May, 1657
[25 May, 1657.]
We the Knights, Citizens, and Burgesses in this present Parliament assembled, taking into our most serious consideration the
present State of the three Nations, joyned and united under
your Highness Protection, cannot but in the first place with all
thankfulness acknowledge the wonderfull mercy of Almighty
God, in delivering us from that Tyranny and Bondage, both in
our Spiritual and Civil Concernments, which the late King and
his Party designed to bring us under, and pursued the effecting
thereof by a long and bloody war; And also that it hath pleased
the same gracious God to preserve your person in many battels,
to make you an Instrument for preserving our Peace, though
environed with Enemies abroad, and filled with turbulent, restless,
and unquiet Spirits in our own Bowels, that as in the treading
down the common Enemy, and restoring us to Peace and
Tranquillity, the Lord hath used you so eminently, and the
worthy Officers and Souldiers of the Army (whose faithfulness
to the Common Cause, we and all good men shall ever
acknowledge, and put a just value upon) So also that he will use
you and them in the setling and securing our Liberties as we are
Men and Christians, to us and our Posterity after us, which are
those great and glorious ends which the good people of these
Nations have so freely, with the hazard of their Lives and
Estates, so long and earnestly contended for: We consider
likewise the continual danger which your Life is in, from
the bloody Practises both of the malignant and discontented
Party (one whereof through the goodness of God, you have been
lately delivered from) it being a received Principle amongst them,
that no Order being setled in your Life time for the succession
in the Government, nothing is wanting to bring us into blood
and confusion, and them to their desired ends, but the destruction of your Person; And in case things should thus remain at
your Death, we are not able to express what Calamities would in
all humane probability ensue thereupon, which we trust your
Highness (as well as we) do hold your self obliged to provide
against, and not to leave a people, whose common Peace and
Interest you are intrusted with, in such a condition as may
hazard both, especially in this Conjuncture, when there seems to
be an opportunity of coming to a settlement upon just and legal
Foundations: Upon these considerations, we have judged it a
duty incumbent upon us, to present and declare these our most
just and necessary desires to your Highness.
1. That your Highness will be pleased by and under the Name
and Stile of Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England,
Scotland and Ireland, and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging, to hold and exercise the Office of chief Magistrate
of these Nations, and to Govern according to this Petition and
Advice in all things therein contained, and in all other things
according to the Laws of these Nations, and not otherwise: That
Your Highness will be pleased during Your life time, to appoint
and Declare the Person who shall, immediately after Your Death,
Succeed You in the Government of these Nations.
2. That Your Highness will for the future be pleased to call
parliaments consisting of Two Houses (in such manner as shal
be more particularly afterwards agreed and declared in this Petition and Advice) once in three years at furthest, or oftner, as the
Affairs of the Nation shall require, that being your great Council,
and in whose affection and advice, Your self and this People will
be most safe and happy.
3. That the ancient and undoubted Liberties and Priviledges
of Parliament (which are the birth-right and inheritance of the
people, and wherein every man is interessed,) be preserved and
maintained; and that you will not break or interrupt the same,
nor suffer them to be broken or interrupted; and particularly, that
those persons who are legally chosen by a free Election of the
people to serve in Parliament, may not be excluded from sitting
in Parliament to do their duties, but by judgement and consent
of that House whereof they are Members.
4. That those who have advised, assisted or abetted the Rebellion of Ireland, and those who do or shall profess the Popish
Religion, be disabled and made uncapable for ever to be elected
or to give any Vote in the election of any Member to sit or serve
in Parliament; and that all and every person and persons who
have aided, abetted, advised or assisted in any war against the
Parliament, since the First day of Jan. 1641 (unless he or they have
since borne Arms for the Parliament or Your Highness, or otherwise given signal testimony of his or their good affection to the
Commonwealth, and continued faithfull to the same) and all such
as have been actually engaged in any Plot, Conspiracy, or Design
against the Person of Your Highness, or in any Insurrection
or Rebellion in England or Wales since the 16. day of December
1653. shall be for ever disabled and made uncapable to be elected,
or give any Vote in the Election of any Member to sit or serve in
Parliament. That for Scotland none be capable to elect, or to be
elected to sit or serve in Parliament, who have been in Arms
against the Parliament of England, or against the Parliament in
Scotland before the 1 day of April, 1648. (except such as have
since born Arms in the service of the Parliament of England or
Your Highness, or given other signal testimony of their good
affection) nor any that since the 1. day of April, 1648. have
been in Arms, or otherwise aided, abetted, advised or assisted in
any war against the Parl. of England or Your Highness, except
such as since the 1. day of March, 1651. (Old style) have lived
peaceably and thereby given testimony of their good affection to
the Parliament and Your Highness.
