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A80510 The copy of a narrative prepared for his Majesty about the year 1674. to distinguish Protestants from Papists 1674 (1674) Wing C6179; ESTC R230957 20,542 16

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his promises to us if we shall serve him according to his word and not otherwise I say if any of these three things be evil then it must be evil to disobey any Law relating to the worship of God though it be not agreeable to his word but if no one of these things be evil in themselves they can never make any man evil who simply conforms to them I say not simply for his conformity how strictly or entirely soever it be And therefore if these thr e Principles are of such a nature as create a necessity of our compliance with them even as we are rational persons we must either then remove the Principles themselves and the lawfulness of them or we must unavoidably suffer and permit their efficacy as lawful over men for to allow the Principles themselves as good and lawful and as necessary and indispensible in themselves and to disallow nevertheless the practice of them or to disallow such persons as follow them and imbrace them and to account such persons to be only disturbers or to be men so evil and bad as that they are not fit to be tollerated in a Nation even though no Crime besides this be objected against them is either grolly to prevaricate with the said Principles themselves and to make but a mock of them or it is to do that which is absolutely repugnant absurd and contradictory in it self which is wholly against the reason and nature of a man as a man For though it cannot be maintained that all the Laws of men must or ought necessarily to arise out of the Laws of God viz. either that of his word or that Law written in the heart of man yet it is maintained among all Christian Governments whatever that no Law of the Civil Magistrate hath any power to supersede any Law of God whether it be that writ in the heart of man or that writ in his word and therefore it is universally agreed by all Governments that all humane Laws if they be inconsistant either with any of these common Principles that are writ in our Nature which are called the common Principles of Reason or with any that is expresly writ in the word of God they are null and void in themselves because they are against a prior or preceding obligation which all men as men have by nature unto God as unto their Supreme Lord and Creator Wherefore in as much as it is clear that all Laws which command men to forbear that worship which they as Protestants do in their hearts judge and believe to be agreeable to the mind will and word of God or which command them to conform to such a worship as they judge according to their understanding and cannot but believe to be disagreeable to the said mind will and word of God are of this nature and are such Laws as have a manifest inconsistency either with the Law writ in the heart it self viz. which is that God is indispensibly to be worshipped in some manner or another or have an inconsistency with the Law writ in the word of God viz. that he will reward all such as shall obey him according to the rule which he hath given them in the said word and will punish such as shall do the contrary or that they have an inconsistency with the rule of the Reformation it self which is that all worship which is Christian and instituted Federal is to be given to God according to the Scripture and that whatever is not read in the Scripture nor may be proved by the Scripture is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an Article of Faith which are the very words of the sixth Article of the Church of England and which Article if wounded the rest of the 39 Articles must be wounded with it seeing they are founded mainly upon it I with all humbleness say that seeing all Laws in any Protestant Government whatever which restrain such a worship as is agreeable to the word of God or is really believed to be such by them that practise it have a manifest repugnancy or inconsistency in them either to the Law writ in the heart of man as man or to the express Law of Gods word or to the Principles of our Reformation and to the sixth Article of the Church of England upon which alone the rest of our Confession is built all the said Laws therefore as such are entirely against that prior Law or preceding obligation which men as men have by nature indispensibly unto God as their immediate Creator and Lord above any which they have or can have unto man how lawfully soever he may be the superiour of them and consequently that all non-obedience or non-conformity to any of the said Laws though it be in a sense voluntary yet it is neither elective nor indeed truly and properly free and therefore is not the least breach of affection nor any real forfeiture of a mans duty to his Prince or to the Government because it is a non-conformity or disobedience that is absolutely constrained compelled and of an inevitable and indispensible nature in it self by reason of the prior Law or of the preceding and indispensible obligation which we have both as men and as Christians unto God and have above and beyond any obligation that we have or can have possibly to any person as the Prince or Superiour of us and all men that maintain the contrary and that either out of a luxury of wit or out of a super●…tation of vanity ins●lency or pride do seek to bo●…e this argument or to evade the force of it under the pretence of the capr●ciousness humoursomness and a sectation of singularity that may be in some persons may with as good reason and with as solid a judgment make a meer mock or ridicule of all the Martyrs that have been since the World stood and may as well call Daniel and the three Children and all the Primitive Christians and Apostles who suffered for God and for the Testimony of his Word and of Christ Revel 6.9 Revel 1.9 men that were only capricious humorous and persons that did affect a singularity as call all men so at this day who ever they are that do not conform to the Laws Nationally made about Worship and Religion for if their bare Alleg tion that all men who do not conform are men only of humorous and capricious tem ters and men who meerly a fect a singularity and disturbance shall be taken for sufficient Evidence against them By as just a Law the Testimony of any Atheist may as well be taken against all the Martyrs that ever were and the testimony of any common person may as well be taken against them themselves that alledge this that they are Atheists for if this last be not reasonable neither is the first for if anothers bare Allegation is not to be taken against them nor ought to be allowed as an Evidence so neither is
