Selected quad for the lemma: kingdom_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
kingdom_n king_n religion_n see_v 2,235 5 3.6602 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
A48793 Never faile, or, That sure way of thriving under all revolutions in an eminent instance from 1639 to 1661. Lloyd, David, 1635-1692. 1663 (1663) Wing L2645; ESTC R31560 45,348 118

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

in Ireland for though Thucydides say the Athenians did well in a case of necessity to seek aide not onely of the Grecians but of the Barbarians Yet methinks I heare Fulco of Remes in Fred. l. 4. Hist. Rhemensi c. 6. admonishing our Charles as he did another who may not be afraid seeing you covet amity with the enemies of God and to the overthrow of the Protestant name take unto you Popish armes and enter into Leagues detestable they are great offenders saith Alexauder in Arrianus who serve the Barbarians against the Greekes contrary to the Lawes of Graecia shouldest thou help the ungodly and love them that hate the Lord 2 Chron. 19. 2. O King let not the arme of Israel goe with thee for the Lord is not with Israel nor with any of the Children of Ephraim 2 Chron. 25. 7. Be yee not unequally yoked with misbeli●vers for what fello●ship hath righteousnesse with unrighteousnesse what communion hath light with darknesse 2 Cor. 6. 1. 15. § 42 His Excellency resolves upon the termes proposed by the Parliament for the Irish service in the capacity of a Collonel of Foot but first he must take the engagement when usurpation hath ravished just power it usually supports it selfe with the two Pillars of Armes and Oathes a good Man feareth an oath and therefore his Excellency upon mature deliberation made a promise equall to an oath for a noble soule of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Persians such bonae fidei as Augustus that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isoc de evag. Gunther ●Leg c. Its word is as strong as its oath that he would be true and faithfull to the Common-wealth without a King or House of Lords and he is not a Man that would not be faithfull to the interest Common-wealth and good of his own Nation as well without as with a King which was the primary favourable proper and significant import of that ingagement to the best judgements of that time § 43 He is no sooner made sure but he is sent by that Man of dispatch O. C. into whom the old Emperour of Germany thought Gustavus Adolphus his hasty soul was got by a metempsuchosis with Reynolds and others to Chester and thence wafted over by a favourable gale immediately to Dublin and made his way resolutely through the thickest of his enemies to relieve the distressed City where they staid not long but impatient both of restraint and delay they sally out for more elbow-room with that successe that they had the pursuit of the enemy for many miles untill they came upon my Lord of Ormond's whole Army ready for an overthrow such was their confusion and disorder The honourable Lord of Ormond unhappily thus associated being betrayed to that security that he is playing at Tables and his Army and cause lyes at stake After this Victory● these lower Commanders are carried about with the rapid motions of O. C. that violent first mover who upon his first arrivall Jehu-like drave furiously tovvards Trogedah vvith all his Forces took the place by storm and spared neither Man Woman nor Child Indeed throughout he vvas resolved to use the highest right and lavv of War vvhich after ages may dare to call an injury strangers were not spared for by the Law of War strangers upon an enemies ground is an enemy Philo. de judice ex vetere Oraculo Malcha excerp legis nor sacred Persons my Lord Broghil hanged a Bishop notwithstanding the common clamour for their Father in God with an haec sunt vestim●nta patris no native escaped the severall parts jus●ly suffering for the guilt of the whole It s lawfull to continue the punishment of a guilty Nation for one generation after its fault Arist. Pol. 7. c. 13. Lib. in ●rat de sedit Ant. Yet it s the generall Law of War if yet it have any law and it be not true what that rash head blurted tha● martiall Law was as absurd as martiall peace H●stis sit ill● et qu● extra praesidia c. Liv. 37. Baldus 1. de just Bembus Hist. 7. mercy sanctuary c. are say the Souldier for the miserable rather then for the guilty venet de Asylis Thu. 1585. Cambd. Eliz. 1593. and we tooke all his Cities at that time and utterly destroyed the Men and the Women and the little ones and we left none to remaine Deut. 2. 