted to Englands Kings a sure sign the Supremacy was not in the King he knew it necessary to aggrandize his power and for an absolute subjection of all interests to his to claim that these were incident and appendixes to the Supremacy absolute which he aspired unto And though the Forts Ships Magazines and appointing Judges Governors Captains c. were actually in his power yet hereby it is plainly seen to what end and how trayterous they were to the then true English Interests who stuck to the King against the Parliament in this war but that controversie is besides my task here Therefore I proceed and say that it is necessary still that the total and absolute Supremacy hath these powers viz. of making or giving forth Laws making Leagues offensive and defensive denouncing Wars and establishing Peace and also to raise moneys Now this I know not denied by any publike and approved Judgement but these men have their bounds their limits also for general common and publike good is their limit their chain and to see the end of this it is fit next to see 12. Who is Judge of publike good and his Rule of Restraint and whether it be fit to admit this absolutely in the Supream Power THe Kings formerly were not unskilled in the issue of this mystery they boulted out what others will bake who ever eats it Now it is plain this also is required in the Supream Power for it is impossible to settle particular Laws sutable to each particular occasion for in the corrupt state of man as the Law is profitable or disprofitable so it is rellished as for example in an equal rate the just man likes the equality and so doth the covetous but he saith no rate at all and if an honest Miser can be he approves equality but he repines at the payment Now the boundary is evident publike good and of this in the manifest parts of it are all men Iudges for though in transactions of the high affairs of State the progression
or default the offender to be punished and in case of inconveniency the place to be dispriviledged Again It s no dispriviledge to a Free-man to have men attainted of crimes severely punished yea in some cases not agreeably to the letter of the at least present practical Law As for example a person dangerous and oft suspected for criminal matters as Robberies Burglaries Thefts Cutpursing and the like is acquitted by the formal ignorant or packed Jury for want of a clear more then noon day evidence which is now with Jurors through the servile terrors of selfish Judges expected if such a one for the peace and welfare of the Publique be detained in Prison made to work c. so one who hath had his Clergie several times So of gallant Rogues who live high and can give no account how they come by their expences to secure such is no doubt the great priviledge of the Subject These matters can never prove prejudicial to just or good men in a well ordered State they tend to the well setling of any State and although some may abuse such power against good men sometimes yet this is well known That that is the evil of men not of the power punish the men and appoint better but necessary power must alwayes be upheld This may be much opposed by some whom I have found earnestly to contend that prisoners convict of Theft and Vagrancie common Milchers and Pilferers could not by the Law be polled that is have their long haire cut off no not when it hath been proved they have made that instrumental to their roguery The Custome of old will not prevail but their new fancy that nothing of reason is Law but what we have an adjudged case for this must be maintained for this is their Diana who so stickle for Rogues and therefore they will not do this but advantageous customes are revived or created though no better and less reason thus they Tyth Mint Annise c. It s no dispriviledge to be enforced to plant yea if a Law were to plant the North and West side of each inclosure with fruit trees and the South and East with Timber and other wood and when any Close were above four Acres to have one row of Timber or fruit in or about the midst It were no dispriviledge to have all Commons inclosed and improved a certain quantity only kept for the meer poor of the Town nay it s the only way to advance the Nation provide assuredly for the poor who now all are eaten out by one rich Clown and make good roads for Trade and take away the Nurse of poverty It s no dispriviledge to alter the Heathenish days of the Moneths and weeks and idolatrous ones of Saints dayes Feasts weeks c. Nor to admit no Market or Fayr of speciall note save on Wednesdays and Thursdays so called that going and returning be not at all on the Lords Day No nor to take away multitudes of old needless Fayrs in England the principal end as practised being only drinking and wantonness It s no dispriviledge to have a Law that no ground within a certain space of a City or walled Town be plowed but all for pasture except allowed and that onely once in a set quantity of years by the Magistrate thereto appointed for necessity and then not except only for Roots Turnips and the like It s no dispriviledge to be punished for keeping Swine or using certain Trades in the heart or great streets or neer thereto of Cities and great Towns alwayes provided they be not tolerated under a rent or any payment to be enforced to sweep streets cleanse Vaults avoid Dunghils yea if it did extend to the avoiding or purging the belly of other excrements then water in any place and not bury it It s no dispriviledge to have the Magistrate set a rate upon what can admit it nor to punish the inventors or wearers of new Fashions It s no dispriviledge to enforce by Law to Tyle or Slate all houses in Cities and great Towns To conclude a general Law can be no dispriviledge nor any Law which truly intends publique good the not equal administring of that Law is a dispriviledge but then the fault is in the Judge not in the Law though it may prove very burthensome as in times of Prerogative nay destructive to a particular which evil will and ought to have a speedy remedy by complaint and due punishment not by alteration of the Law I come now to the last controversie of Priviledge and dispriviledge that I remember that is That men of such Estates shall not keep Hawks keep Greyhounds Guns setting Dogs Nets and the like many have questioned me what benefit we had by all our labours hazzards payments c. if this were practised they had as live the Lord Matravers should take away their goods as the Justices of the Peace but being informed what they did was according to Act of Parliament what he did by meer power what he did was to break the hearts of the people and fit them for slavery what the Justice did was to restrain the vanity of youth and keep poor people to labor that through the vain delights of sporting they might not neglect their Family what he did was to enslave poor and rich equally what they did was only to regulate exorbitancy and looked onely at inconvenience they all resolved the thing was just they would willingly submit and desired a certain enforcement of so just so necessary a Law 2. That trade should be regulated which most assuredly as to well working making fitting and trimming of matter is out of all doubt necessary if not of necessity but as to the times and places of sale wherein one Merchant or Tradesman may outreach another and may border upon particular interest that is not so easily determined only this the Supream Magistrate must take a note of direction that there is two evils which to well settle a free trade must be provided against First to loose a rule which is to place the superintendencie of power in the vulgar Artificer which will at least end in confusion the next is too strict a Rule giving the Masters of the Company as you may call them such a power as they shall make Laws and enforce the execution upon such terms as shall out all Freedom but only in name therefore some general Rules must be laid down and every County must have a Conservator of Liberties of Trade to restrain from unjust encroachments either of the poor by multitudes or rich by power and this will sureliest settle the foundations of all Priviledges But there is one Priviledge more yet remaining which is as it were the essence of all or rather that which in the enmity of the world doth secure all the rest and that is that the Subject himself unless he forfeits his liberty be master of his proper Arms and imployed in the setled Militia of the Nation For it is
properly THe Government of the Family being setled let us see how they part out of the Family and that is commonly by Marriage It is agreed the parents did at their own Liberties dispose their children by natural reason corrupted I conceive they against Nature exposed their children not onely to the next hand of man that took it up by a setled place for that purpose where they that had not the blessing of children of their own bodies might take them off others hand that had many which hath reason in it and undenyable but their exposings were to meer fortune as they called it that is let the will of the Gods be done let the Beasts devour it hunger or cold or both starve it or the merciful hand sustain it and nourish it but these are wholly rejected with us the way is to sustain them till fit for labour or Marriage Now that of labor is generally hinted before none may be brought up idle Now for Marriage there is much to be said The general plea is the Magistrate hath no power to set an age for Marriage The reason is generally that there are divers times wherein Nature works with men and women and to prescribe one certain rule for all is unfit Next it is the Parents duty to take care of that Lastly the gift of Continencie is of God and not of man and the Magistrate hath no power the first and last I shall couple together and answer them thus It is truth divers men and women are of divers tempers and Constitutions and therefore one time will not agree to all but surely the matter is not whether all men or women shall marry at one age but that there is a duty upon the Magistrate to preserve the vigour of the Nation by seasonable Marriages doth it not much more concern us to breed a generation of men fit to manage beasts then to breed beasts fit for management This natural similar reason is of some force surely there is too much looseness in this our Law to allow Copulation at twelve in the woman and fourteen in the man Now the disquisition of the other part concerning the gift of Continency will resolve the whole for I pray you how is the Law of Liberty and Continency to be pleaded may the Child marry without the good liking of the Parent Can the Child plead to him that he hath not the gift of Continencie or do we rather know it is the loosnesse of Government the evil of idle unclean education both in young men and Maids that inflames affections The young ones are ignorant of what is sin and the eldest often and they fall into contagious offences each with other before they understand the rules of wise Reason being led away of natural appetite and not withstanding all incentives the father is allowed to dissent from the Marriage of his son or daughter and in case of disobedience to chastise with stroaks or disinherison or both the son and it is done to the daughter But should the son that had stoln the daughter bring an Action or the married son could he justifie or not by the Law I profess the case is difficult for if lawful why beaten if not lawful why may not the Magistrate set the rule of restraint to Naturall appetite as well as the Parent the publick as the private Magistrate for by paternal power and Jurisdiction he enforces Now the Christian Magistrate therefore upon the whole may and ought to bridle this beast in man by a discreet Moderate Law to restrain the Lusts of proud rich lazy idle and so lustfull young ones And take of the itch of mean ones by work and labor of the body and minde or both with slender dyet and holy exercises Divine and Spiritual breathings after God in the sense of our own weakness will as well restrain exorbitant affections in Christians as the love of Philosophy or the fear of the gods so called could Heathens Let us not therefore eat to lust and live in idleness and then we must marry O we burn It is as lawful from that reason to have many wives many husbands or diversity of men or women in the accidents of sickness long journeys and the like of yoak-fellows The Modern Age is wholly loose through pretence of Christian Liberty that is the undoing destructive principle and it seems by many who out of zeal against humane wandrings go about to eclipse the glimpses of divine inlightenments to be fit totally to be rejected but both must stand a just Liberty with a due restraint that Justice with Righteousness be in all Now as it is rational that the publick Magistrate may temper the liberty of the child not to marry till a season so after that season to mitigate the Rigidity of the parent is as necessary many parents being extream and cruel forcing them to marry whom and how they please or not admitting Marriage at all I know the difficulty of these businesses hath discouraged but Christian piety ought to advance endeavors in this kind yea in some cases to portion moderately children dutiful and obedient in all other things and permit them their own choyces if nothing can be objected on the parents part but meer will It is also fit to resolve the degrees of Marriage for late Liberty hath made Quaeries concerning a just and Regular Law And to see all this done the Magistrate is the onely fit man The Act is meerly civil it is old Popery acknowledging Marriage a Sacrament that onely continues it in the Clergie so called Therefore let no Marriage be solemnized but before one or more publick Magistrates thereto appointed inrolled or recorded in a book of purpose with their hands and of the Parent if living or Certificate under hand and Seal of the Magistrate where the parties live otherwise of the Guardian unless they be of such an Age as is fixed by the Magistrate or they be married by Magisterial Authority that is though the Parent before refuse having no just cause alwayes resolved that if a Magistrate offends or Rasures be and alterations that the punishments be exceeding high Who ought to be Guardians Tutors c. SUrely in this the so called Law of England Common Law I mean as before-said provides excellently above the Civil General of Nations so called Christian by placing the next in blood to whom the inheritance cannot discend to be Guardian and the duty of his Account is well regulated by the other part of the so called Law of England namely the Statutes But the Heir in Capite or by Knight Service being in Ward till 21. the Heir in Soccage but till 14. the Heir in Burg. English but till he can measure cloth tell Money c. These Ages and Tenures breed confusion and difficulty can a plain honest illiterate man know his duty therefore let one time be for all Ages viz. not under 21. And till then let them not dispose by will or otherwise nor
lay to heart these things First that you are in Gods stead Next that there are many vows upon the Nation for Justice and Righteousness against the then and still continued unchristian uncivil nay inhumane dealings of man with man as man with God c. You stand in the eys of all all your goings are marked and all your failings graven to Record Publick necessities your own consciences and peoples complaints have plucked forth Declarations to men as well as Covenants to God the Obligations to men are still the same if the reason be the same And for our Obligations wherein we lift up our hands to the most high God truly though the Covenant as is said be out of date that is the end of the Covenant for satisfaction to the King to draw him to an union and conjunction with his great Councel be disobliged yet the seeking of the setling of this Nation the three Nations all Nations according to the Rule of Righteousness in love peace and unity yea the drawing of them to uniformity both in Doctrine and Discipline according to the Word of God that is by the evidence of truth and the manifestation of the Spirit is still the duty of all Christians for this had been a duty had the Covenant never have been it was before it and must remain after The present Age is in the learned part very acute at least to censure all persons and then assuredly the actions of Enemies You have many who foment jealousies from the supposed Errings and delays some to one end some to another but all of beleeving the old experimented Rule of the destructiveness of popular Government from the variety and inconstancy the dilatoriness and ambiguousness of their proceedings and unsatisfiedness of so many selfish Interests as are among them this is to bring in the Government of a King again Indeed multitude of occasions makes your proceedings slow-paced Instead of particular Acts which are unsatisfactory settle a compleat body of Government you have means of supplying all indigencies for if you improve your power to evident publick good who will oppose The Royalist and all among the Parliament party agree in many just things yet uneffected Justice is the preservation as foundation of the Throne If you will raign safely walk not in any of the wayes of them that fell before you the president of their punishment as their error is too nigh at hand Let no interest deterr you from your Rule Conserve indeed the real Liberties of the people free us from all those Legerdemains the sleights of Oppression and Tyranny What was unjust gain in the King let not the State demand there depend upon follow providence as far as you will and be as remiss and so called merciful as you please but in things just and evidently conducing to common good be severe and unalterable this is righteous In things difficult and doubtful first use reason and prudence discover the interest opposing and so proceed to afflict this wil breed both fear and love Alter a good and just thing though to a more just by degrees and gently for interests have here lawful pleas but in evidently evil it 's the glory to make speed Connive not there for an hour What is here driven at is the just Reformation of all our Laws the Reduction of them to a Rule and standard of Christian Simplicity You that are of the long Robe both in and out of the house you whose knowledge both divine and humane abounds as your abilities in outward as inward excellencies Judges Councellors and Officers of all sorts look not at ancient Customes but at the common Justice of them not how they restrain particular evils but as they conduce to universal good If you will not admit the opposition of inferiors do nothing but carrying that evidence of reason as may stop the mouths of fools as well as satisfie wise men Let Godliness now in this light be the pretious gain it s the Pearl of great price Surely there are things called Law admitted practically for Law and those opposed and complained of which are so notoriously unjust and irrational so destructive to the Nation as its the admiration of all men they are not amended 't is laid onely to the charge as a matter of Interest to be obstructors see in the day the Lord opposing every evil thing lay down Self and God will stablish you To you Princes and Nobles I say learn by Gods dealings with you to see Thrones and Scepters Powers Civil and Military Riches and Honors Wisdom and all are the gifts of the Almighty Wisdom The Hand of Providence holds them forth and disposeth them as it pleaseth You have been bad Stewardes amend your wayes God hath here and there taken all away otherwhere a great part most have suffered know God is able yet to take away the remainder seek not therefore in passion to break out what ever you do carry God along with you and that not in thought but deed assuredly the judgement else will be more smart and deeper in every change le ts see the Work of God upon your hearts change Profession into Practise of Christianity idolize not the Form but acting sincerely Zeal Holiness Austerity of Life in the avoiding the very appearances of evil but exemplary in Charity and that not onely in giving much but giving well ordering the wayes not of your selves onely but of your Families so that the nobility of your souls in the excellence of graces may speak you illustrious above ancient riches the Vertues or Vices of your Progenitors The same I may say to the Gentry and men of great estate City and Country know God gives you much that you may do much for him wherein is now your excellency Titles Alas they are but like Absoloms Pillar serve but to eternize his faults and miserie Good cloathes large Retinue as Revenew if not larger and they generally idle and so necessarily vicious Coaches and horses bountiful and luxurious fare as much spent to feed and cloath ten as well would satisfie each day one hundred and for one hundred as would plentifully maintain a thousand Is God honored in all this or is the poor profited you may think it for thus did your fathers and so did you but where is the Rule the charges of the Commonwealth if but five shillings are a burthen to you who spend ten pound nay a hundred pound nay a thousand pound in waste and they that have nought follow your example thereby believing they gain credit I now shall speak one word to the Army You have followed Providence make no Selfish Interest your Idol lest Providence forsake you be assured others have many enemies but for you how few are your friends there are great engagements upon you to God who hath with such a continued course given success to your undertakings I am so far from incouraging to Mutinies as I condemn them there are just wayes use them I would
