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A29466 A brief narrative of that stupendious [sic] tragedie late intended to be acted by the satanical saints of these reforming times humbly presented to the king's most excellent majesty : also, an impartial account of the indictment, arraignment, tryal [sic], and condemnation of Thomas Tonge, George Phillips, Francis Stubbs, James Hind, John Sallers, and Nathaniel Gibbs, at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bailey, London, Decemb. 11, 1662 ; together with the confessions, speeches, and prayers of George Phillips, Thomas Tonge, Nathaniel Gibbs, Francis Stubbs, at the place of execution, on Munday, Decemb. 22, 1662. / exactly taken in short-hand characters, by the same person that wrote the late king's judges tryals. Hill, William, fl. 1662.; Tonge, Thomas, d. 1662.; Phillips, George, d. 1662.; Stubbs, Francis, d. 1662.; Sallers, John, d. ca. 1662.; Gibbs, Nathaniel, d. 1662. 1662 (1662) Wing B4611; ESTC R32577 58,554 95

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poor sinners under the Law and herein was the great grace and mercy of God to wards all sinners that he was so gracious to send his beloved Son out of his own bosome to take our natures upon him who was defiled and cursed and condemned and separated from God I say Jesus Christ took our natures upon him and for this very end to do the will of his heavenly Father Lo it is written in the volume of thy b●ok I come to do thy will O God and it w●s his meat and drink to do his will and what was that but that we might be sanctified through the offering up of the body of Jesus Christ for our sins to tread the winepress of his Fathers wrath and to endure the cross and bear all our sins in his own body that made his soul heavy unto death he was a surety for us and our sins and for our s●kes the Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all and he hath born our grief and endured our punishment it made his soul cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me or else we must for ever be banished out of the presence of God and never have any hopes of glory of faith or of salvation had not the Son of God become our Mediatour and Surety so there is one God and one Mediatour the Man Christ Jesus He gave himself a ransom for all our sins to free us from the wrath to come everlasting destruction and from the worm that never dies O that we could ever be thankful to God live to him that hath so loved us as to send his Son to die for us and is by the almighty power of God raised from the dead and now sits at the right hand of God and ever lives to make intercession Truly friends this is not the love of man but the love of God and therefore eternal love God so loved the world it is Gods love he loved sinners ungodly ones he did so love them as to give his onely begotten Son to save them to reconcile them to uphold them to redeem them from wrath to come it was to seek and save them that were lost This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners We all like sheep had gone astray and must perish in our sins had not the Lord Jesus been sent of his Father out of his bosome to declare the good will of God and did it by which we are sanctified through the offering up of the body of Jesus Christ and this Lord Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God he is the Mediatour between God and poor sinners Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden says Christ and I will give you rest now this grace is from God we are saved by grace and that not of our selves it is the gift of God through faith in Christ we are saved and all things that do pertain to life and godliness it is the gift of God now all things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ to wit that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses unto him Would you know the forgiveness of your sins your peace with God and that God is well pleased with you God is reconciled by Jesus Christ unto you and does not impute your sins unto you but looks on the righteousness of Christ as satisfaction that thereby you might have the remission of your sins through the bloud of Christ. Be it known unto all men that through this mans preaching the forgiveness of sins Acts 13.38 39. and by him all that do believe are justified from all things from which they could not be by the Law of Moses now justification from sin and redemption from iniquity is through the knowledge of Christs death for your sins and his resurrection and now there is no other name given under heaven whereby we can be saved but by the name of Jesus and whosoever believeth in his name shall not perish but have everlasting life Ioh. ● 24 It is the doctrine of Jesus Christ it is his word and hope you will search the Scriptures and look into those things for your souls good when Christ says Verily verily I say unto you He that heareth my words and believeth them he hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life The reason why God does assure poor sinners they shall not pass into everlasting condemnation and perish is through his rich grace through his promise for he hath promised he will be merciful to our iniquities and our sins will remember no more and these his promises of grace which are all Yea and Amen in Christ are ratified by the bloud of Christ the bloud of Christ is this bloud of the New Covenant and it is that by which we have the forgiveness remission and cleansing of all our sins Vndersheriff Mr. Gibbs let me interrupt you this is very good and pertinent but you have said these things over and over there is another of your friends is to speak and the time grows short pray go on to the matter or conclude Gibbs I shall speak a word or two as to the knowledge of forgiveness of sins by and through Jesus Christ and so the knowledge of the Resurrection of the dead it is the fruit of Jesus Christ for by the first man came death and by the second man Christ came life and God that has by his exceeding great and mighty power raised up Jesus Christ from the grave and power of sin he also shall raise us up by the same power and when he comes again the second time at his appearing and coming we shall see him and be made like to him and he will receive us to himself he is gone to prepare a place for us and in his Fathers house are many mansions and if it were not so he would have told us and now God that hath given eternal life and forgiveness of sins unto his poor servants he will also when Jesus Christ shall come to judge the world receive him into his everlasting glory which is my faith expectation and hope in God through Jesus Christ. A man may bear his infirmities but a wounded conscience who can bear when God smites who can bear and therefore I desire as I believe the forgiveness of all my sins through the rich Grace of God through the bloudshed of Jesus Christ his Son every one must give account to God and as their Works are so will their Reward be either accepted by God as workers of Christ or condemned as workers of iniquity Last of all as to the separated Congregations to whom I belong I have observed in those few daies that I have lived there is a great deal of animosity evil will hard censuring and abusing the pretious Saints of Jesus Christ. If they are in an error you
