THE HUMBLE PETITION OF THE COMMISSIONERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO THE KING'S MAJESTY. Their Declaration sent to the Parliament of ENGLAND. Their Letter to some Brethren of the Ministry there. And their Commission to their Brother Master Alexander Henderson, January 1643. EDINBURGH, Printed by Evan Tyler, Printer to the Kings most Excellent Majesty. 1643. To the Kings most excellent Majesty. The humble Petition of the Commissioners of the General Assembly of the Kirk of Scotland, from their meeting at Edinburgh, January 4. 1643. OUr silence and ceasing to present before Your Majesty our humble thoughts and desires at this time of common danger to Religion, to Your Majesty's sacred Person, Your Crown, and Posterity, and to all Your Majesty's Dominions, were impiety against God, unthankfulness and disloyalty against Your Majesty, an indirect approbation and hard●● ing of the adversaries of Truth and Peace in their wicked ways, and a cruelty against our Brethren, lying in such depths of affliction and anguish of spirit; any one of which crimes were in us, above all others most inexcusable, and would prove us most unworthy of the trust committed unto us. The flame of this common combustion hath almost devoured Ireland, is now wasting the Kingdom of England, & we cannot tell how soon it shall enter upon ourselves, & set this Your Majesty's most ancient and native Kingdom on fire: If in this woeful case and lamentable condition of Your Majesty's Dominions all others should be silent, it becometh us to speak; and if our tongues and pens should cease, our consciences within us would cry out, and the stones in the streets would answer us. Our great grief and apprehension of danger, is not a little increased, partly by the insolency and presumption of Papists and others dis-affected to the Reformation of Religion who although for their number and power, they be not considerable amongst us; yet through the success of the Popish party in Ireland, and the hopes they conceive of the prevailing power of Popish Armies, and the Prelatical Faction in England, they have of late taken spirits, and begun to speak big words against the Reformation of Religion, and the Work of God in this Land; and partly and more principally, that a chief praise of the Protestant Religion, and thereby our not vain, but just gloriation, is by the public Declaration of the Earl of Newcastle, General of Your Majesty's Forces in the Northern parts, and nearest unto us, transferred unto Papists; who although they be sworn enemies unto Kings, and be as infamous for their Treasons and Conspiracies against Princes and Rulers, as for their known Idolatry and spiritual Tyranny; yet are they openly declared to be, not good Subjects, or better Subjects, but far better Subjects then Protestants; which is a new and foul disparagement of the reformed Religion, a notable injury to Your Majesty in Your Honour, a sensible reflection upon the whole Body of this Kingdom, which is impatient that any Subjects, but abhorreth, and extremely disdaineth that Papists, who refuse to take the Oath of Allegiance, should be compared with them in allegiance and fidelity; and, which as a strange doctrine, from the mouth or pen of professed Protestants, will suffer an hard construction from all the Reformed Kirks. We therefore Your Majesty's most humble and loving Subjects, upon these and the like considerations, do humbly entreat, That Your Majesty may be pleased in Your Princely wisdom, First to consider, That the intentions of Papists, directed by the principles of their Profession, are no other, than they have been from the beginning, even to build their Babel, and to set up their execrable Idolatry, and Antichristian Tyranny in all Your Majesty's Dominions, to change the Face of Your two Kingdoms of Scotland and England, into the similitude of miserable Ireland, which is more bitter to the people of God, Your Majesty's good Subjects, to think upon, than death: And whatsoever their present pretences be for the defence of Your Majesty's Person and Authority; yet in the end by their arms and power, with a displayed banner, to bring that to pass against Your Royal Person and Posterity, which the fifth of November, never to be forgotten, was not able by their subtle and under-mining treason to produce; Or which will be their greatest mercy, to reduce Your Majesty, and Your Kingdoms, to the base and unnatural slavery of their Monarch the Pope: And next, that Your Majesty upon this undeniable evidence, may timously and speedily apply Your Royal Authority for dis-banding their Forces, suppressing their Power, and disappointing their bloody and merciless projects. And for this end we are with greater earnestness than