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Lex, Rex, The Author's Preface
Who doubteth (Christian Reader) but innocency
must be under the courtesy and mercy of malice,
and that it is a real martyrdom to be brought under
the lawless inquisition of the bloody tongue. Christ,
the prophets, and apostles of our Lord, went to
heaven with the note of traitors, seditious men, and
such as turned the world upside down: calumnies
of treason to Cæsar were an ingredient in Christ's
cup, and therefore the author is the more willing to
drink of that cup that touched his lip, who is our
glorious Forerunner: what, if conscience toward
God, and credit with men, cannot both go to heaven
with the saints, the author is satisfied
with the former
companion, and is willing to dismiss the other.
Truth to Christ cannot be treason to Cæsar, and for
his choice he judgeth truth to have a nearer relation
to Christ Jesus, than the transcendent and boundless
power of a mortal prince.
He considered that popery and defection had made
a large step in Britain, and that arbitrary government
had over-swelled all bans of law, that it was
now at the highest float, and that this sea approaching
the farthest border of fancied absoluteness, was
at the score of ebbing: and the naked truth is, prelates,
a wild and pushing cattle to the lambs and
flock of Christ, had made a hideous noise, the wheels
of their charriot did run an equal pace with the
blood-thirsty mind of the daughter of Babel. Prelacy,
the daughter planted in her mother's blood,
must verify that word, As is the mother, so is the
daughter: why, but do not the prelates now suffer?
True, but their sufferings are not of blood, or kindred,
to the calamities of these of whom Lactantius
saith, (1. 5, c. 19,) O quam
honesta voluntate
miseri erant. The causes of their suffering are,
- Hope of gain and glory, steering their helm to a shore
they much affect; even to a church of gold, of purple,
yet really of clay and earth.
- The lie is more active upon the spirits of men, not because
of its own weakness, but because men are more passive in
receiving the impressions of error than truth; and
opinions lying in the world's fat womb, or of a conquering
nature, whatever notions side with the world, to prelates
and men of their make are very efficacious.
There is another cause of the sickness of our
time, God plagued heresy to beget Atheism and security,
as atheism and security had begotten heresy,
even as clouds through reciprocation of causes
engender rain, rain begat vapours, vapours clouds, and
clouds rain, so do sins overspread our sad times in a
circular generation.
And now judgment presseth the kingdoms, and
of all the heaviest judgments the sword, and of
swords the civil sword, threateneth vastation, yet
not, I hope, like the Roman civil sword, of which it
was said,
Bella geri placuit
nullos habitura triumphos.
I hope this war shall be Christ's triumph,
Babylon's ruin.
That which moved the author, was not (as my excommunicate
adversary, like a Thraso, saith) the
escapes of some pens, which necessitated him to
write, for many before me hath learnedly trodden in
this path, but that I might add a new testimony to
the times.
I have not time to examine the P. Prelate's preface,
only, I give a taste of his gall in this preface,
and of a virulent piece, of his
agnosco
stylum et genium Thrasonis, in which he laboureth to prove how
inconsistent presbyterial government is with
monarchy, or any other government.
- He denieth that the crown and sceptre is under
any co-active power of pope or presbytery, or censurable,
or dethroneable; to which we say, presbyteries
profess that kings are under the co-active
power of Christ's keys of discipline, and that prophets
and pastors, as ambassadors of Christ, have
the keys of the kingdom of God, to open and let in
believing princes, and also to shut them out, if they
rebel against Christ; the law of Christ excepteth
none,
(Mat. xvi.19;
xviii.15, 16;
2 Cor. x.6;
Jer. i.9,)
if the king's sins may be remitted in a ministerial way, (as
Job xx.23, 24,)
as prelates and their
priests absolve kings; we think they may be bound
by the hand that loosed; presbyteries never dethroned
kings, never usurped that power. Your father,
P. Prelate, hath dethroned many kings; I
mean the pope whose power, by your own confession,
(c. 5, p. 59,) differeth from yours by divine
right only in extent.
when sacred hierarchy, the order instituted
by Christ, is overthrown, what is the condition of
sovereignty?—Ans.—Surer than before,
when prelates deposed kings. 2.
