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A34401 Memorabilia, or, The most remarkable passages and counsels collected out of the several declarations and speeches that have been made by the King, His L. chancellors and keepers, and the speakers of the honourable House of Commons in Parliament since His Majesty's happy restauration, Anno 1660 till the end of the last Parliament 1680 ... by Edward Cooke ... Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.; Cooke, Edward, of the Middle Temple.; England and Wales. Sovereign (1660-1685 : Charles II); England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. 1681 (1681) Wing C5998; ESTC R6281 150,017 116

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such reproach upon the Protestant Religion in general from the Enemies thereof as if upon obscure notions of faith and fancy it did admit the practice of Christian duties and obedience to be discountenanced and suspended and introduce a Licence in opinions and manners to the prejudice of the Christian Faith And let us all 59. And to strive to advance the Protestant Religion abroad by supporting the Dignity of the be Reformed Church at home endeavour and emulate each other in those endeavours to countenance and advance the Protestant Religion abroad which will be best done by supporting the dignity and Reverence due to the best reformed Protestant Church at home and which being once freed from the Calumnies and reproaches it hath undergone from these late ill times will be the best shelter for those abroad which will by that countenance both be the better protected against their Enemies and be the more easily induced to compose the differences among themselves which give their Enemies more advantage against them 60. No wonder why the ●ing was ●o zealous to Establish the True Protestant Religion before Indul●ent Dissenters from it NOW it must not be wondered at that being so zealous as we are saith our Royal Master again to us and by the grace of God shall ever be for the maintenace of the True Protestant His Majesties Declaration to all his loving Subjects Decemb 26. 1662. pag. 7. Religion finding it so shaken not to say overthrown as we did we should give its Establishment the Precedency before Matters of Indulgence to Dissenters from it For it is the great Wall and Bulwark of all the Reformed Churches abroad by this they stand are sheltered and defended and therefore as it were still the better to explain his meaning to us he repeats with enlargement saying We have been zealous to settle the Vniformity of the Church of England in Discipline Ceremony and Government pag. 8. and shall ever constantly maintain it AND whereas according to a former Declaration of the 61. The King Declares Liberty to Tender Consciences King from Breda 14 April 1660. in these words viz. We do declare a Liberty to tender Consciences and that no man shall be disquieted or called in question pag. 3. for differences of Opinion in Matters of Religion which do not disturb the Peace of the Kingdom and that we shall be ready to consent to such an Act of Parliament as upon mature deliberation shall be offered to us for the full granting that Indulgence SO saith he as for what concerns the Penalties upon those who living peaceably do not conform thereunto i. e. to the Act of Vniformity through scruple and tenderness of misguided conscience but modestly and without scandal perform their Devotions in their own way We shall make it our special care so far forth as in us lies without invading the freedom of Parliament to incline their 62. And Promises to try to incline the Parliament to consent to an Act of Indulgence for that purpose wisdom at this next approaching Sessions to concur with us in the His Majesties Declaration to all his loving Subjects Decemb. 26. 1662. Published by advice of his Privy Council pag. 7. 8. making some such Act for that purpose as may enable us to exercize with a more universal satisfaction for it seems the King did before now remember this Part of his Declaration and was sollicitous for one but he says just before that That Parliament to which those promises were made in relation to an Act never thought fit to offer us any to that purpose I say to exercize with a more universal satisfaction that power of dispencing which we conceive to be inherent in us Nor can we doubt of their chearful cooperating with us in a thing wherein we do conceive our selves so far engaged both in Honour and in what we owe to the Peace of our Dominions which we profess we can never think secure whilst there shall be a colour left to the malicious and disaffected to inflame the minds of so many Multitudes upon the Score of Conscience with despair of ever obtaining any effect of our promises for their ease 63. But the Parliament by no means did think it fit that such persons should have an Iudulgence who would dissent from the Act of Uniformity BUT the Parliament though they did with great joy receive his Majesties Most Gracious Speech wherein they were invited to consider this his above said Declaration did thus humbly give their advice hereupon That it was in no sort advisable that there be any Indulgence to such Persons who presume to Dissent from the Act of Uniformity and the Religion Established for these reasons 64. For several reasons here shewn BECAUSE it is not a Promise in it self but only a Gracious Declaration of your Majesties Intentions to do what in you lay and what a Parliament should advise your Majesty to do and no such advice was ever given or thought fit to be offered nor could it be otherwise understood because there were Laws of Uniformity then in Being which could not be dispensed with but by Act of Parliament THEY who do pretend aright to that supposed Promise put the right into the hands of their Representatives whom they chuse to serve for them in this Parliament