Children of Beliall, or, The rebells wherein these three questions are discussed : I. whether God or the people be the author and efficient of monarchie? II. whether the King be singulis major, but universis minor? III. whether it be lawfull for subjects to beare armes or to contribute for the maintenance of a warre against the King? T. S. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A58824 of text R8516 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing S2082). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 59 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 14 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A58824 Wing S2082 ESTC R8516 13247454 ocm 13247454 98669 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A58824) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 98669) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 438:10) Children of Beliall, or, The rebells wherein these three questions are discussed : I. whether God or the people be the author and efficient of monarchie? II. whether the King be singulis major, but universis minor? III. whether it be lawfull for subjects to beare armes or to contribute for the maintenance of a warre against the King? T. S. Scott, Thomas, 1580?-1626. Swadlin, Thomas, 1600-1670. [4], 23 p. s.n.], [London? : 1647. "To his honoured friends" signed: T.S. Variously attributed to Thomas Scott and Thomas Swadlin. Cf. Wing; NUC pre-1956. Place of publication from Wing. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. Marginal notes. eng Divine right of kings. Monarchy. Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1642-1649. A58824 R8516 (Wing S2082). civilwar no Children of Beliall, or, The rebells. Wherein these three questions are discussed: I. Whether God or the people be the author and efficient Swadlin, Thomas 1647 10489 21 45 0 0 0 0 63 D The rate of 63 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2005-10 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-01 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-04 Emma (Leeson) Huber Sampled and proofread 2006-04 Emma (Leeson) Huber Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-09 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Children of Beliall , OR , THE REBELLS . Wherein these three Questions are discussed : I. Whether God or the People be the Author and Efficient of Monarchie ? II. Whether the King be Singulis major , but Universis minor ? III. Whether it be Lawfull for Subjects to beare Armes , or to Contribute for the maintenance of a Warre against the King ? MAT. 12.30 . Hee that is not with me , is against me , &c. Printed in the Yeere , 1647. TO HIS HONOVRED FRIENDS , Sr. G. C. AND HIS VERTUOUS LADIE , A. Sir , Madam , YOu have beene informed of my Loyalty , and beleeve it ; I have felt your Charity , and acknowledge it : That the World may say , I dyed a loyall Subject , and a thankefull Servant , I have left these lines as a testimony of both , from him that was while he lived , Sir , Madam , Your Beads-man , T. S. Some few faults have escaped , which the Reader is intreated thus to Correct . Pag. 13. line 26. read sine . ibid. l. 36. r. distinction . p. 14. ult. r. ipse . p. 15. l. 3. r. Regali . p. 16. marg. Pars for Ps. 1 Sam. 10.27 . The children of Belial said , How shall this man save us ? and they despised him , and brought him no presents . THis latter , and therefore this wicked age , hath broached three seditious questions : the questions were heretofore brewed by Bellarmine and his fellow Jesuites , by Buchanan and his fellow Schismaticks : and this age , this Jesuiticall , Schismaticall age hath practically broached , what they but speculatively brewed . Viz. 1. Whether God or the people bee the author and efficient of Monarchy ? 2. Whether the King be onely Singulis major , but Universis minor . 3. Whether it be lawfull for Subjects to beare armes , or to contribute for the maintenance of a warre against the King ? And this age , this wicked age , resolves these questions just to the peoples humour ; and saith , 1. The people are the author of Monarchie : 2. The people represented , are greater then the King . 3. It is lawfull to contribute for the maintenance of a War , or to beare armes against the King . But to make good that old Adagie , Quod vulgo placet , sapienti displicet , the Prophet Samuel , in this Chapter , in this verse , resolves cleane contrary , and tells us , 1. That God , and not the people , is the efficient of Monarchie : So he saies , v , 24. See yee him , Quem populus elegit ? at no hand ; but Quem elêgit Deus , see ye him whom the Lord hath chosen : The King hath his power , not precario , by the peoples curtesie , but Dei gratiâ . 2. That the King is greater then the people , not only in piece-meale and particulars , but also in grosse , and generall ; so he saies againe ; v. 23 24. He , the King , stood amongst the people and was higher then all the people by the shoulder and upwards ; not only in stature , but also in power , and therefore all the people shouted and saied , God save the King . 3. That contributions to maintaine a war , or to war against the King , are unlawfull , utterly unlawfull , because the King is to be assisted in his wars by the people ; And they are here marked Carbone , for children of Belial , who brought him no Presents : Certainely they are ten times more the children of Belial , who bring Presents against him . Indeed this Text within its owne verge resolves these three questions . 1. In the description of Rebells ; they are children of Belial . 2. In the expostulation , the saucie expostulation of Rebells , How shall this man save us ? 3. In the condition of Rebells , the condition positive , and the condition privative ; positively , they despise the King , and privatively , they bring him no Presents . 1. The result of the whole falls into these particulars . ● . They account the King but as one of themselves , and as one chosen by themselves ; and therefore they saied , How shall this man save us ? And therefore they are called the children of Belial : Had they looked a little higher , and observed how God chose him out of them , they would then have believed , that God by him would save them ; because God chose him out of them for this very end and purpose , to be the King over them , and Protectour of them . 