I fear Christ shall never own this
order.
Check this paragraph
- The mitre cannot suffer, and the diadem
be secured.—Ans.—Have kings no pillars
to their thrones but antichristian prelates. Prelates have
trampled diadem and sceptre under their feet, as histories
teach us.
- Do they not (puritans) magisterially
determine that kings are not of God's creation by authoritative
commission; but only by permission, extorted by
importunity, and way given, that they may be a scourge to a
sinful people?—Ans.—Any unclean
spirit from hell, could not speak a blacker lie; we
hold that the king, by office, is the church's nurse
father, a sacred ordinance, the deputed power of
God; but by the Prelate's way, all inferior judges,
and God's deputies on earth, who are also our fathers
in the fifth commandment style, are to be obeyed by
no divine law; the king, misled by p. prelates, shall
forbid to obey them, who is in downright truth, a
mortal civil pope, may loose and liberate subjects
from the tie of a divine law.
- His inveighing against ruling elders, and the
rooting out of antichristian prelacy, without any
word of Scripture on the contrary, I pass as the
extravagancy of a malcontent, because he is
deservedly excommunicated for perjury, popery,
Socinianism, tyranny over men's conscience, and invading
places of civil dignity, and deserting his calling,
and the camp of Christ, &c.
- None were of old anointed but kings, priests,
and prophets; who, then, more obliged, to maintain
the Lord's anointed, than priests and prophets?
The church hath never more beauty and plenty under
any government than monarchy, which is most
countenanced by God, and magnified by
Scripture.—Ans. Pastors are to maintain the rights of
people, and a true church, no less than the right of
kings; but prelates, the court parasites, and creatures
of the king, that are born for the glory of
their king, can do no less than profess this in words,
yet it is true that Tacitus writeth of such, (Hist. 1.
1,) Libentius cum
fortuna principis,
quam cum principe loquuntur: and it is true, that the church hath
had plenty under kings, not so much, because they
were kings, as because they were godly and zealous:
except the P. P. say, that the oppressing kings of
Israel and Judah, and the bloody horns that made
war with the lamb, are not kings. In the rest of
the epistle he extols the Marquis of Ormond with base flattery,
from his loyalty to the king, and
his more than admirable prudence in the treaty of cessation with the
rebels; a woe is due to this
false prophet, who calleth darkness light, for the
former was abominable and perfidious apostacy from
the Lord's cause and people of God, whom he once defended,
and the cessation was a selling of the
blood of many hundred thousand protestants, men,
women, and sucking children.
This cursed P. hath written of late a treatise
against the presbyterial government of Scotland, in
which there is a bundle of lies, hellish calumnies,
and gross errors.
- The first lie is, that we have lay elders, whereas,
they are such as rule, but labour not in the word
and doctrine (1 Tim. v. 7, p. 3).
- The second lie, that deacons, who only attend
tables, are joint rulers with pastors (p. 3).
- That we never, or little use the lesser excommunication,
that is, debarring from the Lord's Supper (p. 4).
- That any church judicature in Scotland exacteth
pecuniary mulcts, and threaten excommunication
to the non-payers, and refuseth to accept the
repentance of any who are not able to pay: the
civil magistrate only fineth for drunkenness, and
adultery, blaspheming of God, which are frequent sins
in prelates.
- A calumny it is to say that ruling elders are
of equal authority to preach the word as pastors (p. 7).
- That laymen are members of presbyteries or
general assemblies. Buchanan and Mr. Melvin were
doctors of divinity; and could have taught such an
ass as John Maxwell.
- That expectants are intruders upon the sacred
function, because, as sons of the prophets, they exercise
their gifts for trial in preaching.
- That the presbytery of Edinburgh hath a superintending
power, because they communicate the affairs
of the church and write to the churches, what
they hear prelates and hell devise against Christ and
his church.
- That the king must submit his sceptre to the
presbytery; the king's sceptre is his royal office,
which is not subject to any judicature, no more than
any lawful ordinance of Christ; but if the king, as a
man, blasphem God, murder the innocent, advance
belly-gods, (such as our prelates, for the most pare,
were,) above the Lord's inheritance, the ministers of
Christ are to say,
The king troubleth Israel, and
they have the keys to open and shut heaven to, and
upon the king, if he can offend.