who have passed and your Majesty consented unto the Act of Uniformity If any shall presume to say that a Right to the benefit of this Declaration doth still remain after this Act passed IT tends to Dissolve the very Bonds of Government and to suppose a disability in your Majesty and the Houses of Parliament to make a Law contrary to any part of your Majesties Declaration though both Houses should advise your Majesty to it WE have also considered the nature of the Indulgence proposed with reference to those consequences which must necessarily attend it IT will Establish Schism by a Law and make the whole Government of the Church precarious and the censures of it of no moment or consideration at all IT will no way become the Gravity or Wisdom of a Parliament to pass a Law at one Session for Uniformity and at the next Session the reasons of Uniformity continuing still the same to pass another Law to frustrate or weaken the execution of it IT will expose your Majesty to the restless Importunity of every Sect or Opinion and of every single person also who shall presume to Dissent from the Church of England IT will be a Cause of increasing Sects and Sectaries whose Numbers will weaken the True Protestant Profession so far that it will at least be difficult for it to defend it self against them and which is yet further considerable those Numbers vvhich by being troublesom to the Government find they can arrive to an Indulgence vvill as their Numbers encrease be yet more troublesom that so at length they may arrive to a general Tolleration vvhich your Majesty hath declared against
do so should be denied some part of that mercy which we 16. For that would seem unjust have obliged our Self to afford to ten times the number of such who have not done so Besides such are the Capital 17. It is grievous to put any to death for their Opinions in matters of Religion only Laws in force against them as though justified in their vigour by the times in which they were made We profess it Would be grievous unto us to consent to the execution of them by putting any of our Subjects to death for their Opinions in matters of Religion only but at the 18. Yet let them all know if they hope for Toleration of their Profession c. or that Priests shall appear and avow themselves to the scandal of good Protestants and of the Laws we will be severe same time That we declare our little liking of those Sanguinary Ones and our Gracious Intentions already expressed to such of our Roman Catholick Subjects as shall live peaceably modestly and without scandal We would have them all know that if for doing what their Duties Loyalties obliged them to or from our acknowledgment of their well-deserving they shall have the presumption to hope for a Toleration of their Profession or a taking away either those marks of distinction or of our displeasure which in a well-governed Kingdom ought always to be set upon Dissenters from the Religion of the State or to obtain the least remission in the strictness of those Laws which either are or shall be made to hinder the spreading of their Doctrine to the prejudice of the True Protestant Religion or that upon our expressing according to Christian Charity our dislike of Bloodshed for Religion only Priests shall take the boldness to appear and avow themselves to the offence and scandal of good Protestants and of the Laws in force against them They shall quickly find we know as well to be severe when wisdom requires as indulgent when charity and sense of Merit challenge it from us WitH this we have thought fit to arm our good Subjects 19. This is to arm the good Subjects minds against the practises of our ill ones minds against the practises of our ill ones by a True Knowledg of our own of which now rightly perswaded we make no question but that whatsoever they be from whom they can derive the spreading or somenting of 20. That those who foment such suggestions are the most dangerous Enemies of the Crown and the peace of the Nation any of those wicked suggestions they will look upon them with detestation as the most dangerous Enemies of our Crown and of the Peace and Happiness of the Nation I thought it could not be too tedious either for me to Recite or for you to hear thus much of his Majesties Declaration upon this Head because he has in it so clearly fully delivered himself as one would think it should be to the general if I may not say Eternal satisfaction of all his loving and dutiful Subjects IS it not a superlative expression for the King to say of those 21. What can be higher said than this that give out that most pernicious as well as malicious scandal of his favour to Papists that he looks on it as the most unpardonable offence that any can be guilty of towards him and that those wicked Aspersers by all his good and Loyal People will as they deservedly ought to be looked upon as the most dangerous Enemies both to his Crown and the Peace and Welfare of the Kingdom AND whereas still some men would fain possess the people 22. Never any Prince hath given more convincing proofs to the contrary of his favouring Papists that his Majesty is a Favourer of Popery though never any Prince in Christendom hath given more convincing and irrefragable proofs of the contrary let them take heed and consider that by such aspersion they run the hazard of a Praemunire upon the Act for the safety of the King's Person in scandalizing his Majesty for a Favourer of Popery NOW where the humours and spirits of men are too rough 23. Where mens humours are too rough for soft indulgence shar Laws must be made to break their Stubborness and boisterous for the soft remedies of signal indulgence and condescensions of suspension of the rigour of former Laws there must be prepared sharper Laws and penalties to contend with those refractory Lord Chancellor's Speech to both Houses May 19. 