Selected quad for the lemma: sin_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
sin_n adam_n law_n transgression_n 5,599 5 10.5016 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A62145 A compleat history of the lives and reigns of, Mary Queen of Scotland, and of her son and successor, James the Sixth, King of Scotland, and (after Queen Elizabeth) King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, the First ... reconciling several opinions in testimony of her, and confuting others, in vindication of him, against two scandalous authors, 1. The court and character of King James, 2. The history of Great Britain ... / by William Sanderson, Esq. Sanderson, William, Sir, 1586?-1676. 1656 (1656) Wing S647; ESTC R5456 573,319 644

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

whose former fewds had made but suspitious and so he wearied with doing evil returns into France to settle their Solemn League He gone Henry the eight sends home the Queen and Angus and having this while composed his French Quarrels with a Defensitive Amity against all Tourney rendred to the French and Overtures of a Match between the Dolphin and Henries Sister and not a word for the poor Scots that had lost their King in the French Dispute only interceding for a Cessation of Arms with the English and so accepted for Henries conveniency of Princely Interview with Louis The while supporting Angus and his Faction their own Civil Dissentions sufficient to busie themselves and to keep matters in much disorder the policy of England and France both to weaken the Scots power for eithers prey which being suspected by Albany now in France and the violent Fewds beginning fresh at home after five years absence he gets loose of the English Ships that lay wait in his way and Lands in Scotland The Governour come he sets things strait again which by his absence were made awry forces Angus into France many suffer besides others more factious fly into England and pretend the Dukes sudden return was to ingage that Nation against Henry who in rage sends to the Governour to be gone to his French Friends or to expect blowes and was answered as peremptorily That in case of War he knew better to defend than the other to fight King Henry in fury sets fines on some Scots here and after banishes all and presently pursues with invasions upon their Nation by Sea and Land And over to England comes the Emperour instigating the King to fall out with France the like Empirick Balm the French apply to cure the wounds of the Scots Commonwealth which prevailed so far that both Armies meet but the Scots would not fight the English fire all before them and the Governour not affected with the Scots falshood returns back to France for ever Angus gets home again countenanced by Henry assumes the person of the King now thirteen years old concludes a lasting Peace with England and proposes a Marriage between the young King and the Princess Mary which Henry in heart desired untill he heard of the French King Prisoner at Pavia by the Emperour so the match was put off upon pretence for the Emperours consent her neerest Kinsman The Queen displeased with her Husbands Supremacy over her Self and Son and both agreed to dislike each others Bed for it was fatal to her as to her Brother Henry to love change in And forthwith followed Divisions of Religion in Scotland also with Disputes and Arguments for Toleration excellently urged in ●avour of the Reformed but the Catholique Clergy prevailed and the Inquisition erected to force the other with Fire and Fagot The first that suffered in suspition of those attempts were the Hameltons of Kin to the Crown which wrought factions to such height as that King Henry takes heart begins by Incursions where the English were soundly beaten And then in Revenge Howard stiled the Old Earl of Norfolk is sent with formidable Forces 40000. to 30000. if the sums are not mistaken either party so numerous as to eat up all and starve themselves But upon some distrust of success the Earl retreats The Scots pursue this advantage And the next Spring mutiny among themselves and at Salloway Moss the English gave them a mighty defeat which so astonished King Iames that with wondrous regret he forced death over hastily to seize him at the instant when his Queen was delivered of a Daughter the only issue remaining to succeed him in his Throne And with he begins our History The Life and Death of his Daughter Mary Queen of Scotland taking up the Remain of Henry the eighth who lived not long after leaving his three children succeeding Sovereigns yet thought him not worthy memory by any Monument Edward the sixth whose short raign and youth supported by a wise Council held up what was left him by Succession Untill the Soveraignty fell to his Sister with alteration of all and hazard of all she being imbarqued in body and business to a Strangers Supremacy but not lasting long time Was left to a Virgin to recover desperate dangers Ecclesiashick and Civil with various Designs Impressions and Operations upon her Neighbour States imbroyled with her jealousies to infamy of destruction in the blood of Q. Mary of Scotland her neerest kinswoman and pretended Competitor in the Crown untill at last in Gods due time the Sovereignty fell to