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for us, we may say, Ut ros super herbam, His favour is as the dew upon the grass; Prov. xix. 12: and shall justly shut up, with old David, Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, who hath thus replenished our Throne, as our eyes see it this day; 1 Kings i. 48. And if we do in the joy of our hearts say, Habemus Regem; why should not he, with equal reflection of joyful heart, say, Habemus Subditos. Tribute, honour, fear, prayers, love, life, is not too dear for our Cæsar.

II. This is enough for the Affirmation, Cæsar is our King. The NEGATION follows; We have no King but Cæsar.

The negative, as it is universal, excluding all; so it specially singles out Christ, whom Pilate had lately named for their King. None; therefore not this Jesus: a rebellious protestation, and no better than blasphemy in the mouth of Jews, of Priests: for, could they be ignorant of the kingdom of the Messiah? yea, of this

Messiah?

Was not this King of the Jews Fore-figured by Melchisedec king of Salem? sedeč, we know, is Justice, salem is Peace: the fruit of his Justice is Peace.

Fore-prophesied to be the Prince of Peace? Isaiah ix. 6. the government is upon his shoulder, saith that Evangelical Seer: yea, which of the prophets is silent of this style?

Constituted? Behold, I have set my King upon Sion; Psalm

ii. 6.

Acknowledged by the sages? Where is he, that is born King of the Jews? We have seen his star; Matt. ii. 2.

Ushered in by the angel Gabriel? The Lord shall give him the throne of his father David; Luke i. 32.

Anointed? he is Christus Domini, and Christus Dominus; anointed with the oil of gladness above his fellows.

Proclaimed? Behold, thy King cometh to thee, saith Zachary: Hosannah, Blessed be the Kingdom that comes in the name of the Lord, said the children in the streets.

Enthronized? Thy throne, O God, is for ever, and the sceptre of thy Kingdom is a right sceptre.

Honoured with due homage? The kings of the earth shall bring presents to thee, saith the Psalmist.

And yet this King, thus prefigured, fore-prophesied, constituted, acknowledged, ushered in, anointed, proclaimed, enthronized, adored, is cast off with a Nolumus hunc, No King but Cæsar.

And were they not well served, think we? Did, or could ever, any eye pity them? Because they say, "Christ is not our King, but Cæsar; therefore Christ shall plague them by Cæsar: that very Roman Government, which they honoured in a corrivality and opposition to Christ, shall revenge the quarrel of Christ in the utter subversion of these unthankful rebels. O foolish people and unjust! ye thus requite the Lord? Did he empty himself of his celestial glory, and put on weak manhood and all the symptoms of wretched mortality; and do ye despise him for this mercy? Is he so vile to you, because he was so vile for you? Did his love make him hum

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ble, that his humility should make him contemptible? Did he chuse you out of all the kingdoms of the earth, and do ye wilfully reject him? Hear therefore, ye Despisers, and tremble; hear the just doom of him, who will be your Judge, if he shall not be your Saviour: Those mine enemies, that would not I should reign over them, bring them hither, and slay them before me; Luke xix. 27.

Lord, it is done as thou hast commanded; and yet there is room. Do we think that Christ hath no rebels, but Jews? Would to God, we sinners of the Gentiles had not said, Disrumpamus vincula, Let us break his bonds, and cast his cords from us. What are his bonds, but his laws; his cords, but religious institutions? These fly about men's ears like rotten tow; binding none, but the impotent. The bounds of his Kingdom are the ends of the earth. It is a hard word; yet I must say it: Oh, that there were not more traitors in the world, than subjects! Tell not me what men's tongues say: their lives say loud enough, Nolumus hunc, "Christ is no king for us." Obedience is the true touchstone of loyalty: not protestations; not outward cringes; not disbursement of tribute. We have all solemnly sworn allegiance to the God of Heaven: we are ready to bow at the dear name of Jesus: we stick not, perhaps, to give dientiam bursalem, as Gerson calls it, to God: but, when it comes once to the denial of ourselves, to the mortifying of our corruptions, to the strangling of the children of our own accursed wombs, to the offering up our bodies and souls as a reasonable and lively sa crifice; hic Rhodus, hic saltus.

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Kings rule by their laws. Be not deceived: if slips of weakness mar not our fealty, certainly continuance in wilful sins cannot stand with our subjection. Quomodo legis? How readest thou, then? as our Saviour asks.

What says thy law-giver in Sinai? Thou shalt have no other gods but me: if now thou rear up in thy bosom altars to the Ashtaroth of Honour, to the Tammuz of Lust, to the Mammon of Wealth, thou hast defied Christ for thy King.

God says, Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain: if now thine unhallowed tongue will not be beaten out of the hellish track of oaths, blasphemies, profane scoffs, thou hast defied Christ.

