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A68707 A large declaration concerning the late tumults in Scotland, from their first originalls together with a particular deduction of the seditious practices of the prime leaders of the Covenanters: collected out of their owne foule acts and writings: by which it doth plainly appeare, that religion was onely pretended by those leaders, but nothing lesse intended by them. By the King. Balcanquhall, Walter, 1586?-1645.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1639 (1639) STC 21906; ESTC S116832 348,621 446

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and other places needfull and there by open Proclamation to make publication of the holding of the said Parliament and to warne all and sundry Noblemen Prelates and Commissioners for the Barons and Burrowes and all others having voice and place in the said Parliament that they and every one of them in their most decent and comely manner make their addresse to the said Parliament attend and await thereat during the time thereof and to discharge that duty which is incumbent to them and each one of them as they will answer on the contrary at their perill ANd last of all was published and proclaimed first the Act of the Lords of Our Councel for requiring all Our subjects to subscribe the said Confession of Faith and Band annexed which here followeth At Holy-rood-house the 24. day of September Anno 1638. THe which day a Noble Earle JAMES Marquesse of Hamiltoun Earle of Arran and Cambridge his Majesties Commissioner having produced and exhibit before the Lords of secret Councell upon the twenty second day of this instant a warrant signed by his Majestie of the date the ninth of September instant wherein among others of his Majesties gracious and royall expressions for preservation of the purity of Religion and due obedience to his Majesties authoritie in the maintenance thereof his Majestie did will and ordaine that the Lords themselves should sweare the Confession and generall Band mentioned in his Majesties said warrant and also should take such order as all his Majesties lieges may subscribe the same And the said Lords of secret Councell acknowledging his Majesties pious and gracious disposition and affection to the purity of Gods truth did upon the 22. day of September instant unanimously and with all humble hearty and sincere affection sweare and subscribe the confession of Faith dated the second of March 1580. according as it was then profest within this Kingdome Together with the foresaid generall Band dated in Anno 1589. And now to the effect that all his Majesties lieges may give the like obedience to his Majesties so pious desire therefore the said Lords have ordained and ordaines all his Majesties lieges of whatsoever estate degree or qualitie Ecclesiasticall or Civill to sweare and subscribe the said Confession dated the second of March 1580. and that according to the said date and tenour thereof and as it was then profest within this Kingdome Together with the said generall Band dated in Anno 1589. as they will answer at the contrarie upon their obedience And ordaines officers of Armes to passe to the market crosse of Edinburgh and make publication hereof and at all other places needfull wherethrough none pretend ignorance of the same ANd next after that was proclaimed the Commission of the Lords of Our Councell whereby they appointed and designed severall Commissioners for requiring and taking the subscriptions of Our subjects to the said Confession and Band annexed throughout the severall Shires within the Kingdome which here followeth At Holy-rood-house the 24. day of September Anno 1638. FOrsomuch as a noble Marquesse James Marquesse of Hamiltoun Earle of Arran and Cambridge his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of Secret Councell by an act of the date of the twenty second of this instant have by speciall warrant of his sacred Majestie sworne and subscribed with all humble and heartie affection and unanimously the Confession of Faith dated the second of March 1580. and at length insert in the Bookes of Privie Councell of and according to the said date and tenour thereof and according as it was then profest within this kingdome Together with the generall Band insert therewith in the said bookes of Privie Councell dated in Anno 1589. Like as also the said Lords of Councell by their Act of the date of these presents acknowledging his Majesties pious and gracious disposition and affection to the puritie of Gods truth and as thereby they conceive themselves bound in conscience and humble dutie to use and follow forth all possible diligence for procuring the subscriptions of all his Majesties Lieges thereto And to this effect have thought fit that the care and diligence in procuring thereof be committed to some of his Majesties Councell and others of the Nobilitie and Gentrie within the severall Sheriffedomes and Provinces of the Kingdome in manner after specified Therefore the said Lord Commissioner and Lords of secret Councell give power warrant and commission to such of their number and others after-following within the bounds after specified viz. For the sheriffedome of Edinburgh principall William Earle of Lothiane Archibald Lord Naper S. John Dalmahoy of that ilke S. George Towers of Innerleith For the Burgh of Edinburgh the Provost and Baillies of Edinburgh that are or shall be for the time For East-lothiane Robert Earle of Roxburgh Lord privie Seale Thomas Earle of Hadintoun John Earle of Lauderdaill Harrie Lord Ker S. Patrick Murrey of Elibanke S. Patrick Hepburne of Wauchtoun and James Maxwel of Innerweik For the Stewartie of Dalkeith John Earle of Traquair Lord Treasurer William Earle of Dalhoussie and S. James Macgill of Cranstonriddell For the sheriffedome of Peebles and Ettrick forrest the said Lord Treasurer and John Lord Yester For the sheriffedome of Selkirke the said Lord Treasurer the Earle of Hadintoun S. William Scot of Harden and Generall Ruthven For the sheriffedome of Roxburgh the Lord Privie-seale the Earle of Lauderdaill the Lord Ker S. Andro Ker of Greenhead S. William Dowglas Sheriffe of Tiviotdaill and S. Thomas Ker of Cavers For the Sheriffedome of Bervick the said Lord Privie-Seale James Earle of Home the Earles of Hadintoun and Lauderdaill and Laird of Blacader For the sheriffedome of Fyffe John Earle of Rothes Charles Earle of Dumfermeline John Earle of Annandaill John Earle of Wemes Lord Fentoun John Lord Lindsey David Lord Balcarres S. Thomas Hope of Craighall Knight Baronet His Majesties Advocate S. Alexander Gibson of Durie Sir James Learmonth of Balcolmie and S. Andrew Murrey of Balvaird For the sheriffedome of Linlithgow Alexander Earle of Linlithgow James Lord Amont S. John Hammiltoun of Orbeston Justice clerk Dundas of that ilk and M. George Dundas of Manner For the sheriffedome of Lanerk John Earle of Wigtoune Archibald Lord Angus Lord Fleeming Robert Lord Dalyell S. William Elphinstoun chiefe Justice Sir James Carmichaell of that ilk Treasurer Depute the said Justice-clerke S. James Lokhart younger of Lee Francis Douglas of Sandelands Gawin Hamiltoun of Raploche S. James Hamiltoun of Broom-hill Robert Hamiltoun of Torrence and Alexander Hamiltoun of Hags sheriffe For the sheriffedome of Striveling John Earle of Mar William Earle of Airth John Earle of Montrose Alexander Earle of Linlithgow John Earle of Wigtoun John Lord Flemming Alexander Lord Elphinstoun James Lord Amont and S. William Murray of Polmais For the sheriffedome of Dumfreis William Earle of Queinsberrie Master of Dalyell the Laird of Lag William Maxwell of Kirkhouse and John Dalyell of Newtoun For the sheriffdome of Clackmannan the said Earle
of Mar S. Robert Bruce of Clackmannan S. Thomas Hope younger of Cars sheriffe For the sheriffedome of Wigtoun John Earle of Cassils Alexander Earle of Galloway Sir John Hamiltoun elder and younger of Barganie S. Patrick Mackie of Larg John Murrey of Broughton For the sheriffedome of Air Alexander Earle of Eglintoun Alexander Earle of Glencarne John Earle of Cassils William Earle of Dumfreis William Lord Crichton John Lord Lowdoun the Lairds of Barganie elder and younger the Lairds of Gastoun and Cragiewallace For the sheriffedome of Renfrew Alexander Earle of Glencarne Robert Vicount of Belheaven S. Archibald Stewart of Black-hall the Laird of Howston and Bryce Sempill of Cathcart S. Robert Dowglas of Blaikester and S. John Maxwell of Pooke For the sheriffedome of Dumbartan Argile and Carbet the said Earles of Montrose and Wigtoun the Lords Lorn Flemming S. George Stirline of Keir and S. William Stewart Captaine of the Castle of Dumbartane For the sheriffedome of Perth stewartries of Monteith and Strathern the Earls of Airth Montrois Atholl Perth Tullibardin and Kinnoul Mungo Vicount of Stormont the Lairds of Keir and Lawers elder and younger the Lairds of Duncrub elder and younger and Blair of Baltheiock For the sheriffedome of Forfar the Earls of Montrois Kingorn and Southesk the Lords Carnaegie and Ogilvie the Master of Spynie Patrick Maule of Panmure the Constable of Dundie S. Andro Fletcher of Innerpeffer the Lairds of Din Ethie Balnamoune Aldbar Bonnyton Lethintie and Innerquharratie For the sheriffdome of the Mernes the Earles of Mairshall and Southesk the Lord Carnegie S. Thomas Burnet of Leyes the Lairds of Glenbervie Arbuthnet Morphie Balmoyne and Halkerton elder For the sheriffedome of Aberdene the Marquesse of Huntly the Earles of Mairshall and Kingorne the Earle of Kingorne for himselfe and as Tutor to the Earle of Erroll the Lords Forbes and Fraser and Laird of Drum For the sheriffedome of Banff the Marquesse of Huntly the Earls of Mairshall and Finlatter For Elgine and Forres the Earle of Murray the Laird of Innes Brodie of that ilk and Dumbar sheriffe of Murrey For the sheriffedome of Innernesse the Marquesse of Huntly the Earle of Seafort the Lord Lovatt the Lairds of Grant and Makintosh For the sheriffedomes of Caithnes and Sutherland the Earles of Sutherland Caithnes and Seafort the Master of Berridail and S. Robert Gordoun For Orkney and Zetland the Earle of Cariet S. John Buchannan of Scotiscraig and Will. Stewart of Maynes For the sheriffdom of Bute the Lord Lorn and sheriff of Bute For the Iles the Lord Lorn With power to them conjunctly and severally to passe to the severall bounds above-written at such times places as they shall think fit and there to exhibit the said Confession of faith and generall Band above-specified marked and subscribed by the Clerk of Councell and to require all his Majesties lieges of whatsoever rank and qualitie to subscribe the said Confession of Faith dated March 2. 1580. according to the said date and tenour thereof and as it was then profest within this kindgdome together with the generall Band dated in Anno 1589. as they will be answerable to his Majesty and the said Lords upon their dutie and obedience and to make report of their said diligence betwixt and the thirteenth day of November next ANd because many did conceive though falsly that these pretended Innovations had made some alteration in the Religion which was sworne at the first in the said Confession Our Commissioner and Councell knowing well that suggestion to be made by those who were enemies to all peace and onely to that end that Our subjects might be kept from returning to their obedience did declare most truly and justly that Our intention and so accordingly the oath which they had now taken was to defend the true Religion and Confession of faith as it was professed in that Kingdome and sworne unto in the yeare of our Lord 1580. by which they did assuredly conceive that all Our good people would rest fully satisfied The Act of Councell containing that short explication here followeth Apud Holy-rood-house 22. Septembris Anno 1638. THe which day a Noble Marquesse JAMES Marquesse of Hammiltoun Earle of Arran and Cambridge his Majesties Commissioner and Lords of secret Councell in all humble and heartie affection unanimously swore and subscribed the Confession of Faith above-written dated 2. March 1580. according as it was then profest within this Kingdome Together with the generall Band above specified dated in Anno 1589. Whereupon S. Thomas Hope of Craighall his Majesties Advocate in his Majesties name asked instruments WIth all these Our gracious proceedings the Lords of Our Councel were so fully satisfied themselves that they did verily beleeve that there would remaine no more scruples in the minds of Our good subjects and that nothing now could keep them from a cheerfull and thankfull returning to their former obedience Their own resentment and satisfaction they testified both by an act of Councell and a particular Letter directed to Us for that purpose which here do follow The Act of Councell THe Lords of secret Councell having read and maturely considered his Majesties letters and particular declaration of his pleasure anent the annulling of the Service Book Book of Canons and high Commission discharging the pressing of the practice of the five Articles making all persons Ecclesiastick and Civill of what title or degree soever lyable to the tryall and censure of Parliament generall Assembly and other Judicatories competent anent the not administrating to Ministers at their entry any other oath then that which is contained in the Act of Parliament anent the subscribing and renewing the Confession of Faith subscribed by his Majesties Father of blessed memory and his houshold in Anno 1580. and Band following thereupon anent the indiction of a generall Assembly to be holden at Glasgow the 21. day of November 1638. and Parliament at Edinburgh the 15. of May 1639. and anent his gracious goodnesse in forgetting and forgiving all by-gones and indiction of a Fast for craving of Gods blessing to this Assembly find themselves so fully satisfied therewith and the same to be so satisfactory for removing all the feares of the subjects anent innovation of Religion or Lawes that we hold our selves bound in duty not only to acquiesce therewith as the best meane to secure both Religion and Lawes but also to use our best endevours that all his Majesties good subjects may likewise rest satisfied therewith And that they with us and we with them may testifie our thankfulnesse for so great a grace and goodnesse with all the heartie expressions of dutifulnesse and loyalty And that our true sense hereof may the more clearly appeare to our sacred Soveraigne Wee doe by these humbly and heartily make offer of our lives and fortunes in the defending and assisting of his Majesties sacred person and authority in the maintenance of the foresaid Religion and Confession and repressing of all such as
Our Commissioner they expected no satisfaction to their desire for they themselves did know as well as any Judge or Advocate in the Kingdome that no Commissioner either could award or ever had awarded any such processe as they required And therefore they moved Our Commissioner once againe that he would require Our Judges or Lords of Our Session to grant out such processe with which request when Our Commissioner made Our Judges acquainted they returned him that answer which the Covenanters knew verie well they could not chuse but make viz. That they could grant out no processe for the compeerance of any persons before them but those who were impleaded and whose causes were triable before them The truth is Our Commissioner found by inquirie and the Covenanters knew it perfectly well that the ordinarie way of processe or cytation to a Generall Assemblie was to passe it under the hand of the Clerk of the Assemblie whose office is during life if he be not legally removed usually too under the hand of him who was Moderator at the last Generall Assemblie both which were then living and are so still the name of the Clerk of the Assemblie being Master James Sandelands an Advocate and Commissarie of Aberdene and the Moderator of the last Assemblie being the now Archbishop of Saint Andrewes But they who had all this while gone on in disorderly illegall and unjustifiable wayes belike thought it an incongruitie to keep the beaten path and tract of justice in any thing and therefore they fell and resolved upon a way so unlike Justice so repugnant to Religion and common honestie as one would wonder how they hit upon it having neither Law nor practise for it which was this They caused to be drawn up a most false odious and scandalous Libell against the Archbishops and Bishops with a Petition annexed to the Presbyterie of Edinburgh wherein they desired the Libell to bee admitted by them the copie whereof as it was exhibited by them to the said Presbyterie and afterward publikely read in all the Pulpits thereof here followeth which out of Our love to the Christian Religion We wish might never come to the notice of any Pagan and out of Our love to the Religion reformed We wish might never come to the notice of any Papist But it cannot be concealed The Bill or the complaint of the Noblemen Barons Burgesses Ministers and Commons Covenanters which were not Commissionaries to the Assembly against the pretended Archbishops and Bishops within this kingdome as it was presented to the Presbyterie of Edinburgh with an Act of reference of the Bill from the Presbyterie to the next Generall Assembly as it was fully read on the Lords day before noone in all the Churches within the Presbyterie of Edinburgh according to the Act. Noblemen Unto your wisedomes humbly shewes and complaines We John Earle of Sutherland John Earle of Athol William Earle of Dalhousie Mungo Vicount of Stormouth Hugh Lord Montgomerie David Lord Elcho George Lord Forrester Arthur Lord Forbesse John Master of Berridale Robert Lord Boyd David Lord Balcarras John Lord Melvill Barons and Gentlemen Craggemillar Lugtoun Buchanan Young Dury Balgonny Balbirny Master William Hammilton Thomas Cragge of Ricarton John Cowper of Gogar John Hammilton of Boghall David Inglis of Ingliston John Dundas of Newliston Sir William Cockburne of Langton Patrick Cockburne of Clerkinton John Leslie of Newton Colonel Alexander Leslie David Barclay of Onwerme Sir Michael Arnot of Arnot Sir Michael Balfoure of Deanemill John Aiton of Aiton David Beaton of Balfoure John Lundie of Lundie Walter Murray of Liviston Sir John Preston of Ardrie Walter Cornwall of Bonhard William Scot of Ardrosse Robert Forbosse of Ricesse Sir Andrew Murray of Balvarde George Dundasse of Dudistone Sir William Murray of Blebo Master Robert Preston William Dicksone Ministers Master William Scot Minister at Cowper Master George Hammiltoun at Nuburne Master Walter Grog at Balmerino Master Iohn Machgil Parson of Fliske Master Andrew Blackhat at Aberlady Burgesses and Commons George Bruce of Carnock George Potterfield a Burgesse of Glasgow John Smith John Mill Lawrence Henryson Richard Maxwell Burgesses of Edinburgh WE for our selves and in name and behalfe of the rest of the Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons within this Realme of Scotland subscribers of the Covenant who are not chosen Commissioners to the Generall Assemblie but who will assist and insist in this complaint with us as faithfull Christians as loyall subjects and sensible members of this Church and Common-weale having interest to pursue this popular action in a speciall manner and an eminent degree by which pursuit God may bee glorified Christs Kingdome advanced that the Church may bee restored to her priviledges and liberties and freed from manifold scandals from the corrupters of Doctrine with Poperie and Arminianisme of the Sacraments with Superstition and Wil-worship and of the Discipline with tyrannie and from the overthrowers of the peace of this Church and Kingdome by their usurpations and lies their violent humours and falshood for their owne worldly ends may be tried and censured accordingly and so this Church and State made free from the present divisions and combustions and restored to peace and unitie both with God and amongst themselves and that his Majesties religious disposition and honour may be cleared to all the world by the triall and censure of those men who have fraudulently abused his Majesties name and authoritie by their trust and credit with his Majestie Wee most earnestly make request That whereas by the Lawes of this Church and Kingdome and by his Majesties last Proclamation all his Majesties subjects whether Ecclesiasticall or Civill of whatsoever title or degree if they have exercised an unlimited or unwarrantable power They are declared and ordained to be liable to the triall and censure of the Generall Assemblie and Parliament or to any other Judicatorie according to the nature and qualitie of the offence And whereas Master David Lyndsey pretended Bishop of Edinburgh Master Thomas Sydserfe pretended Bishop of Galloway Master Walter Whitefoord pretended Bishop of Brichen Master James Wedderburne pretended Bishop of Dumblane Master James Fairley pretended Bishop of Argyle Master John Spotswood pretended Archbishop of Saint Andrewes having their residences or dwelling places within the bounds of this Presbyterie of Edinburgh Master Patrick Lyndsey pretended Archbishop of Glasgow Master Alexander Lyndsey pretended Bishop of Dunkell Master Adam Bannatine pretended Bishop of Aberdene Master John Gutherie pretended Bishop of Murray Master John Maxwel pretended Bishop of Rosse Master George Greme pretended Bishop of Orkney Master Iohn Abernethie pretended Bishop of Caithnesse Master Neil Campbel pretended Bishop of the Isles should be tried and censured for their unlimited and unwarranted power For whereas it was provided in the Cautions agreed upon in the Generall Assemblie holden at Mountrose Anno 1600. for bounding of the Ministers votes in Parliament and concluded to bee inserted in the bodie of the act of Parliament for
A LARGE DECLARATION CONCERNING THE LATE TUMULTS IN SCOTLAND FROM Their first originalls TOGETHER WITH A PARTICULAR DEDUCTION Of the seditious Practices of the prime Leaders of the Covenanters COLLECTED OUT OF THEIR OWNE foule Acts and Writings By which it doth plainly appeare that Religion was onely pretended by those Leaders but nothing lesse intended by them By the King LONDON Printed by ROBERT YOUNG His Majesties Printer for Scotland Anno Dom. M.DC.XXXIX By the King THough by Our manie Proclamations and Declarations some whereof are printed and others were made by word of mouth by Our high Commissioner the Lord Marquesse of Hamiltoun during the time of his late imployment in Scotland it doth fully appear to all men whose mindes are not distasted with Justice and Government what Our religious care Princely clemencie and unparalleled patience have been for the setling of the late troubles in that Our ancient and native Kingdome of Scotland and for the composing of that State so much of late discomposed and disjointed by the seditious practices of divers impatient of all lawes and government Yet for the further and full satisfaction of all our true hearted and loyall subjects in all Our Kingdomes and for the manifestation of Our Justice and Pietie in Our late proceedings to all abroad especially to those who with Us adhere to the Religion Reformed We have thought good by way of an Historicall Deduction to set downe the true passages of all this businesse that the world may as it were under one view and aspect behold Our gracious and clement comportment towards Our subjects of that Kingdome and the depraved and froward deportment of many of them towards Us their liege Lord and Soveraigne Not doubting but that whosoever shall goe along by the threed of this Our unquestionable Narration will rest fully satisfied in these three points First That the first contrivers and since pursuers of their late wicked Covenant or pretended holy League a name which all good men did abhorre in them of France though following the patterne of all other seditions they did and doe pretend Religion yet nothing was or is lesse intended by them but that they having received from Us full satisfaction to all their desires expressed in any of their Petitions Remonstrances or Declarations yet their persisting in their tumultuous and rebellious courses doth demonstrate to the world their wearinesse of being governed by Us and Our Lawes by Our Councell and other officers put in authoritie by and under Us and an itching humour of having that Our Kingdome governed by a Table of their owne devising consisting of persons of their own chusing A plot of which they are very fond being an abortion of their owne braine but which indeed is such a monstrous birth as the like hath not yet beene born or bred in any Kingdome Jewish Christian or Pagan Secondly That Our promises expressed in Our severall Proclamations and Declarations to Our people were not as the wicked contrivers of that Covenant have ever gone about to make Our subjects beleeve onely verball but sincere and reall and such as Wee doe professe to the whole world in the word of a just and true Prince We doe resolve to make good to all Our subjects of that Our Kingdome As holding it beneath the greatnesse and goodnesse of a just King that the unjust actions of his subjects should occasion in their Soveraigne the least suspicion of breach of promises made by him to them especially when the performance of them shall conduce to the settling of Religion and Peace Thirdly That these men who give themselves out to be the onely Reformers of Religion have taken such a course to undermine and blow up the Religion Reformed by the scandall of Rebellion and Disobedience which so farre as in them lyeth they have gone about to cast upon it that if the Conclave of Rome the severall Colleges or Congregations perpetually sitting at Rome for contriving and effecting the meanes of reducing to the Roman obedience all those Kingdomes and Provinces which have justly departed from them nay and if with both these all the Jesuites and others the most specially combined and sworn enemies to our profession were all assembled in one place and had all their wits and devices concentrated into one conclusion and resolution they could hardly have fallen upon such a way as these pretended Reformers have fallen upon for turning all men out of the pathes of the Reformed Religion or have setled upon such courses which can bespeake no other event but the undoubted overthrow of it at least in that Kingdome unlesse God himselfe from heaven which We hope shall have all their Cobweb contextures in derision For by their particular proceedings truely set downe in this Our Narration it will plainely appeare that their Maximes are the same with the Jesuites their Preachers Sermons have been delivered in the very phrase and stile of Becanus Scippius and Eudaemon Johannes their poore Arguments which they have delivered in their seditious Pamphlets printed or written are taken almost verbatim out of Bellarmine and Suarez as appeareth to Us by Our Royall Father his Monitorie Preface to all Christian Kings and Princes and his Apologie for the Oath of Allegeance and in the Bookes writ by others in defence of them both in all which these arguments are fully answered And that the meanes which they have used to induce a credit of their conclusions with their Proselytes are purely and meerly Jesuiticall fables false reports false prophesies pretended inspirations and divinations of the weaker sexe as if now Herod and Pilate were once againe reconciled for the ruine of Christ and his true Religion and Worship Now if these three particulars by this historicall Relation shall undoubtedly appeare to the unprejudicate Readers whether Our Subjects or Forreiners then We shall little doubt to gaine from them their assent to these Our two just desires First That these proceedings of some of Our subjects whom though they would be accounted the purest Protestants yet by their wicked Protestations you will finde to be the most froward and perverse Protesters that ever did contest with their Soveraigne and his Lawes may not induce an undeserved scandall upon that Religion which We professe For since their conclusions are quite contrary to the Confessions of the severall reformed Churches in their particular Articles both of the Church and of the civill Magistrate as appeareth by the Helvetian French Belgick Polonian Argentine Palatine Genevian Our English and Irish nay and their owne Scotish positive Confession printed amongst the Acts of Parliament of that Our Kingdome and besides the Augustane and all other particular Protestant Confessions of the Lutherans And all the weapons wherewith they now fight against these Protestant conclusions are stollen or borrowed not onely out of the Romane for many of the Romanists fight with Us against them but out of the most rigid Jesuites Magazins why should they not in this quarrell be accounted
into England unto the Lord Archbishop of Canterburie in which they desired him to recommend unto Us their care of and fidelitie to Our service and to undertake for them to Us their zeale and forwardnesse for settling the peaceable practice of the Service Booke Which Letters We here have caused to be inserted that the Reader may see what names of simplicitie and ignorance they bestow upon that multitude which made the first opposition and withall take notice of the names of the Magistrates subscribers to these Letters for some of them which hardly could be expected from reasonable men will be found to be very forward if not leaders in the next succeeding sedition and so of the rest which have followed since The Letters be these Most Reverend Father in God and our verie good Lord WEe regrait from our hearts that tumult which did fall out in our Churches that day of the inbringing of the Service Booke wherein now these of his Majesties Councell who have laboured the tryall thereof will give testimonie of our innocencie Since that time and the rising of his Majesties Councell in this feriall time we have daily concurred with our Ordinarie and our Ministerie for settling of that Service Booke as the right Honourable the Earle of Traquair Lord Treasurer with the Bishops of Galloway and Dunbleane will beare witnesse who have spared neyther paines nor attendance to bring that purpose to a good conclusion And although the povertie of this Citie be great being almost exhausted with publicke and common workes yet we have not beene lacking to offer good meanes above our power to such as should undertake that service and in all things wherein we have beene required we have ever beene ready really to approve our selves obedient and loyall subjects to his Majestie in all his Royall commandements which we have vowed ever to second to our lives end And we being infinitely obliged to your Graces favours we now presumed by these lines to give your Grace that assurance of obedience upon our part in this purpose and in all other purposes wherein we may contribute to the advancement of his Majesties service or can be expected of good subjects VVhereof if his Majestie by your Grace shall be pleased to rest assured whatsoever any other shall suggest we will accept it from you as a great accumulation of favour for all which your Grace shall ever finde us most thankfull Remembrancers and most ready really to expresse our thankfulnesse whenever we shall be made so happy as that your Grace shall have occasion to use our service Thus from our hearts wishing you all happinesse we kisse your Graces hands Edinburgh this 19. of August 1637. Your Graces most affectionate and humble servants the Bailliffes of Edinburgh J. Cochrane Bailly An. Ainslie Bailly J. Smith Bailly C. Hammilton Bailly THE SECOND LETTER Most Reverend Father in God and our very good Lord WEe did receive your Graces kind letter and from our hearts we do render your Grace most hearty thanks and as wee have hitherto found your speciall favour in this matter concerning the laitly imprinted Service Booke whereanent we did write to your Grace formerly shewing our dutifull and obedient resolution not onely in our selves but in the greatest and best part of our Inhabitants of whom from time to time we had most confident assurance so now we must againe become new suiters at your Graces hands to receive from us a true information of the difference of the present time and of that when we did presume to write the occasions thereof which is that since our last there hath beene such an innumerable confluence of people from all the corners of this kingdome both of Clergie and Laitie and of all degrees by occasion of two Councell dayes and such things suggested to our poore ignorant people that they have razed what we by great and continuall pains had imprinted in their minds and have diverted them altogether from their former resolutions so that now when we were urged by our selfes alone we could not adventure but were forced to supplicate the Lords of Councell to continue us in the state they had done the rest of the kingdome having hitherto forborne either to combine with them or to countenance them in their supplications yet we will not forbeare to doe our Masters service to our power but shall studie to imprint in their minds what hath beene taken away in the interim we will humbly beg your Graces favour and intercession with his Majestie that we may be keeped still in his favour which we doe esteeme our greatest earthly felicitie and that what course shall be taken with the rest of this kingdome in that matter who have presented many supplications and with whom we have in no wayes combined that the same and no other may be taken with us wherein we are confident to prevaile as much as any other within the kingdome and in all things shall endevour nothing more then that we may approve our selves most dutifull and obedient subjects Thus relying upon your Graces favour as our most assured refuge we kisse your Graces hands and rests Edinburgh this 26. of September 1637. Your Graces most affectionate and humble servants the Bailliffes of Edinburgh J. Cochrane Bailly J. Smith Bailly C. Hammilton Bailly James Rucheid WEe confesse that these large undertakings of the Magistrates moved Us to remit much of Our intended rigor against the offenders in the first uproare hoping that their acknowledgment of Our clemencie would have produced effects quite contrarie to those which We have found And now We shall desire the Reader to observe that this first tumult was owned by none condemned and cryed down by all the authors of it and actors in it called by all sorts by no better names then Rogues and the base Multitude What will you then think if that within verie few daies you shall see the verie same liberall bestowers of these names entring upon the same Stage repeating and acting over againe the parts of that madd Multitude Onely the Stage you shall see a little better hanged and the Scenes better set out and the Play having a more specious name of Pietie and Religion For soon after these base and unruly people who were so much out in their first act of Rebellion as Actors at the first are not commonly perfect were in the Pulpits even for that their first and foule act so much of late hissed at and decryed afterwards magnified for the most heroicall Sparkes that ever God inspired and raised up in this last age of the world and though they were but Asses yet they were cryed up for having their mouthes opened immediately by God as the mouth of Balaams Asse was to the upbraiding of all the rest of the Land who held their peace when they should have cryed and brayed as they did Their happy mouthes and hands which God was pleased to honour that day with the beginning of their new blessed Reformation and
