Selected quad for the lemma: kingdom_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
kingdom_n house_n majesty_n time_n 1,776 5 3.6807 3 false
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
A89562 A copy of a letter written by Mr. Stephen Marshall to a friend of his in the city, for the necessary vindication of himself and his ministry, against that altogether groundlesse, most unjust, and ungodly aspersion cast upon him by certaine malignants in the city, and lately printed at Oxford, in their Mendacium Aulicum, otherwise called Mercurius Aulicus, and sent abroad into other nations to his perpetuall infamy. In which letter the accusation is fully answered. And together with that, the lawfulnesse of the Parliaments taking up defensive arms is briefly and learnedly asserted and demonstrated, texts of Scripture cleared, all objections to the contrary answered, to the full satisfaction of all those that desire to have their consciences informed in this great controversie.; Plea for defensive arms. Marshall, Stephen, 1594?-1655. 1643 (1643) Wing M750; Thomason E102_10; ESTC R21572 25,726 33

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

for love or money whereas when the Scots were proclaimed Rebels and Traytors it must speedily be published in all the Churches of England I must acknowledge this made me to think that the Parliament had just cause to be jealous of great danger But when His Majesty returned from Scotland discharged the guard which the Parliament had set for their owne safety an other denied except under the charge of the Queenes Chamber-lain and His Majesty himselfe entertained divers Captaines as a supernumerary guard at Whitehall went to the House of Commons after that manner to demand the five members to be delivered unto Him The Earle of Newcastle now Generall of the Armie of Papists in the North sent to Hull attempting to seize it and the Magazine there His Majesty according to the Lord Digbies Letters retiring from the Parliament to a place of strength and the Queene going beyond Sea to rayse a party there I must have shut my eyes if I had not seene danger and thousands of thousands would have thought he Parliament altogether sencelesse if they had not importuned His Majesty as they did to settle the Militia all former settlings of it by Commissions of Lievtenancy being confessedly voyd His Majesty refusing this in that manner as they thought necessary for security they Voted the putting of it into the hands of persons whom they thought the State might confide in though alas many of them since have discovered to us how vaine is our hope in man And secured the Town of Hull and the Magazine there soone after this His Majesty in the North seised New-Castle and under the name of a guard begun to raise an Army all this was done before the Parliament Voted that His Majesty seduced by wicked councell c. And when His Majesties Army was more encreased hee then declared that hee was resolved by strength to recover Hull and the magazine and to suppresse the Militia After this indeed the Parliament began to make vigorous preparations by their propositions for Plate Money Horse c. This being the true progresse and state of the busines I saw cleerly all along the Kingdome and Parliament were in danger that it was therefore necessary to have the Militia and Navy in safe hands which His Majesty also acknowledged That he refused to settle it for a time in the way they conceived necessary and that by the judgement of both Houses when they were full they had power by the fundamentall Lawes of the Kingdome to settle it especially for a time upon His Majesties refusall That His Majesty raysed force and declared it was to suppresse the Militia and recover Hull and the magazine is as cleare and made pregnant preparations both at home and beyond the Seas And the civill Lawyers say that pregnant preparations are the beginning of a War The onely Question remaining was whether the Parliament did justly in ordering the Militia and securing the Magazine and Navy in a confessed time of danger upon such His Majesties refusall What the Kings power and prerogative and what the Parliaments power was for securing the Militia in time of danger according to the Lawes of England was out of my profession and in great part above my skill But certainly unlesse I was bound rather to believe the Votes of the Papists and other Delinquents about his Majesty who hitherto had prevailed to bring upon us all the miseries that wee have laine under then the Votes and Judgements of the highest Court of Judicature in England which so far as I have heard was never by Common Law or Statute Law presumed to be guilty of or charged with the overthrow of the Kings prerogative or the Lawes and Liberties of the Subjects untill now and who have given us so much evidence of their wisdome watchfulnesse and faithfulnesse I was bound to be concluded under their Testimony and so consequently that His Majesty was seduced c. And surely if men who serve upon Justice betweene Prince and People party and party in matters of life or State may rest in the resolution of the learned Iudges that this or that is Law when themselves know it not well might I rest in the judgement and resolution of that Court which is the Iudge of all the Iudicatures in the Land And in case I were unsatisfied to whom should I appeale in whose judgement I might more safely rest especially when I saw their Vote agreeable to that which is the supreame Law of all Nations namely that Publique safety is the highest and deepest Law and that it is requisite that every State have a power in