- That king James said, a Scottish presbytery
and a monarchy agreeth as well as God and the
devil, is true, but king James meant of a wicked king;
else he spake as a man.
- That the presbytery, out of pride, refused to
answer king James's honourable messengers, is a lie;
they could not, in business of high concernment,
return a present answer to a prince, seeking
still to abolish presbyteries.
- Its a lie, that all sins, even all civil business,
come under the cognizance of the church, for only
sins, as publicly scandalous, fall under their power.
(Matt. xviii.15-17,
&c.;
2 Thess. iii.11;
1 Tim. v.20.)
It is a calumny that they search out secret
crimes, or that they ever disgraced the innocent, or
divided families; where there be flagrant scandals,
and pregnant suspicions of scandalous crimes,
they search out these, as the incest of Spotswood,
P. Prelate of St Andrews, with his own daughter;
the adulteries of Whitefore, P. Prelate of Brichen,
whose bastard came weeping to the assembly of
Glasgow in the arms of the prostitute: these they
searched out, but not with the damnable
oath, ex
officio, that the high commission put upon
innocents, to cause them accuse themselves against
the law of nature.
- The presbytery hinder not lawful merchandise;
scandalous exhortation, unjust suits of law, they may
forbid; and so doth the Scripture, as scandalous to Christians,
2 Cor. vi.
- They repeal no civil laws; they preach against
unjust and grievous laws, as, Isaiah
(x.1) doth, and
censure the violation of God's holy day, which
prelates profaned.
- We know no parochial popes, we turn out no
holy ministers, but only dumb dogs, non-residents,
scandalous, wretched, and apostate prelates.
- Our moderator hath no dominion, the P. Prelate absolveth him, while he
saith,
All is done in our church by common consent
(p. 7).
- It is true, we have no popish consecration, such as P. Prelate
contendeth for in the mass, but we have such as Christ and his apostles
used, in consecrating the elements.
- If any sell the patrimony of the church, the presbytery censures him; if
any take buds of malt, meal, beef, it is no law with us, no more than the
bishop's five hundred marks, or a year's stipend that the entrant gave to
the Lord Bishop. for a church. And whoever took buds in these days, (as
king James by the earl of Dunbar, did buy episcopacy at a pretended
assembly, by foul budding,) they were either men for the episcopal way, or
perfidiously against their oath became bishops, all personal faults of
this kind imputed to presbyteries, agree to them under the reduplication
of episcopal men.
- The leading men that covered the sins of the dying man, and so lost
hissoul, were episcopal men; and though some men were presbterians, the
faults of men cannot prejudice the truth of God; but the prelates always
cry out against the rigour of presbyteries in censuring scandals; because
they themselves do ill, they hate the light; now here the prelate
condemneth them of remissness in discipline.
- Satan, a liar from the beginning, saith, The presbytery was a seminary
and nursery of fiends, contentious, and bloods, because they
excommunicated murderers against king James' will; which is all one to
say, prophesying is a nurse of bloods, because the prophets cryed out
against king Achab, and the murderers of innocent Naboth; the men of God
must be either on the one side or the other, or then preach against
reciprocation of injuries.
- It is false that presbyteries usurp both swords; because they censure
sins, which the civil magistrate should censure and punish. Ilias might be
said then to mix himself with the civil business of the kingdom, because
he prophecied against idolators' killing of the Lord's prophets; which
crime the civil magistrate was to punish. But the truth is, the assembly
of Glasgow, 1637, condemned the prelates, because they, being pastors,
would be also lords of parliament, of session, of secret council, of
exchequer, judges, barons, and in their lawless high commission, would
fine, imprison, and use the sword.
- It is his ignorance that he saith, a provincial synod is an associate
body chosen out of all judicial presbyteries; for all pastors and doctors,
without delegation, by virtue of their place and office, repair to the
provincial synods, and without any choice at all, consult and voice
there.
- It is a lie that some leading men rule all here; indeed, episcopal men
made factions to rent the synods; and though men abuse their power to
factions, this cannot prove that presbyteries are inconsistent with
monarchy; for then the Prelate, the monarch of his diocesan rout, should
be anti-monarchical in a higher manner, for he ruleth all at his
will.