before, constrained to fall down again before Your Majesty, and in all humility to renew the Supplication of the late General Assembly, and our own former Petition in their name, for unity of Religion, and for uniformity of Church-government in all Your Majesty's Dominions: And to this effect for a meeting of sound Divines to be held in England, unto which according to the desire of Your Majesty's Parliament, some Commissioners may be sent from this Kirk, that in all points to be proponed and debated, there may be the greater consent and harmony. We take the boldness to be the more instant in this our humble desire, because it concerneth the Lord Jesus Christ so much in his glory, your Majesty in your honour, the Kirk of England which we ought to tender as our own bowels, & whose reformation is more dear to us, than our lives, in her happiness, and the Kirk of Scotland in her purity and peace: Former experience, and daily sense teaching us, that without the Reformation of the Kirk of England, there is no hope nor possibility of the continuance of Reformation here. The Lord of Heaven and Earth, whose Vicegerent Your Majesty is, calleth for this great Work of Reformation at Your hands, and the present commotions and troubles of Your Majesty's Dominions, are either preparations in the mercy of God, for this blessed Reformation and unity in Religion, which is the desire, prayer, and expectation of all Your Majesty's good Subjects in this Kingdom, Or, which they tremble to think upon, and earnestly deprecate, are in the justice of God for the abuse of the Gospel, the tolerating of Idolatry and Superstition against so clear a light, and not acknowledging the day of visitation; The beginnings of such a doleful desolation, as no policy or power of man, shall be able to prevent, and as shall make Your Majesty's Kingdoms within a short time as miserable as now they may be happy by a Reformation of Religion. God forbidden, that while the Houses of Parliament do profess their desire of the Reformation of Religion in a peaceable and Parliamentary way, and pass their Bills for that end in the particulars, That Your Majesty, the Nursefather of the Kirk of Christ, to whose care the custody and vindication of Religion doth principally belong, should to the provoking of the anger of God, the stopping of the influence of so many blessings from Heaven, & the grieving of the hearts of all the godly, frustrate our expectation, make our hopes ashamed, and hazard the loss of the hearts of all Your good People, which next unto the truth and unity of Religion, and the safety of Your Kingdoms, are willing to hazard their lives, and spend their blood for Your Majesty's honour end happiness. We are not ignorant that the Work is great, the difficulties and impediments be many, and that there be both Mountains and Lions in the way. The strongest , till it be taken out of the way, is the Mountain of Prelacy: And no wonder, if Your Majestic consider how many Papists, and Popishly affected, have for a long time found peace and ease under the shadow thereof; How many of the Prelatical Faction have thereby their life and being; How many profane & worldly men do fear the yoke of Christ, and are unwilling to submit themselves to the obedience of the Gospel; And how many there be, whose eyes are dazelled with the external pomp and glory of the Kirk, whose minds are miscarried with a conceit of the governing the Kirk by the rules of humane Policy, & whose hearts are affrighted with the apprehension of the dangerous consequences which may ensue upon alterations. But when Your Majesty in Your Princely and religious wisdom, shall remember from the Records of former times, how against the gates of hell, the force & fraud of worldly and wicked men, and all Panic fears of danger, the Christian Religion was first planted, and the Christian Kirks thereafter reform, & from the condition of the present times, how many from the experience of the tyranny of Prelates, are afraid to discover themselves, lest they be revenged upon them hereafter: Whereas Prelacy being removed, they would openly profess what they are, & join with others in the way of Reformation; All obstacles and difficulties shall be but matter of the manifestation of the power of God, the principal worker, and the means of the greater glory to Your Majesty the prime Instrument. The intermixture of the government of Prelates with the Civil State, mentioned in Your Majesty's Answer to our former Petition, being taken away, and the right Government by Assemblies, which is to be seen in all the Reformed Kirks, and wherein the agreement will be easy, being settled; The Kirk and Religion will be more pure and free of mixture, and the Civil Government more sound and