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A68707 A large declaration concerning the late tumults in Scotland, from their first originalls together with a particular deduction of the seditious practices of the prime leaders of the Covenanters: collected out of their owne foule acts and writings: by which it doth plainly appeare, that religion was onely pretended by those leaders, but nothing lesse intended by them. By the King. Balcanquhall, Walter, 1586?-1645.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1639 (1639) STC 21906; ESTC S116832 348,621 446

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according to the Articles of our Covenant against divisive motions and if any propound motions tending to the breach of our union it would be told them plainely wee will repute them as unfriends both to us and our cause Secondly for the better method in preparing and holding of matters to be treated of it is thought fit that there be a Committee chosen and that some of the Gentrie Burrowes and Ministers be present at the meetings with the Noblemen Thirdly It is thought fit that all who are interessed may attend punctually to Dyets and meetings with the rest of the number appointed for the good of the publike businesse and lest our adversaries should upon the frequent attending of the prime Noblemen and Statesmen take occasion to affirme that they have power to dispose of their friends in this cause their attendance would be the more shunned to shew we will depend upon no man who is of an averse judgement or who are about a contrarie imployment in the matter of our Covenant and conscience Fourthly if there bee any new Proclamation it is thought fit that it may be obviat and reincountred with a new Protestation which would be condiscended upon and would conteine our eight last Articles And that our Protestation may bee backed with good information and reasons and sent with diligence to the Commissioners to the severall parts of the Kingdome that they be not deceived nor surprised with Proclamations or suggestions and that the copie of the Protestation may be given to the Commissioners of Shires and Burghes to meet the Proclamation in all points needfull Fifthly if the discharge of the Book of Service and Canons and limitation of the High Commission be granted and that upon the Statesmen and Commissioners offer the King will grant all we can crave which is not repugnant to Law and alleadge that Episcopall power and Articles of Pearths Assemblie are established by Law It is answered that the abuses of Episcopall government are contrarie to Law and censurable by Law and the Articles of Pearth should bee rightly interpreted and our desires for the free and yearely exercise of Generall Assemblies free admission of Ministers without unlawfull Oaths and rectifying of the Articles of Pearths Assemblie and that the Prelates boundlesse usurped power limited according to the caveats of their admission are all agreeable to Law for the reasons conteined in the Articles And if the Bishops Statesmen and others be of a different judgement from the most part of the Church and Kingdome the Generall Assemblie and Parliament who were the Law-makers are onely competent Judges for interpreting their owne Acts whose direction we crave And although the Law were interpreted as they alleadge which is altogether untrue and contrarie to the grounds and meaning of the Law yet the bodie of the Kingdome for whose good the Law was made may crave the lawfull redresse of the grievances sustained by that Law and our complaints supplications and protestations against the Bishops depending in processe for clearing the subjects loyaltie and repairing the wrong complained of cannot bee otherwise lawfully decided cannot remedie the present evils nor prevent the like or worse evils in time comming Sixthly it is thought fit that all who have subscribed the Covenant be made sensible that they are obliged by their Oath not to rest satisfied with lesse then the desire of our Articles which are agreeable to law conscience and reason and without which we will be frustrated of our ends our adversaries in time will obtaine the establishment of the evils we complaine of Seventhly it is thought fit that the number of the Commissioners be doubled against the Statesmen and Marquesse down comming and that all be warned to be readie upon advertisement Eighthly that the report of the subscriptions of the Covenant may bee sent to Edinburgh from all severall parts of the Kingdome Ninthly that things recommended to our former Committee be adverted to with the best diligence that can be Tenthly it is thought expedient that all the time of the generall meeting there be a Fast. OUr Commissioner upon his way to that Kingdom did meet with advertisements of these strange fears which the ringleaders of the Covenant who were affraid of nothing more then that our subjects should receive satisfactiō from Us by Our Commissioner had possessed Our people with the bad entertainment he was like to receive at his comming thither acquainted Us therewith but went forward on his journy until he came to Barwick from whence he sent to his especiall friends and kindred and to all such Gentlemen of his owne name and others as were his Vassals and Tenants and hold their lands from him by service and attendance on him when he shall require it hee received answer that all these Obligations were quite discharged by the Covenanters Table at Edinburgh who had absolutely commanded that none who had subscribed their Covenant should go to meet or give any personall attendance upon Our Commissioner untill such time as they should have leave from their Table so to do and so Our Commissioner went from Barwick unattended by these Noblemen or by any other of his owne kindred or vassals unlesse such as had not subscribed their Covenant except some few whose affection exceeded the command of the Tables an affront before that time never offered to any person of his qualitie in that Kingdome Yet hee was verie nobly and honourably received and conducted to Dalkeith by all Our Councell most of the Lords of the Session who are the Judges of the Law great troups of the Nobilitie and Gentrie who had not subscribed their Covenant Now the reasons why their Table had laid this strict charge of not conducting Our Commissioner upon all their adherents were these two as appeared plainely by the speeches uttered by many of the Covenanters themselves First that they might not seeme to shew the least respect to any especially to those of greater rank who were disaffected to their Covenant as was ordered in the third Article of their ten last mentioned Secondly that they might make triall of their power with their owne partie the heads of the Covenant being perswaded that if they could prevaile with their associates for breaking through the bonds of nature bloud consanguinitie civilitie vassalledge and dependance in pursuance of their Orders they should not much need to feare that any other obligations could be able to divert them from obedience to their dictats Our Commissioner immediately upon his comming to Dalkeith where the Councell assembled for safetie because the combustions at Edinburgh increased daily met with many discouragements and difficulties First We had sent some small proportion of Armes and powder to be put into Our Castle of Edinburgh justly doubting the surprisall of it by the Covenanters who were there assembled in great multitudes and had of late made great provision of Armes there No sooner had the ship in which these Armes with other goods were cast Anchor
therefore intending to make known to the Lords of secret Councell what was noised concerning the Proclamation how far the whole Kingdome had been by some sinistrous mis-information frustrate of their hopes and their constant desire to have some course taken by their Lordsh advice how his Majestie being further informed might deliver his good subjects from so great grievances and feares and establish a sure peace in this Countrie for time to come we found our selves tyed by order of Law to decline those against whom we had made our complaint unlesse we would admit our parties to be our Judges And in case our Declinator should not be accepted we behoved to protest that we might have immediate recourse to the King himselfe c. Thereafter in the Moneth of March finding that by the foresaid Proclamation the innovations supplicated against were approven our lawfull proceedings condemned our most necessary meetings prohibited there being no other way left unto us wee were necessitate to renew the nationall Covenant of this Kirk and Kingdome thereby to reconcile us to God provoked to wrath against us by the breach of his Covenant within this Land to cleare our Soveraigns mind from all jealousies and suspicions arising from our adversaries mis-information of our intentions and carriage and so to make way for his acceptance of our humble supplications and grant of their lawfull remedies to guard this Land in defence of Religion authoritie and liberty against inward divisions and externall violences And that our actions might be answerable to our holy profession we afterward drew up an humble supplication containing our grievances and desires of the ordinary remedies thereof to have beene delivered to the King himselfe In the meane time wee were directed by those who were intrusted by his Majesty to attend his Declaration here in Scotland which would free us of all feares of innovations of Religion and prove satisfactorie And lest for want of true information of our just grievances and desires it should fall out otherwise wee expressed to them with the greatest modestie wee could our desires in some few Articles and with great patience have attended his Majesties pleasure thereanent And all this Moneth by-gone being frequently conveened to heare the same delivered by his Majesties Commissioner the right Noble and potent Lord James Marquesse of Hamiltoun c. we presented a new petition to his Grace as his Majesties Commissioner craving most humbly the indiction of a free Assembly and Parliament as the onely remedies thereof Like as finding a mis-information or mistake of our Covenant with God as if it had beene an unlawfull combination to bee the maine hinderance of obtaining our desires in a new supplication wee have fully removed that impediment renewed our desires of those supreme judicatories to bee indicted with diligence for settling of the Kirke and Kingdome But being answered only with delayes after these nine Moneths attendance and with this Proclamation that conteined his Majesties gracious declaration of his pious intentions not to admit of any innovations in Religion or Law nor any staine of Popish superstition But on the contrary to be resolved to maintaine the true Christian Religion professed in this Kingdome which we were ever so far from calling in question as in our supplicatications complaints and bills we used the same as one cause of our desires one ground of our confidence of a gracious answer and argument of our adversaries malignant mis-information of so religious a King And now most humbly with bended knees and bowed hearts thanke our gracious Soveraigne for the same Wishing and praying the Lord of heaven truly and fully to informe his Majestie how far these bookes judicatories and all our other evils and grievances are full of idolatrous superstitions and Popish errours How destructive of the reformation of Religion in this Land and of the Lawes and Liberties of this Church and Kingdome and so directly contrary to this his Majesties pious intention and Declaration Yet seeing that no Proclamation could sufficiently remove the present evils nor settle our feares nor secure us from the re-entrie of any evill or Innovation which it seemed to discharge or prevent the like in time comming nor satisfie our humble supplications craving the present indiction of a free Assembly and Parliament as the only remedies of our evils and meanes to prevent the like And seeing this Proclamation doth not so much as make mention or acknowledge any of our supplications complaints and grievances or any just cause thereof except under the name of great increase of disorders faults and mis-demeanours but only our feares of some future Innovation of Religion or Lawes occasioned onely as is pretended by the introduction of the Service booke booke of Canons and High Commission which feares his Majestie hoped to have beene abundantly and sufficiently satisfied by his two former Proclamations of the ninth of December and ninteenth of February And by this his present Declaration except his subjects bee blindly under pretext of Religion led unto disobedience Doth mis-ken passe over and so in effect denie all our supplications bills articles and desires especially our complaints against the Prelats our parties And that once for all in a faire and perswasive way even after the resaite of our last supplication clearing us from the calumnie of unlawfull combination Doth not disallow nor discharge any of the innovations and evils complained upon but only assureth that his Majestie will not presse their practice but in such a faire and legall way as shall satisfie his subjects of his intention which joyned with the other clause allowing and confirming the Proclamation the nineteenth of February evidenceth the liberty left to any Prelate or persons to practise the same and by all other faire waies to perswade others thereunto and his Majesties resolution to presse their practice in a faire and legall way And also confirmeth the former Declaration that the Service Booke is a ready meane to maintaine the true Religion already professed and to beat out all Superstition and no waies to be contrary to the Lawes of this Kingdome but to be compiled and approved for the universall use and edification of all his Majesties subjects Doth not abolish but promiseth to rectifie the High Commission with advice of his privie Councell implying the Kings power with consent of the Councell to establish this or any judicatory within this Kingdome without consent of the three Estates conveened in Parliament contrary to the fundamentall and expresse Lawes thereof and by consequent with the like reason to establish Lawes and Service bookes without consent of the Assembly and Parliament Which is contrary to the maine ground of all our supplications against the manner of their introduction Doth only promise to take into his consideration in an Assembly and Parliament which shall bee called at his best convenience while as the evident and urgent necessity for settling the combustions threatning the totall dissolution and desolation of this Church and
State excuseth our uncessant and importune calling for these present remedies Doth insinuate the continuance and execution of any pretended Lawes for these innovations of worship and corruptions of Church government and civill places of Church-men which by our Covenant wee have obliged our selves to forbeare and the re-establishment of these evils in an Assembly and Parliament which hee will call in his best convenience to wit for that and this other end of satisfying his subjects judgements anent the Service Booke and Book of Canons Doth condemne all our former proceedings even our supplicating complaining protesting subscribing of our Covenant together and our continuall meetings as great disorders increase of disorders deserving justly a powerfull rather then a perswasive way a running headlong into ruine a perishing in our faults a blind disobedience under pretext of Religion and doth threaten denounce Now once for all If we be not heartily satisfied and give testimony of our obedience after this Declaration but continue as by our former proceedings to draw on our owne ruine that albeit unwillingly he must make use of that power which God hath indued him with for reclaiming of so disobedient people THerefore we in our own name and in name of all who will adhere to the Confession of Faith and reformation of Religion within this Land are forced and compelled out of our bound duty to God our King native Country our selves and our posterity lest our silence should be prejudiciall to so important a cause as concernes Gods glory and worship our Religion and salvation the Lawes and Liberties of this Church and Kingdome or derogatory to our former supplications complaints protestations Articles and proceedings or unanswerable to the solemne oath of our nation covenant with God To declare before God and man and to protest Primo That we doe and will constantly adhere according to our vocation and power to the said Reformation in doctrine use of Sacraments and discipline And that notwithstanding of any innovations introduced therein either of old or of late Secundo we potest That we adhere to the grievances supplications and protestations given in at Assemblies and Parliaments and to our late supplications complaints protestations and other lawfull proceedings against the same and particularly against the Service book and booke of Canons as maine innovations of Religion and Lawes and full of Popish superstition and so directly contrary to the Kings Declaration And against the High Commission as a judicatory established contrary to the Lawes and Liberties of this Church and Kingdome and destructive of other lawfull judicatories which both in respect of the nature of it and manner of introduction without consent