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A47866 The growth of knavery and popery under the mask of presbytery L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. 1678 (1678) Wing L1256; ESTC R12227 33,537 104

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sence of them that Impos'd it that betwixt their Consciences their Safeties and Estates they were in a great streight He that Considers the Solemn and the Awful Circumstances that accompani'd the taking of these Engagements the lifting up of the Eyes and Hands the Attesting of Almighty God the Invocations of the Great Name of the Lord and their Appeals to the Searcher of all Hearts and Compares their Actings with their Protestations will find them perhaps the most Impious and Extravagant Contradiction in Nature And That 's the thing next to be Observ'd in a View of the Fabrique they Rais'd upon this Goodly Foundation After this Hypocrisie in the very Frame of their Project there was but little of Good Faith to be expected in the Menage of it And all their Covenants under Colour of Reforming the Government were both in Construction and in Effect but so many Othes for the Adjuring of it and the setting up of a more Blasphemous Oracle in the Name of Christ Iesus than ever was silenc'd at his taking Flesh upon him by his Holy Power I call their Covenants Oracles as well in respect of the Inspiration as of the Imposture But we shall better understand them by Tracing their Motions from One Usurpation to Another By Letters from Sterling of March 10. 1556. Knox was invited from Geneva with This Assurance That the Faithful in Scotland were ready to jeopard their Lives and Goods for the setting forward of the Glory of God as he would permit These Letters came to his Hand in May. And in September following with the Privity and Encouragement of Calvin he left Geneva and Octob. 24. arriv'd at Diepe with Intent to Embarque for Scotland where he met with other Letters disswading his Return See his History of Scotland Fol. 107. The Faction was now ready to give up the Cause and had undoubtedly so done but for Knox his Letter to some of the Nobility upon That Occasion which re-Confirm'd them in their Resolutions Your Brethren says he are Oppress'd Fol. 109. and you ought to Hazzard your own Lives be it against Kings or Emperours for their Deliverance So that here was Violence Intended you see in the very first Proposition By the Instigation of this Letter they enter'd into their first Covenant at Edinburgh in Decemb. 1557. Fol. 110. and Immediately after the Subscribing of it they Order'd the Common Prayer of England to be read weekly on Sunday and other Festival Days in all the Parish-Churches of That Kingdom with the Lessons of the Old and New Testament Conformed to the Book of Common Prayers Fol. 111. Soon after This they Petition'd the Queen and Council for the Use of the Common Prayer in the Vulgar Tongue which was granted them with an Exception only to Edinbourgh and Leith for fear of Tumults And upon the Neck of this Petition follows a Protestation deliver'd in Parliament 1558. against all Acts of Parliament for the Punishing of Heretiques the Removal of all Prelates and their Officers from any Place of Iudgment Fol. 133. Foretelling by way of Menace that if Abuses should chance to be Violently Reform'd the Government may thank it self From Protesting they Gather'd themselves Together at St. Iohnston the Town Declaring for them Hereupon the Preachers were Summon'd to appear at Sterling May 10. 1559. And on the Other side The Brethren Concluded that the Gentlemen of Every Country should Accompany their Preachers to the Day and Place appointed that is to St. Iohnston where they had their First Assembly Upon this Contempt the Ministers were Proclaim'd Traytours and the Multitude fell to the Demolishing and Rifling of Religious Houses where they found great Booty and so they Proceeded to the fortifying of themselves and calling in of their Friends to their Assistance Maintaining their Ground by Force notwithstanding A Proclamation for all of them to avoid the Town under the Pain of Treason Which Place soon after was Deliver'd up upon Composition From the Pretence of Defending themselves in St. Iohnston they Advanc'd shortly after to the Assaulting of it and so the Burning of Scone the Seizing of the Minting-Irons for the Coyning of their Plate And then from Monasteries and Abbies they went forward to the Defacing and Pillaging of Cathedrals Parochial Churches and there were few Chancels that scap'd them In their Answer to the Queens Proclamation of Aug. 28. 