- The prime men, as Mr. R. Bruce, the faithful sevant of Christ, was
honoured and attended by al, because of his suffering, zeal, and holiness,
his fruitful ministry in gaining many thousand souls to Christ. So, though
king James cast him off, and did swear, by God's name, he intended to be
king, (the Prelate maketh blasphemy a virtue in the king,) yet king James
swore he could not find an honest minister in Scotland to be a bishop, and
therefore he was necessitated to promote false knaves; but he said
sometimes, and wrote it under his hand, that Mr R. Bruce was worthy of the
half of his kingdom: but will this prove presbyteries inconsistent with
monarchies? I should rather think that knave bishops, by king James'
judgment, were inconsistent with monarchies.
- His lies of Mr R. Bruce, excerpted out of the lying manuscripts of
apostate Spotswood, in that he would not but preach against the king's
recalling from exile some bloody popish lords to undo all, are nothing
comparable to the incests, adulteries, blasphemies, perjuries,
Sabbath-breaches, drunkenness, profanity, &c., committed by prelates
before the sun.
- Our General Assembly*is no
other than Christ's court,
(Acts xv.)
made up of pastors, doctors, and
brethren, or elders.
- They ought to have no negative vote to impede the conclusions of Christ
in his servants.
- It is a lie that the king hath no power to appoint time and place for
the General Assembly; but his power is not privative to destroy the free
courts of Christ, but accumulative to aid and assist them.
- It is a lie that our General Assembly may repeal laws; command and
expect performance of the king, or then excommunicate, subject to them,
force and compel king, judges, and all, to submit to them. They may not
force the conscience of the poorest beggar, nor is any Assembly
infallible, nor can it lay bounds upon the souls of judges, which they are
to obey with blind obedience—their power is ministerial,
subordinate to Christ's law; and what civil laws parliaments make against
God's word, they may authoritatively declare them to be unlawful, as
though the emperor
(Acts xv.)
had commanded fornication and eating of
bloos. Might not the Assembly forbid these in the synod? I conceive the
prelates, if they had power, would repeal the act of parliament made, anno
1641, in Scotland, by his majesty personally present, and the three
estates concerning the annulling of these acts of parliament and laws
which established bishops in scotland; therefore bishops set themselves as
independent monarchs above kings and laws; and what they damn in
presbyteries and assemblies, that they practise themselves.
- Commissioners from burghs, and two from Edinburgh, because of the
largeness of that church, not for cathedral supereminence, sit in
assemblies, not as sent from burghs, but as sent and authorised by the
church session of the burgh, and so they sit there in a church
capacity.
- Doctors both in academies and in parishes, we desire, and our book of
discipline holdeth forth such.
- They hold, (I believe with warrant of God's word,) if the king refuse to
reform religion, the inferior judges, and assembly of godly pastors, and
other church-officers may reform; if the king will not kiss the Son, and
do his duty in purging the House of the Lord, may not Elijah** and the people do their duty, and cast out Baal's
priests. Reformation of religion is a personal act that belongeth to all,
even to any one private person according to his place.
- They may swear a covenant without the king, if he refuse; and build the Lord's house
(2 Chron. xv.9)
themselves; and relieve and defend one
another, when they are oppressed. For my acts and duties of defending
myself and the oppressed, do not tye my conscience conditionally, so the
king consent, but absolutely, as all duties of the law of nature do.
(Jer xxii.3;
Prov. xxiv.11;
Isa. lviii.6;
i.17.)
- The P. Prelate condemneth our reformation, because it was done against
the will of our popish queen. This showeth what estimation he hath of
popery, and how he abhorreth protestant religion.
- They deposed the queen for her tyranny, but crowned her son; all this is
vindicated in the following treatise.
- The killing of the monstrous and prodigious wicked cardinal in the
Castle of St Andrews, and the violence done to the prelates, who against
all law of God and man, obtruded a mass service upon their own private
motion, in Edinburgh anno 1637, can conclude nothing against presbyterial
government except our doctrine commend these acts as lawful.