God says, Thou shalt keep holy the Sabbath-day: if now thou shalt spend it altogether upon thyself, or else thinkest, with that wise heathen, thou dost septimam ætatis partem perdere, thou defiest

Christ.

God says, Thou shalt not commit adultery: if now, like an enraged stallion, thou neighest after every object of impure lust, thou

hast defied Christ.

God says, Non in comessationibus et ebrietate, Not in surfeiting and drunkenness: if now we shall pour our health and our reason down our throats, and shall sacrifice our souls to our bellies, what do we say but, Nolumus hunc?

But, Ŏ foolish rebels that we are! do we think thus to shake off the yoke of Christ? In spite of men and devils, he will be their

King, who do most grin and gnash at his Sovereignty. Feel, O ye Wilful Sinners, if ye will not learn, that, as he hath a golden sceptre, Virgam directionis; Psalm xlv. 6: so he hath also an Iron sceptre; Psalm ii. 9. Virgam furoris; Isaiah x. 5. Beauty and Bands; Zech. xi. 10, 14. If ye will not bow under the first, ye must break under the second. He shall break you in pieces like a potter's vessel; to mammocks, to dust. Ye shall find, that the Prince of Darkness can no more avoid his own torment, than he can cease from yours; and every knee, not only in heaven and in earth, but under the earth too, shall mal-grè bow to the name of that Jesus, whom they have scornfully rejected with Nolumus hunc, "Christ is no King to us."

But I persuade myself better things of you all, that hear me this day. There is none of you, I hope, but would be glad to strew his garments, his olive-boughs, yea his myrtles and laurels, yea crown and sceptre, under the feet of Christ, and cry, Hosanna altissimo. Oh then, if you be in earnest, take the Psalmist's counsel; Osculamini filium: give him the kiss of homage, of obedience.

Let me have leave to say, that this charge is there given to the great princes and rulers of the earth: they, who honour others with a kiss of their hand, must honour themselves with the humble kiss of his no power can exempt from this sweet subjection. Ecce serous tuus, Behold, I am thy servant, saith David; yea, and vilior ero, I will be yet more vile for the Lord. Tremble before his footstool, O ye Great Ones, that bindeth Kings with chains and Nobles with fetters of iron; Psalm cxlix. 8. Your very height enforces your obedience: the detrectation whereof hath no other, but, Potentes potenter punientur, "Mighty ones shall be mightily tormented." As an angel of God, so is my lord the king; as that wise Tekoan said. Do ye not see, how awful, how submiss the angels of heaven are? Before his throne, they hide their faces with their wings; and, from his throne, at his command, they wait upon base and sinful flesh. It was a great praise, that was given to Placilla the wife of Theodosius in Theodoret's History; Neque enim imperii principatu extollebatur, &c. "Her throne had not over-carried her thoughts; but enflamed her holy desires the more for the largeness of God's blessing so much more intended her love to the giver." Let me be bold to say, we have seen, we have seen the incomparable favours of God to your Sacred Majesty; we, that were witnesses both of the weakness of your cradle, and the strength of your throne: and what loyal heart did not feel the danger of your late southern voyage, and the safety of your return? Go on happily to fear and honour that God, who hath so blessed you, and us in you. Yield still unto the Son of God the faithful kisses of your reverence, loyalty, observance: he shall return unto you the happy kisses of his Divine Love and Favour; and, after a long and safe protection, the dear embracements of an eternal welcome to Glory.

III. Thus much of the Negation; Christ is not our King. The IMPLICATION follows; Christ is not our King, because Casar is.

The Anabaptist and the Jew are so cross, that I wonder how one Amsterdam can hold them both: the Anabaptist says, " Cæsar is not our King, because Christ is :" the Jew says, "Christ is not our King, because Caesar is:" both of thein equally absurd. Could there be a more ignorant paralogism than this, wherewith the foolish Jews beguiled themselves? as if these two, Christ and Casar, had been utterly incompatible. This senseless misprision was guilty of all the plots against Christ. Herod no sooner hears of a King of the Jews, than he startles up; and is straight jealous of his crown: the Jews hear of a King; and they are jealous of Casar's crown: the Caesars following hear of a King; and they are jealous of the Jews; for, as Suetonius tells us in the Life of Vespasian, Percrebuerat in Oriente toto vetus et constans opinio, esse in fatis ut Judai hoc tempore rerum potirentur; "It was an old and constant conceit all the East over, that the Jews were about this time destined to rule." This was on all hands an ignorant, an injurious scrupulosity. O vain men! could they but have known, that this was he, that truly said, Per me Reges regnant, By me Kings reign, they had concluded, Cæsar could be no king but from him. Earthly jurisdiction is derived from this heavenly. It is he, that makes this, a monarch; that, a prince; that other, a peer: Omnis potestas, All power is given to him both in heaven and earth; and, from him, to men. Cæsar hath his crown from Christ: so far is Christ from pulling the crown from Cæsar.

