From blog:
When the Rev. Jonathan Mayhew died in Boston on July 9, 1766 his moral, religious, and political legacy was far from accomplished. Indeed years and decades would unfold before the depth of his influence became apparent in a new nation and in a new faith. Mayhew, then only 46 years old, was the minister of Old West Church, and much beloved by his congregation and admired by the hot heads and radicals being rallied by Samuel Adams who would soon become the Sons of Liberty. He was decidedly unpopular among the majority of his ministerial peers, conservative civic leaders, and with the Royal Governor of Massachusetts and his Council.
Mayhew was born on Martha’s Vineyard on October 8, 1720, a fifth generation descendent of Thomas Mayhew, the Elder who first arrived in the New World with the Great Migration fleet of Puritan settlers in 1631. Ten years later the original Mayhew secured a proprietary colony grant for Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, the Elizabeth Islands, and other small islands. Installing himself as governor he began populating his grant with new immigrants and also established his own farm and whaling operations. Thomas, his son, and grandson also were missionaries among the local Wampanoag and established such fair and friendly relations with the natives. They made clear that religion and governance were separate. The tribe was welcome to embrace Christianity, but Mayhew was at pains to assure them that their governance and lands were secure on their own. Relations were so good that despite vastly outnumbering the settlers the local Wampanoag did not join the general uprising known as King Philips War that almost wiped out the Massachusetts Bay Colony of 1675-76.
Although the small proprietary colony was absorbed by Massachusetts after 1688, the family, or much of it, remained on the island in relative isolation from the mainstream of Puritan society. Devoutly religious, their local version of the Congregationalist New England Standing Order drifted from the harsh and rigid Calvinism of the mainland.
Young Jonathan, noted for his scholarly bent, left the island to pursue the Lord’s work as a student at the factory of divines, Harvard College. Upon graduation Mayhew he found New England in a religious upheaval.
The Connecticut minister and Theologian Jonathan Edwards had helped inaugurate the first round of revival meetings in the 1730’s. In 1841 he scared the hell out New England with his fiery sermonSinners in the Hands of an Angry God which quickly became the first big best seller in the Colonies inpamphlet form. Mayhew rejected Edwards view declaring that “total depravity [is] both dishonourable to the character of God and a libel on human nature.” He likewise rejected the five points of Calvinism including the doctrine of irresistible grace and the doctrine of the Trinity as taught by the Athanasian and Nicene Creeds.
At the same time Mayhew also rejected the Great Awakening—the first of a series of huge revival movements that have periodically swept Americans up into a religious frenzy. Mayhew had seen the principle mover of the Awakening, the English preacher and revivalist George Whitefield, an Anglican preacher who became a founding figure in Methodism, at camp meetings in what is now Maine. He was repulsed by the mindless emotionalism he witnessed which he suspected would burn brightly but soon extinguish itself. He found Whitefield’s followers, ‘of the more illiterate sort,” and the preaching “confused, conceited and enthusiastic.” He was repelled by the “extravagance and fanaticism, and violent gestures and shrieks” of people in the throes of religious ecstasy.
Mayhew made his views publicly know. He proposed a third path based on religious rationalism and a view of a loving, but firm God as Father as revealed in a careful reading and analysis of The Bible.
These view made it difficult for the young minister to find a parish. But in 1747 West Church in Boston, one of the city’s nine Congregational Churches—and the least prosperous—called him to be their minister. Only two of the other ministers in the city would even agree, as was customary, to be at the service of installation and ordination for the customary laying on of hands, symbolizing a welcome into the ministerial community. One prominent minister is known to have scolded his barber when the man expressed interest in hearing Mayhew warning him not to go hear “that heretic.”
Shortly after assuming the pulpit Mayhew crossed the ocean to pursue his doctorate of divinity at theUniversity of Aberdeen in Scotland, an intellectual hot bed of the Scottish Enlightenment. Although the liberal ideas of the Scottish Enlightenment were taking hold among a young and rising generation of Virginia Tidewater aristocrats, they were a novelty in New England where most ministers who pursued advanced degrees in the Mother Country did so at firmly Puritan institutions.
Despite the cold shoulder of his colleagues, Mayhew perused a ministry that presaged Unitarianism—a theological position that did not even yet have a name—by more than two decades. His belief in a firm, fair, and loving God/king led him to believe that even the worst sinners, after a period of punishment and reflection, could be reconciled and dwell thereafter in Heaven with the saints and the angels. This was a kind of universalism, making Mayhew probably the first North American preacher to combine the two ideas which became the two streams of modern Unitarian Universalism.
But Mayhew, however far seeing and a religious pioneer, is best remembered for the political sermons that helped stir rebellion.
His most famous and influential sermon was preached on the centennial of the execution of King Charles I, January 30, 1750. Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and Non-Resistance to the Higher Powers refuted the growing opinion that the king was a martyr. It was a long, scholarly history of the monarchy and the development of the English constitution and built a Biblical argument against the Devine Right of Kings and in favor of popular resistance to unjust government in answer to a higher law. He concluded that the execution of Charles was justified when he when he “too greatly infringed upon British liberties. It was also a lesson for any future monarch with inclinations to despotism.
The sermon was widely printed and circulated as a pamphlet, for a while supplanting Jonathan Edwards old screed in popularity. It was also reprinted in London in 1752 and again in 1767 as relationsbetween the Mother Country and the Colonies were reaching crisis. Mayhew became an international celebrity, albeit a highly controversial one. His radicalism was denounced from other pulpits, and, of course, condemned by authorities.
But Sam Adams and his boys and a rising generation of patriots did listen. Years later Sam’s cousin John Adams would recall, that Mayhew’s sermon “was read by everybody.” Some would call it the intellectual opening salvo in the run-up to the American Revolution.
Mayhew continued to preach influential, widely circulated sermons including two election day charges in 1750 and 1754 espousing colonial rights and the civic duty to resist tyranny. He became particularly aroused with the imposition of the Stamp Act in 1765. The essence of slavery, he argued in a new sermon, consists in subjection to others—“whether many, few, or but one, it matters not.” The day after his sermon, a Boston mob attacked and destroyed Lieutenant Governor Thomas Hutchinson’s house. Mayhew and his sermon were held responsible by the “respectable citizens of Boston.”
In 1763 Mayhew rebuked the Anglican Society for the Propagation of the Gospel for its plans todispatch missionaries, priests, and teachers to the Colonies as well as the eminent appointment of an Anglican Bishop. He regarded all of this as a camel’s nose under the tent meant to bring the coloniesback into conformity with the Crown and its institutions.
In 1765 Mayhew was invited by Harvard to deliver the annual Dudlean Lecture on religion. This was arare show of approval from the New England establishment and an acknowledgement of his popular leadership against the Crown.
The Snare Broken was a thanksgiving discourse preached by Mayhew on May 23, 1766 occasioned by Parliament’s repeal of the Stamp Act. It was a warning to William Pitt and others in England who he knew would read it that taking self-government into private hands in some circumstances must surely proceed from “self-preservation, being a great and primary law of nature.”
Weeks after delivering this last famous salvo, Mayhew died. Most of the Boston clergy still avoided his funeral as did virtually all officeholders.
In addition to his influence on the Sons of Liberty and the American Revolution, Mayhew’s religious ideas, except for his proto-universalism, were quietly adopted by a new generation of Harvard graduates and ministers.
In the years following the revolution all most all Boston churches affiliated with the Standing Order were quietly but unofficially unitarian. An open break with the Congregationalists however would not come until William Ellery Channing’s Baltimore sermon in 1819. Ironically Mayhew’s old congregation Old West would be one of only two Boston churches to remain with the orthodox Congregationalists.
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Note that the Congregationalists in Boston maintained a unique tradition of preaching election sermons to the newly elected governments
From Wiki:
Born 1720
Educated at Harvard (class of 1743, along with Samuel Adams and James Otis Jr., and Univ. of Aberdeen) Note: The Commencement Question put to the '43 class was "Is it lawful to resist the Supreme Magistrate, if the Commonwealth cannot otherwise be preserved?"
Mayhew was not a strict Calvanist. He held several liberal beliefs, including that man could earn his way into God's grace through good works. His saving grace was that he was the most outspoken opponent of Anglicanism.
1745 - Jacobite Rebellion saw the pretender win several victories in Scotland and one in England before being put down at Culloden. After the victory, there was a resurgence in the Anglican Church for the doctrine of Unlimited Submission. The songs "God Save The King" and "Rule Brittania" were from this time frame.
1745 - 1,000 New Englander's die in the successful effort to take the French Fort at Louisbourg from whence the French had been attacking New England's fishing industry. The UK promptly traded it back to France when it made peace in 1748. The New Englanders were a trifle peeved.
1747 - Ordained as the minister at Boston's West Church, same year as the Knowles Riot in Boston and Samuel Adams first pamphlet citing to our Lockean natural rights. The Knowles Riot was important. It divided Boston on the issue of whether the riot was legitimate resistance. Boston gained a reputation for being riotous and then Gov. Shirley promised to bring down the weight of the imperial government on the town in the event of another riot.
Anglicans spoke openly of establishing theirs as the State religion. All of the governors appointed were Anglicans and Anglicans were favored whenever possible by the governor.
-- Still fighting the English Civil War in Boston.
1748 - James Allen controversy. He was expelled from Mass. Parliament for failing to "ask for pardon" after severely criticizing Gov. Shelly and calling him corrupt. Allen was then reelected, but the House again refused to seat him. Shades of Gadsden and Wilkes.
1749 - The Centeniary of the execution of Charles I
1749 - Months prior to Discourses, four Anglicans in Boston, including the rector of King's Chapel, argued in a pamphlet that the Anglican Church had dominion over New England and that New Englanders were obliged to obey it. Dissent from the Church meant disobedience to God and King. One was a proponent of establishing an American Bishop in the colonies.
1750 - Published Discourses -- No earthly authority deserves unqualified obedience. Locke and the belief that a Constitution is a political contract, and a king can be executed for failing to follow it as well as a commoner executed for treason.
Dissent is not equal to sedition.
Note this is at odds with the High Anglican belief that King's rule by Divine Right - and his subject's divine obligation to obey - which reached its zenith under Charles I.
The "morning gun of the Revolution." Gave a religious right and duty to resist tyranny. People are only responsible to obey legitimately exercised authority.
It was a "cliche" of 17th century whig political theory.
John Adams - Heard the sermon preached in the pew on 30 Jan. 1750. Discourse "was read by everyone; celebrate by friends, abused by enemies." At the age of 14, Adams had read it and reread it until "the Substance of it was incorporated into my Nature and indelibly engraved on my memory."
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A Sermon Preach’d in the Audience of His Excellency William Shirley, Esq; Captain General, Governour and Commander in Chief, The Honourable His Majesty’s Council, and the Honourable House of Representatives, Of the Province of the Massachusetts-Bay, in New England May 29th 1754. Being the Anniversary for the Election of His Majesty’s Council for the Province. By Jonathan Mayhew, D.D. Pastor of the West Church in Boston. Boston: N.E. Printed by Samuel Kneeland, Printer to the Honourable House of Representatives, 1754.
An Election SERMON.
MATT. XXV. 21.
His Lord said unto him, Well done, thou good and faithful Servant; thou hast been faithful —-
This is part of our Savior’s well-known parable of the talents; the moral of which is in general this, That whatever powers and advantages of any kind, men severally enjoy, are committed to them in trust by the great Lord and Proprietor of all, to whom they are accountable for the use they make of them; and from whom they shall, in the close of this present scene, receive either a glorious recompence of their fidelity, or the punishment due to their sloth and wickedness. The subject, then, is very general, and equally interesting. All men, of whatever rank or character, are concerned in it. It leads our thoughts from what we possess, up to the great source thereof; from what we are at present, to what we shall be hereafter. It connects this world with another; and comprehends both our probationary and final state, under the righteous administration of God.
But tho’ the subject is very general, and of the last importance to all; yet civil power being one of the principal of those talents which Heaven commits to men, and the present occasion requiring a more particular consideration of it, the ensuing discourse will be confined thereto. Nor would I injure our honoured rulers by the least suspicion, that they can possibly take it amiss to be reminded of their duty to God and Man upon this occasion, with all the plainness and simplicity becoming a minister of the Gospel, and consistent with decency; the rules of which, it is hoped, will not be violated. . . .
As to the source and origin of civil power; the parable on which my discourse is grounded, suggests that it is ultimately derived from God, whose “kingdom ruleth over all;” this being as truly a talent committed by Him, to the fidelity of men, as any thing else can be. In this light it is considered in the holy scriptures. It is not only agreeable to the original scheme and plan of God’s universal government, that civil rule should take place among men, in subordination to His own; but his providence is actually concerned in raising those persons to power and dominion, who are possessed of it. In the language of the Prophet, “Wisdom and might are His. He removeth kings, and setteth up kings. the most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.” The language of the apostles is not less emphatical. They tell us, that “there is no power, but of God”; and that “they are God’s Ministers.”