2. They looked upon themselves Aggregation , and in conjunction , and thought themselves in that bulke and collection greater then him ; and therefore they despised him ; and therefore they are called the children of Belial : Had they looked upon him as the Head of that Body , whereof themselves were our members , they would have confessed , that neither some of the principall Members representatively , nor all the Members collectively had been worthy of comparison with him ; and that he , the King , had been greater , not only then any one asunder , but then All together also . 3. They looked upon their enemies , how strong they were , and upon themselves , how numerous , how copious , and therefore how well able to defend themselves ; and therefore they brought him no presents , and therfore they are called the children of Belial ; and therefore not only by symbolical , but also by rationall Divinity : It is unlawfull to contribute for the maintenance of a war , or to beare armes against the King . I begin with the first , the description of Rebels , in the first words ; the children of Belial saied : And first , what is here meant by Belial ? Why , as Christ tacitely tells his Disciples there are many kindes of Divells , when he saies expressely , this kinde goes not out , but by fasting and prayer ; so the Prophet Samuel here tells us , that there are divers names of Divells , or the Devill hath divers names , and this of Belial is not the best . V. G. Sometimes he is called Daemon , for his knowledge ; sometimes Satan , for his malice ; sometimes Beelzebub , for his filth ; sometimes Diabolus , for his traduction and accusing of man ; sometimes as heere , Belial , for his rebellion , and casting off the yoke of obedience , for contending against him , as much as in him lyes , by whom he should , and shall at last be controuled ; for Belial signifies Absque jugo , or Absque Dominio , a Masterlesse Imp , and it is not unworthy your remembrance ; That wheresoever people are so called , children of Belial ; disobedience and rebellion are the ground of it . But what then ? Did the Divel beget these men in my Text ? or else , how and why are they called the children of Belial ? No , the Divell cannot beget children ; neither , 1. As the common cause ; for so Sol in concurrence with man generat hominem ; nor , 2. As the proper cause , either a sirvile genere , or a simile specie ; nor , 3. As the materiall cause ; for he is not Spermaticall . They are then here called the children of Belial , not by any naturall or virtous generation , but by a vitious and sinfull imitation : As Christ told the Jewes , that they were of their Father the Divell , because they sought to kill him , and belye him , and gives the reason of it , for the Divell is a murtherer from the beginning , and the Father of lies : So here the Prophet Samuel calls these men the children of Belial , i. e. of the Divell , because they by his example and tentation sought to shake and cast off the yoke of obedience : And therefore they barely apprehended the King , as a creature of their owne , and chosen by themselves , or of faction amongst themselves , saying , How shall this man save us ? And this brings me to the examination of the first question , viz. whether God or the People be the Author of Monarchie ? To this is is answered by the children of Belial for the people ; saying , How shall this man , This man , and no more , save us ? But by the Prophet of God , it is resolved for God , saying , see you him whom the Lord hath chosen ? And now , Beloved judge your selves , whether it is fitter to obey God or man , as the Apostles spake in another case ? Whether it be fitter to believe the children of Belial , who from their Father have learnt to speake nothing but lies , or the Prophet of God , who from the spirit of God can speake nothing but truth ? If I thought there were any children of Belial here , I would for their sakes examine this question to the full , either to call them by repentance to acknowledge the truth , and doe their duty , or that they might with more security , and lesse excuse wander to hell : If there be any such Divell in Samuels mantle here , any complyer here with the children of Belial , elsewhere , let him at least know the truth , and if he will be blessed , let him doe it too . The very worke of creation speaks this truth ; God made many Angels , he made but one man , and yet he could , if he would have made as many Legions of men upō earth , as of Angels in Heaven : He could , but he would not ; would you know the reason of it ? Truely I dare not prie into this Cabinet ; such secrets of State are not for the Commons ; yet according to my evidence , I shall dare shew you the outside of it ; thus : God found not heaven it selfe free from mutinie amongst a multitude of inhabitants , and therefore to take off all colour of Rebellion , and to prevent all pretence to disobedience against Soveraignty , he made but one man ; one , and no more ; hereby teaching us , That the power of a King over his Subjects is as naturall as the power of a Father over his children ; that the power and person of a Monarch is from God , and not from the people , and so to be acknowledged by the people : Sic fuit ab initio . And this is acknowledged by Aristotle , who was led only by the light of nature , and saw as far into the Lawes of nature , as ever man did : At first , saith he , Regall Power belonged to the Father of the Familie , and he gives this reason for it ; because in the infancie of the world , the Fathers were so grandevous & lived so long , that each Father begot such a numerous Posterity as might people a whole Country : And therfore Regal power over them as Subjects was no lesse from God , then Paternall power over them as children . Will you heare another Naturalist , little inferiour to this , say the same ? Principio rerum , Gentium nationumque , Imperium penes Reges erat ; The Rule of Nations , of all Nations , was in the hands of Kings from the beginning , and the people had no more right to chuse their Kings , then they had to chuse their fathers , because the Kingly Right appertained to the Father of the Family : Sic fuit ab initio . And so it hath continued ever since , and in all places . Looke else upon Moses the first Catholick and visible King of the Jewes ; ( the Sanhedrim was but his great Counsell ) He was fully perswaded that God had appointed him to be Israels deliverer : And when God called him , he alone called him , not with the people , not to the people , for their approbation by vote , but to Pharoh for the execution of his owne justice : And all this to tell the people , that yet they had nothing to doe in the appointment of a King : That God himselfe and he only , he inclusively , and he exclusively , is the efficient of Monarchie . When afterward God left them