I HAVE now to show that the grand intention and design of the Solemn League and Covenant was to carry out and maintain the principle of the text. To prove this, a brief historical statement may be necessary. Though Prelacy at first was submitted to in the Church of England, as a mere human expedient, by and by it came to occupy an entirely different position. When an evil principle is once established, its tendency is always from bad to worse. Prelacy—that under the first bishops was submitted to, even by them, as a thing only tolerable—assumed under their successors an attitude essentially intolerant. When the Puritans, enlightened by the Word, found it impossible to take part in a system, that in so many respects departed from the divine model, they were necessarily constrained, in self-defence, for the justification of their own position, to hold up to public view, the contrariety between the government of the National Church, and the government established in the Scripture. To the men who occupied the Episcopal bench, and who were constrained by Queen Elizabeth, much against their own will, to enforce upon those who conscientiously resisted it, the hierarchical system she was determined to uphold, it could never be pleasing to hear themselves arraigned before the nation as persecuting their brethren in behalf of a mere human invention, for their very fidelity to the Word of God. Was it to be supposed, that these high dignitaries would tamely submit to this? But how could they meet the charge? On the principles of the Latimers, the Cranmers, the Hoopers—the martyred bishops of the Church of England—the men who were the glory of that church, it was impossible to meet it. In these circumstances a man was found, who endeavoured, not only to meet the Puritan accusation, but to hurl against the Nonconformists themselves, the charge of rebellion, not merely against an ordinance of man, but against an ordinance of God. This was Bancroft, chaplain of Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, and afterwards, successively, Bishop of London, and Archbishop of Canterbury himself. In a sermon preached at Paul’s Cross, in 1588, he maintained that bishops were a distinct order from presbyters, and had authority over them by divine right, and directly from God. This was entirely new doctrine in the Church of England, and not only alarmed the Puritans, but startled the Episcopalians themselves. Whitgift, the Archbishop himself, though declaring that he believed his chaplain’s sermon had done much good, had yet the candour to confess, that for his own part, “he rather wished than believed his doctrine to be true.”[13] This doctrine once broached, was not allowed to slumber. The furnace of persecution was heated hotter and hotter, till, in the time of Laud, and Charles I., through the unholy alliance between the twin principles of the “right divine of kings to govern wrong,” and the “right divine” of bishops to “lord it over God’s heritage,” all liberty, civil and religious, seemed on the point of becoming extinct. Then the English nation at last became aroused, and acting on the very principle now engrafted into our constitution since the Revolution, that the Sovereign has no more right to violate the constitutional liberties of the people, and the sacred rights of conscience, than the people have to resist the lawful authority of the Sovereign, the high courts of Parliament—Lords and Commons alike—determined to make a stand against the intolerable despotism which the king and his favourite Laud were equally determined to set up. In considering what measures were necessary, to save themselves from tyranny and arbitrary power, the two Houses of Parliament soon found, that reform in the Church was absolutely indispensable. “Petitions,” says Hetherington, in his History of the Westminster Assembly, “were poured into the House of Commons from every part of the country, signed by almost incredible numbers, against the hierarchy; some desiring its reformation, others praying that the whole system might be destroyed. Of the latter kind, that which attracted chief attention, was one from the city of London, signed by about 15,000 persons, and generally termed ‘The Root and Branch Petition,’ on account of one expression in its prayer, viz., ‘That the said government, with all its dependencies, roots, and branches, may be abolished.’” This, at first, met with vigorous resistance. But the subject was fairly mooted. Men, feeling the bitter effects of Prelacy, and fearing what it might still produce, were willing to listen to reason and Scripture. The hierarchy within the walls of Parliament was compared with the Scriptural model, and then it was seen that Dagon could not stand in the presence of the ark of God. Truth triumphed; Episcopacy was abolished; and this was all the more remarkable, from the character of the men who composed that Parliament, of whom Clarendon, the High Church historian himself is constrained to admit, that their original leanings were all in a contrary direction. “As to religion,” says he, “they were all members of the Established Church, and almost to a man for Episcopal government.”