time of danger to preserve it selfe from ruine and no Law of England more known then that the Parliament is the highest Court from whence there is no appeale This satisfaction I had then and since by the Declarations and Remonstrances of the Parliament concerning these Military matters and by other Bookes lately published it is most apparent that they have not usurped upon His Majesties Prerogative but what they have done is agreeable to the practise of former Parliaments In putting the Militia Forts and Navy into safe hands in these times of danger And that it was therefore lawfull for them yea necessary to take up these defensive Armes and consequently to call in for supply from all such who should share with them in the benefit of preservation and to disable such from hurting them who were contrary minded I spend no time to answer the Objections that some make that His Majesty could not tarry at LONDON with safety of His Person that the Lords and Commons that are with Him were driven away by popular Tumults and could not enjoy freedome of their Votes c. Because I thinke these things are now believed by none but such as would believe no good of the Parliament though one should rise from the dead againe Thus Sir you have a just account of the grounds that first induced mee to owne this Cause you desire to know whether I see not yet reason to repent of what I have done I confesse I never undertooke any thing but I saw cause to repent of my miscariage through the corruption which cleaves to mee and great cause I have to bewaile my many failings in this great Worke but for the Worke it selfe I as solemnely professe I never saw cause to repent of my appearing in it the Cause is a right Cause the Cause of God my call to it a cleare call and though the Worke prove harder and longer then at first it was thought yet the Cause is farre clearer then at the first The Worke indeed is harder then I expected for whoever could have believed he should have seen in England so many Lords and Commons even after their solemne Protestation to defend the Priviledge of Parliament And their own Vote that His Majesty seduced by wicked councell intended War against the Parliament so shamefully to betray the trust committed to them so many of the Protestant
Profession joyning with an Army of Papists under pretence of mantaining the Protestant Religion against a Protestant Parliament to fight themselves into popery so many unworthy Gentlemen fight to destroy a Parliament and thereby fight themselves and posterity into slavery so many Papists in Armes contrary to so many knowne Lawer and armed with Commission to disarme Protestants contrary to their knowne Liberties and the Protestants who exceed their number an hundred fold not to rise as one man to subdue them And who would have believed that he should have seen after all this an Army raysed by the Parliament in such an extremity for such an end having hazzarded their lives undergon all these hardships performed all these services and whose untimely disbanding may prove our irrecoverable ruine strai●…ed for want of pay while England is worth a groate Behold regard and wonder marvelously I relate a thing which many will not believe though it be told unto them Hab. 1. 5. But though the Worke be harder the case is still clearer both in regard of the intentions of the Parliament and also of their adversaries For the Parliament multitudes would not believe but that they had further aimes then their own and the publique safety that they intended it not to depose His Majesty yet by force of Armes to compell him to that which is not fit for a King to yeild to But now by their frequent petitioning of His Majesty especially by the reasonablenesse of their late Propositions and Instructions wherein they desire a present disbanding of all Armes even before any other bills were past and were willing to have the Ports Forts and Sh●●s c Of the Kingdome resigned up into His Majesties hands provided onely that in these times of danger they might Pro bac vice be put into the hands of such as the State might confide in The sincerity of their intentions are now so plaine that I think Malignity it self cannot but be convinced of them And the intentions of the contrary councells are as plaine their mask now falling off and their designe more then ever discovered to be the overthrow of Parliament liberty Lawes and Religion For at first we had Declarations to preserve all the just priviledges of Parliament but now we see men proclaimed Traytors for executing the Commands of the two Houses and the two Houses themselves if not in direct yet in equivalent tearmes proclaimed Traytors yea denyed to be a Parliament because His Majesty withdrawes himselfe and after multitudes of Petitions refuses to returne and because many of their Members have deserted them and are protected by His Majesty from the Houses who have sent for them Yea they are required to recall their Votes as illegall and that such as they have fined and imprisoned may bring their Habeas Corpus to be tried in an inferiour Court Yea people provoked to scorne them and thereupon multitudes not fearing to trample upon and cast as vile scorne and contemptunjustly upon that thrice-honorable Court as ever was cast justly upon the Commissaries Courts We have heretofore been assured that the knowne Lawes of the Land should be the onely rule of government but to name no other instances now we see the Commission of Array to be justified to be Law which the Parliament hath not only declared but demonstrated and the Countries where ever it hath prevailed found to be the utter