firm; That Government of the Kirk, must suit best with the Civil State, and be most useful for Kings and Kingdoms, which is best warranted by GOD, by whom Kings do reign, and Kingdoms are established; Nor can a Reformation be expected in the Common and ordinary way, expressed also in Your Majesty's Answer. The wisest and most Religious Princes have found it impossible, and implying a repugnancy, since the persons to be reform, and the Reformers, must be divers, and the way of Reformation must be different from the corrupt way, by which defections of Kirk-men, and corruptions in doctrine, worship, & Government have entered into the Kirk. Suffer us therefore (Dread Sovereign) to renew our Petitions for this unity of Religion, and uniformity of Kirk-government, and for a meeting of sound Divines of both Kingdoms, who may prepare matters for Your Majesty's view, and for the examination and approbation of more full Assemblies. The Nationall Assembly of this Kirk, from which we have our Commission, did promise in their thanksgiving for the many favours expressed in Your Majesty's Letter, their best endeavours to keep the people under their charge, in unity and peace, and in loyalty and obedience to Your Majesty and Your Laws, which we confess is a duty well beseeming the preachers of the Gospel: But we cannot conceal, how much both Pastors and People are grieved and disquieted with the late reports of the success, boldness, and strength of Popish forces in Ireland and England, and how much danger from the power of so malicious & bloody Enemies, is apprehended to the Religion & peace of this Kirk & Kingdom, conceived by them to be the spring whence have issued all their calamities and miseries: Which we humbly remonstrate to Your Majesty, as a necessity requiring a General Assembly, & do earnestly supplicate for the presence and assistance of Your Majesty's Commissioner at the day to be appointed, That by universal consent of the whole Kirk, the best course may be taken for the preservation of Religion, and for the averting of the great wrath which they conceive to be imminent to this Kingdom. If it shall please the Lord, in whose hand is the heart of the King, as the rivers of waters to turn it whithersoever he will, to incline Your Majesty's heart, to this through Reformation, no more to tolerate the Mass, or any part of Romish superstition or Tyranny, and to command that all good means be used for the conversion of Your Princely consort the Queen's Majesty, which is also the humble desire of this whole Kirk and Kingdom, Your joint comforts shall be multiplied above the days of Your affliction, to Your incredible joy, Your glory shall shine in brightness above all Your Royal Progenitors, to the Admiration of the World, and the terror of Your Enemies; And Your Kingdoms so far abound in Righteousness, Peace, and Prosperity above all that hath been in former Generations, that they shall say; It is good for us that we have been afflicted. A. Ker Cler. Commiss. Gen. Ass. TO THE HONOURABLE HOUSES of the Parliament of ENGLAND. The Declaration of the Commissioners of the General Assembly of the Kirk of SCOTLAND, from their meeting at Edinburgh. Jan. 4. 1643. THe weighty charge and trust put upon us by the General Assembly of this Kirk, hath given us, the boldness, in this time of so great danger to Religion, to His Majesty's Person, Crown, and Posterity, & to all His Majesty's Dominions, through the insolency and prevailing power of Papists and the Prelatical party, to represent unto His Majesty by supplication, our humble thoughts and desires for a speedy remedy; By disbanding all Papists out of His Army; by calling an Assembly of godly and sound Divines, unto which some of the Commissioners may be sent from the Kirk of Scotland, that by the blessing of GOD upon their labours, the so much desired unity in Religion and Kirk-government, may be brought about and settled in both Kingdoms; and by the faithful using of all good means for the Conversion of the Queen's Majesty to the profession and practice of the true reformed Religion, which we conceive a principal part of the remedy. This Kirk and Kingdom hath the sympathy and fears, but the Houses of Parliament, and the Kingdom of England have the sufferings and sense of these evils; We are in the danger, they in the distress; The miseries are imminent to us, but incumbent upon them: And therefore the Commissioners of the Assembly do only represent their Brotherly and Christian fellow-feeling of the present condition of that Kingdom, and their fears ere it be long, unless the merciful and mighty GOD prevent it by his gracious providence, of the like calamities unto themselves, Together with their earnest prayers for England's deliverance and