Selected quad for the lemma: law_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
law_n church_n king_n people_n 6,474 5 4.6830 4 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
A51956 The Church of England and the continuation of the ceremonies thereof vindicated from the calumnies of several late pamphlets, more particularly that entitled, The vanity, mischief, and danger of continuing ceremonies in the worship of God, subscribed by 1690 (1690) Wing M65; ESTC R4181 64,933 67

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of continuing Ceremonies in the Worship of God Humbly proposed to the Present Convocation c. THat An English-man never knows when he is well is a Proverb which we use at home and wherewith we are reproach'd abroad and that too justly to be denyed applicable both to single Persons and conjunct Societies the tendency of Affairs in this Nation since the Year 1640. beyond all possibility of contradiction doth evince The Subjects of this Kingdom through the Grants of former Kings and by virtue of the good Laws by them enacted and made were better secured in their Rights Properties and Persons than any other Nation of the Universe Nor were they less happy as Christians living in the bosom of a Church whose Faith was Catholick Government Apostolical whose Publick Liturgy Constitutions and Canons in perfection excell'd those of any of the Reformed or any other then Visible Church whose Clergy were esteem'd the wonder of the World Hence the envy of the Roman and the admiration of the Reformed Churches Such was then the condition of the English Church and State that it was hard to imagine what could be thought wanting to compleat their happiness unless perhaps you will say their being sensible of it But not knowing when they were well they by God's just permission actuated by the Romish Emissaries who took advantage of the ambition and covetous Inclinations of some and of the discontented and restless Spirits of others involv'd the Nation in a most odious and unnatural Rebellion the Violences Cruelties and Murthers which accompany'd and the Oppressions Usurpations Tyrannies Plunderings and Miseries which follow'd it are too many to be numbred too woful to be rehearsed and such as any Man in his right Wits would for ever be caution'd by to avoid as the worst of evils any actions means or methods whereby the like may again be brought upon us And yet as if Men were led by destiny or guided by those ludicrous Spirits which our Author supposes play little tricks in disturb'd houses and others learned in those matters think set Men together by the ears as they do Cocks and Dogs for their own diversion they seem industriously to lay the Foundations of future troubles to return to 1640. and to be willing to react the same Tragedy and that before the Epilogue is ended and the Actors all gone off the Stage Hither tend most of our new Scriblers and their Pamphlets some devesting the King of all Inherent Sovereign Authority Supremacy and Prerogative c. Others representing our Monarchs of the last Race as the most Monstrous and Wicked Villains that ever liv'd and under the pretence of Secrets relating things not only incredible in themselves but if supposed yet impossible to be known to any but Pimps and Persons if any such there be of a more odious Character thereby endeavouring to possess the People with an ill opinion of the Persons of Kings in order to prepare them for the dissolution of the Monarchy Essays tending to the same purpose have been also made against the Church designing Men having unjustly slander'd her Divines as inclined to Popery and popishly affected till in King James's time to their no less glory than hazard they appeared the greatest if not the only Champions in the Cause of our Religion and the Laws and thereby made all future calumnies of that sort appear too unjust and malicious to be used How is it to be wished that our Enemies malice could have had an end But alass though they thus were forc'd to change the Object yet they have retained the Vice Nothing will please them they will never be quiet now our Rites and Ceremonies must be illegitimated our Liturgy circumcised our Subscriptions Constitutions and Canons all abolished to gratifie those who if all these things were done would be as little satisfy'd as now they are Our Author their Adversary betrays too much Passion before the things themselves and their consequences are well considered he is all upon the fret and out of all patience to be pulling down the whole Ancient and therefore venerable the well compact and firm Fabrick of the Church of England which having been of full proof against all the assaults of our Foreign Roman Foes must now be undermined by her domestick Enemies and what is yet more intolerable her own pretended Friends by an easie surrender of her outworks make her main strength less tenable and precipitate her ruin Our Author like a Man full of design or big with some conceit of his own or News heard from others breaks out and with abundance of concern and passion thus vents himself It is the wonder and grief of all good English Protestants Pag● 〈…〉 that such an unaccountable frenzie should possess and hurry some hot Clergy Men amongst us with a blind zeal against the good proposals of Peace prepared by the Kings Commissioners in the Jerusalem Chamber If by all good English Protestants he means the Men of the Church of England as by Law Established to whom that Name borrowed from the Lutherans who at Spire in the Year 1529. protested against the Corruptions and Usurpations of the Church of Rome whose Communion they then forsook more properly than to any other People in England belongs both because they are an Establish'd and Visible Church and because all Sectaries whatsoever among us hold more in common with the Papists than they do then his assertion is too general to be true Many and perhaps the most and wisest admire what an unaccountable frenzie should hurry some hot Church-Men amongst us with a blind Zeal against that Pious Good and above all extant the most Perfect Liturgy to which and all things therein contained and prescribed they have all once at the least declared as they then pretended their unfeigned assent and consent or against that Government in Church which as far as we can understand by the Scriptures was Instituted by our Saviour which the Ancients assure us was propagated together with the Christian Faith by the Apostles and their Successors and which the continual Succession of the Catholick Church of Christ for now more than 1600 Years hath delivered to us and those wholsome Constitutions which the Wisdom and Experience of the Learned and Grave Fathers of our own Church relation being had to those of elder times also have produced and the Civil Laws of the Land confirmed unto us As for His Majesties design in giving a Commission to some of our Reverend Fathers and Divines to prepare things for Peace and calling of a Convocation c. Who ever blamed it though as to the Method it must be supposed that the unseasonable precipitancy and preposterous Zeal of some in the Late House of Commons to gratifie their dissenting Friends by an Act of Toleration hath prevented even those few good Fruits which they who are acquainted with that sort of People expected from it but of this afterwards I shall here only add that this would be too
Ambition Envy and Avarice of their pretendedly conscientious but really designing c. Enemies that the tottering Monarchy tho never so desirous because obliged in interest c. will not be able to rescue them from becoming their Prey What I have said by way of consideration or answer to any particular expression of our Author's Pamphlet or of the whole in general or of himself you are allowed to judge of as after an impartial reading of it you shall find cause If you shall imagine that any Passages I have used concerning Dissenters are too harsh my Apology is that all I have said concerning them is reconcileable with that charitable opinion I have always had viz. that many of them are good Men who yet are too credulous and with a Faith too implicite follow their designing Teachers not knowing the danger of their living in Schism That my accidental circumstances have occasioned me to know that sort of People very well and that I have taken great care not to do them any wrong by a Mis-representation but on the contrary in this imperfect Pourtraicture have been cautious and out of pure kindness have very sparingly used such proper colours as I knew would make the draught to the life for fear of making it too ruthful a Spectacle CONSIDERATIONS ON THE PUBLISHER's PREFACE TO THE READER WHETHER our Author 's pretended Friend the Publisher hath not by an imitation of his own prevarication instead of a real commendation mock'd him with an Irony when he called him a Man of Excellent Principles and Healing Temper let the Learned judg The tripartite reflection he makes upon the Clergy of the Lower House of Convocation as being Men of hot Thoughts crude Judgments and four Humours they may either take quietly amongst themselves if true or if otherwise answer as they please being of age to speak for themselves I should have pass'd it by had he not made another more general worse design'd and a more malicious one wherein he attributes the not proceedings of the said House and their not consenting to the pulling in pieces our Liturgy Articles Canons Act of Vniformity c. to the peevishness ignorance and dissaffectedness of some of the Clergy to the present Government and all this such is the Modesty and Conscience of the Man without any reason or proof but ushered in with a foolish and unmannerly Confidence I doubt not This Epistoler having a large Talent in Railing is not only very free in the exercise of it but is so rude and uncivil as to impose the Belief of his Calumnies upon his Readers and cause them to read the following Pamphlet with as much prejudice against the Clergy as it is written with malice against our Ceremonies and Church Constitutions He would no less falsly than malicioufly represent all those who are well satisfied with the Church to be dissatisfied with the Government Though how it can be inferred that those Clergy men that sincerely declared their Assent and Consent to the Book of Common-Prayer c. and are not willing that they should be abolished either in the whole or in part are therefore disaffected to the Present Government it is not very easie to apprehend How absurd is it to suppose every body who approves of the Church's Doctrine and Discipline to be disaffected to the Civil Government when the King hath declared his approbation of them and promised to protect the Church as now by Law Established and the Queen joyns with him in his Communion with it Must they not therefore according to our Publisher be disaffected to their own Government However though I believe this Publisher was not aware of it that supposition if true would cast a vile reflection on the late Revolution as being really in lieu of what was pretended the Preservation of that Government in the State which was agreeable to the Doctrines and Discipline of the Church the Introduction of another so opposite thereunto that he who adheres to his former Faith and Church Service must be therefore supposed to be disaffected to it And that all the Clergy and all others who in pursuance of our Statutes have sworn never to endeavour any alteration in the Government of Church or State must be supposed to be either perjured or disaffected to the Government The greatest part of the Clergy or rather all the Benefic'd Clergy in the Kingdom some few particular Persons only being excepted The Divines and others in the two Universities the Members of the House of Commons in the Late Convention and Present Parliament and almost all others thereunto obliged have given sufficient evidence of their affection to the Present Government by their taking the Oaths and yet it is rationally supposed that by far the greater part of all these as also of the Nobility and other Gentry in the Kingdom by reason of the present satisfaction of their Judgments their former Obligations the apprehensions of the many and great damages and inconveniencies which naturally follow all frequent changes in Religious matters and which accidentally would follow these and many other weighty Considerations are against such alterations in the Church-Service