to themselves , and gave them no Kings , and that monster the Multitude took the power into their owne hands ; O , what hideous births did they produce ? Licentiousnesse instead of the Subjects Libertie , Rapes , and Rapines , instead of the Subjects propriety ; enough to affright people from affecting any kinde of government whereof God himselfe is not the immediate efficient : And he is not so the immediate efficient of any kinde of government as of Monarchy . Well , afterwards when God in mercy looked upon their misery , and gave them a little refreshment in the succession of two Judges , Eli & Samuel , & they were weary of this government , and would needes have a King to governe them , as the Nations had : Why , even then God did not give them leave to chuse one themselves ; but he himselfe appointed one over them , even Saul , of whom Samuel saies , see yee him whom the Lord hath chosen ? It is still to tell them , that God is the Author of Monarchie , and not the people . And was it not so afterwards ? What else meanes Solomons Per me Reges regnant ? That 's for the Jewes , you le say ; It is true , and it is as true of the Nations too ; what else meanes Isaiah's Vnctus Cyrus ? Daniel speakes them both : The most high ruleth in the Kingdome of men , and giveth it to whomsoever he will ; marke it , God gives it , not the people , and God gives it to whomsoever he will , not to whomsoever the people will . Thus it was in the daies of Moses and the Prophets ; and was it not thus in the dayes of Christ and his Apostles ? Why else did Christ acknowledge Pilates power to be de super ? Why else doth St. Paul say , the Powers that bee , are ordained of God . That Objection of Jeroboam , that he was a King of the peoples making , doth not soile this truth a jot , for Jeroboam confesses himselfe to be but an usurper , saying , This people will returne to their owne Lord , if they doe sacrifice in Jerusalem : We have good hope , if ever our old Religion be set up , this new rebellion must goe downe : And it concernes you , Gentlemen , to looke to it to the establishing of our Religion , Nor does that reply from Saint Peter any more helpe this lame cause ; where he calls Monarchie the Ordinance of man . For Saint Peter speakes of the finall cause of Monarchie : It is for the good of man ; and Saint Paul speakes of the efficient cause ; it is ordained of God . Pareus himselfe , Pareus confesseth as much , saying , The very word {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ad Deum primum authorem nos revocat ; this word Creation , shewes plainely that God is the author of Monarchie . Thus it was in the dayes of Moses and the Prophets ; thus it was in the dayes of Christ and his Apostles ; and hath it not been so in the dayes of Christians ever since . Looke else upon Athanasius for the Primitive Fathers ; the power of Kings is of God : looke else upon Aquinas , for the Schoolemen , All Kings are Gods ordinance , even wicked Kings to punish the peoples sinnes : looke else upon Luther , for the moderne Writers ; Yee ought not to reject the Prince whom God hath set over you : It was his answer to the assembly of the German Rebells . Thus it was in the dayes of Moses and the Prophets ; thus it was in the dayes of Christ and his Apostles ; thus it was in the dayes of Athanasius and the Primitive Fathers ; thus it was in the dayes of Aquinas , and the subtle Schoolemen ; thus it was in the dayes of Luther , and our honest Grandfathers . But hath it beene so with the Kings of England ? looke else upon his Rights , looke else upon his power . 1. His right to the Crowne is by birth , not by election : he hath it not by the peoples votes , but by Gods blessing , and hereditary succession : King Charles that now is , and long , and long may he so be , was King of England , Scotland , and Ireland , so soone as ever King James was dead , by the Law of Birth-right ; and so had beene , though he had not yet received the ceremonie of Coronation : Henry 6. was not crowned untill the ninth yeare of his Raigne , and yet he was King the eight preceding yeares . 2. His power is universall , in all Causes , over all Persons , both Ecclesiasticall and Civill : So is his Power Military ; he may , the people may not , ( de jura ) proclaime war , and establish peace : So is his power curiall ; no Court , not the Court of Parliament can meet , but by the Kings authority ; yea , the Court of Parliament it selfe was at first devised , framed , and instituted by the Kings of England ! O fortunatos Anglos bona si sua nô rint : So is his power officiall ; He bestowes all offices , the Lord Keeper , the Lord Treasurer , the Lord Chamberlaine , and all the rest acknowledge the King their only Patron and Donor ; and lastly such is his power origenall , and that runs thus , Carolus Dei gratia , not , Carolus electione Populi . The King hath under him free-men and slaves , saies Bracton , but he is under none but God : And it may be said of our King in his Chaire-Royall , as it was said of Solomon , That he then sits , not in solium Populi , as if they made him King ; but in solium Domini , because he is , what he is , Charles , by the grace of God , of England , Scotland , France , and Ireland , King , &c. And may Almighty God with his grace , by which he made him King , continue him in his Kingdomes , and restore him to his power , that he may punish all those men of Belial , who say , they made him King , and He shall no longer raigne over them ; yea , O God , let all those Children of Belial taste of thy mercy , and the Kings justice , who say , how shall this man save us ? And so deny his Authority to come from thee , and despise him because they conceive him lesse then the whole Body , though greater their particular Members . Amen . It is my second part , and I am now to discusse it ; I called it the positive condition of Rebells : They despised him : And first what is the meaning of these words , they despised him ; why the meaning of this consists in these three branches . 1. They did malè cogitare , and so came within the compasse of Solomons prohibition , curse not the King in thy thought . A thought of despising the King is treason , as well as a word , and a word as well as an action : So it is said of the intentions of Bigthan and Texesh , Traitors they were , and yet they never came to an insurrexerunt , or any act of treason , but only to a voluerūt , a bare intention , they sought , or , they thought to lay hands upon King Abasuerus , and for this very thought they were hanged : And as the Law of God , so the Law of this Kingdome construes a bare purpose against the King , a despising thought of the King , to be treason , and makes it deadly my prayer therefore is : Convert them O God ; if they will not bee converted , confound them O God , as many as have evill will against my Lord the King , and do malè cogitare , despise him in their thoughts . 