moved justly who was the first and principal Agent the Lord in appointing or the people in requiring a King which being plain on the peoples part it is objected that the Lord in his first laws to his people Deut. 17. 14. c. gave them a Rule concerning the choice of their King namely one of their brethren c. and that Jacob prophesied of the same and that God laid down the duties of the King c. To which it is answered that neither the prophesie of Jacob nor Gods laying down the Kings choice duty and such like no nor Samuels annointing Saul by Gods appointment proves any divine institution no more then the prophesies c. of great sins and defections from God c. warrants them No no the utmost it holds forth is rather a Divine concession then an original institution for the Lord in that eighth of Samuel tells Samuel the people had rejected him for being their King and laying before the people by Samuel the usage of Kings ruling at list or according to their own will and power as it were to deterre the people from it the peoples stubbornness ver 7. 8. and 19. and 20. shews plainly that in wrath as the spirit elswhere expresses it he gave them a King that is yielded to their desire of a King and Saul annointed by Samuel was chosen by Lot and being hidden was sought and by Gods direction found out of the people and saluted King with a God save the King whence if it be thought fit to be objected he was chosen by Lot and so the disposition of that being from the Lord the Lord appointed the King it s agreed but thence to infer that Kings are of divine institution it followeth not This only is properly raised thence that God appointed that person Saul to be King of his own people after Saul David comes to the Throne and though by Gods appointment and special designation the house of Saul contends with him Absolom he Rebels and carries the multitudes of Israel after him and Solomon the wisest of the sons of men succeeding though by Davids appointment yea by divine approbation many waies manifested if not fore-prophesied he so sins that the Lord rejects him dividing the Kingdom and now in the settlement of hereditary succession that special spirit which accompanied the cheifs or Kings of Gods people ceases as to the most if not all of them and rested upon special Prophets whom the Lord raised up in the Raignes of several Kings for the manifestation of his glory and love to his people not only declaring his notice of their especial sins but also denouncing judgements in case of impenitency which accordingly fell out in the several raigns of several of the Kings of Israel Judah which subsequent Kings were either faithful wholly or in the main depending upon God walking in the waies of David their father or else a kinde of formal servers of God not faithfully but hypocritically or openly prophane and Idolatrous one or two especially Jeroboam who made Israel to sin yet of Gods appointment renting the kingdom from Solomons heire to give it him and Ahab that sold himself to work wickedness in the sight of the Lord for whose outward humiliation only God spared the Nation during his daies Now this is to be noted that even then such as was the King such was the pople generally and for the greatest part at least in outward profession An idolatrous King an idolatrous people a luke-warm King a careless people a zealous faithful King a reforming praying people So far ever was outward splendor and power a leader of outward profession and civil conversation and under the law accordingly as the Lord was served faithfully negligently or prophanely such was his cariage towards this his people under faithfull and holy Kings great blessings both of War and peace under the indifferent luke-warm neuter self-seeking Kings Secureness in peace and cutting short in War But under the idolatrous and openly wicked actual devastations besiegings overthrows and at last general captivities of which the kingdom of Israel so called being of the ten Tribes under the head Tribe Ephraim felt sorely and still feel where ever they were carried by the Assyrian Monarch who was punished as for her own sins so for the example of her sister Judah whose race was yet continued in their own land under their own governors but for sin cut short and the royal race wasted or over-awed the kingdom at last became Mercinary and set forth by the Asian Kings the successors of part of the great Alexanders Monarchy to a publique sale yet sold to the Preists and of the royal blood untill at last in the fulness of time the Romane conquering or Commanding both the Asian and Aegyptian Princes it was sold or given to Herod an Edomite so that now the Law-giver and Scepter departed from Judah The temporal kingdom of the Jew in power royal ceased from all the Tribes of Judah and Israel And now the Jews themselves expected the comming of their Messiah and the fulfilling of the Ancient prophesies according to their received vulgar interpretation of a most glorious mighty powerful Prince then to be raised up of God who should subdue all their enemies under them free them from the Romane yoke now so much feared and should lead them in the strength of Moses and Elias and by his power should consummate all their joyes in reducing their dispertions to an head and seating them freely and absolutely the Commanders of the Universs Thus private interest still led on the people though pretending to God so powerful is nature ever with the flesh Having here drawn into a short sum the Misterious history of Gods dealing with that people which he did more immediately hold as his own inheritance and made a special covenant with them before we pass to new matter let us a little look back and reveiw generally and briefly what this people was the form of the Covenant the nature of the Laws and Statutes given them by God and their execution and such other particulars as shall offer themselves In the first age the persons magnified in holy writ is Abel Enoch and the rest what were they but plain men living innocently Abel though loving God and loved of God God rescues him not from the violence of his brother Cain but he falls and perishes under his hands and Enoch among the Ancients lived no more then three hundred sixty five years and was translated as t is translated that is to Saints taken into the mistery of God but to men ceased to live longer on earth both were blessed yet one dies violently or untimely the other timely he lived not half the daies of wicked men before translated both judgements in mens accounts In the succeeding generations after the flood what was Noah the preacher of righteousness or of the truth which were traditionally or otherwise received as the word of the righteous God
him and that not onely in high and criminal matters concerning his Crown and Dignity the life and honor of his subjects the original due object of the power of the Court now called the Common-Bench or of his Treasure the object of the Court now called the Exchequer or the Court concerning matters of the Income Profit Revenew or Treasure of the King But also of the differences betwixt party and party the object or subject matter call it what you will of the power of the Court now called the Common-Pleas which for ought I can finde authentique to convince me had all one officers which were not many all one Process which was a special Writ for appearance and a trial before the King or such as he appointed in his Court for the King was to be always present and there was also help in case of Equity by the Kings Chancellor in matters of the Summum jus of Law according to the common Lawyers phrase or severest opinion according to the rule of pure conscience that is do as you would be done unto or like a good Christian according to the Episcopal and Church-mens equity in the times of their Regiments now this foundation laid which offered benefit as well as Law to the people who had hereby remedy against the greatest oppressions of great men or Judges in the Courts of the Sheriffs or Lords Courts or Hundred Courts which all at first submitted by way of gradation to each other all to the Kings and so the Courts in Cities and Boroughs and other places incorporate as also Franchises and Liberties which were the evident marks of conquest and granted larger or stricter as the King pleased Now the King plots his own setlement first as being a Norman that is French he wills all our pleadings to be in French for he being as chief Father of the Commonwealth to see to all ought to understand it Next he ought especially for offences criminal or trespasses of force voluntary to have the punishment of the offender as a disturber of the peace of the Commonwealth as well as the particular party to have reparations and therefore he brings in together with Appeals the ancient usage of England which was the challenging of a man to have committed an offence as of treason murder rape felony and the like a kinde of suit in the name of the King called an Indictment and truly all the reason of the introduction that I can see was to advance the end of the Kings gain for here the King hath all the gain all the goods of the party at first from the day of the offence done truth now he hath it in appeal but it was not so for this the old true tale of Kents freedom will be known Evidence for they opposed this part of prerogative and then the father to the bough that is to be hanged upon the arm of a tree the usual and ready way then of dispatch and the son to the plough that is to the improving the inheritance left Concerning the common Law Prerogatives of a Prince or what the Laws of England anciently as by the right and light of natural knowledge granted to their Kings a certainty of land of the Crown Mines of gold and silver Royal fishes lands deserted of the sea and of them who died without heir as the prime person in whom the honor and glory of the people rested I omit to speak at present Truly that this William used Parliaments I finde not though others do for it is evident to the world and he that is not blinde may see he to quiet the people pretended Title but his intention was to make it his absolute conquest he therefore calls Councels where his Lords were present they do what his Will is and there is an end So that grant it a Parliament or National Assembly of the Estates yet it was but to grant or enact what the King desired his Normands had liberty to speak their will what English man durst oppose but the acts of his successor fully demonstrate this who destroys thirty towns and Churches to make a Forrest the Monks of the time durst speak but who else So that now it was evident what Title he claimed by pretend he what he will for the King had still his pretences truly the English were now in great streights they saw their Laws utterly abolished and their lives and estates to lye at the Kings mercy there was no remedy to complain who durst The Bishops yet notwithstanding something interpose but their mouthes are stopped by a command from his Holiness for people must not rise against their Prince but at his will and fill his coffer and you have his Crosier at command for Rome was now at the full height of wickedness but God taking away this sacrilegious Prince he soon opens a way of comfort to the almost cowed English giving them some means of revenge by a royall contest or a quarrel for the Crown this and matters of like nature setled there now ariseth a greater quarrel which hath continued even to these times though with divers parties and upon several grounds and that was betwixt the Lords and the King it seems God would have the English free and though he chastised them he would not forsake them for he makes their enemies the chief assertors of their ancient Liberties for these Lords finde now that they had not the same free priviledges their Ancestors had and claimed their births had now made them English of sharers in principallity they were made meer though greater Subjects The King Lawyers belike had found some flawes in their patents it may be they had done some wrong to their Tenants and were complayned of and the King to anger them that they might forfeit their too large liberties did the poor men right the greatest vexation and Soul or heart-grief a proud great man can have but be the ground what it will many of which are evident and arising as before is said The contest grew high there were things called Parliaments assembled to the end to determine these differences and in them divers good Laws tending to reconciliation were enacted but what was the effect of force ceased in execution when the cause was removed and the Lords armed against their Princes and truly their Tenants took part as the rest did they feared the saving of their faith to their King would prove the forfeiture of their lands to their Lords and now what was intended for the Kings safeguard was his ruine the most immediate Lord carrying all the power the superior Lords all along were strangers So vain a thing is the most prudent settlement of men if Divine providence affords not success But this still remains a sure foundation good Laws are ever the same though the badness of men may enervate and weaken them yea oft times invert them but still as differences grew higher and higher Parliaments were the means of quieting of all which doth
civill State where the Kings as I tell you still laboured to maintain their Prerogative so called by which they intended the absolute rule of their will holding all that was yielded by the Law not as datum or given but debitum therefore they refused it not but laboured to encroach and therefore there was no immunity granted to the Subject but they paid for it no right cleared but bought at the hardest market yet upon these chaffers the Kings settle the Courts of Judicature both of the Common Pleas Kings-Bench Exchequer and appoint Judges and salaries at Westminster a certain place and at certain and appointed times whereby the great and arduous causes the difficulties of which could not be determined by the ordinary Judges of the County might by these eminent and most learned or so esteemed receive a period with less charge to the Subject and to these were appointed Officers and Fees After this the Chancery was setled and the chief Judges of all these Courts I have read the Parliament were to appoint and they might if Annuall but if but every seven years as by after agreement was established it was requisite to admit the king the choyce once and then to be sure he was like to keep it for ever there was a president out of these Courts the kings raised large supports for all the Officers which were now multiplyed went all along with the Crown and yet these Courts the kings liked not but laboured to introduce other Courts the settlement of all these Judicatories by way of gradation admitting a finall appeal to Parliament in course therefore the Court of Wards is erected and that upon a good colour but a bad cause for the latter kings having seen the issues of things before as is related now neglected the warlike education and the preferment of their Wards as at first institution indeed the cause which was then that was the putting by degrees the whole power of the Land by Marriages was now ceased and now none bare less affection to the king then the race of Normans the issue being like in condition with the English ill brooking the service and vassalage which themselves laboured to lay upon the English After this Court came up the Court so called of Star-Chamber intended still as a bridle to curb the head-strong humours of the Lords and great men There were erected Courts of Admiralty and all these Courts were bounded had their Rules in all circumstances the defects of which were still as I said lyable to appeal that is to be questioned in Parliament the Law Courts and Statutes Courts of course the other agreeable to their own nature by supremacy of power neither were the Spiritual Courts so called that is the Courts of or under or by or from the jurisdiction power authority of the so called Clergy from the highest Bishop to the meanest Surrogate of other settlement yet in these the Kings were chary for they appealing to the Pope a curse might follow and who that hath a due consideration of conscience can blame the Princes Judges Magistrates and Officers of those times seeing they pretended to beleeve the Popes Supremacy of power and all other things conducing thereto But now we shall see a stronger opposition to the Pope then ever for he sending out many prophane Indulgences as for pardoning of the greatest offences and tolerating the highest wickednesses Luther a Popeling opposes and that openly before the Emperour at the great meeting or Parliament of the Princes of the Empire many of which took part with him he thus upheld and the Pope scorning the check by a paultry Fryer he curses and excommunicates him Luther writes against that and seeking and searching the Scriptures to find out how to assure the truths he had declared God manifests many more Now here I must observe that Luther broached no new matters it was the old Scriptures and the old truths of the Scripture but the men that then lived thought it then strange and novelty as being contrary to what they had been trained up in Of all the forreign Princes to Germany who stickled in this business none so hot as the king of our England then called Henry the Eight a Prince not esteemed so Religious as Warlike nor approved so Warlike as fierce every violent spirit not being for the management of Military Atchievments and to speak the truth the ease and delicacy of Court breeding imbecillitates the mind and enervates the body for the pains care and danger of War This king nevertheless had sure some design in his head to gain his Holy Fathers good will in as other Princes he therefore writes or causes to be written which he fathered a Book against Luther in maintaining the Popes power yea even in the unjustest matters that is That Luther a Vassal of the Sea of Rome a Child of the Church ought not to judge the Fathers acts nor censure much less controul matters allowed by him much less authorized nay commanded for the bearer of the Indulgences had his Letters missory or Bull so called Luther bears this shock and all and alone stands the dint of the whole so called Christian world a few men and one or two inferiour Princes with an university excepted but this notwithstanding Luther teaching and holding forth the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles fears not and multitudes are converted I may say to the Faith from the Pope to him he appealing to a general Councel but the Princes oppose with the Emperour as well as our Henry and good reason as I before declared set the Councel to order the Popes matters and a Parliament or Dyet will by Analogical Rule argue at least rationate at first and at last determine of the rule of Princes let a Fryer question the Pope and any Subject may as well altercate with his Prince and at last appeal to a Parliament as Luther to a Councel truly all the irregular Interests of Popes Cardinals Bishops Priests and the rest of that rabble and of kings and Princes Judges Advocates as Lawyers and the rest hang upon one thread and I presume that one sword at one blow cuts at last both asunder assuredly as they have stood so they will fall together but mark Gods way our Henry was a dissolute young Prince and he married young and to a widdow nauseous to such a spirit vain though Heroick or magnanimous to give it the best among such epithites he was desirous of a divorce which he at first at least sought not so much as is most probable for conscience as humour sake for this change he seeks the Popes dispensation she was a daughter of Spain the elder son of the Church that is the most ambitious among the so called Christian Princes which now stood ready at all assayes to act the Popes pleasure He was nigh and potent and must not be displeased the Pope dallies puts the English king desirous and hoping of a divorce upon an injury to