occasioning their celestiall Covenant as they called it were so highly extolled by their Preachers that they assured their Auditors that their memorials should be eternall whom before they had called the scumme of the people and the base Multitude and that all succeeding generations should call them blessed These high flowne speeches and many others of the like extravagant straine both in the Pulpits and out of them immediately after the first tumult and ever since have beene bestowed and that not sparingly upon that multitude which not long before they called base and rascall But no wonder for many of the better sort having succeeded that multitude in the same madnesse they must needs now give them new high and Heroicall titles such as they would have given to themselves now acting their parts for now their owne actions come next upon the Stage to bee viewed and judged All businesses now for a time seemed to be hushed and calmed by reason of the long vacation which in that Kingdome beginneth alwayes on Lammas day and the Harvest which drew all sorts of people from Edinburgh except the Citizens so that little or nothing was done betweene the last of July and first of October save that some Ministers petitioned the Lords of Our Councell for suspending the Letters whereby they were charged to receive the Service Book and that they of Edinburgh begun a little by the instigation of their two silenced Ministers to relent of their former forwardnesse for receiving the said Booke and to repent themselves of their too eager condemning the raisers of the first insurrection and presented to Our Councell on the 26. of September a Petition humbly desiring not to bee pressed with the Service Booke notwithstanding all their former undertakings but to be continued in the same case with all the rest of the Kingdome untill Our pleasure were further knowne which Petition as they alledged they were necessitated to present by the example and encouragement of all ranks from all parts of the Kingdome But so soone as Harvest was done the conflux of all sorts of Our subjects Nobilitie Gentrie Ministers and Burgesses from all parts of that Kingdome came to be so great at Edinburgh and after such a tumultuous maner as that a present Insurrection was justly feared which forced Our Councell assembled then at Edinburgh upon the day before appointed by them viz. the xvij of October 1637. to make three Proclamations The first to give notice that on that day nothing should bee treated of at the Councell Table concerning Church businesse untill the Lords might see the times and meetings of his Majesties subjects more quiet and peaceable and therefore commanded all who were come thither about any such businesse peaceably to repaire to their owne homes within foure and twentie houres under the paines expressed in the said Proclamation A second for removing the Session which is here in England called the Terme from Edinburgh to Lithcow for feare of present danger if this great concourse of people should not some way be diverted and divided especially considering that those of Edinburgh were now apparently perverted and become very evill affected to Our and Our Councels courses of peace and quietnesse A third for bringing in and burning a certaine seditious Booke newly dispersed amongst our subjects there tending to sedition and the disgrace of Our Ecclesiasticall Government here in England The three Proclamations are here inserted Apud Edinburgh 17. Octob. 1637. FOrasmuch as it hath pleased the Kings Majestie upon divers good respects and considerations to give warrant and direction to the Lords of his Majesties Privie Councell for dissolving the meeting of this Councell day in so farre as concerneth matters of the Church And that everie one that hath come to attend this businesse repaire to their owne dwellings except such persons as shall make knowne to the said Lords of Councell just cause of stay for their particular affaires Therefore the said Lords according to his Majesties speciall warrant and direction sent unto them have dissolved and by the tenour hereof doe dissolve the meeting of this Councell day in so farre as concernes the businesse above written And ordaines a Maissar of Councell to passe to the Mercate Crosse of Edinburgh and to make publication hereof And to command everie one that hath come hither to attend this businesse to repaire home to their owne dwellings within 24. houres after the publication hereof except such persons as shall make knowne to the said Lords just cause of their further particular affaires in manner aforesaid under the paine of Rebellion and putting them off to the Horne with certification to them that if they faile they shall be denounced Rebels and put to the Horn and all their moveable goods escheat to his Majesties use Apud Edinburgh 17. Octob. 1637. FOrasmuch as it hath pleased the Kings Majestie upon divers great and good considerations knowne to his Majestie to remove his Councell and Session from the Citie of Edinburgh to the Burgh of Dundie And whereas it is inconvenient at this time to remove it so farre his Majestie is graciously pleased that this next Session shall be holden at the Burgh of Linlithgow and the next after the ordinarie vacants at the Burgh of Dundie And there to remaine during his Majesties pleasure And therefore the said Lords according to his Majesties speciall direction ordaines Maissars or Officers of Armes to passe and make publication hereof to all his Majesties good subjects by open Proclamation at all places needfull whereby they can pretend no ignorance thereof but may prepare themselves to attend at Linlithgow and Dundie accordingly Apud Edinburgh Octob. 17. 1637. FOrasmuch as the Kings Majestie is credibly informed that there is a certaine booke intituled A Dispute against the English Popish Ceremonies obtruded upon the Kirke of Scotland and hath beene sent abroad and dispersed in this Kingdome purposely to stirre the hearts and affections of the subjects from their due obedience and allegeance And therefore it hath pleased his Majestie to give order and direction to his Councell that diligent inquirie and search be made for the said booke And for this effect the said Lords ordaines letters to be directed to make intimation and publication to all his Majesties subjects that such of them as have anie of the said bookes bring in the same to the Lords of his Majesties Privie Councell betwixt the date of this Proclamation and the day of And the said bookes being brought in that the same be publikely burnt certifying all his Majesties subjects if any of those bookes shall be found or knowne to have beene with any of them after the time aforesaid that they shall incurre the like censure and punishment as the Authour may be found to deserve for any thing contained in that booke ANd whether Wee and Our Councell were not justly necessitated to these Proclamations and whether it were not high time to require obedience to them though none was yeelded let
would not offend the Lord Treasurer got to Our Palace at Haly-rud-house and the Bishop of Galloway to his lodging But the Lord Provost was againe set upon as he was entring his owne house and was so pressed upon by the multitude that they crouded with him into his owne yard railing upon him and throwing stones at his windowes untill some of his servants discharging a Peece which had nothing but powder in it they retired for feare In this tumult none were more forward and inexorable then two who were Bailiffes the yeare before and who had subscribed the two Letters to the Archbishop of Canterburie This mornings storme being a little blowne over Our Councell in the afternoone met at Our Palace at Haly-rud-house and commanded a Proclamation presently to bee made at the Crosse of Edinburgh the tenour whereof here followeth At Haly-rud-house the 18. of Octob. 1637. FOrasmuch as a number of the Lords of his Majesties Privie Councell as likewise the Towne Councell of Edinburgh being this day conveened in their severall Judicatories for his Majesties speciall affaires and service they were most rudely interrupted in the course of their proceedings by a tumultuous gathering of the promiscuous and vulgar multitude by whom his Majesties Councell and servants in an open way was shamefully environed VVhich being a matter verie disgracefull to his Majesties Authoritie and lawfull Government and which in the consequence thereof may produce dangerous effects if the like bee not prevented in the time to come Therefore the Lords of secret Councell according to the dutie of their place and charge incumbent unto them Ordaines a Maissar of Councell to passe to the Mercate Crosse of Edinburgh and there by open Proclamation to discharge all publike gatherings and convocations of his Majesties subjects within the Citie of Edinburgh and upon the streets thereof As likewise all private meetings tending to faction and tumult And in his Majesties name and authoritie to command and charge all his Majesties lieges and inhabitants within the said Citie to containe themselves in peace and quietnesse And for that effect to keepe their houses except when their lawfull businesse doth otherwise call them Under all highest paine and charge that by rigour of law can be inflicted upon the contraveeners of the premises in manner above expressed TO this Proclamation so little obedience was yeelded and they of Edinburgh so farre from conceiving that they had any way misdemeaned themselves by that horrible insurrection as that the next Councell day they had the impudence to send their Commissioners publikely to Our Councell Table and there to require that their Ministers and Reader might be restored to them and that they might have assurance for the performance of what was promised to them by their Magistrates at this last Rebellion and before the pacification of it From this Relation joyned to the Narration of the first insurrection in the Churches it is easie to judge whether this their intended glorious Reformation which according to their religious intentions and ardent prayers they say God even to a miracle hath so graciously prospered in their hands be like to proceed from God the first act whereof was begun in the Church with contempt of God and profanation of the house where his honour dwelleth and the violation of those persons who serve at his Altar and the second Act whereof was presented on the streets of the capitall Citie of the Kingdome with the contempt of the highest Authoritie under God viz. Us and Our lawes and offering violence to the persons of Our Councellors and chiefe Officers of State not forbearing the verie houses and places where Our Councell for that Kingdome and Our Magistrates of that Citie doe usually sit and were then sitting which places have alwayes been accounted sacred and have duely challenged all respect and reverence And now it is verie observable by what degrees this Rebellion hath risen as if it had been before-hand well studied and contrived everie rank entring upon the Stage in their due turns in which they served and answered one another The first tumult was begun by the basest sort of that Citie whom the Authors of this second insurrection did then even for that first tumult condemne by the name of Rascalls and scum of the people This second uproare farre more seditious and dangerous then the former was made by the best sort of Citizens excepting onely the Magistrates and some few others yet disavowed and disliked at least in shew by the Nobilitie Gentrie and the Magistrates of the Citie but these last Mutiners were not so cryed downe by them as the former nor did they put such vile names of Rebels and Rascals upon them nor did they shew any signification of their desire to have them questioned or punished for that tumult because now the qualitie of these last mutiners persons gave some good countenance to the designes which they themselves had in hand For these Noblemen Gentrie and Magistrates being themselves to performe the third Act of that Tragedie at the first whereof they had hissed and seemed to dislike the second held it not fit to be too severe in condemning of that which it seemes they meant shortly after to act themselves and in a more dangerous way For first their Protestation against Our Proclamation and then their Covenant against Us and Our Authoritie were next to come upon the Stage which though they were of the same plot and piece with the two other former insurrections yet because they were to be better acted and the Actors men of greater eminencie they hoped their parts should not finde such foule names as the former had found As if the things being the same the names of Protestation or Covenant could alter the nature of insurrection and Rebellion like those of that bloudie League in France who hoped that the verie name of the HOLIE LEAGUE would cause in the world a mistake of their meaning and palliate their most wicked and unnaturall treasons for rooting out their lawfull Soveraigne and the true Religion And now this highest and worst part commeth next to be related After these tumults there were presented to Our Chancellour and Councell two Petitions one a verie weake and childish one in the name of all the men women children and servants of Edinburgh onely against the Service Booke another in the name of the Noblemen Gentrie Ministers Burgesses against the Service Booke and Booke of Canons That to the Lord Chancellour was as followeth My Lord Chancellour UNto your Lordship humbly shewes we men women and children and servants Indwellers within the Burgh of Edinburgh That whereas we being urged with this Book of Service and having considered the same VVe finde many things therein so farre different from that forme of Gods publike worship universally received and professed within this Kingdome And we Burgesses being at our entrie and admission deeply sworne for the maintenance thereof that now makes our hearts to tremble and our weak
consciences will not suffer us to imbrace and practise this urged Service VVe have this long time past winked at some former alterations being put in hope that no further novations should follow But now we being oppressed with our just feares to see our selves deprived of that libertie in serving God which ever hath beene approved by Church and Kingdome In place whereof we are now like to be constrained to imbrace another which hath neither been agitated nor received either by generall Assemblie or Parliament In such extremitie we are most humbly to supplicate your Lordship to consider our present estate and that this businesse is a matter of so great weight and consequence as should not appeare to bee a needlesse noyse of simple women but it is the absolute desire of all our hearts for preservation of true Religion amongst us which is dearer to us then either estate or life And therefore we do humbly crave that as the rest of the Kingdome so we may have a time to advise and that your Lordship may find out some way whereby wee may be delivered from the feare of this and all other innovations of this kinde and have the happinesse to injoy the true Religion as it hath beene by the great mercie of God reformed in this land and authorised by his Majestie who may long and prosperously Reigne over us And your Lordships answer Their Petition to the Councell followes My Lords of Secret Councell UNto your Lordships humbly shews VVe Noblemen Barons Ministers Burgesses and Commons That whereas we were in humble and quiet manner attending a gracious answer of our former supplications against the Service Book imposed upon us and readie to shew the great inconveniences which upon the introduction thereof must ensue we are without any knowne desert farre by our expectation surprised and charged by publike Proclamation to depart out of the town within twentie foure houres thereafter under paine of Rebellion by which peremptorie and unusuall charge our feares of a more severe and strict course of proceeding are augmented and course of our supplication interrupted wherefore we are constrained out of the deep griefe of our hearts humbly to remonstrate that whereas the Arch-bishops and Bishops of this Realme being intrusted by his Majestie with the government of the affaires of the Church of Scotland have drawne up and set forth and caused to be drawne up and set forth and injoyned upon the subjects two Books In the one whereof called the Book of Common prayer not onely are sowne the seeds of divers Superstitions Idolatrie and false doctrine contrarie to the true Religion established within this Realme by divers Acts of Parliament But also the Service Booke of England is abused especially in the matter of Communion by additions subtractions interchanging of words and sentences falsifying of titles and misplacing of Collects to the disadvantage of Reformation as the Romish Masse is in the more substantiall points made up therein as we offer to instruct in time and place convenient quite contrarie unto and for reversing the gracious intention of the blessed Reformers of Religion in England In the other book called Canons and Constitutions for the government of the Church of Scotland they have ordained That whosoever shall affirme that the forme of worship inserted in the Booke of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments whereof heretofore and now we most justly complaine doth containe any thing repugnant to the Scriptures or are corrupt superstitious or unlawfull in the service and worship of God shall be excommunicated and not be restored but by the Bishop of the place or Archbishop of the Province after his repentance and publicke revocation of this his wicked errour Besides one hundred Canons moe many of them tending to the reviving and fostering of abolished superstitions and errours and to the overthrow of our Church Discipline established by Acts of Parliament opening a doore for what further invention of Religion they please to make and stopping the way which Law before did allow unto us for suppressing of errour and superstition And ordaining That where in any of the Canons there is no penalty expresly set down the punishment shall be arbitrary as the Bishop shall think fittest All which Canons were never seen nor allowed in any Generall Assembly but are imposed contrary to order of law appointed in this Realm for establishing Constitutions Ecclesiasticall unto which two books the foresaid Prelates have under trust procured his Majesties Royall hand and Letters Patents for pressing the same upon his loyall subjects and are the Contrivers and Devisers of the same as doth clearly appear by the Frontispice of the Book of Common Prayer and have begun to urge the acceptance of the same not onely by injunctions given in Provinciall Assemblies but also by open Proclamation and charge of Horning whereby we are driven in such straites as we must either by Processe of Excommunication and Horning suffer the ruine of our estates and fortunes or else by breach of our Covenant with God and forsaking the way of true Religion fall under the wrath of God which unto us is more grievous then death VVherefore we being perswaded that these their proceedings are contrary to our gracious Soveraign hispious intention who out of his zeale and Princely care of the preservation of true Religion established in this his ancient Kingdome hath ratified the same in his Highnesse Parliament 1633 And so his Majestie to be highly wronged by the said Prelates who have so farre abused their credit with so good a King as thus to insnare his subjects rend our Church undermine Religion in Doctrine Sacraments and Discipline move discontent between the King and his subjects and discord between subject and subject contrary to severall Acts of Parliament VVe out of bound duty to God our King and native Countrey complain of the foresaid Prelates humbly craving that this matter may be put to tryall and these our parties taken order with according to the lawes of the Realm And that they be not suffered to sit any more as Judges untill the cause be tryed and decided according to Justice And if this shall seeme to bee to you a matter of higher importance then you will condescend unto before his Majesty bee acquainted therewith Then wee humbly supplicate that this our grievance and complaint may be fully represented to his Majestie That from the influence of his Gracious Soveraigntie and Justice these wrongs may bee redressed and wee have the happinesse to injoy the Religion as it hath beene reformed in this Land IN this Petition it is worthy the observing that they complaine of the mangling of the English Service Booke and of the abuses offered unto it and the wronging of the intentions of the blessed Reformers of Religion here in this Kingdome whereas in their Sermons and ordinarie discourse they doe usually inveigh against the Service Booke here for being stuffed with Superstition and Poperie and that the first Reformers
of this Church never departed fully from Rome And in this last Petition they begin to make their grievances swell adding their dislike of the Booke of Canons to their former distaste of the Service Book the occasion of Our authorising of which Booke of Canons was this As Wee were desirous to settle one uniforme forme of publike Prayer and Divine Service throughout that Our Kingdom and for that purpose authorized the Service Book so We conceived that it was not only expedient but necessary that there should be one uniforme forme of Church government throughout the same and because there was no booke extant containing any rules of such governement so that neither the Clergie nor Laity had any certaine rule either of the ones power or of the others practise and obedience and considering that the Acts of their generall Assemblies were but written and not printed and so large and voluminous as it is impossible that so many copies of them should be transcribed as that they may come to the use and knowledge of many and so Apocryphall as that few or none of themselves can tell which of them are authenticall and so unsafely and uncertainely kept that they do not know whither to addresse themselves for finding of them Wee could not imagine but that it should have beene acknowledged and received with all thankfulnesse that We had reduced their numerous Acts and those not knowne to them to such a paucitie of Canons and those published that none could be insnared through ignorance nor complaine that they were over-charged with the multiplicitie of them For it may be averred with unquestionable certaintie that not one in that Our Kingdome did either live under the obedience of the Acts of the generall Assemblies or did know what they were or where certainely to have them And yet these men have interpreted Our furthering their knowledge and facilitating and conveniencing their obedience for one of the most grievous burthens was ever laid upon them But no wonder it is if when mens minds are once out of taste with government nothing tending to order relisheth well with them Their petition was sent up to Us by Our Councell But Wee seeing no signe of repentance for or disavowing of their late tumults untill some order might be taken for the finding out and punishment of the authors of them resolved to delay the answering of their petition but in the meane time commanded Our Councell to signifie to all Our good subjects Our aversnesse from Poperie and detestation of Superstition the contrarie suggestions whereof We found the heads of this Rebellion had used for abusing of Our loyall subjects and so accordingly Our Councell caused a Proclamation to be made at Lithgow which was this Apud Linlithgow septimo Decemb. 1637. FOr as much as the Kings Majestie having seene the Petition presented to the Lords of his Majesties privie Councell and by them sent up to his Majestie concerning the Service Book determined to have taken the same into his Royall consideration and to have given his gracious answer thereanent with all conveniencie Like as his Majestie by his letters to his Councell of the date of the ninth of October last did signifie his gracious resolution to the effect aforesaid But since that time his Majestie finding farre contrarie to his expectation that such disorderly tumultuous and barbarous insolenceis have beene committed within the Citie of Edinburgh upon the eighteenth of October last to the great contempt of his Majesties Royall authoritie by abusing his Majesties Councellors and Officers of State with others bearing charge and authoritie under his Majestie within the said Citie His Majestie in a just resentment of that foule indignitie wherein his Majesties Honour did so much suffer hath beene mooved to delay the signification of his Majesties gracious intention in giving to his subjects such satisfactorie answers to their Petitions as in equitie might have been expected from so just and religious a Prince But yet his Majestie being unwilling that his Loyall and faithfull subjects should be possessed with groundlesse and uncessarie doubts and feares His Majestie is pleased out of his goodnesse to declare like as by these presents hee declareth That as he abhorreth all Superstition of Poperie so he will be most carefull that nothing be allowed within his Majesties Dominions but that which shall tend to the advancement of the true Religion as it is presently professed within his most ancient Kingdome of Scotland And that nothing is or was intended to be done therein against the laudable lawes of this his Majesties native Kingdome And ordaineth publication to bee made hereof in forme as a foresaid AT this time We sent into Scotland the Earle of Roxburgh Lord privie Seale with certaine instructions to Our Councell for ordering these disordered affaires according to which they appointed the Councell to sit at Dalkeith being not above foure miles from Edinburgh that so they might the more easily know what passed in that place now become the seat of the Rebellion and they removed the Session or Terme from Lithgow to Sterlin a place of 24. miles distance from Edinburgh that so the huge disorderly multitudes there assembled might be dispersed by the necessitie of the attendance of such as had any Law-businesse At the same time the Earle of Traquair Lord Treasurer of that Kingdome whom Wee had sent for hither was returned back with directions from Us He with Our Lord privie Seale other principall Councellers repaired to Sterlin where by Our commandement they caused a Proclamation to be made for the dispersing of the huge and dangerous multitudes there assembled and the assuring of Our subjects of Our sinceritie towards the Religion established in that Our Kingdom And there first the Nobilitie Gentrie Ministers and Burgesses did the same thing which they themselves called the uproare of Rascalls at the first reading of the Service Book in the Churches of Edinburgh and which they condemned but in milder tearmes by the name of an unjustifiable act in that great sedition at Edinburgh on the eighteenth of October 1637 For by them first at Sterlin then at Lithgow and last at Edinburgh was made the first avowed affront to Us Our authoritie and Lawes For at Sterlin Our Proclamation being made the Earle of Hume and the Lord Lindsey assisted with many others of all ranks made a Protestation against the same which Protestation was afterward repeated at Lithgow and last at Edinburgh where when upon the Crosse Our Proclamation was made by Our Officers with sound of Trumpets and assisted with Our Heralds with Our coats of Armes upon their backs it was received while it was in reading with jeering and laughing and after it was ended with a Protestation against it made by many Earles Lords Ministers and Burgesses and the conflux of all other sorts of people who were all of them so malapert as not to suffer Our Heralds and Officers to come off the Crosse but forced them to stay and heare