destruction of all the Lawes made for the Subjects liberty Heretofore Proclamations were put out that no Papists should be entertained into His Majesties Army because the resolution was to maintaine the Protestant Religion But now we see them armed and armed with Commission and Protestant Doctors in their writings justifying it and being armed dare professe their Religion publiquely set up their masse in the second City of the Kingdome cutting 〈◊〉 pieces and burning Bibles and as multitudes of reports come from beyond the Seas and the supplies that come from thence confirme it all the Papists in Christendome contributing to this War as to the Catholique cause Heretofore the Liberty of the Subject seemed to be stood for yea defended against the Parliament as if it were possible the representative body should enslave it selfe and in the meane time while these things are promised hundreds yea thousands of his Majesties Subjects plundred with His Majesties Proclamations against plundering in the hands of diverse of the plunderers And their persons led away in Ropes and Chaines like Turkish Gallyslaves and many cast into Prisons and Dungeons only for detending themselves against robbers and murderers abusing His Majesties Name where their Jaylours use them worse then the Turkes doe their Christian slaves or one that hath any thing of man in him could use a dog And when all these things are now done the Parliament not only sitting but having so much strength in the Field what can we expect when these men have prevailed when at the putting on of their harnesse their usuall language is nothing but blasphemy against God not to be mentioned and against His people calling all that adhere to his and the Kingdoms Cause Parliament dogs and Parliament rogues what language will you expect to heare if once they come triumphantly to put it off If while the event is uncertaine they cut us out such kinde of Lawes Liberties and Parliament-priviledges as these are if God for our sinnes sell us into their hands thinke if you can what Lawes Liberties and Parliament-priviledges our posteritie shall finde Recorded in our bloud for our selves alas who shall live when God doth this nay who would desire to live I would rather with holy Austin make it my humble suite to that God whose are the issues of life and death that he would rather take mee from the Earth then let mee live to see His deare Church and my native Countrey delivered into the hands of such Blasphemous and barbarous Men So that in stead of repenting and withdrawing from the Worke I could wish that my voyce were able to reach into every corner of the Kingdome and that I could awaken all people to see the danger and misery that is flowing in upon them That every soule might be quickened up to make his owne and helpe to make Englands bleeding dying Englands peace with God and every one who hath any interest in Heaven to cry mightily unto that God in whose hand the hearts of Kings are and who rules in the Kingdomes of men that the power of our God might be great towards us in turning away these imminent calamities and turning the heart of our King towards His great and faithfull Councell and rescuing Him out of the hands of this Generation of men who delight in blood Our God hath nor yet sayd pray not for this people but if the Lord say he hath no delight in us Righteous art thou O Lord and just are all thy judgements onely let us not be accessary to our own destruction and the destruction of so flourishing a
A Copy of A LETTER Written by Mr Stephen Marshall To a friend of his in the City for the necessary vindication of himself and his Ministry against that altogether groundlesse most unjust and ungodly aspersion cast upon him by certaine Malignants in the City and lately printed at Oxford in their Mendacium Aulicum otherwise called Mercurius Aulicus and sent abroad into other Nations to his perpetuall infamy In which Letter the Accusation is fully answered And together with that the lawfulnesse of the Parliaments taking up Defensive Arms is briefly and learnedly asserted and demonstrated Texts of Scripture cleared all Objections to the contrary answered to the full satisfaction of all those that desire to have their consciences informed in this great controversie HOSEA 4. 1 2 3. 1. Heare the word of the Lord ye Children of Israel for the Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the Land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the Land 2. By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and whoring they break out and blood toucheth blood 3. Therefore shall the Land mourne c. LONDON Printed for JOHN ROTHWELL at the Sunne in Pauls Church-yard 1643. SIR YOur letters brought not the first tidings of the continuance and encrease of those strange reports concerning me they filled the City even while I was there and I perceive pursue me into the Countrey it is a lying spirit which God hath permitted to haunt me for my triall as it hath done others of his servants before me You know what a book Bolsec wrote of the life and death of Mr. Calvin Beza lived to write a confutation of a book written of his renouncing his religion and turning Papist And concerning Luther the Priests had long reported that he had his call from the devill and to confirm it filled Italy with a rumour of his death and that at his death hee was carried away by the devil soul and body which they good souls divulged not to discredit the man but in gloriam Iesu Christi to the glory of Christ and comfort of the godly The like usage my self have lately met with in some degree for being afflicted with