But then it is to be remembered, that this power is derived from God, not immediately, but mediately, as other talents and blessings are. The notions of any particular form of government explicitly instituted by God, as designed for a universal model; of the divine right of monarchy, in contradistinction from all other modes; of the hereditary, unalienable right of succession; of the despotic, unlimited power of kings, by the immediate grant of Heaven; and the like; these notions are not drawn from the holy scriptures, but from a far less pure and sacred fountain. They are only the devices of lawned parasites, or other graceless politicians, to serve the purposes of ambition and tyranny. And tho’ they are of late date, yet being traced up to their true original, they will be found to come, by uninterrupted succession, from him who was a politician from the beginning. . . .
All the different constitutions of government now in the world, are immediately the creatures of man’s making, not of God’s. And indeed the vestiges of human imperfection are so manifest in them, that it would be a reproach to the all-wise God to attribute them directly to Him. And as they are the creatures of man’s making; so from man, from common consent, it is that lawful rulers immediately receive their power. This is the channel in which it flows from God, the original source of it. Nor are any possessed of a greater portion of it, than what is conveyed to them in this Way. Or at least, if they have any more, they have it only as the thief or the robber has the spoil, which fraud or violence has put into his hands. Agreably to what is here said, concerning the medium or channel thro’ which power is derived from God, government is spoken of in scripture, as being both the ordinance of God, and the ordinance of man: Of God, in reference to His original plan, and universal Providence; and of man, as it is more immediately the result of human prudence, wisdom and concert.
In the second place, we are just to mention the great end of government. And after the glory of God, which we usually consider as the end of all things in general, that can be no other than the good of man, the common benefit of society. This is equally evident whether we consider it as a divine, or an human institution.
As it is God’s ordinance, it is designed for a blessing to the world. It is instituted for the preservation of mens persons, properties & various rights, against fraud and lawless violence; and that, by means of it, we may both procure, and quietly enjoy, those numerous blessings and advantages, which are unattainable out of society, and being unconnected by the bonds of it. It is not conceivable that the all-wise and good God, should ordain government amongst men, but with a view to its being subservient to their happiness, and well-being in the world: to be sure, not, that it might be subservient to a contrary one, their misery. We cannot imagine it possible that He who is good unto all, and whose tender mercies are over all his works, should exalt a few persons to power over the rest, to be their oppressors; or merely for their own sakes, that they may amass riches, that they may live in ease and splendor, that they may riot on the produce of other’s toil, and receive the homage of millions, without doing them any good. It were blasphemous to think that God has instituted government for such a partial, unworthy end.
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Jan. 30, 1750
Preface
The ensuing Discourse is the last of three upon the same subject, with some little alterations and additions. It is hoped that but few will think the subject of it an improper one to be discoursed on in the pulpit, under a notion that this is preaching politics, instead of Christ. However, to remove all prejudices of this sort, I beg it may be remembered that "all Scripture is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness." [2 Peter 3:16] Why, then, should not those parts of Scripture which relate to civil government be examined and explained from the desk, as well as others?
Obedience to the civil magistrate is a Christian duty; and if so, why should not the nature, grounds, and extent of it be considered in a Christian assembly? Besides, if it be said that it is out of character for a Christian minister to meddle with such a subject, this censure will at last fall upon the holy apostles. They write upon it in their epistles to Christian churches ; and surely it cannot be deemed either criminal or impertinent to attempt an explanation of their doctrine. It was the near approach of the thirtieth of January that turned my thoughts to this subject : on which solemnity the slavish doctrine of passive obedience and non-resistance is often warmly asserted, ...
l For example: On the day of the execution of Lord William Russell, 1683, the University of Oxford declared " submission and obedience, clear, absolute^ and without exception, to be the badge and character of the Church of England."
The Rev. John Gierke, in a sermon at Rochester Cathedral, May 29, 1684, said : » Whosoever shall compare the trial of our blessed Saviour Jesus Christ, before Pontius Pilate's first high court of justice, with the arraignment of our late most barbarously murdered king before John Bradshaw's second, shall find them to differ no more than a faithful copy from its original, with conditions exactly parallel, and, I had almost said, alike in sufferings, alike in innocence; . . . the Breath of our nostrils, the Anointed of the Lord, . . . the only true Vice gerent of Jesus Christ, that supreme Bishop of our souls."
The Rev. Henry Sacheverell, D. D., preached at the cathedral in London, No vember 5, 1709, " the subject's obligation to absolute and unconditional obedience to the supreme power in all things lawful, and the utter illegality of resistance, npon any pretence whatsoever. The Englishman is born with an innate, sullen principle of discontent, which directly interferes with that inward quiet, that sedate serenity of mind, which is alone able to yield true peace and satisfaction, . . . and he will forsake the true Fountain of living water, the Church of England. . . . He sends his children, in their tender years, to suck in those deadly envenomed principles that are but too commonly prated up in conventi cles, — those seminaries of murmuring and nurseries of rebellion ; . . . and actually engage their unstable minds . . . against the king's sacred person, his serene and happy government."
"It may be hoped," said the philosopher Locke, " the ages to come, redeemed from the impositions of these Egyptian under-task- masters, will abhor the memory of such servile flatterers, who, whilst it seemed to serve their turn, resolved all government into absolute tyranny, and would have all men born to, what their mean souls fitted them for, slavery. " Yet in New England, and in our own times, these " Egyptian " monstrosities are eulogized as "sentiments of the highest sublimity," " the badge and character of the Church of England." — Oliver's Puritan Commonwealth, 1856, pp. 482-3.
Indeed, Lord King says, "As for toleration, or any true notion of religious liberty, or any general freedom of conscience, we owe them not in the least degree to what is called the Church of England. On the contrary, we owe all these to the Independents in the time of the Common wealth, and to Locke, their most illustrious and enlightened disciple." — Ed.
...and the dissenters from the Established Church represented not only as schismatics (with more of triumph than of truth, and of choler than Christianity), but also as persons of seditious, traitorous, and rebellious princi ples.1 God be thanked ! one may, in any part of the British dominions, speak freely — if a decent regard be paid to those in authority — both of government and religion, and even give some broad hints that he is engaged on the side of liberty, the Bible, and common sense, in opposition to tyranny, priestcraft, and nonsense, without being in danger either of the Bastile or the Inquisition, — though there will always be some interested politicians, contracted bigots, and hypocritical zealots for a party, to take offence at such freedoms. Their censure is praise ; their praise is infamy. A spirit of domination is always to be guarded against, both in church and state, even in times of the greatest security, — such as the ...
The author wrote to Benjamin Avery, LL. D , of Grey's Hospital, London: " I have ventured to send you a discourse which I published last winter, about the time that the Episcopal clergy here are often seized with a strange sort of frenzy, which I know not how to describe, unless it be by one or two of its most remarkable symptoms. These are, preaching passive obedience, worshipping King Charles I., and cursing the Dissenters and Puritans for murdering him. You possibly have seen persons in this melancholy condition, as you have so much concern with a hospital, but especially if your humanity — as is very likely — has ever led you to Bedlam, to relieve the pitiable objects there." Thir teen years afterward, Dr. Mayhew, referring to this passage, wrote : "Some of the Episcopal clergy here used, on the same occasion, to assert the divine, hereditary, and indefeasible right of kings, in direct, manifest opposition to the principles of the Revolution; almost deifying Archbishop Laud, as well as Charles I. ; calumniating Nonconformists as schismatics, fanatics, persons of republican, rebellious principles, and imitating, as far as they were able, the manner and style of the keenest, severest sermons ever published in England on the same occasion " — January 30th. — Ed.
... present is among us, at least as to the latter. Those nations who are now groaning under the iron sceptre of tyranny were once free ; so they might probably have remained, by a seasonable precaution against despotic measures. Civil tyranny is usually small in its beginning, like " the drop of a bucket," [Isaiah 40:15] " till at length, like a mighty torrent, or the raging waves of the sea, it bears down all before it, and deluges whole countries and empires.
Thus it is as to ecclesiastical tyranny also — the most cruel, intolerable, and impious of any. From small beginnings, " it exalts itself above all that is called God and that is worshipped." [2 Thess 2:4] People have no security against being unmercifully priest-ridden but by keeping all imperious bishops, and other clergymen who love to " lord it over God's heritage," from getting their foot into the stirrup at all. Let them be once fairly mounted, and their " beasts, the laity," may prance and flounce about to no purpose ; and they will at length be so jaded and hacked by these reverend jockeys, that they will not even have spirits enough to complain that their backs are galled, or, like Balaam's ass, to " rebuke the madness of the prophet." [2 Peter 2:16]
"The mystery of iniquity began to work" [2 Thess. 2:7] even in the days of some of the apostles. But the kingdom of Antichrist was then, in one respect, like the kingdom of heaven, howover different in all others ; — it was " as a grain of mustard- seed." [Matthew 13:31]
This grain was sown in Italy, that fruitful field, and, though it were " the least of all seeds," it soon became a mighty tree. It has long since overspread and darkened the greatest part of Christendom, so that we may apply to it what is said of the tree which Nebuchadnezzar saw in his vision :
— " The height thereof reacheth unto heaven, and the sight thereof to the end of all the earth; and the beasts of the field have shadow under it." ' [Daniel 4:11]
Tyranny brings ignorance and brutality along with it It degrades men from their just rank into the class of brutes ; it damps their spirits ; it suppresses arts ; it extinguishes every spark of noble ardor and generosity in the breasts of those who are enslaved by it ; it makes naturally strong and great minds feeble and little, and triumphs over the ruins of virtue and humanity. This is true of tyranny in every shape : there can be nothing great and good where its influence reaches. For which reason it be comes every friend to truth and human kind, every lover of God and the Christian religion, to bear a part in opposing this hateful monster. It was a desire to contribute a mite towards carrying on a war with this common enemy ' that produced the following Discourse ; and if it serve in any measure to keep up a spirit of civil and religious liberty amongst us, my end is answered.
There are virtuous and candid men in all sects ; all such are to be esteemed. There are also vicious men and bigots in all sects, and all such ought to be despised. "
To Virtue only and her friends a friend ;
The world beside may murmur or commend :
Know, all the distant din that world can keep
Rolls o'er my grotto, and but soothes my sleep." — Pope.
JONATHAN MAYHEW.
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Discourse I
DISCOURSE I. UNLIMITED SUBMISSION AND NON-RESISTANCE TO THE HIGHER POWERS.
LET EVERT SOUL BE SUBJECT UNTO THE HIGHER POWERS. FOR THERE IS NO POWER BUT OP GOD: THE POWERS THAT BE ARE ORDAINED OP GOD.
WHOSOEVER THEREFORE RESISTETH THE POWER, RESISTETH THE ORDINANCE OF GOD: AND THEY THAT RESIST SHALL RECEIVE TO THEMSELVES DAMNATION. FOR RULERS ARE NOT A TERROR TO GOOD WORKS, BUT TO THE EVIL.
WILT THOU THEN NOT BE AFRAID OF THE POWER? DO THAT WHICH IS GOOD, AND THOU SHALT HAVE PRAISE OF THE SAME ; FOR HE IS THE MINISTER OF GOD TO THEE FOR GOOD.
BUT IF THOU DO THAT WHICH IS EVIL, BE AFRAID; FOR HE BEARETH NOT THE SWORD IN VAIN: FOR HE IS THE MINISTER OF GOD, A REVENGER TO EXECUTE WRATH UPON HIM THAT DOETH EVIL.
WHEREFORE WE MUST NEEDS BE SUBJECT, NOT ONLY FOR WRATH, BUT ALSO FOR CONSCIENCE' SAKE. FOR, FOR THIS CAUSE PAY YOU TRIBUTE ALSO: FOR THEY ARE GOD'S MINISTERS, ATTENDING CONTINUALLY UPON THIS VERY THING.
RENDER THEREFORE TO ALL THEIR DUES: TRIBUTE TO WHOM TRIBUTE IS DUE; CUSTOM TO WHOM CUSTOM; FEAR TO WHOM FEAR; HONOR TO WHOM HONOR. — Romans 13:1-8.
It is evident that the affairs of civil government may . properly fall under a moral and religious consideration, at least so far forth as it relates to the general nature and end of magistracy, and to the grounds and extent of that submission which persons of a private character ought to yield to those who are vested with authority. This must be allowed by all who acknowledge the divine original of Christianity. For, although there be a sense, and a very plain and important sense, in which Christ's kingdom is not of this world," [John 18:36] his inspired apostles have, nevertheless, laid down some general principles concerning the office of civil rulers, and the duty of subjects, together with the reason and obligation of that duty. And from hence it follows, that it is proper for all who acknowledge the authority of Jesus Christ, and the inspiration of his apostles, to endeavor to understand what is in fact the doctrine which they have delivered concerning this matter. It is the duty of Christian magistrates to inform themselves what it is which their religion teaches concerning the nature and design of their office.