and Government as by Law established But some Men are too malicious and designing to be long quiet civil or satisfied with any Persons or things or in any circumstances It hath been the usual practice and policy of Fanatick Schismatical and Seditious Spirits appearing under the Vizor of Purity and Zeal to asperse and calumniate all Sober Sincere Honest and Loyal Persons the only preservers of our Monarchies and Church's Peace who would not concur with all the extravagant humors and sudden motions of the Mobile when actuated by the Jesuits Enthusiasts or intriguing Common-Wealths Men in order to disgrace them and advance themselves in the esteem of the Vulgar Thus in the Reigns of King Charles I. and II. to effect their designs they imposed on them the Names of the Popish Party Cavaliers Malignants Pensioners Court-Faction c. And now those of Popishly-affected disaffected to the Present Government Well-wishers to King James in the more civil and in the more factious and supposed odious terms Jacobites And this Machiavellian Principle of calumniating is so well learned and practised by our Dissenters that neither herein nor in equivocations pretences of Conscience Hypocrisie Oppositions to Monarchy breeding of mischiefs disturbances and divisions in Church and State shall the Jesuits need to be ashamed of the proficiency of their Scholars And this as many other evil Artifices recommends either the inclinations and ingenuity of the Learners or its easiness in being learn'd for not only the Author himself of this thundering zealous Pamphlet but even the Broker of it this small Publisher and confederate retailer hath arrived at that perfection in it that I am content to own my self little able or willing either to contend with him for the superiority herein or to retaliate CONSIDERATIONS On a Late PAMPHLET INTITULED The Vanity Mischief and Danger
he is welcome he will do good service he needs not fear the Law is on his Side Criminals ought to be brought to Justice and he may expect a Reward however he hath malice enough towards Clergy-men and perhaps for their sakes to the Priest ridden Gentlemen to discover them if he knew them and therefore unless he doth so what he says ought in all reason to be esteemed as a notorious Calumny and Libel and our Author to be dealt with accordingly Who brought Ireland and Scotland into their late and present condition is very well known 〈◊〉 6. All the pious sober and moderate Clergy-men are for a Union I believe they are so but all the Question is how we shall attain it an abundance of Men have undertaken to dictate to the Convocation many whereof have like the Cobler in the Proverb who went beyond his Last judged of things beyond the Verge of their knowledge and prescrib'd Methods both unreasonable and impracticable Our Author cannot be thought to have contributed to the cure but must be accounted amongst those unskilful Operators who instead of lessening and removing have only increas'd our Maladies and made them more incurable for in lieu of Wine and Oyl he hath brought Gall and Vinegar to pour into the Churches Wounds The account he gives of the rest of the Clergy is such as can be called no less than an heap of malicious false suggestions and slanderous railing accusations and deserves and admits of no particular answer If I should say of his magnify'd Clients the Dissenting Teachers some are whimsical Enthusiasts and not worthy our regard some are ignorant Dunces and incompetent Judges some are Proud and Hypocritical Pharisees and separate as their Predecessors amongst the Jews to be thought more holy than others that their Glory and Triumph consists in leading filly Women captive that instead of the Solid and Practical Doctrins taught in the Church of England they entertain their seduc'd and beguil'd Disciples with useless canting and unintelligible Phrases that their separation from our Communion was not so much out of Conscience as out of Pride Peevishness and Love of opposition to their Superiors in Church and State that they study more to avoid the scandal than the vice and differ from the most profane but as he who wears a Vizor from him who goes bare-fac'd that they all drive on a Carnal and Worldly Interest and do but maintain a Faction to be maintained by it I should do violence to my inclinations and intentions and write with almost as little civility and shew of good breeding but with far more truth and modesty than he hath done concerning the Clergy of the Established Church Our Author for fear his successive cajoling and railing should not prevail with the Church of England to part with those ancient Rites and laudable Customs wherein she holds Communion with the Primitive and Catholick Churches whereby she justifies her separation from the Roman and performs the solemn Worship of God with decency and uniformity in her own Publick Assemblies which her Pious and Prudent Reformers and Fathers recommending unto Authority are secured unto us by Laws and Constitutions and he in contempt calls Ceremonies proceeds now at length to threatnings to frighten her Members into a compliance and to this purpose he tells our Clergy-men that in the next Rebellion the People viz. the Dissenters will be severely reveng'd on them Pag. 〈◊〉 make sure work with them I suppose he means by cutting their Throats for that is as secure a way as any I know and totally extirpate them Whether our Author speaks these things experimentally from what some suffered in the late Rebellion or prophetically by vertue of his talent that way let the learned judge however we may see what manner of Spirit he and his Clients are of and how fit he is to be a Peace-maker and what manner of stuff he hath proposed to the Convocation he might well have called his Pamphlet the second part of the Healing Attempt As for those dreadful Comminations who can deny their being probable What passed between the Years 1635. and 1660. is sufficient to teach us that the usage of Presbyterians and Papists to those in their Power is much alike and that when they shall have the same or the like opportunities an indissolvible House of Commons to protect them and the Rabble to fight for them and their Brethren of Scotland to assist them they may expect the same or a worse Persecution for what fair Quarter can they look for when Kings are beheaded c. But in the mean time what would he have them to do to pull down their Churches themselves for fear the Dissenters should do it This is but for a Man to hang himself for fear of dying In the next National Deluge of Rebellion and Bloodshed which our Author Prophesies to be at hand and our Friends the Dissenters true Lovers of Peace desirers of Union and upholders of Monarchy in pursuance of their Solemn League and Covenant and for the establishment of their Godly Discipline shall bring upon us and therein overwhelm our Church and State they do not expect to escape nor are covetous to survive them and yet at present are not willing either to be the Authors of or to anticipate their own misery 2. Our danger of losing all our lately recovered Rights 〈…〉 if by our Divisions we should again let in the Common Enemy That our Church's parting with all her Liturgy Rites Ceremonies and what else our Author hath confidence enough to ask would not re-unite the Dissenters to the Establish'd Church I shall elsewhere endeavour to make apparent I shall therefore here only observe that in this time of danger all the Dissenters even the most Potent Interests as well as the lesser Sects would do well and wisely since better Motives will not prevail with them to re-unite themselves with the Church of England but to exhort the Church of England to go over to any of them is not so proper or decent The Agreement of the Church of England with Scripture and the Primitive and Catholick Church both in Doctrin and Government the moderation of her Reformation Her Apologies Defences and Vindications of her self and practices from the Calumnies of the Church of Rome and Separatists her Orthodoxness of Principles Regularity of Constitutions and Legal Establishments to which I might add the Personal obligations a great part of the Nation is under not to endeavour any alterations in the Government of either Church or State as by Law established all prohibit it and make it unequal and unreasonable And farther that if the Church of England will not for these and other reasons part with any Rite Ceremony laudable Custom or Constitutions till the Dissenters shall prove them unlawful or shew her better motives so to do yet there is therefore nothing the more danger of losing all our lately recovered Rights by letting in again the Common
concurr'd to the granting of them a Parliamentary Indulgence neither did her kindness end there but she entertained thoughts of making farther attempts to re-unite them to her Communion till their own carriage and ill returns made her pursue those Methods more coldly which by the outward Symptoms appear already to be without any hopes of the design'd success Therefore Pa● 〈…〉 as to the many Dissenters living in the confines of our Church the bringing them back to her Communion and thereby the Restauration of a mutual tranquillity peace and charity among all her Members and the recalling of that Christian Love which seems now to have forsaken us as well as the rest of Europe would be the greatest and most valuable blessing both to our Church and State can be attained on this side Heaven and he doth not deserve to be reckon'd in the number of good Christians who would not part with all his temporal enjoyments or even his Life it self were it at his own disposal to purchase it God forbid that any Clergy-men of the Church of England should hold any Rites or Ceremonies the two Sacraments often so called only excepted Church-Constitutions Canons Customs Benefices or Preferments whatsoever so dear unto them but that they would most gladly Sacrifice any or all of them to the Peace and Unity of the Church were it thereby attainable this Peace and Union are that which every one wishes and desires though few find solid ground whereon to fix their hopes while we mistake the means and methods to obtain them The Dissenters being unwilling to own the real Motives of their Separation from our Church have for a pretence cavell'd and excepted against some few Passages in our Liturgy some of our legal Constitutions and Establishments our Subscriptions Ceremonies Church Customs c. Wherefore several have thought that the alteration and removal of them would effect a Re-union but that this is at the best but a great mistake I shall think my self to have sufficiently proved when I have produced such Reasons as shall be effectual for the proving the following Position viz. Any alterations how many or great soever that can be made in our present Liturgy the utter abolishing all the Ceremonies prescribed or used in our Publick Worship and any alteration● that can be made in our Book of Constitutions and Canons or all these together should they be accomplished would never heal the Schisms that are amongst us and re●unite the Dissenters to the Church of England For 1. If the Liturgy Ceremonies and Constitutions in use in the Church of England were the causes of these Schisms and Separations then where these are not in use there would be no Schisms but we see the contrary In the United Provinces what a great and formal Schism did the Calvinists make upon the account of Five disputable Articles neither way accounted Heresie and what a severe Persecution did they raise against the Remonstrants which they could neither confute nor convince of error because they would not say as they would have them In Scotland the Church there by Law Established in the Reign of King Charles II. used no Liturgy no Cross after Baptism nor any other Ceremony that ever I could learn and yet the Dissenters there behaved themselves far worse to the Conformists than ever the Jews did to the Samaritans nay so barbarously as undeniably to evince that the true Presbyterian Spirit is no less full of rancour malice spleen hatred and when let loose from fear of Laws of Robberies Persecution and Bloodshed than the Papal If any fay this is nothing to us the English Presbyterians are not like the Scotch I answer God forbid they should but yet that any alterations in our Liturgy c. Abolishing of all our Ceremonies c. would never make an Union in our Church is apparent from hence that some few Years after 1640. and thence till 1661. When the Supreme Authority lodged as was pretended in the House of Commons with the assistance of the Rabble had disowned the King's Authority in Church and State and thrown all our Laws thereunto relating out of doors and our Liturgy Rites Ceremonies Church-customs Constitutions and Canons were all abolished and discharged so that if the cause of the Con-conformity Schism and Separation lay in any or all of them it must necessarily have been removed The Dissenters were so far from an Union among themselves 〈◊〉 ● by ● Mr. 