of advice and Councell for ordering the affaires of the Kingdome without Our authoritie and in contempt of Us and Our Councell established by Us there and by entring into a Covenant and most wicked Band and combination against all that shall oppose them not excepting Our owne Person directly against the law of God the law of Nations and the municipall lawes of that Our Kingdome So that after this their Protestation they perfected that which they had before begun confusedly and as it were in a ruder draught For then contrarie to Our expresse commandement and authoritie expressed in Our last Proclamations and repeated unto them by Our Councell they did erect a great number of Tables as they called them in Edinburgh Foure principall One of the Nobilitie another of the Gentrie a third of the Burroughes a fourth of Ministers and the Gentrie had manie subordinate Tables according to their severall Shires These severall Tables did consult of what they thought fit to bee propounded at the generall Table which consisteth of severall Commissioners chosen from the other foure Tables and what they of the generall Table resolved on was to be put in practice with a blinde and Jesuiticall obedience A rare and unheard forme of Government in a Kingdome whose Government ever was Monarchicall and which they themselves still say continueth to be so Sure these meetings by wise men have been accounted rather Stables of unruly horses broken loose and pulling downe all they can reach then Tables for the consultations of wise and rationall men Now the first dung which from these Stables was throwne upon the face of Authoritie and Government was that lewd Covenant and seditious Band annexed unto it which We here subjoine because We are confident that by the verie recitall and perusall of it every religious and wise man may run and read that sentence of condemnation which it carrieth in its owne front THE CONFESSION OF FAITH OF THE KIRK OF SCOTLAND SUBSCRIBED By the Kings Majestie and his Houshold in the yeare of God 1580. WITH A Designation of such Acts of Parliament as are expedient for justifying the union after mentioned And Subscribed by the Nobles Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons in the yeare of God 1638. JOSH. 24.25 So Joshua made a Covenant with the people the same day and gave them an Ordinance and Law in Sichem 2 KING 11.17 And Jehoiada made a Covenant between the Lord and the King and the people that they should be the Lords people likewise betweene the King and the people ISAIA 44.5 One shall say I am the Lord another shall be called by the name of Jacob and another shall subscribe with his hand unto the Lord c. The Kings Majesties Charge to all Commissioners and Ministers within this Realme in the yeare of God 1580. SEeing that VVe and Our Houshold have Subscribed and given this publike Confession of Our Faith to the good example of Our subjects VVe command and charge all Commissioners and Ministers to crave the same Confession of their Parochianars and proceed against the refusers according to Our Lawes and Order of the Kirk delivering their names and lawfull processe to the Ministers of Our House with all haste and diligence under the paine of fourtie pound to be taken from their stipend that VVe with the advice of Our Councell may take order with such proud contemners of God and Our Lawes Subscribed with Our Hand at Haly-rud-house 1580. the 2. day of March the 14. yeare of Our Reigne The Confession of Faith of the Kirke of SCOTLAND The confession of Faith subscribed at first by the Kings Majesty and His Houshold in the yeere of God 1580. Thereafter by Persons of all rankes in the yeere 1581. by ordinance of the Lords of the Secret Councell and Acts of the Generall Assembly Subscribed againe by all sorts of Persons in the yeere 1590. by a new Ordinance of Councell at the desire of the Generall Assembly With a generall Band for maintenance of the true Religion and the Kings Person And now subscribed in the yeere 1638. by us Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons under subscribing Together with our resolution and promises for the causes after specified To maintaine the said true Religion and the Kings Majestie according to the Confession foresaid and Acts of Parliament The Tenor whereof here followeth WEe All and every one of us underwritten Protest That after long and due examination of our owne Consciences in matters of true and false Religion are now throughly resolved of the Truth by the Word and Spirit of God and therefore we beleeve with our hearts confesse with our mouths subscribe with our hands and constantly affirme before God and the whole World that this only is the true Christian Faith and Religion pleasing God and bringing Salvation to man which now is by the mercy of God revealed to the world by the preaching of the blessed Evangel And received beleeved and defended by many and sundry notable Kirks and Realmes but chiefly by the Kirk of Scotland the Kings Majestie and three Estates of this Realm as Gods eternall Truth and onely ground of our Salvation as more particularly is expressed in the Confession of our Faith stablished and publikely confirmed by sundry Acts of Parliaments and now of a long time hath been openly professed by the Kings Majestie and whole body of this Realme both in Burgh and Land To the which Confession and forme of Religion wee willingly agree in our consciences in all points as unto Gods undoubted Truth and Verity grounded onely upon his written Word And therefore Wee abhorre and detest all contrarie Religion and Doctrine But chiefly all kinde of Papistrie in generall and particular heads even as they are now damned and confuted by the Word of God and Kirk of Scotland but in speciall we detest and refuse the usurped authoritie of that Roman Antichrist upon the Scriptures of God upon the Kirk the civill Magistrate and Consciences of men All his tyrannous lawes made upon indifferent things against our Christian libertie His erroneous Doctrine against the sufficiencie of the written VVord the perfection of the Law the office of Christ and his blessed Evangel His corrupted Doctrine concerning originall sinne our naturall inabilitie and rebellion to Gods Law our justification by faith onely our imperfect sanctification and obedience to the Law the nature number and use of the holy Sacraments His five bastard Sacraments with all his Rites Ceremonies and false Doctrine added to the ministration of the true Sacraments without the VVord of God His cruell judgement against Infants departing without the Sacrament his absolute necessitie of Baptisme his blasphemous opinion of Transubstantiation or reall presence of Christs body in the Elements and receiving of the same by the wicked or bodies of men His dispensations with solemn oaths perjuries and degrees of Marriage forbidden in the VVord his crueltie against the innocent divorced his divellish Masse his blasphemous Priesthood
man before his Father that confesseth him before men All of these and each of them besides your Lordships personall and particular obligations to God doe call for no lesse at your Lordships hands in the cause of so great and singular necessitie and we also doe expect so much at this time according as your Lordship at the houre of death would be free of the terrour of God and be refreshed with the comfortable remembrance of a word spoken in season for Christ Jesus King of Kings and Lord of Lords OUr Commissioner in the meane time resolved to publish Our gracious Declaration for relieving of their grievances and satisfying Our people in Our forwardnesse for the maintenance of the Religion professed in that Kingdome and Our aversnesse from Poperie which they of the Covenanters Table having notice of being above all things afraid that Our people should receive any satisfaction from Us or rest contented with the grace of Our reasonable proffers of favour did mightily repine at came to Our Commissioner and wished him for Our honour his owne safetie and peace of the publike not to make any such Declaration which undoubtedly would be encountred with a Protestation and that in such manner as would be displeasing to him and make the publishing of that Declaration be found disserviceable unto Us. Our Commissioner being perplexed with these unexpected and dangerous difficulties resolved by faire proceedings to gaine so much time untill he might make Us acquainted with them and receive Our answer and instructions concerning them In his Letters of advice he acquainted Us with the danger threatned if he should publish Our Declaration which though he knew to be full of grace yet the heads of the Covenant would never suffer the multitude of their members to understand it so Two things he desired of Us One that in case Wee continued in Our resolution of publishing Our Declaration Wee would be pleased to sweeten it with this further favour as to restore to the citie of Edinburgh the sitting of Our Councell Our Session and all other Courts of Justice which he conceived would be very acceptable to Our Councellors Judges to all Advocates and all dependents upon the Law to all Our subjects which had businesse depending in any of these Courts but most of all to the citie of Edinburgh which complained much of their being impoverished by absence of these Courts and that this was like to prove a most probable perswasion for reclaiming them to their former obedience Next that We would be pleased to give him leave to take a journy unto Us though he should returne presently that he might acquaint Us with the new emergencies of businesses and such other things as could not be conveniently expressed in Letters and so accordingly receive instructions from Us for his carriage To which Letters of advice Wee did returne by a speedie dispatch this answer That We would have Our Declaration no longer delayed but commanded him presently to publish it because Wee would not whatsoever the event should be have Our people barred the knowledge of Our Gracious intentions and favours towards them which We did see the leaders of them studied nothing more then to suppresse And that at his intreatie Wee were contented that all the Courts of Justice should presently begin to sit againe at Edinburgh for the reasons contained in his Letters and in hope of reclaiming of that Citie which otherwise by their misdemeanour had no reason to expect any such favour from Us And withall after the dispatch of these two that Wee were contented hee should repaire to Us as hee desired whensoever hee should finde it convenient taking first order with Our Councell for keeping all things in order untill his returne This answer of Ours so soone as Our Commissioner received he assembled Our Councell and made them acquainted with it who were so well satisfied with the bringing back of Our Courts of Justice to Edinburgh that presently they sent unto Us a Letter of thanks of this tenour Most Sacred Soveraigne THe Marquesse of Hamiltoun your Majesties Commissioner having imparted unto us your Majesties gracious pleasure and allowance that the Judicatories of the Councell of Session and others should be returned to the Citie of Edinburgh Thereupon the Lord Commissioner being present order was given for publication at the Market Crosse of Edinburgh with all solemnities requisite and that the like publication should be made throughout the whole Kingdome at all publike places This hath given so great contentment to all your Majesties subjects that we cannot expresse with what dutifull respect and heartie prayers for your Majestie they have embraced this great and undeserved favour In consideration whereof wee conceive our selves bound in dutie to acquaint your Majestie herewith and withall to render to your Majestie most humble and heartie thanks for this so great grace and goodnesse which wee hope shall contribute to the good of your Majesties service and to establishing the peace of the Countrie for the which we all your Majesties good subjects shall ever bee most thankfull and all in dutie bound to pray for your Majesties long and happie Reigne Holy-rood-house July 2. 1638. Subscribitur Traquaire Roxbrugh Mar Morton Winton Lithgow Wigtonne Kingorne Hadinton Lauderdaile Kinoul Southesk Lorne Naper Dalyell Ihay Ja Carmithaell Thomas Hop John Hammilton ANd accordingly Our Commissioner caused Proclamation to be made at the Crosse of Edinburgh for the first sitting downe of the Session there the Tuesday following being the third of July 1638. which was received with such joy by the Judges Advocates and all others having relation to the Colledge of Justice but above all by the Magistrates and Citizens of Edinburgh that Our Commissioner and Councell did then well hope all mens minds had beene well prepared to receive the Declaration of Our Grace and favour which was to bee published in the next Proclamation with an humble and thankfull acknowledgment which undoubtedly they had done if they had not beene not onely diverted but perverted by those men who interpreted every satisfaction of Our subjects received from Us to be a dividing and pulling them away from themselves And therefore they quickly cast about to finde out some meanes how this Our speciall favour might not be resented by them which was this They assured their followers that there were two of the Lords of Our Session viz. Sir Robert Spotswood President of the same and Sir John Hay Our Clerk of Register answerable to the Master of the Rolles here in England sworne enemies to their Covenant well affected to Episcopall government procurers and abettors of the pretended Innovations that unlesse these two were presently removed from Our Session there could be no good intended to them by the bringing of it back to Edinburgh and therefore advised them to send some of their number to Our Commissioner to desire that these two Our Judges might presently bee removed from that Court Not that they who put this in their
and nineteenth of February had been abundantly sufficient Neverthelesse finding that disorders have daily so increased that a powerfull rather then perswasive way might have been justly expected from Us Yet We out of Our innative indulgence to Our people grieving to see them run themselves so headlong into ruine are graciously pleased to try if by a faire way We can reclaime them from their faults rather then to let them perish in the same And therefore once for all We have thought fit to declare and hereby to assure all Our good people that We neither were are nor by the Grace of God ever shall bee stained with Popish superstition But by the contrary are resolved to maintain the true Protestant Christian Religion already profest within this Our ancient Kingdome And for farther clearing of scruples We do hereby assure all men that We will neither now nor hereafter presse the practice of the foresaid Canons and Service Book nor any thing of that nature but in such a faire and legall way as shall satisfie all Our loving subjects that We neither intend innovation in Religion or Lawes And to this effect have given order to discharge all Acts of Councel made thereanent And for the high Commission We shall so rectifie it with the help of advice of Our privie Councel that it shall never impugne the Lawes nor bee a just grievance to Our loyall subjects And what is farder fitting to be agitate in generall Assemblies and Parliament for the good and peace of the Kirk and peaceable government of the same in establishing of the Religion presently profest shall likewise be taken into Our Royall consideration in a free Assembly and Parliament which shall be indicted and called with Our best conveniencie And We hereby take God to witnesse that Our true meaning and intention is not to admit of any innovations either in Religion or Laws but carefully to maintain the purity of Religion already profest and established and no wayes to suffer Our Lawes to be infringed And although We cannot be ignorant that there may be some dis-affected persons who will strive to possesse the hearts of Our good subjects that this Our gracious declaration is not to be regarded Yet We do expect that the behaviour of all Our good and loyall subjects will be such as may give testimonie of their obedience and how sensible they are of Our grace and favour that thus passeth over their misdemeanours and by their future carriage make appeare that it was only feare of innovation that hath caused the disorders which have happened of late within this Our ancient Kingdome And are confident that they will not suffer themselves to be seduced and mis-led to misconstrue Us or Our actions but rest heartily satisfied with Our pious and reall intentions for maintenance of the true Religion and Lawes of this Kingdome Wherefore We require and heartily wish all Our good people carefully to advert to these dangerous suggestions and not to permit themselves blindely under pretext of Religion to be led in disobedience and draw on infinitely to Our grief their own ruine which We have and still shall strive to save them from so long as We see not royall Authoritie shaken off And most unwillingly shall make use of that power which God hath endued Us with for reclaiming of disobedient people OUR WILL is herefore and Wee charge you straightly and command that incontinent these Our Letters seene you passe to the market crosse of Our Burgh of Edinburgh and all other places needfull and there by open Proclamation make publication hereof to all and sundry Our good subjects where through none pretend ignorance of the same The which to do We commit to you conjunctly and severally Our full power by these Our Letters delivering the same by you duely execute and indorsed againe to the Bearer Given at Our Court of Greenwich the twenty eight day of June and of Our Reigne the thirteenth yeer 1638. Per Regem NO sooner was it ended but this their ensuing Protestation against it begun and was publickly read which here according to their printed Copie We have caused to be reprinted The Protestation of the Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burrows Ministers and Commons c. WEe Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons That whereas wee the Kings Majesties true and loyall Subjects who have ever esteemed it our greatest happinesse to live under a religious and righteous King and our greatest glory to testifie our best affections to our gracious Soveraign have beene in His Majesties absence from this His native Kingdome heavily pressed for a long time past And especially of late with diverse innovations which both in themselves and in the way wherein they have beene urged doe manifestly tend to the prejudice of the Kings honour and of our Religion Laws and Liberties And by which we were brought to such extremitie that there was no way left betwixt the rock of excommunication and the high paine of rebellion on the one part and the desperate danger of forsaking the way of true Religion and the breach of our Covenant with God on the other but to represent our case and present our supplications to the Lords of secret Councell that being equally pondered by them they might either be answered by themselves or by their recommendation might ascend to his Majesties owne consideration And therefore in all humble manner we did to this effect supplicate their Lordsh we were most willing for the modest following of our supplications to obey their direction in choosing Commissioners for the great number of supplicants who flocked together from all quarters of the Kingdome were carefull to order our selves in all Christian and quiet carriage and against the tediousnesse of many and long delaies did wait for a long time with very great patience till at last they were pleased to receive our supplications complaints and bills And conceiving them to containe weightier matters then could by themselves bee determined they did promise and undertake to represent and recommend the same according to their more then ordinary importance unto his Majesties Royall consideration and to report his Majesties answer While his Majesties good Subjects of all ranks throughout the whole Kingdome had their minds wakened and their hearts filled with the expectation of a gracious and satisfactorie answer worthy of his Majesties pious and equitable disposition in the Month of February last incontinent a rumour flyeth through the Countrie and filleth all eares That the Lords of his Majesties secret Councell were commanded to make such a Proclamation concerning the Service booke booke of Canons and the peaceable meetings of his Majesties good Subjects in time comming as we were perswaded to have beene procured by the secret working and malignant mis-information of our adversaries Seeking for their owne private ends without respect to his Majesties honour and welfare of this Kirk and Kingdome to stop the course of our legall proceedings and to escape their owne due censure And
therefore intending to make known to the Lords of secret Councell what was noised concerning the Proclamation how far the whole Kingdome had been by some sinistrous mis-information frustrate of their hopes and their constant desire to have some course taken by their Lordsh advice how his Majestie being further informed might deliver his good subjects from so great grievances and feares and establish a sure peace in this Countrie for time to come we found our selves tyed by order of Law to decline those against whom we had made our complaint unlesse we would admit our parties to be our Judges And in case our Declinator should not be accepted we behoved to protest that we might have immediate recourse to the King himselfe c. Thereafter in the Moneth of March finding that by the foresaid Proclamation the innovations supplicated against were approven our lawfull proceedings condemned our most necessary meetings prohibited there being no other way left unto us wee were necessitate to renew the nationall Covenant of this Kirk and Kingdome thereby to reconcile us to God provoked to wrath against us by the breach of his Covenant within this Land to cleare our Soveraigns mind from all jealousies and suspicions arising from our adversaries mis-information of our intentions and carriage and so to make way for his acceptance of our humble supplications and grant of their lawfull remedies to guard this Land in defence of Religion authoritie and liberty against inward divisions and externall violences And that our actions might be answerable to our holy profession we afterward drew up an humble supplication containing our grievances and desires of the ordinary remedies thereof to have beene delivered to the King himselfe In the meane time wee were directed by those who were intrusted by his Majesty to attend his Declaration here in Scotland which would free us of all feares of innovations of Religion and prove satisfactorie And lest for want of true information of our just grievances and desires it should fall out otherwise wee expressed to them with the greatest modestie wee could our desires in some few Articles and with great patience have attended his Majesties pleasure thereanent And all this Moneth by-gone being frequently conveened to heare the same delivered by his Majesties Commissioner the right Noble and potent Lord James Marquesse of Hamiltoun c. we presented a new petition to his Grace as his Majesties Commissioner craving most humbly the indiction of a free Assembly and Parliament as the onely remedies thereof Like as finding a mis-information or mistake of our Covenant with God as if it had beene an unlawfull combination to bee the maine hinderance of obtaining our desires in a new supplication wee have fully removed that impediment renewed our desires of those supreme judicatories to bee indicted with diligence for settling of the Kirke and Kingdome But being answered only with delayes after these nine Moneths attendance and with this Proclamation that conteined his Majesties gracious declaration of his pious intentions not to admit of any innovations in Religion or Law nor any staine of Popish superstition But on the contrary to be resolved to maintaine the true Christian Religion professed in this Kingdome which we were ever so far from calling in question as in our supplicatications complaints and bills we used the same as one cause of our desires one ground of our confidence of a gracious answer and argument of our adversaries malignant mis-information of so religious a King And now most humbly with bended knees and bowed hearts thanke our gracious Soveraigne for the same Wishing and praying the Lord of heaven truly and fully to informe his Majestie how far these bookes judicatories and all our other evils and grievances are full of idolatrous superstitions and Popish errours How destructive of the reformation of Religion in this Land and of the Lawes and Liberties of this Church and Kingdome and so directly contrary to this his Majesties pious intention and Declaration Yet seeing that no Proclamation could sufficiently remove the present evils nor settle our feares nor secure us from the re-entrie of any evill or Innovation which it seemed to discharge or prevent the like in time comming nor satisfie our humble supplications craving the present indiction of a free Assembly and Parliament as the only remedies of our evils and meanes to prevent the like And seeing this Proclamation doth not so much as make mention or acknowledge any of our supplications complaints and grievances or any just cause thereof except under the name of great increase of disorders faults and mis-demeanours but only our feares of some future Innovation of Religion or Lawes occasioned onely as is pretended by the introduction of the Service booke booke of Canons and High Commission which feares his Majestie hoped to have beene abundantly and sufficiently satisfied by his two former Proclamations of the ninth of December and ninteenth of February And by this his present Declaration except his subjects bee blindly under pretext of Religion led unto disobedience Doth mis-ken passe over and so in effect denie all our supplications bills articles and desires especially our complaints against the Prelats our parties And that once for all in a faire and perswasive way even after the resaite of our last supplication clearing us from the calumnie of unlawfull combination Doth not disallow nor discharge any of the innovations and evils complained upon but only assureth that his Majestie will not presse their practice but in such a faire and legall way as shall satisfie his subjects of his intention which joyned with the other clause allowing and confirming the Proclamation the nineteenth of February evidenceth the liberty left to any Prelate or persons to practise the same and by all other faire waies to perswade others thereunto and his Majesties resolution to presse their practice in a faire and legall way And also confirmeth the former Declaration that the Service Booke is a ready meane to maintaine the true Religion already professed and to beat out all Superstition and no waies to be contrary to the Lawes of this Kingdome but to be compiled and approved for the universall use and edification of all his Majesties subjects Doth not abolish but promiseth to rectifie the High Commission with advice of his privie Councell implying the Kings power with consent of the Councell to establish this or any judicatory within this Kingdome without consent of the three Estates conveened in Parliament contrary to the fundamentall and expresse Lawes thereof and by consequent with the like reason to establish Lawes and Service bookes without consent of the Assembly and Parliament Which is contrary to the maine ground of all our supplications against the manner of their introduction Doth only promise to take into his consideration in an Assembly and Parliament which shall bee called at his best convenience while as the evident and urgent necessity for settling the combustions threatning the totall dissolution and desolation of this Church and
this to be any hinderance of the indiction of a Generall Assemblie but rather a powerfull and principall motive with speed to conveene the same as the proper Judicatorie wherein to determine such dangerous and universall differences of the Church Neither do wee heare that any Ministers are deposed but onely suspended during this Interim till a Generall Assemblie for their erroneous doctrine and flagitious life So that it were most offensive to God disgracefull to Religion and scandalous to the people to restore them to their places till they be tried and censured And concerning Moderators none of them as we understand are deposed but some onely changed which is verie ordinarie in this Church The fourth concerning the repairing of Parishioners to their owne Church and that Elders assist the Ministers in the discipline of the Church ought to be cognosced and judged by the particular Presbyteries to which the Parishioners and Elders are subject since the cause may bee in the Ministers no lesse then in the Parishioners and Elders And in case they finde no redresse there to assent till they come to a Generall Assemblie the want whereof maketh disorders to bee multiplied both in Presbyteries and particular Parishes To the sixth That ministers wait upon their owne Churches and that none of them come to the Assemblie or place where the same is kept but such as shall bee chosen Commissioners from Presbyteries we answer That none are to come to the place of the Assemblie but such as are either allowed by Commission to have voice or otherwise have such interesse as they can justifie to his Majesties Commissioner and the Assemblie conveened To the seventh Concerning the appointing of Moderators of Presbyteries to bee Commissioners to the Generall Assemblie onely constant Moderators who have ceased long since were found in the Assemblie 1606. which yet was never reputed by the Church to be a lawfull nationall Assemblie to be necessarie members of the Generall Assemblie And if both the Moderators who if they be necessarie members need not to bee chosen and the chosen Commissioners repaire to the Assemblie the Assemblie it selfe can judge best of the members whereof it ought to consist To the ninth That no lay-person whatsoever meddle with the choosing of Commissioners from the Presbyteries and no Minister without his owne Presbyterie we say That according to the order of our Church discipline none but Ministers and Elders of Churches ought to have voice in choosing Commissioners from Presbyteries and that no Minister or Elder should have voice in Election but in his owne Presbyterie The rest of the particulars are concerning civill matters As the fifth concerning the paying of Rents and Stipends to Ministers and Bishops concerning which we can say no further but that the lawes are patent for them as for his Majesties other subjects and that the General Assemblie ought not to be delaied upon any complaint in that kinde The eighth requiring that Bishops and Ministers be secured in their persons we think so reasonable that wee will promise everie one of us for our own parts they shall suffer no violence from us and that we shall hinder others so farre as wee may And if any trouble them otherwise or make them any kinde of molestation in that attendance but by order of Law the parties are justly punishable according to the degree of their fault as other subjects are To the tenth concerning the dissolving of all Convocations and meetings and the peaceablenesse of the Countrie These meetings being kept for no other end but for consulting about lawfull remedies against such pressing grievances as threaten the desolation of this Church and State cannot be dissolved till the evils be removed And we trust that nothing in these our meetings hath escaped us which carrieth in it the smallest appearance of undutifulnesse or which may seeme to tend to the breach of the common peace But although our adversaries have herein calumniated us yet we have alwayes so behaved our selves as beseemed his Majesties most humble and loyall subjects petitioning his Majestie for a legall redresse of our just grievances To the last concerning the Covenant the Commissioner his Grace having many times and most instantly pressed us with that point we did first by invincible arguments make manifest that wee could not without sinning against God and our owne consciences and without doing wrong to this Nationall Church and all posteritie rescind or alter the same And thereafter did at large cleare the same of all unlawfull combination against Authoritie by our last Supplication and Declaration which his Majesties Commissioner accepted as the most readie and powerfull of all other meanes which could come within the compasse of our thought to give his Majestie satisfaction The subscription of this our confession of Faith and Covenant being an act so evidently tending to the glorie of God the Kings honour and happinesse of the Kingdome And having alreadie proved so comfortable to us in the inward of our hearts It is our ardent and constant desire and readie wish that both his Majestie and all his good subjects may be partakers of the same comfort Like as we finde our selves bound by conscience and by the Covenant it selfe to perswade all his Majesties good subjects to joyne with us for the good of Religion his Majestes honour and the quietnesse of the Kingdome which being modestly used by us without pressing or threatning of the meanest we hope shall never give his Majestie the least cause of discontent Seeing therefore according to our power and interesse wee are most willing to remove all hinderances that things may bee carried in a peaceable manner worthy our Profession and Covenant doe aime at nothing but the good of the Kingdome and preservation of the Church which by consumption or combustion is like to be desperately diseased except remedy some way bee speedily provided And wee delight to use no other meanes but such as are legall and have beene ordinarie in this Church since the Reformation Wee are confident that without further delay for preventing of greater evils and miseries then wee can expresse our just desires shall be granted So shall we be encouraged in the peace of our souls still to pray for his Majestie all encrease of true honour and happinesse UPon their refusall he sent for some of the chiefe Lords Covenanters and told them of his resolution for a new journey that he found their wayes such as he could not goe along with them that he had power to grant them a free Generall Assembly but that he could not conceive that to be a free one in which they should bring in everie man to have a voice whom they had a minde to If they would let him know what manner of persons should sit there and what they intended to doe there he would give his best concurrence if he found their intentions to be agreeable to the lawes and customes of that Church and
