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A67559 Against resistance of lawful powers a sermon preached at White-Hall, Novemb. Vth, 1661 / by Seth Ward ... Ward, Seth, 1617-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing W812; ESTC R10700 22,608 47

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Tribe Korah an eminent man amongst the Levites was offended that the High-Priest's Office went beside him and was settled upon Aaron and his Posterity These were their secret griefs for a redress whereof they make a party in the Parliament they gain to them two hundred and fifty men famous in the Parliament men of renown and in order to their ambitious Designs they remonstrate against Moses Verse 13. and their Declaration was this Pretense which we are upon that all the Congregation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were Holy and that Moses and Aaron had lifted up themselves above them that is that their power was a contrivance of themselves not an Ordinance of God that notwithstanding what God had done to setle the Civil and Ecclesiastical power it remained still in the people or their Representatives assembled together Now the Scripture tells us that since the world began God was never more highly provoked then upon this occasion when he heard this he was wrath and greatly abhorred them he invented a new thing in the world for their sakes for the Earth opened and swallowed up Dathan and covered the Congregation of Abiram I have now done with these Pretenses and my endeavour hath been to vindicate Religion from the charges of unbelieving Politicians and indeed to shew that it is not a Spirit of carnal Compliance but the true and genuine Spirit of Christianity which runs thorough the Doctrine and Government of the Church of England After what hath been spoken I hope I may presume to say with the Apostle Do we now make void the Laws through Faith yea we establish the Laws We have seen the Christian Theory doth the Philosophical Theory provide better for the safety of Princes and the establishment of Government It tells us in effect that Might is Right that every thing is just or unjust good or evil according to the pleasure of the prevailing Force whom we are to obey till a stronger then he cometh or we be able to go thorough with resistance That in reference to this life Obedience is a matter of Wit and Prudence and after life there remain for us no Concernments How stramineous is this Theory compared with the Christian Theory which speaks in this wise Let every Soul be subject to the higher Powers c That this is the genuine Christian Theory hath in some measure been demonstrated so that indeed it may be wondered from whence these Prejudices have arisen But alass that my head were Waters They have one grand Objection to which having spoken I shall conclude If this be the Doctrine of Christianity how comes it to pass that those who pretend the bighest to Religion and profess themselves the ONELY Christians the Bigot and Iesuited Romanist the frighted and transported Reformist have been authours of the most horrible Treasons and Rebellions On the one hand what mean the Catholick Leagues On the other the Solemn League and Covenant forced upon Subjects renitente Principe On one hand what means shall I say the lowing of the Oxen or rather the roaring of the Bulls the thundring of Excommunications the absolving Subjects from their Allegiance the actual Murthers of Princes the Attempts for blowing up King Lords and Commons at one clap What is the meaning of the noise of the Bels of the claps of Squibs and Fire-works which we hear On the other hand what was the meaning of that black and terrible Dispensation which will cause the ears of all Posterity to tingle It is but a little while since the anointed of the Lord the holiest the wisest the best of Kings was taken in the suares of men pretending to Reformation and sacrificed to the fury of men possessed by an evil Spirit from the Lord. He was offered as a Lamb that is dumb or rather like the Lamb