2. They did malè dicere , saying , How shall this man save us ? and so came within the compasse of Moses his prohibition , thou shalt not speake evill of the Ruler of thy people : A word against the King is treason , as well as a thought , or action ; greater treason then the thought , and lesser then the action : And they that now word it against the King , if they be of the Clergy , they are of Balaams ordination ; because they curse whom God hath blessed : And he was killed with the sword ; If they be of the Laietie , they are of Shemeies condition , because they revile whom God hath anointed ; and he was put to a violent and shamefull death : And at this time by the Law of this Kingdome , there stands one Pym endited and arraigned for saying , He would , if he could , embrue his hands in the bloud of King Charles ; my prayer againe is : Convert them , O God , convert them , If they will not be converted , confound them O God , and let them perish , as many as speake evill of my Lord the King , and doe malè dicere , despise him with their tongues . 3. They did malè facere ; for they brought him no presents , and so came within the compasse of King Davids prohibition , thou shalt not stretch forth thy hand against the Lords Anointed ; ( And drawing our hand back from the Lords Anointed is equivalent ) I know King David there speakes by an interrogative , quis , who can ? But I know withall that that interrogation , quis , is a most tryumphant Negative , and saies nullus , no man can , unlesse he will bring guilt upon his owne soule : Absolon did against his Father the King , and was both hanged and stabbed for it ; Robert late Earle of Essex did , and was beheaded for it , and how many in the same conspiracy were hanged , you may reade in that story ; my prayer againe is : Convert them , O God , Convert them , and returne them to their duety of Loyalty to thine Annointed ; if they will not be converted , confound them O God , as many as lift up their hands against , or withdraw their hands frō my Lord the King . You see what is meant by these words , they despised him ; will you now see why they despised him ? Why , it was because they looked on him as a single man , how shall this man save us ? Happily they thought him greater then any one of themselves in particular ; but they thought themselves in a collective or representative Body greater then the King ; and this brings me to my 2a . 2ae . and the unfolding of my second question , which is , Whether the King be Singulis major , but Vniversis minor ? But of the first branch of this question , I shall not neede to speake ; for that the King is singulis major , no man denies ; or if any , onely such as are more Beasts then men , and live more by sense then reason , or rather , have lost both their sense and reason . My enquirie therefore is upon the other branch of this question : viz. Whether the King bee universis minor , lesse then the body representative ? This is the thing in agitation in this wicked age , and affirmed by wicked men , the children of Belial . But how truely they affirme it , you may see : First , by their Sophistrie : and secondly , by our verity grounded upon Scripture , Fathers , Reason , and the Law of England . 1. They tell us , the fountaine or cause of the King is greater then the King ; but the people representative is the cause and fountaine of the King . But with their favour , that Axiome upon which they build , Quicquid efficit tale est magis tale , though it bee alwayes true , Ante effectum productum , yet it is often false , Post effectus productionem : V : G : The fountaine was once more water then the river , the sparke was once more fire then all the wood in the chimney , but it is not so . And indeed , the assumption is never true , for the people is not the fountaine or efficient of the King , God is ; I have shewed it before , and thither I referre you . And yet , were it true , why , yet it would not follow , that therefore the people are greater then the King : For that Axiome is true onely in those agents , in whom the quality by which they worke is inherent , and from whom it cannot be separated : But the people ( if they had power to make the King ) have by that Act divested themselves of that power ; and the King is not under them , but over them ; and not onely over them , Sigillatim , but also Conjunction ; else the body representative need not petition him ; for they might command him , they need not else call him their Soveraigne , but their fellow-subject , they need not else write , To the Kings most excellent Majestie ; but , To our very loving friend : But you know the usuall style of the body representative ; to the Kings most excellent Majestie ; We your Majesties most humble subjects in this present Parliament assembled ; and this I hope is no complement , or pro formâ tantum : Sure I am they call God to witnesse it , and so by their owne practise and confession , the King is , not onely singulis , but also universis major . 2. And so secondly , the Scripture sayes as much ; for when that Army Royall was to joyne Battell against Absolon the Generall of the Rebels , and his Rebell-Armie ; and David the King had appointed his three chiefes over all his Cavalrie and Infantrie , Joah , Abishai , and Ittai , and said , Hee would go forth himselfe to battell , No said the people , the people represented the great Councell , the Councell of Warre , and the Councell of State : they all desire him to forbeare , and tell him , It is not safe for him to go along with them ; and why ? What reason have they for it ? marry the best reason in the world , salus Populi , salus Regui , both depending upon the safety of the King : If we flie away , they will not care for us , neither if halfe of us die , will they care for us but now thou art better then 10000. of us : id est , Thou art worth us all , thou art better then us all , thou art over and above us all . And so much sayes God himselfe , when speaking of the King , he sayes , I have exalted one chosen out of the people ; Marke it , it is Vnum electum è populo , not a populo ; and that one so chosen by God , God hath exalted ; and over whom hath God exalted him ? over the people sure , or over no body , and not over this or that part of the people , but