There were two points of State, which, if they had known, would have secured them from these idle fears; the Subordination, the Diversity of Christ's kingdom and Cæsar's.

Subordination for Christ is the founder of all just sovereignty: he can be no enemy to it. Plainly, Christ is Cæsar's Lord; Cæsar is Christ's Deputy. The deputed power is not against the original; but, as by it, so for it. As Caesar was Christ's Lord in formá servi; (ye know his charge, Give to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's; and the liquid coffer of the sea shall rather yield the Didrachma than he will not pay it, Matt. xvii. 27.) so Christ is Caesar's Lord in the Sovereignty of his Deity: Solus supra Cæsarem Deus, qui fecit Cæsarem; None above Cæsar, but the God that made Casar;" as that Father said. There can be no contrariety in subordination. So is Cæsar to Christ, as earth is to heaven; under, not against it. All the life, and motion, of any earthly creature is from the influences of heaven; without which, this whole globe were nothing but a dull and drossy clod.

And, as here is subordination one way, so Diversity another. Pilate questioned our Saviour punctually of his Kingdom; Art thou a King? He denies not; but distinguishes: My Kingdom is not of this world; John xviii. 36. Lo, Christ's Kingdom was not of this world; Cæsar's, was not of the other: here can be no danger of opposition. Audite Judai, audite gentes, as St. Austin wittily, "Hear, O Jews, hear, O Gentiles: I hinder not your dominion in this world, for mine is of another. Fear not Herod's vain fear, who killed the infants to rid Christ (timendo magis quàm

irascendo crudelior) more cruel in his fear than in his rage. My Kingdom, he says, is not of this world. Oh come then to that kingdom, which is not of this world; come in believing, and do not tyrannize in fearing." Thus he. "This King came not into the world to subdue kings by fighting, but to win them by dying;" Fulgentius well. "Neither doth he take away mortal kingdoms, who gives heavenly;" as the Christian Poet said aright.

Upon both these grounds, therefore, it is a blasphemous inconsequence, "Casar is our king, therefore not Christ:" yea, therefore Cæsar, because Christ. Religion doth not cross policy, but perfects it rather. Give me leave, I beseech you, to press this point a little.

It is religion, that teacheth us, that God hath ordained kingly sovereignty; Rom. xiii. 1: ordained it immediately. That position was worthy of a Red Hat, Potestas Principis dimanavit à populo, Pontificis à Deo, (Bellarm. Recogn.) in the Recognition of the book de Laicis; purposely raised to depress the dignity of kings, to advance the priesthood. I am sure, Samuel (when it was) said, Ecce, prafecit zobis Jehovah Regem; Behold, God hath set a King over you; 1 Sam xii. 13. And Kings are wont to have no less title than Unctus Jehove, the Anointed of the Lord; not unctus populi, the anointed of the people; 1 Sam. xxiv. 6. 2 Sam. i. 14. Daniel could say of God, He removes Kings, and setteth up Kings; Dan. ii. 21. What need I persuade Christian Kings and Princes, that they hold their crowns and sceptres as in fee from the God of Heaven? Cyrus himself had so much divinity; Ezra i. 2.

It is religion, that teaches us, that the same power, which ordained Cæsar, enjoins all faithful subjection to Casar; not for fear, but for conscience; Rom. xiii. 5. Tribute to whom tribute, honour to whom honour; yea, all devout prayers for a Nero himself; 1 Tim. ii. 2: cuibing both the tongue and the heart; Thou shalt not curse the King in thy thoughts, nor the rich in thy bed-chamber; Eccl.. 20.

It is religion, that teaches us, that vengeance shall be sure to follow rebellion; Nuntius crudelis; Prov. xvii. 11: yea, no less than hell and damnation; Rom. xiii. 2.

Cursed be they, that say, religion is only to keep men in awe; and cursed be he, that says, there is any so sure way to keep men in awe as religion. Go, ye Crafty Politics, and rake hell for reasons of State: ye shall once find, that there is no wisdom, nor understanding, nor counsel against the Lord. It was a true and wellgrounded resolution of Constantius, that "they cannot be faithful to their King, who are perfidious to their God.”

Let the great Caesars of the world then know, that the more subject they are to Christ, the more sure they are of the loyalty of their subjects to them. Neither is there, in all the world, any so firm and strait bond to tie the hearts of their people to them, as true religion to God.

To conclude therefore, Christ is not Cæsar's rival, but Cæsar's

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