1662. pag. 16. persons and to break that stubbornness which will not bend to gentler applications and it is great reason that they upon whom Clemency cannot prevail should seel that severity they have prcvoked I pray hear what the Speaker of the House of Commons could say in his Address to the King from the whole House they being there present Above The Address of the House spoke by Sir Edw. Turner Feb. 28. 1662. pag. 7. all saith he we can never enough remember to 24. The Speaker of the House of Commons acknowledges His Majesties most solemn invitations of them to make Laws against the growth of Popery the Honour of Your Majesties Piety and our own unspeakable comfort those solemn and most indearing invitations of us Your Majesties Subjects to prepare Laws to be presented to Your Majesty against the growth and increase of Popery and withal to provide more Laws against Licentiousness and Impiety at the same time declaring Your own resolution for maintaining the Act of Uniformity And when a little after both the Lords and Commons Petitioned His Majesty by his Proclamation to command all Romish Priests and Jesuits c. to depart this Kingdom by a day at the reception of the Petition His Majesty thus begins his Speech to them My Lords and Gentlemen You do not expect that I should give you an Answer presently to your petition yet I will tell you that I will speedily send you an Answer which I am confident will be to your satisfaction and was it not so think ye when he in his Gracious Answer on the 1st of April 1663. told them that he did readily concur with their advice and that he had given order for such a Proclamation as they desired which you may see more at large a little before This made the Speaker of the House of Commons no doubt so sensible that he could not be kept off from a fresh mention of it when he spake to his Majesty although it was almost four years afterwards Saith he We have been allarum'd from all parts of the Kingdom 25. His Majestie commands all his Officers and Souldiers to take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy ●d and Priests an Jesuits to de part by a day which much secures us aginst fears c by the insolencies of Popish Priests and Jesuits who by their great numbers and bold writings declare to all the world they are in expectation of a plentiful harvest here in
that there may be but one heart and one soul among us He that does not now put his Hand and Heart to support the King Lord C. S. to Si. Job harleton then chosen Speaker to the House of Com. Feb. 5. 1672. p. 23. in the Common cause of this Kingdom can hardly ever hope for such another Opportunity or find a time to make satisfaction for the Omission of this Let us tryby our means to raise up the hearts and hopes of all those whom ill men have wrought upon to such a degree as to cast them into a sadness end into a despondency which is most unreasonable Lord Ch. Sp. Ap. 13. 75. p. 22. What the Romans Scorned to do after the Battle of Cannae what the Venetians never did when they had lost all their Terra firma that men are now taught to think a vertue and the sign of a Wise and Good man desperare de Republica And let us try what we can to confirm the faith of those that p. 23. are made weak and give to the King the present of all our hearts and the full assurance of all our Lives and Fortunes to preserve him in his just Prerogatives that he may with the Greater confidence and chearfulness still secure and further promote the true protestant Religion and all due Liberties and Properties to these Kingdoms Then will the King esteem himself a Richer Prince then if he were possest of all the treasures of the East And if any man should question or suspect His Majesties affection towards the Protestant Religion and his firm resolution still to maintain it together with all our Civil Rights let him be pleased to hear him give his own Royal word for 't and as Solomon saith where the word of a King is there is Power And first to begin with Religion CHAP. I. Of the Protestant Religion FOR as his Majesty very wisely hath observed to us in his Declaration to all his Loving Subjects of his Kingdom 1. Of Religion of England and Dominion of Wales concerning Ecclesiastical Affairs in the very year of His Happy Restauration 25th day of Oct. 1660. pag. 3. There is so close a Connexion between the Peace of the Church and the Peace of the State That the One cannot be disturbed without the Other These are his words how much sayth he the Peace of the State is concern'd in the Peace of the Church and how difficult a thing it is to preserve Order and Government in Civil whilst there is no Order or Government in Ecclesiastical Affairs is evident to the world and this little Part of the World our own Dominions hath had so late experience of it that we may very well acquiesce in the conclusion without enlarging our self in discourse upon it it being a Subject we have had frequent occasion to contemplate upon and to lament abroad as well as at home TRUE Religion has an enlightning Influence 2. What Religion is over the minds of men It works upon Lord Keep Speech April 13. 1675. pag. 11. the Conscience is an inward Principle of the divine Life by which good men do govern all their actions And if rightly followed and obeyed how great 3. How sweet and peaceable where it is right would the harmony of affection be amongst us The Impressions which the Law of Religion makes in the hearts of good men are all healing and Sanatory There is no divide Impera within her Districts no furious Heats and hostile Clashings to be heard where she has uncontrolled Power and Sovereignty That unruly and unmanly Passion which no question the Divine Nature exceedingly abhors sometimes and I fear too frequently Transports those who are in the right as well as those who are in the wrong and leaves Lord Chan. Speech Thursday Sept. 13. 1660. p. 20. 