of God to the rage of wilde fanatical Enthusiasts It is but a very little while since the Lamentation of Ieremy was in the mouth of all the faithfull in the Land Our King and our Princes were amongst the Gentiles provoked to serve other Gods the Law was no more the Prophets also received no vision from the Lord. And all these things were brought to pass by men pretending wonders in Religion And they would know the reason of all these Dispensations But who art thou O man who pressest into the secret of God's Pavilion How unsearchable are his Iudgments and his ways past finding out such knowledge is too wonderfull we cannot attain unto it It may be these things have been done that the Sayings of our Saviour might be fulfilled It cannot be but offences will come but we be to them by whom they come and It were better that a milstone c. It may be the Gunpowder-Treason was permitted to be designed that the disappointment might be had in everlasting remembrance and celebrated as it is this day Son of man write the name of the day even of this same day the King of Babylon set himself against Jerusalem this same day It may be God suffered the late Rebellion to prevail that he might not leave himself without witness but shew forth his wonders in our days in the miraculous restitution of our gracious Sovereign and the Church If he had not been driven out how could he have been restored not by might nor by power but by the Spirit of our God It may be this was done that we might say no more The Lord liveth which delivered us from the Treason of pretended Catholicks but The Lord liveth which hath delivered us from the Tyranny and bloody rage of the wild Fanatical Enthusiasts Surely all these things have been permitted that the Stone which the Builders refused might be made tried and precious and that his Patience his Piety his Constancy in Religion his Christian Magnanimity being manifest to all the World by the impatient desire of all Nations he might become the head of the Corner Surely these things were suffered that the Faith and Patience and Loyalty of the Church of England might be made bright and glorious by the Flames of Persecution and that in the day when God shall have given our most Gracious Sovereign the hearts or necks of all his Enemies it may not repent him of the Kindness he hath shewn to Religion and Government in lifting out of the dust the despised Head of that onely Church for ought I know which makes Obedience without base restrictions and limitations an Article of its Religion Lastly these things it may be have been permitted that by the Triumph of this day and by the vengeance lately executed in the sight of this Sun the Atheistical world might be convinced that the Powers that be are ordained of God and that though the wicked do evil an hundred times and God prolong their days yet Vengeance is his and he will repay it and They that resist shall receive to themselves Damnation FINIS * J. G. Anti-Caval * 2 Pet. i. 12. * Psal. ii Expl Object Sol. * Heb. x. 29 Obj. Sol. * Matth. xxvi 53. * Apolog. §. 37. * Mat. xii 25. * 1 Cor. xiv 33. * Rom. i. 14. * Polit. lib. 7. cap. 8. * Ephes. ii 12. a D●ut xxxiii 1. b Io●h xxiv 29 c 1 Sam. xiii 14. d 2 Chron. ix 22. e 1 Kings xv 14. f 2 Chron. xvii 3. g 2 Chron. xxix 2. h 2 Chron. xxxiii 13. i 2 Chron. xxxv 26. k Deut. xxxiii 5. l Verse 1● m Verse 13. n Verse 14. o 2 Chron. xxix 25. p 2 Chron. xxxv 15. q 2 Chron. xxix 34. r Lev. i. 6 7. s Novel Constit. 131. t Mat. xix S. u 1 Kings ii 27. x Ibid. 35. y Ioh iv 12. z Rom. xiii 1. a 2 Cor. xii 2 3. b Heb. i. 3. c Matt. xxii 21. d Matth. vii 15. e 2 Tim iii. 1. f Ibid. Verse 4. 5. g 2 Pet. ii 1. h Ibid. Verse 10. i Iude 19. k Verse 9. l Verse 11 12. c. m Verse 14. n Verse 19 o Psal. ii 10 11. p 1 Kings xxi 25. q 1 Sam. xiii 14. r Chap. xv 13. s Chap. xvi 13. t Ibid. Verse 18. u Chap. xviii 5. x 2 Sam. i 21. y Exod iv 16. z Acts vii 35. a Deut. xxxiii 4. b Num xvi c Psal. cvi 16. d Num. xvi 32. Application e Rom. iii. 31. f Lam. ii 9 g Matth. xviii 7. h Ibid. Verse 6. i Ezek. xxiv 2.
