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A85710 A sermon preached in the Citie of London by a lover of truth. Touching the power of a king, and proving out of the word of God, that the authoritie of a king is onely from God and not of man. Griffith, Matthew, 1599?-1665. 1643 (1643) Wing G2017; Thomason E104_17; ESTC R22414 21,757 29

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the state will breed convulsion fits each contending who shall come forth in government one of them at length will come forth with scarlet strings on his hands and bloudie banners If a body have two heads they will not easily agree upon motion To end this questioning by Magistrates wee will call Tertullian Reges sunt super omnes homines ante omnes Deos And that proverb of the Rabines Nulla Creatura Iudicat Rogem Quis e populo May dare say unto the KING what doest thou GOd blesse this poore people it is totus in questionibus busie in speculations questions concerning things that do not much concerne them they have beene in Divinitie long agoe as whether faith onely or good workes justifie and such like questions the Divines have been vehement in those disputes and the people conceivd straight matter of salvation to be in the knowledge of them then they undertake to discusse the question in conclusion believe nothing but their own phantasies and resolve to do no good works at all Then whether the Common-prayer be not diservice new English for the new Religion of whom it may be fitly said as Tullie of Antho●y for his pientissimus quod verbum latino sermone non est id ad tuam singularem pretatem exprimendam inventum est Whether kneeling at the Sacrament that tremendum mysterium of the commemoration of Christs passion bee not Idolatry whether Jesu-worship be lawfull and that resolved to their hands whether to worship God in entrance to his house in the presence of his Angels saith Terullian be not superstitione O tempora Whether we may repeate the Lords Prayer that Idol O mores whether the signe of the Crosse used in Tertullians time be not now popery O ridiculum but I may not excusse the rest by name so few come wee neerer to the Text whether if our Clergie will not preach unto us such Pharisiacall seditious ignorant Diabolicall doctrine wee may not chuse others in a case so concerning the destruction of our soules And then whether if the King Himselfe will not conforme to our vaine senselesse religions so many now for number infinite for qualitie so blasphemous that it is impossible for one man to know them all and for rationall man to practice any of them wee may not question his government whether to make the question more semblable a King in a State bee not like a Marriner in a ship if one will not another must The Marriners thought so in the last tumult vix vera esse nisi cunctanter crederem nisi his oculis videram In sum whether both for Religion and civil policie we may not as we have done to the Clergie so to the King put up insolent questions Quid agis Why dost thou rule otherwise then we please to be ruled our selves O that my head were a fountaine of teares c. Jerem. 1. For Religion We read of rebellion intended against Ahashuerus 2 Hester ver 21.22 No reason set downe but in diebus illis and what were those dayes you might know them by the story Ahasuerus had married Ester his Queene a vertuous woman but of another Religion Bigthan and Thares T is like were crossed in the match but see they draw their arguments from popular heads to interest 127. provinces in the rebellion Ahasuerus our King matcheth with a Jew one of a Religion hated among us one that cares neither for Mithra nor Wamasdres one brought in to ruinate the establish'd religion in Persia which by our Law ought not to be altered Thus they are zealous on the suddaine as the fashion of the world is This jealousie delivered downe and digested by a prevailing faction in the people they forthwith although there be no cause are ready tumultuatim to runne up to the King with Quid agis Why dost thou change our Religion Good people for so I may rhetorically call them if you intend a new religion take not rebellion in your way for a thing that I will tell you in Luthers reformation when was more need then now is the rule of obedience was not duely observed and there fell in or upon that reformation 100. thousand of the people before then that you need a reformation before you adventure upon the dangers Barclay accuseth Luther for it I dare not defend him I finde him in his booke Contra regem Angliae very familiar and impudent to the King stoliditas vestra asinitas vestra cornicula avum aut regem nasci aut fatuum and I wish there be no such Sheimies such felly tounged reformers abroad in this our pious reformation Barclay chargeth Luther yet farther of the death of all those people that when he had moved them to rebellion and could not accomplish his owne ends he was the first that moved the Magistrate to ruine and destroy them all how true God knowes but this the people may know is true in Policie in States men under the larve of Religion to draw the people to one side but if they faile in their plots and ambitious Projects they to preferre themselves must be the first and most active in cutting the peoples Throates whom they have stirred up Againe in the Reformation after the death of so many thousands and there issued forth so many Schismes from the Anarchie that holy Melancton who loved not Poperie confessed for unities sake they must all returne to the Church of Rome againe and Prot in his An on Cass Porf speaks little lesse better to endure one extreamitie then Twentie better admit of one tyrannicall Religion then a hundred And I pray God it bee not the effect and resultance of our many Schismes and distractions in our Church at this day To come with questions contradiction to a King for Religion was not heard of in the Iewish Government The Law in Deutren mie 13.6 was if thy brother or thy sonne or thy wife or thy friend intice thee to Idolatry sistas coscoram judice not if thy Father or thy Husband or thy Judge for certaine not thy King The manner of Balthasars deposition for abusing Gods Religion and Temple is very remarkable by all good Subjects None of his Subjects must dare to draw up the order no a hand writing out of the wall from God must declare it and when it was there none of all the people were able to read it so strange a thing to a subject is a deposition of his King no nor the Astrologers nor South-sayers no nor the Devill himselfe is able to understand it Daniell is sent for he only by divine revelation is able to read and what is it Mene Mene tekell uparsin God not the people hath numbred thy Kingdome and finished it Joseph 17. chap. 36. Tells us of the sect of the Pharisees who to the number of sixe thousand in zeale to their hypocriticall Religion were in a covenant by themselves against Caesar some of that number came to our Saviour with that question for that