〈…〉 that on the contrary they subdivided themselves into many minute Sects and Opinions and gave birth or revival to about forty more than our Church was formerly troubled with some whereof neither Amsterdam nor the World it self had ever seen before And this is so convincing an Argument being taught us by experience the School Mistress of Fools that I need add no more for the proof of my Assertion but I subjoin ex abundanti If our Liturgy should be altered our Ceremonies abolished and our Constitutions and Canons till they became insignificant so that one or two of the gravest wisest and most moderate of the Dissenting Preachers for the love of Peace and Union having Episcopal Ordination should come over to our Church and conform unto it yet the main Body of the Presbyterians who being unacquainted with Antiquity have credulously embraced the opinion of Lay Elders believe the Ordination of Presbyters by Presbyters to be valid and are too wise in their own Eyes to be informed The Independents who before separated from the Presbyterians and were numerous and powerful enough in Anno 1647. to supplant and displace them The Anabaptists and Quakers whose opinion of Liberty of Prophesying makes them uncapable of being united in Church Polity And all the other subdivisions and lesser Sects and Relicks of Schisms having the same Reasons must be supposed to continue in the same Separation as formerly and consequently by these means would never be reunited to our Communion and Church Some of their Teachers would be conscious to themselves of their own Ignorance and that their whining Tones useful impletives of Hums Huh's spittings Coughings c. Canting Phrases affected and unintelligible expressions so melting and ravishing to the Apron-proselytes would not meet with that applause and Admiration in a more judicious Auditory and a Congregation used to the more pertinent solid and rational Discourses made by the learned Clergy in the Conformable Churches and therefore will think it prudence rather to stay where they imagine themselves highly in esteem than to go where their defects will render them only tolerable Others since our Church is abundantly supply'd with learned and deserving Divines which will and may with good reason expect the best Benefices and their qualifications being none of the greatest they consulting their own interest perhaps will judge the Mens present gratuities together with their Wives superadded and secret kindnesses more eligible than the probability of being provided after a considerable long expectation with a small One Others as if
from them both And if all other pretences for the continuance of a Schism were removed perhaps this founded in the difference of Opinion would be made a new one by our Dissenters for many of them reproach as they imagine some eminent Divines of the Church of England by imposing on them the name of Arminians Their Doctrines of Solifidianism Imputative Righteousness the Instruments of Justification c. though founded in mistakes and wrong acceptations of words were by many of them imbib'd and receiv'd with that confidence and assurance that they had not patience to hear them explain'd much less doubted of and if there were no Schisms occasioned by them in those times of their Reformation for it would puzzle even a good Ramist to Analyze the several subdivided Sects and their Opinions which that great confusion produc'd Yet how they aspers'd revil'd and persecuted one another upon that account is well known if not Mr. B. can inform any Man who desires it more fully 4. Not only difference of Opinion in matters of Religion but also in the Civil Government is sufficient to make a separation and division in the Church especially if any Authority in Ecclesiastical Affairs be assigned to the supreme Magistrate for that neither the Papists nor Presbyterians will allow him It hath been often observed that Rebellion in the State is usually attended with a Schism in the Church Jeroboam of old introduc'd Idolatry to continue his Revolt lest Union in one Religion and Communion in one Church should restore Loyalty in the Kingdom The Feuds betwixt particular Families arising from the ambitious Emulation of the Prince's favour The Faction between the Covenanters and the Anti-Covenanters in Scotland The Attempts of the Anabaptists in Germany and the Fifth Monarchy-men here in England to omit the most famous Faction between the Guelphes and Gibellines both Parties of the same Religion and other ancient and forreign Instances I shall give you one Example sufficient alone to prove my Assertion The Mountain Conventiclers in Scotland who having under pretence of Conscience separated themselves from the establish'd Episcopal Church and also subdivided themselves from the Presbyterian Dissenters followed select Teachers of their own which being prosecuted according to the Laws of that Country King Charles the Merciful indulged some of them and licensed them to Preach which when he had done and they accepted they who before could by no Authority Laws and Penalties be restrained from flocking to them in multitudes quite deserted them and refused to hear them Preach Such was their pretense of Conscience but indeed Zeal for the Covenant aversion to the King 's Monarchical Authority and Supremacy c. So that if there were not one Rite Ceremony Vestment Gesture c. if it were possible retained or used in our Church nor even the Liturgy it self nor any Constitutions and Canons in force Yet the Old Kirk and Common-wealth Principles beginning to be revived again and the Question being not as some short-sighted Clergy-men imagine about Rites Ceremonies Liturgy Vestments Constitutions and such like small and inconsiderable things but whether a King or Common-wealth if a King from whence shall his Power be derived how limited c There needs no more than that Opinion of the King's Supremacy and that Adherence and Loyalty to Monarchy which the Church of England was formerly renowned for to cause the Dissenters all which are against the King's Supremacy and many of them Men of Common-wealth Principles whose Fingers itch after the Crown and Church-Revenues to separate and continue their Schism from the Church the Quarrel being really and truly more Political than Religious and of this the War against and Execution of King Charles the First the Fanatick-Plot against the Life of King Charles the Second which perhaps they will say was the Action of but some few particular Persons and the Carriage Conversation Writings and Actings of the N. Cs. in general in those times ever since especially this and the last year the transactions lately in Scotland and their precipitate abolishing of the King's Supremacy there are sufficient evidences to any Man who is in his right Senses 5. Different persuasions concerning Ecclesiastical Discipline See● 〈◊〉 En●●●● No●●● for●●● und●●● K. C● c. The Advocate of the Non-conformists as a reason of their Recusancy objects against Lay-Civilian's decreeing Persons to be excommunicated which he calls the exercising the Power of the Keys though this objection is absurdly urged by any Man who asserts the Presbyterian Model by Lay-governing Elders but the removal of this would do little to their satisfaction Neither would what the Author of the Healing Attempt proposes viz. In 〈◊〉 A condescending to settle the Power of Orders and Jurisdiction on Presbyters as well as Bishops according to the Learned Archbishop Usher 's Model c. satisfie them so long as there remain any Persons in our Church superior to them in degree the Power of Ordination and the exercise of Jurisdiction for that is not only inconsistent with their affected Parity but irreconcileable with that Vice gerency which they pretend as well as the Pope to derive from and hold under Christ as the Supreme Head of the Church Thus the Author of the Survey of Discipline tells them pag. 440 441. See 〈◊〉 Do●●ame'●● fence● the S●●● c. 〈◊〉 6. p. 〈◊〉 They had said that your Discipline is the Kingdom of Christ wherein your Presbyters hold as it were Christ's Sceptre That the Question between the Bishops and You is about no less matter than this whether Jesus Christ shall be King or no c. Or more truly and plainly whether they shall be his Vice-Roys and as Popes over several Parishes Lord it over their Flocks As for Lay-Chancellors tho it is some deviation from the Primitive Times when Bishops with the assistance of their Colleges of Presbyters managed all Affairs yet the Christian Magistrate afterwards committing many Causes to Episcopal Audience Silvanus the Famous Bishop of Troas delegated them with approbation Soc. 〈◊〉 cap. 〈◊〉 to the hearing of Lay-Men However I believe all the Clergy and Lay-Men living in the Communion of the Church of England would be glad the Reverend Fathers of it by a personal execution of the Episcopal Office with their Cathedral College in all cases of Conscience Heresie Schism Crime and Scandal for their own sakes if not for their Church's would remove that Objection As for the Learned Archbishop Usher's Model every body knows it was not his judgment but invented as an expedient to prevent things from coming to the utmost extremities that it doth not settle any Power of Orders as is insinuated upon Presbyters or of Jurisdiction but what they have already and may exercise as to the substance of it by vertue of their Order our Rubricks confirm'd by Statute and our Canon besides that Model excludes the lately invented Lay-Elders and is as little reconcileable to the Congregational way into which most
THE CHURCH of ENGLAND AND THE Continuation of the Ceremonies THEREOF Vindicated from the Calumnies of several late PAMPHLETS More particularly that Entitled The Vanity Mischief and Danger of continuing Ceremonies in the Worship of God Subscribed By P. M. a Minister of the Church of England To which are added Some farther Considerations of a Re-union of the Dissenters with the Church of England Wherein the true Causes of the Schism its Continuance and the means to put an end to it c. are proposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 D. Paul 1 Cor. 14.40 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conc. Nicaen 1. Can. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 S. Ignat. Epist ad Antioch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Id. ad Philadelph London Printed for S. Cook and are to be Sold by the Booksellers of London 1680. To the READER AMongst those many Factious and Schismatical Pamphlets which in these licentious times have passed the Press I chose after a considerable time's neglect at vacant hours to bestow some considerations on our Author 's because subscrib'd as is pretended by a Minister of the Church of England thinking thereby both to have had an opportunity of vindicating some innocent Ceremony against his ignorant or malicious Misrepresentation of it and that the appearing in our Holy Mother the Church of England's quarrel when beset with Domestick as well as Foreign Enemies forsaken by many of her formerly pretended Friends and risen up against by her undutiful and unnatural Sons howsoever weakly her Cause should be managed would yet be an argument of my sincere and constant duty and affection The Title of his Pamphlet is harsh bitter and malicious and intimates its Author to be either some ill designing Schismatick or blind Zealot bigotted to opposition and actuated as a Tool by a more intriguing Head however it might well be expected that such a bold Front should be followed with great attempts to demonstrate what that so largely intimates viz. That vain mischievous and dangerous Ceremonies are continued prescribed and used in the Divine Worship of the Church of England But upon a perusal his Pamphlet appeared to be a malicious and railing Invective an heap of undecent passionate and virulent expressions a fardle of spightful suggestions founded upon false and precarious Principles He hath taken leave with a supercilious pride to censure and Pythagorically to condemn and that in unbecoming terms all our Ceremonies without ever telling us either what he means by them and in which acceptation of that equivocal Word he desires to be understood or proving all or any of them to be unlawful or undecent And tho he hath no where asserted yet he hath every where presupposed that nothing may be lawfully used in the Worship of God or imposed on the Clergy or Congregation by Ecclesiastical Canons and Constitutions as matter of decency and order which is not positively and expresly commanded in the Text of the Scriptures which Position is altogether unsound and precarious and sufficiently without other arguments overthrown by that one Maxim That which is not prohibited is conceived to be allowed I always both lik'd and lov'd the Constitution of our English Monarchy as being such a middle betwixt a Despotick and Titular Government as seems to have laid the most probable and stable Foundations of a mutual and lasting happiness of both Prince and People It gives to the King a Prerogative and Supremacy large enough to make him the Father of his Country and to the Subject more liberties privileges and security than any other Monarchy much more inferior Government known to me always enough and unless more loyal in many instances too much and therefore I have with not a little admiration and regret often beheld some in the highest Station whose Interest as well as Duty it hath been to support it connive at encourage nay concur with its Enemies in the pulling of it down And others who live more happily and securely under it than they can under any Aristocracy much more Democracy imagining that they make not figure great enough in the Government of this Monarchy conspire the translation of it into a Common-wealth hoping to be more conspicuous when set at an higher Post as the reward of their intrigues and merits And I think the Church of England as already by Law Establish'd to be the best constituted of any now Visible the like excellent moderation between two extremes may be observed in her Publick Worship avoiding the multitude of needless Observancies and Ceremonies used in the Church of Rome inclining to Superstition and the rustical undecencies and clownish disorders introduced by some pretended Reformers tending no less to confusions and profaneness And tho I will not assert that our present Liturgy cannot admit of a greater accuracy in some Collects and Offices yet I believe it to be now the most perfect extant that there is nothing in it but what any Man how pious and conscientious soever if humble peaceable and duly inform'd without scruple may comply with and joyn in and that the making any considerable alterations in it would lay a new Stumbling-block before the Papists and make them more averse from coming over to our Church and scandalize many of our own Communion by our levity needless and frequent changing and modelling even our Religious Worship and Divine Offices to the humour of designing Persons and a State-Cabal and that all the alterations that may or can be made in it and our Constitutions both will never answer their purpose viz. effect a Comprehension and Re-union of the Dissenters with our Church for they as long as any thing remains will never want a pretence for their Separation And to an unconcern'd Spectator it cannot but appear strange and unaccomptable to see some Persons of the highest Orders and Degrees in the Church so zealous and impatient to make such alterations in its Liturgy Customs and Legal Establishments as must in all reason precipitate the subversion of it and to sacrifice its Honour Rites and Constitutions to the Pride of a few designing Persons so divided among themselves that they could never agree in any thing but in a joint enmity and opposition to the Government of the Church and State who herein aim not so much at an Union of themselves with us as at the destruction of our Ancient Hierarchy to make way to establish their novel Discipline this experience might have taught us But if the Persons concern'd will not be caution'd neither by the avowed Principles of their Adversaries nor by their Practices especially for this last half Century it will be easie without the trouble of erecting a Scheme to predict that when the Supreme Order of our Church-men shall be acknowledged useless by a publick concession of an equality of degrees and an identity of that Order with the hitherto and that truly supposed inferior then their Superiorities Privileges and Revenues will in a very little time expose them so prevalent a temptation to the Pride
great a change if due regard be had to those who are very well satisfyed that all things should continue as they are to be huddled up in hast by a few Persons the Affair is weighty enough to consult both the Universities and all the Clergy in England which may easily be done in the space of one Year at their several Visitations Late experience may convince us how inconvenient it is to impose the Sentiments of some few Persons in particular things to be generally approved of consented to and joyned in by the whole National Church Let all our Reverend Pious Pa● 〈…〉 and Learned Church-Men weigh well the manifold considerations that oblige them by all means to endeavour that the the advancement of the Protestant Interest at home and abroad For so his Argument if it be one should run Otherwise we must suppose K. William came not to preserve the Government of Church and State our Laws and Religion but to alter both and to make new Laws and Establish another Religion and our parting with them now will shew that either he never came to preserve them or that we give him little thanks for so doing For suppose a Gentleman's House on Fire and his Friend coming to his assistance should make it his chief care to save a Cabinet wherein he knew his Gold Jewels and chief Writings concerning his Estate were kept and should with the utmost difficulty and danger effect it and the Gentleman who own'd it should when brought to him take it and cast it into the Thames would not his Friend think himself ungratefully rewarded for his service and his care pains and hazard ill bestowed in the Preservation of that which when in danger the Owner pretended to value above all things ●bid but when preserved threw away Let it not give offence if I say that we shall be ungrateful towards Dissenters It seems our Author had run about half a Page in full cariere before he could stop but now remembring himself to have been guilty of an expression improper unwarrantable and offensive in joyning the Dissenters with Christ our Sovereign ●bid he strives to justifie or excuse it saying They were steady for the Preservation of the Church of England in the day of our distress against the taking away of the Test and Penal Laws by which they had smarted so much This expression almost makes me doubt whether I have not hitherto mistaken the design of his Pamphlet in judging it to be intended for an Harangue made in favour of the Dissenters against that Church which he pretends to be ingaged in for it is so far from truth in a literal sense that I know not how to understand it but as an Ironical upbraiding them with and exposing them for their carriage in those days However if the filling the Gazettes for so many Months with Addresses and in them the giving thanks for Liberty of Conscience granted by a dispensing Power designed in favour of the Papists and their weakning of the Church of England by their running back again into Conventicles upon that account if their promising in some Addresses implicitely to choose such Representatives as should comply with his Majesties desire in others explicitely to choose such as should take off the Penal Laws and Test then they were so ●bid if not then the contrary He adds There were more of our own Communion than of theirs that revolted from us and turned against the Laws This account differs from mine therefore I will not allow it but demand a Poll and will not believe him nor be determined without it and a Scrutiny upon it ●bid And now they have an Indulgence by Law they are contented with the liberty of serving God according to their Conscience and trouble not the Government with Petitions for more I am afraid that is too good News to be true for by all that I have read of them in History Chronology c. by their Intriguing for the Election of Members as formerly in all other so now in this Parliament and by all that I could see hear or observe to this day induced thereunto I do not believe they are or in this World ever will be quiet if our Author believed they were contented why did he trouble himself they need not his impertinent Advocacy nor will thank him for it Doth he think to draw them out of their Conventicles where they are now by this Act of Indulgence lodg'd as safe as a Thief in a Mill to dance after his Pipe So that he might easily have apprehended that this attempt for them if he had no design of his own to serve in it whether it took effect or not must needs be made in vain The meetings of Dissenters are as legal as ours I●●● As to the Laws of the Land which I doubt not are here referr'd to The Lawyers say Conventicles are against the Common Law and I suppose they are at least reductively and analogically contrary to Magna Charta I am sure they are contrary to many Statutes the Rubricks confirm'd by divers others and the Ecclesiastical Laws and Canons confirm'd by Royal Authority and consequently according to the whole body of our Laws are illegal and therefore I do not believe that one Statute of disputable Authority which only conditionally suspends the execution of some Penal Statutes yet unrepeal'd can make their Meetings as legal as ours He adds Ib●● None are by the Law of God or Man obliged to hold Communion with as upon the present terms As for the Law of God I refer the Author and all his dissenting Clients to those places of holy Scripture where Unity Love Peace Order Decency Unanimity Brotherly-kindness Charity Uniformity Humility Gentleness Mildness Obedience c. are commanded and where Pride Malice Envy Hatred Carnality Self-conceit Turbulency Contention Disorder Disobedience Atheism Apostacy Heresie Schism Separation Divisions Scandals Offences c. are forbidden All these the Laws of the Land both Civil and Ecclesiastical and I might add the Law of Nature and if they availed any thing the Laws of Reason Justice and Charity oblige all persons Foreiners not naturalized onely excepted to hold Communion with us upon the present terms as long as we remain a true Christian visible and National Church and nothing which is imposed upon all persons communicating with us is demonstrated to be directly sinful Ib●● And God may charge upon them viz. those who are for our Church its continuing as it now is and as his present Majesty hath often promised and once sworn to keep and maintain it as many have sworn never to endeavour any alteration in the Government of it and as our Author himself hath subscrib'd and declared his assent and consent to her Liturgies Articles c. all the blood that hath been shed from the foundation of the World from the blood of Abel unto the blood of those glorious Champions for our Religion and Laws Essex