And it is equally the duty of all Christian people to inform themselves what it is which their religion teaches concerning that subjection which they owe to the higher powers. It is for these reasons that I have attempted to examine into the Scripture account of this matter, in order to lay it before you with the same freedom which I constantly use with relation to other doctrines and precepts of Christianity ; not doubting but you will judge upon everything offered to your consideration with the same spirit of freedom and liberty with which it is spoken. The passage read is the most full and express of any in the New Testament relating to rulers and subjects; and therefore I thought it proper to ground upon it what I had to propose to you with reference to the authority of the civil magistrate, and the subjection which is due to him.
But, before I enter upon an explanation of the several parts of this passage, it will be proper to observe one thing, which may serve as a key to the whole of it. It is to be observed, then, that there were some persons amongst the Christians of the apostolic age, and particularly those at Rome, to whom St. Paul is here writing, who seditiously disclaimed all subjection to civil authority; refusing to pay taxes, and the duties laid upon their traffic and merchandise ; and who scrupled not to speak of their rulers without any due regard to their office and character.
Some of these turbulent Christians were converts from Judaism, and others from Paganism. The Jews in general had, long before this time, taken up a strange conceit, that, being the peculiar and elect people of God, they were therefore exempted from the jurisdiction of any heathen princes or governors.
Upon this ground it was that some of them, during the public ministry of our blessed Saviour, came to him with that question, " Is it lawful to give tribute unto Caesar, or not ? " [Mathew 22:17] And this notion many of them retained after they were proselyted to the Christian faith.
As to the Gentile converts, some of them grossly mistook the nature of that liberty which the gospel promised, and thought that by virtue of their subjection to Christ, the only king and head of his church, they were wholly freed from subjection to any other prince; as though Christ's kingdom had been of this world in such a sense as to interfere with the civil powers of the earth, and to deliver their subjects from that allegiance and duty which they before owed to them. Of these visionary Christians in general, who disowned subjection to the civil powers in being where they respectively lived, there is mention made in several places in the New Testament. The apostle Peter, in particular, characterizes them in this manner: them that " despise government, presumptuous are they ; self-willed ; they are not afraid to speak evil of dignities." [2 Peter 2:10]
Now, it is with reference to these doting Christians that the apostle speaks in .the passage before us. And I shall now give you the sense of it in a paraphrase upon each verse in its order ; desiring you to keep in mind the character of the persons for whom it is designed, that so, as I go along, you may see how just and natural this address is, and how well suited to the circumstances of those against whom it is levelled.
The apostle begins thus: "Let every soul" [a Hebrew idiom meaning "man"] . . .
be subject unto the higher powers [in Hebrew, this also means civil powers of government on earth] for there is no power" [By " power" the apostle intends, not lawless strength and brutal force, with out regulation and proper direction, but just authority; for so the word here used properly signifies. There may be power where there is no authority. No man has any authority to do what is wrong and injurious, though he may have the power to do it] . . .
but of God; the powers that be are ordained of God." [Romans 13:1] [" By " power" the apostle intends, not lawless strength and brutal force, with out regulation and proper direction, but just authority; for so the word here used properly signifies. There may be power where there is no authority. No man has any authority to do what is wrong and injurious, though he may have the power to do it.]
Whereas some professed Christians vainly imagine that they are wholly excused from all manner of duty and subjection to civil authority, refusing to honor their rulers and to pay taxes ; which opinion is not only unreasonable in itself, but also tends to fix a lasting reproach upon the Christian name and profession — I now, as an apostle and ambassador of Christ, exhort every one of you, be he who he will, to pay all dutiful submission to those who are vested with any civil office ; for there is, properly speaking, no authority but what is derived from God, as it is only by his permission and providence that any possess it. Yea, I may add, that all civil magistrates, as such, although they may be heathens, are appointed and ordained of God. For it is certainly God's will that so useful an institution as that of magistracy should take place in the world for the good of civil society."
The apostle pro ceeds: "Whosoever, therefore, resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God ; and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation." Romans 13:2 " Think not, therefore, that ye are guiltless of any crime or sin against God, when ye factiously disobey and resist the civil authority. For magistracy and government being, as I have said, the ordinance and appointment of God, it follows, that to resist magistrates in the execution of their offices, is really to resist the will and ordinance of God himself; and they who thus resist will accordingly be punished by God for this sin, in common with others."
The apostle goes' on : " For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. . . . [It cannot be supposed that the apostle designs here, or in any of the succeeding verses, to give the true character of Nero, or any other civil powers then in being, as if they were in fact such persons as be describes, a terror to evil works only, and not to the good. For such a character did not belong to them ; and the apostle was no sycophant, or parasite of power, whatever some of his pretended successors have been. He only tells what rulers would be, provided they acted up to their char acter and office.]
Wilt thou, then, not be afraid of the power ? Do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same ; for he is the minister of God to thee for good." Romans 13:2
That you may see the truth and justness of what I assert (viz., that magistracy is the ordinance of God, and that you sin against him in opposing it), consider that even pagan rulers are not, by the nature and design of their office, enemies and a terror to the good and virtuous actions of men, but only to the injurious and mischievous to society. Will ye not, then, reverence and honor magistracy, when ye see the good end and intention of it? How can ye be so unreasonable ? Only mind to do your duty as members of society, and this will gain you the applause and favor of all good rulers. For, while you do thus, they are by their office, as ministers of God, obliged to encourage and protect you : it is for this very purpose that they are clothed with power.
The apostle subjoins : "But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid ; for he beareth not the sword in vain. For he is the minister of God, a revenger, to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.""Romans 13:4 [It is manifest that when the apostle speaks of it as the office of civil rulers to encourage what is good and to punish what is evil, he speaks only of civil good and evil. They are to consult the good of society, as such; not to dictate in religious concerns ; not to make laws for the government of men's consciences, and to inflict civil penalties for religious crimes. It is sufficient to overthrow the doctrine of the authority of the civil magistrate in affairs of a spiritual nature (so far as it is built upon anything which is here said by St. Paul, or upon anything else in the New Testament) only to observe that all the magistrates then in the world were heathen, implacable enemies to Christianity; so that, to give them authority in religious matters, would have been, in effect, to give them authority to extirpate the Christian religion, and to establish the idolatries and superstitions of paganism. And can any one reasonably suppose that the apostle had any intention to extend the authority of rulers beyond concerns merely civil and political, to the overthrowing of that religion which he himself was so zealous In propagating? But it is natural for those whose religion cannot be supported upon the footing of reason and argument, to have recourse to power and force, which will serve a bad cause as well as a good one, and, indeed, much better.]
But, upon the other hand, if ye refuse to do your duty as members of society ; if ye refuse to bear your part in the support of government; if ye are disorderly, and do things which merit civil chastisement, — then, indeed, ye have reason to be afraid. For it is not in vain that rulers are vested with the power of inflicting punishment. They are, by their office, not only the ministers of God for good to those that do well, but also his ministers to revenge, to discountenance, and punish those that are unruly, and injurious to their neighbors." The apostle proceeds : " Wherefore ye must needs be subject not only for wrath, but also for conscience' sake." Romans 13:5
Since, therefore, magistracy is the ordinance of God, and since rulers are by their office benefactors to society, by discouraging what is bad and encouraging what is good, and so preserving peace and order amongst men, it is evident that ye ought to pay a willing subjection to them; not to obey merely for fear of exposing yourselves to their wrath and displeasure, but also in point of reason, duty, and conscience. Ye are under an indispensable obligation, as Christians, to honor their office, and to submit to them in the execution of it."
The apostle goes on : " For, for this cause pay you tribute also ; for they are God's minis ters, attending continually upon this very thing." Romans 13:6 And here is a plain reason also why ye should pay tribute to them, — for they are God's ministers, exalted above the common level of mankind, — not that they may indulge themselves in softness and luxury, and be entitled to the servile homage of their fellow-men, but that they may execute an office no less laborious than honorable, and attend continually upon the public welfare. This being their business and duty, it is but reasonable that they should be requited for their care and diligence in performing it ; and enabled, by taxes levied upon the subject, effectually to prosecute the great end of their institution, the good of society.
The apostle sums all up in the following words : " Render, therefore, to all their dues ; tribute to whom tribute is due ; custom" to whom custom ; fear to whom fear; honor to whom honor."Romans 13:7 [Grotius observes, that the Greek words here used answer to the tributum and rectigal of the Romans: the former was the money paid for the soil and poll, the latter the dues laid upon some sorts of merchandise. And what the apostle here says deserves to be seriously considered by all Christians concerned in that common practice of carrying on an illicit trade and running of goods.]
Let it not therefore be said of any of you hereafter, that you contemn government, to the reproach of yourselves and of the Christian religion. Neither your being Jews by nation, nor your becoming the subjects of Christ's kingdom, gives you any dispensation for making disturbances in the government under which you live. Approve your selves, therefore, as peaceable and dutiful subjects. Be ready to pay to your rulers all that they may, in respect of their office, justly demand of you. Render tribute and custom to those of your governors to whom tribute and custom belong; and cheerfully honor and reverence all who are vested with civil authority, according to their deserts."
The apostle's doctrine, in the passage thus explained, concerning the office of civil rulers, and the duty of sub jects, may be summed up in the following observations," viz.: That the end of magistracy is the good of civil society, as such. That civil rulers, as such, are the ordinance and ministers of God ; it being by his permission and providence that any bear rule, and agreeable to his will that there should be some persons vested with authority in society, for the well-being of it.
That which is here said concerning civil rulers extends to all of them in common. It relates indifferently to monarchical, republican, and aristocratical government, and to all other forms which truly answer the sole end of government — the happiness of society ; and to all the different degrees of authority in any particular state ; to inferior officers no less than to the supreme.
That disobedience to civil rulers in the due exercise of their authority is not merely a political sin, but a heinous offence against God and religion. That the true ground and reason . . . [Some suppose the apostle, in this passage, enforces the duty of submission with two arguments quite distinct from each other; one taken from this consideration, that rulers are the ordinance and the ministers of God (vs. 1, 2, 4), and the other from the benefits that accrue to society from civil government (vs. 3, 4, 6). And, indeed, these may be distinct motives and arguments for submission, as they may be separately viewed and contemplated.
But when we consider that I rulers are not the ordinance and the ministers of God but only so far forth as they perform God's will by acting up to their office and character, and so by being benefactors to society, this makes these arguments coincide, and run up into one at last; at least so far that the former of them cannot hold good for , submission where the latter fails. Put the supposition, that any man bearing the title of a magistrate should exercise his power in such a manner as to have no claim to obedience by virtue of that argument which is founded upon the usefulness of magistracy, and you equally take off the force of the other argument also, which is founded upon his being the ordinance and the minister of God; for he is no longer God's ordinance and minister than he acts up to his office and character by exercising his power for the good of society.
This is, in brief, the reason why it is said above, in the singular number, that the true ground and reason, etc. The use and propriety of this remark may possibly be more apparent in the progress of the argument concerning resistance.]
That the true ground and reason of our obligation to be subject to the higher powers is, the usefulness of magistracy (when properly exercised) to human society, and its subserviency to the general welfare. That obedience to civil rulers is here equally required under all forms of government which answer the sole end of all government — the good of society ; and to every degree of authority, in any state, whether supreme or subordinate. From whence it follows — That if unlimited obedience and non-resistance be here required as a duty under any one form of government, it is also required as a duty under all other forms, and as a duty to subordinate rulers as well as to the supreme. And, lastly, that those civil rulers to whom the apostle enjoins subjection are the persons in possession ; the powers that be / those who are actually vested with authority. [This must be understood with this proviso, that they do not grossly abuse their power and trust, but exercise it for the good of those that are governed. Who these persons were — whether Nero, etc., or not — the apostle does not say, hut leaves it to be determined by those to whom he writes. God does not interpose in a miraculous way to point out the persons who shall bear rule, and to whom subjection is due.
And as to the unalienable, indefeasible right of primogeniture, the Scriptures are entirely silent, or, rather, plainly contradict it, — Saul being the first king among the Israelites, and appointed to the royal dignity during his own father's lifetime ; and he was succeeded, or rather superseded, by David, the last born among many brethren. Now, if God has not invariably determined this matter, it must, of course, be determined by men. And if it be determined by men, it must be determined either in the way of force or of compact ; and which of these is the most equitable can be no question.]