1559. they Rise from matter of Religion to matter of State Knox Hist. of Scotland Fol. 174. And in Direct Terms Fol. 179. They Affirm that it appertaineth to the Nobility and also to the Barons and People to bridle the Rage and Fury of misled Princes which was only a Prologue to the Formal and Solemn Deposal of the Queen Regent at Edinburgh Octob. 24. 1559. that ensu'd After This they emplor'd Aid from England under Colour of Maintaining their Ancient Liberties And the Treaty was sign'd at Berwick by the Commissioners of Both Nations Feb. 27. 1559. By these Persecutions they brought the Queen Regent to her Grave And upon her Death a Peace was Concluded the Armies to Disband and the French and English Succours to return Home In Decemb. 1560. Francis the Second of France departed this Life leaving the Queen of Scots an Unfortunate Widdow Poor and Helpless They were now out of Fear of France and there was no Danger from England in regard of the Queen of Scots Pretensions to That Crown so that they resolv'd now to play their Own Game And their First Act was the Abolishing of the Common-Prayer in a Convention at Edinburgh which they had formerly Embrac'd and Confirm'd by a Solemn Decree and Subscription And the Presenting of a Church-Government of Knox's own Contrivance and not much differing from the Geneva-Model to a Convention of the Estates under the Title of The Confession of the Faith and Doctrine believed and Professed by the Protestants of Scotland The States took Time to consider of the Form of Polity but pass'd an Act however for the Demolishing of Cloysters and Abby-Churches Whereupon says Spotswood in his Church-History Fol. 175. there ensu'd a Pitiful Vastation of Churches and Church-Buildings No Difference was made but all the Churches either Defaced or Pull'd to the Ground The Holy Vessels and whatsoever else Men could make Gaine of as Timber Lead and Bells were put to Sale The very Sepulchers of the Dead were not spar'd The Registers of the Church and Libraries cast into the Fire And All This colour'd with the Warrant of Publique Authority Take Notice here that after the Convention was Dissolv'd their Book of Polity was Subscrib'd notwithstanding the Postponing of the Question And we shall see now that they treated the Queen her Self no better than they had done the Queen Regent Upon this Nice Juncture of Affairs the Queen was Invited Home And Aug. 20. 1561. She arrived at Leith declaring upon her Entrance That there should no Alteration be made in the Present State of Religion only for her Self and Family
which brought down their Stomacks and made Way for the passing of the aforesaid Articles It is not my Intent to write any thing more of the History of the Times than what I find pertinent to my present purpurpose so that passing over the Grumblings and Mutinous Dispositions that appear'd in the Remainder of King Iames and the First Seaven or Eight Years of King Charles his Reign I shall only tell you by way of Introduction to what follows that the late King having before-hand order'd a Convention of the Estates upon the 13th of May 1633. began his Journey towards Scotland in order to his Personal Coronation where he was receiv'd with a Pomp and Acclamation befitting the Dignity and the Solemnity of the Occasion His first Work was to ratifie the Laws and Statutes of his Predecessour in Relation to Church-Government which pass'd not without some Opposition but the Commission of Surrenders went yet nearer them tho' both the Owners of Lands and the Ministers were so abundantly satisfi'd that the Former as the King himself says in his large Declaration pag. 9. acknowledg'd it as a Deliverance from an Intolerable Bondage under which They and their Ancestours ever since the Reformation of Religion had grievously Groan'd and the Other with Infinite Gratitude Celebrated his Majesty as the Father and Founder of their Churches The Case was this as Heylin renders it in his Cyprianus Anglicus pag. 224. In the Minority of King James the Lands of all Cathedral Churches and Religious Houses which had been settl'd on the Crown by Act of Parliament were shar'd among the Lords and Great Men of that Kingdom by the Connivance of the Earl of Murray and some other of the Regents to make them sure unto that side and They being thus possess'd of the Lands with the Regalities and Tithes belonging to these Ecclesiastical Corporations held the Clergy to small Stipends and the Peasantry in Vassallage His Majesty was advis'd by Council to take them into his own hand the present Occupants having no