over the people indefinitely : i.e. over all the people generally and universally . The New Testament too speakes the same , {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . In which words the body collective , and the body representative , are both subordinated to the King : the body collective is the people ; and sayes Saint Peter to them , Submit your selves , the body representative is the inferiour Magistrates , the Peers , Nobles , and Counsellors , call them what you please , the House of Peeres , and the House of Commons ; and saies Saint Peter of them , They are Governours sent by him , id est , by the King : for {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} cannot here relate to any word but {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , else there had beene an absurditie , and if there were a {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} to {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , there were an impossibility too , as absurd to suppose one Kingdome to have two supremes , as one Firmament to have two Sunnes , and as impossible to grant obedience to two supremes commanding contrary things , as to serve two masters . In a word , the inferiour Governours are made by the cheife , and who is the chiefe but the King ? God only made the King , and the King only makes Inferiour Magistrates ; ( for they are sent , or made only by him ; ) God only can de jure unmake the King , and the King only can de jure unmake the Inferiour Magistrates ; And therefore , they are not coordinate with him , but subordinate to him . If now you believe Samuel the Prophet , or St. Peter the Apostle , or God himselfe , the King is as well universis , as singulis major : id est , in plaine English , Greater then people , or Parliament : viz. where the King and Parliament are distinguished ; for the Parliament is sent , or made , or calld to be a Parliament by the King . And hath it not been so ever since ? looke else upon Tertullian for the Primitive Fathers , We account the Emperour Soveraigne over all , and acknowledge him subject to God alone : Looke else upon Aquinas for the Schoolemen , if a successive King , or King by inheritance turne Tyrant , recurrendum est ad omnium Regem , Deum , we must have recourse to God alone , because God onely hath power over Kings . And sayes Gregory Turonensis to Childerick that King of France , You may chastise us if we transgresse , but if you exceed your limits , who may chastise you ? None , no man , no assembly of men , who but God ? surely then the King is above all men in the judgement of Divinity . And is he not so in the judgement of reason ? why else doe we call the Ring Sponsus Regni ? and at his Coronation he is wedded to the Kingdome with a Ring : Why else doe wee call the King Caput Regni ? not of these or those perticular Members , but Regni , of all the members in the kingdome : For all the members in their politick capacity make but one body , and hath one body any more then one head ? and hath not every body a head ? else it is a monster , or a carkasse : Nec populus Acephalus corpus vocari meretur ; quia ut in naturalibus capite detruncato , Residuum non corpus , sed truncum appellamus ; sic in politicis sive capite communitas nullatenus corporatur : And certainely if the King makes the community a body , and the community without the King is not a boby , the King is above the community , for the head is above the body . To these two Denominations , I adde a third ; the King is Oecenomus , or Pater familias : the kingdome is Familia , the King is Dominus , the kingdome Domus , and that Criticisme is ● truth ; Dominus domni praeest , as well in universis , is singulis . Agesilaus foresaw the danger of this Destruction and therefore to a Citizen of Sparta , that desired , an alteration of Government , he returned this answer , That kind of rule which a man disdaines in his owne house , is very unfit to govern a Kingdome by : You disdaine that your Wife , Children , Servants , the Representative body of your little Kingdome , should carry themselves over you , and command you ; it is a gracelesse Familie that does so , and they are gracelesse and rebellious Subjects , that say , They are , or esteeme themselves to be above the King . They that say so , speake against reason , for the King is sponsus , and the People sponsa ; for the King is Caput , and the people Corpus ; for the King is Pater , and the people Filij ; for the King is Dominus , and the people servi . They that say so , speake against Divinity : for it hath been the universall opinion of all the Fathers , of all , I bate not one till the yeare 1300. and odde ; that the King is inferior to none but God ; and they speake against the letter and sense of the Scripture too , for the Scripture calls such despisers of the King , Children of Belial : And lastly , they speake against the letter and sense of the common lawes of England too . Omnis sub Rege , saies Bracton ; Parem non habet in Reg●● de Chartis Regiis , & Factis Regum , neo privatae personae , 〈◊〉 Justiciarii debent disputare . Notorium est , saies Walsingham ; It is beyond all doubt , th●● the Kings of England are of an unbounded preeminence , and ought not to answer before any Judge Ecclesiasticall or Civil . It was an answer of that Parliament to a Popes demand , and for such demands our forefathers accounted the Pope to be Antichrist ; I wish they had not sent that reason of Antichrist from St. Peters in Rome to St. Peters elsewhere ; for some wise men doe not now stick to say , if this be his badge , Populus is Antichristus ; It is an ordinary thing for Antichrist to lye , and I take this for one ; for if the King be of an unbounded preeminence , then by no meanes under the peoples girdle . That objection is of no force ; Ad tutelam Legis , subdit●rum , ac eorum corporum & honorum Rex erectus est , & hanc potestatem affluxam ipsa habet : For Fortescue there speakes of a King meerely Politick , saying , Rex hujusmodi , whereas Regnum Anglia in Dominium Politicum & Regal● prorupit , & in utroque , tam Regalè , quàm politico , populo suo dominatur ; The sence of this great Lawyer is , in reference to his power , he is a Regall King , & Rex naturalis , and a King by birth ; in reference to his duty , he is a politick King , or Rex nationalis , a King by Law ; But in both , a King ; and therefore universis major in both respects . Nor does that reply from Bracton or Fleta , ( for they both have it ) doe any more harme ; Rex sub Lege est , for howsoever the King be under the Directive Power of the Law , as the Law is