Market is over before they arrive or near it They also put exceeding charges upon admissions c. and no accompt but to themselves which in the consequences may be destructive not only to the private person but body politique in amassing Treasure The lesser Corporations were for marking measuring sealing sluffs linnen and woollen with a Crown Seal forsooth and these were his Majesties gratuities to the Lord of c. Marquess c. Q. Mother Lady Nurse Groom of the stool that is the Close stool whether King or Queen high and advantageous honours and this discended to outlandish as in Land commodities yea to pins and brooms and it was said to Rags for paper and Marrow-bones for Kitchin-stuff or grease Next he found one so base as being a Lawyer to take a pattent to have the first motion in the strictest sence or to be heard in all cases before any other which the Judges wisely quashed in the shell hearing him and shewing obedience to power and fulfilled this Patent therein and then declaring by an intimation of a rigid dislike that the Authority pretended could not that is with safety grant it for the Lawyers would be stirred who had the key of Knowledge and they once disaffected might be like a spark in powder All these had their success because they by degrees falling upon persons or trades only they even upon advice desisted generally from more then expostulation some few brought Actions and were killed with delayes and frowns Then the King intends a Master-piece which was at once to quash all controversies by a sleight and sudden judgment having a colour of Law but no substance and this was by an universal charge upon the whole body of Subjects so called Ship-Money which had for foundation thus much The Kingdom was an Isle the defence Shipping the Navy was decayed the King must replenish so he rigs his Ships and sends them forth to take the ayre as the idle ones said but indeed to inure bodies to the Sea settle them under pay and discipline and so engage dependance they return and whereas heretofore the Maritine Counties sent forth Ships and the Land towns paid now the King would provide all Ships and they all should pay now this was clearly done only to inhance the so called Crown Revenue for the Subject saw no Enemy and so no necessity the original cause of that Tax a general peace was held to the out side with all Nations after theslaughter of the gallant English at the Isle of Ree and the dismanteling of Rochel But the upshot was the King must be judge nay sole Judge of this necessity and this is quaeried by the King to his Judges which to prove the assertion before they were all King trodden that is had engaged all their abilities to his meer will two onely of twelve in this so important a business as indeed the whole life of the Subjects Liberty was involved in it as to his estate at first and for denyal of that to his restraint durst assert the truth which two only I shall own as men noble and honest Crook and Hutton and though both or one were by the plurality of Votes ingaged to the first Quaere Whether the King were sole Judge yet upon the Tryal brought by that true Patriot Hambden they righted themselves and the Nation to the utmost and honest Crook spake true plain English reason and good Law while mercinaries blundred upon the work and had they taken Barcley's Argenis and read the discourse betwixt Polyarchus and Hyanisbe touching such taxes they had saved their credits as only declaring the judgement of an Alien to English Liberty and reserved themselves But now 'twixt Truth and Loyalty so called they were confounded and gave no satisfaction no not to the well-affected to absolute powers and by this notwithstanding all power the Subject was enboldned to deny and at last after some two or three yeer the King was enforced to desist and surely his cogitations were for Armies how providence prevented there being so many discourses of it I shall omit only with this hint That these fore-runners manifestly declare that the Arms in Ireland raised by his Commission and continued in England against the same power of Parliament Assertors of the same Common Liberty by the Nation owned and petitioned for were undoubtedly the effects of the same cause namely the subversion of Englands Law and Government the peoples Liberties and all Rights making the King by his meer free will the absolute Arbiter of all actions civil and criminal Thus in brief I have set down some of the visible preparatives to Englands Climaterical Revolution which it now labours under In the discussion of the State of affairs civil and so called Ecclesiastick before but especially in the time of the late King and all shews that plainly there was left no more then an outside Christianity or formal Religion the temper of the clay of the world the pravity of Reason in the depraved principles of policy the iron of reason in the variety of species of Government and the gold of Christian simplicity the gold owned in the Scriptures by Authority allowed the iron in the rational formal profession of the same and the consequences thereof the Clay in the false and unconsequential glosses to make mans rule and absolute Government the higest and last refuge of every man and that for a particular persons end though in publke trust for that trust was said not so much to be for the peoples benefit as his own These things premised I might omit the passages since as being fresh in every mans memory but at the desire of some I shall go on in the way of a cursory Historical Narration repinings and grudgings by and from the actions of the King and his Ministers growing high so that it was not thought fit to proceed without some force ready for fear of insurrections which were indeed desired and therefore the people were afflicted that they might rebell and bring themselves into slavery The King having received the platform of alteration of his State from Thomas Earle of Strafford he is made his Agent to keep on foot a strong Army in Ireland who to speak truth were a company of men fit for as high an attempt as they were intended for but being Jesuited in great if not the greatest part they might have double designs that is rather to embroile all the Kingdomes and fit them for the tooth of the Spaniard their universal Patron then for the Kings absolute settlement in England whom they truly knew not to affect the Popes interest further then it stood with his own which is truly the Maxime of all Princes however they carry it Upon the confidence of this Army he is fooled into a quarrel with the Scots and was undoubtedly made beleeve that to let the Spaniard land 10000. in England was the only way to set all right and Wentworth a man of depth of policy and courage might
over-confidently accept these councels the truth I shall not prolixly assert God having providentially cut of that Quaere by the Sword of the Hollander but their course lading provision number and quantity of men and Commanders quality of convoy and backs of carriage besides the testimony of divers all tend to demonstrate the same nor for the same reason shall I argue how cross and incoherent we see these Councels were for fools see errors when the cast is plaid which the wise Gamester studied for and could not descry This as it hastened preparations on the Kings part for war so it enforced him while yet unprepared to hold out the Ensigns of peace and what no advices could produce before is now for interest sake granted namely a Parliament wherein all under-hand proceedings for elections not being able such a general dislike being in all men to the King and his proceedings to work and mould it serviceable to the Kings ends he as soon dissolves as calls it This breeding a deeper distast and he not yet fitted and seeing the people now fell upon petitioning rather then rebelling relying upon the Parliaments united power rather then upon their single personal rights and would sooner venture to set down with an unjust loss of part from the Kings power then loose all to his mercy by an unwarrantable course He calls a Parliament again and to this Parliament are brought so many complaints that I fear the bulk of Petitions and Remonstrances will affright our Worthies for looking into them and let much necessary work lye undone not giving due reparations to many persons against publike Theeves and Extortioners Now the Parliament made no great haste and the King was urgent for money which they taking advantage of and of his former not only declining and breaking up or dissolving Parliaments but his neglecting his own Laws that is those to which he had assented they upon the ground laid in his third year insist to have an Act for setling this Parliament till dissolved or prorogued by themselves notwithstanding an act for calling a Parliament every three years thinking no knot too sure to hold what they still found loose which effected with some other things they then fall to work with the Earle of Strafford that had power enough to have done all he intended in an ordinary course of providence had not vain confidence that he could do it when he would as the Almighty determined befooled him he surprized who was the Master-dear the herd flye and though accused by the Kings great Councel yet his Majesty having affections personal notwithstanding the supream publick trust in ordinary gives them his pass and by the means of his Admiral they were set safe a forreign shore and now himself labours to his utmost the safety and preservation of that man who had ruled in Ireland to his utmost in that absolute way he intended his Master here should as the Cardinal Richelieu had done in his France the great pleas on his side were what he had done was for his Master the King by his special command for which he had his warrant and for all Moneys his discharge and if a further offence were it was against no existent Law if Treason c. not within the Law of 25. of Edward the third which was made with much advisement to preserve the Liberty of the Subject and consequently his life by a certain knowledge of his dutie To which it was answered that his trust was to the Commonwealth to the King in his Politique not in his natural capacity and his personal receit warrant or allowance was not sufficient but they had power yea in case he had had a legal allowance or discharge in ordinary yet for the Commonwealths sake which includes both king and people to call him to an account And to the last part that it was against no Law existent They said the Parliament was by the Stat. Judge of Treason de futuro and to orethrow the Laws and government was more then to destroy a person to ruine a kingdom then kill a king and therefore I must agree by importunity forced the King to assent to his death which effected and not dared to be recalled all plots and policies left are used to break up the Parliament by the King yea an attempt made upon some Members to sacrifice to the Ghost of Strafford but all failing and yet manifested the Parliament think fit to have a guard the King practices the Army the Parliament Vote no less then 400000. l. And with that disband the Army the King thus lost every way and the Army in Ireland utterly lost by the grand Rebellion there taking many of them part with the Irish if not most and this still giving harsher resentments to the people whose Liberty was now grown great and the Parliament loth to hinder them while they served their turns many not only sleights but affronts were put on the Kings servants reflecting upon himself The Bishops now shew their sure Rock was he and they wholly cleave to him the Lords many joyn with him many against him and many appear not the Kings Agents whose designs had been nipt here being now in Denmark Holland France c. moved for assistance against the Parliament of England as the Irish Rebels do there they seek the same things and under the same pretexts so that the King is said and not without some ground to be the chief Actor in all so loth he was to call the Irish Rebels This causes the Parliament to talk of raising Armes not only to defend themselves against the King and those with whom he came to the Parliament House and kept still about him being generally a crew of Jovialists debaucht persons But to offend such publike forreign Enemies as under the Kings Name should be brought from other Nations or raised here to which there was such an unanimous loan of all sorts especially the Religious who found a change indeed in their condition That they from that took the hint of the strong affections of the people towards them and upon that Vote the extirpation of Episcopacy the which the King so long contending for and so eagerly ruined himself with them How far this is to be read out of the Revelation I shall not quaere but say it was long foretold out of that prophesy and now fell out they gave themselves now to treat of Reformation of the Church but this rooting up Episcopacy took many from them they had voted and acted against pluralities as to settle the Church and gave the Judges a setled and sufficient salary pretending to take away all other Fees from them but proceeded not The King fled from London the Convocation they follow his shaddow the Parliament call themselves a certain number of men called Ministers from all parts and nominate them the Assembly these sit as the Clergy of England the King after many Traverses having gotten together an Army comes to Oxford whether
many come from the Parliament to him as well as went with him there he erects or allowes a new Parliament And by their advice as his Parliament at Oxford demands Treaty with his Parliament at Westminster which they reject and at last the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal London indeed stood true to them which by its Vicinity to the Parliament and infinite populacy awed all other parts they had a sence of former sufferings under the power of Kings they had a deep sence of the extremities the godly and most piously affected people suffered in all parts of the Nation and how far the vicinity of the Court and Archbishop of Canterbury had violated their Christian Liberty prevailing over the quiet spirit of their Bishop was though little not forgotten they therefore generally followed the Parliament especially stirred up by their Ministers as having in hand the cause of God The King he brands them all with Declarations of Rebellion and taxing them with seeking his life and the rooting out of his Posterity They answer that they were so far from seeking his life as that they should labour by all means possible to defend and protect the same their just Rights and Priviledges preserved and for his satisfaction cause the Nation generally to enter the like Protestation this not satisfying but it being still urged by the King that the Protestation was but to establish their own power not secure his fears While their Armies were in the field against the King they answered They were only on the defensive part and such indeed was the Generals Commission and that they could not but according to their trusts preserve the Laws and Rights of the Nation Hereupon they open the Law that the King was indeed but the chief trusted person and that for his peoples sake that of this not he only but they also and more especially being congregate into a body were to judge that his failings past demonstrate his ends contrary to publike interest and resolve that even the Law of Nature taught self-preservation and that it was too too visible he intended an usurpation upon their just Priviledges That they desired his preservation so it might consist with the Weal-publick and therefore desired him to leave the company of evill men so called his Counsellors who mis-led him and to adhere to his great Councel and promised to make him on these terms the most Glorious King that ever was in these Nations and now a diverse part appearing upon several grounds and opinions amid the Members of the House the prevailing party to firm the union betwixt the Scots and them more strongly whose assistance they had had all this while in the work they frame a Covenant which held forth security and glory to the King and his posterity in endeavouring to settle Church and State upon the firm foundations of Justice and righteousness which taken in Scotland is transmitted hither and they by Parliament made brethren and this is tendred to the King to sign being first taken solemnly by the principal of the Nation with this condition That if the King agreed with them in it they would still not only acknowledge him their King but make him more glorious c. But this was so penned in such general terms that an absolute Royalist might well take it for it was intended by the some I say not the many by the leaders not the followers but as a measure to try the stretch of every mans judgement opinion or interest many no doubt took it cordially many formally some strictly some loosely but though this were not only taken but urged yet Armies were continued against the King as he said in the field against his evil Councel as they said 't is truth their evil Councel was now his the Lesson of absolute power and to be like his Brethren the rest of the Kings who had joyned interest with the Whore of Rome made him not only hold correspondence with that Beast not only at bed and board but Councel also as far as served his interest who undoubtedly aimed to rule in all things according to his own Will which Will yet should have had Regulations but still with such dependence upon his Judgement that he being the speaking Law would have had no Interpreter that should be able to cross him and his determination and so the Law must have spoken in all things to his lust or he would have made it and this he thought and I am perswaded believed to be the undoubted right of all Princes though their people as his in case of contest between competitors for the Soveraignty might wring something from them of Grants or Charters or so called priviledges or immunities which yet he believed they could no more grant to the prejudice of the Crown that is of the heirs and successors in the Kingdom then things sacred to God could be imployed to prophane uses This doctrine admitted which I dare avow was and can prove sufficiently by Witnesses yet alive That our late King Charls said these words openly upon a Hearing Mr. Hern I have heard what you have said What do you talk to me of Law Justice or Conscience according to all which Mr. Herne alledged the Patent signed by his Majesty to be I tell you said the King there is nothing in England shall stand that is not for my profit There stands one pointing to Sir John Banks then Attorney General who had hundred of pounds many I have heard for the work and drew the Patent shall bring a quo warranto against the Patent and see then what you will do Now take notice this Patent was of the new invention of Salt and opposed the Monopoly at the Sheilds under the favor of deservedly beheaded Hambleton and the Inventor not complying with the Kings Interest against the priviledge of the Subject the King brake not onely his private word with him contrary to particular engagements under his Hand carried by Sir Charls Herbert but also his publike word as King this sentence being so ruinous to the man made the Worme speak and said Sir Dare you be a King and be thus unjust I never read of Tyrant said so what ever he did or words of like effect whereupon Lord Dorcet with a great oath by his Maker as I express it said loe and if it please your Majesty these are your prick-eared Rogues the Tub-preachers and indeed he was a Zealot these are they will pluck you out of your Throne unless you dethrone them I pray take not this Lord for a Prophet unless like Caiaphas This word I could not but insert for conscience sake as a firm Index and testimony of his reall intentions This kept him off from closing with his Parliament and the rather because they insisted to have the Sword in their power for so many years or during his life tenderness of him caused the Parliament to venture far for it could not by this sole defensive way but protract the