these eight Articles composed and commanded by their Tables In the second Article they set downe to everie Presbyterie a set forme of a Commission to be made to their Commissioners which was never done before and at the Assemblie when the severall Commissions were read it was observed that all the Commissions were the same verbatim except a verie few from some Presbyteries who would not be ruled by the Table and gave power to their Commissioners to continue no longer in the Assemblie then Wee or Our Commissioner in Our name should continue it In the same Article they will have the Presbyteries in their Commissions to take it pro confesso that the pretended and complained of Innovations are corruptions and disorders disturbing the peace and tending to the overthrow of their Religion and Liberties within the reformed Church of that Realme If this bee not to prejudge and take that for granted which was to be tried by the Assemblie whether it was so or not viz. whether these things complained of were Innovations and corruptions introduced in Religion We must leave it to the Reader to judge In the third Article they appoint Lay-men to sit in Presbyteries which had not beene done for above fortie yeares before Nay and these Lay-men to be equall in number with the Ministers which is contrarie to their owne book of Discipline alledged by them which did then order that the Ministers should alwayes exceed the number of the Lay Elders so that before this time they never were equall in number Nay that these Lay-men should have voices not onely in the chusing of their own Lay Elder but which is insufferable should have suffrage in the Election of the three Ministers Commissioners for the Assemblie which they themselves do know was never heard nor practised in that Church before in the verie first and strictest times of reformation nor ever since In the fourth Article they order a notable trick and device of their owne to bee put in practice whereby they were ascertained that no Minister should bee chosen Commissioner in any Presbyterie where they had any power but such as did undoubtedly concurre with them in their rebellious courses for they appointed and accordingly it was practised that everie man suspected to bee of a different judgement from them should presently bee processe and brought under the scandall of erroneous life or doctrine and so made uncapable of being chosen Commissioner according to which Article there were verie few Ministers in the Kingdome who had not subscribed their Covenant but they were presently suspended by their Presbyterie where they had voices to do it or at the least put under processe by some one or other which could not be prevented for no man can bee denied an originall processe against any man whom he will implead But yet this Article left no evasion if it should happen that such a one should be chosen Commissioner for in this case they ordered that the rest who gave not voices should protest against the election and complaine of it to the Generall Assemblie where they were sure enough to processe him there and lay him aside untill his processe should bee discussed which they did put in practise upon some Ministers who did not concurre in judgement with them at the first sitting downe of the Assemblie The sixth Article is directly against the Constitutions of their Church then in force and till then practised the Moderator of the Presbyterie being constantly one as being most able to give an accompt to the Assemblie of all Presbyteriall actions The seventh Article gives order for practising the above mentioned equivocation and enjoyneth them to make their elections before they received Our answer and that they repaire to Edinburgh immediately after their election that all the Commissioners elected may consult before hand upon what was to be said or done at the Assemblie which is in effect neither more nor lesse then to receive directions from their Tables how to carrie themselves at the Assemblie and indeed to preconveene and hold the Assemblie at Edinburgh before their meeting at Glasgow These were their publike instructions which they were not ashamed to avowe and send abroad from their Tables as it were by publike authoritie to the severall Presbyteries of that Kingdome And whether they do not containe prelimitations of the Assemblie we shall leave it to the Reader to judge But whether if We Our Commissioner or Councell had sent any such directions and instructions to the severall Presbyteries they would not have exclaimed against them as unsufferable prelimitations of that Assemblie and prejudgings of the liberties of the Church of Christ in that Realme Wee do appeale even to their owne consciences And yet these publike instructions are nothing to the private ones which they durst not communicate to all their partie but onely to some one Laick and one Minister their speciall confidents in every Presbyterie of which you shall heare more afterwards in their due place Notwithstanding all these discouragements arising from the disorderly proceedings of the Covenanters in the time of his absence Our Commissioner the day after the time prefixed for his returne viz. the 22. day of September 1638. assembled Our Councell at Our Palace of Holy-rood-house and there first delivered unto them this letter from Us as followeth Apud Holy-rood-house Septemb. 22. 1638. The which day James Marquesse of Hamiltoun His Majesties Commissioner produced and exhibited before the Lords of Privie Councell the two Missives underwritten signed by the Kings Majestie and directed to the said Lords which being read heard and considered by the said Lords They have ordained and ordaines the same to bee inserted and registred in the bookes of Secret Councell therein to remaine ad futuram rei memoriam whereof the tenour followeth CHARLES R. RIght trusty c. being certainly informed that the distractions which have happened of late both in Church and Common-wealth in this Our ancient Kingdome of Scotland have much troubled the minds of many of Our good and loyall subjects and that these distractions have beene occasioned upon jealousies and feares of innovation of Religion and Lawes as tending to the introduction of Poperie and not without some suspicion as if Wee Our selfe were inclined that way Upon occasion whereof many of Our subjects have of late subscribed a band or Covenant for preserving the true Religion and Lawes already established and for defending the Kings person and each others in defence thereof But the same not being warranted by Royall authority as that which was in Our deare Fathers time must needs of it selfe be ineffectuall and much prejudiciall to the ancient Forme and Custome of government kept within that Our Kingdome of Scotland Wherefore Wee out of Our inborne love to Our said native Countrie and for obviating these conceived feares and satisfying of you and all Our loving people have thought good to ordaine the Confession of Faith and band subjoyned thereto of the date at Edinburgh
if any of Our subjects whether ecclesiasticall or civill of whatsoever qualitie title or degree have or shall at any time presume to doe any such act or assume to themselves any such exemption or power That they shall like as by these presents We make and ordaine them to be lyable to the triall and censure of Parliament generall Assembly or any other Judicatories competent according to the nature and qualitie of the offence And for the free entry of Ministers that no other oath be administrate unto them then that which is contained in the act of Parliament And to give Our subjects full assurance that We never intend to admit of any change or alteration in the true Religion alreadie established and professed in this Our kingdome And that all Our good people may be fully and clearly satisfied of the realitie of Our intentions towards the maintenance of the truth and integritie of the said Religion We have thought fit and expedient to injoine and authorize like as We by these presents doe require and command all the Lords of Our privie Councell Senatours of the Colledge of Justice Judges and Magistrates to burgh and land and all Our o●her subjects whatsoever to subscribe and renew the Confession of Faith subscribed at first by Our deare Father and His houshold in the yeare of God 1580. Thereafter by persons of all rankes in the yeare 1581. by ordinance of the Lords of secret Councell and acts of the generall Assembly Subscribed againe by all sorts of persons in the yeare 1590. by a new ordinance of Councell at the desire of the generall Assembly with their generall band of maintenance of the true Religion and the Kings person And for that effect We doe require the Lords of Councell to take such course anent the foresaid confession and generall band that it may be subscribed and renewed throughout the whole kingdome with all possible diligence And because We will not leave in Our subjects minds the least scruple or doubt of Our royall intentions and reall resolutions Wee have given warrant to Our Commissioner to indict a free generall Assembly to be holden at Glasgow the twenty first day of November in this present yeare 1638. And thereafter a Parliament to be holden at Edinburgh the fifteenth day of May Anno 1639. for settling a perfect peace in the Church and Common-weale of this kingdome And because it is likely that the disorders and distractions which have happened of late have beene occasioned through the conceived feares of innovation of Religion and Lawes and not out of any disloyaltie or disaffection to soveraigntie We are graciously pleased absolutely to forget what is past and freely to forgive all by-gones to all such as shall acquiesce to this Our gracious pleasure and carry themselves peaceably as loyall and dutifull subjects and shall ratifie and approve the same in Our next ensuing Parliament And that this Assembly may have the better successe and more happy conclusion Our will is that there be a solemne Fast proclaimed and kept by all Our good subjects of this kingdome a foureteene dayes before the beginning of the said Assembly the causes thereof to be a begging a blessing from God upon that Assembly and a peaceable end to the distractions of this Church and kingdome with the aversion of Gods heavie judgement from both And Our pleasure is that this Fast be kept in the most solemne manner as hath beene in this Church at any time heretofore upon the most extraordinary occasion OUR WILL is herefore and We charge you straightly and command that incontinent these Our Letters seen ye passe and make publication hereof by open proclamation at the market crosses of the head burrowes of this kingdome where-through none pretend ignorance of the same Given at Our Court of Oatlands the ninth day of September 1638. Per Regem AFter this Declaration was proclaimed the Confession of Faith as it was at the first commanded by Our Royall Father as also the band annexed for defence of the Religion now established and of Our Person and authoritie with the subscriptions of Our Commissioner and Councell to them both doe here follow The Confession of Faith of the Kirke of SCOTLAND Subscribed at the first by the Kings Majesties umwhile dearest Father of blessed memory and his Houshold in the yeer of God 1580. Thereafter by persons of all ranks in the yeere of God 1581. by ordinance of the Lords of Secret Councel and Acts of the Generall Assembly Subscribed againe by all sorts of Persons in the yeer 1590. by a new Ordinance of Councel at the desire of the general Assembly With the general Band for maintenance of the true Religion And now renewed and subscribed again by his Majesties speciall command by the right noble Marquesse James Marquesse of Hamiltoun Earle of Arran and Cambridge Lord Even and Evendail his Majesties high Commissioner and Lords of secret Councell undersubscribing And that of and according to the date and tenor of the said Confession of Faith dated in March 1580. and of the Band dated in Anno 1589. WEe All and every one of us underwritten protest That after long and due examination of our owne Consciences in matters of true and false Religion are now throughly resolved in the Truth by the Word and Spirit of God and therefore we beleeve with our hearts confesse with our mouths subscribe with our hands and constantly affirme before God and the whole World that this only is the true Christian Faith and Religion pleasing God and bringing salvation to man which is now by the mercy of God revealed to the world by the preaching of the blessed Evangel And received beleeved and defended by many and sundry notable Kirks and Realmes but chiefly by the Kirk of Scotland the Kings Majestie and three Estates of this Realme as Gods eternall truth and onely ground of our salvation as more particularly is expressed in the Confession of our Faith stablished and publikely confirmed by sundry Acts of Parliaments and now of a long time hath been openly professed by the Kings Majestie and whole body of this Realme both in Burgh and Land To the which Confession and forme of Religion wee willingly agree in our consciences in all points as unto Gods undoubted Truth and Verity grounded onely upon his written Word And therefore Wee abhorre and detest all contrarie Religion and Doctrine But chiefly all kinde of Papistrie in generall and particular heads even as they are now damned and confuted by the Word of God and Kirke of Scotland but in speciall we detest and refuse the usurped authoritie of that Roman Antichrist upon the Scriptures of God upon the Kirk the civill Magistrate and conscience of men All his tyrannous lawes made upon indifferent things against our Christian liberty His erroneous doctrine against the sufficiency of the written word the perfection of the Law the office of Christ and his blessed evangel His corrupted doctrine concerning originall sin our naturall
and estate against whatsoever Jesuites and Seminarie or Masse-priests condemned enemies to God and his Majestie to their utter wracke and exterminion according to the power granted to us by his Majesties proclamation and acts of Parliament To try search and seeke out all excommunicates practisers and others Papists whatsoever within our bounds and shire where we keepe residence and dilate them to his Highnesse and his privie Councell and conforme us to such directions as from time to time we shall receive from his Majestie and his Councell in their behalfes And specially so many of us as presently are or hereafter shall be appointed Commissioners in every shire shall follow pursue and travaile by all meanes possible to take and apprehend all such Papists Apostates and excommunicates as we shall receive in writ from his Majesty And we the remanent within that shire shall concurre and assist with the saids Commissioners with our whole friends and forces to that effect without respect of any person whatsoever And generally to assist in the meane time and defend every one of us another in all and whatsoever quarrels actions debates moved or to be moved against us or any of us upon action of the present Band or other causes depending thereupon And effauldly joine in defence and pursuit against whatsoever shall offer or intend any injury or revenge against any one of them for the premises making his cause and part that is pursued all our parts Notwithstanding whatsoever privie grudge or displeasure standing betwixt any of us which shall be no impediment or hinder to our said effauld joyning in the said common cause but to lye over and be misknown till they be orderly removed and taken away by the order under-specified To the which time we for the better furtherance of the said cause and service have assured and by the tenour hereof every one of us taking the burden upon us for our selves and all that we may let assure each other to be unhurt unharmed or any wayes to be invaded by us or any our foresaids for old feid or new otherwise then by ordinary course of law and justice neither shall we nor any of our foresaids make any provocation or tumult trouble or displeasure to others in any sort as we shall answer to God and upon our Honours and fidelitie to his Majestie And for our further and more heartie union in this service we are content and consent that all whatsoever our feids and variances fallen or that may fall out betwixt us be within fortie dayes after the date hereof amicably referred and submitted to seven or five indifferent friends chosen by his Majestie of our whole number and by their moderation and arbitrement componed and taken away And finally that we shall neither directly nor indirectly separate nor with-draw us from the union and fellowship of the remanent by whatsoever suggestion or private advice or by whatsoever incident regard or stay such resolution as by common deliberation shall be taken in the premises as we shall answer to God upon our consciences and to the world upon our truth and honours under the pain to be esteemed traitours to God and his Majestie and to have lost all honour credit and estimation in time comming In witnesse whereof by his Majesties speciall command allowance and protection promised to us therein We have subscribed these presents with our hands At 1589. We JAMES Marquesse of Hamiltoun Earle of Arran and Cambridge Lord Even and Evendail his Majesties High Commissioner and Lords of his Majesties Privie Councel undersubscribing by vertue and conform to a warrant and command signed by his sacred Majesty of the date of Sept. 9. 1638. and registrate in the bookes of Councell upon the 22. day of the said month Swear and with our hearts and humble and true affections to Gods truth and to his sacred Majesty subscribe the Confession of faith of according to the date and tenour above specified and also renew swear and subscribe the foresaid general Band of the tenor abovewritten for preservation of the true Religion and maintenance of his sacred Majesties authoritie according to the tenor thereof and siclike as amply as the same was conceived in favours of his Majesties umwhile blessed Father of eternall memorie by the said Band. In witnesse wherof we have subscribed these presents with our hands At Holy-rood-house Septemb. 22. 1638. Sic subscribitur HAMILTOUN Traquair Roxburgh Mairsheall Mar Murray Linlithgow Perth Wigtoun Kingorne Tullibardin Hadingtoun Annandaill Lauderdaill Kinnoull Dumfreis Southesk Belheaven Angus Lorn Elphinstoun Naper Dalyell Amont J. Hay S. Thomas Hope S.W. Elphinstoun Ja. Carmichael J. Hamiltoun Blackhall AT the same time was a proclamation made for the indiction of the generall Assembly which was this At Holy-rood-house the 22. day of September 1638. FOrsomuch as it hath pleased the Kings Majestie out of his pious and religious disposition to the true Religion and out of his fatherly care for removing of all feares doubts and scruples which may arise in the mindes of his subjects for preservation of the puritie thereof and upon divers great and weightie considerations importing the glory of God the peace of the Kirke and Common-weale of this kingdome to appoint and give order that a free generall Assembly be indicted kept and holden at the Citie of Glasgow the 21. of November next Therefore the Lords of secret Councell ordaines letters to be direct charging Maissars and Officers of Armes to passe and make publication hereof by open Proclamation at the Market Crosse of Edinburgh and the head Burrowes of this Kingdome and other places needfull And to warne all and sundry Archbishops Bishops Commissioners of Kirkes and others having place and vote in the Assembly to repaire and addresse to the said Citie of Glasgow the said one and twentieth day of November next to come and to attend the said Assembly induring the time thereof and aye and while the same be dissolved and to doe and performe all which to their charges in such cases appertaineth as they will answer to the contrarie at their highest perill IMmediately after that this Proclamation was made for the indiction of the Parliament At Holy-rood-house the 22. day of September 1638. FOrsomuch as it hath pleased his Majestie out of his pious and religious disposition to the true Religion and out of his fatherly care for removing of all feares doubts and scruples which may arise in the mindes of his subjects for preservation of the puritie thereof and upon divers other great and weighty causes importing the glory of God the peace of the Kirk and Common-weale of this Kingdome to appoint and give order that the Soveraigne and High Court of Parliament shall be holden at the Citie of Edinburgh upon the 15. day of May next to come with continuation of dayes Therefore the Lords of secret Councell ordain letters to be direct to Maissars and officers of Arms charging them to passe to the market Crosse of Edinburgh
shall hereafter presse to disturbe the peace of this Kirk and Kingdome In witnesse whereof we have heartily and freely subscribed these presents with our hands At Holy-rood-house the 22. day of September 1638. Sic Subscribitur HAMMILTOUN Traquaire Roxburgh Mairsheall Mar Murray Linlithgow Perth Wigtoun Kingorne Tullibardin Hadington Annandail Lauderdail Kinnoul Dumfreis Southesk Belheaven Angus Lorne Elphinstoun Naper Dalyell Amont J. Hay S. Thomas Hope S.W. Elphinstoun Ja. Carmichael J. Hammiltoun Blackhall The Letter of Our Councel Most Sacred Soveraigne IF ever faithfull and loyall subjects had reason to acknowledge extraordinarie favours shown to a Nation and in a most submissive and heartie manner give reall demonstrations of the grace vouchsafed then doe we of your Majesties Councell of this your ancient Kingdome unanimously professe that such acts of clemency vouchsafed us cannot proceed from any Prince saving him who is the lively image on earth of the great God Authour of all goodnesse For return of so transcendent grace fortified with the reall expression of unparallel'd Pietie royall inclination to Peace and universall love not onely to those of our number but likewise to all your Majesties loyall Subjects wee doe all in one voyce with all resentment can bee imagined in all humility render our most bounden thankes and offer in testimonie of our full satisfaction and acquiescence herewith to sacrifice our lives and fortunes in seconding your Sacred Majesties commandements and repressing all such as shall hereafter preasse to disturbe the Peace of the Kirk and Kingdome And for some small signification of our alacritie and diligence in your Sacred Majesties service we have all without the least shadow of any scruple subscribed the Confession of Faith and Band appointed to be received by all your Majesties loyall Subjects sent the act passed in Councell with our other proceedings which wee doe most humbly represent to your Royall view And wee beseech your Majestie to be pleased to be perswaded of the unviolable devotion of all here subscribers who doe all in all humilitie pray for your Majesties most happie and flourishing reigne Sic subscribitur HAMMILTOUN Traquair Roxburgh Mairsheall Mar Murray Linlithgow Perth Wigtoun Kingorne Tullibardin Hadintoun Annandaill Lauderdaill Kinnoull Dumfreis Southesk Belheaven Angus Lorn Elphinstoun Naper Dalyell Amont J. Hay S. Thomas Hope S.W. Elphinstoun Ja. Carmichael J. Hammiltoun Blackhall IT is not for men to judge of other mens hearts and of their secret desires but We doe challenge the most rigid Covenanters to name any one particular ever desired by them in any of their supplications remonstrances protestations declarations written or printed exhibited to Us Our Commissioner or Councell which is not in this Our gracious Declaration granted to Our people For not onely all and every one of their particular grievances any way petitioned against by them are hereby discharged and removed but even the two generall things which they made the people beleeve was the summe of all their desires and expectations viz. a free Generall Assembly and a Parliament are indicted and in that order upon which they stood so earnestly first the Assembly and then the Parliament And besides all these their owne Confession of faith the ground as they pretend of their Covenant renewed and established Who would not now have expected a happie period to all the distractions of that Kingdome upon this Our gracious assenting to all their owne desires But the divellish obstinacie and malice of those factious spirits who did see that all their designes were utterly defeated and that their hopes for compassing of them were now a bleeding and drawing their last breath if they could not finde some meanes to blindfold Our peoples eyes and so keepe them from discerning and acknowledging Our grace and goodnesse towards them They presently before the houre that this Our Declaration was to be proclaimed filled Our peoples minds and eares with fearfull expectations of most terrible things to be delivered in this Our Proclamation and so destructive of the lawes and liberties of that Church and Kingdome especially of their late sworne Covenant that presently they wrought the people to a detestation of Our Declaration before they knew what it was They presently erected a large scaffold under the Crosse where Our Proclamation was to be made upon which were mounted not one or two from every Table to protest in the name of the rest as heretofore they had done but a great number of Earles Lords Gentlemen and others with their swords in their hands and hats on their heads not without jeering and laughing during all the time of Our Proclamation which no sooner was ended but with a most insolent and rebellious behaviour they assisted one Johnston in reading of a most wicked treasonable and ignorant Protestation which within few dayes after they printed and We doe here insert as being confident that all subjects in the world who shall come to read it will abhorre and detest it if ever they did feele in their owne hearts the least touch or taste of a Princes favour and clemencie or carry any affection to loyaltie justice and government The very reading of it will bring every good subject and religious honest man so farre out of love with it as it needeth no further confutation then the very perusall of it For who can endure to heare Scripture so grossely abused the holy name of God so solemnely invocated as a witnesse to such notorious falshoods to their rebellious courses and Covenant those attributes of infallibilitie given which are onely proper to the sacred Scripture and royall authoritie affronted with such peremptorie asseverations ignorant and senslesse reasons the falshood and inconsequence whereof must needs appeare upon first view to any one who shall cast his eye upon them The Protestation followes thus The Protestation of the Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burrows Ministers and Commons c. WEe Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burgesses Ministers and Commons his Majesties true and loyall subjects That whereas our continuall supplications complaints articles and informations presented first to the Lords of his Majesties Privie Councell next to his sacred Majestie and last from time to time to his Majesties Commissioner our long attendance and great patience this twelve-month bygone in waiting for satisfaction of our most just desires our zeale to remove all rubs out of the way which were either mentioned unto us or could be conceived by us as hinderances of our pious intentions aiming at nothing but the good of the Kingdome and preservation of the Kirk which by consumption or combustion is likely to expire delighting to use no other meanes but such as are legall and have beene ordinarie in this Kirk since the reformation and labouring according to our power and interesse that all things might be carried in a peaceable manner worthy of our Profession and Covenant our Protestation containing a hearty thanksgiving for what his Majesty in his Proclamation from his justice had granted of our just desires and our Protests