the Rule of justice ; yet he is above the Corrective Power of the Law , as the Law is the instrument of justice . In a word , the Law declares the Kings Right , the people admit him to the possession of that Right , the Counsell advise him in the safest way of governing his people ; and so they use all but as instruments and servants to him , and he is above them all . The King is the life , the Head , and Authority of all things that are done in the Realme of England , saies Sir Thomas Smith in his Common wealth of England . Summam & supremam potestatem habet in omnes Regni or●●●s ; Nec praeter Deum superiorem agnoscit , sayes Master Cambden ; and if he be under none but God , he is above all the people , unlesse they be God . And to all this you have all sworne in the Oath of Allegiance , some of you in the Oath of Supremacie , and the late Protestation , viz , To maintaine the Kings supremacie in all causes , and over all persons , Ecclesiasticall and Civill : A soveraignty then hee hath , and you have sworne to maintaine it , not onely over singular persons , but over all persons , and as you endeavour it , so helpe you God . But you may justly feare , if now you unsweare that , or sweare , or doe against that which you have so solemnly sworn to doe ; that God will , not onely not helpe you , but wound you , wound you while you live with the infamie of Rebells , and a tormenting conscience , and wound you when you are dead with the eternity of fire , and all the torment of hell . From both which Almighty God deliver you for Jesus Christ his sake : and from both which that you may be delivered , I pray God to give you grace to acknowledge and esteeme the King to be universis as well as singulis major ; Amen . They that thinke lesse of him , doe despise him , and are therefore the children of Bellal ; And so are they that bring him no presents . It is my last consideration ; I called it the Privative condition of Rebells , and children of Belial , they brought him as presents . I need not spend any time in the explication of these words , they are obvious to the thinnest understanding , and they intend thus much ; These men , these children of Belial , did not contribute to the maintenance of the King in his warres , they did not ayde him , they did not assist him , they ayded him not with Armes , they assisted him not with money , they withheld his vectigalia from him , they brought him not his Customes , his Crowne-Revenues , his Subsidies , and his Pollmonies . I shall therefore spend my ensuing discourse , in resolving that question , which doth even naturally arise from these last words , viz. Whether it be lawfull to beare Armes , or to contribute for the maintenance of a Warre against the King ? And this Text resolves it negatively , and sayes , It is not lawfull ; for they who brought the King no presents , were sonnes of Belial ; and therefore much more are they the sonnes of Belial , who fight against , or contribute to maintaine a fight against the King . And to make this good , I shall take leave , 1. removere , to remove those objections , those grand objections which seem to check this truth . 2. Movere , to commend to you a choise and pregnant place of Scripture , or two , which give the checkmate to those objections : 3. Perpendere , to waigh some speeches of the Fathers , and so make it good by their Theorie and practise : and 4. Proponere , to lay before your face some of those fearefull judgements , which have befallen some men that have borne Armes against their Kings , as fearefull examples for them , who now contribute for the maintenance of such warres . And first , for the objections ; I meet but with two that carrie any seeming validitie with them , many more there are : As 1. The peoples rescuing Jonathan from Saul : 2. Elisha's shutting the doore , and holding fast the messenger that came from King Joram : 3. Jebues killing that King Joram : 4. Ahikams defending the Prophet from the tyrany of King Jehoiakim : 5. The withstanding of Vzziah the King by Azariah the Priest : 6. The Deposing of Athaliah the Queene : But they are all frivolous , and want weight , Et eâdem facilitate repelluntur , quâ proponuntur . The first that carries any shew with it , as I conceive , is Davids taking up Armes against King Saul ; and hence the Rebells argue thus : David the Subject tooke up Armes against Saul the King , and was not rebuked for it , either by Divines , Lawyers , or States-men ; many of his fellow-Subjects tooke up armes with him , to the number of 600. and very likely , many more contributed to the maintenance of that Army ; nor yet were they reprehended by Divinity , Law , or Pollicie : and therefore Subjects may in some cases take up Armes , and contribute to the maintenance of a Warre against their King , ( if he be an oppressour of their Properties , Liberties , or Religion . ) And to this colourable objection it is answered , the allegation is false , false and absurd both ; false , because David was so farre from taking up these Armes against King Saul , that he continually fled from him , and never fought with him : yea , so farre from fighting with King Saul he was , that when God had delivered him two several times into his hands , once at the Edge hill of Hackilah , and once in the wildernesse of Eugedi , he durst not himselfe , nor would hee suffer any man else to stretch forth his hand against King Saul , and for this onely reason , Because he was the Lords annointed , false therefore : And absurd too , to imagine that David should raise or entertaine 600. men to fight against King Saul , who never went without 3000. men at his heeles : Impar congressus , and very unlearnedly is David with his 600. men urged as an example or argument , to justifie disloyalty . Nor will that addition helpe it , viz. That King David was 40000. strong ; for he was not so strong till after Sauls death , as appeares in the story : But admit it for truth , that David was 40000. strong in the dayes of Saul , yet this is so farre from being an argument to justifie Rebellion , or taking up Armes against the King , as that it doth altogether condemne it ; for notwithstanding so great strength , yet David never pursued Saul , never let flie any murthering arrowes , dart , ston● , at or against King Saul , but still fled from him ; and to put him out of all such feares and jealousies , hee got himselfe with all his Forces out of his Kingdome , and begged a place for his habitation of Achish King of Gath. Let all our rebells follow David in the whole example , and wee shall both allow this quotation , and also commend their imitation ; yea , and pray they may have so many followers , that there may not bee one Rebell left to lift up his hand against King Charles the Lords Annointed . Object . 