equitable dispute as both were thought best to be at present rejected Now the so called Independent or rather Congregational party walking in the mean what ever the vulgar esteemed them and how Idiot-like and simply they conceived of them yet the moderate and inquisitive found in their Doctrine more of the purity and simplicity of the Doctrine of Christ then either of the other held forth namely Bishop or Presbyter yea no such infallibility by them pretended to as both the other were guilty of these holding that though there was all the revealed Will of God manifested in the Scriptures yet that all was not discovered to the world much less received by it all at once but that the Wisdom of God unveiled himself and gave out to every Age their portion The Examples they gave were clear as day in the great manifestations God had given the world in these latter times from Luther to his followers from them to Calvin from him to this present and therefore they propounded That the Rule of Gods Word held forth many things that to this Age seemed clear yet a future might descry doubts in therefore they advised moderation to be used towards men of all opinions concerning matters of Religion of all sorts and so held forth the proposition of liberty of conscience but not as agreeing that each man might do what him lust or live at his own law But that as no man knew the Father but he to whom the Son revealed him nor the Son but by the Father that is the communication of the work of grace was solely from the immediate hand of the Almighty That man not disobeying the Law Civil that is the proper Law of the Magistrate as man That the Civil Sword or Sword of Civil Justice reached not the life of any man no not his estate that is had no just power over a man for what was only meer matter of religion that is of pure conscience That is to speak to the most mens understanding that the Magistrate was not at least so the Keeper of both Tables as to enforce an outward obedience to the religion he held forth the president of error manifest was in the divers sounds of the Trumpets of Hen. the 8. Edward the 6. Queen Mary Queen Elizabeth James and Charls all various some contrary this summed up drew from contrary affected ones whether from interest evil affection or ignorance two charges One of confusion so called by affecting toleration for all opinions yea even to community of wives and estates afterwards called Levelling The other of new Lights as if they had been meerly sceptical that is ready every hour at every change of interest or whimsey of the crown by a prophetick phantasy to admit a change of at least religious principles I have been in company with them who after bitter invectives against Independents yea I may attest some of the black cloath have upon the opening of the Tenents approved their enemies and disallowed their own parties professing to have taken up the controversie but on trust however the opinion of the so called Independent agreed with the temper of the civil Magistrate as by him thought most sutable yet not of necessity to the power by them intended which was regulated Democracie as the King held Episcopacy best as most sutable to Monarchy and the Presbyterian affected the Lords however degenerated as sorting best with Aristocracie now corrupted Now these parties though they held forth principles diverse yea some seemingly contrary while the power of the King was on foot yet they fell not right out many Independents looking at the outward letter of the Covenant took it some fearing denyed it but this bred hot disputes and though it were intended as aforesaid as a meer civil touchstone for the Commonwealths settlement yet from the different Interest of parties it was disobliged but especially after the sence was explained and that so far from the pure natural acception of the letter for instance that clause to labour uniformity c according to the Word of God and the example of the best Reformed Churches which was interpreted of Scotland generally by the party This being on foot and the Parliaments party brought low under the Earl of Essex the Defensive General The Parliament had now found out a man I may say God sent them one though of Noble extraction in the worlds phrase that is born of rich parents yea anciently rich who would take an Offensive Commission for it is said Essex would not the Commons were eager but the Lords opposed this by this time resenting their Interest also hung upon the same chain with the Kings but the undertaking was proceeded in too far to be stopped so that on they go and now in a miserable low condition they resolve to new mould the Army a work so improper and impertinent both in regard of distasting old Commanders and getting new mutinies of old Souldiers not willing to change a General until all scores be cleared as well as getting new when on the losing nay lost side and that obstructed with stain of Rebellion But all these bugs past aside it is ordered and accordingly done but there is a rub cast in the way by the brethren of Scotlands friends for it is ordered none to bear office in the Army that should not take the Covenant yet this all this while held forth as a religious Oath a Covenant to God and from thence urged to the end of civil settlement and at last it went so high that no one should bear Office Ecclesiastick so called Civil or Military that would not subject his conscience to this Covenant which as I have said few men literally opposed but obstructed with the late Scottish mist of interpretation or explanation but as occasion offered this also was not so pressed as to retard the work which now pressed hard upon them so that it was reported divers of the Members thought the Seats at Westminster too hot for Leicester taken and the King with his Army coming on full and strong the Parliament's weak and thin all was counted lost I my self the day the field of Naseby was fought dined with four of the Honors so called of Knight-Baronets and two Colonels under the Earl of Manchester who avowed there were but two Souldiers in the Field the General and Major General Cromwel was known absent and the outlandish Gamester Vermuden gone when tide turned he had lately laid down which made them say had they one thousand pound they would not be in the Battaile for nine hundred so lost was the Cause given yet a Noble Knight though highly affected to the Interest both of Essex and Manchester resolved he had rather lose his 1000. l. there then have it and life and liberty taken away To this despicable Army in such a season and juncture of time as there never was the like for strength of all sorts on the other side as in all Battails before after a loss
against each other But by the power of the Army they are re-instated again at Westminster and declare Pelhams Parliament so called he being the new chosen Speaker no Parliament but the lenity of the prevailing part went no further then imprisonment of some heads either not daring in such a difficult season or prudently forbearing to exasperate but this lenity shattered much their work for although in the re-instating these Members the Army passing through the heart of London shewed themselves brethren not enemies no force no disdain appearing yet London was full of hot humours and no sooner was the body of the Army to that end politickly dispersed by the Members kept in by every Voting but they break forth anew Yea so was the plot laid that each County in England should have their embroilments and the Scot should return to beat down the Levelling Army and re-inthrone the Presbyter but declared to make way for a free Treaty with the King at the Isle of Wight a sure plot for the Army every where distracted what could they do But the plot works let us see the event Wales begins the remote part West thither is Cromwel sent He gone all on the sudden the world is full but happily by degrees not as intended but occasionally each party of Rogues who began the work thinking themselves able to re-instate King Charls the next place was Norwich where the Lord shewed himself wonderfully both in the height of power and depth of providence of which only one word There was about two thousand persons in six hours time gathered together not intended untill May day the choyce day of the Major by promiscuous popular Election I need say no more to shew the evil in case of a future settlement but the Major being upon miscarriage sent for by a Messenger of Parliament to kill the Messenger and rescue the Major this multitude pretended to rise but up they broke open one of the Sheriffs houses and rifled the same and the Excise Office and then seized the Magazine of the County in which was ninety eight barrels of powder there were in the house dwellers to the number of twenty and odd of men women and children the house was large and strong yet they forced it open there being Arms also for two thousand persons which found out they presently arm and charge but the scowrers and worms being in and they in haste their Guns became useless against the Horse who came in to the assistance of the Roundheads as they were called of whom it was resolved not one should be left alive by the next day after And now both Presbyter and Independent being in the same danger they both met as friends and accounted the ones safety the others preservation and as God preserved the Souldier without so did he also them within the house for the house being blown up as is most likely by wilfulness of some of them for it was declared the day before it would be blown up and above one hundred of them found dead not one of the Inhabitants were slain though under the same ruines yea a woman great with childe formerly subject to miscarry now near her time though lying long under a great wall was taken out safe miscarried not but liveth still to praise the Lord with those her brethren and sisters who saw themselves in the grave and were yet raised and this was done April the twenty fourth One thousand six hundred forty eight From hence were the Souldiers while the City was yet scarce setled called to Bury in Suffolk thence into Kent thence to Colchester a small party brought Holland's and Buckingham's partakers to their shame and the Scot before not known whether Royal or Presbyterial being with much ado disowned by the Parliament by reason as was declared of the insufferable cruelties and rapines by them exercised upon the English but the visible interest of them was wholly Royal commixing Councels and Interest with the renegate English so called and although all the breakings forth were meerly by the loose multitude and no appearance but for the Royal party yet this hint was taken strongly to urge a close with his Majesty and to make this the less doubtfull the Navy in great part revolt and the strong supporters of the Presbyterian party engage in it Now whether the Independents were not true to the King in their Colloque I here quaere not nor can more then before This I am sure they were true to themselves But the Presbyterian party so called were not true to themselves for the King out-went them as far as the other did him not that I beleeve that they intended it but that their Leaders now seeing things at a dead lift resolved to make the best bargain they could for themselves not seeking the Kings Interest neither but as it stood with their own therefore they resolve to please the King in all and that the Treaty might be free send him down new Suits c. and free him from the close imprisonment or restraint wherein he had suffered and this proceeded to a large Treaty wherein the King and his Creatures treated all matters as them listed and that which was never heard on in the world a Prince alone to maintain Arguments both divine and civil against the utmost wits of Lawyers and Divines and as they were printed seemed to surmount them yet to get himself into the Throne and make his enemies bowe he parted with what he had argued himself into so they had what they had not of right but grant still and all this done with such sobriety such opposition granting now a little then a little that a meer honest eye-witness would have been deceived notwithstanding he knew his Majesty had declared himself a prisoner not free his Son the Prince now acting by his command avowing the Treaty forced and the Armies of the Scots and English engaged to break all off But God notwithstanding all this that breaks all the bows that were strained against him scatters all these clouds only Colchester the Scots Army and the Fleet are continued ●o exercise our patience during the siege of Colchester it is wonderfull that the poor Souldier should endure to fight the same men so many times still sending them to London whence they escaped and yet he not execute them but send them again so that I have heard some were taken above seven times prisoners the Elements seemed to fight against them or bewaile the obdurateness of some hearts by a continual rain during all that summer especially at that siege which though long yet at last was effected And God so blessed the Lieut General in the North that though he had been made specially instrumentall in most the great warlike affairs as well as conciliary yet here he triumphed indeed the General taken prisoner and the whole Army utterly dissipated though above three to one and disputed manlike but who can oppose the will of the Almighty Yet some endeavoured
therein still and these successes against him whom God would cast down engaged them the more speedily to effect their intentions and enact a disbanding of the Army lest the Army should disband them This hastens the Armies march to London I am consident altogether unresolved what to do the work which God now called them to was higher then ever and the presages were the ruine either of London the Army or both certainly there were many who would have put it to the Tryal but the Citizens wisely considering that the multitude of discontented persons poor and necessitous were as great if not greater dangers within then the Army without and that lose they what they could by compliance they must lose more by opposition they admit the General The Parliament is now shattered many of the Members being taken and imprisoned are declared as guilty of the bringing in the Scots and might as well if not better of the several mutinies in England on the Land and defection of the Ships at Sea London is now Garrisoned the Arrears which were great there intending by want of pay if possible to dishearten the Souldier are strictly ordered and the Seat of the beast there that is Pauls Church the Cathedral made a Court of Guard and such Members as would avow the proceedings with the King excluded the House Ireland all this while was to the Parliament almost as it hath been with me a thing not regarded but now there are thoughts of that and the Army setled under a certain number with a settlement of pay respectively and order taken for the settling the Navy and Generals sent forth there is great thoughts of the necessity of doing Justice mens minds had run no higher generally then happily to bring a Lord or two to the block but lo God raiseth mens spirits to that height and brings them to it by degrees that they bring even the King himself to the Barr of Justice O that every heart may tremble at the work of the Lord he hath here manifested his power let all Princes tremble Charls of England the best of Kings I may admit but the worst of all other men for none hath such obligations is the example No Nation had the like mercies with England the hand of heaven had planted and watered us we were grown rich our eyes stared with fat and our bodies sweat under the pride of apparel but our Religion was formal and all our improvement of outward mercies were to licentiousness the poor were naked idle and unprovided for the Law held forth righteousness but the Judges and Ministers made it crooked or broken the rich men only were imployed the honour of Magistracy was rich clothes and a full Table but they were too good to take pains Now O all you Magistrates see God hath plucked him out who was prayed for as the light of your life and the breath of your nosthrils the fountain of your so called Honours your Idoll and hath broken off not only the palms of his hands and his feet but by the Sword of the Lord hath cut off his head as an offender against the Laws which he was entrusted to be the chief Keeper of I write it when I still see with grief men great in riches able in parts think scorn to be left out of Offices and places of trust as neglected but put them in and if they have nothing else to do they think that a work below them I avow it just if God should turn them out of all and set the Plough-man to be their Lord but I see yet no Justice for man to do it yet that they should be punished is most just but of this more seasonably afterwards men that will may see God in this and admire I know many pious Christians enemies to this Act who yet adhered to the Parliament in all the Wars and contributions thereto against the King yea in the offensive one but their stick is the Covenant I would have such rest content 〈◊〉 their own innocency in the fact they might have opposed if then they resisted not let them now be silent seeing the Lord is high in judgement That party of Parliament who transacted the affairs of State now still keeping the name of the Parliament though assisted with or guarded by the Army and in that saving to us our due Rights and Liberties of equal Law and property After this fatall Sentence proceeds to the sentencing of others both of high and low estate and enact the alteration of the State of the Nation from a Monarchy the Government being grown wholly confused the due regulation of the Prince the priviledges of Parliament and the liberty of the Subject being rather not to be distinguished then destinguished rather treated on in the Schools then by themselves and our Laws though the ignorance of them excused no man by the Judges or Senate then by the many concerned whether Executioners as Justices of the Peace inferior Judges Constables c. or the poor multitude yea all our Cities and Boroughs lost in their Franchises and Towns lawless in all kinds so that there was a kinde of legall levelling or theevery grown common Was it not high time for the Parliament of England to step up God raised up some spirits and but a few they attempted high matters feared not the frown of a King nor the combinations of all neighbour Princes which was threatned but resolved to establish the work God set them about And I let them to know God hath plained the way unto them there is no opposition but Self they have been Gods instruments for great works and must be yet for greater success doth not always demonstrate the truth God may suffer them in many errors for one good sake What he intends I determine not but may conjecture that themselves saw God Almighty intended an alteration of that frame of Government which was in this Nation What to settle is their work and how to oppose this settlement was now the endeavour some things I fear in the many Counterbuffs which God had given were taken to oppose which were never so intended though they might be tendered inopportunely and under the time of the grand design of Petitioning As namely some Petitions which though not burned by the hands of the Hangman as that was presented to the ungarbled House yet it was for some things it may be justly distasted in the whole disowned and called or rather miscalled as seditious by some interessed persons to render the whole odious Rainsborough is slain and no due enquiry into his death or Sir H. Cholmleys supposed compliance with the Pomfreteers This in an unsetled State where though faith was highly known and pretended to on both sides little was acted by the parties controverting but as men adopted enemies to new attempts and that from grounds given forth plausible enough for the Engagements at New-Market and Triploe-Heath c. were made the outside of the design The matter proposed