Against Resistance of Lawful Powers A SERMON PREACHED AT WHITE-HALL Novemb. V th 1661. By SETH WARD D. D. Chaplain to His Majesty Published by His MAJESTIE' 's Command LONDON Printed by Tho Roycroft for Iohn Martin Iames Allestry and Tho Dicas at the Bell in St. Paul's Church-yard MDCLXI TO THE Most High and Mighty PRINCE CHARLES the II. By the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. May it please Your Majesty IF when the present Service was with great Favour laid upon me by that most Reverend Person to whom I not onely ow Canonical Obedience but a free disposal of my Concernments I did not without fear address my self to the Undertaking and if now I make my humble approach into Your Presence with Diffidence and Trembling and without those Tokens of Ioy which would be agreeable to the Honour I have received in being by Your Majesty encouraged to make this Offering Your Majesty being as an Angel of God will graciously be pleased to discern that no Aversness from the service of Your Majesty and the Church Nor apprehension of Difficulty in what I was to undertake Nor fear of the Adversaries of the Truth have created these Passions in me but that they are wholly derived from other Causes For next to the greatend of all my hopes I shall not so earnestly snatch at any thing as the opportunities of serving God in that station he hath ordered for me in the Church of Christ in which service I apprehend the acts of Loyalty and Duty to Your Sacred Majesty and of teaching men so to be most eminently involved As for the easiness of this performance I am perswaded in my Conscience that to him who hath embraced Christianity in the true and genuine Spirit of it● and to those who without vile Affections and Carnal Interests shall apply themselves to know the Mind of God delivered in the Scriptures no one thing is more clear and evident or pressed more urgently by the Holy Spirit then is the Doctrine which I have delivered If there be such things as damnable Heresies the denial of Christ himself the Lord that bought us blessed for ever is not more truly an Heresie or a damnable Heresie then that Doctrine which doth encourage Subjects to despise Dominion and speak evil of Dignities We are not to ma●vail if we have seen that after this grand Heresie had broken its way thorough the Consciences of men the sholes of others passed clear without control ● and that those Doctrines and Practises which in the purest Times were abhorred as most heretical and profane were made the marks of the greatest God●iness and instances of the highest attainments in Religion But on the other side it is considerable that in the late days of darkness and of gloominess God did not leave this Truth without witness but amidst all the Blasphemies wherewith Your Glorious Father now with God was in the day of His Calamity blasphemed even Rabshakeh was driven to acknowledge that the Doctrine of Resistance was a Mystery concealed from the Prophets the Apostles and Primitive Christians and reserved to be revealed in our Times upon whom the ends of the World are come And that our teaching Souldiers who taught the Nation with Briers and Thorns as Gideon did the men of Succoth not able to resist the Spirit speaking in the Apostles were wont to resort to this foolish Refuge that the Doctrine of Obedience was a present Truth an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to continue abusing the Saying of St. Peter as they did other Scriptures to their own Destruction As for the Adversaries of the Truths which I have delivered either on the one hand or the other how great soever they may appear in their own Eyes or in the Eyes of their Admirers I humbly conceive it may be no Transgression of the Lines of Modesty if I shall freely profess that they are not terrible in mine no man hath more reason then my self to be laid low on the consideration of days and years withdrawn from that Study whereunto I had been consecrated yet after what hath been spoken me thinks in this Cause I should not fear My fear hath been that in a Cause of so great consequence so clear so nobly handled by the greatest Worthies of the Church of England I should not finde any thing to be tolerably spoken before the greatest and most revered Judgment under Heaven And I now tremble to think that such Failings as in the current of Pronuntiation might disappear being now brought to view the Present which I tender may instead of an Offering be an Offence My fear hath been and still is lest the Truth of that Gospel wherein I stand should any way suffer prejudice by the Weaknesses and Disadvantages wherewith it hath been delivered but we have a gracious God and Your Majesty is gracious I am not ignorant how much the true Cause of God in the World which is truly stated to lie against the Carnal and Spiritual wickedness of men is entrusted in the hands of Princes I know likewise and am assured that if men be taught or brought to believe that the utmost hazard of the greatest Transgressions is onely the loss of a few days or years of life such as they finde it it will be impossible for humane