21 22. the latter more excusable than the former when men who find their manners and dispositions very conformable in all the necessary obligations of humane Nature avoid one anothers conversation and grow first unsociable and then uncharitable to each other because one cannot think as the other doth And from this Separation we Entitle God to the Patronage of and concernment in our Fancies and Distinction and purely for his sake hate 4. An Eminent Instance of Christian Love and Charity one another heartily It was not so of Old when one of the most Ancient Fathers of the Church tells us that Love and Charity was so signal and eminent in the Primitive Christians that it even drew admiration and envy from their Adversaries Vide inquiunt ut invicem se diligunt Their Adversaries in that in which they most agreed in their very prosecution of them had their Passions and Animosities amongst themselves They were only Christians that loved and cherished and comforted and were ready to dye for one another Quid nunc illi dicerent Christiani si nostra viderunt tempora Says the Incomparable GROTIUS how would they look upon our sharp and virulent Contentions in the Debates of Christian Religion and the bloudy Wars that had proceeded from those Contentions whilst every one pretended to all the Marks which are to attend upon the True Church except only that which is inseparable from it Charity to one another How did These in the Late Distracted Times who would 5. How different Christians are from the temper and spirit of Christ needs be call'd Christians differ from Christ the True and Only Head of the Church How calm and quiet how sedate and peaceable was he throughout the whole Conduct of his Life though he walked in the midst of a stubborn and perverse Generation that despised his Doctrine reproached him for his Miracles in saying That he cast out Devils through Beelzebub the Prince of the Devils he came to his own and his own received him not yet he was sweet and affable in all his Conversation 6. Christ was meek and Curteous gentle and affable to all continually doing good to those who were his Enemies and the worst of them too Though he was reviled yet he reviled not again and though he was oppressed and afflicted yet he opened not his mouth when he was wounded for our Transgressions and bruised for our Iniquities and the Chastisement of our Peace was upon him and by his Stripes we are healed yet he went as a Lamb to the slaughter and as a Sheep before the shearers he was dumb and opened not his mouth but just before his expiration upon the Cross he mercifully poured out this prayer for those his Enemies that could not forbear breaking forth into this curse of his Blood be upon us and our Children that God would freely pardon them in this their sin Father says he forgive them they know not what they do But how did these make it their business to rend 7. We are sowre and morose fierce and bitter one against another and divide the Church by tying it up
swerve from it and nothing can be proposed to manifest our Zeal and Affection for it to which we will not readily consent And we hope in due time our self so propose some what to you for the propagation of it that will satisfie the World that we have always made it both our care and our study and have enough observed what is most like to bring disadvantage to it HIS Majesty saw that it was the first 17. Religion as it was first in our thoughts so it was the Kings first and principal ca thing in all our thoughts and we cannot but Lord Keep Speech April 13. 1675. pag. 9. see that it hath been and still is the first and principal part of his care AND this Royal declaration of himself joyned to what 18. Therefore we need not doubt he hath since done carries in it self so evident an assurance and is stampt by so sacred an Authority that there remains no place for doubting nothing can scarce be added to the efficacy of it Id. ib. THEN after a repetition of the same words just above cited to the Speaker of the House of Commons in his Majesties Declaration concerning Ecclesiastical affairs He proceeds thus And the truth pag. 4. 5. 19. The King most fit to propose being the most competent Judg from his experience with the most learned of the reformed Churches abroad is we do think our self the more competent to propose and with Gods assistance to determine many things now in difference from the time we have spent and the experience we have had in most of the reformed Churches abroad in France in the Low Countries and in Germany where we have had frequent Conferences with the most learned men who have unanimously lamented the great reproach the Protestant Religion undergoes from the distempers and too notorious Schisins in matters of Religion 20. Our Religion suffers from the distempers and schisms that are in the Church in England And as the most learned amongst them have always with great submission and reverence acknowledged and magnified the established Government of the Church of England and the great Countenance and shelter the Protestant Religion received from it before these unhappy times so many of them have with great ingenuity and sorrow confessed that they were too easily misled by mis-information and prejudice into some dis-esteem of it as if it had too much complyed with the Church 21. Church of England the best fence against Popery in the World of Rome whereas they now acknowledge it to be the best fence God hath yet raised against Popery in the world and we are perswaded they do with great Zeal wish it restored to its old dignity and Veneration AND a little after in pag. 8 9. he further says We need 22. The Kings great esteem for the Church of England not profess the high Affection and Esteem we have for the Church of England as it is Established by Law the Reverence to which hath supported us with God's blessing against many temptations AS to the Opinion of the Presbyterians concerning Episcopacy hear how the King declares himself in this point When we were in Holland saith he we were attended by many grave and learned Ministers from hence who were looked upon as most able and principal assertors of the Presbyterian 23. Presbyterians affectionate to the King Zealous for the Peace of Church and State and no Enemies to Episcopacy Opinions with whom we had as much conference as the multitude of affairs which were then upon us would permit us to have and to our great satisfaction and comfort found them persons full of Affection to us of Zeal for the Peace of the Church and State and neither Enemies as they Pag. 5. Declar. conc Eccles affairs Octob. 