It is upon this principle that many royal oppressors have been driven from their thrones into banishment, and many slain by the hands of their subjects. It was upon this principle that Tarquin was expelled from Rome, and Julius Caesar, the conqueror of the world and the tyrant of his country, cut off in the senate-house.
It was upon this principle that King Charles I. was beheaded before his own banqueting-house.
It was upon this principle that King James II. was made to fly that country which he aimed at enslaving ; and upon this principle was that revolution brought about which has been so fruitful of happy consequences to Great Britain.
But, in opposition to this principle, it has often been asserted that the Scripture in general, and the pas sage under consideration in particular, makes all resistance to princes a crime, in any case whatever. If they turn tyrants, and become the common oppressors of those whose welfare they ought to regard with a paternal affection, we must not pretend to right ourselves, unless it be by prayers, and tears, and humble entreaties. And if these methods fail of procuring redress, we must not have recourse to any other, but all suffer ourselves to be robbed and butchered at the pleasure of the "Lord's anointed," lest we should incur the sin of rebellion and the punishment of damnation ! — for he has God's authority and commission to bear him out in the worst of crimes so far that he may not be withstood or controlled.
Now, whether we are obliged to yield such an absolute submission to our prince, or whether disobedience and resistance may not be justifiable in some cases, notwithstanding anything in the passage before us, is an inquiry in which we all are concerned ; and this is the inquiry which is the main design of the present discourse.
Now, there does not seem to be any necessity of supposing that an absolute, unlimited obedience, whether active or passive, is here enjoined, merely for this reason — that the precept is delivered in absolute terms, without any exception or limitation expressly mentioned. We are enjoined to be " subject to the higher powers ; " Romans 13:1 and to be " subject for conscience' sake." Romans 13:2
And because these expressions are absolute and unlimited, or, more properly, general, some have inferred that the subjection required in them must be absolute and unlimited also, — at least so far forth as to make passive obedience and non-resistance a duty in all cases whatever, if not active obedience likewise ; — though, by the way, there is here no distinction made betwixt active and passive obedience ; and if either of them be required in an unlimited sense, the other must be required in the same sense also, by virtue of the present argument, because the expressions are equally absolute with respect to both. But that unlimited obedience of any sort can not be argued merely from the indefinite expressions in which obedience is enjoined, appears from hence, that expressions of the same nature frequently occur in Scripture, upon which it is confessed on all hands that no such absolute and unlimited sense ought to be put. For example : " Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world," 1 John 2:15
"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth," Mathew 6:19
" Take therefore no thought for the morrow," Mathew 6:34 ' are precepts expressed in at least equally absolute and unlimited terms ; but it is generally allowed that they are to be understood with certain restrictions and limitations ; some degree of love to the world and the things of it being allowable. Nor, indeed, do the Might Reverend Fathers in God, and other dignified clergymen of the Established Church, seem to be altogether averse to admit ting of restrictions in the latter case, how warm soever any of them may be against restrictions and limitations in the case of submission to authority, whether civil or ecclesiastical.
It is worth remarking, also, that patience and submission under private injuries are enjoined in much more peremptory and absolute terms than any that are used with regard to submission to the injustice and oppression of civil rulers. Thus : " I say unto you, that ye resist not evil ; but whosoever shall smite thee on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also. And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile with him, go with him twain." Mathew 5:39-41
Any man may be defied to produce such strong expressions in favor of a passive and tame submission to unjust, tyrannical rulers, as are here used to enforce submission to private injuries. But how few are there that understand those expressions literally ! And the reason why they do not, is because (with submission to the Quakers) common sense shows that they were not intended to be so understood. But, to instance in some Scripture precepts which are more directly to the point in hand : Children are commanded to obey their parents, and servants their masters, in as absolute and unlimited terms as subjects are here commanded to obey their civil rulers. Thus this same apostle: "Children, obey your parents in the Lord; for this is right. Honor thy father and mother, which is the first commandment with promise. Servants, be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, with singleness of your heart, as unto Christ." Ephesians 6:1 Thus, also, wives are commanded to be obedient to their husbands: "Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord ; for the husband is head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church. Therefore, as the church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives be to their own husbands in everything." Ephesians 5:22-24
In all these cases, submission is required in terms at least as absolute and universal as are ever used with respect to rulers and subjects. But who supposes that the apostle ever intended to teaeh that children, servants, and wives, should, in all cases whatever, obey their parents, masters, and husbands .respectively, never making any opposition to their will, even although they should require them to break the commandments of God, or should causelessly make an attempt upon their lives? No one puts such a sense upon these expressions, however absolute and unlimited.
Why, then, should it be supposed that the apostle designed to teach universal obedience, whether active or passive, to the higher powers, merely because his precepts are delivered in absolute and unlimited terms? And if this be a good argument in one case, why is it not in others also?
If it be said that resistance and disobedience to the higher powers is here said positively to be a sin, so also is the disobedience of children to parents, servants to masters, and wives to husbands, in other places of Scripture. But the question still remains, whether, in all these cases, there be not some exceptions.
In the three latter it is allowed there are ; and from hence it follows, that barely the use of absolute expressions is no proof that obedience to civil rulers is in all cases a duty, or resistance in all cases a sin. I should not have thought it worth while to take any notice at all of this argument, had it not been much insisted upon by some of the advocates for passive obedience and non-resistance ; for it is in itself perfectly trifling,and rendered considerable only by the stress that has been laid upon it for want of better.
There is, indeed, one passage in the New Testament where it may seem, at first view, that an unlimited sub mission to civil rulers is enjoined : " Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake." 1 Peter 2:13
" To every ordinance of man. However, this expression is no stronger than that before taken notice of with relation to the duty of wives : "So let the wives be subject to their own husbands in everything." But the true solution of this difficulty (if it be one) is this : By " every ordinance of man" is not meant every command of the civil magistrate with out exception, but every order of magistrates appointed by man, whether superior or inferior ; for so the apostle explains himself in the very next words : ".Whether it be to the king as supreme, or to governors, as unto them that are sent," etc. But although the apostle had not subjoined any such explanation, the reason of the thing itself would have obliged as to limit the expression " every or dinance of man " [Literally, every human institution, or appointment. By which manner of expression the apostle plainly intimates that rulers derive their authority im mediately, not from God, but from men.] . . . to such human ordinances and commands as are not inconsistent with the ordinances and commands of God, the Supreme Lawgiver, or with any other higher and antecedent obligations.
[Milton considers this text, in his " Defence of the People of England," much at length. He says : " It being very certain that the doctrine of the gospel is neither contrary to reason nor the law of nations, that man is truly subject to the higher powers who obeys the laws and the magistrates so far as they govern according to law. So that St. Paul does not only command the people, but princes themselves, to be in subjection; who are not above the laws, but bound by them ; . . . but whatever power enables a man, or whatsoever magistrate takes upon him, to act contrary to what St. Paul makes the duty of those that are In authority, neither is that power nor that magistrate ordained of God. And consequently to such a magistrate no subjection is commanded, nor is any due, nor are the people forbidden to resist such authority; for in so doing they do not resist the power nor the magistracy, as they are here excellently well described, but they resist a robber, a tyrant, an enemy."]
It is to be observed, in the next place, that as the duty of universal obedience and non-resistance to the higher powers cannot be argued from the absolute, unlimited expressions which the apostle here uses, so neither can it be argued from the scope and drift of his reasoning, considered with relation to the persons he was here opposing. As was observed above, there were some professed Christians in the apostolic age who disclaimed all magistracy and civil authority in general, despising government, and speaking evil of dignities ; some, under a notion that Jews ought not to be under the jurisdiction of Gentile rulers, and others that they were set free from the temporal powers by Christ.
Now, it is with persons of this licentious opinion and character that the apostle is concerned ; and all that was directly to his point was to show that they were bound to submit to magistracy in general. This is a circumstance very material to be taken notice of, in order to ascertain the sense of the apostle ; for, this being considered, it is sufficient to account for all that he says concerning the duty of subjection and the sin of resistance to the higher powers, without having recourse to the doctrine of unlimited submission and passive obedience in all cases whatever. Were it known that those in opposition to whom the apostle wrote allowed of civil authority in general, and only asserted that there were some cases in which obedience and non-resistance were not a duty, there would then indeed be reason for interpreting this passage as containing the doctrine of unlimited obedience and non-resistance, as it must, in this case, be supposed to have been levelled against such as denied that doctrine. But since it is certain that there were persons who vainly imagined that civil government in general was not to be regarded by them, it is most reasonable to suppose that the apostle designed his discourse only against them ; and, agreeably to this supposition, we find that he argues the usefulness of civil magistracy in general, its agreeableness to the will and purpose of God, who is over all, and so deduces from hence the obligation of submission to it. ^ But it will not follow that because civil government is, ( in general, a good institution, and necessary to the peace and happiness of human society, therefore there are no supposable cases in which resistance to it can be innocent. So that the duty of unlimited obedience, whether active or passive, can be argued neither from the manner of ex pression here used, nor from the general scope and design of the passage.
And if we attend to the nature of the argument with which the apostle here enforces the duty of submission to the higher powers we shall find it to be such a one as concludes not in favor of submission to all who bear the title of rulers in common, but only to those who actually perform the duty of rulers by exercising a reasonable and just authority for the good of human society. This is a point which it will be proper to enlarge upon, because the question before us turns very much upon the truth or falsehood of this position. It is obvious, then, in general, that the civil rulers whom the apostle here speaks of, and obedience to whom he presses upon Christians as a duty, are good rulers," . . . . [By " good rulers" are not intended such as are good in a moral or religious, but only in a political, sense; those who perform their duty so far as their office extends, and so far as civil society, as such, is concerned in their actions]
. . . such as are, in the exercise of their office and power, benefactors to society. Such they are described to be throughout this passage. Thus, it is said that they are not a terror to good works, but to the evil ; that they are God's ministers for good ; revengers to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil ; and that they attend continually upon this very thing.
[Dr. Mayhew may have had in mind the apologies often made for Charles the First and other tyrants — their good lives as private men ; but certainly be did not mean that it is a thing of indifference that bad men should be rulers. In his Election Sermon of 1754, he says that morals and religion "ought doubtless to be encouraged by the civil magistrate by his own pious life and good example." What is the security, or probability, that the weak or the bad, in private life, will be able and good men in public life, especially if it be, as Hume says, " that men are generally more honest in a private than in a public capacity, and will go greater lengths to serve a party than when their own private interest is alone concerned"?
"Nations rise and fall by individuals, not numbers, as I think all history proveth," said Hollis. It was the virtue of Washington only that saved the republic, when, in 1782, the suffering army suggested to their leader the "title of king." Had his been a "to ambition," what then would have been our history? The political motto, "Principles, not men," is a dangerous doctrine. The monument to Pitt, in the Guildhall, Londo n, was raised to show "that the means by which Providence raises a nation to greatness are the virtues infused Into great men."]
St. Peter gives the same account of rulers : They are " for a praise to them that do well, and the punishment of evil doers." It is manifest that this character and description of rulers agrees only to such as are rulers in fact, as well as in name ; to such as govern well, and act agreeably to their office. And the apostle's argument for submission to rulers is wholly built and grounded upon a presumption that they do in fact answer this character, and is of no force at all upon supposition of the contrary. If rulers are a terror to good works, and not to the evil ; if they are not ministers for good to society, but for evil and distress, by violence and oppression ; if they execute wrath upon sober, peaceable persons, who do their duty as members of society, and suffer rich and honorable knaves to escape with impunity ; if instead of attending continually upon the good work of advancing the public welfare, they attend continually upon the gratification of their own lust and pride and ambition, to the destruction of the public welfare ; — if this be the case, it is plain that the apostle's argument for submission does not reach them; they are not the same, but different persons from those whom he characterizes, and who must be obeyed, according to his reasoning.