of the three Estates of Parliament cannot be any wayes rectified but absolutely discharged Tertio we protest That we adhere with our hearts to our Oath and subscription of the Confession of Faith the solemne Covenant betweene God this Church and Kingdome and the clauses particularly therein expressed and generally contained and to our last Articles for the peace of this Kirke and Kingdome drawne out of it and to all the matters therein contained and manner of remedy therein desired Quarto We protest that this Proclamation or act of Councell or any other act or Proclamation or Declaration or ratification thereof By subscription or act or letter or any other manner of way whatsoever or any precondemnation of our cause or carriage before the same be lawfully heard and tryed in the supreme judicatories of this Kirk and Kingdome the onely proper judges to nationall causes and proceedings or any certification or threatning therein denounced shall no waies be prejudiciall to the Confession of Faith lawes and liberties of this Kingdome nor to our supplications complaints protestations articles lawfull meetings proceedings pursuits mutuall defences nor to our persons and Estates and shall no wayes be disgracefull either in reality or opinion at home or abroad to us or any of us But on the contrary that any act or letter or subscription of the Councell carrying the approbation of the declaration and condemnation of our proceedings indicta causa is and ought to be repute esteemed unjust illegall null as here before God and man we offer to clear to verifie both the justice of our cause and carriage and the injustice of such acts against us in the face of the first generall Assembly of the Church Parliament of the Estates unto whom with all solemnities requisite we do publikly appeal Quinto We protest that seeing our former supplications last Articles our last desire and petition to his Majesties Commissioner which petitioned for the present indiction of a free general Assembly Parliament according to the law and custome of all nations of this nation in the like case to hear the desires ease the grievances settle the fears of the body of the Church Kingdome are thus delayed in effect refused to wit Once for all till his Majesties conveniency for the end contained in this Proclamation that We continue by thir presents to supplicate his Majesty again and again for the granting of the same And whatsoever trouble or inconvenience fall out in this land in the mean time for want of these ordinary remedies and by the practice of any of these innovations evils contrary to our supplications articles confession it be not imputed unto us who most humbly beg these lawfull remedies but also that it is shall be lawfull unto us to defend and maintain the Religion lawes and liberties of this Kingdome the Kings Authority in defence thereof every one of us one another in that cause of maintaining the Religion and the Kings foresaid Authority according to our power vocation and Covenant with our best counsel bodies lives means whole strength against all persons whatsoever against all externall or internall invasions menaced in this Proclamation Like as that in the great exigencie of the Church necessitating the use of this ordinary and lawfull remedies for settling the commotions thereof it is and shall be leasome unto us to appoint hold and use the ordinary means our lawfull meetings and Assemblies of the Church agreeble to the Law of God and practice of the primitive Church the Acts of the generall Assemblies and Parliaments and the example of our Worthy Reformers in the like case Sexto We protest that our former Supplications Complaints Protestations Confessions meetings proceedings and mutuall defences of every one another in this cause as they are and were in themselves most necessary and orderly meanes agreeable to the lawes practice of this Church and Kingdome to be commended as reall duties of faithfull Christians loyall Subjects and sensible members of the body of the Church and Kingdome and no wise to be stiled nor accounted great disorders misdemeanors blind disobedience under pretext of Religion and running headlong into ruine c. So they proceeded only from conscience of our duty to God our King native
Magistrate is described to assist and maintaine the Discipline of the Kirk and punish those civilly who will not obey the censures thereof without confounding alwayes the one jurisdiction with the other and this order of Ecclesiasticall Discipline condescended upon in generall Assemblies as warranted by divine authoritie to be execute notwithstanding any humane inhibition is set downe before the Psalmes in meeter and therefore we can never expect that his Majestie who out of his pious inclination to justice by a late Proclamation 22. September last hath declared and ordained that all His subjects both Ecclesiasticall and Civill shall be lyable to the tryall and censure of generall Assemblie or any other Judicatorie competent will now stay the execution of the lawfull and grave sentences of this nationall Kirk so comfortable to us and so necessarie for maintaining the puritie of Religion which his Majestie in the end of the Articles before mentioned hath promised to defend and His subjects in the profession thereof which is incompatible with the defence of excommunicate and obstinate persons But therefore wee are assured that his gracious Majestie will be pleased to allow that reverence and all readie obedience may bee deferred to the whole Acts Constitutions and censures of the said generall Assemblie by all His subiects who undoubtedly and necessarily are obliged to obedience of all the lawfull commands and injunctions of the mother Kirk if they would bee accounted members or sonnes thereof By all which cloud of weightie reasons the warrantablenesse of our just proceedings doth evidently appeare notwithstanding of all the arguments of challenge adduced against us in the said Proclamation And therefore for these and many other reasons Wee the members of this Assemblie in our owne names and in the name of the Kirk of Scotland whom we represent And we Noble-men Barons Gentle-men Ministers Burgesses and Commons before mentioned do solemnely declare in the presence of the everliving God and before all men and protest That our thoughts are not guiltie of any thing which is not incumbent to us as good Christians towards God and loyall Subiects towards our sacred Soveraigne And we attest God the Searcher of all hearts that our intentions and whole proceedings in this present Assemblie have beene and shall continue according to the word of God the Lawes and constitutions of this Kirk the Confession of Faith our nationall Oath and that measure of light which God the Father of light hath granted unto us and that in the sinceritie of our hearts without any preoccupation or passion That it was and is most lawfull and necessarie for us to fit still and continue in keeping this present Assemblie indicted by his Majestie untill after conclusion of all matters it bee dissolved by common consent of all the members thereof and that for trying judging and censuring all the by-gone evils and the introductors and providing a solide course of the continuance of Gods truth in this land with puritie and libertie according to his word our Oath and Confession of Faith and the lawfull constitutions of this Kirk That this Assemblie is and should bee esteemed and obeyed as a most lawfull full and free generall Assemblie of this Kingdome And that all Acts sentences constitutions censures and proceedings of this Assemblie whereof the generall and principall Acts are to bee published are in the selfe and should bee reputed obeyed and observed by all the subjects of this Kingdome and members of this Kirke as the Acts sentences constitutions censures and proceedings of a full and free generall Assemblie of this Kirke of Scotland And to have all readie execution under the Ecclesiasticall paines contained or to bee contained therein and conforme thereto in all points and such like that whosoever presumeth to utter any undutifull speech against the same may be duly censured and condignly punished We protest that all and everie member of this reformed Kirk efoldly and faithfully joyne and concurre in their severall callings and stations to advance further and assist the execution and obedience of the whole Acts of this Assemblie by all meanes which their abilitie can afford as they affect the advancement of Gods glorie and the work of reformation in this land We protest against all the challenges and aspersions laid upon us in the said Proclamation and that our whole answers are not onely true in everie point but likewise sufficiently forcible to deliver us from all unjust imputations and to justifie the lawfulnesse and necessitie of our whole proceedings and carriage which hath beene so unreasonably blamed Likeas by these presents we summond and cyte all those of his Majesties Councell or any other who have procured consented subscribed or ratified this present Proclamation to bee responsable to his Majestie and three Estates of Parliament for their counsell given in this matter so highly importing his Majestie and the whole Realme conforme to the 12. Act. Parl. 2. King James 4. And protest for remead of Law against them and everie one of them We protest that it is and may be lawfull unto us to defend and maintaine the Religion Lawes and Liberties of this Kingdome the Kings authoritie in defence thereof and everie one of us another in that cause according to our power vocation and Covenant with our best counsell bodies lives meanes and whole strength against all persons whomsoever and against all externall and internall invasions and that in the obedience and observance of the Acts of this Assemblie and nationall mother Kirk That whatsoever inconvenients shall fall out by impeding molesting or staying the observance and obedience due to the Acts Ordinances and Conclusions of this Assemblie or execution to follow thereupon that the same be not imputed unto us or any of us in our lawfull defence and maintenance thereof who most ardently desired the concurrence of his Majesties Commissioner to this lawfull Assemblie and do yet still with humble vehemencie beg his Majesties gracious approbation thereunto but on the contrarie that the Prelats and their adherents who have protested and declined this present Assemblie in conscience of their owne guiltinesse not daring abide to any legall tryall and by their misinformation did move the Commissioner his Grace to depart and discharge this Assemblie be esteemed repute and holden as they truly are the disturbers of the peace and overthrowers of the liberties of the Kirke and guiltie of all the evils which shall follow hereupon and condignly censured according to the greatnesse of their faults and Acts of the Kirke and Realme Wee protest that none hereafter subscribe the Covenant formerly subscribed by the Commissioner his Grace in Councell as they will eschew the danger of a contradictorie Oath but that all everie one subscribe the Covenant renewed in Februarie last And that with this sense meaning and condition that they subscribe the same conforme to the determination and declaration of this Assemblie at Glasgow allanerly We protest that as we adhere till
Act. 99. Parl. 7. Act. 23. Parl. 11. Act. 114. Parl. 12. Act. 160. Parl. 13. K. James 6. ratified by Act. 4. K. Charles So that Act. 6. Parl. 1. and Act. 68. Parl. 6. of K. James 6. in the yeare of God 1579. declares the Ministers of the blessed Evangel whom God of his mercie had raised up or hereafter should raise agreeing with them that then lived in Doctrine and administration of the Sacraments and the people that professed Christ as he was then offered in the Evangel and doth communicate with the holy Sacraments as in the reformed kirkes of this Realme they were presently administrate according to the Confession of Faith to be the true and holy kirk of Christ Jesus within this Realme and decernes and declares all and sundrie who either gainsayes the VVord of the Evangel received and approved as the heads of the Confession of Faith professed in Parlament in the yeare of God 1560. specified also in the first Parlament of K. James 6. and ratified in this present Parlament more particularly do specifie or that refuses the administration of the holy Sacraments as they were then ministrated to be no members of the said kirk within this Realme and true Religion presently professed so long as they keepe themselves so divided from the societie of Christs bodie And the subsequent Act. 69. Parl. 6. K. James 6. declares That there is no other face of kirke nor other face of Religion then was presently at that time by the favour of God established within this Realme which therefore is ever stiled Gods true Religion Christs true Religion the true and Christian Religion and a perfect Religion Which by manifold Acts of Parlament all within this Realme are bound to professe to subscribe the articles thereof the Confession of Faith to recant all doctrine and errours repugnant to any of the said Articles Act. 4. and 9. Parl. 1. Act. 45.46.47 Parl. 3. Act. 71. Parl. 6. Act. 106. Parl. 7. Act. 24. Parl. 11. Act. 123. Parl. 12. Act. 194. and 197. Parl. 14. of K. James 6. And all Magistrates Sheriffes c. on the one part are ordained to search apprehend and punish all contraviners for instance Act. 5. Parl. 1. Act. 104. Parl. 7. Act. 25. Parl. 11. K. James 6. And that notwithstanding of the Kings Majestes licences on the contrary which are discharged and declared to be of no force in so farre as they tend in any wayes to the prejudice and hinder of the execution of the Acts of Parlament against Papists and adversaries of true Religion Act. 106. Par. 7. K. James 6. on the other part in the 47. Act. Parl. 3. K. James 6. it is declared and ordained seeing the cause of Gods true Religion and his Highnesse Authority are so joyned as the hurt of the one is common to both and that none shall be reputed as loyall and faithfull subjects to our Soveraigne Lord or his Authority but be punishable as rebellers and gainstanders of the same who shall not give their Confession and make their profession of the said true Religion and that they who after defection shall give the Confession of their faith of new they shall promise to continue therein in time comming to maintaine our Soveraigne Lords Authoritie and at the uttermost of their power to fortifie assist and maintaine the true Preachers and Professours of Christs Religion against whatsoever enemies and gainstanders of the same and namely against all such of whatsoever nation estate or degree they be of that have joyned and bound themselves or have assisted or assists to set forward and execute the cruell decrees of Trent contrary to the Preachers and true Professours of the Word of God which is repeated word by word in the Articles of Pacification at Pearth the 23 of February 1572. approved by Parlament the last of Aprill 1573. ratified in Parlament 1578. And related Act. 123. Parl. 12. of K. James 6. with this addition That they are bound to resist all treasonable uproares and hostilities raised against the true Religion the Kings Majestie the true Professors Like as all lieges are bound to maintain the K. Majesties Royal Person and authority the authority of Parlaments without the which neither any laws or lawful judicatories can be established Act. 130. Act. 131. Par. 8. K. Ja 6. the subjects liberties who ought only to live and be governed by the Kings lawes the common lawes of this Realm allanerly Act. 48. Parl. 3. K. James 1. Act. 79. Parl. 6. K. James 4 repeated in Act. 131. Parl. 8. K. James 6. VVhich if they be innovated or prejudged the Commission anent the union of the two kingdomes of Scotland and England which is the sole Act of the 17. Parl. of K. James 6. declares such confusion would ensue as this Realme could be no more a free Monarchie because by the fundamentall lawes ancient priviledges offices and liberties of this kingdome not onely the Princely authoritie of his Majesties royall discent hath bin these manie ages maintained but also the peoples securitie of their lands livings rights offices liberties dignities preserved and therefore for the preservation of the said true Religion Lawes and Liberties of this kingdome it is statute by Act. 8. Parl. 1. repeated in Act. 99. Parl. 7. ratified in Act. 23. Parl. 11. and 114. Act. of K. James 6. and 4. Act. of K. Charles That all kings and Princes at their Coronation and reception of their Princely authoritie shall make their faithfull promise by their solemn oath in the presence of the eternall God that enduring the whole time of their lives they shall serve the same eternall God to the uttermost of their power according as he hath required in his most holy VVord contained in the old and new Testaments And according to the same VVord shall maintain the true Religion of Christ Jesus the preaching of his holy VVord the due and right ministration of the Sacraments now received and preached within this Realme according to the Confession of Faith immediately preceding and shall abolish and gainstand all false Religion contrarie to the same and shall rule the people committed to their charge according to the will and command of God revealed in his foresaid VVord and according to the lowable lawes and constitutions received in this Realm no waies repugnant to the said will of the eternall God and shal procure to the uttermost of their power to the kirk of God and whole Christian people true and perfit peace in all time comming and that they shall be carefull to root out of their Empire all Hereticks and enemies to the true worship of God who shall be convicted by the true kirk of God of the foresaid crimes which was also observed by his Majesty at his Coronation in Edinburgh 1633. as may be seene in the order of the Coronation In obedience to the commandement of God conform to the practice of the godly in former times and according to the laudable example