25. 1660. at Whitehall have been given out to be to Episcopacy or Liturgy but modestly to desire such alalterations in either as without shaking Foundations might allay the present distempers which the indisposition of the time and the tenderness of some mens consciences had contracted AND We further find upon the full conference we 24. The Mischiefs the Church labours under as well as the State result from the passions and Interests of private persons have had with the learned men of several perswasions that the mischiefs under which both the Church and State do at present suffer do not result from any formed Doctrine or Conclusion Pag. 7. Of the same woich either party maintains or avows but from the passion and appetite and Interest of particular persons who contract greater prejudice to each other from those affections then would naturally arise from their Opinions FOR we must for the honour of all those of either persuasion 25. The professions and desires of both perswasions for the advance of Religion are the same with whom we have conferred declare that the professions and desires of all for the advancement of piety and true godliness are the same their professions of Zeal for the Peace of the Church the same of affection and duty to us the same they all approve Episcopacy they all approve a set form of Liturgy and they all disprove and dislike the sin of Sacriledge and the alienation of the Revenue of the Church and if upon these excellent foundations in submission to which there is such a harmony of affections any superstructures should be raised to the shaking Pag. 8. Of the same those foundations and to the contracting and lessening the blessed gift of Charity which is a vital part of Christian Religion we shall think our self very unfortunate and even suspect that we are defective in that administration of Government with which God hath intrusted us NOW we do not think that Reverence which we have 26. No Reverence for the Church of England lessened by dispensing with some Ceremonies in it for a while for the Church of England in the least degree diminished by our condescensions not peremptorily to insist on some particulars of Ceremony which however introduced by the piety and devotion and order of former times may not be so agreeable to the then present but may even lessen that piety and devotion for the improvement whereof they might happily be first introduced and consequently may well be dispensed with and we hope this Charitable compliance of ours will dispose the minds of all men to a cheerful submission to that Authority the preservation whereof is so necessary for the Vnity and 27. The support of Episcopacy the best support of Religion Peace of the Church and that they will Pag. 9. acknowledge the support of the Episcopal Authority to be the best support of Religion by being the means to contain the minds of men within the Rules of Government IF we had the command of as many tongues as his Majesty 28. His Majesty cannot be sufficiently thanked for his dispensing with some Ceremonies hath of hearts we could
not express our great Joy and thankfulness for his Speak of the House of Commons Speech to the King in the Banquet-House at Whitehal Nov. 9. 1660. p. 3 4. continual and indefatigable labour and pains in repairing and making up our sad breaches and composing our unhappy differences and in particular for this his most gratious declaration concerning Ecclesiastical affairs wherein his Majesty hath provided wholesom food for all clean Stomacks strong meat for such as are able to bear it allowing them the use of our Church Liturgy together with comely vestments Ornaments and Ceremonies in the service and worship of God as likewise Milk for tender Babes dispensing with their Conformity in such matters and things as are not so much of the substance and Essence of Faith and Religion as of Decency and becomingness which giveth abundant 29. Which will abundantly satisfie all reasonable and sober men and such as are truly Religious satisfaction to all peaceable sober minded men and such as are truly Religious for those that are really and truly so will find themselves bound ever in Conscience to the observation and practice of that excellent lesson taught us by the Apostle which is sap●re ad temperantiam spartam ornare with a Vade tu fac simile AND this General Thanks of that whole house was not 30. His Majesty very well deserved that thanks of the House of Commons presented rashly and precipitately to the King for if you will please to hear further what he did for the settling of the Church upon firm foundations you will find they had good reason for their so doing For 1. Sayes he He do declare our 31. The Kings Resolution for promoting the power of Godliness in having the Lords day duly observed purpose and Resolution is and shall be to promote the power of Godliness to encourage the exercises of Religion both publick and private and to take care that the Lord's day be applied to holy exercises without unnecessary divertisements and that insufficient negligent and scandalous Ministers be not permitted in the Church 32. In turning insufficient Ministers out of