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truth_n age_n church_n time_n 2,142 5 3.6322 3 false
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A29208 A sermon preached at Dublin upon the 23 of Aprill, 1661 being the day appointed for His Majesties coronation : with two speeches made in the House of Peers the 11th of May, 1661, when the House of Commons presented their speaker / by John Lord Archbishop of Armagh, Primate and Metropolitan of all Ireland. Bramhall, John, 1594-1663. 1661 (1661) Wing B4235; ESTC R25292 22,740 52

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securely upon either ear When the Preacher hath but fallen upon the Martyrdom of our late Soveraign or those instructions vvhich he left behind him hovv have I seen his Majesty dissolve into tears that brought to my mind that of S. Austin proruperant stumina oculorum meorum acceptabile tuum sacrificium The f●…oods of mine eyes did break forth an acceptable sacrifice unto thee O God This is the first qualification He that goeth on his way weeping The second follows and bringeth forth good seed It is a Metaphore taken from sowers What a man sowes that he may certainly expect to reap But what is the good seed which our Soveraign did bear forth with him I answer first a good title Dieu son droit God and his right There is a 〈◊〉 error lately crept into the world and almost thrust out again That Dominion is founded in grace not in nature That the wicked have no interest in their possessions or estates but are like moths which make their houses in other mens garments That all things belong properly to the elect Paul Apollo Cephas things present things to come all are theirs if they be Christs Ex his praemissis necessariò sequitur collusio Admit this once and then they vvho take themselves to be true Israelites may with a good conscience rob plunder the profane Egyptians of this world Nothing is more hidden than true grace We know it not in another hardly in our selves Therefore if grace should give an interest to possessions no mans title should be certain from whence of necessity must follow an incredible confusion But our God is a God of order Religion neither alters nor takes avvay any mans right Ananias vvas no Saint yet S. Peter told him that he had a good interest in his estate was it not thine own The truth is Dominion is founded in nature not in grace It vvas said to our first parents immediately upon the creation Replenish the earth and have Dominion c. Every son of Adam may challenge an interest in his ovvn estate by virtue of this concession All is yours saith the Scripture that is not every individual creature but every species or kind of creatures All is yours that is not by vvay of civil possession but by divine ordination All things by Gods disposition serve for the good of the Church and help forvvard the salvation of Gods servants Or All is yours and you are Christs that is you onely vvho are Christs have the sanctified use of the creatures This is far enough from a civil possession far enough from a just title Such as King CHA●…LES had not grounded upon a Fana ick exposition of a text of holy Scripture nor upon the fickle humors of a giddy multitude nor upon the traiterous dictates of a seditious oratour but upon the evident Lavvs of God of Nature of Nations and the municipal Lavvs of these ●…ingdoms upon a radicated succession from royal progenitors He himself being the hundred and tenth person of one family vvho hath svveyed the Scepter I do not yet knovv any Prince in Europe or in these parts of the vvorld that can say the same A title so clear as if it vvere vvritten vvith a beam of the Sun vvhich no true English man in his right vvitts did ever yet oppose but one or tvvo forreign pensioners maintained on purpose abroad to kindle scath fires at home vvho gained nothing by the question but to render themselves ridiculous This vvas the good seed vvhich King CHARLES did bear forth vvith him A good title vvhich though it seemed for a time to perish under the clods yet vve see it sprouts up again A tempest brings Achilles his arms to Ajax's tombe to reverse an unjust sentence And Aaron's rod devou●…ed the rods of the enchanters to the comfort of all loyal Subjects and the confusion of all Egyptian Juglers for ever This is the first good seed vvhich King CHARLES did bear forth vvith him A good title A second sort of good seed vvhich King Charles did bear forth vvith him vvas the testimony of a good conscience void of offence towards God and towards man A good conscience is a better proof of innocence then a thousand vvitnesses and vvill make it self a garland of the lying reports of Sycophants When King CHARLES was first chased out of England his age was not capable of much guilt and his onely crime was that which in truth was his chiefest glory he was the Son of such a Father Those accursed jealousies and fears which the first devisers and spreaders of them did know assuredly to be damnable lies are now vanished Truth the daughter of time hath discovered them to all the world to have been counterfeit shews They feared an apostasy to Popery yet King CHARLES the Father dyed a glorious Martyr and King CHARLES the Son lives a Noble Confessour of the true faith professed in the Church of England having shewed evidently by a thousand proofs that he is no such reed shaken with the wind They complained of tyranny against him whose onely defect was overmuch goodness and lenity Let their high Courts of Injustice speak let their black roll of Sequestrators and committee men speak let all the great Towns in England which they made shambles of good Christians and loyal Subjects speak let Tredah speak and that torrent of loyal blood which vvas poured out there barbarously upon cold and deliberate thoughts like water upon the face of the earth who vvere the Tyrants Cajus the Emperour out of a ridiculous affectation to make himself like the Gods did assume Mercurie's rod Apollo's bow and arrows Mars his sword and shield But King CHARLES hath ever better ensignes of the Deity Justice Mercy Piety and Temperance These make up the image of God where these abound the bird in the breast sings sweetly He who hath these may with comfort expect an happy deliverance from all his troubles He that goeth on his way weeping and beareth forth this seed with him shall doubtless come again with joy The third sort of good seed which King Charles did bear forth with him was a good Religion A Religion not reformed tumultuously according to the brain sick fancies of an half witted multitude dancing after the pipe of some seducing charmer but soberly according to the rule of Gods word as it hath been evermore and every where interpreted by the Catholick Church and according to the purest pattern of the primitive times A Religion against which the greatest adversaries thereof have no exception but that it preferreth grace before nature the written vvord before uncertain traditions and the allsufficient blood of Jesus Christ before the stained works of mortal men A Religion which is neither garish with superfluous Ceremonies nor yet sluttish and void of all order decency and Majesty in the service of God A Religion which is as careful to retein old Articles of faith as it is averse from new Articles The essences