THE Church & Crown's Felicity CONSUMMATED: OR, England's Happiness Complete, IN THE JOYFUL RECEPTION OF THE Princess of Orange. THe wondrous Happiness, that England once reaped, from the Uniting of the Red and White Rose, in the Marriage of Henry the 7th, to the establishing the Peace of the Kingdom, by Reconciling the Bloody Wars between the House of York and Lancaster, are Blessings infinitely inferior to the larger Portion of National Happiness we are destined to enjoy, in the Illustrious Prince and Princess of Orange's Accession to the the Imperial Crown of England. For in the Former Union, the Feuds of two Corrival Families were only appeased; but in the Present more Glorious Union, we have that Great work, which Ages have been labouring for, Completely finished and perfected. viz. In that unshaken and lasting Foundation of our Religion and Liberty (the nearest and dearest concern of mankind,) so firmly laid, that the power of Rome, and Gates of Hell itself, shall never prevail against them. And more and above the security, Peace, and Happiness of the People so entirely consummated, we have likewise the Glory of the Nation exalted above all the former Grandeur of preceding Ages; that is in the unity of all Hearts, to strengthen the Royal Arm; and 2dly, by Rivetting the English and Dutch Interest, Our Naval walls, and Maritime Strength, will soon render Us the Terror of the World, and make Us once more the Arbiters of Europe, A Title which our long frenchifyed Interest, and Alliance before, had so meanly and ignobly lost Us, by giving up the Reins to the insatiate Ambition of that wild Ravager of the Christian World, and plague of all Europe, the French Tyrant. There only wanted this Blessed Day to perpetuate the Security of the Protestant Religion and the Liberties of England. And to our no little Satisfaction, and Delight the welcome Tidings of her Arrival is our only remaining Felicity. Accordingly the Guns of the Tower, and the General Ringing of Bells, have already proclaimed Our Universal Joys: and the whole Court, the more immediate sharer of so Divine a Blessing, is filled with the Highest Transports suitable to Her Royal Reception. London Printed for T. Tillier. 1689.