Laws to give check to the unruly Lusts of men or for Society to consist Knowing this and knowing likewise the Scandals laid upon Religion I have proposed in all humble sincerity to lay before Your Majesty the true state of these matters to separate the pretious from the vile the sincere spirit of Religion from the adulterate pretenses of it and if it should please the Authour of Religion and Government so far to bless my poor endeavours by unaffected and unstrained Arguments to do right to the Doctrine of our Church and render our Religion lovely in Your Eyes to represent to Your Majesty how much You have been favoured of God who hath so far wedded Your Concernments and interwoven his Interests with Yours and of how great Concernment it is to Your Majesty to endeavour the settlement of the true Religion and to exert that Power wherewith You are entrusted to the eradication of Atheism and Prophaneness and to the pulling down of the strong Holds of Satan That this Resolution is deeply fixed in Your Bosom God hath put into the Heart of Your Majesty to declare may the same God be pleased to perform this great and true Work of Reformation by Your Hand may Wickedness be rooted out and all things that are generous and praise worthy flourish in Your time may Your Majesty live many happy and glorious days upon Earth and be afterwards crowned with Glory and Immortality So prayeth Your Majestie 's most humbly devoted Chaplain SETH WARD ROM XIII 2. And they that resist shall receive to themselves Damnation AMongst all the Stratagemes of the Devil tending to the undermining
heart to be tender of the rights of the Church as of the Apple of his Ey This is a Calumny insisted on generally by almost all our Adversaries but it is too rude and gross to be spoken to in this place Rather let us see whether the Sovereigns among all people Heathen Iews Christians have not claimed and exercised power in all Causes over all Persons as well Ecclesiastical as Civil 1. For Causes The New Testament sometimes divides the Gentiles into Greeks and Barbarians sometimes into wise and unwise according to which division the Romanes are I suppose reckoned under the Greeks from whence they were mostly extracted and with whom they contended in Civility Briefly 1. the Greeks 2. the Romanes 3. the Barbarous Nations did alwaies exercise such a power 1. Aristotle the greatest among the Greeks tells us that the first and principal Thing in a Common-Wealth is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And accordingly if we consult the Fragments which are left us of the Laws of the most antient Grecian Common-Wealths we shall finde nothing so frequent as the Ordinances concerning their Religion 2. Amongst the Romans Cicero the wisest saith that Religion is the Foundation of Humane Society as in truth it is To say nothing of the Ordinances of Numa the Ius Pontificium c. the Titles of the Twelve Tables are many of them concerning Religion 3. As for the Barbarous Nations I shall not multiply Testimonies nor go beyond the line of Scripture In the third of Daniel we finde an Edict of the King of Babylon enjoyning all People Languages and Tongues to commit Idolatry Verse 4 5. And by and by another Edict that no man should speak amiss of the God of Shadrach Mesech and A●ednego Verse 29. In the sixth we finde Darius the Persian by the advise of his Council signing a Decree against petitioning for thirty days any God besides himself Verse 9. and shortly another that all men should tremble and fear before the God of Daniel Verse 26. In the third of Ionah the King of Nineveh and his Nobles proclaim a publick Fast. In the first of Ezra Cyrus puts forth an Edict to build the Temple at Hierusalem In the fourth Artaxerxes reverseth it In the sixth Darius re-inforceth it I suppose it is now evident that Greeks and Barbarians did exercise this power To think to elevate the force of these Instances because all these were Strangers from God and aliens from the Common-Wealth of Israel is to mistake the purpose for which they are alledged However it was not thus among the Kings of the Nations only but among the holiest and wisest of the Governours and Kings of Israel and Iudaea who for abolishing false Worship and ordaining the true are often highly commended by the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures The time would fail me to speak distinctly and particularly of the Ordinances concerning Religion which were made by Moses Ioshua David Solomon Asa Iehosaphat Hezekiah Manasses also and Iosiah concerning whom the Scripture gives these Characters Moses was the man of God Joshua the servant of the Lord. David a man after God's own heart There was none like unto Solomon Asa his heart was perfect with the Lord. The Lord was with Jehoshaphat Hezekiah did that which was right in the sight of the Lord. Manasseh was heard of God Josiah did that which was right and his Goodness was recorded Now the Acts of every one of these concerning the Worship of God and matters of Religion are recorded and applauded in the Scriptures For these all ordered and regulated Services