Selected quad for the lemma: authority_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
authority_n bishop_n england_n king_n 3,498 5 3.9157 3 true
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
A49832 The Lay-man's answer to the Lay-mans opinion, in a letter to a friend. 1687 (1687) Wing L747; Wing D265_CANCELLED; ESTC R18586 7,591 15

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

could and this their Zeal though unsuccessful was yet thought sit to be rewarded with some considerable Offices Matters changing some time after it was proposed to these same Gentlemen to take away these Laws they had before opposed but they having in the mean time been convinced that these Laws were not only serviceable to the Publick then but were since become necessary refuse to repeal them and are content to resign their Places both Honourable and Benesicial rather than comply with what they judged incommodious to the State freely sacrificing the Rewards of their former Vertue to preserve their present one And these are the Men so loudly exclaimed against But good God! in what dregs of time do we live when that Probity and Courage which in any other Age would have deserved a Statue does in this furnish Matter for a Libel Non olim sic erit Well then if Men cannot part with their Places without giving offence sure they may keep them innocently for to an ordinary understanding there seems to be no Medium No but you must not do this neither if you chance to squint whisper or look slily for then it will be construed as done with contempt of all your Master does or designs 'T is very strange that a Man can't squint or look a little slily at Court and be all the while a very good Subject But this is too malicious a Reflection on the present Courtiers to make merry withal Those worthy Gentlemen are wise enough to see this is only one of the many sly Insinuations of some malicious Viper that wants a Place himself 'twere much beneath the meanest of them to slacken either in their Service to the King or Duty to the Church for any thing that can be said by such bold Defamers as this But who are they who think themselves so dextrous as to convince the King they are his Friends though it never appeared so before they were his Subjects I could guess as well as other folks if I might but I dare not I will only venture to say they were not Church-of-England-Men and some of them at present are not such Ay but these very men whose Consciences are complaisant enough on other occasions yet dare not venture any farther than the Threshold of the King's Chappel to hear Sefache sing What then is it so very strange for a Man's Conscience to permit him quietly to pursue one evil course and to disturb him in another Would this Author's Conscience permit him to kill his Father and ravish his Sister because it permits him to slander and defame a Whole Church and Nation I hope not Nay but he does not say this so much to censure them as to vindicate our Church which condemns no Man for staying at Divine Service in any Christian Congregation but rather blames so nauseous an Affectation of Zeal and Faction Here he is in one of his loving fits again and will needs be vindicating the Church of England though it be at the expence of his own Truth and Honesty for he had before told us that our Clergy exclaimed against the Religion of our Sovereign and branded it with the Mark of Idolatry and he knows it is one part and that a principal one too of that Divine Service which we can find no civiller name for And within ten lines of this very Passage he says the same again and yet this is the Church that condemns no Man c. These things look like Contradictions And now let our Author summ up all May we not oppose the Government and yet do all these things That is in plain English thus May we not oppose the Government and yet our Parliaments debate Matters before them and yet our Clergy Preach up the 39 Articles and yet our Universities humbly Remonstrate to the King the Inconveniencies of a Mandamus May we not oppose the Government and yet some Old Courtiers resign their Places and yet some Others keep theirs still though perhaps they look somewhat slily and yet some Faces constantly appear at the Protestant Chappel which were great strangers there before and yet some others venture to the Threshold to hear Sefache sing but dare no farther had we not as good be down-right Rebels as do these horrid and unheard of things It may be you may think I jest when I put this sence upon our Author's Queries but by the Faith of an Honest Man there is nothing else in them of substance he has only put them into spiteful and invidious Terms for want of true Matter to furnish out an Accusation Here follow some more of them Did we pull down a Pope to set up a King The Parliament all the Bishops but one and the whole Convocation pulled down the Pope though all of them Papists themselves and restored the King to his just Authority And this Author would have a Protestant Parliament and Clergy set him up again And are we tugging with the King to pull him down and set up ourselves No not We of the Church of England but let Others acquit themselves as well What Pretence have We of all the World for doing this None for they who do Nothing want no Pretence We have no Private Spirit to guide Vs in such Dark Paths And therefore we keep out of them walking in the Light as Children of the Light. We have no Infallible Council to secure us against any Doubts of Conscience And we have no Doubts or Objections and therefore need no Infallible Council but we have the Word of God our Infallible Rule We have listed ourselves under a King ever since Henry the Eigth's time and about a Thousand Years before and like Aesop's Horse are obliged to bear him for a Rider ever after We like our King so well that we wish with all our hearts and souls there may never want of his Race to Govern us to the worlds end We never strove to throw off our Rider as the malice of the Author may seem to suggest by the Fable he has chosen but reckon ourselves securest when our Royal Rider sits the fastest Whom God long preserve And now because our Author has set me an Example out of Esop and because Fabling is very much in fashion I will take the liberty of presenting one which this and other the Enemies of our Church may apply as they see good And to recommend it the more it is of a Panther It chanc'd a Panther heedless of her feet Slipt unawares and fell into a Pitt Whether the Pitt were dug with that design Or not our Authors leave us to divine Which when some Churles lab'ring at distance knew Thither they with united fury flew Snatching such Arms ās haste or made or found Stakes from the hedge and Stones from off the ground These most of them bestow'd upon the Beast Lab'ring for life and almost quite opprest Whilst Others mild and more compassionate Pitted the wretched Creatures lost estate And kindly threw her scraps of Bread to eat Concluding as at Night they homewards made To find her early in the Morning dead But she recov'ring strength made an essay And by a vigorous bound escap'd away Homewards she fled nor many days were past Before she laid the Neighb'ring Country waste Shepherds and Flocks were undistinguish'd slain And raging Vengence foam'd around the Plain Then they who had in pity spar'd the Beast With fear and trembling to her now addrest Their Goods and Fortunes they no more regard But only ask to live for their Reward To whom the gen'rous Panther Friends no fear Rest you secure there is no danger near Well I distinguish 'twixt my Friends and Foes And well remember who gave Bread who Blows FINIS