of our worthy and religious Progenitors and of many yet living amongst us which was warranted also by Act of Councell commanding a generall Band to bee made and subscribed by his Majesties subjects of all ranks for two causes One was for defending the true Religion as it was then reformed and is expressed in the Confession of Faith above written and a former large Confession established by sundrie acts of lawfull Generall Assemblies and of Parlament unto which it hath relation set downe in publicke Cathechismes and which had beene for many yeeres with a blessing from heaven preached and professed in this Kirk and Kingdome as Gods undoubted truth grounded onely upon his written Word The other cause was for maintaining the Kings Majestie his Person and Estate the true Worship of God and the Kings authoritie being so straightly joyned as that they had the same friends and common enemies and did stand and fall together And finally being convinced in our minds and confessing with our mouthes that the present and succeeding generations in this Land are bound to keep the foresaid nationall Oath and subscription inviolable We Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons under subscribing considering divers times before and especially at this time the danger of the true reformed Religion of the Kings honour and of the publicke peace of the Kingdome by the manifold innovations and evils generally contained and particularly mentioned in our late supplications complaints and protestations doe hereby professe and before God his Angels and the World solemnely declare That with our whole hearts wee agree and resolve all the daies of our life constantly to adhere unto and to defend the foresaid true Religion and forbearing the practice of all novations already introduced in the matters of the worship of God or approbation of the corruptions of the publick Government of the Kirk or civill places and power of Kirkmen till they bee tryed and allowed in free Assemblies and in Parlaments to labour by all meanes lawfull to recover the purity and libertie of the Gospel as it was established and professed before the foresaid novations And because after due examination wee plainly perceive and undoubtedly beleeve that the Innovations and evils contained in our Supplications Complaints and Protestations have no warrant of the Word of God are contrary to the Articles of the foresaid Confessions to the intention and meaning of the blessed Reformers of Religion in this Land to the above written Acts of Parlament and doe sensibly tend to the re-establishing of the Popish Religion and tyranny and to the subversion and ruine of the true Reformed Religion and of our Liberties Lawes and Estates VVe also declare that the foresaid Confessions are to bee interpreted and ought to be understood of the foresaid novations and evils no lesse then if everie one of them had beene expressed in the foresaid Confessions and that wee are obliged to detest and abhorre them amongst other particular heads of Papistrie abjured therein And therefore from the knowledge and conscience of our dutie to God to our King and Countrey without any worldly respect or inducement so farre as humane infirmitie will suffer wishing a further measure of the grace of God for this effect VVe promise and sweare by the Great Name of the Lord our GOD to continue in the Profession and Obedience of the foresaid Religion That we shall defend the same and resist all these contrarie errours and corruptions according to our vocation and to the uttermost of that power that God hath put in our hands all the dayes of our life And in like manner with the same heart we declare before God and Men That we have no intention nor desire to attempt any thing that may turne to the dishonour of God or to the diminution of the Kings Greatnesse and Authoritie But on the contrarie we promise and sweare that wee shall to the uttermost of our power with our meanes and lives stand to the defence of our dread Soveraign the Kings Majestie his Person and Authoritie in the defence and preservation of the foresaid true Religion Liberties and Lawes of the Kingdome As also to the mutuall defence and assistance everie one of us of another in the same cause of maintaining the true Religion and his Majesties Authoritie with our best counsell our bodies meanes and whole power against all sorts of persons whatsoever So that whatsoever shall be done to the least of us for that cause shall be taken as done to us all in generall and to everie one of us in particular And that we shall neither directly nor indirectly suffer our selves to be divided or withdrawn by whatsoever suggestion combination allurement or terrour from this blessed and loyall Conjunction nor shall cast in any let or impediment that may stay or hinder any such resolution as by common consent shall be found to conduce for so good ends But on the contrarie shall by all lawfull meanes labour to further and promove the same and if any such dangerous and divisive motion be made to us by VVord or VVrit wee and everie one of us shall either suppresse it or if need be shall incontinent make the same known that it may bee timously obviated neither do we feare the foule aspersions of rebellion combination or what else our adversaries from their craft and malice would put upon us seeing what we do is so well warranted and ariseth from an unfained desire to maintaine the true worship of God the Majestie of our King and the peace of the Kingdome for the common happinesse of our selves and the posteritie And because we cannot look for a blessing from God upon our proceedings except with our Profession and Subscription we joyne such a life and conversation as beseemeth Christians who have renewed their Covenant with God VVee therefore faithfully promise for our selves our followers and all others under us both in publike in our particular families and personall carriage to endevour to keep our selves within the bounds of Christian libertie and to be good examples to others of all Godlinesse Sobernesse and Righteousnesse and of everie dutie we owe to God and Man And that this our Union and Conjunction may bee observed without violation VVee call the living God the Searcher of our Hearts to witnesse who knoweth this to be our sincere Desire and unfained Resolution as we shall answer to JESUS CHRIST in the great day and under the paine of Gods everlasting wrath and of infamie and of losse of all honour and respect in this World Most humblie beseeching the LORD to strengthen us by his holy Spirit for this end and to blesse our desires and proceedings with a happie successe that Religion and Righteousnesse may flourish in the Land to the glorie of God the honour of our King and peace and comfort of us all In witnesse whereof we have subscribed with our hands all the premisses c. TO dispute against this Covenant scholastically or otherwise then by
would be most willing to indict a free generall Assembly and call a Parliament for those good ends but that your Grace as His Majesties Commissioner hath conceived the Confession of faith and Covenant latelie renewed by us His Majesties subjects to be an unlawfull combination against Authority thereby to cast off our dutifull obedience and not a Covenant for maintaining of true Religion of His Majesties Person and Authority and of the Laws and Liberties of the Kingdome And we being most willing to remove that as the maine hinderance of the obtaining of our desires Therefore and for clearing of our loyaltie and vindicating our selves from so great an imputation Wee do now in all humility remonstrate to your Grace as His Majesties Commissioner and declare before God and men that we are heartily grieved and sorrie that any good man but most of all that our dread Soveraigne should so conceive of our doing And that we were and still are so fa●re from any thought of withdrawing our selves from our dutifull subjection and obedience to His Majesties government which by the descent and under the raigne of 107 Kings is most chearfully acknowledged by us and our predecessours that we never had nor have any intention or desire to attempt any thing that may turne to the dishonour of God or diminution of the Kings greatnesse and authority But on the contrary we acknowledging our quietnesse stability and happinesse to depend upon the safety of the Kings Majestie as upon Gods Vicegerent set over us for maintenance of Religion and ministration of Justice have solemnly sworne not onely our mutuall concurrence and assistance for the cause of Religion but also to the uttermost of our power with our meanes and lives to stand to the defence of our dread Soveraigne the Kings Majestie His Person and Authority in the preservation and defence of the true Religion Liberties and Lawes of the Kingdome And therefore we His Majesties loyall subjects free from that and all other imputations of that kinde most humbly beseech your Grace to esteeme that our Confession of Faith and Covenant to have been intended and to be the largest testimony of our fidelity to God and loyaltie to our King And that hinderance being removed must still supplicate that your Grace would be pleased to indict a free generall Assembly and Parliament which will undoubtedly redresse all our evils settle the peace of the Kirk and Kingdome and procure that chearfulnesse of obedience which ought to be rendred to His Majesty carrying with it the offer of our fortunes and best endeavours for His Majesties honour and happinesse as a reall testimony of our thankfulnesse and our hearty prayers to God that His Majestie may long and prosperously raigne over us NOw doth this Petition deserve the name of an explication of their Covenant much lesse of such an explication as should give either Us or Our Commissioner any satisfaction No for it containeth neither more nor lesse then this that they doe not meane to shake off their obedience if We will give way to all their courses which by this Petition they justifie so that their meaning is that they will continue obedient subjects if We will part from Our Soveraigntie which is in effect that they will obey if Wee will suffer them to command But where it was expected that to these words of their Covenant whereby they binde themselves to mutuall maintenance against all persons whatsoever should have beene added except the King and his successors that was refused though even that could have given no satisfaction unlesse We should give way to that which divers Acts of Parliament have made sedition and punishable with death Upon notice given by Our Commissioner of his intended departure the debatements at their Table grew very hot and fierie upon this point Whether they should presently indict a Generall Assembly and fall upon the violent courses intended by them or that they should grant some short time for his journey his stay with Us his returne to them againe with Our finall answer and last resolution and in the meane time promise that they would behave themselves quietly and peaceably and continue all things in statu quo untill his returne This last was agreed unto though not without much contrarietie of voices and so some of the principall Covenanters came and acquainted him with this their resolution which was That they would expect Our answer and his returne upon the fifth of August next at the furthest untill which time they would breake up their great meeting containe themselves and the people in quietnesse and peace but if by that day he did either not return or not bring with him from Us such an answere as they expected then they would hold themselves free and goe on to prosecute the courses which they had resolved upon And so Our Commissioner begun his journey towards Us. After Our Commissioner had at Greenwich made Us fully acquainted with all their insolencies We speedily dispatched him with new Instructions and commanded him to returne so that he might be backe in Scotland by the fifth of August and gave him order for the indicting both of a Generall Assembly and a Parliament but so that he should first be fully satisfied by all informations which he could conveniently receive of the constitution of a Generall Assembly with which perhaps many were not acquainted none having beene kept for divers yeares And therefore it did require good deliberation to agree both upon the members of the Assembly not for their persons but for their qualitie and of what things were usually treated and handled there No sooner was he returned into Scotland but he found all things in much worse case and in a farre greater combustion then he left them For he found that the heads of the faction being affraid that he might bring backe with him some satisfactory accommodation which Our subjects might like well but they themselves resolved to reject had in the time of his absence assured their followers that they might compasse their ends by such means and upon such conditions as themselves desired Nay they proceeded so far as to make the people beleeve what they knew to be most untrue viz. That Our Commissioner was well satisfied with all their proceedings and especially with their Covenant in regard of the late explication they had made of it and were so impudent as to use that inducement for an argument whereby they perswaded many of all sorts especially of the Ministers who had formerly stood out against their Covenant to enter into it in this short time of his absence from them And the three Ministers in their answers to the Queries of the Divines of Aberdene had the boldnesse to print that Our Commissioner rested satisfied with their Covenant according to their explication of it With which their notorious calumnie he found himselfe so highly injured in a point which so much concerned his loyaltie to Us and the trust reposed in
adjudged to be so in the case of the Ministers who held an Assembly at Aberdene after it was prorogued by Our royall Father who being cited to compeere before the Lords of the Councell to answer that high contempt and compeering declined the authoritie of Our royall Father and his Councell and appealed to a Generall Assembly and were therefore arraigned of high treason upon that Statute before the Lord chiefe Justice of that Kingdome and after pleading to it by their Advocates were found by a Jurie or Assize guilty of high treason and had received sentence accordingly if Our royall Father out of his singular clemencie and gracious respect to their calling had not reprived them before sentence and only inflicted upon them perpetuall banishment which they did undergoe The Act of Parliament upon which they were arraigned was this The eighth Parliament current holden at Edinburgh the 22. of May in the yeere of God 1584. by the right Excellent right High and Mightie Prince James the Sixt by the grace of God King of Scots and three Estates of this Realme An Act confirming the Kings Majesties royall power over all Estates and subjects within this Realme FOrasmuch as some persons being lately called before the Kings Majestie and his secret Councell to answer upon certaine points to have beene inquired of them concerning some treasonable seditious and contumelious speeches uttered by them in Pulpits Schooles and otherwaies to the disdaine and reproach of his Highnesse his Progenitors and present Councell contemptuously declined the judgement of his Highnesse and his said Councell in that behalfe to the evill example of others to doe the like if timely remedy be not provided Therefore our Soveraign Lord and his three Estates assembled in this present Parliament ratifieth and approveth and perpetually confirmeth the Royall power and authority over all Estates aswell spirituall as temporall within this Realme in the person of the Kings Majestie our Soveraign Lord his Heires and Successors And also statuteth and ordaineth that his Highnesse his Heires and Successors by themselves and their Councells are and in time to come shall be judges competent to all persons his Highnesse subjects of what estate degree function or condition soever they be of Spirituall or Temporall in all matters wherein they or any of them shall be apprehended summoned or charged to answer to such things as shall bee inquired of them by our said Soveraigne Lord and his Councell And that none of them which shall happen to be apprehended called or summoned to the effect aforesaid presume to take in hand to decline the judgement of his Highnesse his Heires and Successors or their Councell in the premises under the paine of treason Their sixth Protestation is nothing but a repetition of that which they have said so oft even unto tediousnesse In their seventh and last they bewray an unexempled boldnesse in avowing their confidence of Our approbation to the integritie of their hearts and peaceablenesse of their waies and actions all this time past when