a deep cold and distillation from my head upon my lungs and some feverish distempers my learned loving and carefull Physitian finding that the too importune visits of my many loving friends occasioned too much speech and thereby too much expence of spirits advised me to remove to the house of my Noble Lord of Warwick where I should have more ayre and lesse company hereupon a report was immediately spread about the City that I was distracted and in my rage constantly cried out I was damned for appearing in and adhering to the Parliament and Kingdom in this defensive warre which when I first heard I looked upon as a calumny invented by some simple adversary though malicious enough to my person and ministry who finding it the readiest way to reproach me betook himself to this But afterwards observing how studiously it was maintained how laboriously propagated how handed from Court to City from City to Countrey from England to forraign parts Mercurius Aulicus printed it and a great Officer of State having sent it into other Kingdoms with his letters assuring the truth of it and that not nine dayes no not a month did allay it I then perceived the plot was not so much to disgrace me for alas who am I that they should trouble themselves so much about me but through me to wound the cause in which my poore labours have been engaged This rumour it seemes yet lives and as your letter confirmes encreases from my going down into the Countrey they have taken occasion not only to report me distracted but dead yea that I died crying our of my appearing in this cause and this is so confidently reported by some that it is almost as confidently beleeved by others even thousands you say which makes you earnestly to presse me to write unto you whether I have not at least changed my former judgement about our defensive armes and this not as you professed to satisfie your selfe but that you might have something under my owne hand to shew for the satisfaction of others Sir your ancient love to me and present desires to vindicate me from these aspersions but especially your care that the publike cause might not suffer doe all command me to be your servant in this thing I know it will satisfie you that I solemnly protest unto you that in all these fourteen weeks keeping in I never had an houres sicknesse nor lost a nights sleep nor had any distemper in my head nor saw any cause of sorrow for my adhering to the Parliaments cause but esteem it a great honour and mercy from God that he should move his Excellency my Lord to require my service in this great expedition and that I have even therefore exactly followed the Doctors prescriptions out of an earnest desire to be sitted for my work that I might returne to my most Honoured Lord being fully resolved if God say Amen to it never to give it over untill either there be an end of that work or an end of my dayes This I think will satisfie you and it is possibly as much as you desire for the satisfaction of others to have this under my hand Take this concerning the cause and concerning the report spread of me what Luther said of those above mentioned concerning himselfe fateor testor hâc meâ manu c. I professe and testifie under my hand that I entertained this fiction of my distraction and death laetaque mente hilari vul●●… very chearfully But since your love hath compelled me to put pen to paper I shall compell you to read the largest letter that ever I wrote being resolved to give you a full account both of my ground and warrant of entring upon my office and how farre I am from changing my judgement upon the present view of things When his Excellency vouchsafed to require my service for God knows I offered not my selfe in this great work there were but two questions beside my care to walk aright in my ministry for my conscience to be resolved in First whether upon supposall of the truth of the Parliament votes viz. That his Majesty seduced by wicked Councell did levie warre against the Parliament the Scripture did warrant them to take up defensive armes Secondly Whether the Parliament was not misinformed about such his Majesties purpose and practice The first is a mear question in Divinity viz. Whether a people especially the representative body of a State may after all humble Remonstrances defend themselves against the unlawfull violence of the Supream Magistrate or his Instruments Endeavouring and that in matters of great moment to deprive them of their lawfull liberties The Second is a question mearly of matter of fact For the first Before the beginning of these unhappy differences I
by their ayds of men and money their distressed and oppressed Brethren and Neighbours in the like case and now in our own sight both the King and States have acquitted the Scots as having done nothing in their late defence but what became good Subjects And what the judgement of this Nation was in the time of Popery is plain enough by their practice in their usuall taking of Armes and not leaving till they had compelled their Princes to ratifie their Priviledges and Charters which through ill Counsellors they had infringed And observeable it is that because the Bishops and Clergie of those times saw the Princes go about to take down their pride they were ever the most forward to justifie the proceeding of the State and I suspect in case the Tables were turned and we had a King endeavouring to take downe the Bishops to take away Pluralities Non-Residents c. and a Parliament seeking to maintain them the world would hear another Divinity from many of them who now crie out that all our defence is damnable But lest I might be thought not to have weighed the Scripture and reasons of both sides equally I will give you a further account what my thoughts were and are concerning the Scriptures usually pleaded against this resistance and the reasons deduced from them The strongest hold they pretend to is built upon Romans 13. 