Let me illustrate the apostle's argument by the following similitude (it is no matter how far it is from anything which has, in fact, happened in the world) : Suppose, then, it was allowed, in general, that the clergy were a useful order of men ; that they ought to be " esteemed very highly in love for their works' sake," 1 Thessalonians 5:13 and to be decently supported by those they serve, "the laborer being worthy of his reward." 1 Timothy 5:18
Suppose, further, that a number of reverend and right reverend drones, who worked not; who preached, perhaps, but once a year, and then not the gospel of Jesus Christ, but the divine right of tithes, the dignity of their office as ambassadors of Christ, the equity of sinecures and a plurality of benefices, the excellency of the devotions in that prayer-book which some of them hired chaplains to use for them, or some favorite point of church- tyranny and anti-Christian usurpation ; — suppose such men as these, spending their lives in effeminacy, luxury, and idleness, — or, when they were not idle, doing that which is worse than idleness ; — suppose such men should, merely by the merit of ordination and consecration, and a peculiar, odd habit, claim great respect and reverence from those whom they civilly called the beasts of the laity," and demand thousands per annum for that service which they never performed, and for which, if they had performed it, this would be more than a quantum meruit; — suppose this should be the case (it is only by way of simile, and surely^ it will give no offence), would not everybody be astonished at such insolence, injustice, and impiety ? l / And ought not such men to be told plainly that they could not reasonably expect the esteem and reward due to the ministers of the gospel unless they did the duties of their office? Should they not be told that their title and habit claimed no regard, reverence, or pay, separate from the care and work and various duties of their function — and that, while they neglected the latter, the former served only to render them the more ridiculous and contemptible ? 2
The application of this similitude to the case in hand is very easy. Like those who bear the title of civil rulers do not perform the duty of civil rulers, but act directly counter to the sole end and design of their office ; if they injure and oppress their subjects, instead of defending their rights and doing them good, they have not the least pretense to be honored, obeyed, and rewarded, according to the apostle's argument. For his reasoning, in order to show the duty of subjection to the higher powers, is, as was before observed, built wholly upon the supposition that they do, in fact, perform the duty of rulers.
If it be said that the apostle here uses another argument for submission to the higher powers besides that which is taken from the usefulness of their office to civil society when properly discharged and executed, namely, that their u power is from God, that they are ordained of God, and that they are God's ministers ; and if it be said that this argument for submission to them will hold good, although they do not exercise their power for the benefit, but for the ruin and destruction of human society, — this objection was obviated, in part, before." ^Rulers have no authority * from God to do mischief) They are not God's ordinance, or God's ministers, in any other sense than as it is by his permission and providence that they are exalted to bear rule; and as magistracy duly exercised, and authority rightly applied, in the enacting and executing good laws, — laws attempered and accommodated to the common welfare of the subjects, — must be supposed to be agree able to the will of the beneficent Author and supreme Lord of the universe, whose " kingdom ruleth over all," Psalms 103:19 and whose "tender mercies are over all his works." Psalms 145:9
It is blasphemy to call tyrants and oppressors God's ministers. They are more properly "the messengers of Satan to buffet us." 2 Corinthians 12:7 No rulers are properly God's ministers but such as are "just, ruling in the fear of God." 2 Samuel 23 When once magistrates act contrary to their office, and the end of their institution, — when they rob and ruin the public, instead of being guardians of its peace and welfare, — they immediately cease to be the ordinance and ministers of God, and no more deserve that glorious character than common pirates and highwaymen. . . .
[Parallel with this is Milton's distinction, where he says : " If I inveigh against tyrants, what is this to kings? whom I am far from associating with tyrants. As much as an honest man differs from a rogue, so much I contend that a king differs from a tyrant. Whence it is clear that a tyrant is so far -from being a king, that he is always in direct opposition to a king." — The Second Defence. James I., in 1603 and 1609, in his speeches to parliament, said : " A king ceases to be a king, and degenerates into a tyrant, as soon as he leaves off to rule according to his laws." And Locke, of " Civil Government," says : " Wheresoever the authority ceases, the king ceases too, and becomes like other men who have no authority."]
. . . So that, whenever that argument for submission fails which is grounded upon the usefulness of magistracy to civil society, — as it always does when magistrates do hurt to society instead of good, — the other argument, which is taken from their being the ordinance of God, must necessarily fail also ; no person of a civil character being God's minister, in the sense of the apostle, any further than he performs God's will by exercising a just and reasonable authority, and ruling for the good of the subject. This in general. Let us now trace the apostle's reason ing in favor of submission to the higher powers a little more particularly and exactly ; for by this it will appear, on one hand, how good and conclusive it is for submission to those rulers who exercise their power in a proper manner, and, on the other, how weak and trifling and inconnected it is if it be supposed to be meant by the apostle to show the obligation and duty of obedience to tyrannical, oppressive rulers, in common with others of a different character.
The apostle enters upon his subject thus : " Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers; for there is no power but of God : the powers that be are ordained of God." Romans 13 Here he urges the duty of obedience from this topic of argument : that civil rulers, as they are supposed to fulfill the pleasure of God, are the ordinance of God.
But how is this an argument for obedience to such rulers as do not perform the pleasure of God by doing good, but the pleasure of the devil by doing evil ; and such as are not, therefore, God's ministers, but the devil's? "
"Whosoever, therefore, resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God ; and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation." Romans 13:2 Here the apostle argues that those who resist a reasonable and just authority, which is agreeable to the will of God, do really resist the will of God himself, and will, therefore, be punished by him. But how does this prove that those who resist a lawless, unreasonable power, which is contrary to the will of God, do therein resist the will and ordinance of God? [This lesson was well conned : hear one of Dr. Mayhew's disciples, John Adams, twenty-five years afterward, in 1775, in defence of resistance to the despotism of the British Parliament : " We are not exciting rebellion. Opposition, nay, open, avowed resistance by arms against usurpation and law less violence, is not rebellion by the law of God or the land. Resistance to lawful authority makes rebellion. Hampden, Russell, Sydney, Somers, Holt, Tillotson, Burnet, Hoadley, etc., were no tyrants nor rebels, although some of them were in arms, and the others undoubtedly excited resistance against the tories."]
Is resisting those who resist God's will the same thing with resisting God ? Or shall those who do so " receive to themselves damnation? For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power?
"Do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same. For he is the minister of God to thee for good." Romans 13:3 Here the apostle argues, more explicitly than he had before done, for revering and submitting to magistracy, from this consideration, that such as really performed the duty of magistrates would be enemies only to the evil actions of men, and would befriend and encourage the good, and so be a common blessing to society.
But how is this an argument that we must honor and submit to such magistrates as are not enemies to the evil actions of men, but to the good, and such as are not a common blessing, but a common curse to society? " But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid : for he is the minister of God, a revenger, to execute wrath upon him that doth evil." Romans 13
Here the apostle argues, from the nature and end of magistracy, that such as did evil, and such only, had rea son to be afraid of the higher powers ; it being part of their office to punish evil-doers, no less than to defend and encourage such as do well. But if magistrates are un righteous, — if they are respecters of persons, — if they are partial in their administration of justice, — then those who / 1 do well have as much reason to be afraid as those that do evil : there can be no safety for the good, nor any peculiar ground of terror to the unruly and injurious; so that, in this case, the main end of civil government will be frustrated. Qlnd what reason is there for submitting to that government which does by no means answer the design of government ? "
Wherefore ye must needs be subject not only for wrath, but also for conscience' sake." Romans 13 Here the apostle argues the duty of a cheerful and conscientious submission to civil government from the nature and end of magistracy, as he had before laid it down ; *'. e., as the design of it was to punish evil-doers, and to support and encourage such as do well ; and as it must, if so exercised, be agreeable to the will of God.
But how does what he here says prove the duty of a cheerful and conscientious subjection to those who forfeit the character of rulers ? — to those who encourage the bad and discourage the good ? The argument here used no more proves it to be a sin to resist such rulers than it does to resist the devil, that he may flee from us." James 4:7 For one is as truly the minister of God as the other. "
"For this cause pay you tribute also; for they are God's ministers, attending continually upon this very thing." Here the apostle argues the duty of paying taxes from this consideration, that those who perform the duty of rulers are continually attending upon the public welfare. But how does this argument conclude for paying taxes to such princes as are continually endeavoring to ruin the public ; and especially when such payment would facilitate and promote this wicked design?
"Render therefore to all their dues ; tribute to whom tribute is due ; custom to whom custom ; fear to whom fear ; honor to whom honor." Here the apostle sums up what he has been saying con cerning the duty of subjects to rulers ; and his argument stands thus : " Since magistrates who execute their office well are common benefactors to society, and may in that respect properly be called the ministers and ordinance of God, and since they are constantly employed in the service of the public, it becomes you to pay them tribute and custom, and to reverence, honor, and submit to them in the execution of their respective offices." This is apparently good reasoning.
But does this argument conclude for the duty of paying tribute, custom, reverence, honor, and obedience to such persons as, although they bear the title of rulers, use all their power to hurt and injure the public ? — such as are not God's ministers, but Satan's? such as do not take care of and attend upon the public interest, but their own, to the ruin of the public? — that is, in short, to such as have no just claim at all to tribute, custom, reverence, honor, and obedience?
It is to be hoped that those who have any regard to the apostle's character as an inspired writer, or even as a man of common understanding, will not represent him as reasoning in such a loose, incoherent manner, and drawing conclusions which have not the least relation to his premises. For ** what can be more absurd than an argument thus framed : " Rulers are, by their office, bound to consult the public v welfare and the good of society ; therefore, you are bound to pay them tribute, to honor, and to submit to them, even when they destroy the public welfare, and are a common pest to society by acting in direct contradiction to the nature and end of their office"?
Thus, upon a careful review of the apostle's reasoning in this passage, it appears that his arguments to enforce submission are of such a nature as to conclude only in favor of submission to such rulers as he himself describes ; i. e., such as rule for the good of society, which is the only end of their institution. (JDommon tyrants and public oppressors are not entitled to obedience /from their sub jects by virtue of anything here laid down by the inspired apostle^] I now add, further, that the apostle's argument is so far from proving it to be the duty of people to obey and submit to such rulers as act in contradiction to the public good," [This does not intend their acting so in a few particular instances, which the best of rulers may do through mistake, etc., but their acting so habitually, and in a manner which plainly shows that they aim at making themselves great by the ruin of their subjects.] and so to the design of their office, that it proves the direct contrary. For, please to observe, that if the ( end of all civil government be the good of society; if this i be the thing that is aimed at in constituting civil rulers ; and if the motive and argument for submission to government be taken from the apparent usefulness of civil authority, — it follows, that when no such good end can be answered by submission, there remains no argument or motive to enforce it ; and if, instead of this good end's being brought about by submission, a contrary end is brought about, and the ruin and misery of society effected by it, here is a plain and positive reason against submission in all such cases, should they ever happen.
And therefore, in such cases, a regard to the public welfare ought to make us withhold from our rulers that obedience and submission which it would otherwise be our duty to render to them. If it be our duty, for example, to obey our king merely for this reason, that he rules for the public welfare (which is the only argument the apostle makes use of), it follows, by a parity of reason, that when he turns . tyrant, and makes his subjects his prey to devour and destroy, instead of his charge to defend and cherish, we are bound to throw off our allegiance to him, and to resist; and that according to the tenor of the apostle's argument in this passage. Not to discontinue our allegiance in this case would be to join with the sovereign in promoting the slavery and misery of that society, the welfare of which we ourselves, as well as our sovereign, are indispensably obliged to secure and promote, as far as in us lies. It is true the apostle puts no case of such a tyrannical prince ; but, by his grounding his argument for submission wholly upon the good of civil society, it is plain he implicitly authorizes, and even requires us to make resistance, when ever this shall be necessary to the public safety and happiness.
Let me make use of this easy and familiar similitude to illustrate the point in hand : Suppose God requires a family of children to obey their father and not to resist him, and enforces his command with this argument, that the superintendence and care and authority of a just and kind parent will contribute to the happiness of the whole family, so that they ought to obey him fox' their own sakes more than for his ; suppose this parent at length runs distracted, and attempts in his mad fit to cut all his chil dren's throats. Now, in this case, is not the reason before assigned why these children should obey their parent while he continued of a sound mind — namely, their common good — a reason equally conclusive for disobeying and resisting him, since he is become delirious and attempts their ruin?
It makes no alteration in the argument whether this parent, properly speaking, loses his reason, or does, while he retains his understanding, that which is as fatal in its consequences as anything he could do were he really deprived of it. This similitude needs no formal application. But it ought to be remembered that if the duty of universal obedience and non-resistance to our king or prince can be argued from this passage, the same unlimited submission, under a republican or any other form of government, and even to all the subordinate powers in any particular state, can be proved by it as well, which is more than those who allege it for the mentioned purpose would be willing should be inferred from it ; so that this passage does not answer their purpose, but really overthrows and confutes it. This matter deserves to be more particularly considered. The advocates for unlimited submission and passive obedience do, if I mistake not, always speak with reference to kingly and monarchical government as distinguished from all other forms, and with reference to submitting to the will of the king in distinction from all subordinate officers acting beyond their commission and the authority which they have received from the crown. It is not pretended that any persons besides kings have a divine right to do what they please, so that no one may resist them without incurring the guilt of factiousness and rebellion.
If any other powers oppress the people, it is generally allowed that the people may get redress by resistance, if other methods prove ineffectual. And if any officers in a kingly government go beyond the limits of that power which they have derived from the crown (the supposed original source of all power and authority in the state), and attempt illegally to take away the properties and lives of their fellow-subjects, they may be forcibly resisted, at least till application can be made to the crown. But as to the sovereign himself, he may not be resisted in any case, nor any of his officers, while they confine themselves within the bounds which he has prescribed to them.