the Church and that as the present Bishops are known to be men of great and Exemplary Piety in their Lives which they have manifested in their notorious and exampled sufferings 33. In providing learned and pious Bishops to govern in the Church during these late distempers so we shall take special care by the assistance of God to prefer no men to that office and charge The King 's Declarat concern Ecclesiast Affairs pag. 10. but men of Learning Virtue and Piety who may be themselves the best Examples to those who are to be governed 34. They shall be frequent Preachers unless sickness or some notable occasion excuse them by them And we shall expect and provide the best we can that the Bishops be frequent Preachers and that they do very often Preach themselves in some Church of their Diocess except they be hindered by sickness or other bodiln infirmities or some other justifiable occasion which shall not be thought justifiable if it be frequent AGAIN it is said in Pag. 12. 13. Fol. 5. We will take care that Confirmation be rightly and solemnly performed by the Information and with the consent of the Minister of the place who shall admit none to the Lords 35. Confirmation rightly performed Supper till they have made a credible profession of their Faith and promised Obedience to the will of God according 36. None to be admitted to the Lords Supper till they have professed their faith c. as is expressed in the considerations of the Rubrick before the Catechism and that all possible diligence be used for the instruction and reformation of scandalous offenders whom the Minister shall not suffer to partake of the Lords Table until they have openly declared them 37. Care taken to instruct and reform all scandalous offenders and not to let such communicate c. selves to have truly repented and amended their former naughty lives as is partly expressed in the Rubrick and more fully in the Canons Moreover the Rural Dean and his Assistants are in their respective divisions to see that the Children and younger sort be carefully instructed by the respective Ministers of every Parish in the grounds 38. Ministers to see that youth be instructed in the grounds of Christian Religion of Christian Religion and be able to give a good account of their Faith and Knowledge and also of their Christian conversation conformable thereunto before they be confirmed by the Bishop or admitted to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper 6. NO Bishopsh all exercise any Arbitrary Power or do 39. Bishops only to act according to the law of the Land or impose any thing upon the Clergy or the people but what is according to the known Law of the Land Pag. 14. 7. WE are very glad to find that all with whom we 40. A set form of worship held lawful by all have conferred do in their Iudgments approve their Liturgy or set form of publick Worship to be lawful which in our Iudgment for the preservation of Vnity and Vniformity we conceive to be very necessary and though we do esteem the Liturgy of the Church of England contained in the book of Common Prayer and by Law established to be the best we have seen and We believe that We have seen all that are extant and used in this part of the world and well know what reverence most of the Reformed Churches or at least the most learned men in those Churches have for it yet since we find some exceptions 41. Yet since some things in the Liturgy are excepted against Divines on both sides shall reveiw and alter what is thought most necessary made against several things therein we will appoint an equal Number of learned Divines of both persuasions to review the same and to make such alterations as shall be thought most necessary and some additional forms in the Scripture phrase as near as may be suited unto the nature of the several parts of worship and that it be left to the Minister's choice to use one or other at his discretion In the mean time and till this be done although we do heartily wish and desire that the Ministers in their several Churches because they dislike 42. Tho some clauses be disliked yet let those parts be read against which there can be no exception some clauses and expressions would not totally lay aside the Book of Common Prayer but read those parts against which there can be no exception which would be the best instance of declining those marks of distinction which we so much labour and desire to remove yet in compassion to divers of our good subjects who scruple the use of it as now it is Our will and pleasure is that none be 43. But if not none shall be punished or
let the world see that it shall not be my fault if The Kings Speech to both Houses Feb. 15. 1679. pag. 1 and 2. they be not happy by your Consultations in Parliament AND how shall the world see this why saith he in the 140. By securing the Protestant Religion to them very next words For I declare my self very plainly to you that I come prepared to give you all the satisfaction and security in the great concerns of the Protestant Religion as it is established in the Church of England that shall reasonably be asked or can consist with Christian prudence TO be sure his Majesty when he said this was sufficiently sensible of what the Lord Chancellor at the same time had in command to say viz. that The Peace of the Church is harder to preserve than the 141. For the Peace of the Church is harder to be preserved than that of the State peace of the State for they who desire Innovations in the State most commonly Lord Chancellors Speech to the same p. 6. begin the attempt upon the Church AND by this means it comes to pass that the peace of 142. Hence it is so oft disturbed by two sorts of persons by mistaken souls and by malicious designing men the Church is so often disturbed not only by these poor mistaken souls who deserve to be pittied but by malicious and designing men who deserve to be punisht And while things continue in this State it cannot be avoided but that the Laws which are necessary to restrain the malicious must and will sometimes disquiet and wound those that are weak Yet the Phanaticks Sectaries and Nonconformists as the 143. How Phanaticks no friends to the established Government Speaker of the Honourable House of Commons then said as they differ in their shapes and species accordingly are more or less dangerous but in this they all agree they are no friends to the established Sir Edward Turnors Speech Tuesday May 14. 