1. c. 1 Peter 2. 13 14. where we are enjoyned subjection to the Higher Powers especially to the King as Supreme and all know that Nero the then supreme Governour was no better then a Tyrant Answ. First it is observable that this objection and almost all the rest taken out of the Scripture make the case of all Subjects in all Kingdoms to be alike that although as I touched before there are hardly two Kingdoms in the world but do differ in Laws Customs and Constitutions bounding the Kings authority and the Subjects obedience yet if any of these would change the the bounds of his authority for instance If the King of Denmarke or Sweden or Polonia would invade the liberty of his Subjects and make himselfe as absolute not onely as the King of England but as the King of France or Spaine or the Great Turk this argument tyes all their Subjects from resisting let any man shew an outgate for the Subjects of the one which will not let out others and for my part I will yeeld the cause If they say these Kings tooke their Crowns upon those termes and the Subjects indented to have libertie of resistance in such cases then they grant that where the Laws of the Kingdom allow a liberty of resistance resistance may be used notwithstanding these texts which is as much as we plead for If any people have covenanted in no case to resist let them seek another answer in the mean time these Texts tie not those from resisting by their own answer who have not tyed themselves Secondly I appeal to their own judgements whether these Texts forbid all forcible resistance Suppose a Prince in his rage should go about to kill himselfe or runne some innocent man thorow with his sword might no man take the sword out of his hand and if it be lawfull for a private man to dis-arme him of the weapons wherewith he would kill one may not the State take such weapons out of his or the hands of his Instruments wherewith they goe about to destroy all Thirdly both Texts lay the same charge for subjection to inferiour Magistrates who likewise have their authoritie from God though under the Superiour As our Saviour said to Pilate who was but a Deputy thou couldst have no {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} no power at all against me if it were not given thee from above And may no resistance be made against the unjust violence of inferiour Officers if there may it is sufficient sure I am the Texts have not one word to allow the one and prohibite the other Fourthly what one syllable in either of these Texts so much as looks towards the forbidding of a people to resist Tyrannie but onely that we resist not the Magistrates in the rightfull exercise of their authority given them by God the Texts speak not of their persons but of their power not of their dictates but of their legall commands no more of Kings than of an higher Power in an Aristocracie or Democracie binding all persons to subject themselves to that Power and Authoritie which in the severall places where they live is the Highest or Supreme power Object But Nero was a Tyrant Answ. Not in his five first years nor secondly was he a Tyrant in all things he had authoritie to rule according to Law that was not his Tyrannie his Tyrannie was what he usurped contrary to the Law nor thirdly were all his under-Officers Tyrants many of them could say with Festus Acts 25. It is not the manner of the Romanes to deliver any man to die before that he which is accused have the accusers face to face and have leave to answer for himselfe and would accordingly dismisse them if they had done nothing worthy of death or of bonds Object 2. But doth not the thirteenth Chapter of the Romans plainely binde mens hands from resisting the Supreme Power Answ. By the Supreme power must be meant that power which by the originall and fundamentall Constitution of any People and Nation hath authoritie to make Lawes which shall binde the whole Nation to dispose of the estates and lives of any person or persons for the good of the Nation to judge every person and persons in the Nation determinatively and conclusively so as from that judgement there is no appealing that power it self being subject to the judgement and authoritie of none but God and Aristotle makes three distinct Branches of this power 1. The power of making and repealing Lawes a Legislative power 2. The power of making Warre and Peace of imposing Customes and Tributes 3. The power of judging Causes and Crimes ultimately and decisively where these three meet and make their residence whether in one person as in absolute Monarchs or in many as in mixed Monarchies or Aristocracies or in the body of the people as in the ancient Roman Government there is the highest power which every soule is forbidden to resist But now what ever be the higher power in England most certain it is that the Kings absolute or illegall will is not the highest power that hath neither power to make Laws nor repeale Laws that hath not power to acquit or condemne nor may men appeal from the Kings lawfull judgement Seate to the Kings absolute will but his legall will in the highest Court or the King and Parliament may make Lawes or repeal Lawes may engage the whole Nation in a Warre and command both the Bodies and Purses of men unto the service is the highest Court of Iudicature to which all may appeal and