and hopes for so much as was not as yet granted All these made us confidently to expect from his Majestes Royall and compassioned disposition towards this his native Kingdome that a free Generall Assembly and Parliament should have beene indicted as the ordinary and most proper remedies of our grievances and did constraine us to renew our petition earnestly intreating that his Majesties Commissioner would be pleased to represent unto his Majesty the condition of this Kirk and Kingdome crying in an extreme exigencie for present helpe with the lawfulnesse of the remedies prescribed by his Majesties Lawes required by us and presented to him in some particular Articles which his Grace promised to recommend to his Majestie and to doe his best endeavours for obtaining the same especially the first Article that there might be indicted a full and free Generall Assembly without prelimitation either in the constitution and members thereof in the order and manner of proceeding or in the matters to be treated And if there should be any question or doubt about one of these or such like particulars that the determination thereof might be remitted to the Assembly it selfe as the only proper and competent judge And now after so many supplications complaints articles and informations after our necessary protestation expressing the humble thankfulnesse and continued desires of our hearts after so long expectation and so much dealing having with open eares and attentive minds heard his Majesties Proclamation it is our desire purpose and endevour so to proceed that we may upon the one part still be thankfull to God and the King for the least blinke of his Majesties countenance and the smallest crums of comfort that fall unto us from his Majesties Royall hands beseeching the Lord yet further to enlarge his Majesties heart for our full satisfaction and rejoycing to the honour of God the good of this Kirk and Kingdome and his Majesties never dying fame and glory that his wise government and zeale to the service of God may be a measure and pattern of desires to all generations hereafter when they shall be wishing for a religious and righteous King And on the other part that Christ our Lord the King of Kings through our neglect or luke-warmnesse may want no part of his Soveraignty and Dominion and that in our Religion which is more dear unto us then our lives we deceive not our selves with that which cannot satisfie and make up the breach of this Kirke and Kingdome or remove our feares doubts and suspicions of the innovations of Religion This hath made us to observe and perceive that his Majesties Proclamation doth ascribe all the late distractions of this Kirke and Common-wealth to our conceived feares of the innovation of Religion and Law as the cause and occasion thereof and not to the innovations themselves with which we have beene for a long time and especially of late heavily pressed and grieved as if the cause were rather in apprehension and fancie then in reality and substance That the Service book and booke of Canons are not so far discharged by this Proclamation as they have beene urged by preceding Proclamations for this Proclamation onely dischargeth the practice of them and rescinds the Acts made for establishing their practice but doth not rescind the former Proclamations namely that of the 19. of February at Stirling and that of the fourth of July at Edinburgh which give an high approbation to these Books as fit meanes to maintaine Religion and to beat down all superstition and withall declares his Majesties purpose to bring them into this Kirk in a faire and legall way And thus both our feares that they may be introduced hereafter must still remaine and the libertie of the Generall Assembly by such a Declaration of his Majesties judgement is not a little prejudged in the minds of so many as wisely consider and compare the preceding Proclamations with this which we now heare although others who looking upon one step and not upon the whole progresse run on rashly and neither considering what they are doing nor with whom they are dealing may be easily deceived Qui pauca videt citò judicat a short sight maketh a sudden judgement That it is declared in this Proclamation That his Majesty neither intendeth to innovate any thing in Religion or Lawes or to admit of any change or alteration in the true Religion already established and professed in this Kingdome and withall this is interposed That the articles of Pearth are established by the acts of Parliament and generall Assembly and dispensation of the practice only granted and discharge given that no person be urged with the practice thereof and consequently his Majesties intention for the standing of the Acts of the Assembly and Parliament appointing the Articles of Pearth is manifest which is no small prejudice to the freedome of the Generall Assembly That while the Proclamation ordaineth all his Majesties subjects to be liable to the triall and censure of the judicatories competent and that none of them shall use any unlimited and unwarranted power likewise that no other oath be administred to Ministers at their entrie then that which is contained in the Act of Parliament in both these Articles the Bishops are meaned who are only thereby for the present curbed against their exorbitancie and enormities in exercing their office but the office of Bishops is thereby not only presupposed as unquestionable but also so strongly established that his Majestie declareth for the present his intention to admit no innovation therein which is more evident by the indiction of the Parliament warning all Prelats to be present as having voice and place in Parliament and by the indiction of the Assembly warning all Archbishops and Bishops for so are their divers degrees and offices Ecclesiasticall here designed and supposed to be present as having place and voyce in the Assembly contrary to the caveats acts of the Kirk and our declinator And thus a third and great limitation is put upon the Generall Assembly The Proclamation by reason of these many reall limitations and prejudices of the liberty of the Assembly in the very points which have wrought so much woe and disturbance in this Kirk and Kingdome and wherein the liberty of the Assembly is most usefull and necessary at this time can neither satifie our grievances and complants nor remove our feares and doubts nor cannot without protestation be admitted by us his Majesties subjects who earnestly desire that Truth and Peace may be established and that for the reasons following 1. TO keepe silence in any thing that may serve for the good of the Kirk whether it be in preaching prayer or in proposing and voyceing in a lwfull Assembly of the Kirke is against the word of God Esai 62.6 Yee that are the Lords remembrancers keepe not silence and give him no rest till he establish and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth 1. King 18.21 Like the halting of the
people betweene two opinions and their not answering a word when the Lord called them to give a testimony Act. 20.20 I have keeped backe nothing that was profitable unto you and againe 1 Cor. 12.7 Mat. 15.18 Rom. 1.18 Revel 2.14.20 and 3.15 and therefore to keepe silence or not to meddle with corruptions whether in doctrine sacraments worship or discipline in a generall Assembly of the Kirk conveened for that end were the ready way to move the Lord to deny his Spirit unto us and to provoke him to wrath against our proceedings and might be imputed unto us for prejudice for collusion and for betraying our selves and the posterity 2. This predetermination is against our supplications and protestations wherein we have showne our selves so earnest for a free generall Assembly contrary to every limitation of this kind so far prejudging the liberty thereof is against the Confession of Faith registrated in the Parliament 1567. declaring that one cause of the Councels of the Kirk is for good policie and order to be observed in the Kirk and for to change such things as men have devised when they rather foster superstition then edifie the Kirke using the same and is against our late Confession wherein we have promised to forbeare all novations till they be tryed which obligeth us to forbeare now and to try them in an Assembly and by all lawfull meanes to labour to recover the former purity and liberty of the Gospel to which this limitation is directly repugnant our liberty in a Generall Assembly being the principall of all lawfull meanes serving to that end 3. This were directly contrary to the nature and ends of a generall assembly which having authority from God being conveened according to the lawes of the Kingdome and receiving power from the whole collective body of the Kirke for the good of Religion and safety of the Kirke Whatsoever may conduce for these good ends in wisedome and modestie should be proponed examined and determined without Prelimitation either of the matters to be treated or of the libertie of the members thereof It being manifest that as farre as the assembly is limited in the matters to bee treated and in the members to be used the necessary ends of the Assembly and the supreme Law which is the safety of the Kirke are as far hindered and pre-judged This limitation is against the Discipline of the Kirke which Booke 2. chap. 7. declareth this to be one of her liberties That the Assembly hath power to abrogate and abolish all Statutes and ordinances concerning Ecclesiasticall matters that are found noysome and unprofitable and agree not with the time or are abused by the people and against the acts of the generall assembly Like as the pretended Assembly 1610. declareth for the common affaires of the Kirk without exception or limitation it is necessary that there be yearly generall Assemblies And what order can be hoped for hereafter if this assembly indicted after so long intermission and so many grosse corruptions be limited and that more than ever any lawfull Assembly of the Kirk was when it was yearly observed 5. It is ordained in Parl. 11. act 40. K. James 6. anent the necessarie and lawfull forme of all Parliaments that nothing shall be done or commanded to be done which may directly or indirectly prejudge the libertie of free voycing or reasoning of the Estates or any of them in time comming It is also appointed in Parl. 6. act 92. K. James 6. that the Lords of Counsell and Session proceed in all civill causes intended or depending before them or to be intended to cause execute their decrees notwithstanding any private writing charge or command in the contrarie and generally by the acts of Parliament appointing every matter for its owne judicatorie and to all judicatories their owne freedome And therefore much more doth this liberty belong to the supreme judicatorie ecclesiastick in matters so important as concerneth Gods honour and worship immediatly the salvation of the peoples Soules and right constitution of the Kirk whose liberties and priviledges are confirmed Parl. 12. K. James 6. Parl. 1. K. Charles for if it be carefully provided by diverse Acts of Parliament especially Parl. 12. act 148. K. James 6. That there be no forstalling or regrating of things pertaining to this naturall life What shall be thought of this spirituall for stalling and regrating which tendeth to the famishing or poysoning of the soules of the people both now and in the generations afterward 6. It were contrary to our Protestations proceedings and complaints against the late innovations And it might be accounted an innovation and usurpation as grosse dangerous to us and the posterity and as prejudiciall to Religion as any complained upon by us to admit limitations and secret or open determinations which belongeth to no person or judicatorie but to an Assembly Or to consent to and approve by our silence the same predeterminations It were to be guilty of that our selves which we condemne in others We may easily judge how the Apostles before the Councell of Jerusalem the Fathers before the Nicene Councell and our Predecessors before the assembly holden at the Reformation and afterwards would have taken such dealing That this Proclamation commandeth all his Majesties Subjects for maintenance of the Religion already established to subscribe and renew the Confession of Faith subscribed before in the yeere 1580 and afterward And requireth the Lords of privie Councell to take such course anent the same and the generall Band of Maintenance of the true Religion and the Kings person that it may be subscribed and renewed throughout the whole Kingdome with all possible diligence which cannot now be performed by us For although of late we would have been glad that our selves and other his Majesties Subjects had been commanded by authority to sweare and subscribe the generall Confession of Faith against Popish errours and superstitions and now would be glad that all others should joyne with us in our late Covenant Confession descending more specially to the novations and errors of the time and obliging us to the defence of Religion and of the Kings Majesties person and authority and for these ends to the mutuall defence every one of us of another Yet can we not now after so necessarie and so solemne a specification returne to the generall for the reasons following 1. No means have been left unassayed against our late Confession of Faith and Covenant so solemnly sworn and subscribed For first we were prest with the rendring and rescinding of our Covenant Next an alteration in some substantiall points was urged 3. A Declaration was motioned which tended to the enervation thereof and now we find in the same straine that we are put to a new tryall and the last mean is used more subtile than the former That by this new subscription our late Covenant and Confession may be quite absorbed and buried in oblivion that where it was intended
and power of Kirkmen Because we are bound to swear this Confession by vertue of comform unto the Kings command signed by his sacred Majestie of the date September 9. 1638. These are the very words subjoyned to the Confession and Band and prefixed to the Subscriptions and it cannot be denyed but any oath ministred unto us must either be refused or else taken according to the known mind professed intention and expresse command of Authority urging the same And it is most manifest that His Majesties mind intention and Commandement is no other but that the Confession be sworn for the maintenance of religion as it is already or presently professed these two being coincident altogether one and the same not only in our common form of speaking but in all His Majesties proclamations and thus as it includeth and conteineth within the compasse thereof the foresaid novations and Episcopacie which under that name were also ratified in the first Parliament holden by his Majestie And where it may be obiected that the Counsellours have subscribed the Confession of Faith as it was professed 1580. and will not urge the Subscription in another sense upon the Subiects We answer First the Act of Counsell containing that declaration is not as yet published by Proclamation Secondly if it were so published it behooved of necessity either be repugnant to His Maiesties declared Iudgement and Command which is more nor to sweare without warrand from Authority a fault although uniustly often obiected unto us or else we must affirme the Religion in the yeare 1580. and at this time to be altogether one and the same and thus must acknowledge that there is no novation of Religion which were a formall contradiction to that we have sworne 3. By approving the Proclamation anent the Oath to be administred to Ministers according to the Act of Parliament which is to swear simple obedience to the Diocesan Bishop and by warning all Archbishops and Bishops to be present as having voice and place in the Assemblie They seem to determine that in their Iudgment the Confession of Faith as it was professed 1580. doth consist with Episcopacie whereas We by our oath have referred the tryall of this or any other question of that kind to the generall Assembly Parliament 10. This subscription oath in the mind intention of authority consequently in our swearing thereof may consist with the corruptions of the Service book Canons which we have abjured as other heads of Poperie For both this present proclamation and his Majesties former proclamations at Linlithgow Striveling Edinburgh The Lords of privie Counsell in their approbation of the same and the prelates and doctors who stand for the Service book Canons Doe all speak plainly or import so much That these books are not repugnant to the Confession of Faith and that the introducing of them is no novation of religion or law And therefore we must either refuse to subscribe now or we must confesse contrary to our late Oath and to a cleare Truth That the Service book and Canons are no innovations in Religion And though the present books be discharged by proclamation yet if we shall by any deed of our owne testifie that they may consist with our Confession of Faith within a very short time either the same books or some other like unto them with some small change may be obtruded upon us who by Our abjuration if we adhere unto it have freed both our selves and the posteritie of all such corruptions and have laid a faire foundation for the pure worship of God in all time coming 11. Although there be indeed no substantiall difference between that which We have subscribed the Confession subscribed 1580. more then there is betweene that which is hid and that which is revealed A march stone hid in the ground and uncovered betwixt the hand closed and open betwixt a sword scheathed and drawn or betwixt the large Confession registrat in the Acts of Parliament and the short Confession or if we may with reverence ascend yet higher between the Old Testament the New yet as to scheath our sword when it should be drawn were imprudencie or at the commandement of Princes professedly popish in their dominions after the Subjects had subscribed both Confessions to subscribe the first without the second or at the will of a Iewish Magistrate openly denying the New Testament to subscribe the Old alone after that they have subscribed both were horrible impiety against God and Treacherie against the Truth Right so for Vs to subscribe the former a-part as it is now urged and framed without the explanation and application thereof at this time when ours is rejected and the subscribers of the former refuse to subscribe ours as containing something substantially different and urge the former upon us as different from ours and not expressing the speciall abjuration of the evils supplicated against by us were nothing else but to deny and part from our former subscription if not formally yet interpretatively Old Eleazar who would not seeme to eate forbidden meat and the Confessors and Martyrs of old who would not seeme by delivering some of their papers to render the Bible or to deny the Truth may teach us our dutie in this case although our lives were in hazard for refusing this Subscription And who knoweth but the LORD may be calling His people now who have proceeded so farre in professing His Truth at this time to such Trials and Confessions as His faithfull Witnesses have given of old that in this point also our doing may be a document both to the succeeding ages and to other Kirks to whom for the present we are made a spectacle 12. If any be so forgetfull of his oath which God forbid as to subscribe this Confession as it is now urged he doth according to the proclamation acquiesce in this declaration of his Majesties will and doth accept of such a pardon as hath need to be ratified in parliament And thus doth turne our glory unto shame by confessing our guiltinesse where God from Heaven hath made us guiltlesse and by the fire of His Spirit from Heaven hath accepted of our service And doth depart from the commandement of God the practise of the Godly in former times and the worthy and laudable example of our worthy religious progenitours in obedience whereof and conform to which We made profession to subscribe for there is no particular Act required of us to whom the pardon is presented in this proclamation but this new subscription allanerlie 13. The generall band now urged to be subscribed as it containeth many clauses not so fitting the present time as that wherein it was subscribed so is it deficient in a point at this time most necessary Of the reformation of our lives that we shall answerablie to our profession be examples to others of all Godlinesse sobernesse and righteousnesse and of every duty wee owe to GOD and main without
which we cannot now subscribe this Confession least we loose the bands to wickednesse seeme to repent of our former resolutions and promises and choose to have our portion with hypocrites professing and swearing that wee know GOD but in our workes denying him being abominable disobedient and unto every good worke reprobate 14. Since the narrative of the general band is now changed some lines expressing at length the Papists and their adherents to be the partie from whom the danger to Religion and the Kings Majestie was threatned are left out and no designation made of the partie from whom the danger is now threatned We are made either to think that our subscription at this time is unnecessarie or to suspect that we who have supplicated and entred in Covenant are understood to be the partie especially since the Lords of Councell have in the Act September 22. ratifying the Proclamation found themselves bound to use their best endeavours that all his Majesties good Subjects may rest satisfied with his Majesties Declaration since also we have beene although undeservedly challenged of disorders distractions and dangers to Religion and his Majesties authoritie and since in the foresaid Act and in the missive directed to his Majestie the Lords of Councell offer their lives and fortunes to his Majestie in repressing all such as shall hereafter prease to disturbe the peace of this Kirk and Kingdome which being expressed in a generalitie is by many applied to us and interpreted of our adhering to our Covenant We should therefore by our subscription of the Covenant as it is now conceived both do directly against our owne minds in condemning our selves wherein we are innocent and should consent to our owne hurt to the suppressing of the cause which wee maintaine and to the repressing mutually one of us of another directly contrarie to our former solemne Oath and subscription 15. The subscribing of this Confession by the Lords of his Majesties privie Councell who by their place and high employment are publike Peace-makers and by others who have not subscribed the late Confession will make the breach wider and the lamentable division of this Kirk more desperate then ever before some having sworne to labour by all lawfull meanes to recover the former Libertie and puritie of Religion and others maintaining that for puritie which is alreadie established some beleeving and professing that the evils supplicated against are abjured in that Confession of Faith and others maintaining the Confession of Faith and these corruptions although for the present discharged by authoritie not to be inconsistent and beside this many divisions and subdivisions will ensue to the dulefull renting of the Kirk and Kingdome making way for the wrath and many judgements of God often threatned by his faithfull servants which all the godly ought to labour by all meanes to prevent 16. Wee represent also to the honourable Lords of privie Councell to be considered That the Doctrine Discipline and Use of Sacraments are sworne and the contrarie abjured according to the Word of God and the meaning of the Kirk of Scotland in the books of Discipline and Acts of Assemblies And that in the Oath there is no place left to the generalitie of any mans conception of the true Faith and Religion nor to any private interpretation or mentall reservation For these and the like considerations in our owne name and in name of all who will adhere to the late Covenant subscribed by us and sealed from Heaven We from our dutie to God our King our native Countrey our selves and the posteritie lest our silence import a satisfaction of our desires and a stopping of our mouths from necessarie supplication for things yet to bee obtained from his Majesties just and gracious disposition are constrained to declare and protest First that the cause and occasion of the distractions of the Kirk and Common-wealth are no wayes to bee imputed unto us or our needlesse feares but to the innovations and corruptions of Religion which against the Acts and order of this Kirk and the Lawes of the Kingdome have beene pressed upon us the people of God and his Majesties loyall subjects who although under great thraldom were living in peace and quietnesse labouring in all godlinesse and honestie to do our dutie to God and man Secondly We protest that all questions and doubts that arise concerning the freedome of the Assemblie whether in the constitution and members thereof or in the matters to be treated or in the manner and order of proceeding be remitted to the determination of the Assemblie it selfe as the onely proper and competent judge And that it shall be lawfull for us being authorized with lawfull Commissions as at other times when the urgent necessitie of the Kirk shall require so in this exigence to assemble our selves at the Diet appointed notwithstanding any impediment or prorogation to the contrary And being assembled against all qualifications and predeterminations or presupposals to propone treat reason vote and conclude according to the Word of God confession of Faith and Acts of lawfull Assemblies in all Ecclesiasticall matters pertaining to the Assemblie and tending to the advancement of the Kingdome of Christ and good of Religion Thirdly since Archbishops and Bishops have no warrand for their office in this Kirk since it is contrarie both to reason and to the Acts of the Kirk that any have place and voice in the Assemblie who are not authorized with lawfull Commissions and seeing both in common equitie and by the tenour of this Proclamation they are made lyable to the triall and censure of the Assemblie Wee protest that they bee not present as having place or voice in the Assemblie but as rei to compeere for underlying triall and censure upon the generall complaints alreadie made and the particular accusations to be given in against them And that the warning given by his Majesties Proclamation and this our Protestation be a sufficient citation to them to compeer before the Assemblie for their triall and censure in life office and benefice Fourthly Wee solemnly protest that We do constantly adhere to our Oath and subscription of the Confession of Faith and Covenant lately renewed and approven with rare and undeniable evidences from heaven of the wonderfull workings of his Spirit in the hearts both of Pastors and people through all the parts of the Kingdome And that we stand to all parts and clauses thereof and particularly to the explanation and application containing both our abjuration of and our union against the particular evils and corruptions of the time a dutie which the Lord at this time especially craveth at our hands Fifthly We also protest that none of us who have subscribed and do adhere to our subscription of the late Covenant be charged or urged either to procure the subscriptions of others or to subscribe our selves unto any other Confession or Covenant containing any derogation thereunto especially that mentioned in the Proclamation without the necessarie explanation and
the application therof alreadie sworn by us for the Reasons above expressed And because as we did in our former Protestation appeale from the Lords of his Majesties Councell so do we now by these renew our solemne appeale with all solemnities requisite unto the next free Generall Assemblie and Parliament as the onely supreme nationall Judicatories competent to judge of nationall causes and proceedings Sixthly We protest That no subscription whether by the Lords of Councell or others of the Confession mentioned in the Proclamation and enjoyned for the maintenance of Religion as it is now already or at this present time established and professed within this Kingdome without any innovation of Religion or Law be any manner of way prejudiciall to our Covenant wherein we have sworne to forbeare the practice of Novations alreadie introduced c. till they be tried in a free Assemblie And to labour by all lawfull meanes to recover the puritie and libertie of the Gospel as it was established and professed before the foresaid Innovations And in like manner that no subscription foresaid be any derogation to the true and sound meaning of our worthie predecessours at the time of their subscription in the year 1581. and afterward Withall warning and exhorting all men who lay to heart the cause of Religion against the corruptions of the time the present estate of things both to subscribe the Covenant as it hath bin explained and necessarily applied and as they love the puritie and libertie of the Gospel to hold back their hands from all other Covenants till the Assembly now indicted be conveened and determine the present differences and divisions and preserve this country from contrarie oathes Seventhly As his Majesties royall clemencie appeareth in forgiving and forgetting what his Majestie conceiveth to be a disorder or done amisse in the proceeding of any so are we very confident of his Majesties approbation to the integrity of our hearts and peaceablenesse of our wayes and actions all this time past And therfore We protest that we still adhere to our former complaints protestations lawfull meetings proceedings mutuall defences c. All which as they have been in themselves lawfull so were they to us pressed with so many grievances in his Majesties absence from this native kingdome most necessary and ought to be regarded as good offices and pertinent duties of faithfull Christians loyall subjects and sensible members of this Kirk and Commonwealth as we trust at all occasions to make manifest to all good men especially to his sacred Majestie for whose long and prosperous government that we may live a peaceable and quiet life in all godlinesse and honestie We earnestly pray WHereupon a noble Earle James Earle of Montrose c. in name of the Noblemen M. Alexander Gibson younger of Durie in name of the Barons George Porterfield Merchant Burgesse of Glasgow in name of the Burrowes M. Harie Rollock Minister at Edinburgh in name of the Ministers and M. Archbald Johnston Reader hereof in name of all who adhere to the Confession of Faith and Covenant lately renewed within this Kingdome tooke instruments in the hands of three Notars present at the said Mercate Crosse of Edinburgh being invironed with great numbers of the foresaid Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Burrows Ministers and Commons before many hundred witnesses and craved the extract thereof And in token of their dutifull respect to his Majestie confidence of the equitie of their cause and innocencie of their carriage and hope of his Majesties gracious acceptance they offered in all humilitie with submisse reverence a copie thereof to the Herauld ANd now for triall of what Wee have said the Reader may reflect upon these particulars Not farre from the beginning they averre that they did confidently expect from Us a free Generall Assemblie and Parliament to be indicted and that Our Commissioner promised to recommend unto Us this their suit for a free Generall Assemblie without prelimitation either in the constitution and members thereof in the order and manner of proceeding or in the matters to bee treated of and do insinuate as if Wee had not given order for any such Assemblie in Our Declaration which everie Reader looking upon Our Declaration may see to be most untrue for in it We give warrant to Our Commissioner to indict a free Generall Assemblie nor is there there either mention or meaning of any prelimitation though they themselves did use verie many some whereof you have heard alreadie and shall heare of more hereafter Afterwards they quarrell with Our Declaration for ascribing all the late distractions of this Church and Common-wealth to their conceived feares of the Innovation of Religion and Lawes and not to the Innovations themselves No doubt a great crime that We will not acknowledge that the Service Book which was penned at first by those who laid downe their lives in opposition to Poperie is an introduction to Poperie and We do professe that We did discharge that Book onely to remove their feares and doubts and ease their pretended grievances nor can Wee condemne that Book without condemning the Service Book of England for the Covenanters arguments strike alike at both Then immediatly after They take it ill that though We have discharged the practice of these pretended Innovations and voided all Acts made for the establishing of them yet We have not rescinded Our former Proclamations at Sterling and Edinburgh As if nothing could content them unlesse Wee should disgrace Our owne Proclamations which did not any way establish or authorize the things complained of nay more unlesse We will call back Our own words which cannot be interpreted to any such sense as they would force upon them they would make Our people beleeve that the libertie of the generall Assemblie is prejudged in a suspicious undutifull and dangerous phrase tell them That they do not consider with whom they are dealing as if no trust were to be given to Us Next they quarrell with Our discharging of the practice of the Articles of Perth but not the Articles themselves which are established by acts both of Parliament and Generall Assemblie and yet Wee dare say that they would hold it for a strange position if We should use Our Prerogative to the disanulling of any thing established by these two Judicatories nay if We and the Parliament joyntly should as the world goeth now offer to disanull any act of their Generall Assemblie so glad they are to quarrell with Our Declaration that in their eagernesse they destroy their owne grounds Their next cavill if it were possible is as senslesse as the former whereby they averre that Our naming of Bishops in Our Proclamation for the indiction of the Assemblie is a prelimitation of it because thereby We take it as granted that the office of a Bishop is unquestionably an office in that Church and Kingdome and this they call a great prelimitation put upon the Assemblie but with what shew of consequence We cannot possibly conceive