necessity be distinguished which is the fourth thing that we say cannot in any Protestant Government possibly be prevented For if no Law can possibly eradicate the notion that there is a God no endeavour of man whatever can hinder then his being worshipped by such at least as have a sense of his being and do verily believe that he is Wherefore if we are trained up from our Childhood and train'd up not only as men but as Protestants firmly to believe that God will accept of no worship at all from us but what is agreeable to his Word and if it be a thing continually inculcated to us even from our very Infancy that it is in a conformity to this Word alone that all Religion whatever doth consist then it is not reason only but experience it self which attests it that a man may as soon quit his notion that there is a God or to be afraid to own it and may as soon quit that notion that God is to be worshipped or be afraid to own it as he may quit or be afraid to own as a Protestant this notion viz. that God is so only to be worshipped and no otherwise then as he hath set down in his Word And if this notion then about his Word as the only rule of the worship of God be as firmly planted in us by our Education as any notion can be planted in us that belongs to our nature as men it must needs follow that a Government may as well and with as good success hope or propound to it self by a Law to extinguish common notions as hope or propound to it self by a Law to extinguish among Protestants the notion of the necessity of worshipping God according to his Word And therefore if it be rightly considered it will likewise appear that it must be to him that is truly educated as a Protestant every way as grievous to be commanded by a Law to forsake Christianity it self as to be commanded by a Law to forsake that worship which he as a Protestant cannot but believe in his heart is alone agreeable to the Mind and Law of God which is that worship that is given to God directly conformable to his Scripture or Word and of the truth of this the Martyrs in Queen Mary's time are a competent witness And consequently they that pretend to take another measure of Protestantism than according to what is thus firmly rooted in the hearts of men both by their Education and by the very Principles and Doctrine of the Reformation do seem but to prevaricate only with the Reformed Religion and with the sixth Article of the Church of England and do if not in wo ds yet in actions seem manifestly to declare that they neither really believe the Scriptures or the Christian Religion or the Reformation to be of God for if the whole of the Christian Religion be contained in the Scripture and in the Scripture alone as the sixth Article of the Church of England doth both plainly and expresly confess it is then to make the Rule of the Word to be our Rule wholly as Christians in the worship of God is so far from an obstinacy in us and so far from any thing of humour or superstition or conceitedness that the contrary can be no way dispensible and much less maintainable before God and therefore there is neither any part of Popery it self nor any thing of Idolatry though never so gross but it may be as easily imposed upon and as easily entertained by a Protestant as any worship may which he evidently seeth or is sufficiently perswaded of in his Conscience to be against the mind of God or against the rule of his Word seeing it is this rule that is the only Index of his mind as to us and it is this rule alone to which all promises of God are entirely made and all the promises of God being made to this rule only this rule and no other must then as we are Christians be the alone Foundation both of all our hope and of all our trust toward God and must consequently be the only ground upon which we can as Christians have any expectation of salvation and life and consequently the whole interest and concern of our Souls at least as we are Protestants doth and must stand entirely upon the said Word Which deductions if they cannot any way possibly be denied the disobeying then f all such Laws in the matter of worship as are not agreeable to the Word of God or which at least appear not to be so is a thing wholly inevitable and is impossible to be avoided in a Protestant Government even as we are rational persons because there is a threefold reason that necessarily impells it First as it hath its rise from that most forcible and indelible Character wh ch is writ in the minds of all men viz. that seeing God is he ought to be worshipped in some manner or another of necessity Secondly as it hath its rise from that Character which hath equal force with the other in the minds of us as we are bred Protestants viz. that God is no other way to be worshipped nor will accept of any worship from us as Christians but what is agreeable to his Word which two Principles seeing by reason of our Education they make but one indeed in our hearts as we are Protestants they do and must constrain us as soon to abandon all worship it self unto God as to abandon that worship which is properly agreeable to his Word because so far as we abandon this we do abandon all worship that is according to our Principles as Protestants either acceptable with God or agreeable to the Mind of God wherefore if to these two we shall add the third ground of its rise which is as certain also as either of the other viz. that we neither have hope in God nor any promise made us by God further than as we obey him in his Word or further than as we worship him according to the rule of it I say these three things being now joyntly considered and seriously weighed by us what man is there or what man can there be who firmly believes there is any such thing as Salvation and Life who will not run any hazard rather than forbear what he judgeth to be the worship of God or rather than he will observe such a worship unto God as he cannot but know or cannot at least but verily believe to be contrary to his mind and contrary to the rule of his Word If it be evil then for any man to believe that God is indispensibly to be worshipped after some manner or another or evil for a man to believe that there is no other rule of his will or mind to us as we are Christians but his word and therefore no other rule wherein his worship is contained besides his said word or if it be evil to expect that God will most truly faithfully and fully perform