in their owne consciences they doe know that We doe hold and detest their waies and actions as most unpeaceable and seditious And now having taken a short survey of this their Protestation We doe appeale to any man who shall compare it with Our Declaration whether Our gracious Proclamation against which they protested did not rather deserve an humble and hearty acknowledgement of Our many graces and favours towards them with a joyfull and submissive acceptation of them then first to be traduced to the people before it was made for a Proclamation tending to the utter ruine and subversion of the Religion and Lawes of that Church and Kingdome and then afterward to bee encountred in publique with such an impudent insolent seditious and senslesse Protestation And lastly after all this to be railed at in their Pulpits and Our people made to beleeve that that part of it which required subscription to their owne confession of faith but lately sworne and subscribed unto by themselves was a device of the Devill and hatched in Hell as shall appeare by that which followed For the next day being Sunday all the Pulpits of Edinburgh nay and many places where there were no Pulpits for they heard Sermons in many Halls and other profane and common places did ring with bitter invectives and declamations against this Our gracious Declaration especially against that part of it which they conceived would be most satisfactorie to Our people and prove a speciall Antidote for expelling that poyson which they had made them swallow concerning Our declining from the Reformed Religion and inclining to Poperie viz. the subscription to their own confession of faith now commanded by Us For they branded it so with most hideous and horrible names of the very depth and policie of Sathan that the common people who were well perswaded of the pietie of their Preachers could not chuse but imagine that there was some wickednesse in it which their Preachers could and did dive into though they did not One Preacher in his Sermon prayed God to scatter them in Israel and to divide them in Jacob who were the authors of this scattering and divisive counsell Another Preacher in his Pulpit told his people that the urging of this subscription was an Italian and a devillish device first to make them renounce God and perjure themselves and then afterward there was an intention to destroy their bodies and so that this subscription imported no lesse then the destruction both of their bodies and soules These and many more such false feares suggested first from two of the Preachers of Edinburgh and from them transmitted to their fellows throughout the Kingdome did worke so strongly with Our good but simple and seduced people as that they were wrought unto a perswasion that this subscription to their owne confession of faith commanded by Us for removing that false opinion which their Leaders had put into their heads of Our inclination to Poperie was of a farre deeper reach and of more dangerous consequence then if We had been inclined to Poperie indeed still adding That if they did subscribe it now by Our authoritie it could receive no acceptation at Gods hands God rejecting any service done to him by constraint it being very familiar with them at these times to terme obedience to authoritie constraint but when they subscribed it voluntarily or by the perswasion of their Leaders then it was acceptable to God and if they durst have used such a Popish word no question they would have added Meritorious And thus you see with what undutifulnesse Our gracious Declaration was entertained Yet it was not so received by all For first all the Lords of Our Councell amongst whom were some who never seemed to be satisfied before were so fully satisfied and so much overjoyed with this Our gracious Declaration that they did condemne and utterly detest this odious Protestation of the Covenanters whereupon Our Councels Letter of thankes and proffer of
their owne Covenant The Assembly being indicted the Covenanters did now goe about to effect all which they had plotted and designed concerning the election of the Commissioners to it That all and none but they might be chosen whom they had resolved upon and were of the most rigid ranke whom they were sure would receive no satisfaction and keep all others so farre as in them lay from accepting of any Their device was this They perceived that most of the Ministers throughout the Kingdome would gladly embrace peace if they might see their consciences satisfied in these feares and doubts upon which they entred into the late Covenant The Leaders resolved not to trust any such moderate men considering that all their scruples were removed by Our last Declaration and the indiction of a free generall Assembly and therefore they took order by their secret instructions that none of them should be chosen though they were Covenanters For Ministers non-Covenanters they took order that if in any place by pluralitie of voices such a one should bee chosen then hee should be processed and protested against which no man could avoid and so he should be sure to be set by at the Assembly and cast from having any voice there And whereas they might feare that the rigid Ministers designed by them for this Assembly might want a sufficient number of their fellow-Ministers for their elections in their severall Presbyteries they tooke an order That not onely for this time but for all times to come there should bee no Minister chosen Commissioner from any Presbyterie to any Assembly but such as the Laitie should make choice of For they presently gave order from their Tables That every particular Parish should send to the Presbyterie in their bounds one Lay-man whom they called a Ruling Elder who by their appointment should have voice in the Presbytery as wel as the Minister of the Parish so that when the whole Presbyterie was assembled together the number of the Lay-men was at the least equall to the number of the Ministers By which new device the Laitie gained of the Ministers undoubtedly these foure things First That never any Minister should bee chosen Commissioner to the Assembly but whom they would for they being equall in number in voices with the Ministers and sixe of the Ministers being to be put in the List and to stand in election out of which sixe three must be chosen and all these sixe must be removed in the time of the election and have no voices themselves in it it is clear that the number of the Lay voices in these elections must needs exceed the number of the Ministers voices at least by sixe Or if in some Presbyteries as We heare was done in some few these sixe Ministers before their removing gave voices to whom they pleased yet no man being able to give a voice to himselfe of necessitie the number of the Lay voices must exceed the number of the Ministers by one Secondly the Laitie gained this That in all other Presbyteriall meetings which are weekly the Ministers should never have a casting voice to determine any thing but what they liked the Lay-men being alwaies at the least equal to them in number Thirdly this they gained That whatsoever should be concluded in a generall Assembly should ever be concluded likewise in a Parliament if Our negative voice did not stop it and Wee heare that they have not spared to give out that they will take from Us and Our Successors that which all Our Predecessours have enjoyed that is a negative voice in Parliament as they have done in Assemblies for as much as lies in them For by their instructions they ordered That where any Nobleman lived in any Presbyterie hee should bee chosen lay-Elder there for the Assembly and all Noblemen are hereditarie members of the Parliament and where there wanted a Nobleman they should chuse some speciall Gentleman who in all probabilitie standeth faire for being chosen one of the Commissioners of the Shire for the Parliament which made the Covenanters stand so importunately for that point viz. to have the Assembly held before the Parliament as making just accompt that all the lay voices in the Assembly were engaged to give their voices to the same conclusions when they should sit in Parliament and so that the Parliament for it Acts should depend upon the generall Assembly and the generall Assembly for the Acts passed there should depend upon them but neither the one nor the other depend upon Us. Fourthly the Laitie gained this That they exempted themselves for ever hereafter from all fears of the power of the Clergie for they being resolved so farre as in them lay to overthrow Episcopall government and yet fearing by so doing to be brought againe under the tyrannie of Presbyteriall government of which they had heard their fathers so grievously complaine they pitched upon this way of equall number of lay-Elders in every Presbyterie being assured thereby to curb their Ministers most of whom had their stipends and rents paid by these lay-Patrons and so now the Laitie made accompt that if in their elections to this Assembly they could compasse these conclusions and resolutions they had brought the Church and Churchmen under for ever These conclusions though effected by the Laitie with violence yet received great resistance by many Ministers in most Presbyteries and in some by all For when these Lay Elders came to sit with them they either refused to admit them or desired time to deliberate how they who being Covenanters and had complained of Innovations could admit of such innovations as those which seemed to threaten the ruine of the Libertie of the Church for these Reasons First because that above these fortie yeares no Lay Elder had sat in their Presbyteries and therefore it was a great Innovation Secondly because at the beginning of the Reformation when there was a kinde of necessitie to require the assistance of Lay-men for the government of the Church Ministers being then so few and scant yet it was provided that they should ever be fewer in number then the Ministers and that therefore this obtruding of themselves in equall number was not onely an Innovation but directly against the book of discipline upon which they did so much ground their proceedings Thirdly that it was a thing never ●eard nor practised before in that Church that Lay-men had voices in the chusing of the Ministers Commissioners for the Assemblie and therefore if they would chuse they desired them to chuse their own Lay Commissioner but for the Ministers Commissoners to leave it to themselves who were better able to discerne of their Ministers abilities since they were weekly conversant with them then they whom they had never seene in their Presbyterie before But all this opposition and arguing was fruitlesse For the Lay Elders according to their secret instructions from the Covenanters Tables which afterward shall be related would not remove but put themselves in possession
There was a Petition presented against him to the Assembly and no voice must be allowed him untill he had answered that A very easie device for putting by any Commissioner whom they liked not since it was no hard matter to find one to present a Petition against any man Another Minister of the Channery of Rosse and Archdeacon of Rosse one Master William Mackeinzey Commissioner from the Presbyterie of the Channery upon certaine cavills both of his election and commission which did beare that he should continue there no longer then Wee or Our Commissioner should continue the Assembly because the sole power of calling and dissolving of Assemblies did belong to Us for the present was onely suspended from his voice the reason was plaine he was a Non-covenanter and had openly averred in the Assembly that at their election the Ministers of their Presbyterie were threatned by those who brought Letters from the Tables if they should returne the election of any but such as they who brought the Letters desired Two elections were returned from the Presbyterie of Aberdene One of Covenanters made by a few Ministers but many Lay-Elders at which neither the Moderatour nor the Clerke of the Presbyterie were present Another of Non-covenanters which election was made onely by Ministers and at which the Moderatour and Clerke were both present yet that other election at the returne whereof there wanted the Clerkes hand without which no Presbyteriall Act can bee taken for a Record was allowed and the other rejected upon the bare relation of one of the Covenanting Ministers who was returned wrongfully and the attestation of the other whom the Moderatour openly in the Assembly called up and desired to testifie whether the relation of his fellow was true an excellent way of proofe against a publique Record to take the testimonie of one who was as wrongfully returned as the Relator The Universitie of Aberdene sent none of their Professors to the Assembly not daring to trust themselves upon the way having been so much threatned with the losse of their lives for writing against the Covenant Onely they sent one of their number no Divine but a Professor of Humanitie to excuse their absence his Commission being read gave him onely power to be there and did constitute him their Agent in any thing which should concerne their Universitie requiring him to continue there and from time to time to give them advertisement of all that passed The Moderatour did justly affirme That that was no Commission the party having no power by it to give any voice in the Assembly and so there was no more to be said to it but immediately something being transmitted by whispering from eare to eare untill it came to the Moderatours eare the Moderatour begun presently to recant and perusing his letter of credence said hee perceived that there was onely want of formalitie in the draught which they might easily passe over and so they allowed that for a Commission which was none and admitted him to have a voice in the Assembly though the Universitie gave him no such power nor would they have sent any Commissioner but a Divine At this sudden change of the Moderatour made in him by a whisper many begun to smile and to lay wagers that the party admitted was a Covenanter which the Moderatour did not expect from that Universitie and that this secretly-conveyed intelligence of it had changed him and indeed afterward it proved to be so And thus the members of their Assembly were constituted just as they had designed them at which they were mightily over-joyed being now assured that they might conclude what they pleased And although it might in common reputation have better suited with the principles of wisedome not to have taken exceptions against these few elections which were made contrarie to their directions for thereby they had gained the opinion of impartialitie and had lost nothing of their power those few voices not being able to carrie any thing against their great number yet such was their blind obstinacie that they scorned that any one should sit there who runne not their rebellious courses as holding it a dis-reputation to them if they should be thought to have abated any thing not onely of their power but even of their will Besides not onely their peevishnesse but even their pride appeared notably in one particular Wee in Our Letters to the Assembly had nominated for Assessors to Our Commissioner these sixe The Earle of Traquair Lord Treasurer the Earle of Roxburgh Lord Privie-Seale the Earle of Argyle the Earle of Lauderdaile the Earle of Southesk Lords of Our Privie Councell and Sir Lewis Stuart an Advocate a farre fewer number then ever Our royall Father called to assist any of his Commissioners all which ever constantly had voices in the Assembly But here though these sixe suffrages were able to doe nothing against their minds yet because they would be sure to clip the wings of Authoritie they absolutely refused to let them have any voice at all telling Our Commissioner That he might consult with these Assessors if he pleased but that they were to have no voice in the Assembly affirming with incredible impudence That if We Our Selfe were there We should have but one voice and that not negative neither nor more affirmative then any one member of the Assembly had by which meanes they have published to the World this sweet and wholsome doctrine That their King in their Ecclesiasticall Assembly hath no more power then any Towne-Clerke Taylor or Sadler who shall sit as a Lay-Elder there which desperate opinion of theirs doth plainly shew the reason why in their last publique instructions preceding the Assembly they ordered That every Lay-Elder from Presbyteries should come attended with three or foure and every Commissioner from Burrowes with five or sixe of their owne ranke and qualitie who should continue with them all the time of the Assembly without whose advice they should not give voice to any thing a thing never heard of at any generall Assembly before Sure they had heard and knew the number names of the Assessors whom Wee had appointed to assist Our Commissioner and therefore they would have every mechanicall Artizan chosen a Lay-Elder for the Assembly whom they held to have equall power with Us in it to carrie the same badge of power and state with Us and to have their Assessors as well as We and those equall in number to Ours and the same power with Ours of consulting though not concluding All which whether royall Majestie and supreme Soveraigntie can or ought to digest any reasonable man may judge The Assembly being just now the same thing which the Tables were at Edinburgh in substance but in condition far worse for here were none now but the most obstinate Covenanters whom the severall Tables had picked out of all the packe and they meeting at the Towne-house of Glasgow alwayes before they met at the Church the place of the