a Foreiner King Iames with re-union of the antient Title of Britain Elizabeth indeed succeeded in the Inheritance begotten by H. 8. upon Ann Bullen after his divorce from Katharine his Brothers widow by whom he had Q. Mary and that mariage dispensed with by the Pope Hence did arise a question Whether the Divorce was legal or Elizabeth legitimate when Adam was created Eve was taken out of him and made Woman a fit Instrument for prolification and Society And both married in Paradice God the Father being the Priest and the Angels Witnesses for which cause A man shall leave Father and Mother and cleave to his Wife They begat Sons and Daughters which were Brothers and Sisters and married one the other without contradiction untill the Flood nay after the Flood untill Moses writ And these Marriages were not against the Moral Law written in their hearts which being much obliterated in the faculties of the Soul by reason of Adams transgression when Moses writ the Law of Nature or Law of Reason it was therefore twice written in Tables of Stone that by reading those Precepts which were much defaced within man might repair in some measure those Laws almost blotted out by sin And so by reading get them into his Understanding Will and Memory Mans Knowledge comming most naturally by Sense Moses did not onely write this Morall Law in Stone but gave many positive Laws for the Pedagogie of the Iews untill Christ as the Ceremonial and Iudicial The Iudicial Lawes amongst other things did forbid Marriages in cases of blood and affinity and these continued until Christs time and no longer unless there were a Moral Equity in them which Morality is onely inter Ascendentes descendentes where there is a kind of Paternity and Fi●●ation for Filius non portabit iniquitatem Patris and for that sin Iacob cursed Reuben for ascending his Fathers bed This ground being truly laid it was conceived there is no Law of God in force but that which is between Ascendents and Descendents It is true every Church hath made Laws to bind people in their Churches but it was insisted upon only in this That the Moral Law doth not forbid and the Ceremonial and Iudicial Laws are now abrogated In Sir Giles Allingtons case not long since who married his Sisters Daughter there was a sin against the Moral Law and so they were divorced But it was said in that case that
Du Bartas saies of the destruction of Sodom De peur qu'en Offensant des saincts l'oreille tendre Ie ne les semble plus enseigner que reprendre For fear of offending good peoples Eare I rather teach then with them forbear Then the King falls upon his Bookes especially His modest Christian answer and first in his Preface it is observed how in love he is with himself and his Nick-Name Purus putus Evangelicus a mainly pure Gospeller and indeed the ancient Hereticks called themselves Catharoi and another Sect the Anabaptists Puritans from whence all our Pr●cifians in these latter times who fancying to refuse conformity with the orders of our Church borrow that Name and Gospeller is assumed by many yet more usual in Hungary and Bohe●e where are infinites of Sects agreeing onely in Unity against the Pope As for this Book His Arguments are either sophistical or frivolous abusing the fathers and he extracts divers questions thereout thirteen in Number with his resolve on them Wherein the King notes the others cunning to maintain them and how he easily proves Quidlibet è quolibet as the old Hereticks Arius and Samosatenus usually did and so leaves all to Gods will and the States discretion as they will answer it before God And though Vorstius died not long after his tenents increased to a high distemper in that State But what the King desired to suppress in this Man gave example for him to punish in others under his own power and therefore in this year came to the Stake a Couple the most damnable Hereticks Edward Whithman burned at Lichfield and Bartholo●ew Legat in Smithfield London somewhat applying to the Ranters of these our times 1654. Legat held these opinions That the Creeds Nicene and Athanasius do not contain the true Christain faith That Christ is begotten and made That there are no Persons in the God-head That Christ was not God from everlasting but began to be God when he took flesh of the Virgin Mary That the World was not made by Christ. That the Apostles teach Christ to be man onely That there is no generation of God but of Creatures That this Assertion God to be made Man is contrary to the rule of faith and monstrous Blasphemy That Christ was not before the fullness of Time except by promise That Christ was not God otherwise then an Annointed God That Christ was not in the form of God equall with God that is in substance of God but in righteousnes and giving salvation That Christ is not to be prayed unto Whitemans Opinions were in effect these come of Ebionites Cerinthians Valentinians Arians Macedonians Simon Magus Manes Manichee Photinus and Anabaptists and of other Heretical Execrable and unheard of opinions That there is not the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Deity That Christ is not the true Natural sonne of God perfect God of the same substance Eternity and Majesty with the Father in respect of his God-head That Christ is onely Man and a