34. Ps. 137. ult But with this flux of blood they said they stopped a greater Sanguinis fluxum diffusa venula revocamus Tert. The very repo●t of this siege reduced all Ireland for immediately the two next Garrisons Trim and Dundalk are quitted such a pannick fear seizing upon the Souldiers that they were not able to endure a summ●ns this successe is seconded with the taking of Werford Rosse Kingsale Corke Youghal Bandon-bridge Barrow and Duncannon Enistroge Carricke Waterford● and now Cromwell no sooner seeth a Citty or an Army but he ●onquers it In the meane time his Excellencies particu●ar honour was involved in that great renown of the Generall whatever glory he acquired it was as the Civilians say for his Master § 44 Ireland now acknowledging ●●onquest in ten months for they were there but from the midle of August 16●9● to the next May 1650. which ten Ages formerly durst not boast of They return by order of Parliament to England to assi●… them in those dangers that threatned them on every side especially from Scotland that had ingaged it selfe by a lat●… Treaty at Breda to assist his sacred Majesty 1. In bringing the Murtherers of his late Father of blessed memory to con●ligne punishment 2. In recovering his royall right § 45 Cromwell being to goe for Scotland the House having now concluded that the War should be offensive and my Lord Fairfax laying down his Commission makes choice of his Excellency for one of his Commanders in that desperate expedition which he willingly undergoeth when he heard the quarrel stated by Lashley upon the account of the Old Cause ' and not upon the account of the King whom they disowned as one sticking too close to his Fathers sins forsooth his House Friends ' Judging souls thought that War was for his Majesty rather then against him that Cromwell there was loyall and that it was a great courtesy for our Soveraign to be conquered least a sad successe had gained him a Kingdome with the losse of Religion Law and Liberty however his Excellency thought it unresonable to see his Native Countrey submit its Law and Religion to the saw●y imposition of a neighbour Nation that had been indeed often taught to take Lawes from us but never to give us any § 46 When his Excellency was in Scotland jealous Oliver joynes with him Lambert and Okey to watch his thoughts words and actions and to check him from any designe of loyalty which he discreetly observed and therefore managed each action committed to his trust as that against the Highlanders Dundee c. with such resolution as made
NEVER FAILE OR That sure way of thriving UNDER ALL REVOLUTIONS IN An Eminent INSTANCE From 1639. to 1661. LONDON Printed for Henry Marsh at the Princes Armes in Chancery-Lane neer Fleet-Street 1663. TO THE Most Illustrious JAMES DUKE of YORK May it please your Highness SPeculation is the life of a Schollar and action is the life of a Prince Arist. Pol. 6. 2. Aquin. eth 1. 2. suarez et ●urid ibid Rev. D. P●iep ded cosm●gr It sufficeth the one to meditate up on the great things which former ages have done while the other doth great things which future ages m●y meditate upon the one b Mentes sapientiores su●… qui escend● Pla● ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vid Rev. d Reyn Passion● e●… Arist. et alii● c. rests when he hath c Bacon de Augment scient des●…rtes medit 7. Digby immortality soul 7. raised a scheme a frame an d De Idea in Deo vid. Grot. Christ. relig 1. Annot ex An●… c. Idea within himselfe proportionable in all things to the e He hath made all things in nu●ber and m●…sure Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Synes beautifull in his ●ime Ecl. 3.11 order and method of beings without him while the other having understood this f vid Dickens Delph Phaen. de Pan● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scalig. exercit 6. c. 7. ●…m Tertull. de Palleo 2 Plat. de 2● all is urged by his eager virtues to performe things as great as those he understood and actions as great as his thoughts There is g Norunt Garamantes et Indj c. I have heard Turks Jews speak honorably of you no tongue nor language but hath heard that you are as eminent for your action as for your birth That you are a Prince in both in both your selfe is as well known as your name I need not informe you great Sir that all great actions in any way are guided by a h Arist eth 6.