value to be determined by any two Justices of the Limit by their Warrants without Writ especially at monthly meetings but more especially if they were both poor that is not worth one hundred pound clear or if but one of them the poor being grown lately as well enemies and devourers of one another as the rich That there might be but one waight whether Troy or Aver du-poiz in the Nation and so one measure and one tenure that is Freehold of the State not grantable to any person or persons so called mean Lords as tending to the high advancing of particular interests much more subject to destroy then support the Commonwealth especially that basest badge of slavery and the most prejudicial to the interest of a free Commonwealth the so called Villeni or bond service urging that the Rule of Littleton That Land being the less worthy cannot engage the person of a free man which is more worthy and so that Villenage or now so called Copy-hold is incompatible with freedome and the evil effects of this have appeared in choyce of Representatives as dangerous as ever did any Feife service of the Barons to their Soveraigns the Kings and they say it is just the Comminalty should have right done against inferiour Lords now the Lords have right against the King or State that so while we be freed from the Tyranny of a Prince we may not be worse slaves each to other for they can instance more wicked unchristian merciless and cruel acts in Copyhold Lords then in all the Princes in the world They also desired if the State took Tonnage and Poundage Customes c. that the Seas might be guarded and some said if they did not it was lawful to steal Custome but I put that opinion in a Parenthesis they desired that no person or condition of men might be secured from Law that all evils as appearing might be at appearing rectified and to that end that an easie address might be to Courts of Justice setled in power in the respective bounds both for ending and determining according to Law setled and preparing for remedy to emergent evils by certificate of the matter They said they valued their priviledges as high as any but they would part with their priviledges of men to enjoy the priviledge of just and wise men they therefore would deny themselves things lawful if found inconvenient thus did they submit to the Magistrate and thought not themselves wiser then them whom God set over them but this also admitted that Magistrates were men and might err that the rule of their Government being but perfect reason supposed that infallibility was not tyed to the Seat of Justice if not to the Throne of the Prince and Chair of the Bishop that it was the duty of the Subject with fear and humility to advise of the Law and that no man might oppose the Law but lawfully not to be the Authors of disturbance to the State lest each man might contend for his own opinion until there were as many Laws as men They said that the poor were a parcel of the body politick which ought to be provided for setledly and sufficiently some propounded Commons some concealed Lands some one thing some another but these were mistaken parties generally though well affected they might be for Commons were the Tenants Rights originally not the poors and concealed Lands might now have proved as fatall a Hawk to the State to whom they now belong as Forrest Lands did before to the King for as I have said before all Tenures Titles c. being grown so difficult what might not have been adjudged now concealed as then was Forest These men further allowed and desired that persons should be brought into due degrees the due power of all persons respectively setled the primitive order for security of the Nation by the enforcing the Laws of Tythings for idle vagrant persons Hues and Cryes for Thefts Robberies and such like that due orders of Cities and Walled Towns Bridges and great Roads for Watches c. Regulations of all Trades by certain and just Laws might be renewed Prisons not made the Schools of all Villany but places of due laborious restraint and safe keeping and that specially first for persons criminous next dangerous lusty riotous lazy and idle Publike Offices to be born at the publike charge and no just Office to be the burthen or ruine of a man such as to be a Reader of Inns of Court High-Sheriff Constable Major Sheriff c. of Counties and Cities That all Customes be certain all Fees of Officers with a thousand things more which experience had rendred manifestly holding forth Justice or the foundations thereof Now these just things being so diametrically opposite to the Interest of multitudes who had for their corrupt interest sake or to make a fortune in their own Idolish phrase joyned themselves to the Parliament party were heard but neglected then scandalized to commix Interests with the errors afore-supposed in Levelling in the grossest acceptation so that each rule almost of morall honesty was now miscalled Levelling The reason why I call these just things Levelling is to unmask these Satans and to manifest to all men the strange artifices used to obstruct the truth and take men off from the entertaning true apprehensions of it suggesting to them these jealousies that though the Propositions held forth nothing but seemingly just honest and Christian yet no doubt there was a Snake lay in the grass to eat in pieces the root of Government and debase the Supremacy of Magistracy destroy order annihilate property and introduce the confusion which some as I have said are said to intend and we may justly fear if some timely and just order preventive be not applyed will by these self-seekers be assuredly perfected But all these just Levellers had not the same foundation or principle for their designs though know assuredly all honest men reall and of publike spirits Papist or Kings Protestant that is he that would walk no further in the way of Christ then the Laws of the Land taught him that is beleeving as was by Law established according to the Canon c. yet zealously making conscience of being wiser then his Teachers Presbyter or Independent or of any Sect Opinion or Religion soever were nick-named Levellers by them that found it best fishing in troubled pudled waters But as I say they had several principles The Presbyter founding his Levelling upon the Judicials of Moses stuck to that Rule that the Judicials were Gods own Law given to his own people with whom he had entered a Covenant not only upon Mount Sinai but in the loyns of Abraham father of the faithful that so Abraham is our father and we by faith his seed and so bound Again that the people chosen of God were Types of all Gods people to whom that Law was given in them and living according to that Law should thereby manifest themselves each to other to be the people
so used which liberty being much abused the parties who upon the heat of the blood that is while the injury was fresh complained were bound over by Recognizance to prosecute for the King and so were the Witnesses but if the party or the Witnesses should refuse it it might much be scrupled what by our Law ought to be done to inforce them justly but Custome hath prevailed to go by steps The places of Trial of Crimes are either the Ordinary as Kings-Bench or Statute-Sessions or the Extraordinary and yet Ordinary viz. the Commissions of Oyer and Ter. and Gaol Delivery carried down alwayes with the Iustices of Nisi Prius at the Assizes or the legal Extraordinary which were an assotiation of more men then ordinary according to the novelty and exigency of the cause most legally and usually made up of all the Iudges of all the Benches and no other and heard in the Checkquer Chamber Now these are not to be scrupled in themselves the other and which are extraordinary and scrupled as illegal are meer Royal Commissioners consisting of Iudges Lords and other men according to the pleasure of the prime Magistrate and these were rare and but in case of great offences or doubts of imminent at lest so pretended concernment And there were two Causes the one professed which was the resolution of many wise men sworn to do right according to Law betwixt the King or State and the Subject who by concurrent Votes assured the interest of either party and surely were the Law by which they judged as plain and evident as the reason or foundation of their extraordinary judgements there would be no exception but the fear heretofore on the peoples part which is the ground to the present jealousies was in respect that Commissions pretended of that nature were aiding to the inchroaching vertue of the Supream Power to the advance of Prerogative especially after King James had made the Iudges which were the leaders in both these powers his meer Creatures by absolute dependance in altering their Patents as aforesaid from during their well abearing to during his pleasure How the Iudges Patents are now I know not but except the present condition of affairs make that now lawful which in it self is not surely such Arbritrary Patents are introductive of the heights of vassalage for if they in each Punctilio advance not the intendments and interests on foot of the Supream Magistrate be it good or evil for God or against Liberty or Bondage A Writ of Ease is next to be expected and that engages to the slander of every malitious enemy and he now lies open to the lash of every accuser especially if any litigious person hath been overthrown before him O how the man bustles and now is his time for revenge our eys have seen this and this I suppose to be the ground of fears of such Commissions I willingly avoid Ravelling Controversies upon presidents which in our Laws are so many and so diverse each from other and multitudes so contrary each to other as supream or most excellent reason must bear sway and then the arbitrium of the Commission will not be so much the question as the Law by which judged If it be objected against the adjoyning in Royal Commissions that they are nor Lawyers nor Iudges in Ordinary but Merchants c. I say there lies an Appeal to Parliament from any Court Ordinary or Extraordinary which receives Commission under the Parliaments Authority If it be objected they are meerly the States Pentioners then the Argument is against the Supream Magistrate mediately against their Iudges immediately and is remedied by appeal but this is manifest that there is no necessity of these Commissions they were continually declaimed against and denied as one gap to invade the native proper liberty of the Subject and if now inforced can but foment jealousie against the State Having now found out the proper Courts of Trial of criminal persons let us see who the criminous person is and how to be dealt withal the criminous person is vulgarly taken to be him that is accused Legally him that is convicted not differencing where upon examination before the Iustice there is confession of the party full evidence upon oath violent presumptions or barely suspition but all are dealt withal alike except they misdemean themselves and in case the matter be baylable baylable alike few Iustices looking at good bail but all the Clerks at their Fees in which case much error is where the Clerk is Iustice of the Peace or c. and the Iustice not able or too proud to draw a Warrant himself Now by the Law of England and just reason mens liberties being highly prised heretofore men were to be tried the next Gaol delivery I mean at the Sessions for the County but now by a Statute made in the time of Philip and Mary or at least under pretence of it all matters criminal being death that is out of the Rogues City of Refuge that is to which they cannot readily plead guilty of all Felonies within Clergy the still continued shame of England so that some use a hateful Proverb All Rogues to the Clergy and all Clergy to the Gallows they must be tried at the so called Assises This Statute was a great friend to the Clerk of the Assize above the Clerk of the Peace and those Iustices that will not see this Statute the Inquisitive Clerk of Assise can spy his time to fit him if he cometh in his compass which may be every Assises and though present put him down absent so he is fined forty shillings and to remedy it will cost twice so much Now in the Gaols the Schools of Iniquity they are not imployed and if any one will imploy himself he must purchase his liberty to use his Trade at the Gaolers discretion for there is no Law for it no not for Debtors so that having nothing to do the Prisoners confer notes and the older Thief Cutpurse c. still instructs the yonger in the revealed quidities of the Law Vain people think highly of these nice evasions of Law but the serious sees it makes the Law ridiculously difficult the great Rogues scape but the ignorant and unexperienced dye for it All honest men love mercy and are as loth simple Felony should be death as any but they would not men should by Custom abuse just things or endure unlawful ones or connive at wickedness Yet these and multitudes more well known have long and do still pass unremedied or are provided for but in part or for a parcel of the Commonwealth So that it is certain the generalty of men which once come into Englands prisons of all sorts as now used are spoiled for ever both as to industry and honesty yea so notorious is the evil that I have known many Justices avow it was their sorrow to be in place to be instrumental to such evils by sending one for his first offence to Gaol and likely to
Where is the Image of God Look upon the Magistrate by what names or titles so ever distinguished they execute not the judgement of God but of themselves they rule to satisfie their lust they glory in outward power riches honor and the like the great men both those that are mighty through wisdom as the learned Lawyer Phisitian Divine mighty in strength as the Commander in war Military Power or the Magistrate from the highest Iudge to the lowest Constable who are cloathed with civil power all as the Supream in Trust do lead follow the dance of eying the splendors and glories of the world and can we think that the multitude will not follow O all you mighty men What hath made you thus haste to destruction What was it that by degrees made possible what confidently none of you could once think on the executing of a King in the chief City of his Realm what made you seek a change and what prepared the way to the Iudgement which God had appointed was it not Self-seeking was it not raigning for Self was it not Oppression in Iustice was it not altering the end of the Law more then the Law it self though that was laid to his charge as fittest to draw the people to a sensible interest Those that came in place after what was it rendred them obnoxious to change was it not driving on the same trade and most assuredly it will in Gods Jnquisition for righteousness and Iudgement ruine all that shall tread the same path you cannot wholly ruine the native Liberty I avow to have after a total expulsion of the Kings Power and setling an other by your onely visible Power submitted to the Engamement to be true and faithful to the Commonwealth of England c. I by this acknowledge my self bound in my Place and Station to be actively to you untill as fully subdued while at liberty but if under the Sword of your Adversary I must submit unto the force and not act against them not you this the Law of Nature teaches the Law of best and Supream Reason further you cannot expect no nor your enemy unless you will be Tyrants and this either of you may require I allow not of seditious words writings or deeds I onely say Give the liberty you would take sure none but evil Magistrates ever would disallow a liberty to complain some say t is all that is left them But I shall desist from such enlargements and speak onely upon some few matters arising in the Verge of my trust I am bound by a necessity to declare the evils of them First Concerning the Tax for the Army It hath as to its great and unjust inequality been long complained of for some paid but two pence per pound that is the rate came to two pence per pound in those parts and they gave in but half value of their lands as twenty True value was rated at ten and no more if so much and the Towns adjacent were at full value one shilling two pence per pound yea some in other places one shilling ten pence so that in the highest rates to the E. of Manchester British Army Newark the Garrisons c. the poor owner and some rich ones did freely offer their whole Revenues to discharge Taxes This burthen was long laboured against after this comes an Act for an equal pound rate this by them who had good bargains was opposed and delayed so that the Armies necessities enforced a return to the old way of error Some just men renew this work more rigorously and an Act comes down for six months beginning at 25. of Decem. last the Act comes so late that it s not possible to act towards the first three moneths and that there might not be such delayes and evils as had faln out upon the former three months which gave no power to the Commissioners to act otherwise then by a pound rate so that many feared Premunires this gave such a power in case of not being able to compass the work in due time to return back again The business of the second three months was not thought fit to be put on foot till the first three moneths were ended when the time comes the old Opposers are the new Opposers and plead several pleas which will inlighten much to the truth of what is before Historized The main objections were three or four first It was Levelling and that it was as just to reduce all mens estates to an equality as the rates after so long continuance this a grave and wise man otherwise strenuously asserted The second was It was an obstruction to the service of the State for alteration of Customary Rates would be long in settling the monies would not come in and then the Souldier would return to free quarter and the next The Garrison of Lin were earnest not to alter fearing as they said That they that took free-quarter when it was not due and more then was due would out-do Reason if really behind The last was when we had done what we could we could not make a truly perfect Rate There was a fourth but little to the purpose and that was we knew not what nor how to rate and so we might over-rate as well as under-rate and for that we had no power To the first it was answered That a rule of Justice was desired not equalling estates but equal rating of them the best way to quiet spirits from thoughts of unjust Levelling To the second That it obstructed not the service to alter the rates from evil to good the souldier should have his money and would but each one lend their helping hand as soon as in the old way and to avoid raising more they would raise less and then rate a new as the Act ordered but if obstructing Service would bear a rate absolutely contrary to an Act before that reason would allow a little over rating now and the rather because it should truly ease the next Assessment the Accompter would appear and no evil done To the third it was said That the evil unjust rate had continued seven years and no remedy as unjust as at first and must be so for ever for the rule was to rate as formerly This was now provided for and what was now pleaded That the Parliament did not intend any alteration for alteration could not be without obstruction Thus Self makes use of all weapons for her advantage and were it possible to trust men in chief places not so selfish or that those in Supremacy were so clear that right might be expected we should soon see an alteration The next thing which I hold my self bound to give notice to the Nation of is The Assizes for Norfolk were according to evil Custome if there be so much in it kept at Thetford on the brink of the River parting Norfolk Suffolk the use arising from the High-Sheriffs heretofore serving for both Counties it having no prison fit to receive the