their own safety: And do earnestly entreat, that the Parliament may be pleased for their part, and so much as in them lieth, speedily to apply the forenamed Remedies; by disbanding Papists, if any be in their Armies, as is alleged in divers Declarations; by the full manifestation and constant prosecution of their desires of unity in Religion and Kirk-government; by their instant and uncessant dealing with His Majesty for calling such an Assembly of Divines; & by their serious thoughts and endeavours about the Queen her conversion, that the high provocation of Idolatry may no more be tolerated in the land: For which ends the Commissioners of the Assembly have sent up for the present with the Lord Chancellor, and others from the Commissioners for conserving of peace, one of their number, a beloved and faithful brother Mr Alexander Henderson, faith fully & fully to express their meaning in the particulars, so far as the wisdom of the Parliament shall judge it convenient to require or demand, and to make report to themselves, and unto the General Assembly (which is to be called upon the occasion of the present exigence and necessity through the danger of Religion) of the principal lets and hindrances of Reformation and unity in Religion, and where the work doth stay. As they do above all other things desire, that against all tentations and opposition, whatsoever may promove or conduce for this blessed Reformation, may from the zeal and by the wisdom of the Houses of Parliament be diligently gone about, without waiting for a more settled condition of the State; so do they nothing doubt but this being done, wrath shall be turned away from the Realm, the brightness of the presence of God, accompanying the Reformation of Religion, shall scatter all the clouds of differences betwixt His Majesty and them, and His powerful providence shall both incline the King's heart to the same Reformation, and to the establishing of their Civil Liberties and Laws, and move the Houses of Parliament after a special manner and in all cheerfulness to manifest their tender and dutiful care of His Majesty's sacred Person, and of His Royal Greatness and Authority, as a principal mean of the Greatness and Prosperity of that, and other His Majesty's Kingdoms, that all bypast: miseries being buried in oblivion, and the present distempers being perfectly cured, the Island of Britain may be an holy and happy Land, wherein GOD may be served according to His Word, the King obeyed according to His Laws, and the people live a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty, to the Admiration of the World, the envy of all wicked and Antichristian enemies, and to the comfort of all that love the Lord Jesus Christ. A. Ker Cler. Commiss. Gen. Ass. The Letter of the Commissioners of the General Assembly, direct to the right reverend their well-known and much approved Brethren of the Ministry of the Kirk of England. Right reverend and dear Brethren, OUr earnest & uncessant desires of unity in Religion, the present distress of England & Ireland, the danger to Religion in all His M ties Dominions, & the fears we have of an universal combustion, universally deserved by our not knowing the time of our visitation, & the things which belong unto our peace, have constrained us with greater liberty then formerly, to solicit his Mty by our supplication, & the honourable houses of Parliament by our Declaration, which we have sent by the hand of our reverend Brother, and much approved Commissioner, Master Alexander Henderson, who will also make known to you our care and diligence to discover and remove such lets and hindrances of the Peace and Union of the two Kingdoms, as by the subtlety and malignance of some few bad Instruments have been cast in the way, that this whole Kirk and Kingdom may be entirely kept in the prosecution of their desires of civil peace and religious unity, wherein (by the mercy of God) we have the happiness that the Lords of Privy Council, and the Commissioners for conserving the Peace betwixt the two Kingdoms, have not denied their honourable help and assistance. Your present sufferings, wherein we your Brethren cannot but have our fellow-feeling, and the late experience of somewhat the like among ourselves, may teach us both, that Satan and his instruments, in whom he now worketh, are in a rage at the Reformation of Religion; nor is it any new or strange thing, that a time of Reformation be a time of trouble and difficulty: But your comfort and ours is, that the Arm of the Lord is not shortened, and that he who is in us, is stronger than he who is in the world. We make no question of your vigilancy, circumspection and faithfulness, & that no present nor future opposition will prevail so far, as