traduced doth redound to the reproach of Church and State and of the Gospell whereof they are Preachers 6. Lastly to omit many other informalities against their owne consciences which wee charge in the sight of God as they must answer before his great and fearefull tribunall if they suspect and know not perfectly according to the judgement of charitie them whom they thus accuse to bee free of these crimes wherewith they charge them at least of many of them as appeares evidently by the 11. Article of the said instructions having therein libelled the generall and have yet to seek the specification thereof from the malice of their neighbours if so bee they can furnish it By which informall and malicious proceeding it is most apparent that our said parties do seek our disgrace and overthrow most maliciously and illegally And therefore wee call heaven and earth to witnesse if this bee not a barbarous and violent persecution that all circumstances being considered hath few or none to parallel it since the beginning of Christianitie and if wee have not just cause to decline the said pretended Commissioners as our partie Moreover can these men expect but in a lawfull Assemble they were to bee called and censured for their enorme transgressions foresaid And will any man thinke that they can bee judges in their owne cause It is alleadged out of the Canon-Law against the Pope that if the Pope be at variance with any man he ought not to bee Judge himselfe but to chuse arbitrators And this may militate against them except they be more unruly then Popes Ludovicus Bavarus and all the Estates of Germanie with him did plead this nullitie against the sentence and proceeding of Pope John 22. and of his Councell And the Archbishop of Cullen 1546. did plead the nullitie of Paul 3. his Bull of excommunication because hee protested that so soone as a lawfull Councell should be opened hee would implead the Pope as partie being guiltie of many things censurable by the Councell But the late Protestation doth shew the authors thereof to bee no lesse injurious to our place and authority then they are over-weening of their owne For it is against reason and practice of the Christian Church that no Primate Archbishop nor Bishop have place nor voice deliberative or decisive in generall Assemblies except they be authorized and elected by their Presbyteriall meetings consisting of preaching and ruling Elders as they call them and without warrant or example in the Primitive and purest times of the Church This also doth inferre the nullitie of an Assemblie if the Moderator and President for matters of doctrine and discipline shall bee neither the Primate Archbishop nor Bishop but hee who by pluralitie of Presbyters and Lay-mens voices shall bee elected which happely may be one of the inferiour Clergie or a Lay-person as sometimes it hath fallen out Whereas canonically according to the ancient practice of the Church the Primate should preside according to the constitution of the first Councell of Nice Can. 6. of Antioch Can. 9. and of the Imperiall Law Novell constitut 123. cap. 10. and according to our owne Law For what place in Assemblies Archbishops and Bishops had in other Christian Nations the same they had no doubt in Scotland and yet still do retaine except by some municipall Law it hath beene restrained which cannot be showne For the restraint of their authoritie by the Act of Parliament 1592. is restored by the Act of Parliament 1606. and 1609. and all Acts prejudiciall to their jurisdiction abrogated Neither doth that Act 1592. establishing generall Assemblies debarre Bishops from presiding therein nor the abrogation of their Commission granted to them by Act of Parliament in Ecclesiasticall causes imply and inferre the abrogation of that authoritie which they received not from the Parliament but from Christ from whom they received the spirituall oversight of the Clergie under their charge whereto belongeth the Presidentship in all Assemblies for matters spirituall alwayes with due submission to the supreme Governour which is so intrinsecally inherent in them as they are Bishops that hoc ipso that they are Bishops they are Presidents of all Assemblies of the Clergie as the Chancellour of the Kingdome hath place in Councell and Session not by any Act or Statute but hoc ipso that he is Chancellour By Act of Parliament Bishops are declared to have their right in Synods and other inferiour meetings but by no Law restrained nor debarred from the exercise of it in Nationall Assemblies and the law allowing Bishops to bee Moderators of the Synods doth present a list in absence of the Metropolitan to whom of right this place doth belong as said is out of which the Moderator of the generall Assemblie shall be chosen For is it not more agreeable to reason order and decencie that out of Moderators of Synods a Moderator of the generall Assemblie should be chosen then of the inferiour Clergie subject to them As concerning that Act of the generall Assemblie 1580. whereby Bishops are declared to have no warrant out of Scripture if corruption of time shall bee regarded the authoritie of that Assemblie might bee neglected no lesse then that at Glasgow 1610. But it is ordinarie that prior Acts of Assemblies and Parliaments give place to the posterior for Posteriora derogant prioribus And there past not full six yeares when a generall Assemblie at Edinburgh found that the name of Bishops hath a speciall charge and function annexed to it by the word of God and that it was lawfull for the generall Assemblie to admit a Bishop to a benefice presented by the Kings Majestie with power to admit visite and deprive Ministers and to be Moderators of the Presbyteries where they are resident and subject onely to the sentence of the generall Assemblie As for that Act at Mont rose let them answer to it that have their calling by that Commission Wee professe that wee have a lawfull calling by the election of the Clergie who are of the Chapiter of our Cathedrals and consecration of Bishops by his Majesties consent and approbation according to the laudable Lawes and ancient custome of this Kingdome and of the Church in ancient times and do homage to our Soveraigne Lord for our Temporalities and acknowledge him solo Deo minorem next unto God in all causes and over all persons Spirituall or Temporall in his owne Dominions supreme Governour But now wee may take up Cyprian his complaint Lib. 3. Ep. 14. Quod non periculum metuere debemus de offensâ Domini quando aliqui de Presbyteris nec Evangelii nec loci sui memores sed neque futurum Dei judicium neque praepositum sibi Episcopum cogitantes quod nunquam omnino sub antecessoribus factum est cum contumelia contemptâ praepositi totum sibi vendicent Atque utinam non prostratâ fratrum nostrorum salute sibi omnia vendicarent Contumelias Episcopatûs nostri dissimulare ferre possem sicut
this assemblie under the paine of treason and after seven dayes sitting declare all Acts made or hereafter to be made in this Assemblie to be of no force nor strength and that for such causes as are either expressed in his Maiesties former proclamations and so are answered in our former protestations or set downe in the declinatour and protestation presented in name of the Prelats which are fully cleared in our answer made thereto or else were long since proponed by the Commissioner his Grace in his eleven articles or demands sent unto us before the indiction of the Assembly and so were satisfied by our answers which his Grace acknowledged by promising after the recept thereof to procure a free generall Assembly with power to determine upon all questions anent the members manner and matters thereof all which for avoiding tediousnesse we here repeat Or otherwise the said causes alleadged by the Commissioner were proponed by His Grace in the Assemblie such as first that the ●ssemblie refused to reade the Declinatour and Protestation exhibited by the Prelats which neverthelesse was publickly read and considered by the assemblie immediately after the election of a Moderatour and constitution of the Members before the which there was no assemblie established to whom the same could have been read Next that ruling Elders were permitted to have voice in the election of commissioners from Presbyteries which was knowne to His Grace before the indiction and meeting of the assembly and is so agreeable to the acts and practice of this Church in violably observed before the late times of corruption that not one of the assembly doubted thereof to whom by the indiction and promise of a free assembly the determination of that question anent the members constituent propertie belonged And last that the voices of the six Assessors who did sit with His Grace were not asked and numbered which we could not conceive to be any just cause of offence since after 39. Nationall assemblies of this reformed church where neither the Kings Majestie nor any in his name was present at the humble and earnest desire of the assembly His Majestie graciously vouchsafed His presence either in His owne Royall Person or by a Commissioner not for voting or multiplying of voices but as Princes and Emperours of old in a Princely manner to countenance that meeting and to preside in it for externall order and if Wee had been honoured with His Majesties Personall presence His Majestie according to the practice of King James of blessed memorie would have onely given his owne Iudgement in voting of matters and would not have called others who had not been cloathed with commission from the church to carry things by pluralitie of voices Therefore in conscience of our duty to God and his truth the King and his honour the Church and her liberties this Kingdome and her peace this Assemblie and her freedome to our selves and our safety to our Posterity Persons and Estates We professe with sorrowfull and heavie but loyall hearts That We cannot dissolve this Assemblie for the reasons following 1. For the reasons already printed anent the necessity of conveening a Generall Assemblie which are now more strong in this case seeing the Assemblie was already indicted by his Majesties authority did conveene and is fully constitute in all the members thereof according to the Word of God and discipline of this church in the presence and audience of his Majesties Commissioner who hath really acknowledged the same by assisting therein seven dayes and exhibition of His Majesties Royall Declaration to be registrate in the Bookes of this Assemblie which accordingly is done 2. For the reasons contained in the former Protestations made in name of the Noblemen Barons Burgesses Ministers and Commons whereunto We doe now iudicially adhere as also unto the Confession of Faith covenant subscribed sworn by the Body of this Kingdome 3. Because as We are obliged by the application and explication subioyned necessarily to the Confession of Faith subscribed by Vs So the Kings Maiestie and his Commissioner and Privie Councell have urged many of this Kingdome to subscribe the Confession of Faith made in an 1580. and 1590. and so to returne to the doctrine and discipline of this Church as it was then professed But it is cleare by the doctrine and discipline of this Church contained in the book of Policie then registrate in the books of Assemblie subscribed by the Presbyteries of this Church That it was most unlawfull in it selfe and preiudiciall to these priviledges which Christ in his Word hath left to his Church to dissolve or breake up the Assemblie of this Church or to stop and stay their proceedings in constitution of Acts for the welfare of the Church or execution of discipline against offenders and so to make it appeare that Religion and Church-government should depend absolutely upon the pleasure of the Prince 4. Because there is no ground of pretence either by Act of Assemblie or Parliament or any preceding practice whereby the Kings Maiestie may lawfully dissolve the Generall Assemblie of the Church of Scotland far lesse His Maiesties Commissioner who by his commission hath power to indict and keep it secundùm legem praxim But upon the contrarie His Maiesties prerogative Royall is declared by Act of Parliament to be no wayes preiudiciall to the priviledges and liberties which God hath granted to the spirituall office-bearers and meetings of this Church which are most frequently ratified in Parliaments and especially in the last Parliament holden by His Maiestie himself which priviledges and liberties of the Church his Maiestie will never diminish or infringe being bound to maintain the same in integritie by solemn oath given at his Royal Coronation in this Kingdome 5. The Assemblies of this Church have still inioyed this freedome of uninterrupted sitting without or notwithstanding any contramand as is evident by all the Records thereof and in speciall by the generall Assembly holden in anno 1582. which being charged with letters of Horning by the Kings Majestie his Commissioner and Councell to stay their processe against Master Robert Montgomerie pretended Bishop of Glasgow or otherwise to dissolve and rise did notwithstanding shew their liberty and freedome by continuing and sitting still and without any stay going on in that processe against the said Master Robert to the finall end thereof And thereafter by letter to his Majestie did shew clearly how far his Majestie had been uninformed and upon misinformation prejudged the prerogative of Jesus Christ and the liberties of this Church and did inact and ordain that none should procure any such warrant or charge under the pain of excommunication 6. Because now to dissolve after so many supplications and complaints after so many reiterared promises after our long attendance and expectation after so many references of processes from Presbyteries after the publick indiction of the Assemblie and the solemn Fast appointed for the same after frequent Convention formall
unlesse they bee required so to doe by such as shall have lawfull authoritie from his Majestie to administer it unto them being confident that none either will or can take the said oath or any other oath in any sense which may not consist with episcopall government having his Majesties sense and so the sense of all lawfull authority fully explayned to them HAMILTOUN THat episcopall jurisdiction was in force by acts of parliament no wayes abolished nor suppressed in the yeare 1580. nor at the time of reformation of religion within the realm of Scotland doth evidently appeare by the acts of parliament after mentioned First by the parliament 1567. cap. 2. whereby at the time of reformation the Popes authoritie was abolished it is enacted by the said act That no bishop nor other prelate in this realme use any jurisdiction in time coming by the bishop of Romes authority And by the third act of the same parliament whereby it is declared That all acts not agreeing with Gods word and contrary to the confession of faith approved by the estates in that parliament to have no effect nor strength in time to come Whereby it is evident that it was not the reformers intētion to suppresse episcopacie but that bishops should not use any jurisdiction by the bishop of Rome his authority seeing they did allow episcopacie to cōtinue in the church that they did not esteeme the same contrary to Gods word and confession foresaid as appeares more clearly by the sixth act of the said parliament which is ratified in the parliament 1579. cap. 68. whereby it is declared That the ministers of the blessed Evangell of Iesus Christ whom God of his mercie hath now raised up amongst us or hereafter shall raise agreeing with them that now live in doctrine or administration of the sacraments and the people of this realme that professe Christ as hee is now offered in his Evangel and doe communicate with the holy sacraments as in the reformed kirks of this realme they are publickly administrate according to the confession of the faith to be the only true and holy kirk of Iesus Christ within this realme without any exception by reason of policie and discipline declaring only such as either gain-say the word of the Evangel according to the heads of the said confession or refuse the participation of the holy sacraments as they are now ministrate to bee no members of the said kirk so long as they keep themselves so divided from the societie of Christs body Whereby it is manifest that it was not the said reformers minde to exclude any from that society by reason of discipline and that they did not at that time innovate or change any thing in that policie they found in the said kirk before the reformation This is likewaies evident by the oath to be ministred to the king at his coronation by the eigth act of the said parliament wherby he is to sweare to maintaine the true religion of Iesus Christ the preaching of his holy word due and right ministration of the sacraments now received and preached within this realme and shall abolish and gainstand all false religion contrarie to the same without swearing to any innovation of policie and discipline of the kirk Secondly it doth evidently appeare by these subsequent acts of parliament that by the muncipall