2 The second objection of any colourable strength , is that of Jeroboam ; from whence it is thus argued : Rehoboam the son of Solomon refused to ease the people of their burthens , and therefore the people tooke up Armes , and set up Jeroboam to be King over them ; and this was so farre from being a sinne that the Text sayes , It was from the Lord ; and therefore Subjects may in some cases beare Armes against their King . It was answered , The Scripture here sets downe , Rei gesta veritatem , non facti aequitatem ; and hereupon sayes Saint Austin , Quia factum legimus , non ideo faciendum credimus , s●ctando enim exemplum violimus praeceptum , nor can wee any more free our selves from the breach of the fift Commandement , if wee take up Armes against our King upon this example , then wee can from the breach of the eight Commandement , if wee plunder and robbe our neighbours upon the example of the Israelites spoyling the Egyptians . True , Jeroboam was King , and that was from the Lord ; but by permission onely , not appointment ; and God in that permission at once punished Solomons Idolatry , and Rehoboams follie ; but notwithstanding this , that act of the people , in revolting from Rehoboam , was Rebellion , and so called by God himselfe in two severall places , and God punished this Rebellion of theirs so fearefully , that he first gave them up to Idolatry , and afterwards drove them out into Captivity ; and this is commonly the reward of Rebells : First they turne Idolaters , or what is tantomount ; irreligious , ( let any one say what Religion the Rebells are of ) and so are hated by God , and afterwards are made slaves , and so are hated by men ; That we may never fall into the one or the other , either Idolatry , or Captivitie , Almightie God keepe us from Rebellion . Amen . The Scripture affords not one more colourable example to justifie the taking up of Arms against the King , and therefore the Rebells of this age borrow one from our owne Country . Object . 3 Richard the second was deposed by Parliament , and therefore a King of England may be resisted . I answer it , Infandum scelerate jubet renovare pudorem : If the Rebells were not past all shame , they would never have remembred this Factum , since it is without all Aequum , and to this day remaines the blemish of our Nation ; and this very act brought such miseries upon this Kingdome , that untill two Kings , one Prince , ten Dukes , two Marquesses , 21. Earls , 27. Lords . 2. Viscounts , one Lord Prior , one Judge , 139. Knights , 421. Esquires , Gentlemen of a vast number , and 100000. Common people were slaine in these Civill Warres , England never saw happy dayes ; This repetition hath rethorique enough to stirre you up to sorrow , I say no more of it therefore ; but , that we may againe see peace and happinesse in our dayes , God put a period to them that beare Armes against King Charles : Amen . For it is unlawfull , as appeares . 2. by Scripture , I will name but two instead of two hundred : The first is that of Solomons , whose precept is , That we keepe the Kings Commandement : id est , Whatsoever he commands , so it be not against the word of God : The reason of this precept is double : 1. In regard of conscience , Because of the Oath of God , we have sworne to it , and we have called God to witnesse to the truth of our intention and endeavour to performe this Oath ; and accordingly we may expect God● rewarder , or a revenger : The second reason is , in regard of power , For where the word of a King is there is power : q. d. For a while , the word of a King , like the word of God , may be sleighted , but in the end , it will appeare a word of power , and shall be suffered with death , where it was not obeyed with duety : For against the King there is no rising up : Nemo qui insurgit , sayes Junius ; Nemo qui insurgat , sayes Clarius , ( I wish hee had beene a Prophet : ) By Solomons rule , it is unlawfull to beare Armes against the King . And so it is by Saint Pauls rule too , his precept is obedience to the higher powers , not to the naked authority , as Mr. Burrowes would make that man beleeve , that is given over to beleeve a lye , but to the person cloathed with that power : For if {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} may signifie power in the abstract , or the power of the Law , without relation to the person that made that Law ; yet {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} must of necessity note the person , and the superiority of the person , that hath this power conferred upon him ; and such power no person in England hath , but onely the King of England : His great Counsell may ju● dicere , he onely can jus dare ; and therefore to him must every English soule be subject ; subject actively , licitis , and subject passively , in illicitis ; both wayes so farre subject , as that we may not resist : The reason is , for if we doe , we shall receive damnation : the word is {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , and that signifies , not the plundering of the goods at home , not the hanging of the body abroad , but the everlasting damnation of the soule and body in Hell , notwithstanding Mr. Marshals new Lexicon . If now you beleeve Solomon , or Saint Paul , ( I could add Moses and all the other Prophets , Saint Peter and all the other Apostles ) It is not lawfull for any man , for any sort of men to beare Armes against the King : Yea , therefore every man must assist the King with Armes , and contribute to the maintenance of his Warres , for they that doe not are the children of Belial : The children of Belial said , How shall this man save us ? they despised him and brought him no presents . And doe not the Fathers assent to the same ? Why else did Justin Martyr say ; For our Religions sake , and preservation of publike peace , we Christians , O Emperour , yield you our helpe and assistance : It was Tertullians glory , that Christians were never found Albinians , Nigrians , Cassians , or any other sort of Traytors : Athanasius professed it not lawfull to say or speake otherwise then wel of Majestie : Nazianzen knew no meanes lawful to restrain the persecutour , but tears : St. Ambrose knew no other way to resist then with teares : St. Austine commended the Christians for obeying Julian , I could name St. Gregory , Fulgentius , St. Bernard , and many more : For all , heare the Anathema of a full Assembly of