adjudged to be so in the case of the Ministers who held an Assembly at Aberdene after it was prorogued by Our royall Father who being cited to compeere before the Lords of the Councell to answer that high contempt and compeering declined the authoritie of Our royall Father and his Councell and appealed to a Generall Assembly and were therefore arraigned of high treason upon that Statute before the Lord chiefe Justice of that Kingdome and after pleading to it by their Advocates were found by a Jurie or Assize guilty of high treason and had received sentence accordingly if Our royall Father out of his singular clemencie and gracious respect to their calling had not reprived them before sentence and only inflicted upon them perpetuall banishment which they did undergoe The Act of Parliament upon which they were arraigned was this The eighth Parliament current holden at Edinburgh the 22. of May in the yeere of God 1584. by the right Excellent right High and Mightie Prince James the Sixt by the grace of God King of Scots and three Estates of this Realme An Act confirming the Kings Majesties royall power over all Estates and subjects within this Realme FOrasmuch as some persons being lately called before the Kings Majestie and his secret Councell to answer upon certaine points to have beene inquired of them concerning some treasonable seditious and contumelious speeches uttered by them in Pulpits Schooles and otherwaies to the disdaine and reproach of his Highnesse his Progenitors and present Councell contemptuously declined the judgement of his Highnesse and his said Councell in that behalfe to the evill example of others to doe the like if timely remedy be not provided Therefore our Soveraign Lord and his three Estates assembled in this present Parliament ratifieth and approveth and perpetually confirmeth the Royall power and authority over all Estates aswell spirituall as temporall within this Realme in the person of the Kings Majestie our Soveraign Lord his Heires and Successors And also statuteth and ordaineth that his Highnesse his Heires and Successors by themselves and their Councells are and in time to come shall be judges competent to all persons his Highnesse subjects of what estate degree function or condition soever they be of Spirituall or Temporall in all matters wherein they or any of them shall be apprehended summoned or charged to answer to such things as shall bee inquired of them by our said Soveraigne Lord and his Councell And that none of them which shall happen to be apprehended called or summoned to the effect aforesaid presume to take in hand to decline the judgement of his Highnesse his Heires and Successors or their Councell in the premises under the paine of treason Their sixth Protestation is nothing but a repetition of that which they have said so oft even unto tediousnesse In their seventh and last they bewray an unexempled boldnesse in avowing their confidence of Our approbation to the integritie of their hearts and peaceablenesse of their waies and actions all this time past when in their owne consciences they doe know that We doe hold and detest their waies and actions as most unpeaceable and seditious And now having taken a short survey of this their Protestation We doe appeale to any man who shall compare it with Our Declaration whether Our gracious Proclamation against which they protested did not rather deserve an humble and hearty acknowledgement of Our many graces and favours towards them with a joyfull and submissive acceptation of them then first to be traduced to the people before it was made for a Proclamation tending to the utter ruine and subversion of the Religion and Lawes of that Church and Kingdome and then afterward to bee encountred in publique with such an impudent insolent seditious and senslesse Protestation And lastly after all this to be railed at in their Pulpits and Our people made to beleeve that that part of it which required subscription to their owne confession of faith but lately sworne and subscribed unto by themselves was a device of the Devill and hatched in Hell as shall appeare by that which followed For the next day being Sunday all the Pulpits of Edinburgh nay and many places where there were no Pulpits for they heard Sermons in many Halls and other profane and common places did ring with bitter invectives and declamations against this Our gracious Declaration especially against that part of it which they conceived would be most satisfactorie to Our people and prove a speciall Antidote for expelling that poyson which they had made them swallow concerning Our declining from the Reformed Religion and inclining to Poperie viz. the subscription to their own confession of faith now commanded by Us For they branded it so with most hideous and horrible names of the very depth and policie of Sathan that the common people who were well perswaded of the pietie of their Preachers could not chuse but imagine that there was some wickednesse in it which their Preachers could and did dive into though they did not One Preacher in his Sermon prayed God to scatter them in Israel and to divide them in Jacob who were the authors of this scattering and divisive counsell Another Preacher in his Pulpit told his people that the urging of this subscription was an Italian and a devillish device first to make them renounce God and perjure themselves and then afterward there was an intention to destroy their bodies and so that this subscription imported no lesse then the destruction both of their bodies and soules These and many more such false feares suggested first from two of the Preachers of Edinburgh and from them transmitted to their fellows throughout the Kingdome did worke so strongly with Our good but simple and seduced people as that they were wrought unto a perswasion that this subscription to their owne confession of faith commanded by Us for removing that false opinion which their Leaders had put into their heads of Our inclination to Poperie was of a farre deeper reach and of more dangerous consequence then if We had been inclined to Poperie indeed still adding That if they did subscribe it now by Our authoritie it could receive no acceptation at Gods hands God rejecting any service done to him by constraint it being very familiar with them at these times to terme obedience to authoritie constraint but when they subscribed it voluntarily or by the perswasion of their Leaders then it was acceptable to God and if they durst have used such a Popish word no question they would have added Meritorious And thus you see with what undutifulnesse Our gracious Declaration was entertained Yet it was not so received by all For first all the Lords of Our Councell amongst whom were some who never seemed to be satisfied before were so fully satisfied and so much overjoyed with this Our gracious Declaration that they did condemne and utterly detest this odious Protestation of the Covenanters whereupon Our Councels Letter of thankes and proffer of
your Lordsh meanes for naming none I know not to whom I shall take my selfe nor doe I know what violence and threatnings you mean If you meane his Majesties Commissioners appointed by the King they requiring his subjects to subscribe the old Confession and Covenant by his authoritie now renewed and remonstrating unto them the danger they incurre by law in not obeying his Majesties commandement I hope that cannot bee called violence but duty the omission whereof must needs bee a violation of and violence offered to his Majesties sacred authority If other violences and threatnings they have used as your Lordsh seemeth to intimate for their obedience to his Majesties just authority I am sure your Lordsh will not call violence they must answer for it and shall whensoever your Lordsh shall make known the delinquents But alas my Lords Tell me now in good earnest whether you have heard they have used such violence in perswading this Covenant as hath beene used by your adherents in inforcing of yours hath the bloud of Gods servants his holy Ministers been shed which bloud I am affraid keepeth the vengeance of God still hanging over this Land have men beene beaten turned out of their livings and maintenance reviled and excommunicated in the Pulpits and a thousand more outrages acted upon them for not subscribing this Covenant have none who have subscribed your Covenant done it with blind and doubting minds If they have I beseech your Lordsh not to call his Majesties Councellours legall proceedings irreligious and unjust untill you have proved the piety and justice of the proceedings of your owne adherents For the other of your undertaking and promising for your parts that no man should be troubled till the Assembly and expecting the like from us truly I am glad I have it under your Lordsh hands for I think there are few houres of any one day since the indicting of the Assemblie that from all parts of this Kingdome I am not vexed with complaints of new processing of Ministers new with-holding of Ministers stipends unprocessed heavie complaints of Ministers of your owne Covenant that they are threatned and that sharply and bitterly for their declaring of their griefe in being barred of their freedome in the election of their owne Commissioners to the Generall Assembly and being borne down by the multitude of Lay voyces and menaced because of their protesting against the same The complaints of Ministers Non-Covenanters and Lay-Elders Non-Covenanters chosen by their Sessions to assist at the election of the Commissioners from the Presbyteries but turned backe for not having subscribed your Covenant and reviled with bitter words for being so pert as to come thither is this the performance of promising that no man shall bee troubled till the Assembly These are indeed preparations verie unfit to precede this Assembly they being so unpeaceable and like to take up much time in discussing at that great Meeting the illegality of these elections My Lord the truth is I shall be as carefull to see any wrong offered by his Majesties Commissioners in urging his Majesties authority punished when I shall know the offences and the offenders as I am heartily grieved at the proceedings of your Associats Here I am sure his Majesties Commissioners have been rather backward then forward but so have not your Lordsh adherents been for they have in verie many places proclaimed your Protestation where his Majesties Declaration hath not been proclaimed I hope your Lordsh will pardon my unusuall prolixitie for I confesse I am much troubled to see his Majesties good subjects led into such misconstructions of his pious and religious intentions towards them This my Letter I pray your Lordsh to communicate to the other Noble Lords who subscribed that to me To your selfe and them I pray your Lordsh commend the true respects of Your Lordsh. For the Earle of Cassills THis Letter it seemes gave them no satisfaction for they still continued their reports Besides they had the boldnesse by another Letter from the same Table sent likewise to Our Commissioner being then at Hammilton to expostulate with him that one of Our Ships at sea had searched a Scottish Merchants Ship for Ammunition when as they themselves before had searched a Merchants Ship for some Ammunition which We had sent for Scotland and would have seized upon it if they had not been prevented and immediately after a little English Vessell carrying Beere to some part of that Kingdome was likewise stayed and searched by them In the same Letter they quarrell with Our Commissioner for hindering the bringing of Horses from England thither which is unlawfull for any one to doe without a speciall licence from the Master of Our Horse The copie of their Letter filled with their ordinarie pretences of Religion and Our Commissioners Answer unto it be these Please your Grace AFter your parting from us we had knowledge from John Wilson Skipper and sundry of his Passengers newly arrived That being at Sea on his way from Holland hither one of his Majesties small ships of eight Peeces came aboard and searched him for Armes and Ammunition declaring they did the same by his Majesties Warrant We doe not so much value the hazzard of any prejudice as we are heartily grieved to find any such note of his Majesties displeasure differencing us from his other subjects when our own hearts and the Lord that searcheth them doth heare witnesse of our loyaltie and affection to his Majestie especially to have found it now when we are made so secure both by the hopes of obteyning from his Majesties favour by your mediation these ordinary and publike remedies that can fully settle this Church and State and by assurance from your Grace we should finde no such hard dealing during the time of your imployment amongst the subjects here who trust in your care to prevent speedily the inconvenience of this as you did in that other late particular anent the arrest of our horses in England We thinke this advertisment sufficient to your Grace who is wounded through our sides if wee suffer any thing in this time being so farre interessed to vindicate us from such prejudice who doe acknowledge our selves to be Edinb the 28. Septemb. 1638. Your Graces humble servants Rothees Montrose Home Weymse Lindesay Boyd Londone Balmerino Dalhousie Forrester Elcho Craustoune Baltarres Burghly Lothiane My Lord I Have received a Letter this day signed by your Lordsh and sundry other Noblemen making mention that one John Wilson Skipper being on his way from Holland hither was searched by one of his Majesties small ships This is no new nor unaccustomed thing for commonly the Captains of his Majesties ships during the time of being at sea doe take notice what the loadings of all such ships are as they meet with who trade in the Channell it being a prerogative that belongs to his Imperall Crown I am perswaded that your Lordsh and the rest of my Lords cannot thinke but if
his Majestie had been desirous to have made stop of importation of Ammunition into this Kingdome this time past but it would have been an easie matter for him to have effected but so little hath he regarded this as he hath not so much as taken notice of it And yet it were no strange thing if his Majestie should give direction to cause examine for what end so great store of Ammunition is imported into this Kingdome and a little more narrowly to looke into our actions when by I know not whom there hath been so much notice taken of such Ammunition as his Majestie hath thought fit to send hither For notwithstanding that your Lordsh sayes we are made secure by the hopes of obtaining from his Majestie these remedies that can fully settle this Church and State yet I may say courses are taken to put feares in his Majesties good subjects minds by perswading of them that no such thing is intended This does too too manifestly appeare by the watching and guarding his Majesties Castle and many other courses but of this I will write nothing my intention being only to returne answer of what is writ to me And therefore for your Lordsh satisfaction I shall acquaint his Majestie with the contents of your letters who will no doubt give such directions therein as his good subjects will have no just cause of complaint Whereas you have been pleased to say that you have been assured by me that you should receive no such hard dealing during the time of my imployment let mee desire you to consider this aright and you will find it none for neither was that ship stayed from proceeding in their intended voyage nor any thing taken from them nor needs your Lordsh to doubt that his Majestie will doe any thing except our owne indiscretion provoke him that may make appear to the world that he makes a difference betwixt us of this Nation and his other subjects Bee confident my Lord that my endevours have and doe tend to no other end but to the glory of God the honour of his sacred Majestie and the preserving from ruine this poore distracted Kingdome and that I have and shall labour to prevent all such accidents as may breed the least stop or hinderance of this wished event which I hope and am confident that your Lordsh. and all those noble Lords who have signed this Letter to me will take the same to heart and then certainly you will not be so easily moved with such light and sleight reports Nor will your Lordsh thinke that either you or I can bee wounded by the order and command of so pious mercifull and so clement a Prince as is our dread Soveraigne who hath showne himselfe to be so full of goodnesse as we must of all men living prove the worst if we be not thankfull to God and him for it This my letter your Lordsh will be pleased to communicate to the rest who have writ to me and esteeme of me as Hammilt 24. Sept. 1638. For the Earle of Rothees Your Lordships humble servant Hammiltoun WIth his answer they were so far from being satisfied that to answer this affront as they did interpret it for searching a Ship of that Kingdome at sea they resolved to put a greater affront upon Us by increasing their Guards about Our Castle of Edinburgh In Fyfe they gave order for a Communion throughout their Churches at which they made every one to sweare that they should not subscribe Our Confession and Covenant nor any other but their owne which they swore againe de novo especially to stand to that part of it which concerneth mutuall defence against all persons whomsoever They gave generall order for the Fast to bee kept on the fourth of November being Sunday neglecting the day designed in Our Proclamation which was the Wednesday following and the seventh of that Moneth Our Commissioner seeing these contempts daily to increase and hearing that they had appointed the Communion to bee celebrated at Edinburgh sent for the Provost and Magistrates and inquired of them these particulars First whether at their Communion which was to be celebrated the two next Sundaies following it was intended that the like oath should bee taken with them as had been taken in Fyfe Secondly whether they intended to keep the Fast-day designed by Us in Our Proclamation and according as they had lately since been required to doe by an order sent from Our Councell to them for that purpose Thirdly what order they had taken with those who had the day before reviled and abused Doctor Eliot while he was preaching in the Pulpit That he had sent for them because he had found those few Ministers by whom they were ruled to bee unreasonable men and despisers of Authoritie To the last they promised that they would make a discoverie of the offenders and see them punished which they never did For the first they thought it most unreasonable that any oath should be ministred as it was in Fyfe For the second they thought it most reasonable that Our Fast-day should be kept but before they could give a full answer they must first conferre with their Ministers at their meeting with whom they found that the Ministers had intended that barbarous oath at the Communion and not to keep Our Fast-day more then other Churches in the countrie had done yet the Magistrates did with much perswasions over-rule them in both Our Commissioner did resolve with great solemnitie attended with all Our Councell and Judges to keep that Fast in the great Church of Edinburgh on the day appointed by Us and gave notice thereof to the Magistrates who returned him thanks and assurance of welcome But understanding that they were resolved to discharge the ordinarie Ministers of that Church from preaching there that day onely because they were Non-covenanters and had appointed their places to be supplied with the two onely Covenanting Ministers of their Towne he sent for the Magistrates againe telling them That he could not come to their Church and countenance so great a disorder as the displacing of the two Preachers of that Church onely because they were faithfull subjects to Us nor durst heare these two Preachers designed by them who in their Pulpits did ordinarily inveigh against Us and Our authoritie Unlesse therefore hee might either nominate the Preachers or heare the ordinarie Preachers of that Church he must not come thither The Magistrates did what they could to perswade with their Ministers the one of them was contented with Our Commissioners desire but the other was so obstinate as he would no way hearken to it and him being so powerfull with the people the Magistrates durst not offend and so Our Commissioner with Our Councell and Judges were necessitated to keep Our Fast at another Church hard by Our Palace Now Wee desire the Reader to observe how the Heads of the Covenanters were affraid that any shew of obedience should bee yeelded unto Us by Our
Assembly the Moderator being the same materially who governed them at Edinburgh though not so formally chosen as now the Clerke of the Assembly being the same who was Clerke to their Covenant and to their Tables at Edinburgh the members of the Assembly being the same who sate at their Tables there and those the most corrupted and distempered of them all who could now expect lesse insolent conclusions from this Assembly then they had found from their Tables And indeed the very same were found For immediately they bragged that now they were a constituted Assembly and resolved to laugh at any who should quarrell with the elections which they had approved and especially at the Bishops Declinator if it should containe any arguments to that purpose The first Cocke who begun to crow upon this dunghill though it were within night no ordinarie time of crowing was Master Andrew Ramsey a Minister of Edinburgh who getting up upon a stoole or fourme made a very great bragge offering by dispute to prove against any man the lawfulnesse of lay Elders by Scripture Antiquitie Fathers Councels the judgement of all the Reformed Churches even of the Church of England who admitted them into the High Commission Our Commissioner seeing him crowd so much in a very little room told him that he runne no great hazzard or danger in his challenge for he was sure the Judges would bee his seconds yet if it pleased him hee would find one should enter into the Lists with him either publiquely or privately upon that quarrell but many of his brethren were not very well pleased with his glorious challenge as making accompt that hee would never bee able to make good the greatest part of it And with this bragge the Assembly dissolved for that night The next day being the 27. of November after the Assembly was met Our Commissioner urged once againe that the Bishops Declinator might bee read which was accordingly done by the Clerke of the Assembly It was entertained with much jeering and laughter and by transmission of a whisper from one eare to another they resolved when it was read out to have received it with a generall hissing but yet by another generall whisper transmitted as the former that course was stopped After it was ended Our Commissioner spake home to them for the necessitie of that Declinator and the unavoidable strength of the reasons contained in the same and in depressing by way of parallel their Libell against the Bishops which hee spared not to call infamous and scurrillous both in the matter of it and the manner of promulging it and hereupon tooke instruments in Our Clerke of Registers hands both for the production and reading of the Declinator Some of the Lords of the Assembly offered to doe the like in the Clerk of the Assemblies hands but Our Commissioner told him it was needlesse since it was not tendered to the Assembly but to himselfe First the Moderatour in a short speech deplored the obstinacie of the Bishops hearts who in all that Declinator had bewrayed no signe of remorse and sorrow for their wicked courses and then the Lords of the Assembly perceiving their errour that they who found themselves to bee Judges had offered to take instruments in the Clerkes hands of the production of any exhibits which was never heard to bee done by the Judge but onely by the actor or plaintiffe prompted some young Noblemen and Gentlemen Covenanters but not members of the Assembly then present to demand instruments of the production of the Bishops Declinator in whose name one Gibson one of the Clerkes of Our Session and so acquainted with Law termes both demanded instruments and thundered out a verball Protestation in such Law termes as was not easie to be understood by most of the auditors The summe of what was understood was this That they would pursue their Libell against the Bishops so long as they had lives and fortunes etiam in foro contentiosissimo and required Doctor Hammilton their Proctor then present to take notice that they cyted him to compeere die in diem till sentence were given Our Commissioner first protested against that Protestation and then discharged the Bishops Proctor from appearance before the Assembly to which he had presented no Declinator but required him to appeare before himselfe to whom it was presented when he should require him The Declinator of the Bishops here insueth The Declinator and Protestation of the Archbishops and Bishops of the Church of SCOTLAND and others their adherents within that Kingdome against the pretended Generall Assemblie holden at Glasgow Novemb. 21. 1638. WEE Archbishops Bishops and other Under-subscribers for our selves and in name and behalfe of the Church of Scotland Whereas it hath pleased the Kings Majestie to indict a generall Assemblie of the Church to be kept at Glasgow Novemb. 21. 1638. for composing and setling of the distractions of the same First do acknowledge and professe That a Generall Assemblie lawfully called and orderly conveened is a most necessarie and effectuall meane for removing those evils wherewith the said Church is infested and for setling that order which becommeth the house of God And that wee wish nothing more then a meeting of a peaceable and orderly Assemblie to that effect Secondly we acknowledge and professe as becommeth good Christians and faithfull subjects that his Majestie hath authoritie by his prerogative Royall to call Assemblies as is acknowledged by the Assemblie at Glasgow 1610. and Parliament 1612. and that it is not lawfull to conveene without his Royall consent and approbation except wee will put our selves in danger to bee called in question for sedition Yet neverthelesse in sundrie respects wee cannot but esteeme this meeting at Glasgow most unlawfull and disorderly and their proceedings void and null in Law for the causes and reasons following First before his Majesties Royall warrant to my Lord Commissioner his Grace to indict a lawfull free generall Assemblie the usurped authoritie of the Table as they call it by their missives and instructions did give order and direction for all Presbyteries to elect and chuse their Commissioners for the Assemblie and for seeking of Gods blessing to it to keep a solemne Fast Sept. 16. whereas his Majesties warrant for indicting of that Assemblie was not published till the 22. of that month so that they preventing and not proceeding by warrant of Royall authoritie the pretended Commissioners being chosen before the Presbyteries were authorized to make election cannot bee reputed members of a lawfull Assemblie A lawfull Assemblie must not onely be indicted by lawfull authoritie as we acknowledge this to be but also constituted of such members as are requisite to make up such a body For if according to the indiction none at all do conveene or where the Clergie is called there meet none but Laicks or moe Laicks then of the Clergie with equall power to judge and determine or such of the Laicks and Clergie as are not lawfully authorized or are not capable
traduced doth redound to the reproach of Church and State and of the Gospell whereof they are Preachers 6. Lastly to omit many other informalities against their owne consciences which wee charge in the sight of God as they must answer before his great and fearefull tribunall if they suspect and know not perfectly according to the judgement of charitie them whom they thus accuse to bee free of these crimes wherewith they charge them at least of many of them as appeares evidently by the 11. Article of the said instructions having therein libelled the generall and have yet to seek the specification thereof from the malice of their neighbours if so bee they can furnish it By which informall and malicious proceeding it is most apparent that our said parties do seek our disgrace and overthrow most maliciously and illegally And therefore wee call heaven and earth to witnesse if this bee not a barbarous and violent persecution that all circumstances being considered hath few or none to parallel it since the beginning of Christianitie and if wee have not just cause to decline the said pretended Commissioners as our partie Moreover can these men expect but in a lawfull Assemble they were to bee called and censured for their enorme transgressions foresaid And will any man thinke that they can bee judges in their owne cause It is alleadged out of the Canon-Law against the Pope that if the Pope be at variance with any man he ought not to bee Judge himselfe but to chuse arbitrators And this may militate against them except they be more unruly then Popes Ludovicus Bavarus and all the Estates of Germanie with him did plead this nullitie against the sentence and proceeding of Pope John 22. and of his Councell And the Archbishop of Cullen 1546. did plead the nullitie of Paul 3. his Bull of excommunication because hee protested that so soone as a lawfull Councell should be opened hee would implead the Pope as partie being guiltie of many things censurable by the Councell But the late Protestation doth shew the authors thereof to bee no lesse injurious to our place and authority then they are over-weening of their owne For it is against reason and practice of the Christian Church that no Primate Archbishop nor Bishop have place nor voice deliberative or decisive in generall Assemblies except they be authorized and elected by their Presbyteriall meetings consisting of preaching and ruling Elders as they call them and without warrant or example in the Primitive and purest times of the Church This also doth inferre the nullitie of an Assemblie if the Moderator and President for matters of doctrine and discipline shall bee neither the Primate Archbishop nor Bishop but hee who by pluralitie of Presbyters and Lay-mens voices shall bee elected which happely may be one of the inferiour Clergie or a Lay-person as sometimes it hath fallen out Whereas canonically according to the ancient practice of the Church the Primate should preside according to the constitution of the first Councell of Nice Can. 6. of Antioch Can. 9. and of the Imperiall Law Novell constitut 123. cap. 10. and according to our owne Law For what place in Assemblies Archbishops and Bishops had in other Christian Nations the same they had no doubt in Scotland and yet still do retaine except by some municipall Law it hath beene restrained which cannot be showne For the restraint of their authoritie by the Act of Parliament 1592. is restored by the Act of Parliament 1606. and 1609. and all Acts prejudiciall to their jurisdiction abrogated Neither doth that Act 1592. establishing generall Assemblies debarre Bishops from presiding therein nor the abrogation of their Commission granted to them by Act of Parliament in Ecclesiasticall causes imply and inferre the abrogation of that authoritie which they received not from the Parliament but from Christ from whom they received the spirituall oversight of the Clergie under their charge whereto belongeth the Presidentship in all Assemblies for matters spirituall alwayes with due submission to the supreme Governour which is so intrinsecally inherent in them as they are Bishops that hoc ipso that they are Bishops they are Presidents of all Assemblies of the Clergie as the Chancellour of the Kingdome hath place in Councell and Session not by any Act or Statute but hoc ipso that he is Chancellour By Act of Parliament Bishops are declared to have their right in Synods and other inferiour meetings but by no Law restrained nor debarred from the exercise of it in Nationall Assemblies and the law allowing Bishops to bee Moderators of the Synods doth present a list in absence of the Metropolitan to whom of right this place doth belong as said is out of which the Moderator of the generall Assemblie shall be chosen For is it not more agreeable to reason order and decencie that out of Moderators of Synods a Moderator of the generall Assemblie should be chosen then of the inferiour Clergie subject to them As concerning that Act of the generall Assemblie 1580. whereby Bishops are declared to have no warrant out of Scripture if corruption of time shall bee regarded the authoritie of that Assemblie might bee neglected no lesse then that at Glasgow 1610. But it is ordinarie that prior Acts of Assemblies and Parliaments give place to the posterior for Posteriora derogant prioribus And there past not full six yeares when a generall Assemblie at Edinburgh found that the name of Bishops hath a speciall charge and function annexed to it by the word of God and that it was lawfull for the generall Assemblie to admit a Bishop to a benefice presented by the Kings Majestie with power to admit visite and deprive Ministers and to be Moderators of the Presbyteries where they are resident and subject onely to the sentence of the generall Assemblie As for that Act at Mont rose let them answer to it that have their calling by that Commission Wee professe that wee have a lawfull calling by the election of the Clergie who are of the Chapiter of our Cathedrals and consecration of Bishops by his Majesties consent and approbation according to the laudable Lawes and ancient custome of this Kingdome and of the Church in ancient times and do homage to our Soveraigne Lord for our Temporalities and acknowledge him solo Deo minorem next unto God in all causes and over all persons Spirituall or Temporall in his owne Dominions supreme Governour But now wee may take up Cyprian his complaint Lib. 3. Ep. 14. Quod non periculum metuere debemus de offensâ Domini quando aliqui de Presbyteris nec Evangelii nec loci sui memores sed neque futurum Dei judicium neque praepositum sibi Episcopum cogitantes quod nunquam omnino sub antecessoribus factum est cum contumelia contemptâ praepositi totum sibi vendicent Atque utinam non prostratâ fratrum nostrorum salute sibi omnia vendicarent Contumelias Episcopatûs nostri dissimulare ferre possem sicut