law of this realme archbishops and bishops was not only allowed in the kirk but also had jurisdiction and authority to governe the same First by the 24. act of the said parliament whereby all civill priviledges granted by our soveraigne Lords predecessors to the spirituall estate of this realme are ratified in all points after the form tenor therof And by the 35. act of the parliament 1571. whereby all and whatsoever acts and statutes made of before by our soveraigne Lord and his predecessors anent the freedome and liberty of the true kirke of God are ratified and approved By the 46. act of the parliament 1572. whereby it is declared that archbishops and bishops have the authority and are ordained to conveen and deprive all inferiour persons being ministers who shall not subscribe the articles of religion and give their oath for acknowledging and recognoscing of our soveraigne Lord and his authority and bring a testimoniall in writing thereupon within a moneth after their admission By the 48. act of the same parliament whereby it is declared that archbishops and bishops have authority at their visitations to designe ministers gleibes By the 54. act of the said parliament whereby archbishops and bishops are authorized to nominate and appoint at their visitations persons in every parochin for making and setting of the taxation for upholding and repairing of kirks and kirk-yards and to conveene try and censure all persons that shall be found to have applied to their own use the stones timber or any thing else pertaining to kirks demolished By the 55. act of the parliament 1573. whereby archbishops and bishops are authorized to admonish persons married in case of desertion to adhere and in case of disobedience to direct charges to the minister of the parochin to proceed to the sentence of excommunication By the 63. act of the parliament 1578. whereby bishops and where no bishops are provided the Commissioner of diocesses have authority to try the rents of hospitals and call for the foundations thereof By the 69. act of the parliament 1579. whereby the jurisdiction of the kirk is declared to stand in preaching the word of Iesus Christ correction of manners and administration of the holy sacraments and yet no other authority nor office-bearer allowed and appointed by act of parliament nor is allowed by the former acts but archbishops and bishops intended to continue in their authority as is clear by these acts following First by the 71. act of the same parliament whereby persons returning from their travels are ordained within the space of twenty dayes after their returne to passe to the bishop superintendent commissioner of the kirks where they arrive and reside and there offer to make and give a confession of their faith or then within fourtie dayes to remove themselves forth of the realme By the 99. act of the parliament 1581. whereby the foresaids acts are ratified and approved By the 130. act of the parliament 1584. whereby it is ordained that none of his Majesties lieges and subjects presume or take upon hand to impugne the dignitie and authoritie of the three estates of this kingdome whereby the honour and authority of the Kings Majesties supreme court of parliament past all memorie of man hath beene continued or to seek or procure the innovation or diminution of the power and authoritie of the same three estates or any of them in time coming under the paine of treason By the 131. act of the same parliament wherby all judgements jurisdictions as well in spirituall as tēporall causes in practice custome during these twenty foure yeares by-past not approved
Episcopacy was still condemned notwithstanding all opposition made in the contrare As for the Kings oath the same containeth no mention of Bishops but by the contrary the King is obliged thereby to maintaine the true Religion of Jesus Christ the preaching of his holy word and right administration of the Sacraments then received and preached within this Realme And seeing it is cleared by the preceeding relation that Bishops were never allowed but oppugned by the Kirk of Scotland that oath doth not allow but exclude Episcopacy which is also more perspicuous in the short confession 1580. and 1581. when the Kirk set downe her constant policy in Doctrine and Discipline grounded upon the word of God wherein the Hierarchie is abjured as contrary thereto and craved an oath from his Majesty for maintenance thereof which now also our gracious Soveraign in the judgement of the Kirk of Scotland is obliged to maintaine as being founded upon the word of God and exclusive of Episcopacie as repugnant thereto The acts of Parliament thereafter particularly cited are these mentioned in order The 24. act 1567. ratifying all civill priviledges formerly granted to the spirituall estate and the 35. act 1571. Ratifying all acts made anent the freedome and liberty of the true Kirk the same cannot bee extended to the establishing of Episcopacy because it is not mentioned in these acts but by the contrary was abolished by the acts of the Assembly and Parliament before mentioned so that the priviledges therein mentioned are granted to such Kirk-men as then were received by the Kirk and Kingdome and the freedome of the Kirk must be interpret by her owne judgement who thought ever Episcopall jurisdiction an heavy bondage and yet those priviledges can inferre no spirituall jurisdiction but only civill priviledges some immunities and extemptions granted for the goods and persons of Kirk-men as is cleare 1. act Iames 1. Par. 1. and 26 act Par. 2. Iames 1. and 4. act Par. 3. Iames 2. with many others It is here to be observed that the carefull evolver of these acts of Parliament hath omitted to cite the 7. act 1. Parliament of King Iames 6. bearing the examination and admission of Ministers to be only in the power of the Kirk then openly and publickly profest and presentations to be made to Superintendents or others having commission from the Kirk and appealeth from them to the Superintendents and ministers of the Province and appealleth from these to the generall Assembly in all which gradations no mention of Bishops but they in effect excluded by that contrare distinction of the Kirk then openly profest because they were discharged by the foresaid second act 1567. and Superintendents were then permitted like temporarie Evangelists for the present necessity declared in the first booke of discipline ad ecclesiam constituendam but was abrogate from 1575. that the constant Policie of Ecclesia constituta began to be established As for the acts of Parliament 1572. and 1573. It is knowne by the records of the time that the Regent then laboured hard to bring in Arch-bishops and Bishops who were not dead but standing de facto provided to the power of these titulars of benefices to fortifie his owne designes and counter-ballance the authority of Ministers pressing the purity of reformation and so cannot be honourably alleadged for the Bishops at this time and yet it was done not by authority but by warrand of some Ministers of his owne party conveened at Leeth and was onely done for an interim and protested against by the next Assembly and yet neverthelesse by the said acts of Parliament the Arch-bishops Bishops Superintendents or Commissioners of Dioces or Provinces are joyned together which is wrongously omitted in the quotation to show that no Archbishop or Bishop quatales had any power but only being de facto standing provided in the title they were capable of a Commission from the Kirk which sometimes they obtained and in the book of Assembly are named such as are called Bishops and were under the Discipline of the Kirk and in the same Superintendents possessours and titulars of prelacies as well as Arch-bishops and Bishops are ordained to be called and conveened for that effect before the generall Assembly of the Kirk And yet none can say That the offices of Abbots Pryors c. were then retained howbeit the benefices were not extinct and few ill grant that when the Arch-bishops and Bishops office was in vigour they thought themselves subject to the generall Assembly as they are by the said act which is also fraudfully omitted in the quotation As for the acts of Parliament 1578. and 1579. It is answered that the Kirk in this meane time from the yeare 1575. was busied in abrogating Episcopacy and establishing the constant policie as is cleare by the printed acts of Assembly before the book of Discipline and unprinted acts of Parliament The Kirk by her Commissioners daily reasoning and agreeing with the Kings Majesty and his Commissioners upon these heads of policie whereupon the Parliament by the said 69. act 1579. declareth there is none other jurisdiction ecclesiasticall to be acknowledged but that which is in this reformed Kirk and floweth there-from which extinguisheth Episcopacy because it doth not flow from this reformed Kirk neither can produce its chartor from her for besides that it was abolished by the foresaid acts 1567. It was condemned also in the book of Policie and in the generall Assembly holden at Dundie 1580. and their whole estate spirituall and temporall condemned in the Assembly at Glasgow 1581. and so acknowledged by his Majesties Commissioner in the Assembly at Edinburgh 1581. so that by this act of Parliam 1579. The Bishops are so abolished that unlesse they be established by lawfull Assemblies of the Kirk no act of Parliament since sen can conduce for their establishment seeing this act with the other acts for their abolition standeth yet unrepealed And farther for the act of Parliament 1578. if the same contribute any thing for Episcopacy it must either be because Bishops are there mentioned or for the power thereby conferred upon them But both these are weak grounds The first because there is no Bishop there named but such as stood provided de facto on life which is an designation of the benefice which was not then extinct and not of the office which was extinct The power conferred upon them by the said act can give no strength to the argument because there is no jurisdiction granted thereby to them but only power to visit Hospitalls which the Parliam might have granted to any person but was most proper to these idle titulars of benefices who might best attend the same or imploy means for their reparation And this charge is likewise communicate by act of Parliament to all Chancellours of this Kingdome for the time being And as to the 71. act 1579. we repeat the former answers that Superintendents and Commissioners are there joyned with the Bishops to
sundrie Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Magistrates and all other Our lieges who shall happen to bee present and heare any Ministers either in publike or private conferences and speeches or in their Sermons to approve and allow the said unlawfull Assemblie raile and utter any speeches against Our Royall commandments or proceedings of Us or Our Councell for punishing or suppressing such enormities that they make relation and report thereof to Our Councell and furnish probation to the effect the same may bee accordingly punished as they will answer to Us thereupon Certifying them who shall heare and conceale the said speeches that they shall bee esteemed as allowers of the same and shall accordingly bee taken order with and punished therefore without favour And to this effect We likewise straightly charge and command all Judges whatsoever within this Realme Clerks and Writers not to grant or passe any Bill summons or letters or any other execution whatsoever upon any Act or Deed proceeding from the said pretended Assemblie and all keepers of the signet from signetting thereof and that under all highest paines And because Wee gave order and warrant to Our Commissioner to make open declaration not onely of Our sense but even of the true meaning of the Confession of Faith in Anno 1580. by which it may clearely appeare that as Wee never intended thereby to exclude Episcopacie so by no right construction can it bee otherwayes interpreted as is more nor evident by the reasons contained in the said Declaration and many more which for brevitie the thing in it selfe being so cleare are omitted Herefore Wee do not onely prohibit and discharge all Our subjects from subscribing any band or giving any writ subscription or oath to or upon any Act or Deed that proceeds from the foresaid pretended Assemblie but also do require them not to subscribe nor sweare the said Confession in no other sense then that which is contained in the said Declaration and manifestly emitted by Our Commissioner under all highest paines And that none of Our good subjects who in their duty and bound obedience to Us shall refuse to acknowledge the said pretended Assemblie or any of the pretended Acts constitutions warrants or directions proceeding therefrom may have just ground of feare of danger or harme by doing thereof Wee do by these promise and upon the word of a King oblige Our selves by all the Royall authoritie and power wherewith God hath endowed Us to protect and defend them and everie one of them in their persons fortunes and goods against all and whatsoever person or persons who shall dare or presume to call in question trouble or any wayes molest them or any of them therefore And Our will is and Wee charge you straitly and command that incontinent these Our Letters seene you passe and make publication hereof by open Proclamation at the market crosse of Edinburgh and other places needfull wherethrough none pretend ignorance of the same Given from Our Court at Whitehall the eighth day of December and of Our Reigne the fourteenth yeere 1638. Per Regem THis Our Proclamation published onely to make Our people acquainted with Our gracious proceedings at Glasgow which by the malice of their Leaders had either beene concealed from them or misreported to them was received as all Our former gracious proffers with a verie undutifull windie and blustering Protestation so full of words but withall so void of truth and sense as We were once resolved not to have inserted it here neither indeed is it necessarie it should for it is stuffed with the idle and superfluous repetitions of those things which are contained in their former Protestations especially their last Protestation made at Glasgow with which indeed it is for the most part the same verbatim Yet because We know that if it should be left out they would not stick to assure their followers that it was omitted because of the unanswerable pregnancie of the reasons contained in it here you shall have it but without any answer to it as to their former Protestations hath beene given there being verie little in it which is new and so not answered before or what is in it new being either verie false or verie impertinent both which falsities and impertinencies shall onely bee observed on the margent being assured that the Reader will easily finde that there is nothing in it worthie of any larger answer The Protestation of the generall Assemblie of the Kirke of Scotland made at the Market Crosse of Edinburgh the 18. of December 1638. WE Commissioners from Presbyteries Burghes and Universities now conveened and yet sitting in a full and free Assemblie of the Kirk of Scotland indicted by his Majestie and gathered together in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ the onely Head and Monarch of his owne Kirk And We Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Ministers Burgesses and Commons Subscribers of the Confession of Faith make it knowne that where We his Majesties loyall subjects of all degrees considering and taking to heart the many and great innovations and corruptions lately by the Prelats and their adherents introduced into the doctrine worship and discipline of this Kirk which had been before in great purity to our unspeakable comfort established among us were moved to present many earnest desires and humble supplications to his sacred Majestie for granting a free generall Assemblie as the only legall and readie mean to try these innovations to purge out the corruptions and settle the disorder of the Kirk for the good of Religion the honour of the King and the comfort and peace of the Kirk and Kingdome it pleased his gracious Majestie out of his Royall bountie to direct unto this Kingdome the Noble and Potent Lord James Marquesse of Hamiltoun with Commission to heare and redresse the just grievances of the good subjects who by many Petitions and frequent conferences being fully informed of the absolute necessitie of a free generall Assemblie as the onely judicatorie which had power to remedy those evils was pleased to undergo the paines of a voyage to England for presenting the pitifull condition of our Kirk to his sacred Maiestie And the said Commissioner his Grace returned againe in August last with power to indict an Assemblie but with the condition of such prelimitations as did both destroy the freedome of an Assemblie and could no wayes cure the present diseases of this Kirk Which was made so clearely apparant to his Grace that for satisfying the reasonable desires of the subjects groaning under the wearinesse and prejudices of longsome attendance he was againe pleased to undertake another journey to His Majestie and promised to endeavour to obtaine a free generall Assemblie without any prelimitation either of the constitution and members or matters to bee treated or manner and order of proceeding so that if any question should arise concerning these particulars whereof the power of ruling Elders as a part of the constitution and the examination of Episcopacie as a present