Bishops in the Conncell of Toledo , Whosoever shall violate that Oath which he hath taken for the preservation of the King's Majesty ; whosoever shall attempt to destroy or depose the King , whosoever shall aspire to the Regall Throne , Let him bee accurst , cast out of the Church , and together with his Complices bee condemned with the Devill and his angels eternally ; let them be all tyed in the bond of damnation , who were joyned in the society of Sedition . Here now let no man say , That these Fathers command obedience to good Kings onely ; for some of those Kings , whom they command to obey , were Hereticks , some Idolaters , some Apostata'es , some Tyrants , most of them bad enough . Let no man say , the Christians did not resist , because they had not strength and power enough ; for Tertullian tells you , They had ; Cyprian tells you , They had ; Saint Gregory the Great tells you , They had ; the number of Christians was A principio , from a few yeares after the Apostles . Nimius & copiosus , both strong and numerous . Let no man say , Christian Religion , and their priviledges were not yet established , for they were : Constantine the Great , and his successors established them , and daily added to their Immunities . And now , judge your selves , Beloved , whether you were better beleeve the Scriptures , and the Fathers , then some yong Teachers , and schismatical Divines crept up but yesterday , and never durst appeare in Old England till now ; and now they doe appeare , they dare not dispute verbis , but verberibus , and God first or last will give them their belly full . Certainely if our Brethren were not wilfully blinde , they would joyne with us , and conclude , It is not lawfull to beare Armes , or contribute to maintaine a Warre against the King : They were children of Belial that brought King Saul no presents ; and to Belial they all must ( without Gods infinite mercie and their owne repentance ) who now maintaine a Warre , or beare Armes against King Charles . And this is evident , fourthly and lastly , by those fearefull punishments and judgements , which God and man from time to time have inflicted upon Rebells and Traytors , even such as have borne Armes , and maintained War against their Kings . Looke else upon those intentionall Rebells , Corah the Clergie Rebell , Dathan and Abiron the Laie-Rebells ; the one by a fire from Heaven is sent into the fire of Hell , the other through the earth fall into the pit of the damned : So Saint Basil . Looke else upon that verball Rebell , Shimei , hee is put to an untimely and ignominious death . Looke else upon those actuall Rebells , Achitophel a great Polititian , Absolon a Favourite of his Fathers , and of the peoples affections ; the one hangs himselfe , the other is hanged in a tree : And Sheba for but blowing a seditious Trumpet , for but striking up a rebellious Drumme hath his head cut-off . See my Beloved , see if yee can finde but one , even but one Rebell , either in holy , or humane Histories that ever escaped unpunished , either by the hand of God , in a troubled and perplexed conscience , or by the hand of man , in an untimely and odious death : Brutus with the same hand and Dagger , hee stabbed his King Caesar , he kils himselfe . That seditious Ring-leader of the Jewes against Adrian the Emperour , who called himselfe Ben-Chobab , or Filius stellae , is suddenly kild , and ever after scornfully remembred by the name of Ben-C●zba , or the Sonne of a Lye . I have heard of a certaine Commander , whose name I am not willing to remember , who often wisht he might rot , if ever he lift his hand , or drew his Sword against the King ; notwithstanding he did both , and God answered his wish , hee rotted within , and dyed . A certaine Lord I have likewise heard of , a great Ring-leader in a Rebellion , yet a great pretender to a Reformation , who in his exercises of Devotion would often desire God ; If the cause he took were not right , if the cause he managed were not just , he would take him away suddenly ; God heard him , and answered him , for by the shot of a Musket he is killed so suddenly , that he had not so much time , as to say , God be mercifull unto me , and so without signe or symptome of repentance dyed . I need not remember you of Pausanias , Ariobarzanes , Rodolph Duke of Suevia , Catiline of Rome , and many of England . Not one of them all , nor any other that I remember , or have read of , but if he lived , he lived the scorne of honest men , and if he dyed , he dyed the shame of his Friends , the mirth of his enemies , and the example of all ; God in the shamefull and fearefull punishments of them , telling us , That to beare Armes , or contribute to maintaine a Warre against the King is utterly unlawfull : That the people of this Kingdome may no longer do it : With the Church I pray , From all Sedition and privy Conspiracie , from this present dangerous Rebellion , from all false Doctrine and Heresie , from hardnesse of heart , and contempt of thy Word and Commandement , Good Lord deliver us . Amen . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A58824e-360 Questions . Resol. Populi . Resol. S●muelis . Division . Ps. 1. Mat. 17.21 . Belial , what ? Children of Belial , how ? Job . 8.44 . ● a. ● ae . Act. 4.19 . Pol. l. 1. c. 8. Exod. 2.12 14. Act. 7.25 . Judg. 19.8.10 . 1 Sam. 8.4 . Pro. 8.15 . Isay . 45 1. Dan. ● . 25 . Joh. 19 . 1● . Rom. 11.1 . Object . 1 Reg 12 . 2●0 Answ. Replie . 1 Pet. 2.13 . Resol. Ad Antioch . q 55. De reg. pa. l. 1 c 6. Speed . l. 9. c. 26. Polyd. Virg. l. 11. Smith . C. W. l. 2. c 4. fol. 34. ab . Ps. 2. Eccles. 10.20 . Est . 2.21.23 . Deut. 27.16 . Num. 23. 2. Sam. 16.5 . 1. Sam. 2a . 2ae . or Quest . 2. 2 Sam. 18.2 . Ps. 89.20 1 Pet. 2.13 Ad Scap. 2 a. 2 ae . q. 104. ar. 6. Fortesacut . l. 2. c. 8. Object . Answ. Replie . Resol. l. 2. c. 4. Elisab . pag 391. Brit. pag. 132. Ps. 3. ●● . 3 ae . 1. Mediatione non Rebellione : Junius , Borth●ius , Osiander , Willet : non Fustibus , sed precibus : Peter Martyr . 2. Revelatione , non oppositione . 3 Speciali jussu , non lege . 4. A populi tumultu non Regis tyrannide . 5. Verbis , non Gladits ; persuasione , non insurrectione : & leprosus fuit . 6. Usurpatrix fuit . Object . 1 Sam. ●2 . 1.2.24.28 . Answ. 1 Sam. 26.1 . 1 Chr. 12.22 . 1 Reg. 12. Answ. 1 Reg. 12.19 . 2 Cro. 10.19 . Answ. 4 a. 3 ae . Eccles. 8.2.3.4 . Pro. 30.31 Rom. 13.1.2 . 5 a. 3 ae . Apol. 2. ad Ant. Imp. pag. 113. Ad scap . Apol. ad Const. Orat . in Julian . 1. Contr. Auxent . Ep. 31.32.33 . In Ps. 114. Conc. 5. Canc. 2. In Apol. Ep. l. 7. ep. 1. 6 a. 3 ae . Hom. 9. Euseb. l. 4. c. 7.