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mel. ● 2. Null● qua natura impedite s●… confilio expediuntur Liv. see Reyn ●n Hos. 14. v. 9. Ser. 7. wisedom from above first pure then peaceable according to the principles and maximes of that way together with the conclusions rationally deducible from those principles to their peculiar ends by a discreet application of proper meanes for it was your selfe that mannaged the great affaires of France and Spaine with a wisedome as * Medi● t●lissi●… ibij see Duke of Rho●… Interest of States and Kingdomes distant from the sudden ras●nesse of the one as from the solemne slownesse of the other bare action the priviledge of lower beings valour the glory of those more noble or honour becoming your selfe sufficed you not wi●hour a wisedome guiding all these above your selfe and yeares Therefore when I entertained thoughts of drawing a rude draught of these great actions and counsels that I look upon as the best patternes of Modern Policy I mean these of this honourable Person who discovered most of a Politicians virtues without any of its vices that could be wise as a Serpent and yet innocent as a Dove I immediately resolved to dedicate it to your selfe wisdom is justified of its children the Diamond only can cut Diamond the wise onely understand the wise when I presume to make your Highn●ss● the P●tron of this Modern Policy I intimate you ought to be the subject of another which some i Dig●… 〈…〉 soule might attempt with a Pen as Heroick as your ●…word writing your life with as much Majesty as yo● lived it with k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or a Pourtraicture of his sacred Maj●sty CHARLES the second with his two illustrious Brothers the Duke of Yorke and Gloucester Sold by H M at the Princes Armes in the lower end of Chancery lane When envy suppressed the worth and malice blasted the innocence of our dread Soveraign with those calumnies that were never licenced but in the age when Men spoke whatever they thought fit there being no King in Israel I humbly desire your Mediation for a pardon to my inconsiderable selfe who was then past all fear of loss l Amorem ●sser●it Plato 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cael. Rhodig 16. 15. durst vindicate injured truth and Majesty advancing them above interest prejudice malice by a course I thought most conscientious as a Christian and most generous as a Man my highest designe was to establish his sacred Majesty in the hearts of his people which was all poor I could doe towards his establishment in his Throne Now envy malice and ignorance dares abuse that renowned Person●… whom the King hath desired to honour to whom we owe even your very selfe I could not ●ut doe his Majesty the Nation and Himselfe right in justifying his honourable actions which I doe sufficiently when I repeate them I must con●esse I am sorry that former powers allowed me that leasure I had to vindicate the best Majesty but now his Majesty is come again to his own House in peace I am contented to be at leasure to doe justice to the best Loyalty ‖ Diou Hal● see Suet. in Tit. Vesp. Leighes Caesars Mallel M. S S. Bib. Bodl. Vespasian one like your selfe the darling of Mankind as he dismissed ●one sad from him so he professed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that his Doores were alwayes open for Schollars But to his favourite Appollonius desiring accesse for Dion and Euphrates he said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but to you my very breast is open a poor Schollar despaires not of a gracious admission to your royall presence while he is confident you will give his grace the Duke of A●ma●le admission to your very heart But alas It s high time to leave your Highnesse full of thoughts to advance the honour and good and to improve the virtue and valour of your dread Soveraigne and gracious Brothers Dominions and to retire with my best affections devoutest prayers my honest endeavours into the croud of your Admirers and Servants David Lloyd Modern Policy The Second Part. The occasion GOD as great soules observe hath equally suffered by the too much worship the superstition of the World that was drowned flattered him with and by the too little which the Atheisme of that World which shall be burned slandered him with Good men saith Vossius are equally injured with the honour the fabulous age bestowed upon them by Legends as with that the sullen silent age denyed them● while the one raised their worth to that heighth that it cannot be beleived the other keepes it so low that it cannot be known The good Apostle is abused as much when the Barbarians cry he is a God as when they say he is a Malefactor when he was worshipped at Lystra as when he was stoned there His Excellency the Lord Generall Moncke suffereth equally by the Courtiers smooth Panegyricks as by the ignorants dull silence or the envious his malignant calumny while his