1664. pag. 9. Government either in Church or State And if the old Rule hold true Qui Ecclesiae contradicit non est pacificus we have great reason to prevent 144. Therefore was the Bill against Conventicles their growth and to punish their practice Therefore was the Bill then prepared against their frequenting of Conventicles the Seed-plots and Nurseries of their Opinions under pretence of Religious Worship BUT yet by such Bill no man is hindered the use of his own Judgement in the exercise of Religion by himself or in his own Family or in the presence of 145. But by it none are hindred the use of their own Judgement in their families four strangers but because the peace Sir Edward Turnors Speech to the King Monday April 11. 1670. Vpon the Parliaments adjournment p. 5. of the Nation may be endangered by more populous meetings contrary to the Liturgy and practice of the Church of England therefore from a prudent prospect of such a destructive inconvenience to the weal of the State did the Parliament prepare such a Cautionary prevention AND yet for all this their great care and wisdom 't is somewhat an unpleasant observation to see how slow many inferiour Magistrates are in the 146. How slow the inferiour Officers are in this to discharge their duty discharge of this part of their duty Lord Keepers Speech to both Houses April 13. 75. p. 11 12. which refers to the safety of the Church against the Enemies on both sides of it the Papists and the Dissenters For this is that which opens men's mouths to object against the Laws themselves This is that which encourages offenders to dispute that 147. This encourages Offenders to dispute Authority and to judg the Laws Authority which they should obey and to judge those Laws by which they ought to be judged They have found a way to make even Justice it self criminal by giving it a hard name and calling it persecution IT is no doubt a duty which we owe to God and to our 148. It is the duty of us all to improve the opportunities God gives us to fence our Vineyard selves to the present Age and to posterity to improve the opportunities God gives us of fencing Lord Chan. Speech Thursd May 23. 1668. p. 13 14. our Vineyard and making the hedge about it as strong as we can And therefore goes the Lord Chancellor on saying The King hath commanded me to tell you i. e the Parliament that he is ready to concur with you in any thing of this kind which shall be found wanting and which the Christian Prudence and Justice of a Parliament can propose as expedient LET not any then give themselves up to complain of the danger 149. Let none complain of the dangers of Religion of Religion for fear lest they should and that too justly too be thought to complain only for complaining sake id ibid. FOR what can possibly be said to satisfie any people as to 150. What more can be said to satisfie the people of the security of the Protestant Religion than what the King hath said to his Parliament the security of the Protestant Religion than what the King said to his Parliament When he gave them all his most hearty thanks for the great and extraordinary care they had already taken and still did continue to shew for the safety and preservation of his Royal Person in these times of danger NOR saith he do I think it enough to give you my thanks only but I hold my self obliged to let you see withall that I do as much study your preservation too as I can possibly and that I am as ready to joyn with you in all the ways and means that 151. Our own hearts can't with for more than what he is ready to do for us that way may establish a firm security of the The Kings Speech to both Houses Nov. 9. 78. p. 3 4. Protestant Religion as your own hearts can wish AND this not only during my time of which I am 152. He would secure it to us for ever sure you have no fear but in all future ages even to the end of the world HE proceeds in the next Speech to give them a further demonstration of his Zeal and he saith I meet you here with the most earnest desire that Man can have to unite the minds of all my Subjects both to me and to one another and I resolve it shall be your faults if the success be not suitable to my desires I have done many great things already in order to that end as the Exclusion of the Popish Lords from their Seats in Parliament 153. He has excluded the Popish Lords the House c. And above all I have commanded His Majesties Speech to both Houses on Thursday March 6. p. 3 4. my Brother to absent himself from me because I would not leave 154. Commanded his Brother to absent