Right God who is the Author of Humane Nature must be the giver of it but that he never gave any such Right to Mankind appears from Exod. 20.4 5 6. Because God who is the Author of the Law of Nature is none of those short-sighted Legislators which make a latter Law contrary to the former and the Moral Law hath always been expounded as explanatory but never as contradictory to the Law of Nature neither will it help to say that tho God might contradict the Law of Nature yet man cannot for both the Law in Deut. 13.6 c. and the approved practice of Hezekiah in 2 Kings 18.4 c. quite overthrow that pretence nor will it avail to say that Idols are not Gods for besides that the Heathen did not Worship the Idol as the God it self but some as the Representation or Visible Resemblance and others as the Body or Vehicle of the God which they supposed to be present therein there is the same reason for the Dictates of Conscience to be free in the one Case as in the other and the whole Worship must be supposed agreeable to the Dictates of their Consciences since no other reason can be assigned for the Institution of it 2. If this were true then Hezekiah and Josiah for what they did 2 Kings 18.4 and 23.4 c. to 17. were most wicked Persecutors and unjust Invaders of that first and chief Right and yet they are both highly commended for what they did herein Ch. 18.3 c. 23. v. 24 25. 3. It would from hence follow that if any Men from Turkey the East or West-Indies should come hither and follow their Mahometan Pagan or Diabolical Worship or if this new Indulgence as the late Rebellion should cause a Resurrection of the Adamites and they should go naked through the Streets to their Conventicle which is as justifiable as their being naked at it they must not be hindred by the Magistrate for fear of Invading that first and chief Right of Humane Nature of following the Dictates of Conscience in the Service of God Lastly the Dictates of Conscience are by no Divines affirmed to be the Rule of it And if they are the first and chief Right of Humane Nature in the Service of God I see no reason why they should not be so as much or rather much more in all other actions of the life and then the Jews in killing the Apostles John 16.2 and St. Paul in Persecuting the Christians Acts 9.1 c. ought not to be hindred Or the Anabaptists in Germany the Presbyterians in Scotland the Dragoons in France all pretending Conscience for their several Barbarities to be interrupted and every thing must be allowed for which the Dictates of Conscience may be pretended for fear of abridging this first and chief Right of Humane Nature The Act of Indulgence sets all Men at liberty and it comes not long after a very fierce Persecution Our Author by virtue of an Act of Indulgence which sets all Men at liberty makes an unhandsome reflection upon K. Charles II. in his Grave and his two Houses of Parliament in calling the Late Legal Moderate Prosecution of the Dissenters unto which their Caballing Intriguing and Plotting provoked the Government a fierce a very fierce Persecution Not to mention that the Presbyterians were the first among the Reformed who taught and practised Persecution or the carriage of that people where ever they have gotten the Secular Power of their party or the concurrence of it and particularly here in England betwixt the Years 1640 and 1660. It is to be considered that during the pretended Persecution no Man was under any legal pressure for holding any Opinion or performing any religious exercise in his own Family but only for his external action not necessary to Religion and his publick frequenting of and joyning in such Assemblies as experience had taught to have been dangerous to the Government and therefore prohibited under a pecuniary penalty and farther that this prosecution was founded upon a Law invented and consented unto by the People's Representatives in whose Persons the whole Commons of the Kingdom are virtually interpretatively and determinatively comprehended So that by consequence if it was a Persecution the people persecuted themselves or at least the Representatives the persons represented which is not to be supposed they would do under that Notion Therefore in common Reason and Charity it must be supposed That the Parliament the grand Council of the Nation advised and consented to that as to all other Laws for the publick good and safety a moderate Coercion of such illegal Assemblies and a wholesom Statute to prevent a factious and dangerous Schism and establish an Uniformity in divine Worship though time and experience have proved it as ineffectual as the abolishing of Liturgies Ceremonies Church-Orders and Constitutions c. were any so senseless as to try the experiment would now be to reduce them to Unity Order Peace or Reason We can impose these things upon none but the Ministers and their Clerks Pag 〈…〉 Then all others being unconcerned may be satisfied And if nothing be imposed on them What is it they complain of or would be eased from Why doth our Author rage rave and be in such a mighty heat in the behalf of Dissenters for the pulling down such Ceremonies as are imposed on none but the Minister and Clerk cannot he let the Minister and his Parish-Clerk keep their Ceremonies if they please as well as let him have a May-pole who hath a mind to one Ib●● As knowledg encreaseth Zeal for Ceremonies will grow more and more ridiculous That is a great mistake Had it been for his purpose he might more truly have said As Knowledg encreaseth opposition to Ceremonies will vanish For Scrupulosity the parent of Opposition if conscientious is the Child of Ignorance It is generally believed that there is no Rite Ceremony or Custom enjoined and practised in the Church of England but the same is fully and sufficiently explained maintained defended and vindicated by the Learned Mr. Hooker Dr. Falkener Dr. Comber c. to the satisfaction of all free indifferent and competent Judges whether Natives or Foreiners And as far as I could ever observe the more knowing discreet and pious Men are so much the more conformable to the established Church and accordingly it is in every Man's observation that the more learned and judicious Men of all persuasions Opinions and Sects are the most moderate and the vulgar and unthinking Herd the most violent and furious hence the Epithete of blind Zeal And that to be doubtful timorous and scrupulous in things indifferent of small moment and not essential to Religion are symptoms of little knowledg weak judgment and an erroneous Conscience appears sufficiently from the Apostles Discourse in the 14 and 15. Chapters of his Epistle to the Romans As to our Authors new Project of the Parliaments making a Law that the Members of both Houses shall
who is dumb and deaf or a Natural who cannot be instructed being born of Believing Parents and baptized may be saved and he who being many Years sick cannot go to Church and yet it is lawful to appoint publick Prayers Catechizing and Preaching A Man born in the Country of a Mahometan or Pagan Prince of Christian Parents may want both the preaching of the Word and administration of the Sacraments and yet be instructed sufficiently to his Salvation and we here not only may but also must use them God himself required other and more perfect Service in the Land of Canaan than he accepted in the Wilderness And accordingly the Christian Church hath practised otherwise in times and places of Danger and Persecution than of Peace and Security Those famous Men of our Reformation mentioned in Pag. 8. being perhaps prepossessed with a good opinion of what they had been used to in their Pilgrimage or exasperated against Popery that being the cause of it by Persecution or perhaps being too far transported by a well-meaning Zeal might approve of the abolishing of innocent and decent Vestments whilst other good Men might think there was too much abolish'd before since the abolishing of any lawful Thing or Custom might by giving offence to the Papists as being the effect of Passion and a perverse Humour and not of conviction of Judgment be an obstacle to the Reformation Every good Man's opinion and judgment cannot nor is fit to be made the Standard of a National Reformation and therefore herein certainly the wise Queen was directed by Providence or at the least more in the right than those good Men for the preserving and continuing the use of them was far more agreeable to that excellent temper and moderation which that great Man Iren. pag 121 c. the then Dr. Stillingfleet so justly commended and all good and wise Men do the same both in our English Liturgy and the French Prayers and indeed it behoved them to act like the Reformers of the Old Church and not the Founders of a New and what was corrupt only needed Reformation and not what was pure It may be observed that those excellent Bishops judged the use of those Vestments a thing in it self indifferent and so complyed with the continuance and injunction of them and if all others had imitated their Piety Peace and Prudence this unhappy strife about them had never been The Apostles did not at all favour the imposing humour Pag. 9. The Holy Ghost and the Apostles were only for requiring necessary things Acts 15 28. Here our Author catches at the word Necessary without any regard to the sense wherein it is used The next Verse enumerates those necessary things That ye abstain from meats offered to Idols and from blood and from things strangled and from fornication Where of these four things necessary three of them are so only in respect of the Jews which they were obliged not to offend as being a probable course to hinder their conversion but rather to abstain from the lawful use of indifferent things Rom. 14.14 for that the first of them is lawful appears from 1 Cor. 8. and that the two next are Moses's Ceremonial Law being understood as a temporary positive Law obligatory only to the Jewish Nation and that only till our Saviour's Crucifixion is evident by common Reason and Custom I might observe for my purpose against our Author That the same Holy Ghost who enjoined the Gentile Converts to forbear the use of some iudifferent things for fear of giving offence to Jews yet zealous for the Law of Moses amongst which they conversed being always consonant to himself by this Text commands us to continue the use of other indifferent things lest we should scandalize the Papists not only in these three Kingdoms but in all the Western Churches by a wilful perverse and unnecessary secession and departure from them in the use or disuse of lawful and indifferent Things Customs and Ceremonies for where there is the same Reason there is the same Law So that this inconsiderate Author could scarcely have cited a Text more fatal to his Cause This precedent the Apostle's practice 1 Cor. 9.19 c. and the Scripture Canon 1 Cor. 14.40 had they been duly imitated observed and obeyed the greatest part of the Schisms and Divisions which have unhappily rent and distracted the Christian Church had either been prevented or soon reunited 4. The manifold mischiefs of these Impositions Pag. 1● No Man can shew any good they have done c. I know no other Impositions upon our Congregations but those I have already mentioned and let our Author tell us either which of them is unnecessary and hurtful and he would have abolished or what else he means by Impositions that so we may know whether they are so mischievous as he talks of The good they were designed to do was to testifie our reverence to Antiquity and our holding Communion with the Catholick Church of Christ to justifie our Reformation and prevent giving any scandal to the Papists and to cause all things in our own Church to be done decently and in order of which if they have fallen short we may thank some Men who have been turbulent and unquiet proud peevish and schismatical and troubled with the humor and spirit of contradiction What follows in our Author assigned as the mischief of Impositions is neither true nor of Date ancient enough to be so nor is an Argument fit for a Divine to use in Church-matters but seems to be the passionate resentment of some covetous ambitious Person lately candidate for some Civil or Military Employment and discontented for the missing of it the venting the spleen of some well-willed to the Good Old Cause or the shallow and mistaken observation of some small pretender to Politicks who usually prognosticates the Prosperity or Fate of the Kingdom according to the measures of the Elevation or Depression of his own Sect tho the most factious and seditions in it and of Principles the most destructive to its Government As for that which is cited out of a great Man in our Church Ibid. Or. Stilingfleet ●ren Pref. 9. in these words Without all controversie the main Inlet of all the distractions confusions and divisions in the Christian World hath been by adding other Conditions of Church-Communion than Christ hath made When that Learned Man shall be at leisure to reconcile these words with his own in the two following Pages of the same Preface and 122 c. of his following Book and shall be farther pleased to tell us which are the conditions of Church-Communion that Christ hath made it will be easie to determine whether the adding other hath been the main Inlet of all the distractions confusions and divisions in the Christian World but nothing can be inferred from such general expressions The mischiefs I am speaking of are innumerable some of them are reduceable to these six Heads 1.