unite spirits and affections whereas plurality of parties or interests nourished they generate and consider advantages as hath been evident in the traverses of this Nation You have seen the standing out of the King against a few just things made at last that many that would have been granted would not serve the turn I profess it is meer zeal to Justice hath produced this I have avoided bitterness to the utmost My only hope desire and prayer is for the welfare of the Nation and the establishing of it upon the firm basis of most undenyable verities I shrink under the opposition Truth is like to find I know the alterations of Nations come not till Nature as it were almost stifled labors for life it must purge or perish I know where knowledge is greatest Satan is busiest here must be great if not the greatest opposition what God hath I hope dictated to my spirit I have held forth to you of this Nation who are in supream Trust You know how dangerous a thing it is to alter the frame of Ancient Government you yet see its easier far to pull down then to build to you I say it must be extraordinary Justice and exemplary vertue must stablish you The temper of our old English Government in the mixtures of the three main Regiments was in Christian Politicks heretofore held the soundest of all most just and so most durable As for evil Government of Kings through usurpation of power the purity of it being destroyed they did admit and do to this Establishment without King or Lords yet if the contrary drawings of the Democratique estate or insatiate interest as old Writers have objurgated of many equals tend to the continuance of pressures either of purse or person the issue will be dangerous it 's evident the looser knots have been untied by the halter I mean the Robber Burgler c. but the treble Cord of the Religious Necessitous poor which are a multitude joyning with the pretending Leveller and Hypocritical Opposer will know their time they look for the day of their necessity There is nothing of Justice or Civil Righteousness in a strict survey more then what meer form produces or necessity among the many If there be not a speedy settlement there must be a dis-settlement the people are prone to as well as stirred up to disobedience did you command never so well if Subjects shake off the yoak or loose it but in what or as long as they please Empire must down We are now as it were in the dregs of so called Populacy the Kings attempted alteration and alteration was just but just things must be done justly and as he suffered for seeking himself so will others in their day if the expected one come mete out to you You are compassed about with difficulties every way God give you eyes to see your way still we looking at your transactions afar off have seen God going along with you Be not deceived you see it was not in eminency of Justice Righteousness Mercy and Truth acted but held forth no we saw your failings but hope of your integrity for we saw God evidently changing your Errors into a question of foresight and prudence to your Enemies so that they beleeved that Stratagemicall which was Casual or rather of providence O that all this might but raise a heart in you to serve and trust God do not only hear Sermons and for you of other stations labour Righteousness in your places your divisions shew your carnality Learn the nature of the one Covenant made with Abraham Isaac and Jacob and ratified to us Christians so distinguished from time as of Faith and Works that as much of Works is now requisite under the Covenant so called of grace as was before of Faith under the Covenant of works contend not so much whether Magistrate or Congregations be the Keeper of the first Table as both to give due glory to God and educate the people faithfully in the knowledge and practice of the Doctrine of the Gospel and you chief in power to see to govern them according to a Rule of Righteousness upon a sure foundation in all places and callings which according to the Talent God hath given me I shall here hold forth to you and that out of the so called Law of England or usually accepted Law Books of the same with the Word of God and the approved examples of our most free Progenitors wherein that I name not the Authors I have before laid down the reason I shall only now hint That its the duty of Magistrates not to regard the person of the man from whom the work comes grant it but my mite if it be pure Gold put it into the Treasury I will give much light to some and though others know much more let them also improve their talent make use of this till then Some say 't is the nature of Englishmen better to follow in the dark then go before in the light give no more occasion to that proverb I am no enemy to Powers or Authorities Here is nothing difficult elevated above ordinary frame so austere that the practice is impossible for a time or dangerous to many for it is salutary to ten times so many more It is the reducing Government in as much as may and the progresses thereof to the Rule of our Saviour My yoak is easie and my burthen light laying forth Justice in a due proportion betwixt the Duty and the Power so opening the reason of the Magistrates power and the Subjects obedience that the ancient Quarrels of Interests on either side must be little if any at all stinting the many mutterings and murmurings against the State from the default of Officers and Clerks not of the Judges themselves which if not done do all the good you can and you will be still aspersed and scandalized and there is some reason for they and their Clerks are alike for their care is neither for publike good nor common honesty all they look at is private gain the great dishonour of a State and Nation Now the God of Heaven give me wisdom to hold it forth in such order that it may carry such an evidence of Truth that all Interests may submit to this one Interest of the Regiment of Christian reason in a Commonwealth and what ever is defective may by your power and industry with the advice of such whom you shall choose be speedily setled to his glory and the comfort of this afflicted Nation and set as a light upon a hill to be a direction and president to all the Nations of the Earth That you as faithful workmen may do great things to give free liberty to the word of salvation and build up the Jerusalem of God and set on the Gates and Barrs Locks and Bolts whereby the Congregations of the faithful may be kept pure within themselves by the power of the Word and free and secure from the violences of Enemies carnal and spiritual
appointed to ore-see Bridges Rivers Causeyways and all that is now within the extraordinary Jurisdiction of the Admiralty and Commission of Sewers 2 This so be setled that errors in Neighbouring Counties may be quietly remedied 3 The Error of purchasing Commissions Chap. 61. p. 175. shewing 1 The necessity of good witness in case of controversie 2 Legal objections difficult 3 Wicked men may be heard not sworn and the reason 4 One such evidence alone not sufficient 5 Objection of Alliance how to be accepted Chap. 62. p. 176. shewing 1 The necessitie of promulging Laws 2 The best way thereto 3 Punishment till then unfit to the common Subject Chap. 63. p. 176. shewing 1 How vain light apparel works upon nature 2 The Advantages publick from this no way equal to the dammage and is unlawful 3 The Magistrates duty to repress the excess of Apparel Chap. 64. p. 176. shewing 1 That Titular Honours as now flowing from a King give a tendency to the establishment of that Government 2 Good to decline them and that by exalting proper vertue Chap. 65. p. 177. shewing 1 No offence but under some general head of Law but the want is no set punishment where circumstances aggravate the offence exceedingly 2 Fit the Judge to punish according to the head rule or consult his Neighbours or secure till resolved legally in circuit 3 No Judge to be punished meerly for defect in form Chap 66. p. 178. shewing 1 The necessity of providing fit remedies for the ordinary causes of Duels 2 Words and light acts when grown obnoxious must have punishments suitable 3 Speedy remedy in this case of necessity 4 Incertain Tryals as by fire and water how best to be setled 5 If the suspected walk still inordinately how to be dealt with Chap. 67. p. 178 179 180 181 182 183 184. shewing 1 Questions 'twixt Magistrate and Church must be wisely discussed and here only hinted to open clearly the controversie so to pacifie 2 Wherein the controversie as now stated principally rests 3 This so far troubles the outward peace that the Magistrate must umpire 4 Certain questions urged by the Congregational way 180 181 5 Some private Quaeries concerning the Ministery and its maintenance 6 Age of Pastors and Baptizing Infants only hinted 7 Wherein Christian liberty principally consists 8 This opening the matter how it settles peace 9 The right of Tythes and how 182 10 What Religion the Magistrate must settle 11 Wherein the Churches power principally consists 12 Whither there may be two Supreams 13 How the controversie rises 14 How they of the Congregationall way settle it 183 15 An objection answered arising from the supposall of the necessity of uniformity 16 How far outward or sword Power reaches 17 What are impropriations and appropiations 18 Some things making Reformation difficult 19 That Prescription is but a particular mans custom 20 It ought to be adjudged lawfull and recorded before allowed Chap. 67. p. 185 186. Shewing 1 The Imperiall or Romane Civil Law to be the foundation of our Justice 185 2 How the multitude of their cases came to be digested 3 Why that Law was with us rejected or not used 4 Why those Lawyers were neglected 5 The evils of having two divers Laws to Judge by in one Nation 6 When a Church or State are in evident Error or Apostacie 185 186 7 A well constituted Nation must have a known settled Law proper 8 As little form as may be 9 The habits of honor kept distinct I say not sacred Chap. 68. pag. 186. Shewing 1 That to put Offices to sale in any kind is the inlet to all injustice 2 That wise and honest men have approved is no argument now 3 That there is a sufficient Revenue to carry on the work of Reformation with satisfaction to the Office and advantage to Magistrate and people 4 A consideration of the succession graduall of Officers 5 The way to have good Officers considered Chap. 69. pag. 187. Shewing 1 Breeding able Mariners of necessity to this Nation 2 How to breed them or how they be best bred 3 How to encourage and settle them 4 A consideration of the season called Lent 5 What the Magistrate may do in it 6 Objections against it Religious and Physical 7 Two wayes offered to salve all the first Religious the other Politique and not unjust for its general 8 The benefit considered and some laws fits to be established universally Chap 70. pag. 188. Shewing 1 Customes received engage to secure the seas 2 The Magistrate not bound to secure all but to imploy a sufficient guard 3 Yet the losses by Piracy are to be in some sort defrayed out of the advantage of prizes 4 Cases wherein there ought to be no satisfaction admitted Chap. 71. pag. 188 189. Shewing 1 That all officers that receive the revenues of the Commonwealth ought account 188 2 That its fit this be done in the particular Counties and the reasons 188 3 Judges must be thereto appointed and have power c. 4 All Fees settled and Offices during well abearing Chap. 72. pag. 189 190. Shewing 1 That the Magistrate hath all power to preserve the Peace 189 2 As King he hath no power in Church assemblies 3 Prudentially yet what ever done by him not simply unlawfull is lawfull 4 Reasons why no publick Church Conventions should or way be without particular allowance of the Magistrate 5 If upon disturbance of the peace the Magistrate settle a Law the Churches are bound to obey 6 The Right of calling Councels for setling matters of Religion so called cleared 190 7 The reason of the Authors undertakeing 190 191 192. 8 The Authors Prayer for a Spirit of turning to the Lord c. 192 193 c. FINIS ERRATA PAg. 102. l. 10. r. cautious l. 18. r. govern all l. 19. r. of force l. 22. r. as p. 112. ca. 11. l. 24. r. fancles p. 113. l. 27. r. transcendency p. 115. l. 10. dele this was derogative l. 36. r. groundage p. 118. l. 6. r. swerve p. 119. l. 47. r. now p. 120. l. x. r. at his l. 27. r. conquassations p. 123. l. 9. r. handed p. 225. l. 36. r. run p. 141. l. 45. r. simular p. 142. l. 24. r. objectors p. 146. l. 40. r. under p. 149. l. 10. r. that p. 151. l. 31. r. do we not rather p. 154. l. 40. r. into p. 158. l. 7. r. practice constant l. ult r. none p. 162. l. 13. r. without delay l. 17. r. twenty pound p. 163. l. 44. r. the fourth p. 165. l. 7. dele equally p. 165. l. 26. r. adjudged p. 173. l. 28. r. verdict p. 177. l. ult r. person p. 178. l. last but 4. r. discuss p. 186. l. 26. r. eighteen thousand l. 28. after Lord Au. r. c. p. 187. l. 15. for I r. It p. 192. l. 27. r. act vigorously AN ESSAY OF Christian Government The first Quaere what is Monarchy and its Divisions FIrst Monarchy in General or
interests for they were corrupt Oh you that are in power build not with such hay and stubble still for surely your work is like to pass the fire But assuredly a Kingdom Hereditary is far before any other Kingly Government where the Nation is small bounds large and spirits content for Peace is most durable in that Government And that will give Riches and the people shall have ease and plenty and grow numerous for emulation the mother of discord is restrained at least But then the land will be too scant and that Nation must fall upon others or break within her self or transmit Colonies Now Democracie must be in War abroad or else she breeds Feavers in her own bowels Yet Aristocracie and Oligarchy seems worse as partaking in more selfish interests but assuredly in all they are best or worst as the men Ruling are 6. Whether the acquests of Kings belong to the State in Case of alteration of Government SEeing now alterations are incident to States it may be justly Quaeried whether what is gotten by the Prowess of a King or Marriages come to the Supreme power Governing or return back in such Alterations or the Heir Naturall to enjoy them The answer is easie for all these things rest in the King as King as they were acquired whether in an absolute or limited State they go to his Successor Politick not Natural not in the ordinary course of inheritance but according to the Transition of the Crown how great Jumps soever it take and this person dies not so that it is evident the supreme power hath all the acquests and rights whether Warlike or Civil as by Marriage Permutations Emptions of State or Mortgages Real as Cautionary Towns So that this Change of Government hath not divested England of any Title to ought due to any former Kings as Kings of England whether in Ireland France Castile Cicily Cyprus Hierusalem united Provinces or else where And should Kings come in again sure they would not hold the intervening settlement of a Reipublick a Bar and the Reason is evident for they have the Supreme power and are as Capable to give Protection and enforce Obedience each as other in consideration of Reason so there is no inconsistencie in the thing 7. Whether better to be Governed by Laws or without HAving seen the Governors let us see how they are to Govern I take it that the same reasons against Arbitrary Government in a King will serve for a State for grant a Choyce of the most excellent men in knowledge and Justice Yet can we say they shall be alwaies such or those that succeed them therefore no doubt it is better to be Governed by good Laws then good men taking care that those Laws be executed under severe punishments 8. Whether better to have general or particular Laws I Now must come to the hard task of all Polititians That is to set the Medium of power in Magistrates wherein it is plain that to tye a Magistrate in any Government supreme or inferior yet administring Justice to the very strict letter of the Law is to have all the safety of the Commonwealth shipt in a Vessel without sails or oars slip but the letter and no Magistrate can meddle Therefore generals must be the way but limited they must be or else your venture is as much on the other side for to give him no bound or too much is to put him into a vessel overladen and the sail too full which upon every gust is ready to sink or be o're turned or run under water Now to pass this Scylla and Charybdis is the hard work in the first settlement That the supreme Magistrate hath his due boundary and after for him so to dispence to inferior Magistrates that the equal Temperament in every part may assure the safety of the whole England before the late fatal infusions into King Charls his head of the absolute power due to Princes Jure Divino whereby they were rendred accountable only to God boasted against all other Nations of the happiness of all these Governments in a sweet and admirable admixture of power for they had the freedom of a Commonwealth the opulency of Aristocracie the glory of a King Yet he so bounded by the Laws and so watched by the Emulators of his glory the Nobles and by the Conservators of our Liberties the Commons that it was hard for him to break Yet break he did and that so suddenly that it was evident the settlement we gloried in was but as we say A last gasp to the decaying state of the Bastard William so called the Conqueror And now is the time for them to whom God gives the Honor of a Settlement so to mould and temper Government that it may be most durable which is the glory of a State Now to do this aright after the Assurance that nothing be done how politick or advantageous soever it seems contrary to the light of Christian Doctrine I come to the difficulty abovesaid that is What Power is to be committed to the Magistrate whether Supreme or Inferior respectively To which I answer generally That the Magistrate whoever he be that is intrusted ought to have more power then it s commonly requisite he should improve that thereby by acts of Grace he may endear or suppress as occasion shall offer The Supreme thereby obliging all parties as well inferior Magistrates as other Subjects the inferior Magistrate to engage the equals in all but Magistracie and all the vulgar and that without punishment from above or scorn below For it is evident there are ever ambitious or insolent Spirits who if the Magistrate be tyed too streight will draw him to the end of his line and then dare him I wish from my soul Magistrates were all wise and just fearing God and hating Covetize but in the choyce of these men for interests it will not be so therefore I meddle not to prescribe rules as some do for a man who prefers private interests but him that onely and principally fixes himself and his endeavors upon the advance of Publick and Common good therefore to them I address my self with this Caution That the great ruining danger is in times of Commotion to be over strict beyond late presidents and Examples for that blows the coals of Sedition yea sparks to a great flame especially if publick ruins build private fortunes so called or partake with any selfish interest They therefore that are in Supream trusts and would settle or continue their Governments quiet must themselves in their places and whom they impower respectively with not onely faithfulness and diligence but also wisdom and discreet activity moderate that power which may be lawful much more that which is exorbitant or but to be used against persons exorbitant that is violent Rebellious and that in acts disturbers of the Peace for against such to spare one guilty is to venture the destruction of a thousand of innocents In evident just things
might be but now a clearer light manifests higher things or is so pretended to The main particular and worthy consideration is our formation of Christian policy according to the Jewish Model for we held all Baptized as Circumcised to be Christians Now of these how excellent Christians we have the Gallows Gaoles Houses of Correction for punishment and all places of vanity such as almost the Heathen would blush at Drinking Dicing Drabbing c. publickly known manifestly proclaim and though no rents to the State as at Rome for the Stews yet to the Statesmen they enhance Farm Rents c. for surely were there no advantageous interests they would not against common profession be upon so weak reasons as they are tolerated while winked at yet what is done with these Christians lo they are punished are they not Surely no not one of ten if one of a hundred and this punishment is the sacrificeing for sin and this past they are if it be but commutation as clear Christians as the best and being now become more serviceable to corrupt interests these spied out the lawful Liberties of better Christians which the Judicials not affording a whip for The Magistrate must be loosed from his restraint rather then not have an honest man punished this raised error upon error and opened this loose to the Christian to seek freedom from an unjust Law and to the Magistrate to seek to punish at lust But if you see through all the Apostles Writings they only forbid the sin and for punishment look at the Law in general which surely they could not intend but of the Judicial Now for the Commands of Christ the Lord and the Precepts of Love Charity Patience forbearance c. they are certainly true and to be observed and then the Quaere or Objection is what need of Law The Answer to this is as evident as the other That the purest Congregations Churches c. have had and ever will have evil men among them not only hypocrites but open sinners The error of the Congregations not ejecting or Magistrates not punishing or not due regulating by punishment rather shews the necessity of Law then the uselesness of it Now grant that the whole Nation were purely Church-Members of which no visible cause of ejecting or rejecting communion appeared yet there would or might arise many debates differences and controversies which would require a Magisteriall Authority to determine if but for difficulty And surely the Congregations of Christians never so little declining could not avoid litigations and wranglings and there being no word to extirpate the Civil Magistracie it becomes not Christians to wrangle much less violently to oppose so approved so necessary an Ordance That opinion that in the simplicity of the last Age as in the beginning the father of the Family shall be King and Priest hath little warrant that hath more that each Saint shall be so and yet in the mean time as hitherto subject to the powers yea the Heathen ones for conscience sake of the radiancy or glimpse of the Divinity holden forth in them It is truth pure Christians will not be contentious some meek spirits may and will obey the letter of Christ and sure they that do so in faith shall not fare the worse for their exact obedience but in the mean-time this is no binding rule to us except the words be so intended It is truth the child of God seeks not his own c. he is wholly taken up with God c. shall the Magistrate therefore see evil against him go unpunished Again love and not avengeing wrongs and praying for enemies in the spiritual sence may stand with the punishing afflicting and bringing to judgement the body of the transgressor in the literal yea God is thereby glorified otherwise how can the peace of good men be preserved against the wicked but miraculously which we have no warrant to expect at present and what shall be hereafter as the light manifests it self the Lord grant we may walk in it and also up to it and that our Laws may be established according to a rule of Righteousness even according to the wisdom revealed by God himself and that all emergent Laws may flow from the same fountain for for every action contingent there is as is agreed no particular Law already setled nor well can be but the Christian Magistrate ought to provide that not the least wrong or trespass but be righted or punished I must yet remove one rub and that is the Judicials have been our misguider hitherto therefore better any other Law then them 't is the same that was objected for using of formes whether of prayer or otherwise which the Church of Rome used and was partly spoken to before particularly in that all our old errors having sprung from that root that it is necessary yea some say of necessity to wave that for our rule lest we tread the same trace of error that was before our ruine and therefore better take our Laws from Turk or Persian or c. then from the Judicials Now let us examine this and all will appear vain for first it is denyed that the observing the Judicials yea though as binding as the prototype was the error of Christians so as to bring so horrible a defection upon our Judicatories We maintain not I desire to be rightly understood That this Nation professing Christianity is bound to the Mosaicall Judicials in the command to the Jew But assay to manifest that those Judicials were not our misguidance The Decalogue or Ten Commandements we all agree except in the set day of the Sabboth to hold forth but even what Natures light determinately approves whereby it is evident that sin is the same to us as with them which all the writings of the Apostles manifest Now the sin in the head Law being the same what difference in the branches either in respect of the severall species of transgression or manners of punishment Now as to these we all agree the error an error but we must differ concerning the ●nfliction of punishment which I drive to this head That the Law prescribed in the Judicial for punishment holds a due proportion punishing life with life goods with goods c. if so then that these mediums or rules of due punishment ought much more to be observed by the Christian Magistrate under the Law of the Gospel the glad tydings of peace and mercy then by the Jew and not to outbound unless after the utmost of execution the Law be found evidently defective which I presume it never will be under prudent Magistrates Now to him that sayes the observation of these Laws was our ground of error I say in the Ceremonials of Moses it was and that the receiving of the Judicials might open a gap to introduce that error the more facily I will not deny but that this must either cast out the Judicial or make us take the Rule for this in any just Law I