him beleeved cordiall to the cause and able for service and therefore advanced him to the command of Lievtenant Generall in Scotland It was his honest ambition to be eminent in every thing he undertook so he hoped at last to arrive at that power that might sway Kingdomes to a compliance with his Majesties interest as successfully as he saw them now swayed against it § 47 And therefore when his Majesty marched for England by the way of Carlisle he refused to follow him and chose rather to compleat former victories in Scotland as Commander in chiefe then to gaine new ones in England under Oliver Therefore waiting anxiously betwen hope and feare upon his Majesties successe in England he took care to reduce Scotland into a subjection to the Parliament untill an opportunity offered it self of restoring it to the King who had utterly lost it had not he lost it § 48 But no sooner were the Scots Wars finished but Holland threatneth us 1 Partly upon his Majesties account being engaged to his assistance 1 By the Prince of Orange 2 By Admirall Vantrump who had not forgot the high honours bestowed upon him in England in the year 1641. 3 By an overture made between his late Majesty of blessed memory and their Embassadour the night before his death Partly upon their own account claiming a right in our Seas which we for times out of mind were taught to * See Gratium in ●are lib. Seld. ●are Clo●… Stri●… M●… Com. Greg. Thol jur reg Franc. prop. L. L. quae propria ulpian l. o. L. L. quae comuiae vid servium in 12 AEn virg ●ust●c● in il ● n. 22● deny them See Fleta and Selden notes upon it see Draytors Polyalbyon Grotius de jure belli et pacis of propriety see Saxon Lawes in Spelm and Selden Just. and Theod. Codes the Danish Lawes in the exact Collect of Beccius Whitlockes observat c. § 49 His Excelle●cy is called upon from Scotland to Sea in joynt commi●…o● with Blake and Deane he willingly submits knowing he was to engage for the right of his native Countrey I meane the dominion of the narrow Sea which belonged to England as a hedge so the Sea is called in Eurip ● and most Poets since out of him belongs to the inclosure and indeed is the best of its enjoyments § 50 He being at some losse in Sea affaires discovers as much wisedome in maki●g use of other Mens skill as others did in acting by their owne others direct he encourageth and spirits the dull Sea-men to action to passe by the meaner passages his most solemn performance was the last engagement with the Dutch for which the Parliam honour him with a gold chaine and oblige him by a command over the Army in Scotland which he underwe●t willingly so securing to himselfe and his Master one Kingdome while now an Usurper swallows up two § 51 Being come to Scotland he takes care that the councell who were in joynt power with him should be Men of solid Principles and good Interest if he must be troubled with some fanaticks they were some soft easy and quiet Men that stood for cyphers and were only to ●ill up a ●umber and not to maintain a party § 52 He takes care to restraine that Scottish spirit that is never quiet Conquerour nor conquered and remembring what sad use they had made of former indulgencies proceeds with force and rigour resolving that they should really fear him who he knew would never really love him § 53 He disarmed imprisoned and innocently trappanned them though none of them suffered the least upon his account in state or life and so amused the cunning Scot with active policy that he had scarce time to think of plots or to contrive villany § 54 And when some Loyall persons under the honourable Middleton attempted something 1654. he easily subdued them first dividing and then conquering them he was as ready to suppress those men that attempted any thing Inconsiderately for his Majesty as he hath been since to incourage them when they attempted any thing soberly It was about that time Oliver would have had him out of Scotland and therefore had not he opposed his Majesty then probably he had not been in a capacity to restore him now § 55 In Scotland he impartially executed all Lawes enacted by the Supreame power in England tending to the peace welfare of that Nation so that his severities had not formerly enraged them more than his justice obligeth them and therefore Oliver omitted no opportunity to tempt him out of Scotland by calling him to the other house c. which temptations he dextrously put off choosing with Caesar rather to be first in Scotland than 3d. or 4th in England so that the Usurper was heard often to say that he could do many things were G. M. out of Scotland And if I am not deceived by knowing and good men the Usurper upon his death-bed when he was urged to name his successour professed It was in vain to set up a Protector in E●gland for George Monck would bring a King out of Scotland MODERN POLICY The Second Part. Sect. His Exc●ll●ncies beh●viour upon Cromwel's death ALthough upon Cromwel's death it was thought the awe whereby he checked the private designes of each party to an homage to his own was so happily removed that the severall Grandees would now publickly pursue their aime at that Supremacy to which each of them was willing to advance Cromwell first