and Sacraments and Covenants with God they erected Altars and Tabernacles and Temples and dedicated them to the Lord they destroyed Idolatry reformed abuses in God's Worship settled both the standing Worship of God and occasional Thanks-givings and Humiliations to omit other matters The whole Aaronical Ministery which consisted in Ceremonies and Sacrifices Typical and Carnal Ordinances was not ordered by the hand of Aaron but of Moses who was King in Iesurun The Tabernacle and Temple-service which beside the Mosaical Institutions consisted of Spiritual abiding Ordinances was instituted by David who being the sweet Singer of Israel and acquainted more then ever any man for ought appears with the ways and helps of lifting up the Heart to spiritual intercourse with God to that end appointed the use of Musick in the Church and without fear of stinting the Spirit he prescribed Set-forms of Praise and Prayers for the use of the Temple and ordered the Service for every day A Psalm consisting partly of the one hundred and fifth ninety sixth and one hundred and eighteenth he first delivered to Asaph and his Brethren at the reduction of the Ark from the house of Obed-Edom 1 Chron. xvi 7. And divers other Psalms were composed by him for the Service of the Church And what he had ordained Solomon put in practise In the fifth Chapter of the second Book of Chronicles we finde the pattern of the Service of this Time and Place the Sons of Asaph Heman and Ieduthun arrayed in white Linen with musical Instruments praising the Lord saying For he is good c. viz. reciting the one hundred and eighteenth Psalm and in token of God's acceptance a Cloud filled the house The one hundred thirty and sixth Psalm likewise was wont to be sung in Thanksgivings So we finde also Hezekiah and Iosiah praising the Lord in the words of David and Asaph Thus stood the matter under the Law the ordering of matters of Religion was not exempted from the Supreme Power Hezekiah varied from Moses his Law and was blameless Neither was it otherwise in the best and purest Times under the Gospel It had been but a slender invitation to the Emperours to become Christian if by submitting to Christianity they must lose so considerable a part of the Sovereign Power enjoyed by all their Predecessours and be thereby exposed inevitably to Seditions and Rebellions upon every Frantick eruption of religious Melancholie The Primitive Emperours understood themselves otherwise and so did the Christians under them I may not stand to recite the Annals of the Church If Constantine had not interposed for the composing of the Arrian Heresie what had become either of Government or Religion The drawing up of Canons for the regulation of Religion was by our LORD committed to the Apostles and their Successours the Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Persons but that these Canons should be enforced as Laws by temporal Penalties it was by the sanction of Civil Powers In the second Oecumenical Council the Fathers assembled at Constantinople beseech Theodosius the Elder to ratifie the Decrees of that Synod Thus we finde Iustinian establishing the Homo-Canonicon or Code of the Vniversal Church consisting of the Canons of the four first General and five antient Provincial Councils and commanding them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be kept as Laws Briefly
to determine this Question we need onely to view the Titles of the sixteenth Book of the Code of Theodosius the thirteen first Titles in the Code of Iustinian Photius's Nomo-Canon and the like The Pretense of exemption of Ecclesiastical Causes so as hath been intimated as it is inconsistent with Government so it is also with the Principles of Christianity 2. Thus much having been spoken concerning the regulation of Matters of Religion it will be needless to enlarge concerning the second Pretense of the exemption of Ecclesiastical Persons This Tenet is equally dangerous with the former and equally contrary to the Principles of Christianity It were to be wished that all men professing themselves Ministers were thorowly convinced of the Doctrine of Obedience otherwise as they grow popular they become dangerous Sacerdotum quidam eo sunt ingenio ut ni pareant territent And Saint Chrysostom commenting upon Every Soul c. saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Both the Apostle the Evangelist and the Prophet Our Saviour was both Priest and Prophet and the Apostles were Ecclesiastical persons yet did not think themselves exempted Such persons were not exempted either before or after the Times of our Saviour neither in 1. a Single or 2. Ioynt capacity From the beginning it was not so 1. As to Single persons under the Law we finde and Instance of the Exercise of the Sovereign power over an High-Priest offending in Abiathar whom Solomon thrust out and placed Zados in his room 2. As to the calling of Assemblies before the Gospel-times it did belong to the Supreme Magistrate We finde Moses not Aaron Ioshua not Eleazar David not Abiathar Solomon not Zadoc summoning the Priests and Levites to meet together And