[14] Before this measure, however, had passed both Houses, the infatuated King Charles I., had begun to make war upon his own subjects, and in prosecution of his arbitrary and despotic measures, had put himself in such a position of hostility to the Parliament, and its just and necessary efforts for liberty—civil and religious—that there was no alternative for it, but either to resist, or the last vestiges of liberty would have been extinct. In these circumstances, it applied to Scotland for help, in the grand contest that was now waged for all that was dear to freemen and to Protestants. The result of this application was the drawing up of the SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT. At first, some of the English commissioners sought to form only a political alliance. But as religion was foremost and paramount in all the bonds and covenants into which our ancestors had entered, they could not be prevailed upon to form any league, unless the settlement of the Church in both kingdoms, on a Scriptural basis, was made an essential element in the covenant. They had no little encouragement to plead for this, from the steps already taken by the English Parliament. Not only was Episcopacy abolished in England, but shortly before the sending of these commissioners to Scotland, the Westminster Assembly had been called, and the terms of the Ordinance summoning that Assembly expressly bore, that one grand intention was, that such a government might be settled in the Church of England, as “might be most agreeable to God’s Holy Word, and most apt to procure, and preserve the peace of the Church at home, and nearer agreement with the Church of Scotland, and other reformed churches abroad.”[15] These were the express words of the ordinance calling that celebrated Assembly. The Westminster divines were convened to bring the Church of England into the nearest agreement with the Word of God, and the Church of Scotland. There was a blessed harmony between these two objects, thus brought together. Kirkton, the historian, says that even “emulous foreigners were wont to call the Church of Scotland ‘Philadelphia and the Morning Star of the Reformation.’” What was it that gave the Church of our fathers such a beauty in the eyes of strangers, and made even England, with all its wealth and worldly superiority, propose to take the Church of Scotland as a pattern? It was just this, that God had given to our Reformers, when organising the Church in this land, at the very first, the wisdom and the grace, not to “confer with flesh and blood,” but to look only to the Word and Spirit of God for guidance and direction. The way in which John Knox refers to this subject is very striking: “All others—that is realms—however sincere that ever the doctrine be that by some is taught, retain in their churches and the ministry thereof, some footsteps of Antichrist, and some dregs of Popery; but we (all praise to God alone) have nothing within our churches, that ever flowed from that Man of Sin. And this, we acknowledge to be the strength given unto us by God, because we esteemed not ourselves wise in our own eyes, but understanding our whole wisdom to be foolishness before the Lord our God, laid it aside, and followed only that which we found approved by Himself. In this point could never our enemies cause us to faint, for our first petition was, ‘That the reverend face of the Primitive and Apostolic Church should be reduced [restored] again to the eyes and knowledge of men.’ And in that point, we say, our God hath strengthened us, till that the work was finished, as the world may see.”[16] Such are the words of our great reformer. There is a moral glory—there is a spiritual sublimity here, that men should be willing to be nothing, and that God and his Word should be all in all. This was what made Scotland’s Church great in the eyes of impartial strangers. This was the foundation of all the greatness of the Church of our fathers. This was what made the English Parliament, when in earnest on the subject of religion, look to it with a reverent and wistful eye.
As the very intention of calling the Westminster Assembly was to bring the two Churches of England and Scotland nearer to one another, on the foundation of God’s Word, the English Commissioners were not difficult to persuade to agree to such an alliance as Scotland desired. The Solemn League and Covenant was then brought forward, having been drawn up by the celebrated Alexander Henderson, then, for the third time, Moderator of the General Assembly. “Henderson,” says the younger M’Crie, “presented the draught of one which he had composed, to a meeting of the three Committees, from the Parliament of England, the Scottish Convention of Estates, and the General Assembly, which, after some slight alterations, they adopted. On the Moderator producing it before the Assembly, the effect was electrifying. ‘When the draught was read to the General Assembly,’ says Robert Blair, who witnessed the scene, ‘our smoking desires for uniformity did break forth into a vehement flame, and it was so heartily embraced, and with such a torrent of affectionate expressions, as none but eye and ear witnesses can conceive. When the vote of some old ministers was asked, their joy was so great, that tears did interrupt their expression.’ The covenant was received with the same cordiality by the Convention of Estates.”[17] If the circumstances in which this religious covenant was agreed to by the English Commissioners be considered, it will not seem anywise surprising that it was welcomed with such tears of joy by the Church and nation of Scotland. Just two years before, in 1641, the Irish massacre had taken place, in which above 100,000 Protestants had been butchered in cold blood by the Irish Papists. The faithful men in the Scottish Church, who had suffered so much from the attempts of James VI., and his son Charles, to enforce Prelacy upon themselves, and who had seen, with alarm, how spiritual and temporal despotism had for long years been carrying all before it in England, now beheld the Episcopal nation of England itself, by its appointed Commissioners, expressing its desire for a firm and intimate union with them on the platform of Scriptural principle. Thus, there was the prospect of union in the truth—union such as had never been seen before, between the two nations, which might enable them to resist with success, not only the bloody attempts of Rome, of which they had just witnessed so terrible an example, but the insidious despotism of a semi-Popish Prelacy. Well, therefore, might the venerable fathers of the Scottish Church give vent to their feelings of delight—well might they say, “This is the doing of the Lord, and it is wondrous in our eyes.”