one daring enough to break the ice to an usurpation that they themselves might be his Seconds and because as Seneca saith Seelera dissident their villainous Enterprises would interfer and clash each of them resolving to admit● neither equall nor superiour it was thought honest men might have opportunities to joyn together in vindication of lawfull Soveraignty and publick Right while the Theeves and the a Magna Latrocinia publick Robbers as the Pirates told Alexander fell out about oppression and wrong Take off the common Principles in which Rebels agree a●d the common persons that keep them together with those Principles their variety of humors and interests bring them immediately to a division and then to a ruine Machiav●l Kings l. 2. c. 3. on Livy l. 6. c. 2. sect 3. These Rods that have lain so long upon our backs might be singly broken when they could not be broken united and in a bundle But Cromwell taking as much care to keep usurped power as he took to gain it Nec minor est virtus quaerere quum pertatueri and being a man of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Arist. de An. l. 2. c. 1. Et● 4. c. 3. of desires as vast as his thoughts and as boundless as his soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Iamblichus Carm. 6. And therefore its pitty as Socrates saith that great and good have been separated he secured not the Government with more policy to himself then he doth to his Heires
according to his Majesties order waites upon his Majesty at Dover being unwilling to Land before he came with so much humility as if he had not knowne any worth and merit in himselfe and was received by his majesty as if he had knowne nothing in him but worth and desert how Honorably doe the best of subjects and the best of Kings greet each other how modestly doth the Subject kneel how humbly doth the Soveraign kiss and embrace its one property of love to condescend with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eurip. Hal. So Parents out of love to their Children lisp and play and fit their speech and dalliances ●o the age and infirmities of their children Sect. He meets his Majesty In that renouned progress of his Majesty to London his Excellency had the honour to ride nex before his Majesty with the Illustrious Duke of Buckingham all the way to London and with the Honourable Mayor through London where the whole Nation saw him more Honourable in that he restored a soveraigne then if he had been one more glo●ious in his Loyall Subjection then in an usurped majesty his bare head was more honourable then oth●rs Crowns His tenderness of his Majesties prerogative When some careful of the Subjects liberty would have bounded his Majes●ies prerogative within the compass of the Lawes it being a power not to be intrusted to frail flesh and blood to be above Law and what was more have capitulated with him for his own right and brought him to his Throne upon termes his Excellency withstood the motion scorning to fetch home a fettered Majesty and to restore a captive Soveraignty if he brought in a King he would also bring in prerogative and a plenam potestatem 2. Ed. 4. 17.21 H. 7 2. H. 7.7 as it was in principio reru●… where Gentium nationumque imperi●m penes reges ●rat Iust. l. 1. See R. B. Ios. in Mishput Aammelech and indeed prerogative cannot be in●rusted to a mortal more capable of it than our Soveraign who thinks it his highest power not to be able to do an injury and his highest prerogative to take nothing from his Subjects but a liberty to offend Principi summum rerum arbitrium di●… dederunt subdit●s obsequij gloria relicta est and may it suffice us when we admit his Majesty to a Soveraignty over us that we know Regem in ipsum imperium est Iovis God is Soveraign over him Sect. His care for justice It was thought his Excellency would intercede with his Majesty for a general pardon to all parties and persons but his Excellencie perceiving his Majesties extraordinary inclination to mercies thought fit rather to encourage him to do Justice 1. That innocent blood may not be upon our heads or upon our posterities such blood as may overthrow a world It s a ●earful thing to let a Nation fall into the hand of the living by a neglect to satisfie that justice which divine mercy will not defraud and therefore humane mercy dares not Secondly that posterity may look upon their late villanies with horror when they see them punished with severity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato apud A. Gel. l. 6. c. 14. Famosos publica furca figendos pluribus placuit ut conspectu deturre antur alii ab iisdem facinoribus F. de paenis L. 28 P. fumosos Pet. Erod de cret l. 2. ●il 14. Zeppa de leg l. 1. c. 11. Plin. l. 29. c. 4. 