complete body exhorted them to stand by the Confession of Faith as it was sworn in 1581. After he had done Our Commissioner desired the Moderatour to say prayer and so to dismisse the Assembly which he was about to doe but was hindered by the Lords who fell againe with new perswasions to urge Our Commissioners stay with them which he answered with so much expression of griefe for there misdemeanours which had necessarily inforced this rupture that verie many of the Assembly seemed to be much moved with it When nothing could perswade his stay at last some of the Lords told him that fearing this rupture they had a protestation ready against what he had said and done which they desired him to heare read which so soone as the Clerk begun to read Our Commissioner repeated his former protestation adding in expresse words that in Our name hee dissolved the Court under the higest paines and so came out with the Lords of Our Councell leaving the Clerk reading their protestation When he came to the Church doore he found it shut so that some of his company were glad to force it open No sooner was he gone but the Lord Areskyn eldest son to the Earle of Marr stood up and made this wise speech not without teares My Lords and the rest my heart hath beene long with you I will dallie no more with God I begge to bee admitted into your blessed Covenant and pray you all to pray to God for me that he would forgive me for dallying with him so long Three others of meaner qualitie desired the same and so all those foure were presently admitted into their Covenant These men at least the Lord Areskyn were resolved to enter into their Covenant long agoe but were reserved on purpose for doing of it at that houre for the greater glory of their Covenant For no sooner had they sworn the Moderator received them by the hand but presently he desired the whole audience to admire Gods approbation and sealing of their proceedings that even at that instant when they might have feared some shrinking and back-sliding because of the present rupture He had moved the hearts of these men to begge admittance into their blessed societie Immediatly after divers stood up and spake but all much about one and to this sense They had seene how carefull and punctuall Our Commissioner was like a good servant faithfully to serve Us his Master and to observe Our instructions speaking withall much to his singular commendation how much more then ought they to be carefull to bee found faithfull in following his instructions who was Master as to all themselves so even to him who was Our Commissioners Master These speeches being ended two things were immediately put to the question First whether notwithstanding Our Commissioners departure and protestation they would adhere to their owne protestation and continue the Assembly They all voyced affirmatively except the Lord Carnaegie Commissioner from the Presbyterie of Brichen Sir John Carnaegie Commissioner from the Presbyterie of Arbroath two Ministers Commissioners from the Presbyterie of Strabogie the lay Elder and Ministers Commissioners from the Presbyterie of Peebles Doctor Strang Principall of the Colledge of Glasgow Doctor Baroune Commissioner from the Universitie of S. Andrewes with some others who refused to sit with them any longer The second was whether the Assembly though discharged by Our Commissioner was competent Judge to the Bishops and whether they would goe on in their tryall notwithstanding the reasons conteyned in their Declinator and this passed affirmatively without one contrarie voyce and so for that night the Assembly was dismissed Our Commissioner after he had left the Assemblie that very night though late assembled Our Councell none were absent except the Earle of Argyle who made some excuse and pretence for his not comming and the Lord Almond who was then sick Two things Our Councell resolved on first to write unto Us a letter of thanks for those gracious proffers which Wee by Our Commissioner had made at the Assembly Next to draw up a Proclamation for the dissolving of the Assembly Their Letter here followeth Most Sacred Soveraigne IN obedience to your Majesties Royall commands we have attended your Majesties Commissioner here at Glasgow since the 17. of this instant and according to our bound dutie in so exigent occasion have not been wanting with our humble and best advices And although wee doe remit the particular relation of what is past to his Graces selfe as best knowne to him yet we cannot for truths sake be so silent as not acknowledge to your Majestie that never servant did with more industry care judgement and patience goe about the discharge of so great a trust And albeit the successe hath not answered his desires neither yet his extraordinarie paines and as wee may confidently affirme most dexterous and advised courses taken to compasse the just command of so gracious a King yet his deserving herein merits to be remembred to posteritie And since your Majesty hath been pleased to renew to us your former act of grace expressed in your Proclamation and Declaration anent the maintenance of the true Religion and we in the defence and profession thereof wee doe all in humilitie and hearty acknowledgement of so great goodnesse returne to your Majesty the offer of our lives and fortunes in defence of your Sacred person and maintenance of your Royall Authority and shall in all our actions approve our selves your Majesties most loyall subjects and humble servants Sic subscribitur Traquaire Roxburgh Marre Murray Lithgow Perth Wigtoun Kingorne Tullibardin Haddington Galloway Annandaile Lauderdail Kinnoul Dumfreis Southesk Angus Elphinstoun Naper Dalyell Hay W. Elphinstoun Ja. Carmichael Hamiltoun Blackhall From Glasgow Novem. 28. 1638. TO this Letter the Lord of Argyle refused to set his hand Next morning the Proclamation was signed by Our Commissioner and Councell but the Earle of Argyle refused to signe it as before hee had done the Letter The Proclamation here followeth CHARLES by the grace of God King of Scotland England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith To Our Lovits Heraulds Pursevants Our Sheriffes in that part conjunctly and severally specially constitute greeting Forsameikle as out of the royall and fatherly care which We have had of the good and peace of this Our ancient and native Kingdome having taken to Our serious consideration all such things as might have given contentment to Our good and loyall subjects And to this end had discharged by Our Proclamation the Service Booke Booke of Canons and high Commission freed and liberate all men from the practising of the five Articles made all Our subjects both ecclesiasticall and civill liable to the censure of Parliament generall Assembly or any other Judicatorie competent according to the nature and qualitie of the offence and for the free entrie of Ministers that no other oath be administrate unto them then that which is contained in the Act of Parliament had declared all by-gone
doe discharge and inhibit all and whatsoever pretended commissioners and other members of the said pretended assembly of all further meeting and conveening treating and concluding any thing belonging to the said assembly under the pain of treason declaring all and whatsoever that they shall happen to doe in any pretended meeting thereafter to be null of no strength force nor effect with all that may follow thereupon Prohibiting and discharging all our lieges to give obedience thereto and declaring them and every one of them free and exempt from the same and of all hazzard that may ensue for not obeying thereof And for this effect we command and charge all the foresaids pretended commissioners and other members of the said assembly to depart forth of this city of Glasgow within the space of xxiiii houres after the publication hereof and to repair home to their own houses or that they goe about their own private affaires in a quiet manner With speciall provision alwayes that the foresaid declaration given in under our Commissioners hand with all therein contained shall notwithstanding hereof stand full firm and sure to all our good subjects in all time coming for the full assurance to them of the true religion And our will is and we command and charge that incontinent these our letters seen ye passe and make publication hereof by open proclamation at the market crosse of Glasgow and other places needfull wherethrough none pretend ignorance of the same Given under our signet at Glasgow the 29. of November and of our reign the fourteenth year 1638. Sic Subscribitur HAMILTOUN Traquaire Roxburgh Murray Linlithgow Perth Kingorne Tullibardin Hadingtoun Galloway Annandaill Lauderdaill Kinnoull Dumfreis Southesk Belheaven Angus Dalyell J. Hay W. Elphinstoun Ja. Carmichael J. Hamiltoun THis Proclamation being very solemnly made with sound of Trumpets and by Harolds with coats of Our arms on their backs at the market Crosse of Glascow was received with a Protestation read in the same place by Iohnston the then Clerk of the Assembly assisted by the Lord Areskyn and divers others young Noblemen and Gentlemen The paper which Iohnston read was not as it seemeth that very Protestation which they printed for he read something out of a paper to that purpose and offered it by the name of a Protestation to him who read Our Proclamation which paper the Clarke of our Councell offering to receive Iohnston refused to deliver it saying He must stay untill it were written By which it is evident that they who at Glascow protested against Our Proclamation did protest and desired their Protestation to be received before it was penned as it is now printed and before they could so much as send to them in whose name it was made to know whether they would adhere to it or not But a Protestation against it they have since printed which here now we doe subjoyne that the reader may see how groundlesse and unwarrantable it is The Protestation of the generall Assembly of the Church of SCOTLAND c. Made in the high Kirk and at the Market Crosse of Glasgow Novemb. 28. and 29. An. 1638. WEE Commissioners from Presbyteries Burghes and Vniversities now conveened in a full and free Assembly of the Church of Scotland indicted by his Majestie and gathered together in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ the only Head and Monarch of his own Church And we Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Ministers Burgesses and Commons Subscribers of the Confession of Faith Make it knowne that where We His Majesties loyall Subjects of all degrees considering and taking to heart the many and great innovations and corruptions lately by the Prelates and their adherents intruded into the doctrine worship and discipline of this Church which had been before in great purity to our unspeakable comfort established amongst us were moved to present many earnest desires and humble supplications to his sacred Majestie for granting a free generall Assemblie as the only legall and ready meane to try these innovations to purge out the corruptions and settle the order of the church for the good of Religion the honour of the King and the comfort and peace of the Kirk and Kingdome It pleased his gracious Majestie out of his Royall bountie to direct unto this Kingdome the Noble and Potent Lord James Marques of Hammiltoun with Commission to hear and redresse the just grievances of the good Subjects who by many petitions and frequent conferences being fully informed of the absolute necessity of a free generall Assemblie as the only Iudicatorie which had power to remedie those evils was pleased to undergoe the paines of a voyage to England for presenting the pittifull condition of our Church to to his sacred Majestie And the said Commissioner his Grace returned againe in August last with power to indict an Assemblie but with the condition of such prelimitations as did both destroy the freedome of an Assembly and could no wayes cure the present diseases of this Church which was made so clearly apparent to his Grace that for satisfying the reasonable desire of the Subjects groaning under the wearinesse and prejudices of longsome attendance He was againe pleased to undertake another journey to His Majestie and promised to indeavour to obtain a free Generall Assemblie without any prelimitation either of the constitution and members or matters to be treated or manner and order of proceeding so that if any question should arise concerning these particulars the same should be cognosced judged and determined by the Assembly as the onely Iudge competent And accordingly by warrant from our Sacred Soveraigne returned to this Kingdome and in September last caused indict a free Generall Assemblie to be holden at Glasgow the 21. of November instant to the unspeakable ioy of all good Subiects and Christian hearts who thereby did expect the perfect satisfaction of their long expectations and the finall remedie of their pressing grievances But these hopes were soone blasted for albeit the Assemblie did meet and begin at the appointed day and hath hitherto continued still assisted with His Graces personall presence yet His Grace hath never allowed any freedome to the Assemblie competent to it by the Word of God acts and practice of this Church and his Majesties Indiction but hath laboured to restraine the same by protesting against all the acts made therein and against the constitution thereof by such members as by all law reason and custome of this Church were ever admitted in our free Assemblies and by denying his approbation to the things proponed and concluded though most cleare customable and uncontraverted And now since his Grace after the presenting and reading of his owne commission from our sacred Soveraigne and after his seeing all our commissions from Presbyteries and Burghes produced and examined and the Assembly constitute of all the members by unanimous consent doth now to our greater griefe without any just cause or occasion offered by us unexpectedly depart and discharge any further meeting or proceeding in
Prelates Act anent the excommunicating of the Ministers deposed who doe not obey their sentence Act against those who speake or write against the Covenant this Assembly and constitutions thereof Act of reference anent the voicing in the Kirk Sessions Act condemning Chapters Archdeans preaching Deacons and such like Popish trash Act against the obtruding of Pastors upon people Act against marriage without Proclamation of Banes Act against funerall sermons Act anent the triall of expectants that is such as are not possessed of any Benefice Act anent the admission of Master Archibald Johnstoun to be Advocate and Master Rob. Dalgleish to be Agent for the Kirk Act anent the transplantation of Master Alexander Henderson from Leuchars to Edinburgh Act of reference to the Presbyteries and Provinciall Assemblies to take order with Salmon-fishing Act of transporting Master Andro Cant from Pitsligo to Newbotle Act condemning all civill offices in the persons of Ministers separate to the Gospel as to be Justices of peace sit in Session or Councell to vote or ride in Parliament Act concerning a Commission for complaints about Edinburgh Another Commission to sit at Jedburgh Another Commission to sit at Irwin Another Commission to sit at Dundee Another Commission to sit at the Channeries and Forres Another Commission to sit at Kircubright A Commission for visitation the Colledge of Aberdene A Commission for visitation of the Colledge of Glasgow Act against Salmon fishing and going of milnes on the Sabbath day Act appointing the Commissioners to attend the Parliament and Articles which they are to represent in name of the Kirke to the Estates Act ordaining the Commissioners from Presbyteries and Burrowes presently to get under the Clerks hand an Index of the Acts and hereafter a full extract of them which they are bound to take back from the Assembly to the Presbyteries and Burrowes Act ordaining the Presbyters to intimate in their severall pulpits the Assemblies explanation of the Confession of faith the Act against Episcopacie the Act against the five Articles the Act against the Service book booke of Canons booke of Ordination the High Commission the Acts of excommunication and deposition against some Prelates and Act of deposition onely against some others of them An Act discharging Printers to print any thing either anent the Acts or the proceedings of this Assemblie or any treatise which concernes the Kirke without a warrant under Master Archibald Johnstouns hand as Clerke to the Assemblie and Proctor for the Kirke and that under the pain of all Ecclesiasticall censure to be intimate with other Acts. Act ordaining the Covenant subscribed in Febr. now to be subscribed with the Assemblies Declaration Act discharging all subscription to the Covenant subscribed by his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of Councell Act ordaining all Presbyteries to keepe a solemne thanksgiving in all Parishes for Gods blessing and good successe in this Assembly upon the first convenient Sabbath Act against those who are malicious against this Church decliners or disobeyers of the Acts of this Assembly Act warranting the Moderatour and Clerke to give out summons upon relevant complaints against parties to compeere before the next Assembly Act renewing the priviledges of yeerely generall Assemblies and oftner pro re nata and appointing the third Wednesday in July next in Edinburgh for the next generall Assembly Act that none be chosen ruling Elders to sit in Presbyteries provinciall or generall Assemblies but those who subscribe the Covenant as it is now declared and acknowledges the constitution of this Assembly Act to transport Master Rob. Blair from Aire to St. Andrewes Act for representing to the Parliament the necessitie of the standing of the Procutors place for the Kirk There are many lesse principall Acts omitted so the Index is not fully perfect A. Jhonston BY these it is easie to be discerned what conclusions tending to Sedition and Rebellion and the overthrow of the lawes both of Church and Kingdome were agreed upon what false nay and what foolish positions there were established For instance Had it not been enough to have removed Episcopall government the five Articles of Perth and the other pretended innovations if they had been furnished with lawfull power so to doe No but they will have it concluded that all these were abjured in the confession of faith when it was first sworne which no reasonable man can beleeve and which they themselves did allow in many not to abjure when they first swore their Covenant and to which many Ministers members of this Assembly had sworne at their admission into their Benefices according to the Acts of Parliament and Acts of generall Assembly provided in that case And so by swearing that these things were abjured in the first confession they make them profess that they had perjured themselves in taking the other oath of their conformitie to these pretended innovations Upon which rocke one Minister of the Assembly finding himselfe to be set fast when that Act was voiced unto which declared Episcopall government and the five Articles of Perth to have been abjured formerly and so to be for ever removed Mr. Robert Baylie voiced thus Removed but not abjured to the great scandall of the rest of the Assembly hee being reputed for one of the ablest men in it But the Act was drawne up in these termes Abjured and removed by the voices of all the Assembly except his alone who knowing that all the Acts were particularly to be read and voiced to againe had drawn up a supplication to the Assembly in the name of those Ministers who before had conformed themselves to the five Articles of Perth for a mitigation of that Act at least that it might receive a publique hearing and arguing which the rest having knowledge of when that Act came to bee read and voiced to againe one of the Lords who was a lay-Elder perswaded with the Clerke that in calling the List this Minister his name should be omitted and so the Act passed without so much as asking of his voice who had his supplication ready when he should be called upon by his name but perceiving that the omission of his name was purposely done he durst stirre no more in it for feare of publique envie and some private mischiefe which might be done unto him And yet you must think this was a most godly and free Assembly Towards the end of their Assembly they divided themselves into severall Committees which should after their rising see all their Acts put in execution a thing never heard of before in that Church The Moderatour concluded with thankes to God for their good successe and then to the Nobilitie and the rest for their great paines and last of all with a speech to the Earle of Argyle giving him thankes for his presence and counsell by which they had been so much strengthened and comforted The Lord Argyle answered him with a long speech first intreating all present not to misconstrue his too late
could wee have any other intention or meaning being clearely warranted and expresly commanded by his Majesties instructions to exact the said Oath and take order that it should bee sworne throughout the Kingdome in that faire and lawfull sense and none other Neither in this point did we deliver our owne words or his Majesties minde ambiguously or doubtfully so as any other sense to our thinking could bee picked or wrung out of either the one or the other for we do attest the Lords of the Councell whether wee did not to manie or all of them upon severall occasions in conference with them ever since our comming into this Kingdome constantly declare unto them that his Majesties resolution was not to suffer Episcopall government to be abolished Wee attest all the Lords of Session whether before our tendering of that Oath to them or their Lordships taking of it wee did not fully and freely declare to them that his Majesties minde in commanding us to see this Oath taken and our own minde in requiring them to take it was onely to settle and secure the Religion and Faith professed in this Kingdome but was not to bee extended to the abjuring of Episcopall government or any other thing now in force by the Lawes of this Church and State at the time of administring this Oath which their Lordships being the reverend and learned Judges of the Lawes knew well could not bee abjured after which perspicuous predeclaration of our minde their Lordships undoubtedly in that same sense and none other took the said Oath And now good Reader having heard his Majesties minde and intention and in pursuance of them the minde of his Majesties High Commissioner concerning this Oath the reasons to repell the former objection seeme to bee needlesse the knowne minde of the supreme Magistrate who urgeth an Oath being to be taken for the undoubted sense of it yet for as much as that objection hath of late beene mainly urged for alienating the mindes of many of his Majesties good subjects and well affected to that government from adhering unto it be pleased to know that the former objection hath neither shew nor force of reason in it and that by the said Oath and that explanation set down in the Act of Councell Episcopall government neither was nor possibly could bee abjured and that for many reasons but especially these five which we having seen and approved have caused to bee here inserted and leave them to thine impartiall consideration First God forbid it should be imagined that his Majestie should command his subjects to take an Oath which in it selfe is absolutely unlawfull but for a man to sweare against a thing which is established by the Lawes of Church and Kingdome in which he liveth unlesse that thing be repugnant to the Law of God is absolutely unlawfull untill such time as that Kingdome and Church do first repeale these Lawes and therefore Episcopall government not being repugnant to the Law of God nay being consonant unto it as being of Apostolicall institution which shall be demonstrated if any man please to argue it and standding fully established both by Acts of Parliament and Acts of generall Assemblie at the time when this Oath was administred to abjure it before these Acts be repealed is absolutely unlawfull and against the word of God and it is to be hoped no man will conceive that his Majestie meaned to command a thing absolutely unlawfull And if it should be said as it is said by some who not being able to avoid the force of reason do betake themselves to pitifull shifts and evasions that these Acts of Parliament and Assembly establishing Episcopall government were unlawfully and unduly obtained certainely if they have any reasons for this their bold assertion which is of a more dangerous consequence then that it ought to be endured in any well setled Church or Common-wealth these reasons may bee presented lawfully to these judicatories to entreat them to reduce the saids Acts if there shall be strength and validitie found in them But to hold that untill such time as these judicatories shall repeale the saids Lawes they either ought to bee or can possibly bee abjured is a wicked position and destructive of the verie foundation of justice both in Church and Common-wealth Secondly it cannot bee imagined that this Oath should oblige the now takers of it farther then it did oblige the takers of it at first for doctrine and points of faith it did oblige them then and so doth it us now perpetually because these points in themselves are perpetuall immutable and eternall But for points of discipline and government and policie of the Church that Oath could binde the first takers of it no longer then that discipline and government should stand in force by the Lawes of this Church and Kingdome which our Church in her positive Confession of Faith printed amongst the Acts of Parliament Artic 20.21 declareth to bee alterable at the will of the Church it selfe and so repealable by succeeding Acts if the C●●rch shall see cause When a King at his Coronation taketh an Oath to rule according to the Lawes of his Kingdom or a Judge at his admission sweareth to give judgement according to these Lawes the meaning of their Oaths cannot be that they shall rule or judge according to them longer then they continue to be Lawes but if any of them shall come afterwards to bee lawfully repealed both King and Judge are free from ruling and judging according to such of them as are thus lawfully repealed notwithstanding their originall Oath Since therefore if the first takers of that Oath were now alive they could not bee said to have abjured Episcopall government which hath been since establshed by Lawes of this Church and Kingdom especially considering that this Church in her Confession holdeth Church government to bee alterable at the will of the Church certainely we repeating but their Oath cannot be said to abjure that government now more then they could be said to do it if they were now alive and repeating the same Oath Thirdly how can it be thought that the verie Act of his Majesties commanding this Oath should make Episcopall government to bee abjured by it more then the Covenanters requiring it of their associats in both Covenants the words and syllables of the Confession of Faith being the same Now it is well knowne that many were brought in to subscribe their Covenant by the solemne protestations of the contrivers and urgers of it that they might subscribe it without abjuring of Episcopacie and other such things as were established by Law since the time that this Oath was first invented and made and the three Ministers in their first answers to the Aberdene Quaeres have fully and clearely expressed themselves to that sense holding these things for the present not to bee abjured but onely referred to the tryall of a free generall Assemblie And likewise the adherers to the last Protestation against his