Thus was it in Scotland. How was the Solemn League and Covenant received, when carried by the Commissioners to England? With equal enthusiasm and unanimity. In the Westminster Assembly, it was read over, clause by clause, and explanations given, where it appeared of doubtful import, till the whole received the sanction of the Assembly. It was then considered by the Parliament; and then by the joint authority of Parliament and the Assembly it was appointed that the Covenant should be publicly taken by these bodies, on the 25th of September. “On that day, accordingly,” says Hetherington, “the House of Commons, with the Assembly of Divines, and the Scottish Commissioners, met in the Church of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, and the Rev. Mr. White of Dorchester, one of the assessors, commenced the solemnity with prayer. Mr. Nye then addressed the dignified and grave audience, in a speech of an hour’s duration, pointing out the Scripture authority of such covenants, and the advantage of which they had been productive to the Church of God in all ages. Mr. Henderson, Moderator of the Scottish Assembly, followed him, in a speech; considerably shorter, but of great dignity and power. Mr. Nye then read it (the Covenant) from the pulpit, slowly, and aloud, pausing at the close of every article, while the whole audience of statesmen and divines arose, and, with their right hands held up to heaven, worshipped the great name of God, and gave their sacred pledge. Then the Members of the House of Commons subscribed the Covenant on one roll of parchment, and the Assembly on another; and when this was done, the solemn scene was closed by praise and prayer to that omniscient God, to whom they had lifted up their hands, and made their vows.”[18] In the House of Lords, on a subsequent day, a similar scene was presented, and the congregations in and around London generally, followed the same example.
Thus was the Solemn League and Covenant entered into between the two nations. It was a great and sublime deed. Justly did Alexander Henderson say of it, in his speech in the Westminster Assembly: “Had the Pope at Rome, the knowledge of what is doing this day in England, and were this Covenant written on the plaster of the wall over against him, where he sitteth Belshazzar-like in his sacrilegious pomp, it would make his heart to tremble, his countenance to change, his head and mitre to shake, his joints to loose, and all his Cardinals and Prelates to be astonished.”[19]
When we look at the terms of the Covenant itself, and the objects it was designed to accomplish and secure, surely we may see that this language of our great divine was fully justified. The Covenant bound the contracting parties, 1.—First to do what in them lay to preserve the reformed religion in the Church of Scotland, in doctrine, worship, discipline, and government, which doctrine, discipline, government and worship that Church had sought simply and solely in the Word of God. 2.—It bound them to seek the Reformation of religion in the kingdoms of England and Ireland, not in doctrine only, but also in “worship, discipline, and government, according to the Word of God, and the example of the best Reformed Churches.” After what we have seen of the extent and meaning of the text, who can doubt, but that this was dutiful and right, and that those who possessed the high privilege of a Scripturally-constituted Church-as Scotsmen did—were bound by the law of Christian love, to do what in them lay, by all lawful means, to extend the same blessing to others, and especially to those who were constituent parts of the same kingdom as themselves. In consistency with this, they were of course bound to “endeavour the extirpation of Popery and Prelacy.” This by some has been perversely represented, as if they engaged to “extirpate” by violence, Papists and Prelatists. But the wording of the solemn deed is expressly framed to cut off the possibility of any such interpretation; for, after pledging themselves to “endeavour the extirpation of Popery and Prelacy,” they add—“That is, church-government by Archbishops, Bishops, &c.,” clearly showing, that it was not persons, but systems, that they were to endeavour to “extirpate.”' And surely, all who admit that Prelacy, as well as Popery, is a “plant that our heavenly Father hath not planted,” must equally admit, that it ought by all proper means to be “rooted up.” 3.—Further, in accordance with the grand design of. Scriptural reform, the Covenanters bound themselves “to seek to bring the churches of God in the three kingdoms, to the nearest conjunction and uniformity of religion, that they, and their posterity after them, might, as brethren, live in faith and love, and the Lord might delight to dwell in the midst of them.” The very idea of seeking to bring the churches in these realms into any measure of uniformity in religion is now very generally thought to be utterly Quixotic and absurd. But why should it be so? We have the example of such a uniformity in the Pentecostal Church, when the “multitude of them that believed were of one heart and once soul.” (Acts 4:32.) We have the express command, to seek not merely a unity of love, but a uniformity of sentiment. “I beseech you brethren,” says Paul, “by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye all speak the same things, and that there be no divisions among you, but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment.” (1 Cor. 1:10.) We have the assurance that the Great Intercessor continually pleads before the eternal throne for this very thing. Thus runs his sublime intercession—“Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word, that they all may be one.” These words have often been perverted—often been misunderstood; but a glance at their connection will show their real meaning. What is the example—the standard of the unity—for which the glorious Intercessor prays? The example—the