This is, I think, a true sketch of the principles of those who defend the doctrine of passive obedience and non-resistance. Now, there is nothing'in Scripture which supports this scheme of political principles. As to the passage under consideration, the apostle here speaks of civil rulers in general, — of all persons in common vested with authority for the good of society, without any particular reference to one form of government more than to another, or to the supreme power in any particular state more than to subordinate powers. The apostle does not concern himself with the different forms of government." ...
[The essence of government (I mean good government, and this is the only government which the apostle treats of in this passage) consists in the making and executing of good laws — laws attempered to the common felicity of the governed. And if this be, in fact, done, it is evidently in itself a thing of no consequence at all what the particular form of government is; — whether the legislative and executive power be lodged in one and the same person, or in different persons; whether in one person, whom we call an absolute monarch; whether in a few, so as to constitute an aristocracy; whether in many, so as to constitute a republic ; or whether in three coordinate branches, in such manner as to make the government partake something of each of these forms, and to be, at the same time, essentially different from them all. If the end be attained, it is enough. But no form of government seems so unlikely to accomplish this end as absolute monarchy. Nor is there any one that has so little pretense to a divine original, unless it be in this sense, that God first introduced it into, and thereby overturned, the commonwealth of Israel, as a curse upon that people for their folly and wickedness, particularly in desiring such a government. (See 1 Samuel 8.) Just so God before sent quails amongst them, as a plague and a curse, and not as a blessing. Numbers 11.]
All civil rulers, as such, are the ordinance and ministers of God, and they are all, by the nature of their office, and in their respective spheres and stations, bound to consult the public welfare. With the same reason, therefore, that any deny unlimited and passive obedience to be here enjoined under a republic or aristocracy, or any other established form of civil government, or to sub ordinate powers acting in an illegal and oppressive manner; with the same reason others may deny that such obedience is enjoined to a king or monarch, or any civil power whatever. For the apostle says nothing that is peculiar to kings; what he says extends equally to all other persons whatever vested with any civil office. They are all, in exactly the same sense, the ordinance of God and the ministers of God, and obedience is equally enjoined to be paid to them all. For, as the apostle expresses it, there is no power but of God ; and we are required to render to all their dues, and not more than their dues. And what these dues are, and to whom they are to be rendered, the apostle saith not, but leaves to the reason and consciences of men to determine. Thus it appears that the common argument grounded i upon this passage in favor of universal and passive obedi ence really Overthrows itself, by proving too much, if it proves anything at all, — namely, that no civil officer is, in any case whatever, to be resisted, though acting in express contradiction to the design of his office, — which no man in his senses ever did or can assert. If we calmly consider the nature of the thing itself, (nothing can well be imagined more directly contrary to common sense than to suppose that millions of people should be subjected to the arbitrary, precarious pleasure of one single man, — who has naturally no superiority over them in point of authority, — so that their estates, and everything that is valuable in life, and even their lives also, shall be absolutely at his disposal, if he happens to be wanton and capricious enough to demand them. What unprejudiced man can think that God made all to be thus subservient to the lawless pleasure and frenzy of one, . . .
[This will suggest to many readers Milton's noble passage : " Our liberty is not Cassar's; it is a blessing we hare received from God himself; it is what we are born to; to lay down this at Caesar's feet, which we derive not from him, which we are not beholden to him for, were an unworthy action, and a degrading of our very nature. If one should consider attentively the countenance of a man, and inquire after whose image so noble a creature were framed, would not any one that heard him presently make answer, that he was made after the image of God himself? Being, therefore, peculiarly God's own, and consequently things that are to be given to him, we are entirely free by nature, and cannot without the great est sacrilege imaginable be reduced into a condition of slavery to any man, especially to a wicked, unjust, cruel tyrant." — Defence of the People of England.]
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. . . so that it shall always be a sin to resist him ? Nothing but the most plain and express revelation from heaven could make a sober, impartial man believe such a monstrous, unaccountable doctrine ; and, indeed, the thing itself appears so shocking, so out of all proportion, that it may be questioned whether all the miracles that ever were wrought could make it credible that this doctrine really came from God. At present there is not the least syllable in Scripture which gives any countenance to it. The hereditary, indefeasible, divine right of kings, and the doctrine of non-resistance, which is built upon the supposition of such a right, are altogether as fabulous and chimerical as trans-substantiation, or any of the most absurd reveries of ancient or modern visionaries. These notions are fetched neither from divine revelation nor human reason ; and, if they are derived from neither of those sources, it is not much matter from whence they come or whither they go. Only it is a pity that such doctrines should be propagated in society, to raise factions and rebellions,1 . . .
[As, for instance, those of the high-chureh, divine-right party, in 1714, 1715, which occasioned the Riot Act, the law of the land to this day. "Down with the Roundheads! God bless Dr. Sacheverell!" was their cry when they destroyed the meeting-houses of the dissenters; and their violences were unprecedented. They sought to replace the Stuarts, as at Preston, Nov. 13, 1715, and at Culloden Moor, April 16, 1746. These will call to mind Campbell's celebrated poem, "Lochiel's Warning," and Scott's romance, " Waverley."]
. . . as we see they have, in fact, been, both in the last and in the present reign. But, then, if unlimited submission and passive obedience to the higher powers, in all possible cases, be not a duty, it will be asked, " How far are we obliged to submit ? If we may innocently disobey and resist in some cases, why not in all ? Where shall we stop ? What is the measure of our duty? This doctrine tends to the total dissolution of civil government, and to introduce such scenes of wild "anarchy and confusion as are more fatal to society than the worst of tyranny."
After this manner some men object ; and, indeed, this is the most plausible thing that can be said in favor of such an absolute submission as they plead for. But the worst, or, rather, the best of it is, that there is very little strength or solidity in it; for similar difficulties may be raised with respect to almost every duty of natural and revealed religion. To instance only in two, both of which are near akin, and indeed exactly parallel to the case before us : It is unquestionably the duty of children to submit to their parents, and of servants to their masters ; but no one asserts that it is their duty to obey and submit to them in all supposable cases, or universally a sin to resist them.
Now, does this tend to subvert the just authority of parents and masters, or to introduce confusion and anarchy into private families ? No. How, then, does the same principle tend to unhinge the government of that larger family the body politic? We know, in general, that children and servants are obliged to obey their parents and masters respectively ; we know also, with equal certainty, that they are not obliged to submit to them in all things without exception, but may, in some cases, reasonably, and therefore innocently, resist them. These principles are acknowledged upon all hands, whatever difficulty there may be in fixing the exact limits of submission. Now, there is at least as much difficulty in stating the measure of duty in these two cases as in the case of rulers and subjects ; so that this is really no objection — at least, no reasonable one — against resistance to the higher powers. Or, if it is one, it will hold equally against resistance in the other cases mentioned. It is indeed true, that turbulent, vicious-minded men may take occasion,- from this principie that their rulers may in some cases be lawfully resisted, to raise factions and disturbances in the state, and to make resistance where resistance is needless, and therefore sinful.
But is it not equally true that children and servants, of turbulent, vicious minds, may take occasion, from this principle that parents and masters may in some cases be lawfully resisted, to resist when resistance is unnecessary, and therefore criminal? Is the principle, in either case, false in itself merely because it may be abused, and applied to legitimate disobedience and resistance in those instances to which it ought not to be applied? According to this way of arguing, there will be no true principles in the world ; for there are none but what may be wrested and perverted to serve bad purposes, either through the weakness or wickedness of men."
[We may very safely assert these two things in general, without undermining government: One is, that no civil rulers are to be obeyed when they enjoin things that are inconsistent with the commands of God. All such disobedience is lawful and glorious; particularly if persons refuse to comply with any legal establishment of religion, because it is a gross perversion and corruption — as to doctrine, worship, and discipline — of a pure and divine religion, brought from heaven to earth by the Son of God, — the only King and Head of the Christian church, — and propagated through the world by his inspired apostles. All commands running counter to the declared will of the Supreme Legislator of heaven and earth are null and void, and therefore disobedience to them is a duty, not a crime.
Another thing that may be asserted with equal truth and safety is, that no government is to be submitted to at the expense of that which is the sole end of all government — the common good and safety of society. Because, to submit in this case, if it should ever happen, would evi =dently be to set up the means as more valuable and above the end, than which there cannot be a greater solecism and contradiction. The only reason of the institution of civil government, and the only rational ground of submission to it, is the common safety and utility.
If, therefore, in any case, the common safety and utility would not be promoted by submission to government, but the contrary, there is no ground or motive for obedience and submission, but for the contrary. Whoever considers the nature of civil government, must indeed be sensible that a great degree of implicit confidence must unavoidably be placed in those that bear rule : this is implied in the very notion of authority's being originally a trust committed by the people to those who are vested with it, — as all just and righteous authority is. All besides is mere lawless force and usurpation ; neither God nor nature having given any man a right of dominion over any society independently of that society's approbation and consent to be governed by him.
Now, as all men are fallible, it cannot be supposed that the public affairs of any state should be always administered in the best manner possible, even by persons of the greatest wisdom and integrity. Nor is it sufficient to legitimate disobedience to the higher powers that they are not so administered, or that they are in some instances very ill-managed ; for, upon this principle, it is scarcely supposable that any government at all could be supported, or subsist. Such a principle manifestly tends to the dissolution of government, and to throw all things into confusion and anarchy.
But it is equally evident, upon the other hand, that those in authority may abuse their trust and power to such a degree, that neither the law of reason nor of religion requires that any obedience or submission should be paid to them; but, on the contrary, that they should be totally discarded, and the authority which they were before vested with transferred to others, who may exercise it more to those good purposes for which it is given. Nor is this principle, that resistance to the higher powers is in some extraordinary cases justifiable, so liable to abuse as many persons seem to apprehend it. For, although there will be always some petulant, querulous men in every state, — men of factious, turbulent, and carping dispositions, glad to lay hold of any trifle to justify and legitimate their caballing against their rulers, and other seditious practices, — yet there are, comparatively speaking, but few men of this contemptible character.
It does not appear but that mankind in general have a disposition to be as submissive and passive and tame under government as they ought to be. Witness a great, if not the greatest, part of the known world, who are now groaning, but not murmuring, under the heavy yoke of tyranny!
While those who govern do it with any tolerable degree of moderation and justice, and in any good measure act up to their office and character by being public benefactors, the people will generally be easy and peaceable, and be rather inclined to flatter and adore than to insult and resist them. Nor was there ever any general complaint against any administration, which lasted long, but what there was good reason for. Till people find themselves greatly abused and oppressed by their governors, they are not apt to complain ; and whenever they do, in fact, find themselves thus abused and oppressed, they must be stupid not to complain.
To say that subjects in general are not proper judges when their governors oppress them and play the tyrant, and when they defend their rights, administer justice impartially, and promote the public welfare, is as great treason as ever man uttered. 'Tis treason, not against one single man, but the state — against the whole body politic ; 'tis treason against mankind, 'tis treason against common sense, 'tis treason against God.
And this impious principle lays the foundation for justifying all the tyranny and oppression that ever any prince was guilty of. The people know for what end they set up and maintain their governors, and they are the proper judges when they execute their trust as they ought to do it; — when their prince exercises an equitable and paternal authority over them ; when from a prince and common father he exalts himself into a tyrant ; when from subjects and children he degrades them into the class of slaves, plunders them, makes them his prey, and unnaturally sports himself with their lives and fortunes.]
A people, really oppressed in a great degree by their sovereign, cannot well be insensible when they are so oppressed ; and such a people — if I may allude to an ancient fable — have, like the hesperian fruit, a dragon for their protector and guardian. Nor would they have any reason to mourn if some Hercules should appear to dispatch him. For a nation thus abused to arise unanimously and resist their prince, even to the dethroning him, is not criminal, but a reasonable way of vindicating their liberties and just rights: it is making use of the means, and the only means, which God has put into their power for mutual and self defence?
And it would be highly criminal in them not to make use of this means. It would be stupid tameness and unaccountable folly for whole nations to suffer one unreasonable, ambitious, and cruel man to wanton and riot in their misery. And in such a case, it would, of the two, be more rational to suppose that they that did not resist, than that they who did, would receive to themselves damnation?
And this naturally brings us to make some reflections upon the resistance which was made, about a century since, to that unhappy prince King Charles I., and upon the anniversary of his death. This is a point which I should not have concerned myself about, were it not that some men continue to speak of it, even to this day,... [The Episcopalians in New England, as well as the parent kingdom, regarded this anniversary as a sacred day, and observed it as a fast. They took occasion not only to dwell on the great injustice done to the king in person, and the outrage, as they called it, committed against the crown, but to exalt and glorify Episcopacy and monarchy, and to abuse both Republicans and Puritans." — Dr. Bradford's Life of Mayhcw, 103, 117. See note to the Preface.]