Majesties Proclamation bearing date the ninth of September in their ninth reason against the subscription urged by his Majestie do plainely averre that this Oath urged by his Majestie doth oblige the takers of it to maintaine Perth Articles and to maintaine Episcopacie Why therefore some men swearing the same words and syllables should have their words taken to another sense and bee thought to abjure Episcopall government more then others who have taken the same oath in the same words must needs passe the capacitie of an ordinarie understanding It is a received maxime and it cannot be denied but that oaths ministred unto us must either bee refused or else taken according to the knowne minde professed intention and expresse command of Authoritie urging the same A proposition not onely received in all Schooles but positively set down by the adherers to the said protestation totidem verbis in the place above cited But it is notoriously knowne even unto those who subscribed the Confession of Faith by his Majesties commandment that his Majestie not onely in his Kingdomes of England and Ireland is a maintainer and upholder of Episcopall government according to the laws of the said Churches and Kingdomes but that likewaies he is a defender and intends to continue a defender of the same government in his Kingdome of Scotland both before the time and at the time when hee urged this oath as is evident by that which is in my Lord Commissioner his Preface both concerning his Majesties instructions to his Grace and his Graces expressing his Majesties minde both to the Lords of Councell and to the Lords of Session and the same likewayes is plainly expressed and acknowledged by the adherers to the said protestation in the place above cited their words being these And it is most manifest that his Majesties minde intention and commandment is no other but that the Confession be sworne for the maintenance of Religion as it is already or presently professed these two being co-incident altogether one and the same not onely in our common forme of speaking but in all his Majesties Proclamations and thus as it includeth and continueth within the compasse thereof the foresaids novations and Episcopacie which under that name were also ratified in the first Parliament holden by his Majestie From whence it is plaine that Episcopacie not being taken away or suspended by any of his Majesties declarations as these other things were which they call novations it must needs both in deed and in the judgement of the said protesters no wayes bee intended by his Majestie to be abjured by the said oath Now both the major and that part of the minor which concerneth Episcopall government in the Church of Scotland being clearly acknowledged by the Protesters and the other part of the minor concerning that government in his other two Kingdomes being notoriously knowne not onely to them but to all others who know his Majestie how it can be imagined that his Majestie by that oath should command Episcopacie to be abjured or how could any one to whom his Majesties minde concerning Episcopall government was known honestly or safely abjure it let it be left to the whole world to judge especially considering that the Protesters themselves in that place above cited by a dilemma which we leave to themselves to answer have averred that when that Act of Councell should come out yet that it could not be inferred from thence that any such thing was abjured Fifthly and lastly If the explanation in that Act of Councell be taken in that not onely rigid but unreasonable and senslesse sense which they urge yet they can never make it appeare that Episcopall government at the first time of the administring of that oath was abolished The very words of that Confession of Faith immediatly after the beginning of it being these Received beleeved defended by many and sundrie notable Kirks and Realmes but chiefly by the Kirk of Scotland the Kings Majestie and three Estates of this Realme as Gods eternall truth and onely ground of our salvation c. By which it is evident that the subscription to this Confession of Faith is to be urged in no other sense then as it was then beleeved and received by the Kings Majestie and the three Estates of this Realme at that time in being and it is well knowne that at that time Bishops Abbats and Priors made up a third Estate of this Realme which gave approbation to this Confession of Faith and therefore it is not to bee conceived that this third Estate did then abjure Episcopacie or that Episcopacie was at the first swearing of that Confession abolished But say that at that time it was abolished by Acts of generall Assemblie yet was it not so by any Act of Parliament nay by many Acts of Parliament it was in force because none of them was repealed some whereof are annexed in the sheet immediatly after these reasons which wee pray the Reader carefully to peruse and ponder and at the very time of the taking of this oath and after Bishops whose names are well knowne were in being Now it is to bee hoped that in a Monarchie or any other well constituted republick that damnable Jesuiticall position shall never take place That what is once enacted by a Monarch and his three Estates in Parliament shall ever be held repealed or repealable by any Ecclesiasticall nationall Synod By all which it is evident that the explanation of that Act of Councell so groundlesly urged can induce no man to imagine that by the Confession of Faith lately sworne by his Majesties commandment Episcopall government which then did and yet doth stand established by Acts of this Church and Kingdome either was or possibly could be abjured And having now good Reader heard his Majesties minde in his instructions to us our minde in requiring in his Majesties name this oath to be taken and these few reasons of many which doe evidently evince the inconsequence of that sense which without any shew of inference is put upon it by those who would go on in making men still beleeve that all which they doe or say is grounded upon Authority though they themselves doe well know the contrary wee suppose that all they who have taken this oath will rest satisfied that they have not abjured Episcopall government and that they who shall take it will take it in no other sense Which timely warning of ours we are the more willing to give because we are given to understand that even they who were wont to call the takers of this oath notwithstanding of that explanation by act of councell perjured and damned persons and in their pulpits called the urging of it the depth of sathan doe now meane to take it themselves and urge others to take it in that sense which they make men beleeve though wrongfully that act of councell makes advantageous to their ends But we doe in his Majesties name require that none presume to take the said oath
therefore taking to our heart that GOD had justly punished us for the breach of that nationall Covenant made with GOD in Anno 1580. We thought fit to reconcile our selves to him again by renewing the same Covenant And so in obedience to his divine Commandement conforme to the practise of the godly in former times and according to the laudable example of our religious Progenitours warranted by acts of Councell we again renewed our confession of Faith of this Kirk and Kingdome as a reall testimony of our fidelitie to GOD in bearing witnesse to the truth of that Religion whereunto we were sworn to adhere in Doctrine and Discipline of our loyaltie to our Soveraigne and mutuall union among our selves in that cause Which Confession with a sensible demonstration of GODS blessing from heaven was solemnly sworn and subscribed by persons of all ranks throughout this Kirk and Kingdome with a necessar explanation and application for excluding the innovations and corruptions introduced in the Religion and government of this Kirk since the yeare 1580. that so our oath to GOD might be cleare for maintenance of the doctrine and discipline then professed and established and according to the meaning of that time The happie effects of this our resolution and doing have been wonderfull And since that time GODS powerfull hand in the conduct of this businesse hath evidently appeared For after some time upon the continuance of our groanes and supplications our gracious Soveraigne was pleased to send into this Kingdome The noble Lord JAMES Marques of Hamiltoun c. with commission to heare and redresse our heavie grievances who after many voyages to his Majestie and long conferences and treating with us needlesse to be related in this place did in end by commandement from his Majestie indict a free generall Assembly to be holden at Glasgow the twentie one of November last and proclaimed a Parliament to be holden at Edinburgh the fifteenth of May next to come for setling a perfect peace in this Kirk and Kingdome And further to give full assurance to the Subjects that his Majestie did never intend to admit any change or alteration in the true religion already established and professed in this Kingdome And that all his good people might be fully and clearly satisfied of the realitie of his royall intentions for the maintenance of the truth and integritie of the said Religion his Majestie did injoyn and command all the Lords of his privie Councell Senatours of the Colledge of Justice and all other Subjects whatsoever to renew and subscribe the confession of Faith formerly subscribed by King JAMES of blessed memory and his houshold in Anno 1580. and thereafter by persons of all ranks in Anno 1581. by ordinance of the Councell and acts of the generall Assembly and againe subscribed by all sorts of persons in Anno 1590. by a new ordinance of Councell at the desire of the generall Assembly with a band for maintenance of the true Religion the Kings person and each of other in that cause as the Proclamation of indiction being dated at Oatlands the 9. of September published at the Mercat crosse of Edinburgh the 22. of the said moneth more fully proporteth Upon the hearing of which Proclamation These who were attending at Edinburgh and expecting a gracious answer of our former desires as out of bounden dutie they did with all thankfulnesse acknowledge his Majesties gracious favour So out of zeale to GOD and Religion they did protest that they who had by the late Covenant and Confession condescended more specially to the innovations and errours of the time could not after so solemne a specification returne to an implicit and more generall confession enjoyned conforme to a mandat apparantly discrepant from the genuine meaning of the confession and wanting both explication and application and did most humbly and earnestly desire the Lords of his Majesties Councell that they would not in regard of the former reasons presse upon the Subjects the subscription of this Covenant but that they might be pleased to forbeare their own subscribing of it in respect of the inconveniences might result upon their subscribing thereof in an ambiguous sense but their Lordships not having subscribed that confession containing our former explanation and being required by his Majesties Commissioner to subscribe the Confession as it was drawne up and presented to them without our explanation with a generall band for maintenance of the Religion in Doctrine and Discipline now presently profest and of his Majesties person least these words now presently repeated in this year 1638. should inferre any approbation of these innovations introduced since the year 1580. whereof many did justly complaine after deliberation for removing of this scruple and prejudice and clearing of their own meaning they caused make an act of Councell that their swearing and subscribing of the confession of Faith was according to the tenour and date the second of March 1580. according as it was then profest within this Kingdome whereupon they rested satisfied being confident that the generall Assembly then indicted would remove any doubt and differ which might arise anent the meaning and interpretation of the confession of Faith and clear what was profest in the year 1580. Yet some having subscribed that Covenant in different senses others forbearing to subscribe the same as some of the Lords of Session till the Assembly should declare the genuine and true meaning of the Confession upon whose interpretation as of the onely competent Judge they might acquiesce and rest satisfied which now after accurate tryall of the acts of generall Assemblies and mature deliberation is fully cleared and explained in this last generall Assembly by GODS mercy and his Majesties gracious favour of indiction holden at Glasgow as the act made thereupon doth proport whereby Episcopall government mongst many other innovations is found upon undeniable evidences of truth and declared to be condemned and abjured in this Kirk in Anno 1580. There is notwithstanding published in name of his Majesties Commissioner a declaration tending to disswade his Majesties Subjects from receiving the explanation of the confession made by this Assembly and affirming that the confession subscribed by the Councell doth no wayes exclude Episcopall government nor any thing else established by laws standing in force the time of the taking of the said oath the ninth of September last notwithstanding the foresaid act of Assembly which as the decree of our mother Kirk ought to be received and reverenced by all her children and act of Councell whereof the words are so cleare as they cannot admit any mentall reservation which is acknowledged by such of the Councellers then present and subscribers whose hearts GOD hath touched to make the sense of their oath to GOD preponder with them above all other worldly respects and fears THis declaration containeth five arguments with a boundle of acts of Parliament quotted and drawne up by some persons whom we know not but seen and approven by the
Commissioner whereby his Grace indevoureth to evince his conclusion that Episcopal government was not abjured by the Councell nor the Covenant 1580. Which is so repugnant to the acts of the Kirk The act of Councell and all reason that wee are confident the same will make no impression in the judgement of any well affected Christian as shall be evident by our following answers which we offer to the readers consideration after he hath first expended these generalls 1. This Declaration is onely made by his Majesties Commissioner and not by the Lords of secret Councell who should be fittest Interpreters of their owne act and whose act should be the ample expression of their meaning else acts of Councell by possibilitie of admitting the variable cōmentarie of intentions will losse all force vigour in themselves And yet it is evident that the Councellers have not only actually sworne to maintaine the Religion Discipline established in Anno 1580. When Episcopacie was condemned but likewise intended to doe so because they have distinguished and opposed betweene the Religion presently professed 1638. mentioned in the Proclamation and the Religion professed in Anno 1580. mentioned in their act and by that opposition of now and then they reject the one and swear the other otherwise they needed no declaration which notwithstanding accompanies their subscriptions and is acknowledged by the Commissioner in the second line to bee an act explaining the Confession for obedience whereof all those who have subscribed that Covenant have done the same 2. Albeit his Majesty did not conceive any difference between the Religion Doctrine and Discipline now profest from that which was in Anno 1580. wherewith his Majestie can hardly be acquainted without perusing the records of Assemblies yet his Majesties Reall intention was to maintaine the confession of Faith professed in Anno 1580. because his Royall disigne by that commandement was to maintaine true Christian Religion in puritie whereunto Episcopacie by this Kirk was ever judged and condemned as prejudiciall and to remove the fears of his Majesties good Subjects complaining of by-gone innovations and apprehending greater changes which ends are only obtained by subscription of the Confession as it was Anno 1580. And no wise by maintaining the Religion now presently profest because the corruptions now presently received in this Kirk are the grounds of our just complaints as being contrary to the word of God and foresaid confession in Anno 1580. 3. Wee must distinguish between oathes tendered by the first framers of the Confession the whole Kirk who have power to interpret and explaine the same and oathes required to bee renewed by the supreme Magistrat the Kings Majestie who as custos utriusque tabulae and a true Sonne of the Kirk ought to receive the true meaning of the Kirk and cause it to be received of those whom God hath subjected to him And wee are confident that his Majestie in his just and pious disposition will never take away the benefite of that holy nationall oath and confession of Faith subscribed by his Majesties Father of blessed memorie 1580. and now lately renewed againe solemnely sworne by the Subjects of this Kingdome upon the pretence of any intentions repugnant to the true sense of that confession which even as it is subscribed by the Councell doth never import that his Majestie was framing or administring any new confession or oath but only injoyning to renew the old confession 1580. and therefore unquestionably should be taken in the true meaning of that time Fourthly if there were any reall opposition betwixt his Majesties Proclamation and the act of explanation made by his Majesties Commissioner and Councell Yet the last must be observed and preferred before the first because the first is his privat will the second his publick and judiciall will Et posterior derogat priori publica privatae And albeit we doe not now expresse that the Councell did subscribe the confession of Faith in obedience to a mandat where there was any contrariety repugnancie or ambiguity betwixt the mandat and the Confession it self which was commanded yet the Councell making an act that they did subscribe it as it was professed 1580. and declaring publickly that this was their owne meaning both they and such of his Majesties liedges who did subscribe in obedience of their charge are obliged to observe r●m juratam and the reall matter of the oath more then the minde and mandat of the prescriver especially seeing it is no new Confession but the renewed Confession of the whole Kirk of Scotland The meaning whereof cannot bee declared nor interpret by any but the whole Kirk of Scotland who now upon unanswerable reasons have clearly found that Episcopall governement was then abolished and abjured It followeth by good consequence that the Councell did both virtually and verily swear yea intend to swear the abjuration of Episcopacie which is found by that confession 1580. and the discipline of the Kirk then established to be a corrupt government in this Kirk of human invention wanting warrand from the word of God tending to the overthrow of this Kirk So that any declaration in the contrare hereof is protestatio contraria facto and the reasons thereof cannot be forceable to brangle the resolution of any judicious well affected Christian if he will patiently read and ponder without preoccupation these following answers to the five reasons insert in that declaration The first aleadged reason is this that his Majestie could not command an oath absolutly unlawfull but it is absolutely unlawfull to swear against any thing established by the Laws of the Kirk and Kingdome if the same be not repugnant to the word of God or repealed by posteriour lawes To this we answer First The Kings Majesty by commanding his subjects to renew the confession of Faith for maintaning the doctrine discipline profest in anno 1580. hath commanded them to abjure whatsoever is found by the competent Judge to bee introduced since that time repugnant therto albeit by the corruption of times it were coūtenanced with some law interveening Secondly the Lords of Councell and Session and other Subjects have subscribed the confession of Faith as it was 1580. not only without any restriction of it to the present laws but in a direct opposition to what is presently established by returning from the present corruptions in the profession tanquam termino a quo to the profession 1580. tāquam terminum ad quem which a great part of Councellours and other Subjects have declared to bee their meaning Thirdly Episcopacie is found by the Kirk of Scotland in many Assemblies to be an office unwarranted by the word of God unlawfull and repugnant thereto so that the abjuration thereof in this Kirk is lawfull and necessare Fourthly Episcopacy was never restored by any Assembly of this Kirk nor these Assemblies wherein it was condemned repealed without the which the same could not
sundrie Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Magistrates and all other Our lieges who shall happen to bee present and heare any Ministers either in publike or private conferences and speeches or in their Sermons to approve and allow the said unlawfull Assemblie raile and utter any speeches against Our Royall commandments or proceedings of Us or Our Councell for punishing or suppressing such enormities that they make relation and report thereof to Our Councell and furnish probation to the effect the same may bee accordingly punished as they will answer to Us thereupon Certifying them who shall heare and conceale the said speeches that they shall bee esteemed as allowers of the same and shall accordingly bee taken order with and punished therefore without favour And to this effect We likewise straightly charge and command all Judges whatsoever within this Realme Clerks and Writers not to grant or passe any Bill summons or letters or any other execution whatsoever upon any Act or Deed proceeding from the said pretended Assemblie and all keepers of the signet from signetting thereof and that under all highest paines And because Wee gave order and warrant to Our Commissioner to make open declaration not onely of Our sense but even of the true meaning of the Confession of Faith in Anno 1580. by which it may clearely appeare that as Wee never intended thereby to exclude Episcopacie so by no right construction can it bee otherwayes interpreted as is more nor evident by the reasons contained in the said Declaration and many more which for brevitie the thing in it selfe being so cleare are omitted Herefore Wee do not onely prohibit and discharge all Our subjects from subscribing any band or giving any writ subscription or oath to or upon any Act or Deed that proceeds from the foresaid pretended Assemblie but also do require them not to subscribe nor sweare the said Confession in no other sense then that which is contained in the said Declaration and manifestly emitted by Our Commissioner under all highest paines And that none of Our good subjects who in their duty and bound obedience to Us shall refuse to acknowledge the said pretended Assemblie or any of the pretended Acts constitutions warrants or directions proceeding therefrom may have just ground of feare of danger or harme by doing thereof Wee do by these promise and upon the word of a King oblige Our selves by all the Royall authoritie and power wherewith God hath endowed Us to protect and defend them and everie one of them in their persons fortunes and goods against all and whatsoever person or persons who shall dare or presume to call in question trouble or any wayes molest them or any of them therefore And Our will is and Wee charge you straitly and command that incontinent these Our Letters seene you passe and make publication hereof by open Proclamation at the market crosse of Edinburgh and other places needfull wherethrough none pretend ignorance of the same Given from Our Court at Whitehall the eighth day of December and of Our Reigne the fourteenth yeere 1638. Per Regem THis Our Proclamation published onely to make Our people acquainted with Our gracious proceedings at Glasgow which by the malice of their Leaders had either beene concealed from them or misreported to them was received as all Our former gracious proffers with a verie undutifull windie and blustering Protestation so full of words but withall so void of truth and sense as We were once resolved not to have inserted it here neither indeed is it necessarie it should for it is stuffed with the idle and superfluous repetitions of those things which are contained in their former Protestations especially their last Protestation made at Glasgow with which indeed it is for the most part the same verbatim Yet because We know that if it should be left out they would not stick to assure their followers that it was omitted because of the unanswerable pregnancie of the reasons contained in it here you shall have it but without any answer to it as to their former Protestations hath beene given there being verie little in it which is new and so not answered before or what is in it new being either verie false or verie impertinent both which falsities and impertinencies shall onely bee observed on the margent being assured that the Reader will easily finde that there is nothing in it worthie of any larger answer The Protestation of the generall Assemblie of the Kirke of Scotland made at the Market Crosse of Edinburgh the 18. of December 1638. WE Commissioners from Presbyteries Burghes and Universities now conveened and yet sitting in a full and free Assemblie of the Kirk of Scotland indicted by his Majestie and gathered together in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ the onely Head and Monarch of his owne Kirk And We Noblemen Barons Gentlemen Ministers Burgesses and Commons Subscribers of the Confession of Faith make it knowne that where We his Majesties loyall subjects of all degrees considering and taking to heart the many and great innovations and corruptions lately by the Prelats and their adherents introduced into the doctrine worship and discipline of this Kirk which had been before in great purity to our unspeakable comfort established among us were moved to present many earnest desires and humble supplications to his sacred Majestie for granting a free generall Assemblie as the only legall and readie mean to try these innovations to purge out the corruptions and settle the disorder of the Kirk for the good of Religion the honour of the King and the comfort and peace of the Kirk and Kingdome it pleased his gracious Majestie out of his Royall bountie to direct unto this Kingdome the Noble and Potent Lord James Marquesse of Hamiltoun with Commission to heare and redresse the just grievances of the good subjects who by many Petitions and frequent conferences being fully informed of the absolute necessitie of a free generall Assemblie as the onely judicatorie which had power to remedy those evils was pleased to undergo the paines of a voyage to England for presenting the pitifull condition of our Kirk to his sacred Maiestie And the said Commissioner his Grace returned againe in August last with power to indict an Assemblie but with the condition of such prelimitations as did both destroy the freedome of an Assemblie and could no wayes cure the present diseases of this Kirk Which was made so clearely apparant to his Grace that for satisfying the reasonable desires of the subjects groaning under the wearinesse and prejudices of longsome attendance he was againe pleased to undertake another journey to His Majestie and promised to endeavour to obtaine a free generall Assemblie without any prelimitation either of the constitution and members or matters to bee treated or manner and order of proceeding so that if any question should arise concerning these particulars whereof the power of ruling Elders as a part of the constitution and the examination of Episcopacie as a present
that oaths have been exacted different from that which is set downe in the acts of Parliament and in many severall wayes according to the pleasure of the Prelats And where his Majestie declares that no other oath shall be required of a Minister at his entry nor that which is set down in the act of Parliament the same is of fearefull consequence because the act beares an oath to be given unto the Bishop by Ministers intrants and so supposeth the office of a Bishop to be unchangeable and uncontroverted whereby the Assembly is prelimited against the reasons before mentioned which may finde that office uselesse and unlawfull in this Kirk and which now they have found upon most infallible reasons Fifthly that his Maiesty assureth generall Assemblies shall be kept as oft as the affaires of this Kirk shall require doth not satisfie because first by leaving the time undefinite it preiudgeth the liberty of the Kirke of holding yeerly generall Assemblies at least and oftner pro re nata ratified by the act of Parliament 1592. the disuse whereof hath beene a maine cause of our evils which should bee prevented in time comming by renewing that ancient necessarie custome and liberty Secondly by the same act of Parliament it is provided that the King or his Commissioner being present shall appoint the time and place of the next Assembly And in case his Maiesty or his Commissioner be not present for the time in the towne where the Assembly is holden it shall be leasome to the said generall Assemblie by themselves to appoint the time and place of the next Assembly as they have bin in use in times past But this declaration not only leaves all indefinite but totally everts that power and liberty competent to them by law and custome Thirdly As it doth not determine how oft the ordinary effairs of this Kirke require an Assembly which the custome of this Kirke and act foresaid evidently manifest to bee yeerely once at least so neither doth it determine who shall judge when the necessity of extraordinary effairs require an Assembly pro re nata whereas undoubtedly the Kirke will be most sensible of her owne necessities and is the most proper Judge of her owne effaires And therefore should have freedome to appoint her owne times when she finds her selfe pressed with present exigencies as his Maiesty hath also power when hee perceives any necessity requiring the same Sixthly whereas his Maiesty is content that all the present Bishops and their successours be answerable to and censurable by the generall Assembly it doth not satisfie because First it beares a prelimitaon of the Assembly in the matter of trying that Office and presupposes the continuance thereof by succession as unquestionable Secondly They have beene formerly made censurable by the generall Assembly in the straightest way that the Kirke could enjoyn or they could assure And yet these thirty yeeres they have shunned all censure though all their actions deserved it by procuring generall Assemblies to be prorogate and then suddenly indicted when they had cunningly prepared both persons and purposes to their minde Likeas now they have by their Declinator refused to answer and be censured by this present Assembly indicted by his Majestie conveened in the name of Christ and perfitly constitute in the members thereof And therefore it lyeth upon this present Assembly to take some solide course for securing the Kirk in all time comming against the prejudices of their former and frequent breaches contrary to their oathes given Seventhly whereas his Majestie requireth this present Assembly to subscribe this Confession of Faith formerly signed by his Royall Father 1580. and lately commanded by his Majestie to be subscribed by all his Majesties subjects The reasons contained in the Protestation September last 22. whereto we adhere and repeats the same do sufficiently evidence that we cannot subscribe the same to which we adde First that his Maiesties Commissioner hath declared to the Lords of Session when their subscriptions was required that it might subsist with the innovations introduced since the yeere of God 1580. which some of the said Lords then did and all of us doe now conceive to repugne to the genuine and true sense of the Confession of Faith as it was first made Secondly That his Grace hath protested divers times in this Assembly that nothing done or to be done therein prejudge the Archbishops and Bishops in their priviledges places power and jurisdiction whereby the declareth that these may subsist with the Confession of Faith notwithstanding they be novations introduced upon this Kirke contrary to the same since the yeer foresaid as is now found by the Assembly Thirdly That to the Assembly presently conveened and perfectly constitute in the members thereof it pertaineth properly according to the word of God constitutions of this Kirke and booke of Policie ratified in divers Assemblies to determine what is the true meaning of the Confession of Faith and to make the same knowne to all the members of this Kirke who thereafter without scruple or danger may subscribe the same And although the Assembly could not finde this Declaration satisfactory for these and the like weighty reasons yet were they willing the same should be insert in their books for obedience to his Maiesties desire and thankfully acknowledging his Maiesties pious affection to true Religion and Royall resolution to defend the same and his subiects in the profession thereof exprest in the closure of his Royall Declaration they were confident that when his Maiestie shall bee fully informed that the novations introduced since the yeere 1580. are incomparable with the Confession of our Faith he will be pleased graciously to vouchsafe his comfortable protection upon those who adhering to the true meaning of that Confession now fully cleared by the Assembly have abjured all the innovations introduced and by their great oath and subscription have bound themselves to maintaine the true Religion and his Majesties person and authority in defence of the same And thus true Religion being the channell which convoyeth both duties to their proper object the evidence of Gods image in our dread Soveraigne his Depute shall bee terrible to all the enemies of his Majestie and of his loyall subjects who stand for the Confession of Faith and the true meaning thereof and shall raise up the affections of his Religious subjects towards his Majestie above all earthly respects And where it is subjoyned in the Proclamation that nothing was able to give contentment except we were permitted to overthrow Episcopal government and to abrogate publicke Lawes standing and take away one of the three Estates wee are sufficiently cleared thereof by the Acts of the Assembly abrogating and abolishing Episcopall government in this Kirke for infallible reasons contained in the said Act and also by our answer published to the Declaration emitted in the Commissioners name which for brevity we forbeare to insert herein whereby wee have