Prince must bear sway and hath the preheminence The Heathens in glory of the Prince annexed the Priestly Office to the Superior Power not the Kings to the Priests and under Gods Law Moses was Aarons Prince or Father Aaron Moses Prophet Next the Civil part of Judicature was ever and now is clear and manifest except where interest or humour prevails and let that humour alone and it is ready to swarm into interest immediatly But this you will say determines the first part of the Question but the latter is undetermined To that it is generally answered that what power is necessary for the preservation of the peace of the Nation or Government is proper to the Supream Magistrate but an obliging power that is that simple obedience is to be given to his determination of but dubious matters in points of either Doctrine or pure Church-Discipline I beleeve never was nor will be yielded to him in matters circumstantially Religious otherwise barely civil was as generally agreed and will not now be denyed as concerning the time of Congregating the place and other Circumstantials for preservation of the peace of Church and Commonwealth yea if it were upon good reason the number that were to congregate provided there were enough to constitute a Congregation might be set by the Supream Magistrate and Christians bound to obey but this is only as keeper of the first Table not of the second Now to clear this it is to be known that if it be taken to be the Keeper of the two Tables so called to promote by all lawful means the glory of God as the good of men as all good and just Magistrates will and ought yea if it be by preaching himself or themselves and that either by word or Doctrine as good life they and all Christians are the keepers of both Tables and he or they as supream in power and so as more entrusted with means by God to do most for God then he or they who have the supremacy are by way of eminency the special keepers of them but that they are designed more especially to represent either the Kingly Priestly or Prophetical Office of the Lord Christ as head of his Church without the manifest tokens of more especial Grace and divine Revelation whereby to periodize the Controversies of their own Subjects holding forth to us under the same rule the will of God as the Priests under the Law is not easily discerned nor will I beleeve be strenuously urged The blessings which our Lord and Saviour held forth were meerly tending to his spiritual Kingdome and the propagating of it and given out to the Apostles and in them to all the Church as most sutable to not onely reason generally but the reason of that our King in his Transactions amongst them of this enough at present I come now to the last Quaere of the Prerogative of Princes 14. Whether Male Administration doth ipso facto dethrone Princes and give their Subjects power to depose them 15. And whether Kings and other Supreams may be punished by whom and how THis is a great weighty controversie truly Magistrates that desire to be flattered stand off you can hear nothing safely for your safety is your danger Now what we have said before tends much to the illustration of this point that is the due consideration of the end for which Magistracie is ordained for by the Law of pure Naturals no one is above another namely the preserving few against many weak against strong and right against wrong in Scripture phrase to be a terror to the evil and to that end not to wear the Sword in vain so that while evils are or may be Magistracie is necessary to be Now generally the defects and failings of Governors in themselves are not simply and alone a cause of neglect of obedience to them or the Laws by them for evil men may be good Magistrates but in case the Magistrate seeks to overthrow laws and all Righteous Government altering or crossing wholly the end of his ordination it is in this case clear he is not a Magistrate but he is a Tyrant an usurper an Enemy to Justice but then it is beleeved by some that the light or interpretation of this defection is in every man and so each man judges and may justly withdraw obedience and oppose This is gross ignorance no then every unjust man punished would be ready to rebell and miscall his deficiency Revenge of injury to the publique The Pope by the evill management among Princes of this quarrel brought the decision of all these controversies to his Tribunal and by the steps of seeming justice mounted the Chayre of Antichrist for he finding that the Ambition Pride Lust Covetize of earthly gods had raised up men against them and that many halings and pullings were between the Princes and Potentates of the earth and their Subjects the one to have all the power in their own hands the others to defend what they called sometimes Priviledges sometimes just Rights one while the inheritance of their Ancestors as what they had contended for and delivered to them sealed with their blood otherwhile their proper and natural birthright as dues to the people which no Power or Usurpation of a Prince could divest them of he politickly holding forth the necessity of an Umpire got absolutely into the Chayr of preheminence and deposed Kings for pleasure and Kings and Emperors and all for his profit Who would beleeve that now after five thousand years experience the world should not be able to unriddle this mystery the source of all our controversies is the Judicials not rightly understood for assuredly the Acts of their Kings is no rule for us or ours we are to follow them no further then they follow the light which God gives us all to walk by that is if you will look at their King it must be as bounded not as imitating the Kings of the Nations as not exalting himself over his brethren not as taking away the excellent young men and beautiful Maidens to be his servants and if so that he be under a Rule then he is not to rule not onely not evilly but not so well as he presumes he might unless it be made parcell of his Rule But if he breaks this Rule who shall enforce Now in this case it is plain that a Prince Ruler or inferiour Magistrate doing greater good then his Rule limits is in an error especially if opportunity were of having that enacted into a Law for men are men and to do so opens a door of jealousie 'twixt him and his people Next it stands as a president to his Successor Lastly it absolutely intimates either a neglect of the Law or seeking freedom by degrees from it but if this were evill or detrimental what remedy To clear this there must be a difference taken betwixt things partly destructive to the end of well reigning and wholly for unless wholly destructive threatning the whole community
there is no cause evident but grant it so we must then see whether the Prince be an absolute Monarch or limited If absolute then it i● the greater difficulty for there being no barr in such cases betwixt the Prince and lust the decision of the difference must be by the whole community at least the greater part and if they break out wo to the Commonwealth c. It is the difficulty to do just things in such extremities not the injustice of the thing puts so many barrs in the way and the evil truly is so great that prudence hath totally waved a liberty of such judgings finding the dear rate Liberty is in such cases purchased at But some Princes have by renewed Tyrannies trusting to their power enforced the multitude to lash out and great men for safetie to head them but when matters come to this pass it is surely a judgement on both sides Now all Christian Princes held this that they being all Typed out by the Judicials they forsooth were absolute Princes anoynted with holy Oyle and so apply all the Texts of Davids not daring to stretch out his hand against Saul his heart smiting for cutting off the lap of his garment hindering Abishai from killing him in his Tent yet agreeing the Lord had delivered him into his hand and that after the Kingdom rent from him and given by God to himself and he with holy Oyle also anoynted And lastly for his slaying the Amalekite who pretended to have killed Saul ahis request to themselves as anointed c. and upon this they get the heart to trangress Laws at liberty and even do what they lusted yea inverted the just ends of universal good for the enhansig of absolute power to their own ends only neglecting the publike claiming propriety in the Rights of the Nation as in private inheritance though truly to that end alone any power absolute or limited cannot be pretended to Now therefore I said the evil of common Rebellions c. hence arising The Pope the Lord Christs servants servant becomes the decider of the controversies of Princes when the Lord himself would not be a Iudge amongst ordinary men and by this string were the Princes of the Earth drawn to commit Fornication with this Whore and she thereby sate upon many waters but if so be that there be none but the Pope that hath right to depose Princes surely they need never fear But in case they be limited Monarchs such as all Christian Princes were having their estates Judges of their Actions whether they were called Dyets Assemblies Conventions or Parliaments they are to be judged by them Now to know whether they were Judges of their Actions or not it is only considerable in whom the main and principal part of supremacy rested for making and annulling of Laws war and peace and raising Moneys For as these were intrusted so was the supremacy and trust of absolute power more or less visible and if the Estates had the most then no doubt they may call to account yea and for ought I can see can be fetched from any the Texts aforesaid or any other may be punished but not by David no nor Abisha nor Davids six hundred The case was personal as to all Israel so the enmity was private and David and all these were but particular persons private men Now therefore to avoid the danger of general Concussions and Conquassions of a Commonwealth setled in popular order it is requisite so to temper it that the constant acting Magistrate may have a kind of superadvisor and the truly wise and honest will soonest yield Such as would be Tyrants if Kings will only seek unlimited power in Common-wealths let not this seem unreasonable to give presidents were easie but you will say facts prove not I have given reason and if that will not prevail what will the reasons are evident give a divine word and I am silent for all Saint Pauls give obedience to Magistrates and let every soul be subject will bear no more water now to free wicked Magistrates from due punishment how high in trust soever so the punishment be done duly then that of Paul Give not a Virgin in Marriage Force may suppress the opinion but wickedness of Magistrates will raise up their own strengths against them yea their confidents will betray them and if from hence you conclude I hold Magistracie a humane Ordinance then you must agree to what I hold forth for what man establisheth man may pull down alter punish c. But I say Magistracy is Gods Ordinance established for mans good and by man admitted under various names and notions which persons and Offices particular are the Conventions of men either by force which are void or Conventional and by compact which being civil are and may be enforced Now this is to be known that this is intended only still in Civil matters wherein just and good for the well being of men as men is intended not of power or obedience in respect of Religious Duties There are as I have said before evils in all States through the pravity of mans nature so that it is not the form of Government but the men that in Religion and Reason gives forth blessings unto a State and the degeneracie of men was never more then now and never more then among so called Christians Blame us not therefore if we endeavor to beat out the truth we have seen the glory of absolute States and also of limited ones and that both in Royalties and Republiques we know the vengeance of the Lord at the last which he we beleeve will repay upon the heads of highest proudest stoutest yea and their children also in outward calamities whether one or more whither Kings or States all their abominations with judgements answerable to his Mercy and upon this ground we are willing to let the Supream Power loose We have seen the abuses of these boundaries and bars to Prerogative and how they have oft upon unjust grounds engaged people to wars and brought great evils upon the Nations We have on the other hand seen the lawfulness of their Barrs together with their conveniencies tying up the ambitious nature of man and as they were instituted oft-times preserving a Nation from the gripes of a lusting Tyrant yea under them we have seen the excellencies of Order Government Temperance Chastity Humility shine in Princes as in meaner men and in the Chief Magistrates as in the industrious so called Commoner We have lately seen at home and do still abroad that great men in power put the evil day far away and if they have no aw upon them but the general Audit at the last day it is so far off their consultations that they are in a most lamentable woful case who find no mercy with them till that day I come now to the last part of this Question and that is how they are to be punished To which it is generally answered That they who have the
or Rational except God in Scripture giveth a liberty to things simply unlawful which who dare aver of obeying c either by doing or suffering be extended to whole communities but to particulars as aforesaid because that Nature in the purity of it intends universal good and if the whole body of the Nation agree in it it seems to be very evident but in a knowing Nation if the most knowing it seems most reasonable but in a wise Nation if the wisdom be corrupted through licentiousness as to Gods glory it oft falls out if the prudent of the Nation not carried away with these corruptions agree it and impowred though not the greater number it is lawful but they cast themselves on Providence to support them An other thing in this must be cleared that is to satisfie interest viz. what is the power To which the Answer is at hand in a double consideration To clear the Cause You must consider that as persons so Powers also may be unjust Now to the first It is clear that Obedience is due to the power That is if an Usurrer gets tht Kingdom while the true King cannot yield protection you are to give obedience and if the Usurper requires an Oath of fidelity onely you are to yield to it that is lawfully may but if he requires you to assert the lawfulness of his Title it is unjust to ask and for you to take and seems onely a picking of a quarrel to banish or confiscate or c. which he may do by his power But you will say what if the right King cometh again I say in such a case you in your place ought to seek the welfare of the Usurper if behaving himself justly and so not condemned by the community for I give no loose to particular conscience to judge of publick good or evil if a Souldier by fighting for him and so all in Trusts Then surely the Minister ought not to preach against him though not for him no not to hint such matters And if he that thinks the Prince driven away hath Right comes under the Sword of that Prince his oath of fidelity is not extinct but suspended until the right King hath totally ousted the Usurper that Prince may put an oath of opposition to the Tyrant upon him but it seems not just Now the reason of this is because God hath only appointed the Office not the person and power and convention are the means usuall of acquiring and God hath been seen in both and man not to be wrecked or racked in his conscience must submit when God hath determined Some men think the Prince is to be slain and his posterity rooted all out but these men plow with the Devils Heifer from this opinion have horrible cruelties murthers devastations and inhumanities more then barbarous proceeded and that among Christians to secure their unjust and also just acquests No it is far safer to determine his rejection by such a total expulsion and make obedience so far universal not so meerly local after oath once taken but he that thinks otherwise and burthens his conscience with it ought to abide by that particular witness in doing what he can for the particular right he is engaged unto until he either sees him resetled and receives the recompence of his voluntary I call it only so faithfulness or perisheth under the wrath of his Adversary or being better informed reconciles himself and submits to the power now this is far more due in doubtful cases or where two powers both lawful contest or where a lawful power is of many persons and part of them enter contest and sub due the other This as I take it is sufficiently cleared I shall now proceed to clear other things Whether Common Good may be enforced against particular Priviledge IT hath been shewed that universal good of mankind is the first matter eyed in the rule of excellent REason so called Law next that of Nations and in Nations under the prudential settlements of their own the Rule is Good is more or less good as it more or less respects or reflects upon the publique interest and Common Concernments Therefore though the Spirit witnesseth that it was done by Prophesie yet the reason of the high Priest went no further then Common Safety urging that it was better put the Lord Christ to death then the Romanes should come and take away the City and Nation so the wise woman of Abel in the case of Sheba Now this is plain that the life of a particular Citizen is not to be valued with the safety of a City c. But put case that a Prince requires unjust things or denounces wars may the subjected Kingdom City State c. stand out or if he requires the life of a particular Citizen it may be him in whom the safety of the place rests yea if it be the King of Right as Jehu demanding Ahabs son it was before Crowned though in a Kingdom successively established I say it is meet in this case in prudence to consult second causes throughly they seem to do so Two Kings say they stood not before him how then shall we And in case of extremity they may deliver a just man but not slay him as they did Ahabs 70. sons that was wholly unwarrantable life is the most precious Now to them that object they must stand out as long as they can we say so to but we may say prudence may avoid evidently soreseen dangers yea with the danger of some just men to save many just men and seemingly unjust For this case also the estates of particular men may be digged up high wayes made through them Bulwarks Forts c. reared whereby property seems annulled yet is only suspended but though the Law with us agrees this generally yet our so called Municipal Law seems to deny it in several cases First though it seem to agree the Law as to Lands yet it denyes it to so called personal estate For suppose invasion as for example the Scots having now many Emissaries laboring in Pulpit and Press especially a subversion of our new Commonwealth invade England the Governor of a Town may order erecting Forts and for pulling down some houses in the Suburbs c. But for enforcing Moneys from him they know have abundance and yet know no other means of supply the Governor cannot do it but by Parliament he must be authorized But the reason is not thorow paced for if Lands being the real estate hath the preferment why should the personal be better guarded therefore to seek Cases for the reason is fruitless Truth is that the difference is not as the one is personal and the other Real estate but as the one is more properly the sinews of war then the other and more subiect to be irrecoverably lost and being private destroyes in search the Law of property Therefore we shall not state the case as the meer Lawyer doth of forcing away money but of imposing