3. That compleat justice be done to all sufferers of the Clergy and Layty righ●eousness establisheth a Nation and the guilty must be as contented for the good of the Nation to suffer Justice as the innocent may be to enjoy right But his Majesty and his Excellency hath taught the Nation to sing of mercy and judgement Ps. 101. 1. by their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Rhet. Iudex u●… medicus syropos habet al●…n R. ●ai● trans● p. ●3 Sect. When his Majesty had leisure for any thoughts of setling his Officers of state he began in his own family for as a Bishop so a King must rule well in his own family for how saith St. Paul can be rule the Church that cannot rule his house and how saith Aristotle Can he govern Kingdomes that governs not his own Court Indeed Kingship saith Selden in his titles of honour Weems exercitations 3. A●ist Polit. 7. Rev. Bp. Will. in his jura Maies●atis was first exercised in the narrow compass of an household and those increasing to Cities Kings a while contentedly possessed those Cities and Cities swelling into Nations we had our Kings of Nations Whence his Excellency had the honour himself of being Master of the Horse and to commend the incomparable Sir Will. Morris eminent in his Countrey for piety prudence publike-mindedness and valour for rejected truths eminent in his worthy book called Caena quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for depth of judgement solid and accute reason sharp quick yet clear apprehension for comprehensive reading for a copious fancy for a choice grave brief perspicuous pleasant vigorous and m●…erately vehement expression with a gra●ious frame of spirit running through each part and the whole of it for the first Secretary of state Sect. His Majesty well weighing That in the multitude of Counsellors there is safety called his Excellency with his own high-borne Brothers in suffering as well as nature the Honourable Marquesses of Hartford of Ormond the Lo●d Chancellor Hide c. to the Council Table where there is no person that need go beyond him who first hath been p●esent at all the subtile debates whe●by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Rulers of the darkness of this age promoted their mysteries of iniquity 2. Who hath managed the tro●blesome affairs of Sco●land so succesfully for so many years 3. Who had manifested so much prudence in his late expedition that the King solemnly desired his sage advice for the settlement of his Kingdome Sect. But his Excellency conscious enough of the worth and ability of the most honourable Council is not so intent upon the affairs of state as upon those of the field his own p●culiar charge where his chief care 〈◊〉 to model the Army to a frame subse●vient to his Majesties and the whole Nations interest and well knowing that the whole Army is at the beck of superiour Officers as much as the lower O●b● at the command of the first mover he di●posed of most commands to persons of honour worth and found interest His Majesty himself with his two Royal Brothers honouring their respective Regiments with their command Sect. And now it may be expected that from this confluence of the highest worth the most eminent virtues the most renouned performances the result must be the highest honour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. d● mor. l. 4. c. 7. Charron wisd c. 7. Hall government l. 1. c. 5. and therfore his Ma●esty was pleased to call his Excellency to the House of Peers as Duke of Aumarle * See Heylin Surv. France Seele blane French Nob. Earle of Torrington Lord Monk of Potheridge Beauchamp c. Knight of the most Honourable order of the Garter c. honours that others indeed have enjoyed but his Excellency made it his chief business to deserve and I hope as he hath attained this honour with great actions he will maintain it with greater until he is gathered to his Fathe●s full of honor and of daies until having seen 1. That Sacr●d Majesty which he was an instrument to re●…ore established above malice envy ambition rebellion faction and treason by a sage Council well constit●t●d Parliaments a well disciplined Army and Navy well chosen Officers and Mini●…e●s of State Secondly the subject secured against all encroa●hments by a Prince who●e prerogative i● i● that ●e cannot do wrong in their persons e●…a●es lives or liberties through wholesome ●…st and good lawes the Chu●ch established 1. Against all Heresy in the fa●th once delivered to the Saints against all s●hisme by the Primitive order discipline and gove●nment See 39. Art Rogers Dr. Overal Dr. Ellis Bp. Andr●… ibid. 3. Against all prophaness 1. By a worship in spi●it and in truth 2. decent 3. in order● 4. to edification 2. by the power of godliness his daies be ●wallowed up of eternity and his honour be exchanged for An eternal weight of Glory FINIS