other Title to them than the Vnjust Vsurpation of their Predecessors And this was carri'd in such a Manner too that the very Nobility and Lay-Patrons could not open their Mouths against it for they were satisfi'd for their Tithes to the Uttermost Farthing only they lost the Dependency of the Clergy and Laity upon them by Virtue of these Tithes and Consequently the Power of making a Party to Embroil the Government They contented themselves within the Bounds of Libels and Clamours till that Rebellious Outrage in the great Church of Edinburgh on the 23 of Iuly 1637. Which was no more than the Emprovement of an Occasion to put the Principles of the Consistory in Execution I 'le make some amends for the length of this Digression by Contracting my self upon the Discipline which was afterward Erected in England after the Scotch Pattern It will be a hard matter to pass from 1637 to 1648 without taking some Notice of the Horrid Distempers in that Interval I shall only tell you that after three or four Years spent in Dissolving the Legal Government and Debating what we should have in the Place of it Out comes the Directory Ian. 3. 1644. with an Ordinance of the Lords and Commons for the Authorizing of it And afterward Aug. 23. 1645. another Ordinance for the more effectual Execution of it which was follow'd Iun. 5. with an Ordinance for the present Settling of it without further Delay and Aug. 19. 1646. with Directions for the Chusing of Ruling-Elders in all the Congregations and in the Classical Assemblies for the Cities of London and Westminster and the several Counties of that Kingdom in order to the speedy settling of the Presbyterial Government There pass'd also an Ordinance for the manner of Ordination of Misters with Rules for Examination and Suspension from the Holy Supper c. And Another of Ianuary 29. 1647. for the speedy dividing and settling the several Counties of this Kingdom into Distinct Classical Presbyteries and Congregational Elderships and they came at last Aug. 29. 1648. to The Form of Church Government to be us'd in the Church of England and Ireland agreed upon by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament after Advice had with the Assembly of Divines And all This toward the Promoting of an Union with the Kirk of Scotland I should have told you of the Ordinance of Iun. 12. 1643. for the calling an Assembly of Learned and Godly Divines to be consulted with by the Parliament for the settling of the Government of the Church The Knights of every Shire to make Choice of Two that should serve as Members for That County and These in Conjunction with so many of the Members of Both Houses as might serve to inspect their Actions took upon them the Powers and Authothority of a Convocation The Form of their Government was the same with That of Scotland They had their Congregational Classical Provincial and National Assemblies with the same degrees of Subordination and Vested in Proportion with the same Powers They had their Expectants too and the Constitution of their several Iudicatories was the very same only the Lords and Commons under the Notion of a Committee for judging of Scandal were so wise as to reserve the Last Appeal to Themselves which was formerly lodg'd in the General Assembly by which Device the Schism was made subservient to the Rebellion whereas in Scotland it was the clear contrary And they had also another Hank upon them in appointing that the National Assembly should meet upon a Summons by Parliament and then sit and continue as the Parliament should order and not Otherwise for they were not able to consent they said in a Declaration of the House of Commons Apr. 17. 1646. to their Granting of an Arbitrary and Unlimited Power and Jurisdiction to near ten thousand Judicatories to be Erected in the Kingdom which could not be consistent with the Fundamental Laws and Government of it and which by necessary Consequence did Exclude the Parliament from having any thing to do in That Iurisdiction But the Nation is never the better yet for This Caution so long as the Tyranny and the Slavery is still the same From this View of their Brotherly Agreement in Government we shall now proceed to their Harmony in Positions and our Brethren of Scotland shall lead the Way The Positions of the Kirk under the Queen Regent and James VI. THe Punishment of such Crimes says Knox as touch the Majesty of God doth not appertain to Kings and Chief Rulers only but to the whole Body of the People and to every Member of it as Occasion Calling and Ability shall serve Nay they are bound by Othe to God to Revenge the Injury done to his Majesty If Princes be Tyrants against God and his Truth their Subjects are discharg'd from their Othes of Obedience The Nobility and Commonalty ought indeed to Reform Religion and in that Case may remove from Honour and Punish such