governed by a Protestant Prince than by any other and consequently it may be further seen whether it be any way adviseable for his Majesty or any way advantagious to his affairs still to commit the whole trust of the Church and of Religion it self entirely into the hands or Government of the Clergy To the end therefore that I may with all clearness represent the difficulties that do attend the Protestant Religion with the Government of it as things now stand I shall humbly crave leave to lay down this as the Foundation of my whole Argument which I humbly conceive will hardly be denied me by any Viz That in the Protestant Church the Prince professing himself to be of the Reformed Religion cannot any way remove or take away the use of the Scriptures from the common people the use or restoration of them in the Vulgar Tongue being accounted one main part if not the chiefest priviledge of any that came by the Reformation it self Which being granted me another difficulty is created by it inevitably for seeing the Prince is no way able to remove the use of the Scriptures from the common people he can never possibly be able to remove the influence and effects which the Divine Authority of the Scriptures must have and cannot but have upon the minds and consciences of the said people as the Scriptures are acknowledged to be the only Word the alone Rule of the mind of God unto his people this Character or apprehension of the Dignity and Authority of the Scriptures being so essential to our Reformation it self that there is no Protestant can so much as doubt of it it being that which is not only commonly taught in our Pulpits but frequently inculcated to us while we are Children by our Parents and by those Masters which take the care of us while we are at School And therefore this Principle of the Divine Authority of the Scriptures being from our very Education thus firmly rooted in us it must unavoidably make the influence and effects to be equally as strong and equally as powerful upon the Consciences of us even as they themselves are that is equal with the very Authority of God himself and especially upon all such as re religiously educated and bred so that there is no obligation or tye wha ever which is capable to be laid on men upon any civil outward or temporal account that is able to have any part of that strength or influence upon them as the Scriptures must necessarily have upon and over the generality of all persons in the Protestant Church which is another consequence that cannot be removed by the Civil Government The strength and prevalency of which tye as made upon the Consciences of all persons as Protestants by or from the Scriptures is yet the more considerable because whatever Worship Service or Religion we as Protestants do profess to give unto God we profess it only from the Authority of the Scriptures themselves and from the Authority of them as they are thus owned and accounted by the Protestant Church to be our Supreme and consequently our immediate tye in all that we believe and in all that we act as Protestants towards God hath not its termination or its dependance so much upon men or upon the Church as upon the Scripture or Word of God itself we judging it lawful enough to forsake the Church when we once judge the Church in what it believes or in what it acts or practiseth toward God to have forsaken the Word and our Prosession or Religion being thus founded I mean out of conscience purely to Gods Word every man then properly as a Protestant if he be sincere doth as much believe that the worship whatever it be which he professeth is as truly agreeable to the Mind and Will of God as is the very Scripture it self and consequently that he is as much to contend for the said Worship as he is bound to contend for the Authority of the Scripture it self for these two being taken by him but for one thing viz. the Authority of the Scripture and the truth and authority of what he professeth consequently the same tye that binds him to the Scripture must of necessity bind him to that Religion whatever it be which he as a Protestant professeth unto God and consequently if there be no tye so firm or so strong upon the Conscience as that of the Divine and absolute Authority of the Scripture is as we have proved there is not there can be no tye stronger than what Protestants as such and as sincere must necessarily have for that Religion whatever it be that they do respectively profess unto God And this now being made clear and undoubted viz. that the tye and obligation that every man hath to the worship which he professeth unto God properly as a Protestant lieth in and riseth immediately from the Scriptures and it being likewise cleared that the highest tye which can possibly be laid upon the Conscience of any man is that proceeding from the Scriptures as they are the only Rule of Gods mind and will to us it must necessarily follow that if a Prince can neither remove the use of the Scriptures themselves nor remove the obligation which they have above all things upon the Consciences of men even from their very Education as they are the only Word of God he can never possibly remove the obedience which men will always conceive themselves obliged to give to the said Word in whatsoever it be they apprehend it doth clearly command seeing this obedience is looked upon to be the same and no other with an obedience given to God himself and if an obedience given unto God be in conscience also infinitely preferrable to any obedience to man then must an obligation to the Law and Will of God be always preferrable to and stronger than any obligation whatever to the Law or command of men which is a third thing that can no way possibly be avoided And consequently if the Law of the Church cannot in the matter of Worship any way compel or bind men to obedience further or otherwise than as they apprehend it to be agreeable to the Law of God or to the Law of his Word then neither can the Law of the Prince or the Law of the Civil Government bind mens Consciences in the matter of worship further or otherwise than the Law of the Church viz. no otherwise than as the said Law appears to them to be agreeable to Gods Law which is the Law of his Scriptures or Word and consequently it can never be avoided by any Prince as a Protestant but his Authority as relating purely to things civil with the efficacy of it must stand upon one Rule his Authority as relating to things of Divine Worship with the efficacy of it must necessarily and unavoidably stand upon another Rule and therefore that his Authority over his Subjects in the one and in the other of these must of