[ p6 J 2. And he confefieth' that Laud durfl: not put his Caufe to a ·convoca cion ,. becaufe fo final! a rNumber there \Vere for him. . 3· And to this day the Church or· Parliament hc;ve not revoked tt~ e Homilies, Articles, Liturgy, · Apology, or any of the WTritings of the Bia1ops and Docl:ors aforefaid , , who have written againit Popery. 4· And excellent Writings have all along to this day been Publiilied by the Church Doctors againft all fuch Confederacies with Papifts ; ,fuch ·as Dr. Stillintfleet, (who though to pleafe his Su– periors he defended Laud, yet defended not all that he JSlid .or did) Dr. More, ' Dr. Ti!lot[on, Dr. Tennifon, Bi{hop Th. Bar!ow, Mr. W4~e, yea, even Henry Fo'wlis , and many more ; But above all, Dr. Ifaac Ba;-row of the Supremacy, unanfwe– rably, thm1gh S. Park§r had Confidence enough to pretend aConfutation. § 3. The Endeavours for aCoalition that were publickly attempted in Scotland, Ireland and Eng– land, by Laud and his Agents, have been fo volu– minoufly written of, Accufed and Condemned in Par\iaments, and his own Death, and the long · Wars and all the FraCtures that have followed, – were fo tTuch ' of the Con[equents, that to fay more of this is Vain. Dr. Pet. Heylin's Life of . Lcmd doth ackn6wledge and jufiifie ail. And Prin's Hifiory of Laud's Tryal1argelyopenetl1 it. · § 4· \!Vhen the Parliaments and Scots Oppoii 4 tion, and the enfning Civil War had broken this ~ 'Defign, and the Bloody J\r1affacre in Ireland haci rendred Popery more odious· and dreadful th;m all Arguments could do (before our War here) the Parliament,that had before the 'Nar, begu~ t;o ~ ·. · · Purge
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