Levy'd by Distress and Sale and in Case of Refusal the Parties to be Emprison'd pag. 767. With further Authority Feb. 3. 42. p. 777. to Break open any Chests Trunks Boxes Dores with Power to Seize such Chests with Money or Goods for the Satisfaction of the Sums Assess'd And the same Power Amplifi'd they granted to Commissioners for Levying of Money by a Weekly Assessment upon London and Westminster and every County and City in England and Wales the City of London being Rated the Weekly Sum of 10000 l. and Others in Proportion You have here from their own Publique Acts for I cite none of their Pamphlets a Breviate of the Powers they assumed to themselves over King and People And this so Early in the War too that the Faction was not as yet sure in the Saddle For This was all before 1643. You shall now see the Execution of these Arbitrary Principles by the Covenanters of Both Kingdoms in their Turns and you shall Confess that tho' the Rigours of the Kirk may serve as a Foil to any Other Tyranny the English have yet had the Honour to out-strip their Masters According to the Common Method of Innovatours their First Work was by Press and Pulpit to Defame the Government their Next was by Popular Artifice to stir up the Multitude by Tumults to Reform it and Lastly if they found their Party strong enough to Depend upon to Enter into a Confederacy and Set up for themselves This was the Course that Knox Willock and their Followers took in Scotland under the Queen Regent in 1555. and afterward under King Iames VI. And Cartwright with his Complices went the same way to Work also under Queen Elizabeth only the Conspiracy of Arthington Hacket Coppinger Wigginton c. was Discover'd and the Plot Disappointed But the Libels and Tumults in Scotland 1637. which led to that Impious Bond and Covenant in 1638. had better success See his Late Majesties Large Declaration upon That Subject And after their Pattern so had the Practices in England in 1641. when the Parliament was so Over-aw'd by Tumults that the Vote of the Two Houses was no other in Effect than the Sense of the Rabble in the Lobby It was but their Bawling for Justice upon the Noble Earl of Strafford their Crying down of Bishops and Popish Lords and the thing is Done The Riots were so Great that the Lords press'd the Commons at a Conference to Joyn with them in a Declaration for the Suppressing of them But it was Answer'd saying We must not Discourage our Friends This being a time we must make use of All our Friends God forbid says Mr. Pim that the House of Commons should proceed in any way to Dishearten People to obtain their just Desires in such a way Exact Collections pag. 532. The Kirk would have said that they did not know with what Spirit they were Over-Rul'd as they told King Iames in the Case of Gibson and Black for delivering Treason in the Pulpit The next thing that follow'd in Course was a Combination and That shall be the first Point we 'l handle in the Common Practices of the Party which in One Word amounts to no less than the Dissolution of a Legal and the Setting up of a Tyrannical Government The Practices and Usurpations of the Presbyterians upon the Civil Government TO be as Clear now in their Practices as I have been in their Positions you shall have as good Evidence for their Proceedings as you have had already for their Principles And I 'le begin with the Foundation of their Empire their Audacious and Mysterious Covenant Not with the Matter or the Design of it but only to shew you that Covenanting is the Method of the Party The First Covenant of Scotland bears Date Decemb. 3. 1557. at Edinburgh The Second at Perth May 31. 1559. The Third at Sterling Aug. 1. And a Fourth at Leith Apr. 27. 1560. They Enter'd also into Another Covenant at Ayr Sept. 4. 