In the Primitive Times of the Christian Emperours we do not meet with Councils or Synods called by the Bishop of Rome nor with Ministers casting themselves into Classical and Synodical Meetings nor with Assemblies of Divines called against or without the Prince's consent The indiction of Times and Places the convocation of Persons the Presidency the order of Debates the dismission of the Assemblies the roboration of Canons as to making them Laws of the Empire in the General and Provincial Councils were all the work of the Supreme Magistrate And As for matters of Appeal we finde Paul appealing to Caesar Athanasius from the Synod at Tyre to Constantine to whom three Appeals were likewise made in the Cause of Caecilianus and Donatus and many more instances of this and the like nature 3. I should now dismiss this Head concerning Religion did there not remain one Pretense more and that so wilde and monstrous that it looks as if it were the last effort of the enemy of man-kinde ultimus Diaboli conatus for it strikes at the Heart both of Government and of Religion It is this that Saints and gifted Persons as they call themselves are exempt from humane Laws and in effect resolves into this that to reprobate others and assume to themselves the Title of the Godly Party to talk of Reformation and the power of Godliness of advancing the Kingdom of Iesus Christ c. is to justifie Sacrilege and Treason and horrid Rebellion and to qualify them for the Kings and Priests and Prophets of the world How far this Satanical madness hath prevailed to the confusion of all things Civil and Sacred to the scandal of Religion the planting and watering of Atheism and Infidelity I tremble to call to our remembrance If my present business were to refute the men that have given this offence how easie were it to examine their Gifts and their Saintship and how hard to finde them But as the Woman of Samaria said to our Saviour Art thou greater then our Father Jacob are they greater Saints or better gifted then Peter and Paul and the rest of the Apostles He that said Let every Soul be subject to the higher Powers had been rap'd up whether in the body or out he could not tell to the third heavens hath any of them been carried higher Christ the natural Son of God the Brightness of his Glory the Express Image of his Person said Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's are they greater then Christ also But my present purpose being chiefly to remove these scandals from Religion come and let us reason together What could Christ and his Apostles have done more to prevent this scandal then they have done Their Doctrine and practise hath been already shewn and the Danger and Heinousness of the Sin of Resistance in all the kindes and degrees of it discovered neither can any thing more be imagined which might be desired to anticipate and obviate this pretense unless it be that these things should have been particularly foretold and the Persons at least their Party and Sect described that the world might be forewarned of them Will it then satisfy the enemies of our Religion concerning the Truth and Infallibility of the Scriptures and the abhorrency of the Christian Principle from this damnable Tenet if it shall briefly appear that these things have been punctually foretold by Christ and his Apostles Christ hath given warning of grievous Wolves in Sheep's cloathing More particularly Saint Paul hath told us that in the last days perilous times should come that there should be heady high-minded Traytours having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof Saint Peter that there should be false Teachers which should privily bring in damnable heresies presumptuous self-willed not afraid to speak evil of Dignities Now if all this be not sufficient Saint Iude hath taken up this Prophesie of Saint Peter and given us two clear Characters of these Persons whereby they might be known He tells us 1. That they shall be Separatists from the Church and 2. false-pretenders to the Spirit These are they which separate themselves being sensual having not the spirit I shall say no more to the Pretenses relating to that Head which concerns the matter of Religion 2 ly Neither shall I enlarge upon that other Head referring to matters Civil where I instanced in two Pretenses taken from I. Harsh Administration in the Magistrate II. Competition as to power in Subjects I. Neither the Time nor the Design which I have propounded nor indeed my Profession nor Abilities do allow me to enter into the depths of the Politicks or to discourse of the limitations of Sovereign Powers Thus much is obvious to every man That there is no Cruelty so great as laxness of Government nor any Tyrany in the World like the rage of Subjects let loose and that the little Finger of Licentiousness is harder then the Loyns of the severest Laws and strictest Government I shall briefly shew that the Scripture foreseeing the easiness by reason of the Self-love and partiality of men of this Pretense and the danger of it hath directly opposed it self against it I shall not mention particular Commands