- What was preached by the servant of Christ, whom (p. 46) he calleth the
Scottish Pope, is printed and the P. Prelate durst not, could not, cite
any thing thereof as popish or unsound, he knoweth that the man whom he so
slandereth, knocked down the Pope and the prelates.
- The making away the fat abbacies and bishoprics is a bloody heresy to
the earthly-minded Prelate; the Confession of Faith commended by all the
protestant churches, as a strong bar against popery, and the book of
discipline, in which the servants of God laboured twenty years with
fasting and praying, and frequent advice and counsel from the whole
reformed churches, are to the P. Prelate a negative faith and devout
imaginations; it is a lie that episcopacy, by both sides, was ever agreed
on by law in Scotland.
- And it was a heresy that Mr Melvin taught, that presbyter and bishop are
one function in scripture, and that abbots and priors were not in God's
books, dic ubi
legis;
and is this a proof of
inconsistency of presbyteries with a monarchy?
- It is a heresy to the P. Prelate that the church appoint a fast, when
king James appointed an unseasonable feast, when God's wrath was upon the land, contrary to God's word
(Isa xxii.12-14);
and what! will this prove
presbyteries to be inconsistent with monarchies?
- This Assembly is to judge what doctrine is treasonable. What then?
Surely the secret council and king, in a constitute church, is not
synodically to determine what is true or false doctrine, more than the Roman emperor could make the church canon,
Acts xv.
- Mr Gibson, Mr Black, preached against king James' maintaining the
tyranny of bishops, his sympathizing with papists, and other crying sins,
and were absolved in a general Assembly; shall this make presbyteries
inconsistent with monarchy? Nay, but it proveth only that they are
inconsistent with the wickedness of some monarchies; and that prelates
have been like the four hundred false prophets that flattered king Achab,
and those men that preached against the sins of the king and court, by
prelates in both kingdoms, have been imprisoned, banished, their noses
ript, their cheeks burnt, their ears cut.
- The godly men that kept the Assembly of Aberdeen, anno 1603, did stand
for Christ's Prerogative, when king James took away all General
Assemblies, as the event proved; and the king may, with as good warrant,
inhibit all Assemblies for word ans sacrament, as for church
discipline.
- They excommunicate not for light faults and trifles, as the liar saith:
our discipline saith the contrary.
- This assembly never took on them to choose the king's counsellors; but
those who were in authority took king James, when he was a child, out of
the company of a corrupt and seducing papist, Exme Duke of Lennox, whom
the P. Prelate nameth noble, worthy, of eminent endowments.
- It is true Glasgow Assembly, 1637, voted down the high commission,
because it was not consented unto by the church, and yet was a church
judicature, which took upon them to judge of the doctrine of ministers,
and deprive them, and did encroach upon the liberties of the established
lawful church judicatures.
- This Assembly might well forbid Mr John Graham, minister, to make use of
an unjust decree, it being scandalous in a minister to oppress.
- Though nobles, barons, and burgesses, that profess the truth, be elders,
and so members of the general Assembly, this is not to make the church the
house, and the commonwealth the hanging; for the constituent members, we are content to be examined by the pattern of synods,
Acts xv.22, 23.
Is this inconsistent with monarchy?
- The commissioners of the General Assembly, are,
- A mere occasional judicature.
- Appointed by, and subordinate to the General Assembly.
- They have the same warrant of God's word, that messengers of the synod
(Acts. xv.22-27)
hath.
- The historical calumny of the 17th day of December, is known to all:
- That the ministers had any purpose to dethrone king James, and that
they wrote to John L. Marquis of Hamilton, to be king, because king
James had made defection from the true religion: Satan devised,
Spotswood and this P. Prelate vented this; I hope the true history of
this is known to all. The holiest pastors, and professors in the
kingdom, asserted this government, suffered for it, contended with
authority only for sin, never for the power and office. These on the
contrary side were men of another stamp, who minded earthly things,
whose God was the world.
- All the forged inconsistency betwixt presbyteries and monarchies, is
an opposition with absolute monarchy and concluded with a like
strength against parliaments, and all synods of either side, against
the law and gospel preached to which kings and kingdoms are
subordinate.
Lord establish peace and truth.
Notes
*source says Assemby
**source says Eliah
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