meer creature and not God and Man in one Person That Christ took not humane flesh of the substance of the Virgin That that promise the seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head was not fulfilled in Christ c. And that God had ordained him the said Whiteman to perform his part in th● work of the salvation of the world These and the rest were written subscribed and by him delivered to the King 9. Martii 1611. Thus in those times Hereticks took some pains to preferre themselves to the Divel But now a days we sport our souls away Amongst many strange Ones I wonder most at this meriment of the Adamites Picardus was the first that possest silly people with the perfect State of Adam placed them in an Iland for that purpose which he called Paradise caused them to walk n●ked and called them Adamites Horrible sins were committed by them under that pretence promiscous whoredoms and Incest at their Service and when their Saint-Minister pronounceth the word Crescite et Multiplicamini et replete terram the ●ights are suddenly extinct and without any respect to Alliance or kindred they mingle like brute beasts and their wickedness we ●ied the lights are tinded and they returned to their service But now with more Infamy their Innocencie will be li●hted they sp●re not openly to act in the face of Heaven at Noon-day I know Our Adversaries the Romanists lodge this device upon the ancient Waldenses poor harmless souls havocked by the Armies of the Military mercyless Papists Adamites says One that went naked an affront to Nature Indeed poor men rather Nudati than Nudi forced thereto by the Popes Legate who at taking of Cariassone in France whither these people swarmed granted them Life on condition that the Males and Females should pass by his Army stark naked I may be censured by some how unusefull it might be to imprint to the publick these damnable opinions but in that I may be justified by Examples of the Fathers mentioning such Heresies and of Councils and Declarations from time to time against such Tenents The next Favorite a new-come young Man was Robert Carr a Scotish-man of no Eminencie But a Gentleman by his bearing Gules on a Cheviron Arg 3. Mullets Sable in the dexter point of the Escocheon a Lion passant gardant Or. And yet himself remembred the King in his Letters hereafter his fall of his Ancestors merit of which truly I have not read This Man had been Page of honour to the King in Scotland and so may be the first and last original Actor on the Theatre of his family The beginner as an excellent workman in bringing his Tooles and making his Materials but his own Ruine by basely degenerating from what his Master had made him in short time giving end to the structure In truth he became the first Favorite That is one whom the King fancied meerly for his fashion upon no other score and it was enough for the present his Master sufficiencies needed no other instructions onely to choose him apt for impressive Marks of honour better becomes the Sovereigns Creation than to be made so to his hand And therefore after Knighthood he was soon Baron of Brandspeeck Viscount Rochester and had the Garter to boot And we are told the King took much pains to teach him Latine as a most needfull Improvement unto a capability of his affections but this his opinion sents more of a Poet than a Courtier And so mounted by the wings of Love more than merit he says the Earl of Salisbury Treasurer casts many Mists to damp his passage and tells the old wives tale of 1000l a gift to the Viscount which was spread upon a Table in Silver and the King invited thither which Mass of money so amazed his Majesty that the half thereof was concluded too much for any Man Amongst these passages of fancie in the King he forgot not
direct honesty to purchace large possessions And now the place of Secretary was joyned in two Principals Sir Ralph Winwood and him and so he continued with honourable esteem untill malice and revenge two violent passions over-ruling the weaker sex concerning his Wife and Daughter involved him into their quarrel the chief and onely cause of his ruine He had by his Wife Sons and Daughters his eldest married unto Baron Rosse in right of a Grand-mother the Son of Thomas Earl of Exeter by a former venter this Baron therefore and upon Lake's credit was sent Ambassadour Extraordinary into Spain Anno 1611. in a very gallant equipage with hopes of his own to continue Lieger to save charges of transmitting any other In his absence here fell out a a deadly feud 't is no matter for what between the Lady Lake and her Daughters Step-mother the Countess of Exeter which was particularly described in a Letter and sent from England to me at Madrid in Spain and because of my near relations in that Ambassie I shewed the same to my Lord Ambassadour A youthfull Widow this Countess had been and virtuous the relict of Sir Thomas Smith Clerk of the Council and Register of the Parliament and so she became Bed-fellow to this aged gouty diseased but noble Earl and that preferment had made her subject to envy and malice Home comes the Lord Rosse from his Ambassie when he fell into some neglect of his Wife and her kindred upon refusing to increase allowance to her senttlement of Jointure which was promised to be compleated