Mischiefs to the Church 2. To the State 3. To Souls 4. To Piety 5. Mischiefs in promoting a mighty increase of Prophaneness and all kind of wickedness 6. Hindring a world of good 1. Pag. 11. Mischiefs to the Church Zeal for Mens devices begets in people a strange Levity of Mind makes them such triflers in Religion that they disregard the great Interests of God and his Church in the World They are not sensible of the desolations of Gods Churches in France Orange Piedmont the Palatinate Ireland c. It might be answer enough for me to say that all this is nothing to the purpose both because the Persecutions and Massacres in these several places were not made upon the account of external Ceremonies but partly upon a secular account and partly upon a religious where then Communion and Doctrines of the Church and not Ceremonies were controverted and because the Church of England doth not impose Ceremonies or Mens devices upon any under penalty of Persecution But I add that these instances disprove what they are brought to confirm for the desolations of God's Churches in France Piedmont c. are so far from proving that Zeal for mens devices begets in people a strange Levity of mind and makes them such triflers in Religion c. That they evince nothing or else the quite contrary that such as raise Persecutions upon the account of Religion are not Men of light Minds or Triflers in it or disregard the Interests of God and his Church though perhaps they prosecute them the wrong way and by undue Mothods for it is evident they if without sinister design pursue what they think to be God's and his Church's Interest more than their own The Kings of Spain weakened their Kingdoms and exhausted their Treasures by Banishing the Moors and erecting the Inquisition and the French King cannot be supposed to gain by the Flight of his Subjects their ceasing to trade and withdrawing their effects neither was it trifling they fled from Do you Sir who in the behalf of the Dissenters clamorous enough without assistance with open jaws set up the Cry of Persecution here in England and call the French King the Duke of Savoy their Armies Officers and Dragoons Triflers What the Church of England-men which this Pamphleteer abusively calls Zealots for these things did in reference to a Popish Successor was agreeable to their Principles both of Loyalty and Honesty They remembred that tho to do evil that good may ensue be a Doctrine received in the Church of Rome yet it is not so in the Church of England They well knew that an Act for Exclusion notwithstanding any Infallibility or Omnipotency a Parliament can pretend to would be still in it self unjust as contrary to the Laws of God and nature and to the Rules of Equity and common Reason void in it self as being contrary to the Fundamental Laws of the Land and the very Constitutions of the Monarchy and mischievous in its Events as that which would most certainly have involved these three Kingdoms in a most Bloody Civil War and perhaps have brought an Invasion from abroad in upon us to boot But behold the tender Conscience of our Dissenters they cry out of Persecution upon the Levying a small pecuniary mulct for the frequenting an unnecessary and seditious Conventicle in pursuance of divers Laws made by their own Representatives but would exclude an Hereditary Prince from his undoubted Right and Inheritance by a Law they were no ways authorized to make and involve three Nations at the least in a Bloody War and all the miseries attending it that so they might again swallow up the Crown Lands to maintain the Grandeur of their Hogan-Mogan-Ships in a new Common-Wealth and all this under pretence of the Preservation of the Laws Liberties and the Protestant Religion the name of which it is probable will grow as odious to after Ages as that of Popery is to us by reason of such who shroud all their ill designs and crimes under that usurped affected and abused Notion The Scripture is our only guide of Unity 〈◊〉 Uniformity is deformity and confusion when Men appoint other terms of Ministerial Service and Church-Communion than are prescribed in Gods Word If the Scripture is the only guide of Unity let our Author tell me why his Clients the Presbyterians Independents Quakers c. are not guided into Unity by it since they all have it and pretend to follow it and yet are far enough from Unity The Scripture it is true prescribes and commands Unity but never actually effected it without the interposition of Ecclesiastical Authority as in the Primitive Church Ecclesiastical and Civil as in the Reformation of our Church or Civil as in Spain by the Inquisition in France by Edicts c. That Uniformity is or can be deformity and confusion I shall think to be a contradiction till our Author shews how it can be reconciled Those terms of Communion which he intimates to be prescribed in Gods Word he would do well to shew us or tell us where we may find them if he can They would do more if clearly discovered and demonstrated towards the Union of our differences than a Thousand such railing Pamphlets and the Intrigues and Politick Desings contrived by Male-contents and as hotly pursued by such Tools as he for the involving us into the same miseries that followed upon the last Rebellion 2. 〈◊〉 3. Mischiefs to the State Zeal for Ceremonies begets in Men a contempt of Publick Rights and Boundaries This is a very strange discovery which our Author hath made but it is so incredible that he could not in reason have supposed that we should take it merely upon his Word Therefore he would have done well to have inform'd us farther how a Zeal for Ceremonies begets a contempt of Publick Rights whether by an Univocal or Equivocal Generation If any Man should argue thus This Man is zealous for Ceremonies therefore he contemns Publick Rights and Boundaries would not all Men wonder at the Inference The Consequence will better follow on the contrary side thus This Man disturbs the Peace and Order of the Church and makes no conscience of breaking the Ecclesiastical Laws and Constitutions and therefore it is probable that out of the same Principle of disobedience and humour of opposition he will contemn Publick Rights and Boundaries and all obligations of the Conscience to obedience set by the Civil Law also But our Author proceeds When they dote so much upon vanities in Worship as to inslave their Consciences and to despise their Christian liberty it is no wonder if they sell at any rate their own and others Civil Rights and Privileges Surely this is spoken of the Inhabitants of the Moon or some Utopian Countries for most Men here have as little Zeal and as much contempt or at least neglect of the daily Service of the Church as our Author supposes them to have of the Publick Rights and Boundaries
To joyn in the Publick Worship of the Establish'd Church though it be supposed there are Ceremonies and what he hath no less maliciously than falsly insinuated vanities in it would not be to despise our Christian liberty but to make use of it Whereas he who scruples it either is weak and thinks he hath no liberty in that case or which is worse is sullen and will not use it But suppose Men despise their Christian Liberty though I understand not how the Members of the Church of England can be said to do so will they sell therefore their Civil Rights and Privileges at any Rate I wonder our Author is not ashamed of such gross non sequitur's As for any indirect means which may be supposed to have been used in Juries Elections Corporations c. I think the Dissenters both in modesty and justice ought to have held their tongues as having by far exceeded the Conformists for as far as I could ever see hear read observe or learn they were much more diligent and industrious used more indirect courses and underwent greater fatigues to uphold and carry on a Faction against the Government and Laws than these some whereof being not so designing they usually drew over to their Party were either to maintain the Right or countermine their attempts The best course which can be taken to recover God's blessing the Church's Union and the Kingdom 's Peace Riches Wealth Strength and Reputation is not the Parliaments or rather some few turbulent Spirits strugling as our Author says with the Prince nor the maintaining an unquiet and never to be satisfied Faction to confront the Government or extort Privileges or Liberties from the King by the diminution of his Prerogative the glorying in the Doctrin of Resistance under the pretence of Preservation of the Protestant Religion and the Laws or the encouraging of Dissenters to make the Schism greater for these do but make one Party jealous of another and neglect the Publick Good to oppose each other but a true practical Piety towards God a Loyalty and quiet Subjection to the Prince and a permission of him to manage his own Province a Charity and mutual Love and Unity without interessing our selves in much less hating and separating from one another for our respective private Opinions and an industrious following every one his own lawful Vocation and Employment 3. Mischief to Souls Pag. 1● For trifles there hath been exercised a mad Tyranny over Mens faculties This is that which cannot be made good for all Men have and since the times of Popery every Man had liberty by the Laws of England to be of any Judgment or Opinion he should think most probable and freedom for his faculties and the exercise of them where they could claim any right to do so in their own Houses and Families nor if a Friend Stranger Traveller or a Neighbor or two happened to be present was there any danger or penalty thereby incurr'd But that every Man under pretence of Conscience should therefore have liberty for all his outward actions and be allowed for his own private advantage to make publick Harangues to disturb the Peace and seduce his Neighbors by the propagation of a Schism dangerous to both Church and State is that which doth not follow even the Dissenters themselves when they had power in their Hands being Judges as appears by their carriage to the Clergy of the Church of England in the late times That a pretence of Conscience where nothing evidently sinful in it self is positively enjoyned will not justifie a Man in Schism or exempt him from Penal Laws as having a Right by the Law of Nature to be tolerated therein I shall imagine my self to have proved till I see farther The little things imposed are a means of depriving the Church of the Service of many useful Ministers that are apt to teach 〈◊〉 16. and would be glad to give the Bread of Life to those Souls that are by the Drones left in the broad way to destruction The Church of England wants not Ministers that are apt to teach but in some places Persons that will be taught and in others maintenance for the Teachers No place where there is a competent visible subsistence needs to want a Preacher Our Universities can supply another Kigndom In the mean time this needs none of their assistance if the Usurping Ministers and Encroaching Pastors would return the straying Sheep home to their own rightful Pastors and proper Folds whence designedly they have drawn them for their own advantage they would thereby do better Service to God his Church the Kingdom their own and the seduced and deluded Mens Souls than possibly they can any other way If any are Drones let them be amended or removed they may well be spared Ibid. Christ commands his Ministers to Preach and qualifies