to make you either more remiss in your intentions and desires of ordering all things in the House of the God of Heaven, according to his own will & commandment, or so much as to lay aside so great & necessary a Work in expectation of a fit opportunity, & a more peaceable and convenient season. We are very confident, that ye will be steadfast and unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, for as much as ye know your work is not in vain in the Lord. We for our part shall, through the Lord's assistance by our prayers, with Fasting and Humiliation, and by our best endeavours be helpers together for the wished end. At the first Reformation of Religion in this Land, a very small number of Ministers, without the help, and with the contradiction of the world, through the mighty presenee, and blessing of God upon their weak labours, brought the Work at last to perfection: And in the beginnings of our late Reformation, when we were assembled at Glasgow against the Prelacy, the Ceremonies and Service-book, a great part of the Assembly intended no such alteration in the Form of Worship and Kirk-government, as they were moved unanimously to consent unto in the end. When the time of Reformation cometh, the wisdom and spirit of God in his servants, cannot be resisted by the wit and power of man. What although ye should sow, and the Posterity reap? Hath not the Lord sent both you and us to reap that whereon neither of us bestowed any labour? other men laboured, and we are entered into their labours? We of this Island are set upon the stage, at this time, the eyes of all the Reformed Kirks are upon us, we are after a special manner made a spectacle to the World, to Angels, to Men. Our cares must be so to acquit ourselves, that we make not our Friends; the followers of Christ, to mourn; and our enemies, the favourers of Antichrist, to triumph and rejoice: Which that we may do, is, and shall be the prayer of Edinburgh, Jan. 1643. Your most loving Brethren and fellow labourers in the Work of the Lord, the Commissioners of the General Assembly. M. Robert Douglas Moderator. A. Ker Cler. Commiss. Gen. Ass. Commission to M. Alexander Henderson Edinburgh, January 20. 1643. WE the Commissioners of the late General Assembly, having power & commission by all lawful & Ecclesiastic ways, to further this great Work of Union of this Island in Religion and Kirk-government, to continue our own peace at home, & the common peace betwixt the Nations, to keep correspondence with the Kirk of England, to concur with the Council & Conservers of peace at home & abroad in all Ecclesiastic ways, and to send some to present & prosecute their desires & humble advice to the King's Majesty, and the Parliament of England and Ministry there, for the furthering & perfecting of so good & great a work: Considering the necessity at this time of sending some from this Kirk entrusted with commission, to concur with the Commissioners now sent from the Lords, & others of the Commission of Parliament for conserving of peace, to the King's Majesty & Parliament of England, in all lawful & Ecclesiastic ways to promove these good ends, And having certain knowledge of the faithfulness and abilities of our reverend and loving brother Master Alexander Henderson Minister at Edinburgh, Gives therefore unto him by their presents full power and Commission, our express mandate and charge to repair to the Kingdom of England, and there, with concurrence of the said's Commissioners sent from the Conservaters of peace, to present unto the King's Majesty our humble Petition, & to obtain His Majesty's gracious Answer thereunto: and with concurrence foresaid to present unto the Parliament of England our humble Advice & Declaration: and also to deliver to our brethren of the Ministry in that Kirk, our Letter direct to them, And to do all things with concurrence foresaid, or by himself in all lawful and Ecclesiastic ways, for prosecuting and promoving our desires to the King's Majesty, and Parliament, and to our brethren of the Ministry there, for that blessed union of this Island in Religion and Kirk-government according to the Laws and Constitutions of this Kirk: for continuing and establishing a firm peace at home and betwixt the nations, and for a good correspondence betwixt the Kirks within the same, conform to the instructions given, or to be given to him thereanent. The said Master Alexander always giving particular and timous intelligence to us of his travels, and diligence herein till, and of the progress and success thereof by every occasion, and being comptable to us, and the next General Assembly for all his proceed in the matters generally and particularly hereby committed to his trust. A. Ker Cler. Commiss. Gen. Ass. FINIS.