at his Return Not long he stays in England but away he gets into Italy turn'd a professed Roman Catholick being cozened into that Religion here by his publick confident Gondamore In this his last absence never to return the Mother and Daughter accuse the Countess of former incontinency with the Lord Rosse whilest he was here and that therefore upon his Wifes discovery he was fled from hence and from her Marriage-bed with other devised Calumnies by several Designs and Contrivement to have impoysoned the Mother and Daughter This quarrel blazened at Court to the Kings ear who as privately as could be singly examines each party The Countess with tears and imprecations professes her innocency which to oppose the Mother and Daughter counterfeit her hand to a whole sheet of paper wherein they make her with much contrition to acknowledg her self guilty craves pardon for attempting to impoyson them and desires friendship for ever with them all The King gets fight of this as in favour to them and demands the time place and occasion when this should be writ They tell him that all the parties met in a Visit at Wimbleton the Earl of Exeter's house where in dispute of their differences she confessed her guilt desirous of absolution and friendship consents to set down all under her own hand which presently she writ at the Window in the upper end of the great Chamber at Wimbleton in presence of the Mother and Daughter the Lord Rosse and one Diego a Spaniard his con●iding Servant But now they being gone and at Rome the King forthwith sends Master Dendy one of his Serjeants at Arms sometime a Domestick of the Earl of Exeter an honest and worthy Gentleman post to Rome who speedily returns with Rosse and Diego's hands and other Testimonials That all the said accusation confession suspitions and Papers concerning the Countess were notorious false and scandalous and confirm it by receiving their Eucharist in assurance of her honour and his innocency Besides several Letters of her hand compared with this writing concluded it counterfeit Then the King tells the Mother and Daughter that this writing being denied by her their testimonies as parties would not prevail without additional witness They then adjoyn one Sarah Wharton their Chamberess who they affirm stood behinde the Hangings at the entrance of the Room and heard the Countess reade over what she had writ And to this she swears before the King But after a Hunting at New Park the King entertained at Wimbleton and in that Room he observes the great distance from the Window to the lower end and placing himself behinde the Hanging and so other Lords in turn they could not hear a loud voice from the Window besides the Hangings wanted two foot of the ground and might discover the Woman if hidden behinde The King saying Oaths cannot deceive my sight And the Hangings had not been removed that Room in thirty years before Nay more than all these the Mother and Daughter counterfeit a Confession in writing of one Luke Hotton that for fourty pounds the Countess should hire him to poyson them which man with wonderfull providence was found out and privately denies it to the King And thus prepared the King sends for Lake whom in truth he valued tells him the danger to imbarque himself in this quarrel advising him to leave them to the Law being ready for a Star-chamber business He humbly thanked his Majesty but could not refuse to be a Father and a Husband and so puts his Name with theirs in a Cross●Bill which at the Hearing took up five several Days the King sitting in Iudgm●nt But the former Testimonies and some private confessions of the Lady Rosse and Sarah Wharton which the King kept in secret made the Cause for some Days of Triall appear doubtfull to the Court untill the Kings discovery which co●cluded the Sentence pronounced upon several Censures Lake and his Lady fined ten thousand pounds to the King five thousand pounds to the Countess fifty pounds to Hutton Sarah Wharton to be whipt at a Carts-tail about the streets and to do Penance at St. Martin's Church The Lady Rosse for confessing the truth and Plot in the midst of the Trial was pardoned by the most voices from penal Sentence The King I remember compar'd their Crimes to the first Plot of the first sin in Paradise the Lady to the Serpent her Daughter to Eve and Sir Thomas to poor Adam whole love to his Wife the old sin of our Father had beguiled him I am sure he paid for all which as he told me cost him thirty thousand pounds the loss of his Master's favour and Offices of honour and gain but truly with much pity and compassion at Court he being held an honest man Discontent among the Roman Prelates put the Ach-bishop of Spalato Mark Antonio de Dominis to seek his peace against that Sea by sundry overtures unto several Princes in Italy and otherwhere Spanish and French at last he becomes tainted with some opinions heretical to them which either he believed or took up such Tenents for the present time to prepare him a fitter Pros●lyte hereafter and finding no safe footing from the fury of the Pope and Conclave he steals over into England and to please the King pretends Conversion by his Majesties Works of Controversie and quarrels with Bellarmine however it was though fit to bid him welcome and to