hath most piously desired may be prevented and so the Peace 2. Because of the Resort of so many Jesuites and Popish Priests both in Church and State may be insensibly disturbed to the great danger of both WHICH was the reason of both the Houses of Parliaments Humble Suit to the King That he would be pleas'd to Issue out his Proclamation to command all Jesuites and Popish 3. Therefore the Parliament desire the King to issue out his Proclamation for their departure Priests c. to depart this Kingdom by a day under the penalties of the Laws to be inflicted on them but saith his Majesty to them presently in his Speech at the reception of that Petition pag. 5. It may be the general jealousie of the Nation hath 4. His Majesties present answer to them made this Address necessary and indeed I believe nothing hath contributed more to that jealousie than my own confidence that it was impossible there should be any such jealousie and the effects of that confidence but saith he in the next words I shall give you satisfaction and then I am sure you will easily satisfie and compose the minds of the Nation Answer to this Representation and Petition he 5. Afterwards his more deliberate return AND in his April 1. 1663. pag. 7. 8. saith having seriously considered it and having made some reflections upon himself and his own actions he is not a little troubled that his Lenity and Condescensions towards many of the Popish Perswasion which were but natural effects of his generositie and good nature c. have been made so ill use of and so ill deserved that the Resort of Jesuites and Priests into this Kingdom hath been thereby encreased with which his Majesty is and hath long been highly offended and therefore his Majesty readily concurs with the Advice of his Two Houses of Parliament and hath given order for the preparing and issuing 6. That he readily concurs with the advice of his Parliament to grant a Proclamation and that to be more effectual than any of that kind have ever been out such a Proclamation as is desired and his Majesty will take farther care that the same shall be effectual at least to a greater degree than any Proclamation of this kind hath ever been AND his Majesty further declares and assures both his Houses of Parliament and all his Loving Subjects of all his Dominions that as his affection and zeal for 7. For nothing is greater than his zeal for the Protestant Religion and to hinder the Growth of Popery the Protestant Religion and the Church of England hath not been concealed or untaken notice of in the world so he is not nor will ever be so sollicitous for the setling his own Revenue or providing any other expedients for the Peace and Tranquillity of the Kingdom as for the advancement and improvement of the Religion Established and for the using and applying all proper and effectual 8. That being the best way to Establish the Peace c. of all his Kingdoms remedies to hinder the Growth of Popery both which he doth in truth look upon as the best expedient to Establish the Peace and Prosperity of all his Kingdoms AND when it was as artificially as the King himself truly phrases it as maliciously divulged throughout the whole Kingdom That at the same time we deny a fitting liberty to those other His Majesties Declaration to all his Loving Subjects December 26. 1662. pag. 3. Sects of our Subjects whose consciences will not allow them to conform 9. The Malicious Scandal of his being more favourabie to Papists than other Dissenters to the Religion Established by Law We are highly indulgent to Papists not only in exempting them from the penalties of the Law but even to such a degree of countenance and encouragement as may even endanger the Protestant Religion As to that most pernicious and injurious scandal so artificially spread fomented of our favour to Papists saith 10. A Repetition of the same detestable Arts of the late Rebellious Times the King as it is but a repetition of the same detestable arts by which all the The same Declaration pag. 9 10 11 12. late calamities have been brought upon this Kingdom in the time of our Royal Father of Blessed Memory who though the most pious and zealous Protestant that ever Reign'd in this Nation could never wash off the stains cast upon him by that malice but by his 11. And therefore we should all be prepared against such poison Martyrdom We conceive our Subjects should be sufficiently prepared against that poison by memory of those disasters especially since nothing is more evident than that the wicked Authors of this scandal are such as seek to involve all good Protestants under the odious name of Papists or Popishly affected yet we cannot but say upon this occasion that our Education and course of Life in the True Protestant Religion hath been such and our constancy in the Profession of it so eminent in our most desperate condition abroad among Roman Catholick Princes 13. Yet the Education of the King in the Protestant Religion hath been such that should any but believe this Scandal it would be a most impardonable offence when as the appearance of receding from it had been the likeliest way in all humane forecast to have procured us the most powerful assistances of our Re-establishment that should any of our Subjects give but the least admission of that scandal into ☞ their beliefs We should look upon it as the most impardonable offence that they can be guilty of towards us 'T is true that as we shall always according to justice retain so we think it may become us to avow to the world a due sense we have of the greatest part of our Roman Catholicks 14. 'T is true the Roman Catholicks did adhere to the King his Father with their Lives and Fortunes against those who employed both against him of this Kingdom having deserved well from our Royal Father of blessed Memory and from us and even from the Protestant Religion it self in adhering to us with their Lives and Fortunes for the maintainance of our Crown in the Religion Established against those who under the name of zealous Protestants employed both fire and Sword to overthrow them both We shall with as much freedom profess unto the world that it is not in our intention to exclude our Roman Catholick Subjects 15. Therefore ought not to be excluded from all share in the benefit of the Act of Indemnity who have demeaned themselves well who have so demeaned themselves from all share in the benefit of such an Act viz. the Act of Indemnity as in pursuance of our promises the wisdom of our Parliament shall think fit to offer unto us for the ease of tender Consciences It might appear no less than injustice that those who deserved well and continued to