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A35571 Not popery, but the Protestant religion the support of the crown. Confirmed out of the mouth of that blessed martyr King Charles I. of pious memory. With other of his sayings and instructions concerning both religion and government, worthy to be seriously considered by all Protestants. Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1682 (1682) Wing C82; ESTC R1051 4,179 4

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NOT POPERY BUT THE Protestant Religion The Support of the CROWN Confirmed out of the Mouth of that Blessed Martyr King CHARLES I. of Pious Memory With other of his Saying and Instructions concerning both Religion and Government worthy to be seriously considered by all PROTESTANTS IF the Soul of the Blessed Martyr from his Mansion of Bliss and Glory could look down and behold a part of himself embracing a Religion so much averse to his Royal Judgment and Pious Mind and so contradictory to what he professed and laid his Life down for and which truly entitles him to Martyrdom it could not but wonder at least if not grieve might such Passion be admitted to Celestial Spirits to behold the danger of introducing a Religion into these Protestant Kingdoms that will infallibly overthrow that Church and Government he so highly prized and in effect make him an Heretick in dying for a false Religion But we doubt not as that Holy Royal Martyr is employed in more beatifick Visions and sees not what in his Life time he would scarce ever have believed from any Prophet or Oracle He is not concerned with our Troubles yet we think it not unnecessary that this Holy Martyr's Words should never be forgotten or sleep in oblivion who was so great and zealous an Assertor of the Protestant Cause and that they may even stare those in the Face that are most concerned and appear before them in most indelible Characters never to be blotted out of the Memories of all Protestants and whose Judgment therein ought to be most sacred especially to his own Issue since his Sacred Life was laid down and his Royal Blood shed for that Cause which is almost now abandoned and forsáken and which depends only on the Life of our now Sacred Sovereign whom the God of Heaven preserve for the Peace of these Nations Amen In his late Majesty's Speech to both Houses on Feb. the 3d. 1640. about the Papists he says I take in good part your Care of the true Religion established in this Kingdom from which I will never depart It is against my mind that Popery or Superstition should any way increase within this Kingdom and I will restrain the same by causing the Laws to be put in Execution I am resolved to provide against Jesuites and Papists by setting forth a Proclamation with all speed to command them to depart the Kingdom within one moneth of which if they fail or shall return then they shall be proceeded against according to the Laws Likewise in his Speech to the Knights Gentry and Freeholders of the County of Lincoln at Lincoln July 15. 1642. He thus expresses himself I assure you upon the Faith and Honour of a Christian King I will be always tender of any thing that may advance the true Protestant Religion c. this Blessed Martyr mock'd not at the word True Protestant it is his though now ridicul'd Here mark his Solemn Protestation made at the Head of his Army Sept. 19. 1642. I do promise in the presence of Almighty God and as I hope for his blessing and protection that I will to the utmost of my power defend and maintain the True Reformed Protestant Religion established in the Church of England and by the Grace of God in the same will live and die I desire to govern by the known Laws of the Land and that the Liberty and Property of the Subject may be by them preserved with the same care as my own just Rights c. And I do solemnly and faithfully promise in the sight of God to maintain the just Priviledges and freedom of Parliament and to govern by the known Laws of the Land c. And again in his Speech to the Lords and Commons at Oxford Apr. 26. 1644. He hath these words towards the close of his Speech And be assured that there is no profession which I have made for the defence and maintenance of out Religion Laws and Liberties which I will not inviolably observe But his Protestation made at Christ Church in Oxford 1643 just before his receiving the holy Eucharist for being then about to receive the Sacrament at the hands of the Lord Archbishop of Armagh rising up from his Knees and beckning to the Archbishop to forbear a little he made this Solemn Protestation which ought never to be forgot My Lord I espy here many resolved Protestants who may declare to the World the resolution I now make I have to the utmost of my power prepared my Soul to become a worthy receiver and may I so receive comfort by the Blessed Sacrament as I do intend the Establshment of the truly Reformed Protestant Religion as it stood in its Beauty in the happy days of Queen Elizabeth without any connivance at Popery and may this Sacrament be my Damnation if my Heart does not joyn with my Lips in this Protestation And yet there were those who would have this King a Papist but hey were only such of themselves as endeavoured to make him odious to his People and as a Priest lately in Ireland who brag'd that our now Sovereign was of the Romish Religion for which he was fined 200 l. at the Assizes and lyes in Gaol to this day But by this Protestation the World may judge how far this good King was from enduring the Romish Religion in his Kingdom And again in his Letter to the Judges to be Published in their Circuits July 4. 1642. He gives them a Charge That they take care by all the best means to suppress Popery in all the Counties by putting the Laws against them in Execution c. And further bids them assure his good Subjects on the Word of a King who called God to Witness That He was resolved with Gods assistance constantly to maintain the True Protestant Religion c. In his private Letters to the Queen with whom he would not dissemble he tells her in several places that he will never quit his Religion but remain constant to the maintaining Episcopacy In his Instructions to his Commissions for the Treaty at Vxbridge He declares to them That be cannot yield to change the Government of the Church being bound thereto by His Coronation Oath and that they must do nothing to change or lessen the dependency of the Clergy on the Crown entirely without which it will scarce sit fast upon the Kings Head So that Popery absolutely overthrows this when the Clergy depends on the Pope altogether and nothing on the Crown How well also His Late Majesty argued for Episcopacy as the only true Religion and most agreeable to the Word of God may be seen by His Learned Papers which we shall not mention and as he lived so he dyed in the same Constancy of asserting ad maintaining of the same Protestant Religion for being on the Scaffold and about to seal to his last words with his bloud He says My Conscience in Religion is very well known to all the World and therefore I declare before