1562. which Knox calls a New Covenant In England 1583. they Subscrib'd their Discipline and Enter'd into a League both by Promise and Writing to do their Parts toward the Establishing of it In Scotland 1638. so soon as ever they had settled their Tables of Advice the First Act of those Tables was their Solemn Covenant And so likewise in England the Commons Impos'd a Protestation and then went on to Covenants and Othes without End Here 's an Vsurpation upon Sovereignty the very first step they set in the Exacting of an Oth without due Authority beside that all Leagues of Subjects among themselves are in the Eye of the Law no better than Seditious Conspiracies Wee 'l come now to the Pretence of these Covenants which is only an Artifice of Inveigling the Silly People into a Confederacy against the Government under the Notion of Promoting the Common Good The End of the First Scottish Covenant above-mention'd at Edinburgh is said to be the Defence of Christs Gospel and his Congregation and of every Member of it against all Opposers to the Death The Second at Perth goes further and Extends to all Persons that shall trouble them upon what Pretence soever In the Third at Sterling they bind themselves from any Correspondence with the Queen either by Word or Writing In their Fourth at Leith they Covenant a Direct Revolt and the reducing of all men by Force that are not of their Opinion In their Last Bond at Ayr they declare against all men as Enemies that shall not submit to their Government And upon the Whole Matter they Found all their subsequent Proceedings upon the Obligation of the First Covenant for the Defence of Christ's Gospel The Pretext of the Scottish Covenant in 1638. was the Defence of the King's Majesty his Person and Authority in the Defence and Preservation of the True Religion Liberties and Laws of the Kingdom As also the Mutual Defence one of another against all sorts of Persons whatsoever And the English Protestation of 1641. looks the very same way viz. for the Maintenance of the Doctrine of the Church of England the Power and Privileges of the Parliament and Liberty of the Subject And what 's the very Title of their Solemn League and Covenant in 1643. but Reformation and Defence of Religion the Honour and Happiness of the King the Peace and Safety of the Three Kingdoms So soon as ever they had by these specious Appearances decoy'd an Inconsiderate Part of the Nation into the Net they Emprov'd the Fraud by Expounding upon all their Bonds and Covenants quite Contrary to the Common Intent and Acceptation of the same And made way thereby to the Destruction of all those Interests which the People thought they had Sworn to Preserve But the Subject was so hamper'd betwixt the Dread of the Othe among those that did not understand the Nullity of the Obligation and the Forfeiture of Life Fortune and Estate if they should not persue it according to the Oraculous
presses the Two Houses to a Speedy Establishment of the Presbytery And here again no Mention of his Majesty But what 's the Sum now of these Propostions that stand in Competition with the Kings Freedome Life and Dignity First Only the Iustifying and Confirming of all they had done Secondly The giving away of the Militia of England and Ireland for Twenty Years with Power to Raise Men and Money Thirdly His Majesty must Swear and Sign the Covenant Impose it upon the Three Kingdomes Abolish Episcopacy and settle Religion as Both Houses shall Agree Fourthly All Honours since 1642. must be made Null and Void No Peers admitted in Parliament for the Future but by Consent of the Two Houses Fifthly All Great Places and Offices of Honour in England and Ireland to be Dispos'd of by Consent of Parliament and in Fine his Majesty must deliver to Death Beggery and Scorn all that ever Serv'd him Thus was this Glorious Prince Betray'd and Sold according to the COVENANT Here 's the True English of it and the Divinity of that Moloch to which this Nation has offer'd up so many Noble Sacrifices Are not our Fundamental Laws Persons Consciences and Estates Secure and Happy under the Care and Wing of such Blessed Guardians How meanly have we Prostituted the Reverence of the Land and of the Government to the Lusts of these Imperious Shameless Ravishers Take Notice here of some of the Kirks following Resolves upon the Main Point in Question First That the Kings Taking of the Scotch Covenant and Passing Some of the Propositions does not Warrant Scotland to Assist him against England Secondly That upon bare Taking the National Covenant they may not Receive him Thirdly That the Clause in the Covenant for Defence of the Kings Person is to be understood In Defence and Safety of the Kingdom Fourthly That his Majesty shall Execute no Power in Scotland without satisfying every Point Fifthly That Refusing the Propositions he shall be dispos'd of according to the Covenant and the Treaties Nor would the Two Houses Probably have Us'd him any better if he had gone to Them For upon his First withdrawing himself they Voted it Treason and Death without Mercy for any Man to Harbour and Conceal the Kings Person