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sense_n believe_v church_n faith_n 5,993 5 6.0238 4 true
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A92025 A reply to the answer of Anonymus to Doctor Gauden's Analysis of the sense of the covenant: and under that, to a later tract of one Mr Zach. Crofton of the same fraternity with him. By John Rowland Oxoniensis, CCC. Rector of Footscray in Kent. Rowland, John, 1606-1660. 1660 (1660) Wing R2070; Thomason E1038_4; ESTC R207862 40,193 52

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who loves to maintain divisions in the Church of God and will not as it seems by him hold communion with any but such as are of their Covenant Whose bonds were then loosed The bonds of Goal-birds thieves and perhaps murtherers and other rogues and malefactors for they are the usual guests in such places if any such have taken the Solemn League and Covenant c. I know none that were more fit to take it than such and doubtless not a few of them did take it to bolster them up in their villany they found favor when others that had not taken it suffered for smaller matters But who doth he call Goal-birds c. He cannot be ignorant that in the times that St. Peter and St. Paul and Silas were cast in prison nay our blessed Savior himself that thieves and murtherers were often let go free the best Christians were the ordinary Goal-birds And was it not so when your Covenant was in force were not the best of the Nobility and Gentry the gravest and most pious Fathers of the Church and the most learned and Orthodox Divines plundred sequestred and cast into prison by your Covenanters deny it if you can 'T is true when Godly Kings ruled over us the case was far otherwise and we doubt not when the Land is once well rid of your Covenant but that those who do well shall live peaceably under His Sacred Majesty that now is whom God prosper and preserve and that none but such as ought to be put into prisons and such as are oriminal shall be the common guests in such places as they were formerly He promiseth to use all brevity in his Reply and for my part I shall do so too being not willing to bestow much time or to spend ink and paper upon such a Scribler as he is I. Proposition The Doctor himself doth admit the Covenant to be in some sense lawful and good 2. Here is evidence enough against the Doctor that the Covenant is lawful and good or how else could he give a sober sense of it Men that are ready to sink will lay hold of any thing to save themselves You may see an example of it 1 Reg. 20.33 Now the man did diligently observe whether any thing would come from him and did hastily catch at it And they said Thy Brother Benhadad This is meer sophistry to conclude à dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter The Doctor doth admit the Covenant in some sense to be lawful and good it seems it hath many senses and I think so too that it was an equivocal Compact but in what it may be admitted to be lawful and good I consess I could never yet understand for the best you can make of it 't is no better but an invention of factious Novelists contrary to the rule of all Antiquity to subvert and cast down an ancient primitive Apostolical Government by Bishops and to set up a new fangled upstart Presbytery in the room thereof which hath strangely bewitched ignorant and illiterate men taken with novelties and I have heard how that Philip Earl of Pembroke fell in love with it yet being asked what Classical was He said Presbyterial and what was Presbyterial but Synodical a man doubtless of a strong faith to believe as the Church believes 3. He quotes the Doctors words That he believes few took it in any sense against primitive reformed regular Episcopacy c. as the reverend Primate of Armagh proposed in his Reduction of Episcopacy and hence he infers If this Reduction be necessary the Government cannot be unlawful but good England God be praised hath yet store of able Divines to defend Episcopacy as it was first regulated by the Apostles by Scripture Fathers Councels and Reason against all the Adversaries of it who pretending some Errors in it and inveighing against personal faults of some Bishops would fain extirpate the frame of primitive Ecclesiastical Government as it was here established by Edw. 6. Qu. Elizabeth King James and King Charls of blessed memories and they that do it we have reason to believe would do it to accomplish some sinister end of their own to revenge private injuries they suppose they underwent or for some expectations which it may be they deserved not which they think they lost by the Bisliops for it can be nothing else but malice in the more learned Presbyters and delusion in those that are of weaker judgements to oppose a received Truth for sixteen hundred years and upward in continuance whereof the Church of England hath been so happy to the amazement and envy of all other National Churches under the most pious Kings and Queens this Land ever bred and they that labour to dissolve this form must condemn all our best Princes of ignorance and superstition and our greatest and learnedst Bishops and Ministers whom the world admired for learning and piety of all the faults they would fain charge this Government with and must extol their own Wisdom and Zeal before theirs under a notion of new Lights and further Revelation I have not seen the Reverend Primate of Armaghs Reduction yet I have reason to believe that the learned Primate did not attempt to divest himself of his honors and preferments in the Church you did that for him and for the rest of the Bishops and eminent Divines but held it fit that Bishops should keep a nearer conjunction with Presbytery than they have done of late years and in that respect I know none of the Clergy that are against it but hold it very fit and necessary that it should be so observed The Doctor had reckoned up some evils defects and dangers incident to Episcopacy as Pride Ambition c. Is not saith he all this enough to prove from his own pen that such a Covenant pre-extirpating such Episcopacy is lawful and good The learned Doctor Gauden unwilling to break the bonds of peace and unity if it were possible to keep them explained their Covenant in the calmest sense to the supporting of moderate Episcopacy But this Anonymus will not away with any qualisication it must sound of nothing but extirpation of Episcopal Government and to speak plainly I dare say that was the true inrent of it and the Doctor is mistaken to think it will admit of any sober construction for it was doubtless another Trojan horse devised by the Politick Sinons of the latter Age full of armed men and when the walls of Episcopacy were broken down to let it in it had doubtless proved if God had not been more merciful to us the utter ruine of Monarchy and Episcopacy and overthrown at once both King Church and State for though there were many necessary and pious things couched in it yet I know not any one of them that they have kept sincerely but the rooting out of Episcopacy nay they rather chuse to break all the rest that they might fully reak their spleen to abollish that II. Proposition Herein all sober