standard—is the unity among the divine persons of the Godhead. “That they all may be one, as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us.” (John 17:20,21.) Is the union in the Godhead a mere union of affection, with a toleration of diversity of sentiment? Is it not also a union of the most perfect understanding? Such, then, is the union for which Christ pleads; and what he prays for, the infallible Word of prophecy tells us, shall be accomplished. However unlikely it may now appear, with the Church broken into fragments, it is written, that on this distracted earth, “the watchmen” on the wails of Zion shall yet “see eye to eye”—“shall lift up the voice” together, and “together shall they sing;” (Isaiah 52:8,) and that the time is coming, when through all the world, “there shall be one Lord, and his name one.” (Zech. 14:9.) And is there anything really incredible in this? What is it that is the real cause of the strifes and dissentions, that so lamentably abound among professing Christians? Is it because the Bible is so obscure, and it is so difficult for an honest mind to ascertain the mind and will of God, in regard to faith and practice? No. The same cause principally operates here, as in regard to physical strife. “Whence come wars and fightings among you?” asks the apostle James; “Come they not hence, even of your lusts, that war in your members?” It is the “lusts that war in the members,” that send up those steams, that darken the mental eye to the plainest truths of God’s Word, and rend the Church asunder by “emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies,” which are divinely declared to be “works of the flesh.” (Gal. 5:19,20.) Let these “lusts that war in the members” be subdued, by a gracious revival being vouchsafed, by the Holy Spirit being poured down in rich effusion from on high, and men would be amazed to see how soon the strifes would cease; how rapidly differences would disappear; how “in God’s light, they would see light” clearly. Now, if the Lord commands that his people should “all speak the same things, and be perfectly joined together, in the same mind, and the same judgment”—if Christ prays for this, and “the mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” that that prayer shall be fulfilled, why should it be thought Quixotic—why should it be regarded as absurd, to labour by all due and appointed means, to bring about such a conjunction and “uniformity” among the true Churches of God? 4.—The Covenant bound those who entered it, to do what in them lay “to preserve the rights and liberties of the Parliaments, and the liberties of the Kingdoms, and to preserve and defend the King’s person and authority, in the preservation and defence of the true religion, and liberties of the kingdoms.” It is the command of God, that those who “fear God” should “honour the king;” but there is no command, to a people who have constitutional liberty, to allow any king to set himself above all law, to extinguish religious liberty, and to oppress his subjects. On the contrary, the whole tenor and spirit of God’s Word is, that those who have religious liberty, hold it fast, and do not let it go, let who will endeavour to wrest it from them. This part of the Covenant, then, is in perfect harmony with the Word, and this part of it is, in point of fact, the fundamental principle of the Revolution settlement—the foundation on which our national liberties at present rest.
5. There is just one other point which demands attention. The clause that speaks about “endeavouring to discover malignants,” and to “bring them to condign punishment,” has stumbled not a few, in modern times. But, historically viewed, why should it? The king was at that time at war with the nation; and the “malignants” were those who were illegally aiding and abetting him in overthrowing the constitution. These men were justly obnoxious to punishment. Then, there was nothing at all inquisitorial intended: for, in the oath which the English members of Parliament swore, which must be held to explain the terms used in the covenant, the words run thus: “BY ALL GOOD WAYS AND MEANS endeavour” to bring them to “condign punishment.”[20] Finally, the clause referred to in connection with the Covenant, has no practical bearing at the present moment. The civil magistrate does not now own the Covenanted Reformation, as such, and, consequently, no transgressors of it can be given up to him for punishment. When the nation again shall put itself under the Covenant, the principle, of course, will again come into force. But that principle just amounts to this—that, when that great Reformation shall be attained, when the Constitution, in Church and State, shall be brought into harmony with the Word of God, those who are bound by the Covenant shall jealously seek to hold fast what they have attained; and shall, “by all good ways and means,” seek to “bring to condign punishment” those who may be found imitating the partizans of Charles I., and endeavouring illegally to overthrow that constitution.
These, then, were the ends and objects for which the Solemn League and Covenant was sworn. And who will say that these were not high and glorious ends, worthy of God-fearing nations to covenant about? If these objects were lawful and Scriptural, and of a permanent nature, then, on the principle of the permanent obligation of national covenants, which has been proved in a previous lecture,[21] the Solemn League and Covenant is binding still. It will not do to say, that there was something wrong in the means employed for the accomplishment of these ends. If this were the case, it would only show that such means may not be employed again. But it does not show that the covenant itself is void.[22] In its substance, that covenant was eminently Scriptural; and, if it had been faithfully observed, it tended to bring “glory to God in the highest, and peace on earth, and good will to men.”