Iltory ofthe Puritans, examin'd. 393 Sedgwick's Thankfgiving-Sermon, before the Commons, April 19. 1644, P. 21, ' What a fad thing is it, my Brethren, to fee our , King at the head ofan Army of Babylonians, re- , fufirs to be called Kingof England, Scotland, and Ireland, chuffing rather to be called King of Ba- bylon?' Cafe's Thankfgiving-Sermon, before the Com- mons, Auguft 22. 1645. p. 18. [Member of the Af ernbly.] The Pfalmill takes notice what God doth, in A breaking the Power of mighty Princes, turn'd .Oppreffors and Tyrants, in making them, Cain like, Vagabonds, to wander up and down in detail and hungry Places. Cafe's Thankfgiving-Sermon, Feb. 19. 1645. p. 2. It werea fad thing, that the Strong Holds of the ç Kingdom, Ihould be taken for God, andkept for ' the Devil.' Ibid. p. 31. Here you fee was Pharaoh, and all his malig- n int Courtiers andSub]ec`Is oppofing andobftrud- 6 ing Ifrael's Deliverance : yea, when they had got loofe, arming all the Militia of Egypt, and put- ' ting them in array to reduce Ifrael again into their , old Servitude and Bondage. And I with he had ' been the laft Pharaoh, who was drown'd in the 5 Red-Sea. There arofe up after him Pharaohs in every Age of the Church, that knew not the Lord.' Cafe's Faft-Sermon before the Peers, Marcb 26. 1646. p. 8. entitled, The Set-Backs of Reformation. You fhall find, that the want of due Execu- c Lion upon Delinquents, has obftru&ed, if not dallied hopeful beginnings in the Church's Deli- verance. Saul fpares Agag, and 'tis a prefent flop in the Work ; and had like to have been the at ter
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