them for that Service Christ commands none to Preach but those which he calls by his Church and he who intrudes into the Sacred Office without an Ordinary Mission unless he demonstrates by Miracles an extraordinary one can shew no tolerable reason why he should not be esteemed and used as either an Euthusiast or Impostor neither can any qualifications though exceeding those of other Men which yet never have been found in them be reasonably laid in the balance with the Peace Order and Unity of the Church and the Love and Charity of the Neighborhood Our Author says in Page 17th The Ruin of Souls may be for want of the Labours of those able Ministers whom we exclude for toys I know none are excluded but such who exclude themselves and the more shame for them if they will be so humoursome and pettish as to shut out themselves because they cannot in every thing have their Wills and the more trivial the things objected are the more evident it is that somewhat else besides and more than Conscience which is pretended is the true cause of their Non Conformity But yet I can see no such great danger of the ruin of Souls more than now there is if they were as silent as they are clamorous Salvation in another sense than that in which it is usually taken being the common end of at least a great part of that noise and disturbance which is made by that Party and I heartily wish that their Hearers laying aside that blind zeal out-side Piety and unreasonable opposition to the Government both of Church and State in which they please themselves and whereby they are distinguish'd from other Men they would by the regular Piety Loyalty Peace Humility Obedience and Charity of their Lives convince the World of the excellency and sincerity of their Teachers 〈◊〉 18. 4. Mischiefs to Piety The most Learned Divines and the Wisest States-men in the World are but bunglers when they take upon them to add unto Gods Worship what he hath not appointed If our Author either could or would tell us what Worship God hath particularly appointed
greatest prevarications his small abilities made him capable of It is true his Pamphlet being stuff'd with false Principles railing Invectives and scurrilous Reflections and wanting proper Motives to persuade or solid Arguments to convince can be supposed to operate only upon Persons of a deluded fancy prepossess'd intellect and infirm judgment and if he designed it for such as it is probable he did it may not altogether in respect of them be without some though evil effects However by the writing of it in such a manner he hath given very great occasion to others to think either that he for filthy lucres sake conformed to the Church Constitutions as by Law Established not following what proved most excellent to his judgment but what was most grateful to his desires because most agreeable to his Interests and Circumstances and that he declared his Assent and Consent outwardly to what he did not inwardly approve of and that with such a reluctancy against the Sentiments of his mind as could not be durable and therefore they have now made a violent eruption to the contradiction of his actions and the discovery of his Hypocrisie or that if being indifferent he did not disallow of what he did that now when he thought some alterations would be made in our Liturgy Canons c. with the same indifferency in things of Conscience and Zeal for Interest he strove to be one of the first to condemn what before he swore subscrib'd or declared his Assent and Consent unto and frequently used undecently and as I hope vainly thinking that being esteemed a Borderer upon Fanaticism though by such an odious contradiction of himself he should therefore be thought the better qualified for and nearer to preferment as if Hypocrisie Levity or Prevarications were the most eminent endowments and such as would most effectually recommend him thereunto Our Church in her being persecuted both on the one hand by Popish Hereticks and on the other by Fanatick Schismaticks hath often been said to be like to her Lord in that he was Crucified between two Thieves and now our Author if his Subscription be really true hath made Her resemble Him in another of his Sufferings viz. in being betrayed by a pretended Disciple and that as it is thought and to be feared in hopes of what his Predecessor more expresly covenanted for viz. a Money-reward Lastly upon the same supposition he hath given the World a notorious instance how necessary it is to continue the Impositions Constitutions Subscriptions c. enjoyned by our Church which he so much and so leudly declaims against for if neither the ingenuity of his Education the Dictates of his Conscience the Precepts of Holy Scripture the Canons and Constitutions of the Church nor his own Oaths Subscriptions Declarations and daily Practice could govern his prejudice malice or sinister designs how imprudent would it be either to remove those fences or lessen that security or cancel those obligations which the Piety and Prudence of our Superiors have placed for the preservation of our Church and so by a contemptible prostitution of them to the crafty pretensions of our insincere Adversaries expose our selves to no purpose but that of an insolent ridicule from the pride of a designing Enemy Our Author whosoever he is especially if what the Subscription to the Pamphlet intimates for his base and malicious prevarications hath evidently incurred the Excommunication ipso facto decreed in Canon 6. the Prosecution of him by virtue of which and the judicial inflicting of that or some other Ecclesiastical censure in salutem animae morum correctionem is a thing by the Constitutions of our Church committed to his Ordinary to whose care and discretion I recommend him Some farther Considerations of a Re-Union of Dissenters with the Church of England 1st IT is to be considered that the Dissenters could not without both a tacite reprehension of themselves and a supposition of our being very good natur'd and easie to be imposed upon have desired from the Church of England so much as a Toleration of their Publick Profession because the giving of it is contrary to both their own judgment and practice Mr. Calvin the Author of the Presbyterians from whom they derive both name and thing as also his Successor Theod. Beza taught and practis'd the Pe●secutions of others differing from them in matters of Religion as the Papists do under the notion of Hereticks Of the same Opinion generally are all that Sect as appears not only by the Writings of those two already nam'd but by those of the Divines of Bearne Tigure Schaffhuse Basil c. by the Decree of the Synod of Dort against the Remonstrants and their Brethren here in England wrote against a Toleration of any differing from themselves from Sion College to the Assembly at Westminster An. 1645. And for matter of practice the burning of Servetus and their other transactions of Affairs at Geneva the long actual Persecution of the Remonstrants by the Contra-Remonstrants in Holland And the Carriage of that Party here when they had usurp'd Power in the Year 1642 c. was such towards the Clergy and others of the Church of England as would in all Justice Reason and Conscience stop their Mouthes from all complaints against her for ever at least till the Burthen laid on them by Law becomes heavier than what they impos'd on her by Illegal Force to omit the unjustice violence robberies barbarities tumults and insurrections done committed and raised in Scotland under pretence of Religion are sufficient Evidences That their Younger Brethren the Independents are of the same Principle their attempts here 〈…〉 their Persecution of the Quakers their making it penal for any Man to abstain from his work or to observe the Christians grand Festival called Christmas-day and their other Laws relating to Religion c. in New-England are Testimonies too convincing to leave a place for doubting The Anabaptists by their Extravagancies committed under pretence of Conscience and Religion have discredited themselves in Germany c. And might no doubt if numerous enough be dangerous elsewhere The Fifth-Monarchy-Men though but an handful shewed in this City what we might have expected from them had their number enabled them to prosecute their designs The Quakers are yet in their Minority both as to Age and Number how they will behave themselves if they live to attain both or whether they will then continue in their seeming innocence is not yet known Hereby it appears I hope sufficiently that the Dissenters in general are against a Toleration of other Religions and therefore can have no Plea for it founded in Conscience Right or Debt Yet so far is the disposition of the Church of England from any Persecution of the Dissenters though justifiable both by their own Principles and Practices and the equal Rule of retaliation for Religion as our scurrilous and malicious Author insinuates falsly and brings a railing accusation against her that she hath at least
of our Modern Presbyterians seeing themselves supplanted by the Independents have degenerated as the Episcopacy by Law Established and therefore would be little satisfactory to the Dissenters or available to the effecting a re-union I might add that their insisting only upon Power of Orders and Jurisdiction the two chief Prerogatives and distinguishing Characters of Bishops no otherways necessary to the discharge of the Ministerial Function in a Parochial Congregation than as by our Church prescribed and by our Laws allowed and commanded is an evidence that it is not conscience which troubles them but the old contention which shall be greatest that their desire of the multiplication of Bishops or rather the Consecration of Chorepiscopi to the number of the quondam Rural Deans must be supposed to proceed from hopes of their advancement at least to some of those many small Sees or from some worse design As for the words of the Disciplinarian we may see by them how far the Presbyterian Principles when asserted in their proper Latitude will extend and that the Prosecution of them would abolish not only Canonical Ordination that Spiritual and Paternal Oversight of both Pastors and Flock which would tend to the Peace Unity and Good of the whole but also the Episcopal Order it self which immediately succeeded to the Administration of the Apostles and hath continued in the Government of the Primitive and Universal Church of Christ in all Ages from their Deaths till the last Century As it would be a very bold attempt to presume to abolish remove or weaken the Primitive and Catholick Government of the Church by Episcopacy which was evidently at least Jure Apostolico Established in the first Ages of it to introduce the novel humane invention of Presbytery So it would not be a little imprudent and unsafe in regard of State Government since it would undermine the Monarchy by the very same means and methods as Popery viz. by depriving the King of his Supremacy in all Causes and over all Persons by elevating the Presbytery above him by exalting every little Mas John to be a Popeling and investing him with the same absolute Authority in his Parish as the Pope of Rome challenges over the World by an exemption of the Presbyterian Teachers from the Civil Jurisdiction making their assembling of Synods to depend upon their own and not the Prince's pleasure and by the Preaching their Doctrins of the lawfulness and their obligations to propagate and defend their Religion