Error or more of course this Term then more the next and then a peremptory day and then Errors Cassed is but legal extortion So that it is plain to take errors totally away is as bad as to have all allowed but to prevent the mischief let a certain day in Court be to determine errors before issue and not after Now the punishments in these defaults are and must be pecuniary and that both in the Judges of Fact as Jurors as well as Law but where the default is evident there ought to be a dispriviledging for future as to all publike trusts at least for a time but out of the Judicial place presently yea though the oath be that he was onely mistaken in Law and did not do it at all maliciously or with a minde of injustice Now to oaths it is fit any Justice of the Peace should give it at discretion this requires able Judges and so should Judges be but of this more in due place Concerning what things the Magistrate may and ought to make Laws YOu heard before that there must rest in some persons thereto designed either by God as those who claym to rule by absolute power or by men as those who rule by Compact or Convention as who either had no power but were meerly elected and agreed with having no Right primarily or had some power but not enough and so condiscended to some rule that they might rule assuredly Now this being in one person or more yet the power ought to extend to all things justly necessary to the well being of a Commonwealth and therefore they have respectively the general powers of war and peace life and death But because we have before hinted that there was a necessity of the Magistrates regulating of those things which many men call dispriviledge to Christians as well as men we will according to the rule before laid that is of the head Law according to Gods own Law the God of Christians as of the Jew see the Government of reason laid there down both for Divine and Civil worship Wherein first it seems directly given to the Magistrate to have the ordering of divine worship to God under the Law Now let us see how this works for Vzziah is a Leper for acting in the Priests Office Yet the aberrations both of Priest and People are laid to the Kings charge and the good Kings commanding just things and not onely so but seeing of them performed are blessed and on the contrary the evil Kings punished and their Adherents And those disobedient to the King as to Ahab the seven thousand that never bowed knee to Baal were those who were to take root downward and bring forth fruit upward Now the great difficulty is to settle the Magistrates power so that he may not bring sin upon himself and the Nation by commanding or tolerating things evil and unjust or unjustly enforcing things just and good Now as to this it is to be considered that we all profess Grace is from Heaven the meer gift of God and that the Spirit breatheth where it pleaseth as the wind bloweth where it listeth if so the Magistrate Yea grant there were a clear Church Magistrate that were by divine Word impowred with the Sword of Paul as the Keys of Peter could he go further then the outward man it is plain he could not Next then grant no such Magistrate sure the Civil or in case of doubt of Spiritual Power the Civil Magistrate onely can act clearly Now for the Spiritual Power to be helped out with the Civil Sword surely it is one of the grossest vanities that Popery ever broached God stands not in need of mans wisdome or power But God having not cleared that the implicit construction by Analogical or singular reason from the legall severity is proportionate to the gentle and quiet brotherlike Rule of the Gospel nor agreeable to the Commission which our Saviour gives to his Apostles which was either to the Jew Matthew the 10. Mark the 3. and Luke the 9. or to the universality of men Matthew the 28. Mark the 16. Luke the 24. and clear enough in that of the 21. of John and 15. where nothing is spoken of but preaching and teaching and feeding If then the Pastor have not the Sword but of the Spirit let us see the material and Magisterial Sword which is not born in vain what may this do If we look to the Jewish Model which many men seem so much to contend for There we see that the Magistrate had power over blasphemers Idolaters and tempters to Idolatry witches c. and this extended to death and that it should do so with us is by them desired Now many suppose this difficulty though very great may be at least in great part assoyled if we consider that the persons to whom this Law was given was a people chosen by wonderful miracles and wonders from all Nations to be the people of God and bear out to the world the Ensigns of his special love to man in all Ages and Generations which tokens of love in obedience to his Law were suited with answerable judgements in the neglect of the same And surely those things which relate immediately to God in the point of gracious service hold forth nothing to us but assurance of eternal punishments to the unrepentant sinner Saint Paul confesseth himself a blasphemer 1 Timothy the 1. 13. and declaring in the last times what fearful and horrible sins should appear among men 2 Timothy 3. 2. he takes notice of blasphemy and bids onely from such turn away Now if you would have a Magistrate to work without a divine precept we must look at the height of improved reason There we find that zeal for the Gods among all Heathens made blasphemy death and surely reverence is due by the light of Nature to what ever is called God Of blasphemy under the Law the Councell was Judge Now the Sanhedrin was not of Priests they might ask Councel of the Priest but determined themselves and these by Gods Law put the blasphemer to death many conjecture upon this the Devil Aped Gods Law others his delight in blood hinted the Law as in Heathen Sacrifices but sure such reason makes against these objects intended to take away the pure light of reason for who that will acknowledge a Deity will allow the Deity to be blasphemed But now the doubt is whether these are not under the Gospel to be reserved to the last Judgement Some beleeving that if Paul of a blasphemer and who ever was a greater became a Saint a Preacher of the Messiah who did and thought to do many things against the Name of Jesus that is against them called on his name why may not any other be converted where is Gods dispencing with the Law where the special reservation of Paul he did it not against the humanity of Christ but his Divinity it was for calling on his Name Some excuse Paul because zealous but others
person or running the Gantlop and this by the judgement upon vote of the Officers of Troop Company or Regiment if the Regiment be there Seek not many but fit souldiers but look none keep Arms but those charged or allowed by the Militia or Justices as now one is fit if not of necessity I have now but one word to the Commissioners and Officers and in them to all Officers of Trust Judges and others be strict in your duties to your Supreams and require nothing but just things and obedience will flow of it self it is the Military power that in all alterations of State gives forth the Rule of Government from their order is the Nation setled Reduce therefore your Discipline to a just and setled Rule and then each one labor to beget this opinion in your Souldiery which is truly a Christian as well as prudent humane Maxime That the riches and safety of the Master is in the emulation of servants but as that so this must have a just emulation and by that the Army and so the Commonwealth will be established and preserved but this emulation is fit to be a little better known It consists principally in the glory of doing good but that doing good is materially in avoiding or hindring of evil I mean they that will faithfully serve the Commonwealth must not only keep the Laws themselves out of conscience of their own duty but also see to and as much as in them lies that is as lawfully they may in their places enforce the performance of them by others the want of which hath so disordered Civil Government that he that requires or advises but the obedience to the Law or a just and consciencious regard thereto is thought nay called a busy-headed fellow a Roundhead a pragmatick self-conceited shallow-brain'd fellow Turks and Heathens will rise up against us Gent. you it is that must redeem Authority buried in the ashes of politick mercy which hath destroyed Kings will ruine this Commonwealth ere it hath the honour of a settlement unless the prudence of power set it on his legs again with the blessing of the Spirit of the eternal wisdome without which all mans labor is in vain But I proceed with my intended settlement Whether Indictments or Appeals are to be pursued in cause of crime or both HAving done with the due regulation of Arms which under God are the great staies and support of men to assure their peace quiet repose enjoyment of what God by their friends or labors hath vouchsafed them for I must agree that the foundation of humane happinesse subsists in the providence of the Almighty however he useth us as instruments that is gives success to our endeavors thereto We come now to look at the civil settlement in the remainder and first because the criminal part of law is of most and greatest concernment as looking at the life of man I shall therefore look first at that now in this the difficulties causing difference are these in an appeal there must and ought to be witness besides him that appeals for he is the accuser and that either in his own right or as next of kin but all for private benefit Secondly there the dammages are to the party and it is a personal thing proper to the complainer and he may desist when he will and compound as he will The Indictment is at the suit of the supream Magistrate solely for the benefit of the Commonwealth and the State hath all the goods and all dammages and the prosecutor or complainer is here a witness for the State but at his own charge which is as now used unjust The Interest therefore of the Magistrate the Subject ought here to be compromised rationally for assuredly if life goes for life dammages are cut off as unfit or of unequal value to be rendred for the life of a man therefore the heir or wife or friend who should bring an appeal as I conceive ought to have no forfeiture some recompence may be where the life is lost as in all cases of Murders and voluntary considerate killings and in all appointed duels not in heat of blood especially if for ought the Law gives a remedy for great abuses dispunishable by Law it seems not reasonable but of this more after Now for to clear this indeed it is requisite that there be as is justly supposed in Law an Attorney for the State whether called Clerk of the Crown Clerk of the Peace or what other name you will give him setled in every County who upon a set day each week by vertue of his place should receive all complaints and that upon oath himself being duly sworn and then by and with the consent and advice of one or more Justices should frame an appeal generally thus I do challenge you A. for the peace of the Commonwealth to answer to B. for the death wounding c. of C. whereof you are accused and let B. and another witness make two witnesses and upon the finding of him guilty let him be fined moderately that is so that at least a fourth part of his estate be left him The like Law also in case of Maym wounding c. whereof two parts to the party wounded c. a third part to the State to bear all charges for it is not fit to add charge loss of time to him that is before oppressed in case of life let life answer life unless by misadventure yet then he must be fined but not to the party but to the State and that but to a third part of his estate reall or personal to bear charges and where the life is lost the charges must also be apportioned in like manner For the leavying this the way is before set but for discovery of estate there is the difficulty but in Lands admit no trusts for deceit nor uses to cheat and the estate in the Land will be visible and take the goods in possession at the time of death and all is satisfied that can be expected Only let a set time be for Creditors to come and be satisfied also that the Common-wealth be satisfied and the members not ruined undone and impoverished Thus shall both interests be satisfied and the multitudes of legal quarrels by indictments c. will be quitted which have freed many rich Murderers Poysoners c. and of other offendors multitudes when there have been poor prosecutors That this must be done in the County where the fact is committed is owned Let the transferring him from one County to another when taken out of that County be setled in an easie and speedy way and that a Judge be there ready to determine such cases weekly if not daily however to examine witnesses immediately upon Oath which all Justices must have power to give as they see cause therefore make wise and honest Justices better then yet are and let this be taken as evidence as far as is credible and let not witnesses stay
better for see how Lent was kept lay in so much flesh before as served the household And so it would be ye will say for two dayes in a week I agree it therefore I say truly observed therefore as in the historical part I propound that the reason of every law be divulged and conscience from conviction of the benefit of it engaged to obedience and no way like that as the examples of Catholique abstinence now manifest But if the Magistrate would use force I shall offer the best and most reasonable way which is to send to every household in every town so many fish at an equal and set rate by him according to the number of his family so many fish for every head by the year accompting two daies in the week wholly for fish Now the benefit of the preservation of yong Cattell is great and warily to be provided for therefore let the Magistrate enact that all Lambe killed before such a day shall be forfeited and the killer and eater to forfeit a price So no Chicken Turky Duck or Goose till such an age no Rabbit till Midsommer And that in Two great respects First till that time they bear little grouth and do not much harme if well looked too Secondly the wool and skin is then serviceable Now for Calves the laws for rearing of yong Cattell must be made in them more certain for Bull Calves needs not in many places to be preserved equally as others some also are plainly unfit for to be reared at least by opinion Therefore there must be a loose to them more then others But to setle all to provide that every second third fourth or fifth Calfe be reared up or so much paid to the hayward of the Town And every Town to have one seems easie and feazible Whither losses at Sea by Piracy ought to be satisfied by whom and how ASSuredly the taking of customes c. engages the Supream Magistrate to the guard of the Sea now this done many think the work is done and customes are due clearly but the Subject must bear his private loss Others Christianlike say that there are providences which none can eschew and for these each one must bear his own burthen Next there are remote places wherein Traffique is thought setled Yet clearly in dominions of other Princes and States and that for any Supream Magistrate to assure their Subjects in all places is impossible Therefore the Engagement of the Magistrate must be setled First that the Piracy be within such a precinct or bound Secondly that it be a vessel of the Nation Thirdly of goods lawful but not that if any goods unlawful were in the Ship no recompence be but that recompence be only for lawful that is not goods prohibited whether for importation or exportation Fourthly to a Subject of the Nation in other cases let the customes of Nations prevail But in these cases it is just that Recompence be to the loosers by the Supream Magistrate out of prizes taken by his men of War which ought therefore to be valewed and returnes made Annually to the losers as their losses are proved in time allwaies provided a high punishment bee to him or them abuse the State Now there is great difficulty made of the proof of these things But we perceive it is easie to the State if the Governors have a minde for the lading will appear in the Bill or Cocket if they have it if not and That that be miscarried they can have what they can claime out of the office from whence they sailed And the Principal Merchants can quickly make out the work especially if all Merchants be brought under rules of Trade as they ought to be what ever is yet alledged to the Contrary How all Accompts for the Common Wealth are to be setled c. THis ought also to be done in the several Counties there are the men best known and their dealing Admit complaints to men impowred and that with speedy and due Justice and small charge and men in conscience will complain oft where little or no cause is but that is quickly ended But make it difficult and Envy and Malice are the only accusers men do accuse then not of but out of conscience only Let the times be set positively wherein to have all accompts cleared and yet let none be called to accompt upon error after a set time for I would have all formal accompts cleared and burnt once in seven years they are not worth the keeping let the Auditors be carefully assigned who are to prove the accompts and let the punishment be in case of Error or Arrears securing estate till cleared and the person except good Sureties be for it is clear it is the due prosecution of justice is the great priviledge and if nothing but securing persons will keep them in due order let the work be done For the Iudges they must have power to call to account as oft as they see cause but all to be ended with the year as aforesaid And let all Treasurers and Officers have their fees from the State as before Next let them have their offices onely during well abearing and so much in the pound truly for all discoveries of deceits and the work will manage it self especially if once the erroneous principle of conceiving it unchristian and unbrotherlike for a brother to enform of a brother be beaten out of the world In whom is the Right and Power of Calling Councels THis is a great Question much ado is made concerning it in the world and yet all to little purpose for that most spend their time onely in treating what was done but few upon what right it was founded It is not nor cannot be intended here who should Congregate the people in Civil Matters No it is intended in Questions doubtful troubling the peace of the Churches of God Now it is plain by what hath been said before that the latitude of the Magistrates power in these cases is only the preservation of the publick Peace otherwise he hath but the relation of a private Christian Therefore as Emperour King or State to settle or convene a Colloque Assembly Dyet or Councel Provincial or General he hath no Power in a Church-way It must be only prudentiall to assure or continue the publick peace in the best way they may wherein all things that are not unlawfull and be expedient become lawful But to assure the jealousie of the Supream power it is not requisite to have such publick Conventions without the Magistrates permission but to turn this sufferance into a Right was an Error Again for the Churches to desire the Magistrates permission and after to enforce a Grant or summon without was a greater fault for their profession admits less deviation just Magistrates will not deny the Churches lawful meetings while the Churches seek but lawful things lawfully Now as the Churches have the first insight as by Office into Church Errors it is their duty to