... with a great deal of warmth and zeal, and in such a manner as to undermine all the principles of liberty, whether civil or religious, and to introduce the most abject slavery both in church and state — so that it is become a matter of universal concern. What I have to offer upon this subject will be comprised in a short answer to the following queries:
- For what reason the resistance to King Charles the First was made.
- By whom it was made.
- Whether this resistance was rebellion," or not. [I speak of rebellion, treason, saintship, martyrdom, etc., throughout this discourse, only in the scriptural and theological sense. I know not how the law defines them — the study of that not being my employment.]
- How the anniversary of King Charles's death came at first to be solemnized as a day of fasting and humiliation. And, lastly,
- Why those of the Episcopal clergy who are very high in the principles of ecclesiastical authority continue to speak of this unhappy man as a great saint and a martyr.
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For what reason, then, was the resistance to King Charles made?
The general answer to this inquiry is, that it was on account of the tyranny and oppression of his reign. Not a great while after his accession to the throne, he married a French Catholic,[Henrietta Maria, daughter of Henry IV. of France] and with her seemed to have wedded the politics, if not the religion of France, also. For afterwards, during a reign, or, rather, a tyranny of many years, he governed in a perfectly wild and arbitrary manner, paying no regard to the constitution and the laws of the kingdom, by which the power of the crown was limited, or to the solemn oath which he had taken at his coronation.
It would be endless, as well as needless, to give a particular account of all the illegal and despotic measures which he took in his administration, — partly from his own natural lust of power, and partly from the influence of wicked counsellors and ministers.
- He committed many illustrious members of both Houses of Parliament to the Tower for opposing his arbitrary schemes.
- He levied many taxes upon the people without consent of Parliament, and then imprisoned great numbers of the principal merchants and gentry for not paying them.
- He erected, or at least revived, several arbitrary courts, in which the most unheard-of barbarities were committed with his knowledge and approbation.
- He supported that more than fiend, Archbishop Laud, and the clergy of his stamp, in all their church-tyranny and hellish cruelties.
- He authorized a book in favor of sports upon the Lord's day ; and several clergymen were persecuted by him and the mentioned pious bishop for not read ing it to the people after divine service. [" One Dr. Dawson read it," — in church, as commanded, — " and presently after read the Ten Commandments ; then said : ' Dearly beloved, you have heard now the commandments of God and man : obey which you please.' "— Knight's History of England, iii. 415.]
- When the Parliament complained to him of the arbitrary proceedings of his corrupt ministers, he told that august body, in a rough, domineering, unprincely manner, that he wondered any one should be so foolish and insolent as to think that he would part with the meanest of his servants upon their account.
- He refused to call any Parliament at all for the space of twelve years together, during all which time he governed in an absolute, lawless, and despotic manner.
- He took all opportunities to encourage the Papists, and to promote them to the highest offices of honor and trust.
- He (probably) abetted the horrid massacre in Ireland, in which two hundred thousand Protestants were butchered by the Roman Catholics.
- He sent a large sum of money, which he had raised by his arbitrary taxes, into Germany, to raise foreign troops, in order to force more arbitrary taxes upon his Subjects. [In 1627 Charles sent funds to Germany for mercenary German troops, to repel any insurrection consequent on the collection of the excise without grant by the Parliament. In 1628 the Commons " remonstrated" against this " bringing in of strangers for aid, as pernicious to most states, but to England fatal," and " we are bold to declare to your Majesty and the whole world, that we hold it far beneath the heart of any English man to think that this victorious nation should now stand in need of German soldiers to defend their now king and kingdom." The king's insolent reply was, "I owe the account of my actions to God alone ! " and so prorogued the Parliament.
In the year before he had said to them, at the opening of the session, " I mean not to spend much time in words. ... I need but point out to you what to do. I will use but few persuasions. . . . Take not this as a threatening, for I scorn to threaten any but my equals." When George II. brought German troops into England in 1756, " That state alone," exclaimed Pitt, " is a sovereign state which stands by its own strength, not by the help of another country." George III. bought with British money " the hireling sword of German boors and vassals" to reduce the American colonies, and this was one of the wrongs set forth in the Declaration of July 4, 1776: "transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries."]
- He not only, by a long series of actions, but also in plain terms, asserted an absolute, uncontrollable power, — saying, even, in one of his speeches to Parliament, that, as it was blasphemy to dispute what God might do, so it was sedition in subjects to dispute what the king might do!
- Towards the end of his tyranny he came to the House of Commons, with an armed force," and demanded five of its principal members to be delivered up to him ; and this was a prelude to that unnatural war which he soon after levied against his own dutiful subjects, whom he was bound, by all the laws of honor, humanity, piety, and, I might add, of interest also, to defend and cherish with a paternal affection.
I have only time to hint at these facts in a general way, all which, and many more of the same tenor, may be proved by good authori ties. So that the figurative language which St. John uses concerning the just and beneficent deeds of our blessed Saviour may be applied to the unrighteous and execrable deeds of this prince, viz. : " And there are also many other things which" King Charles " did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written." John 21:25
Now, it was on account of King Charles's thus assuming a power above the laws, in direct contradiction to his coronation oath, [1688 Act: "Govern the People of this Kingdom of England and the Dominions thereto belonging according to the Statutes in Parliament Agreed on and the Laws and Customs of the same"] and governing, the greatest part of his time, in the most arbitrary, oppressive manner — it was upon this account that resistance was made to him, which at length issued in the loss of his crown, and of that head which was unworthy to wear it.
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But by whom was this resistance made?
Not by a private junto, not by a small seditious party, not by a few desperadoes, who to mend their fortunes would embroil : the state; but by the Lords and Commons of England. It was they that almost unanimously opposed the king's' measures for overturning the constitution, and changing that free and happy government into a wretched, absolute monarchy. It was they that, when the king was about levying forces against his subjects in order to make him self absolute, commissioned officers, and raised an army to defend themselves and the public; and it was they that maintained the war against him all along, till he was made a prisoner.
This is indisputable ; though it was not, properly speaking, the Parliament, but the army, which put him to death afterwards. And it ought to be freely acknowledged that most of their proceeding, in order to get this matter effected, and particularly the court by which the king was at last tried and condemned, was little better than a mere mockery of justice.
[" It is much to be doubted whether his trial and execution have not, as much as any other circumstance, served to raise the character of the English nation in the opinion of Europe in general." — Charles James Fox.
"Having share in the government, sirs, that is nothing pertaining to the people. A subject and a sovereign are clean different things." — King Charles I on the scaffold.
"Now Charles, to a degree which can scarcely be exceeded, conspired against the liberty of his country. To assert his own authority without limitation was the object of all his desires and all his actions, so far as the public was concerned For that purpose he commenced war against the English Parliament, and continued it by every expedient in his power for four years. ... He could never be reconciled ; he could never be disarmed ; he could never be convinced.' His was a war to the death, and there had the utmost aggravation that can belong to a war against the liberty of a nation It is not easy to imagine a greater criminal than the individual against whom the sentence was awarded." — William Godwin.
"They were men sufficiently provided with daring; men, we are bound to see, who sat there as in the presence of the Maker of all men, as executing the judgment of Heaven above, and had not the fear of any man or thing on the earth below. ... I reckon it perhaps the most daring action any body of men to be met with in history ever, with clear consciousness, deliberately set themselves to do." — Thomas Carlyle.
"God has endued you with greatness of mind to be the first of man kind, who, after having conquered their own king, and having had him delivered into their hands, have not scrupled to condemn him judicially, and, pursuant to that sentence of condemnation, to put him to death." — John Milton.
"Illustrious and heroic defenders of real, perfect, and unpolluted lib erty, civil and religious, throughout the world." — Ezra Stiles.]
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The next question which naturally arises is, whether this resistance which was made to the king by the Parliament was properly rebellion or not? [Lord Camden relates that somebody asked the great Mr. Selden, whom Grotius called the glory of England, in what law-book, in what records or archives of the state, might be found the law for resisting tyranny. " I don't know," said Selden, " whether it would be worth your while to look deeply into books on this matter; but I will tell you what is most certain, that it has always been the custom of England, and the custom of England is the law of the land."]
The answer to which is plain, — that it was not, but a most righteous and glorious stand, made in defense of the natural and legal rights of the people, against the unnatural and illegal encroachments of arbitrary power. Nor was this a rash and too sudden opposition. The nation had been patient under the oppressions of the crown, even to long-suffering, for a course of many years, and there was no rational hope of redress in any other way. Resistance was absolutely necessary, in order to preserve the nation from slavery, misery, and ruin. And who so proper to make this resistance as the Lords and Commons, — the whole representative body of the people, — guardians of the public welfare ; and each of which was, in point of legislation, vested with an equal, coordinate power with that of the crown?" . . .
[The English constitution is originally and essentially free. The character which Julius Caesar and Tacitus both give of the ancient Britains so long ago is, that they were extremely jealous of their liberties, as well as a people of a martial spirit. Nor have there been wanting frequent instances and proofs of the same glorious spirit, in both respects, remaining in their posterity ever since, in the struggles they have made for liberty, both against foreign and domestic tyrants.
[1] Their kings hold their title to the throne solely by grant of Parliament; — i. e., in other words, by the voluntary consent of the people ; — and, agreeably hereto,
[2] the prerogative and rights of the crown are stated, defined, and limited by law; and that as truly and strictly as the rights of any inferior officer in the state, or, indeed, of any private subject.
[3] And it is only in this respect that it can be said that " the king can do no wrong." Being restrained by the law, he can not, while he confines himself within those just limits which the law prescribes to him as the measure of his authority, injure and oppress the subject.
[4] The king, in his coronation oath, swears to exercise only such a power as the constitution gives him ; and the subject, in the oath of allegiance, swears only to obey him in the exercise of such a power. The king is as much bound by his oath not to infringe the legal rights of the people as the people are bound to yield subjection to him.
[5] From whence it follows, that as soon as the prince sets himself up above law, he loses the king in the tyrant. He does, to all intents and purposes, unking himself by acting out of and beyond that sphere which the constitution allows him to move in; and in such cases he has no more right to be obeyed than any inferior officer who acts beyond his commission.
[6] The subject's obligation to allegiance then ceases, of course; and to resist him is no more rebellion than to resist any foreign invader.
[7] There is an essential difference betwixt government and tyranny, at least under such a constitution as the English. The former consists in ruling according to law and equity ; the latter, in ruling contrary to law and equity. So, also, there is an essential difference betwixt resisting a tyrant, and rebellion. The former is a just and reasonable self-defence; the latter consists in resisting a prince whose administration is just and legal; and this is what denominates it a crime. Now, it is evident that King Charles's government was illegal, and very oppressive, through the greatest part of his reign; and, therefore, to resist him was no more rebellion than to oppose any foreign invader, or any other domestic oppressor.]
. . . Here, were two branches of the legislature against one ; two, which had law and equity and the constitution on their side, against one which was impiously attempting to over turn law and equity and the constitution, and to exercise a wanton, licentious sovereignty over the properties, consciences, and lives of all the people ; — such a sovereignty as some inconsiderately ascribe to the Supreme Governor of the world. I say, inconsiderately because God himself does not govern in an absolutely arbitrary and despotic manner. The power of this almighty King — I speak it not without caution and reverence — the power of this almighty King is limited by law ; not indeed by acts of Parliament, but by the eternal laws of truth, wisdom, and equity, and the everlasting tables of right reason, — tables that cannot be repealed, or thrown down and broken like those of Moses.
But King Charles set himself up above all these, [He began his reasons for dissolving the Parliament (March 10, 1628) with this : " Howsoever, princes are not bound to give account of their actions but to God alone."] as much as he did above the written laws of the realm, and made mere humor and caprice, which are no rule at all, the only rule and measure of his administration.
And now is it not perfectly ridiculous to call resistance to such a tyrant by the name of rebellion? — the grand rebellion ? Even that Parliament which brought King Charles II. to the throne, and which run loyally mad, severely reproved one of their own members for condemning the proceedings of that Parliament which first took up arms against the former king.
And upon the same principles that the proceeding of this Parliament may be censured as wicked and rebellious, the proceedings of those who, since, opposed King James II., and brought the Prince of Orange to the throne, may be censured as wicked and rebellious also. The cases are parallel. But, whatever some men may think, it is to be hoped that, for their own sakes, they will not dare to speak against the Revolution, upon the justice and legality of which depends, [In other words, the Anglicans seeking to delegitimize the resistance to the tyranny of Charles I are the same hypocrites who supported The Glorious Revolution] in part, his present majesty's right to the throne.
