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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A66761 Mercurius rusticus, or, A countrey messenger informing divers things worthy to be taken notice of, for the furtherance of those proceedings which concerne the publique peace and safety. Wither, George, 1588-1667. 1643 (1643) Wing W3171; ESTC R19091 13,618 18

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become a Daughter nay a nursing Mother of this Church if she had not been left to their delusions who if it were possible would deceive the very Elect If those who had place and opportunities to have endeavoured it and as we heare had inducements to hope it might have been effected had according to their duty attempted the same And whether it is not likely that the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and the whole Prelacie are now come to this shame because they complyed with her seducers and rather confirmed her in an Idolatrous worship then assayed to inform her in the right way Thirdly Whether it be possible that a King many yeers honoured with evidences of Piety and Morality could possibly proceed as he hath done if the falshood and impiety of his evill counsellors were not vailed over with some disguises And whether though he make use of them for the present necessities he can esteem them in his private judgement bettep then Traitors or base Parasites who having been at first Zelots for the Parliament afterward left it for the wages of Ambition Or whether he can esteeme of those more then of a dog deserving the halter who being first raised by His Royall favour and long maintained by Projects and Monopolies obtained by abusing that Royall Power could desert their Advancer and comply with the Parliament to avoid their censures and afterward againe when they saw the Parliament eclipsed could basely creep and insinuate back into his Bosome whom they had forsaken Fourthly Protestants and Papists being so exasperated against each other and the Papists having begun a bloody Massacre in Ireland which the Tenets of their Religion bind them to prosecute upon all advantages whether can they ever be so reconciled as to live securely together again in these Ilands so long as they continue of different Religions And whether they will think the King out of their debt untill he hath given them leave to prop●gate their Religion at their pleasure and means to secure it in this Kingdome by power put into their hands And if hee should so doe whether Truth and Peace were then likely to be setled in these Kingdomes Fiftly Whether his Majesty be not by reason discharged from all obligations to the Papists for personall services and contributions to this war and bound in justice to punish rather then reward them for the same seeing he cannot but know both by their tenets and by those motives whereby the Queene incouraged them in her letters that they aided him for n● respect to himself if he be not totally theirs but meerly for their own ends and to continue that barbarous and murtherous project which they long since begun here lately revived in Ireland and do now prosecute throughout his Majesties dominions for the accomplishment of our generall premeditated destruction under the false colour of serving his Majesty and promoting his Priviledges The last Question of theirs which I will trouble you withall is If we suffer the policies of Antichrist for the continuation of his mistery of iniquity thus to divide the body from the head the King from the Parliament the Court from the City the City from the Country the Nobles from the Commons the Commons from themselves yea to divide the Church the State every Province every County every City every Village every Family and many individuall persons in their own judgements whether this be not or will not be shortly such a divided kingdome as cannot long stand without Gods miraculous aid and our more serious working with him And whether will not the children of Babel seek to repaire again her decayes by the ruines of our British Churches And whether it be not required of us and high time for us to be reconciled to God and to each other that we may hasten the fullfilling of his decree concerning the whore the malignant City the false Prophet the Beast and do that to them which they purpose to us and have already begun to doe in Ireland with unexampled cruelty even to beat or banish them who will not forsake their abominations out of these Islands that Babylon may vanish and the new Jerusalem come down amongst us How these questions are to be voted upon let every one consider and resolve by himself according to his discretion Perchance there be some who are desirous to here what opinion we have in the Country touching the nationall covenant lately tendred and perhaps also the knowledge thereof may be to some purpose You shall hereby understand therefore that not onely all men well affected to the Parliament but every other reasonable man also in these Counties where this Mercurie hath been thus conceives of the said Covenant First That it tends to the strengthning of that nationall union which is now made betwixt us and the Scots and the want of which was an occasion of much blood-shed in this Island many ages together Secondly That it conduceth to that unity and conformity throughout all the reformed Churches which may by Gods blessing settle Christian peace prevent the future increase of heresies and schismes hitherto multiplied amongst us help to preserve truth in purity against the incroachments of popery and superstition and further the overthrowes of Antichrist Fourthly That it will help secure unto us our just rights and priviledges with the preservation of his Majesties person honour and lawfull prerogatives against Traitors Flatterers Tirants and Oppressors Fiftly That it ingageth us to a speedy repentance of those sins which have brought on us the present plagues and to the amendment of our lives also for the time to come 6. They hold it agreeable to the practise of the ancient Churches of God who when such occasions were made covenants to the like effect by Divine approbation as their covenants recorded in holy writ may testifie And the opinion of those among them whose judgement is not to be despised is this that whosoever willfully refuses this covenant deserveth to be reputed an enemy to all that is good to be chastised by all the miseries attending division and discord and to be deprived of every good effect which it may produce hereafter for the present to be denied the vse of those good things which they possesse among us and to be judged unworthy to continue in this land or to partake of this ayre any longer Of the like opinion is this Mercurie who among many other observations in his rustick preambulations had these two which I thought not impertinently divulged at this time One is that they who would seeme to have the tenderest consciences in this cause betwixt the King and Parliament and who usually colour their opposing the Parliament by pretending a conscionable obedience to all the Kings commands are they if we may judge them by their former conversation and present course of life who make little conscience of that or of any sin else As if for making no conscience of breaking such lawes as were once written in their hearts