and Records that the Castle of Edinburgh was given in keeping to the house of Erskine by the King and Estates of Parliament hac lege expressa conditione ut nulli nisi conventui ordinum reposcenti traderent Eighthly this Act is not unexampled in the Christian world but hath many presidents both in the History of other Kirks and Kingdomes and of our own which hath many such examples even done by the Estates themselves whose fact doth make our right and whose authority is ratified conforme to the ancient and loveable custome in punishing rebellious subjects and preserving the faithfull Act 130. Par. 8. James 6. In the next place we are upbraided for our meetings which in the Proclamation are called Councell Tables only by that name which by ordinary expression is due to judicatories to make it beleeved that we have arrogate to our selves some unwarrantable power and authority which we neither have nor intends to doe God willing whereas the truth is that in a matter so highly importing all of us as the preservation of Religion and purity of Gods worship it was most necessary for us to meet and that in a sober modest and quiet way for deliberating with joynt advice upon those weighty businesses for the good of the Kirke his Majesties honour and peace of the Kingdome And those meetings did never emit nor send forth any authoritative command or injunctions but conclude upon such advices as might be most expedient for advancing that great businesse and facilitating the way of supplication to his Majestie and overtures for the Assembly and Parliament which was an Act lawfull and approvable in the selfe albeit the conclusions thereof did not carry the force or validity of a binding law or command which was never aimed at nor intended Which meetings they might warrantably keepe for that end being for Gods glory and removing the iust grievances of the subiects no waies prohibited by any of our municipall Lawes which disapproveth such conventions as are for disturbance of the peace or usurpation against Authority whereof neither of the two can bee alledged against these meetings Not the first because no invasion violence offer of wrong by word or deed to any person no even to those upon whom they justly complaine ensewed upon the same notwithstanding of their provocations and their feares falsly represented to his Maiesty and maliciously pretended for their stay out of the Countrey Not the second because their meetings was to consult in manner foresaid upon the most fitting and humble way of supplicating his Maiestie and for the most convenient propositions to bee represented to his Maiesty the Parliament and Assembly all which acts are most compatible with the loyalty and duty of good subjects and doe no waies intrench upon Authority seeing they can never be challenged to have assumed to themselves any judiciall determination in any matter of State Civill nor Ecclesiasticall but by voluntary instructions and opinions every one to another in a common cause of Religion did resolve what might be most conducible to their lawfull and iust ends And yet those conventions want not the warrant of Law and Authority because they consist of the Nobility Barons Burrows and Ministerie which by the fundamentall Lawes of the Land have place of proponing reasoning and voting in Parliament and Assemblies Act 113. King James the 6. Parl. 11. wherein is acknowledged that it is necessary to the King and his Estates to be truly informed of the needs and causes pertaining to His loving subjects in all estates and therefore ratifieth the Act made by King James 1 anno 1427. Giving power to Barons to propone all and sundry needs and causes and to heare treat and determine all causes to be proponed in Parliament which necessary and true information cannot be made to his Majestie and Estates without privy meeting and consultation and consequently it being granted to them to informe the King and Estates and to propone heare treat and finally determine all needs and causes to be proponed in Parliament there must be necessarily understood to be a sufficient power granted to them for meeting and advising upon that information Quia aliquo concesso omnia concessa videntur sine quibus concessum expediri nequit And as to the Ministers they have likewayes power granted to them not onely by the word of God and constitutions of the Kirke but by the King and laws of this land to propone reason and vote in Assemblies and be the samine parity of reason to keep preceding meetings not to determinate or execute but to consult upon their necessary propositions So that these lawfull meetings for the religious end suffer wrongously the invidious designation of Councell tables which is onely done for procuring misconstruction against them because at these meetings and consultations they sat about a table which posture is no wayes prejudiciall to Authority the meanest of mechanik crafts having their own tables where about they sit when they consult upon the smallest businesse importing their trade And farder these same meetings consisting of Commissioners from each Sheriffedome and body of this Estate were allowed by his Majesties Councel first and thereafter by the Commissioner his Grace In so farre as the whole subjects of this kingdome out of their resentment of the weight of this cause having numerously conveened at Edinburgh from all the parts of the kingdome that confluence of people was desired to be dissolved and directed to make choose forth of that great number of some Commissioners from each shire who might meet to represent their just grievances and desires and attend the answers thereof The third particular challenge in the Proclamation is for the illegall and unformall course taken in the election of Commissioners to the Assembly whereof some are alledged to have beene under the censure of this Kirke some under the censure of the Kirke of Ireland some banished for teaching against Monarchie others being suspended some admitted to the Ministery contrare to the laws of this kingdome others at the Horne some confined and all by oath bound to the overthrow of Episcopacie Whereunto although no answer be requisite seeing the persons thereby meaned are not specially condescended upon yet for clearing all mens mindes and showing the warrantablenesse of our proceedings it is of truth that the Assembly after particular triall which they took upon some such surmises could not finde any censured by the Kirke of Scotland or Ireland by a lawfull manner in a lawfull judicatory or for a lawfull cause but on the contrary the Assembly after carefull searching and examination found that any censure inflicted upon any of these persons in Scotland was only by a Bishop who ought to be punished for taking arrogantly on him the name of the Kirke of Scotland and that without the advice of any Presbytery but sitting in his high commission which was condemned by the laws of this Kirke and
sufficiently evinced that our proceedings are not contrary to the Lawes of the Kingdome or destructive of any lawfull third Estate and which part of the Proclamation doth close with an undeserved imputation to our loyalty bearing that for the like dangerous Acts so derogatory to Royall authority and for others reasons importing true Monarchicall government the Commissioner was forced to dissolve the Assembly but the same is so generally expressed that it appeares evidently to be done of plaine purpose to make us hatefull which we hope will not worke that end unlesse some speciall Act of disloyalty or malversation could bee specially condescended upon which undoubtedly had not beene omitted if it had been possible otherwaies that darke cloud of general termes cannot obfuscate the pure brightnesse of our sincere intentions unlesse our true representation of grievances and earnest humble pressing legall redresse thereof at his Majesties hands may deserve that aspersion in the eyes of these Councellours who thinke themselves obliged rather in absolute obedience then a dutifull representation to their Soveraigne of what is just and warrantable wherein wee appeale to all the world if either our proceedings or opinions bee any wayes derogatory to the true power of Monarchicall government or his Majesties authority which wee are obliged to defend with our lives and fortunes by our Covenant And where in the Proclamation in that part thereof anent the Commissioners discharge of the Assembly is insinuate some expression of his graces willingnesse to returne the next morning to the Assembly wee declare that wee were most sensible of the benefit of his Graces presence and received great contentment by that countenance of Royall authority in representation whereof we would never have deprived our selves if we had had the least signification of any such intention but the truth is that having called our selves to our best remembrances we heard no word or expression tending that way but by the contrary we did humbly require his Grace to give in the reasons of his discontentment in writ and to returne the next day againe at which time wee should give in sufficient answers thereto which might wipe away all his Graces objections and move him to continue his wished presence to that Assembly whereat hee had publickly professed he could no longer assist but this being refused and the Assembly discharged by him we were necessitate to protest both that day and the day following upon the Mercate Crosse of Glasgow and to shew that in conscience of our duty to God and his truth the King and his honour the Kirke and her liberties this Kingdome and her peace this Assembly and her freedome to our selves and our safety to our posterity persons and estates we could not dissolve the Assembly for the reasons following First for the reasons already printed anent the conveening a generall Assembly which are now more strong in this case seeing the Assembly was already indicted by his Majesties authority did conveen and is fully constitute in all the members thereof according to the word of God and discipline of this Kirke in presence and audience of his Majesties Commissioner who hath really acknowledged the same by assisting therein seven dayes and exhibition of his Majesties royall Declaration to be registrate in the books of this Assembly which accordingly was done Secondly for the reasons contained in the former Protestations made in name of the Noblemen Barons Burgesses Ministers and Commons wherunto we did then iudicially and doe now actually adhere as also unto the Confession of Faith and Covenant subscribed and sworn by the body of this Kingdome Thirdly because as we are obliged by the application and explication subioyned necessarily to the Confession of Faith subscribed by us so the Kings Maiestie and his Commissioner and privie Councell have urged many of this Kingdome to subscribe the Confession of Faith made in anno 1580. and 1590. And so to returne to the doctrine and discipline of this Kirke as it was then professed but it is cleare by the doctrine and discipline of this Kirk that it was most unlawfull in the selfe and preiudiciall to these priviledges which Christ in his word hath left to his Kirke to dissolve or breake up the Assembly of this Kirke or to stop and stay their proceedings in constitution of Acts for the well-farre of the Kirke or execution of discipline against offenders and so to make it appeare that Religion and Kirke government should depend absolutely upon the pleasure of the Prince Fourthly because there is no ground of pretence either by Act of Assembly or Parliament or any preceding practice whereby the Kings Maiesty may dissolve the generall Assembly of the Kirke of Scotland farre lesse his Maiesties Commissioner who by his commission hath power to indict and keepe it secundum legem praxim but upon the contrary his Maiesties prerogative Royall is declared by Act of Parliament to be no wayes prejudiciall to the priviledges and liberties which God hath granted to the spirituall office-bearers and meetings of this Kirke which are most frequently ratified in Parliaments and especially in the last Parliament holden by his Maiestie himselfe which priviledges and liberties of the Kirk his Maiestie will never diminish or infringe being bound to maintaine the same in integrity by solemne oath given at his Royall coronation in this Kingdome Fifthly the Assemblies of this Kirke have still enjoyed this freedome of uninterrupted sitting without or notstanding any contramand as is evident by all the records thereof and in speciall by the generall Assembly holden in anno 1582. which being charged with letters of Horning by the Kings Maiestie his Commissioner and Councell to stay their proces against M. Robert Montgomerie pretended Bishop of Glasgow Or otherwaies to dissolve and rise did notwithstanding shew their liberty and freedome by continuing and sitting still and without any stay going on in that proces against the said M. Robert to the finall end thereof and thereafter by letter to his Majestie did shew clearly how farre his Majesty had been mis-informed and upon mis-information prejudged the prerogative of Jesus Christ and the liberties of this Kirke and did enact and ordaine that none should procure any such warrant or charge under the paine of excommunication Sixthly because now to dissolve after so many supplications and complaints after so many reiterated promises after our long attendance and expectation after so many references of processes from Presbyteries after the publike indiction of the Assembly and the solemne Fast appointed for the same and after frequent convention and formall constitution of the Assembly in all the members thereof and seven daies sitting were by this Act to offend God contemne the subjects petitions deceive many of their conceived hopes of redresse of the calamities of the Kirke and Kingdome multiply the combustions of this Kirk and make every man despaire hereafter ever to see Religion established innovations removed the
command and instance to impaire hurt or stay the said jurisdiction discipline correction of manners or punishment of their offences enormities or to make any appellation from the general Assembly to stop the discipline and order of the Ecclesiasticall policie and jurisdiction granted by Gods Word to the office-bearers within the said Kirk under the paine of excommunication summarily without any processe or admonition to be pronounced by the judgement of the Eldership by the Minister or Ministers which shall be appointed by them how soon it is known that any of the saids heads are transgressed Likeas both the Kings Majestie and his Councell promised that none thereafter should have that cause to complaine as is manifest by the Act of Assembly at Montrose in July 1597. And in the Assembly holden at Saint Andrews 24. April 1582. being charged with Letters of Horning not to proceed against Master Robert Montgomrie the Assemblie did write to his Majestie that this discharge was extraordinary as a thing that was never heard nor seen since the world began and was directly against the word of God and Lawes of the Kingdome And yet notwithstanding of the said charge the Assembly did proceed and excommunicate the said Master Robert Further In the Assembly at Edinburgh the 27. of June 1582. Sess. 7. amongst the grievances presented by the Kirk to the King The first is That his Majestie by device of some Councellours is moved to take upon Him that spirituall power and authority which properly belongeth to Christ as only King and Head of his Kirk the Ministerie and execution whereof is only given to such as bear office in the Ecclesiasticall government of the same so that in his Majesties person some men prease to erect a Popedome as though his Majestie could not be full King and Head of this Common wealth unlesse alswell the spirituall as temporall sword be put in his Majesties hands unlesse Christ be rest of his authority and the two jurisdictions confounded which God hath divided which directly tends to the wrack and overthrow of all true Religion c. And in the Assembly holden at Edinburgh in Octob. 