If it be said that although the Parliament which first opposed King Charles's measures, and at length took up arms against him, were not guilty of rebellion, yet certainly those persons were who condemned and put him to death, — even this, perhaps, is not true ; for he had, in fact, unkinged himself long before, and had forfeited his title to the allegiance of the people. So that those who put him to death were, at most, only guilty of murder, — which indeed is bad enough, if they were really guilty of that, — which is, at least, disputable. Cromwell, and those who were principally concerned in the (nominal) king's death, might possibly have been very wicked and designing men. Nor shall I say anything in vindication of the reigning hypocrisy of those times, or of Cromwell's mal-administration during the interregnum ; for it is truth, and not a party, that I am speaking for.
But still, it may be said that Cromwell and his adherents were not, properly speaking, guilty of rebellion, because he whom they be headed was not, properly speaking, their king, but a lawless tyrant ; much less are the whole body of the nation at that time to be charged with rebellion on that account : for it was no national act ; it was not done by a free Parliament. And much less still is the nation at present to be charged with the great sin of rebellion for what their ancestors did, or, rather, did not, a century ago.
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But how came the anniversary of King Charles's death to be solomnized 'as a day of fasting and humiliation ?
[The diary of Evelyn, recently published, contains interesting notices of this "Fast."
" January 30th, 1661, was the first solemn fast and day of humiliation to deplore the sins which so long had provoked God against this afflicted church and people, ordered by Parliament to be annually celebrated to expiate the guilt of the execrable murder of the late king.
"This day (O the stupendous and inscrutable judgments of God!) were the carcasses of those arch-rebels, Cromwell, Bradshaw (the judge who condemned his Majesty), and Ireton (son-in-law to the usurper), dragged out of their superb tombs in Westminster, among the kings, to Tyburn, and hanged on the gallows there from nine in the morning till six at night, and then buried under that fatal and ignominious monument, in a deep pit; thousands of people who had seen them in all their pride being spectators. Look back at October 22, 1658," — Oliver's funeral, — " and be astonished, and fear God and honor the king; but meddle not with them who are given to change."
But times change, and we change with them. Not thirty years had passed before the " martyr's " family was banished from the throne and nation. "And now," says Evelyn, " the clergy began to change their note, both in pulpit and discourse, on their old passive obedience, so as people begin to talk of the bishops being cast out of the House;" and on the 30th of January, 1689, he writes : " The anniversary of King Charles the First's martyrdom; but in all the public offices and pulpit prayers tho collects and litany for the king and queen were curtailed and mutilated."]
The true answer in brief to which inquiry is, that this fast was instituted by way of court and compliment to King Charles II upon the restoration. All were desirous of making their court to him, of ingratiating themselves, and of making him forget what had been done in opposition to his father, so as not to revenge it. To effect this they ran into the most extravagant professions of affection and loyalty to him, insomuch that he himself said that it was a mad and hair-brained royalty which they professed. And, amongst other strange things which his first Parliament did, they ordered the thirtieth of January — the day on which his father was beheaded — to be kept as a day of solemn humiliation, to deprecate the judgments of Heaven for the rebellion which the nation had been guilty of, in that which was no national thing, and which was not rebellion in them that did it.
Thus they soothed and flattered their new king at the expense of their liberties, and were ready to yield up freely to Charles II. all that enormous power which they had justly resisted Charles I. for usurping to himself.
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The last query mentioned was, Why those of the Epis copal clergy who are very high in the principles of ecclesiastical authority continue to speak of this unhappy man as a great saint and' a martyr.
This we know is what they constantly do, especially upon the thirtieth of January — a day sacred to the extolling of him, and to the reproaching of those who are not of the Established Church. " Out of the same mouth," on this day, "proceedeth blessing and cursing;"" therewith bless they their God, even Charles, and therewith curse they the dissenters. And their " tongue can no man tame ; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison." James 3:8-10
King Charles I is upon this solemnity frequently compared to our Lord Jesus Christ, both in respect of the holiness of his life and the greatness and injustice of his sufferings ; and it is a wonder they do not add something concerning the merits of his death also : but "blessed saint" and "royal martyr" are as humble titles as any that are thought worthy of him.
Now this may, at first view, well appear to be a very strange phenomenon ; for King Charles was really a man black with guilt, and "laden with iniquity," Isaiah 1:4 as appears by his crimes before mentioned. He lived a tyrant ; and it was the oppression and violence of his reign that brought him to his untimely and violent end at last.
Now, what of saintship or martyrdom is there in all this? What of saintship is there in encouraging people to profane the Lord's day? What of saintship in falsehood and perjury ? What of saintship in repeated robberies and depredations? What of saintship in throwing real saints and glorious patriots into jails? What of saintship in overturning an excellent civil constitution, and proudly grasping at an illegal and monstrous power? What of saintship in the murder of thousands of innocent people, and involving a nation in all the calamities of civil war? And what of martyrdom is there in a man's bringing an immature and violent death upon himself by "being wicked overmuch?" Ecclesiastes 7:17
Is there any such thing as grace without goodness ; as being a follower of Christ without following him ; as being his disciple without learning of him to be just and beneficent; or as saintship without sanctity? ... [Is it any wonder that even persona who do not walk after their own lust should scoff at such saints as this, both in the first and in the last days, even from everlasting to everlasting? (2 Peter 3:3-4) But perhaps it will be said that these things are mysteries, which, although very true in themselves, lay under standings cannot comprehend; or, indeed, any other persons amongst us besides those who, being inwardly moved by the Holy Ghost, have taken a trip across the Atlantic to obtain episcopal ordination and the indelible character.' How ever, if these consecrated gentlemen do not quite despair of us, it is hoped that, in the abundance of their charity, they will endeavor to elucidate these dark points, and at the same time explain the creed of another of their eminent saints, which we are told that unless we believe faithfully, i. e., believingly, we cannot be saved ; — which creed, or rather riddle, notwithstanding all the labors of the pious and metaphysical Dr. Waterland, remains somewhat enigmatic still]
... If not, I fear it will be hard to prove this that church must be but poorly stocked with saints and martyrs which is forced to adopt such enormous sinners into her calendar in order to swell the number.
But, to unravel this mystery of (nonsense as well as of) iniquity, which has already worked for a long time amongst us," 2 Thessalonians 2:7 or, at least, to give the most probable solution of it, it is to be remembered that King Charles, — this burlesque upon saintship and martyrdom, — though so great an oppressor, was a true friend to the church, — so true a friend to her that he was very well affected towards the Roman Catholics, and would probably have been very willing to unite Lambeth and Rome.
This appears by his marrying a true daughter of that true "mother of harlots," Revelation 17:5 which he did with a dispensation from the Pope, that supreme bishop, to whom, when he wrote, he gave the title of Most Holy Father. His queen was extremely bigoted to all the follies and superstitions, and to the hierarchy, of Rome, and had a prodigious ascendency over him all his life. It was in part owing to this that he (probably) abetted the massacre of the Protestants in Ireland, — that he assisted in extirpating the French Protestants at Rochelle, — that he all along encouraged Papists and popishly affected clergymen, in preference to all other persons, — and that he upheld that monster of wickedness, Archbishop Laud, and the bishops of his stamp, in all their church tyranny and diabolical cruelties.
In return to his kindness and indulgence in which respects they caused many of the pulpits throughout the nation to ring with the divine, absolute, indefeasible right of kings — with the praises of Charles and his reign, and with the damnable sin of resisting the "Lord's anointed," let him do what he would; so that not Christ, but Charles, was commonly preached to the people.
In plain English, there seems to have been an impious bargain struck up betwixt the sceptre and the surplice for enslaving both the bodies and souls of men. The king appeared to be willing that the clergy should do what they would, — set up a monstrous hierarchy like that of Rome, a monstrous Inquisition like that of Spain or Portugal, or anything else which their own pride and the devil's malice could prompt them to, — provided always that the clergy would be tools to the crown; that they would make the people believe that kings had God's authority for breaking God's law, — that they had a commission from Heaven to seize the estates and lives of their subjects at pleasure, — and that it was a damnable sin to resist them, even when they did such things as deserved more than damnation.
This appears to be the true key for explaining the mysterious doctrine of King Charles's saintship and martyrdom. He was a saint, not because he was in his life a good man, but a good Churchman ; not because he was a lover of holiness, but the hierarchy ; not because he was a friend to Christ, but the craft. And he was a martyr in his death, not because he bravely suffered death in the cause of truth and righteousness, but because he died an enemy to liberty and the rights of conscience; i. e., not because he died an enemy to sin, but dissenters.
For these reasons it is that all bigoted clergymen and friends to church power paint this man as a saint in his life, though he was such a mighty, such a royal sinner; and as a martyr in his death, though he fell a sacrifice only to his own ambition, avarice, and unbounded lust of power. And, from prostituting their praise upon King Charles, and offering him that incense which is not his due, it is natural for them to make a transition to the dissenters, — as they commonly do, — and to load them with that reproach which they do not deserve, — they being generally professed enemies both to civil and ecclesiastical tyranny. We are commonly charged, upon the thirtieth of January, with the guilt of putting the king to death, under a notion that it was our ancestors that did it ; and so we are represented in the blackest colors, not only as schismatics, but also as traitors and rebels, and all that is bad. And these lofty gentlemen usually rail upon this head in such a manner as plainly shows that they are either grossly ignorant of the history of those times which they speak of, or — which is worse — that they are guilty of the most shameful prevarication, slander, and falsehood. But every petty priest with a roll and a gown thinks he must do something in imitation of his betters in lawn, and show himself a true son of the church.: and thus, through a foolish ambition to appear considerable, they only render themselves contemptible.
[Dr. Bradford, the biographer of Dr. Mayhew, says : " It should be recollected that the governors in Massachusetts were then appointed by the king, and were Episcopalians, sent over from England. Their particular patronage and favor were bestowed on the few Episcopal clergy ; which served to render them overbearing, and unwilling to allow the Con gregational clergy to be ministers of the gospel. So haughty and censo rious were most of them, that one was led to say of them, ' They know not what they are of.' Great efforts were then making to settle Episcopal clergy in New England, who were most anxious to increase the members of the English Episcopal church, and to interfere with the other clergy. These Episcopal ministers were supported by the English hierarchy ; and the civil administration of the British government particularly favored and encouraged this plan, for the purpose of supporting the political meas ures and views of the ministers, then strongly leaning to tory doctrines. It was considered important to increase and extend Episcopacy in the col nies, with a view to secure obedience to all political measures and plans. ' No bishops, no kings,' was the opinion and party-cry of many."]
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But, suppose our forefathers did kill their mock saint and martyr a century ago, what is that to us now?
If I mistake not, these gentlemen generally preach down the doctrine of the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity as absurd and unreasonable, notwithstanding they have solemnly subscribed what is equivalent to it in their own articles of religion ; and therefore one would hardly expect that they would lay the guilt of the king's death upon us, although our forefathers had been the only authors of it : but this conduct is much more surprising when it does not appear that our ancestors had any more. hand in it than their own.
However, bigotry is sufficient to account for this and many other phenomena which cannot be accounted for in any other way. Although the observation of this anniversary seems to have been at least superstitious in its original; and although it is often abused to very bad purposes by the established clergy, as they serve themselves of it to perpetuate strife, a party spirit, and divisions in the Christian church ; yet it is to be hoped that one good end will be answered by it, quite contrary to their intention : It is to be hoped that it will prove a standing memento that Britons will not be slaves, and a warning to all corrupt counsellors and ministers not to go too far in advising to arbitrary, despotic measures.
To conclude : Let us all learn to be free and to be loyal ; let us not profess ourselves vassals to the lawless pleasure of any man on earth ; but let us remember, at the same time, government is sacred, and not to be trifled with. It is our happiness to live under a prince who is satisfied with ruling according to law, as every other good prince will. We enjoy under his administration all the liberty that is proper and expedient for us.
It becomes us, there fore, tobe contented and dutiful subjects. Let us prize our freedom, but not " use our liberty for a cloak of maliciousness." 1 Peter 2:16
There are men who strike at liberty under the term licentiousness ; there are others who aim at popularity under the disguise of patriotism. Be aware of both. Extremes are dangerous. There is at present amongst us, perhaps, more danger of the latter than of the former ; for which reason I would exhort you to pay all due regard to the government over us, to the king, and all in authority, and to " lead a quiet and peaceable life." 1 Timothy 2:2
And, while I am speaking of loyalty to our earthly prince, suffer me just to put you in mind to be loyal also to the Supreme Ruler of the universe, " by whom kings reign and princes decree justice;" Proverbs 8:15 — to which King, eternal, immortal, invisible, even to " the only wise God," 1 Timothy 1:17 be all honor and praise, dominion and thanksgiving, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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