upon a Supposition that his Majesty was then in London This was the 4th of May and on the 6th the Commons Voted him to Warwick Castle which was Unvoted again upon the 9th and in Iune they Voted the Kings going to the Scots a Design to prolongue the War Let me not appear to Confound the Faction of Scotland with the Nation for no Country affords greater Instances of Integrity and Honour Nay I have heard it from good Authority that the Kings going into Scotland which he most earnestly desir'd was carry'd in the Negative only by Two Voyces His Majesty is now under the Care of his New Governours and a Prisoner to the Covenanters at Holdenby where he desir'd only Two of his Chaplains that had not taken the Covenant and Then a Common-Prayer Book for his own Private Use but Neither could be Granted him At the Isle of Wight the same Faction had the handling of him again where they still Treated his Majesty much at the same Rate And they Us'd his Royal Successour not much better in 1650. When to Auspicate the Project for the Recovery of his Crown in the very Dependence of a Treaty at Breda with him upon the Instigation of the Kirk they Murther'd the Brave and Generous Montross with the most horrid Circumstances of Malice Imaginable And how they Us'd the King himself afterward at his Coming among them I am not willing to mention Nay when the Time appointed by Gods Providence was come for the Restoring of the King the Presbyterian Ministers in London Publish'd a kind of Squinting Gratulation upon That Occasion as if Popery were coming in with his Majesty for Company And the same Party upon the Re-Admission of the Secluded Members press'd upon the House of Commons these Two following Votes for the Justification of the Rebellion in 1641. and in order to the Exclusion of the Royal Party from the next Choice 1. I do Acknowledge and Declare that the War undertaken by Both Houses of Parliament in their Defence against the Forces rais'd in the Name of the Late King was Iust and Lawful and that Magistracy and Ministry are the Ordinances of God 2. Resolv'd that All and Every Person who have Advised or Voluntarily Aided Abetted Assisted in any War against the Parliament since the First day of Jan. 1641. His or Their Sons unless He or They have since manifested their Good Affections to This Parliament shall be Vncapable to be Elected to serve as Members of the next Parliament So that as their Feud against Kings is Implacable their Aversion likewise to all those that Love their Prince descends from Generation to Generation How Inconsistent Presbytery is with Monarchy is sufficiently manifest But they 'l say for themselves that Kings may be Misled and that it is not the Form of Government that is Grievous to Them but the Male-Administration of it To which it may be Reply'd That All Governours under what Form soever are to Them Alike where they themselves are not Vppermost And that the Reformation of Personal Failings will not do their Business without the Total Subversion of all those wholesome and Profitable Laws that stand in the Way of their Discipline It being their Custome to Reproach Princes and their Ministers for straining the Prerogative while they Themselves at the same time Usurp over Kings Parliaments and People And Trample under their Feet All that is Sacred in Society and Government Princes 't is true may have their Errours and their Passions but what have the Innocent Laws done Are They Popishly Affected too But where ever Presbytery reigns there can be no Law but their own Will. Did they not in Scotland Damn Bishops as Anti-Christian and Deprive Ecclesiastiques of their Voyces in Parliament Convention and Council notwithstanding Three Acts of Parliament that is to say of 1584. 1597. and 1606. expresly to the Contrary And did they not pronounce the Acts of the Assemblies of Glasgow and Perth to be Void and Illegal tho' Enacted as Municipal Laws Ask them now says his Late Majesty Large Declaration Pag. 416. by what Authority they do these things expresly against Acts of Parliament Acts of Council and Acts of General Assemblies They Answer that Those Acts of Assembly were unduely Obtain'd and that now they have Rescinded them For Acts of Parliament and Acts of Council they Express great Wonder that any man should Question their Authority over Them For if Christ be above the King Christ Council must likewise be Supreme Parliaments being only the Council of the Kingdom And for the Kings Privy Council and Iudges they must submit to the Councellours and Iudges under Christ who is the King of Kings Nor is it all that