1582. Sess. 15. Summonds are direct by the generall Assembly against the Kings Advocate for drawing up the Kings Proclamation of that straine 7. The foresaid command is also contrary to the Acts of Parliament because as the Acts of Parliament appoint every matter for its owne Judicatorie and to all Judicatories their own freedome so much more doth this liberty belong to the nationall Assembly being the supreme Judicatorie Ecclesiastick of this Kirk and onely competent Judge in matters so important and so nearly concerning Gods honour and worship immediatly the salvation of the peoples soules the setling of the purity of Gods worship the purging away the corruptions thereof and right constitutions of the Kirk whose liberties and priviledges are confirmed Parl. 12. King James 6. and Parl. 1. King Charles Likeas by the 12. Par. 114. Act K. James 6. ann 1592. the libertie and discipline of the Kirk especially in her Presbyteries and Assemblies are fully and firmly ratified with declaration that the Act of the Kings Majesties prerogative Royall over all Estates and persons shall no wayes be prejudiciall to the priviledges which God hath given to the spirituall office-bearers in the Kirk concerning heads of Religion matters of heresie excommunication collation and deprivation of Ministers or any such like essentiall censures especially grounded and having warrant of the word of God with full power even to the particular Presbyteries to put order to all matters and causes Ecclesiasticall within their bounds according to the Discipline of the Kirk 8. The Lords of Councell and Session by Act 92. Parl. 6. King James 6. are ordained to proceed in all civill causes intended or depending before them or to be intended and to cause execute their Decrees notwithstanding any private writing charge or command from the Kings Maiestie or His Councell in the contrarie and by the 47. Act 11. Parl. King James 6. all licences and supersederees purchas'd from his Maiestie are discharged as contempt done to the Law as great hurt to the lieges and contrarie to iustice and declareth the same to bee null of the Law and not admissibly by any iudge nor effectuall to the purchaser any wayes and ordaineth all Judges within this Realme to proceed and do justice siclike and in the same manner as if the said supersederees and licences never had beene purchased nor produced Like as by the 106. Act Parl. King James 6. all licences granted by his Majestie to hinder the execution of Acts against Papists and other adversaries of the true Religion are discharged and declared to be of no force According to which it hath beene the ordinarie custome both in Civill and Ecclesiasticall Judicatories notwithstanding of privie warrants or prohibitions contrarie to Law which commonly are impetrate from his Majestie upon misinformation to proceed and minister justice 9. To discharge obedience to the Acts of the Assemblie stop the execution thereof protect and defend such as are delinquents and under the Kirks censure doth directly repugne to the large Confession of Faith of this Kirk Wherein cap. 19. the third mark of the true Kirk is affirmed to bee upright ministration of Ecclesiasticall Discipline as Gods word prescribes for establishing good order and repressing of vice and so no more can bee impeded nor justly taken from the Kirk then any of her other two marks viz. The right preaching of the word and ministration of the Sacrament And therefore in the Oath at the Kings Coronation he sweareth to maintaine this Confession and these three marks of the Kirke and particularly that hee shall be carefull to root out of his Empire all Hereticks and enemies to the worship of God that shall be convict by the true Kirk of God of the foresaids crimes 10. In the short Confession of Faith sworne 1580. and 1590. and renewed by the greatest and best part of this Kirk and Kingdome with an explication renewed also at his Maiesties command by his Councell all are bound to continue in obedience of the Doctrine and Discipline of the Kirke and defend the same according to their vocation and power So that seeing this generall Assemblie hath proceeded in their Constitution Acts and whole proceedings according to the Discipline of this Kirk of Scotland 1580. and 1590. contained in the second book of Discipline which in both these yeares were ordained to bee registrate and sworn to by all the Ministers of this Kirk as the Discipline thereof and wherein the Civill and Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction are so clearly distinguished in the 1. c. l. 2. as the power of the sword may no wayes stop or impede the power of the keyes and in the 7. c. the Eldership and Assemblies hath power to execute Ecclesiasticall punishment upon all transgressours and proud contemners of the Kirk and in the 10. c. the office of the Christian
all former Protestations and every one of them made in the name of the Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Ministers and Commons respectivè for the time So wee may have his Majesties royall approbation to this present Assemblie whole Acts and constitutions thereof and all our proceedings and behaviour in this businesse which wee assuredly expect from his Majesties imbred pietie justice and bountie notwithstanding the sinistrous untrue informations whispered in his Royall yeares in the contrarie Upon all which Premises and Protestation foresaid which is the same with the former made by us at Glasgow the 29. of November last but so farre differing as was necessarie for answer to the new additions contained in this Proclamation and clearing us of the aspersions wherewith we are changed therein which we might lawfully do having protested for this libertie in respect of our surprisall one certaine number of all qualities and ranks for themselves and in name foresaid asked instruments This was done in presence of a great confluence of people upon the mercate crosse of Edinburgh the 18. day of December FINIS Revised according to the ordinance of the generall Assemblie by me Master Archibald Jhonston Clerk thereto At Edinburgh 8. Jan. 1639. NOt long after this Our Proclamation and their Protestation Our Commissioner seeing all things tending to a present rupture begun his journie according to the leave which We had granted him for his returne After which time and ever since they have throughout the whole Kingdome by threatnings made the Acts of their unlawfull Assembly to be received in many places have perswaded the reception of them by force and armes have levied souldiers and imposed taxes upon Our subjects for payment of them have required of Our Judges or Lords of the Session to approve their Acts though none of them consented to it have threatned and menaced them for refusing of it have raised divers fortifications in Our Kingdome have blocked up Our Castles and Forts and now at last forcibly taken Our Castle of Edinburgh have at home got their Preachers most seditiously and rebelliously to teach Our people that there is a necessitie of their carrying armes against Us under paine of perjurie and damnation have scattered abroad especially here in England divers infamous Libels justifying their own wicked and rebellious courses inciting Our people here to attempt the like rebellion and to deface Our Ecclesiasticall government When the contrivers of that wicked Covenant first framed and devised it and perswaded others who were well perswaded of their pietie to enter into it We dare appeale even to their owne consciences whether they did ever make the seduced people acquainted with their intentions of abolishing Episcopall government introducing of lay-Elders which are the onely two things they make the seduced people beleeve they now stand upon And We do wonder there should be any man found in the world who can hold it a sufficient warrant for Our subjects to take armes against Us their lawfull Soveraign because We will not give them leave to abolish some things which stand fully established by Our Lawes and Acts of Parliament of that Kingdome and to introduce other things which are interdicted and prohibited by the same But much more have We reason to thinke Our subjects did them no whit beleeve that though We should relieve all their grievances just or pretended as now We have done they should yet be forced to acts of rebellion and carrying of armes against Us as now they are But such hath ever been the constant course of the Heads of all rebellions to ingage their followers by degrees to conceale from them their maine and wicked ends which being at the first discovered would be abhorred and detested untill they have gone on so farre in following their Leaders as afterward they are easily perswaded by them that there is no hope of pardon left and so nothing but danger if they shall offer to retreat The very same course hath been held in this rebellion for seducing of Our subjects of that Kingdome The specious pretence used by the contrivers of the Covenant to the people was Religion but that which was intended by them was a Rebellion grounded upon the discontents of some few And the very meanes whereby they have fomented their factious waies and kept up in Our people a beliefe that they intended onely Religion as they pretended have been the very same which have been usually practised by other discontented mutiners But yet We find that the principall meanes used to foment this Rebellion by the Heads of it have been these three First the seditious prayers and sermons of some Preachers suborned by them for that purpose who made the people still beleeve that all they said was Gospel and they crying up in their Pulpits that Covenant and most bitterly exclaiming against all opposers of it with the most vile and reproachfull termes they could devise wrought the people to an incredible good opinion of all that favoured the Covenant and a bad one of all those who opposed it So that such things were delivered in their Pulpits as cannot be related without both shame and horrour One of them upon Our Commissioners comming home prayed God to deliver them from all crafty compositions Another refused to pray in the Church for Sir William Nesbett late Provost of Edinburgh when hee was lying upon his death-bed onely because he had not subscribed the Covenant Another prayed God to scatter them all in Israel and to divide them in Jacob who had counselled Us to require the Confession of faith to bee subscribed by Our authoritie Many Ministers would not admit to the Communion those who had not subscribed their Covenant but in their exhortation before it barred them in expresse termes with adulterers slanderers and blasphemers c. Others would not suffer children to bee baptized in the Churches of those Ministers who were not of the Covenant though they were their owne Parish Churches but carried them sometimes many miles to be baptized by Covenanting-Ministers One preached That all the Non-subscribers of the Covenant were Atheists and so concluded That all the Lords of Our Councell and all the Lords of Our Session were such for none of them had subscribed it Another preached That as the wrath of God never was diverted from his people untill the seven sonnes of Saul were hanged up before the Lord in Gibeon so the wrath of God would never depart from that Kingdome till the twice seven Prelates which makes up the number of the Bishops in that Kingdome were hanged up before the Lord there which is extreme foule and barbarous Another preached That though there were never so many Acts of Parliament against the Covenant yet it ought to be maintained against them all Another delivered these words in his Sermon Let us never give over till we have the King in our power and then He shall see how good subjects we are Another in his Sermon delivered this That the bloudiest and
none of these things were so yet Wee would be satisfied in this point Whether Our refusing of the intrusion of lay-Elders and the extrusion of Episcopall government can bee to the conscience of any man a sufficient warrant or ground for his taking armes against his lawfull King and Soveraigne for now their very Leaders acknowledging that We have given them satisfaction in the rest make these two the onely ground of all their armes And Wee appeale to the consciences of most of Our subjects Covenanters if when they entered into that Covenant at the first they did ever imagine that they should be perswaded to take armes against Us for these two points of lay-Elders and Episcopall government if they should receive satisfaction from Us in their other grievances and feared innovations as We have before declared Wee are confident that no such matter was then within the compasse of their thoughts We then having fully removed those pretended feares which occasioned their Covenant Wee cannot but hope that Our seduced subjects will returne to their former obedience but for their seducers Wee know that some of them from the very first were resolved never to receive any satisfaction This grand imposture and calumnie with the other three being removed We will now declare fully and freely to all Our subjects of Our three Kingdomes and to all forrainers besides the true and onely causes which doe inforce Us at this time to use force for the repressing of the insolencies of such of Our subjects in that Kingdome as shall stand out against Us first protesting that none of the causes before mentioned suggested by their Leaders have settled in Us this resolution but onely these causes which now follow First We will never endure that any of Our subjects nay that all Our subjects if they could possibly bee all of one mind out of Parliament shall ever abolish or destroy any Act of Parliament especially not Noblemen and others assembled in an Ecclesiasticall Assembly for to hold that any Assembly of subjects out of Parliament or in Parliament without Our consent may abolish any Act of Parliament destroyeth the very foundation of government and justice in all Monarchies and the doing of it by Ecclesiasticall persons in their Councells and Synods hath been the cause of infinite calamities and miserable wars and devastation of Kingdomes in the Christian World since the Pope and his Conclave did usurp that unlawfull and unlimited power which being in that Our Kingdome in all these late troubles practised against the expresse lawes of the same Wee are resolved to punish unlesse the offenders betake themselves to Our mercie Secondly We are resolved not to endure that any of Our subjects without Our consent and the consent of the Parliament shall destroy any of the three Estates of Parliament which they in their late pretended Assembly have gone about to doe Thirdly We are resolved not to endure that any generall Assembly shall be called but by Our indiction according to an expresse Act of Parliament in that case provided or that it shall continue after that Wee by Our authority have dissolved it and are resolved to punish them who shall doe so as Our Royall Father punished those who did the like at Aberdene Fourthly We are resolved to punish those who have imposed taxes upon Our subjects levied men or armes raised any fortifications in that Our Kingdome without Our leave and first blocked up and then taken Our Castles and Forts and by violence dispossessed Our loyall subjects of their houses and castles detaining them by force for all these by the expresse Lawes of that Our Kingdome are acts of treason and rebellion Fifthly We are resolved not to endure that the Protestations of subjects against Us Our Councell Our Judges and Lawes shall discharge the obedience of the protesters unto these Lawes unlesse they be admitted before the competent Judges and legally discussed before them the contrarie whereof hath been practised by the Covenanters all the time of these tumults Sixthly We are resolved not to endure that Our subjects shall enter into any covenant or band of mutuall defence without Our leave asked and obtained it being expresly forbidden by divers Acts of Parliament of that Our Kingdome for this hath been and still is the ground of all this Rebellion Seventhly and principally We are resolved not to endure that any of Our subjects under the name of a Table or Committees of the generall Assembly or under any other name title or pretence whatsoever shall sit without Our consent and authoritie and order businesse of the Church and Kingdome at their pleasure and if they shall be called in question for the same by Us Our Councell or Judges shall appeale from Us and them and refuse to be judged by either alledging that they will be judged by none but by the generall Assembly which is Christs owne immediate Councell and therefore hath no dependencie from or subordination either to Our Councell or Judges or Our Parliament which is the Councell of Our Kingdome and so that both Church-men and lay-men under Ecclesiasticall names shall exempt themselves from the authoritie of Us and Our Lawes and the Assembly it selfe shall hold the members of it free from being judged in all matters of Assembly by any but by it selfe which by the Lawes of that Our Kingdome is treason as appeareth by the Act cyted in the bodie of this narration Now all this hath been practised and is practised by those which call themselves of the Table From all which We hope it is evident that the offences which We resolve to punish in some of Our subjects doe not concerne Religion So that the question is not Whether there shall be a Service Booke Booke of Canons high Commission nay nor whether there shall be no lay-Elders in Assemblies or no Episcopall government though We are resolved to reject the one and retaine the other But the question indeed is neither more nor lesse then this Whether We and Our Successours shall be any more Kings of that Kingdome for if these traiterous positions shall bee maintained and made good by force of armes then We and Our Successours can bee no more Kings there Our Parliament Councell and Judges have no more authoritie there So that unlesse We will give over to be King and so betray and desert that charge wherewith God hath intrusted Us We must use that power which God hath put in Our hands and by faire just and legall waies to Our great griefe force them to obedience These are the true reasons which have forced Us to undertake this journey and to make use of the armes and aide of Our loyall subjects here for the securitie of this Kingdome and safeguard of Our person as likewise of the armes and aide of Our subjects of that Kingdome for the same purposes And here first We call God to witnesse what an unwelcome journey this is unto Us and how unwillingly We doe undertake it Secondly We