and Kirk-Government by Arms will certainly by a gradual diminution of the King's Prerogative and Authority lessen his Power to that degree that whensoever they please to exert their democratical Principles and animate the Populace easily influenced under pretence of Conscience with the hopes of plunder into such an Insurrection as may reduce this Kingdom if not the three to the same or a worse condition than they were in in 1641. c. And thereby the Government of both Church and State be swallowed up in Anarchy and Confusion out of which if they become not a prey to some Puissant Foreign Enemy the vast expences of Blood and Treasure the Nation will be put to the many divisions and separate interests will be in it the contentions of the Schismaticks which shall be uppermost c. will hinder a re-establishment of Monarchy or a settlement of any form of Government more perfect than that which is most agreeable to the Presbyterian and Independent Discipline of a Democracy which amongst so fickle and unconstant People must needs be short-liv'd and during its continuance by reason of its own proper inconveniencies and inherent defects is but a degree above confusion III. The Schism which the Dissenters have made from the Church of England whatsoever may be pretended was not really made upon the account of any thing contained in our Liturgy any Ceremonies in use in our Publick Worship or any subscriptions enjoyn'd by our Laws as in themselves contrary to their Judgments in case of Conscience as appears because 1st None of the Dissenters have hitherto with any cogent Arguments proved any of them unlawful and therefore can have no reasonable cause or lawful Warrant to either make or continue a Schism if it be said They doubt of the lawfulness of some of them I answer That is not enough to excuse the Schism which unless it be to avoid the doing of that which is evidently sinful is always unlawful and criminal The Obligations to Order Peace Unity Charity and Communion with the Church of Christ to obedience to our Ecclesiastical Superiours their Constitutions and Canons and to our Civil Governors and their legal establishments in indifferent things and the circumstantials of Religion are derived from Divine Authority of an Eternal Nature and so far binding as not to admit of a Relaxation unless plain and notorious sin be positively commanded for otherwise to separate would be both to omit a certain duty for fear of being guilty of a possible mistake and to commit an evident and aggravated sin of many pernicious consequences to avoid the transgression of a single Precept either not existent or at least not evident Doubts under pretence of Conscience are usually made to shroud a perverse disobedient humour or some sinister design not willing to appear above-board Thus a Man being called to give an evidence which he knows will endanger his Friends Interest Liberty or Life not willing either to damnifie him or perjure himself as a mean expedient to prevent both he pretends that he did not hear the words or that he doth not remember them So here the Dissenter not being able to prove any thing contained in our Liturgy or the innocent and decent gestures of standing and kneeling observed in the use of it for nothing else is enjoyned the Congregation in our Publick Worship unlawful nor willing to own the true causes of his Schism pretends he doubts but the unhappiness of it is that in the former case the answer doth not avoid the perjury nor in the latter the doubts take away the Hypocrisie and guilt of Schism and are no more than mere evasions for there is nothing but hath or may be doubted or at least be pretended so to be and if every such pretence should be allowed nothing can be commanded nor no order decency or uniformity observed 2. The greatest part by far of the Dissenters are such as never examined or seriously considered our Liturgy Articles Rites Ceremonies Constitutions or Customs or any other of their Teachers pretences for their separation a considerable number of them are such as never saw nor heard them and are not qualified either to read or understand them and scarce any of them can say in their own defence that they have sought any satisfaction at home by reading impartially such Treatises as the Divines of our Church have written to explain defend and vindicate them or abroad from the several Pastors under whose care and charge Providence and the
Laws of the Land have placed them and which they might and ought if any doubts and scruples had arose in their minds to have had recourse to and consulted And indeed the frequenters of Consenticles consisting of Petty-coat Proselytes the vulgar sort of Men who are illiterate ignorant and unstable and some few Men of better quality that sometimes grace those Meetings with a fair out-side and the attendance of a Coach and Lacquey whose infirmities and defects made it necessary or convenient for them to give up themselves fortunes and Religions to the conduct and choice of their Wives for all such Persons it is more fit and necessary to be well instructed in the Church Catechism by their own proper Pastors than to take upon them to judge of or determine controversies in Religion of which they are no more qualified to be Judges than blind Men of colours So that being no competent Judges of such matters they can have no right to plead that the conviction of their judgments that such and such things in our Church are unlawful is the cause of their separation because it presupposes them to have judged and determined in a case in which no Wise Man much less any Church or Synod ever allowed them to have any right so to do But the truth is some suck in Fanaticism with their Mothers Milk are initiated with the Principles of it in their Infancy continue under the prejudices of that education and inherit their Parents Schism and have no more reason for it than the ignorant Papists Jews and Mahometans have for their Religions Some are Dissenters upon Worldly accompts and for temporal advantages as the promotion and encrease of Trade gaining of Custom advance of Fortune conveniencies of Marriage pleasing of Relations friendship of Favourites c. Others are Persons of a fickle and unstable temper affect novelties and as if the Religion of our Parents Age and our Infancy as well as their Houses and our last Years Clothes were out of fashion and unsuitable for us think to recommend their judgments to the World by their singularity and new Choice and alledge the Apostles Precept of proving all things for their justification Others being Persons of strong passions but weak judgments are of a ductile temper and wrought upon by the whining tone affected cant fustian Language stuff and unintelligible Phrases of their Holders forth not discerning that all these are but the designed artifices and cunning craft whereby they lye in wait to deceive sacrifice to their own nets and enhaunse their Glory by leading silly Women Captive Others well inclin'd without any persuasion of the unlawfulness of any thing in our Church's Doctrin Discipline or Constitutions or so much as doubting of it hearing these Venders of the Geneva Discipline make such large boasts of more than ordinary purity of Worship strictness of Discipline and holiness of life as if they were entail'd upon that Sect since so Pharisaical a confidence without something to support it would be monstrous and absurd are apt to think that some parts of them are true and not aware that all this is done to draw the more Customers together and get the better Market for their spiritual Wares blindly give up themselves by a Faith more implicite and inexcusable than that in the Romish Church to be taught and guided by them Thus ordinary People being Men of great inadvertency and small judgment become their cheap and easie prey and as for the richer sort whose Wealth may be useful to the supporting of the cause they usually imitate the Method of the first deceiver and so make their Addresses that the Men are made Disciples by the mediation and assistance of their Wives I might add hereunto the evil arts those designing Persons use to decry others to recommend themselves such are their traducing both Persons and Things the envious detractions and calumnies the unjust aspersions and slanders which they used to insinuate and spread abroad amongst their hearers with a purpose to put them out of conceit with and make them disaffected to the Government of both Church and State in general and the Persons of our Governors and Clergy in particular hence arose that malice censoriousness want of Christian Charity and bitterness of Spirit which they are leaven'd withal more than and above other Men this makes them turbulent and unquiet disobedient to the Government and like S. J. strugling with it contriving caballing and plotting against it factious in the State Schismatical in the Church proud and peevish in their dispositions morose unsociable and unneighbourly to all but themselves and banishes that Christian Charity and Brotherly Kindness which would qualifie them more for a re-union with our Church and conduce more to it than our abolishing all our Rites Ceremonies Church constitutions and Customs can or ever will do for it is not any evil in them or any of them but the evil designs of Men that caused these unchristian breaches and divisions 3. If the Dissenters had really made their Schism upon the accompt of Conscience the same Principles of Conscience would have influenc'd their other actions as well as it and they would certainly have behaved themselves very differently from what they have done and have carried themselves humbly modestly quietly and obediently to the Monarchy as God's Ordinance as the Primitive Christians did to even the Heathen Emperors Pro-consuls and Governors But alass we find them of a quite contrary temper to omit what Men of the same Principles have done in Germany France Bohemia Holland Switzerland Geneva c. The Murmurings Tumults Covenanting Conspiracy Insurrection and open Rebellion of the Scots against King Charles I. and their Invasion of England being promoted both by the Instruments of Cardinal Richelieu who aimed at furthering the French Kings designs against the Hugonots and Flanders by diverting King Charles's Forces and Attempts design'd against France and by the Missionary Jesuits who to ruine the Church of England exclaimed against the King and his Government the Archbishop and evil Counsellors Arbitrary Power and Popery c. blew the coals fomented differences pretended grievances aggravated miscarriages exasperated Parties both here and there and excited the Fanatick Party here to encourage their Brethren in Scotland first by secret and then open assurances of their assistance to invade this Kingdom cannot be imputed to the obligations of their Consciences unless the Cardinal and Jesuits are allowed the Guides and Directors of them The two several open Rebellions raised in Scotland against King Charles II. the Fanatick Plot against his Life here the continued carriage of the Dissenters in general and of the Presbyterian Party tin particular since his Restauration their malicious and bitter Speeches against him and his Government in ordinary conversation and discourses the slanderous Libels railing Pamphlets written and dispersed by them their intriguing caballing and plotting their pragmatical and indirect interposing in all Publick Elections Places and Offices their perverse