to one Gibbs and there he brought us to this very man first enquiring at a house for him Beazley was told he was at a Tavern at Bridewel-stairs We went there and found him he told us he could tell us little himself till his Brother came and accordingly he presently after came that was the occasion that I came into his company Gibbs He sayes that I spoke of Pistols delivered and a number but now many he knows not and that I should talk of the death of the King which is as false as God is true Again I knew not of his coming never appointed him never was privy to any such Plot I abhor it in my Soul I never engaged in any such design with any man at any time Court You do your self much wrong and take away that time which you may happily spend better Stubbs I desire to know of Mr. Hill who was present at that meeting that I should say the King should have such quarter as Ludlow Hill It was spoken at that meeting at Black-Friers after his brother and the other persons were gone it was there spoken That the Councel was brook up and all ready Alhallows Eve the time and then the same quarter to be given as Ludlow should have if taken Stubbs You do not answer the Question who was there besides your self Hill There was Riggs and that Gibbs there Stubbs You have onely his evidence Tonge Who was in company when I talked of 300. men at Windsor Hill It was at your own house and there was Ward Stubbs Riggs Hind and my self Phillips Whether did he ever see my face at any meeting Hill I never saw you before that time in Cornhill Phillips Upon what account did I speak to Riggs then Hill When you came off the Exchange you told him you could not stay your Captain was coming Riggs thanked you for your favour in sending word to the Meeting to be gone to a certain Quaker Phillips I never sent to any Quaker to that purpose I did not see this man upon the Sabbath day But Riggs came down to me and thought I had sent notice to Anchor-Alley but I did not Sallers He affirmed that there was several meetings of 40. and then of six ask Mr. Hill whether I was in either of those numbers at any time Councill He did not charge you with any such thing of being in that number he askes a question about things not laid to his charge Council Let Mr. Riggs speak Edward Riggs About 23. weeks since I came acquainted with Mr. Tonge upon this occasion Captain Baker did say that he was a man of Intelligence but Mr. Tonge did not care for him and told me that I might be acquainted with him a while after I came acquainted with him accidentally when I came to his House Court Whose House Riggs Tonges house Mr. Stubbs was there he said That he had been at Windsor spoken with the Gunner and Sergeant and that they promised it should be ready upon some certain notice given that night he had received a Letter of some business concerning a suit at Law he said in which there was a mystical meaning which he did not tell me of but this he said That he had made sure of Windsor by the Gunner and Sergeants promises This is that I know of him Council Is this all of Tonge Riggs This likewise he has told me That he had sometimes met with a certain company he did not say thirty or forty but a pretty many there was he named Mr. Cole Captain Elton Captain Leigh that they had often met but could not well agree but at last Mr. Strange did meet with them give them one meeting they could not agree neither they went away and said these words to the best of my remembrance Mr. Strange did refuse to joyn with them but when God did bid him go he would go whether this day or next week or next year matters not but when God bids him go he would go Mr. Cole was somewhat troubled to hear it but sayes Mr. Cole if you will go give me but notice If I cannot go so fast as you ride I will hold by your Horse-tail A little while after he told me they had not met again that Mr. Cole because they could not agree about this business was gone beyond Sea but before he was gone he did tell me of some Considerations that were drawn as he judged about a Government by Master Cole and gave me in a Paper some certain Propositions three or four concerning Sea-men the substance was this what great benefits they had by a Common-wealth Court Who gave you them Riggs Tonge but it came from M. Cole as he said In general they were to declare against the misgovernment of Church and State in particular to Sea-men what great advantages there would be to them and three or four things propounded in order to them 1. That no Sea-men should pay custom for any commodity that he did bring under the value of Ten pounds upwards they must And likewise there should be care taken upon our own Coasts and beyond Sea That where any of our English Ships should be cast away there should be care taken out of the Customes that might keep them in their travelling homewards either from begging or starving Put Mr. Cole when they met as Tonge said would not agree and therefore went beyond Sea after he was gone within a week or fortnight they had another meeting Court They which they name them Riggs I did not hear him name many unless Leigh and Captain Elton I remember no more and there he said they had under consideration the Government of a Commonwealth and so to declare against the misgovernment of the Church and State and that there was to be a meeting at London-Wall in a little time after and he was there He afterwards told me he mist that meeting but had intelligence brought him that the time that he missed thirty or forty I know not the certain number had referred it to six men they called it The Council of Six but the names of them I never heard from him and indeed he said he knew them not by reason of his absence from that meeting But what I gathered from him was this That he judged Captain Elton was one of them Council He told you there was a Council of six Riggs Yes that he heard there was but knew them not Sir Hen. Finch To make things short were you ever at any meeting where there was a discourse touching surprizing the King altering the Government and who was there upon your oath Riggs That Friday immediately before we were taken I think October 24. there was some discourse in general concerning Whitehal what might be done as to the procuring of that and likewise concerning the Tower Council Who was present that Friday Riggs My self Hill Tonge Stubbs Ward Hind and Iohn Baker and then to the best of my knowledge there was this