Provided, That nothing in this Article contained, shall extend
to put any incapacity upon any English or Scotch Protestants in
Ireland, either to elect or to be elected to serve in Parliament who
before the 1. day of March, 1649. have born Arms for the Parliament or Your Highness, or otherwise given signal testimony of
their good affection to this Commonwealth, and continued faithfull to the same; That all Votes and Elections, given or made
contrary, or not according to the qualifications aforesaid, shall be
void and of none effect; and that if any persons or persons so uncapable as aforesaid, shall give his or their Vote for election of
Members to serve in Parliament; all and every such person and
persons so electing, shall lose and forfeit one years value of his
and their respective real Estates, and one full third third part of
his and their respective personal Estates, The one Moyety thereof
to your Highness, and the other Moyety to him or them who
shall sue for the same in any Court of Record, by Action of Debt,
Bill, Plaint or Information, wherein no Essoign, Wager of Law, or
Protection, shall be allowed, And that the persons who shall be
elected to serve in Parliament, be such, and no other then such,
as are persons of known Integrity, fearing God, and of good conversation, and being of the age of Twenty one years, and not such
as are disabled by the Act of the 17th Year of the late King, Entituled, An Act for disabling all persons in holy Orders, to exercise
any temporal Jurisdiction or Authority, nor such as are publique
Ministers, or Publique Preachers of the Gospel. Nor such as are
guilty of any of the offences mentioned in an Act of Parliament
bearing date the 9th of August, 1650, Entituled, An Act against
several Atheistical, Blasphemous, and Execrable opinions derogatory to the honour of God, and destructive to humane society;
No common Scoffer nor Reviler of Religion, or of any person or
persons for possessing thereof; no person that hath married or
shall marry a wife of the Popish Religion, or hath trained or
shall train up his child or children, or any other child or children
under his tuition or government, in the Popish Religion, or that
shall permit or suffer such child or children to be trained up in
the said Religion or that hath given or shall give his consent
that his son or daughter shall marry any of that Religion; no
person that shall deny the Scriptures to be the word of God, or
the Sacraments, Prayer, Magistracy and Ministery to be the Ordinances of God, no common prophaner of the Lords day, no
prophane Swearer or Cursers, no Drunkard or common haunter
of Taverns or Alehouses.
And that these qualifications may be observed, and yet the
Priviledge of Parliament maintained, We desire that it may be
by Your Highness consent Ordained, That Forty one Commissioners be appointed by Act of Parliament, who, or any fifteen or
more of them, shall be authorized to Examine and Try whether the
Members to be elected for the House of Commons in future
Parliaments be capable to sit, according to the Qualifications
mentioned in this Petition and advice; And in case they finde
them not qualified accordingly, then to suspend them from sitting until the House of Commons shall upon yearing of their
particular cases admit them to sit; which Commissioners are
to stand so authorized for that end, until the House of Commons
in any future Parliament shall Nominate the like Number of other
Commissioners in their places; And those other Commissioners so
to be nominated in any future Parliament, to have the same Powers
and authorities: That the said Commissioners shall certifie in
Writing to the House of Commons, on the first day of their meeting
the Causes and Grounds of their Suspensions of any persons
so to be elected as aforesaid: That the Accusation shall be upon
the Oath of the Informer, or of some other person, That a Copy
of the Accusation shall be left by the party accusing, In Writing
under his Hand, with the party accused, or, in his absence, at his
House, in the County, City, or Town for which he shall be chosen,
if he have any such House, or if not, with the Sheriff of the
County, if he be chosen for a County, or with the Chief Magistrate
of the City or Borough for which he is chosen: And that the
number of persons to be Elected and chosen to sit and serve in
Parliament, for England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the distribution of the persons so chosen within the Counties, Cities and
Boroughs of them respectively, may be according to such propositions as shall be agreed upon and declared in this present Parliament.
5. That Your Highness will consent, That none be called to
sit and Vote in the other House, but such as are not disabled,
but qualified according to the qualifications mentioned in the
former Article, being such as shall be nominated by Your Highness, and approved by this House, and that they exceed not
Seventy in number, nor be under the number of Fourty (whereof the Quorum to be one and twenty) who shall not give any
Vote by Proxies: And that as any of them do dye, or be Legally
removed, no new ones be admitted to sit and Vote in their rooms,
but by consent of the House itself. That the other House do
not proceed in any Civil Causes, except in Writs of Errour, in Cases
adjourned from Inferiour Courts into the Parliament for difficulty,
in Cases of Petitions against proceedings in Courts of Equity, and
in Cases of the Priviledges of their own House: That they do
not proceed in any Criminal Causes whatsoever, against any
person criminally, but upon an Impeachment of the Commons
assembled in Parliament, and by their consent: That they do not
proceed in any Cause, either Civil or Criminal, but according to
the known Lawes of the Land, and the due course and custome
of Parliament; That no final Determinations or Judgements be
by any Members of that House, in any Cause there depending
either Civil, Criminal or Mixt, as Commissioners or Delegates, to
be nominated by that House; But all such final determinations
and Judgements to be by the House itself, any Law or Usage to
the contrary notwithstanding.
6. That in all other particulars which concern the calling and
holding of Parliaments, Your Highness will be pleased, That the
Lawes and Statutes of the Land be observed and kept; And
that no Lawes be altered, suspended, abrogated or repealed, or
new Law made, but by Act of Parliament.
7. And to the end there may be a constant Revenue for
Support of the Government, and for the Safety and Defence
of these Nations by Sea and Land; We Declare Our willing
ness to Settle forthwith a Yearly Revenue of Thirteen hundred
thousand Pounds, whereof Ten hundred thousand Pounds for
the Navy and Army, and Three hundred thousand pounds for
the Support of the Government, and no part thereof to be
raised by a Land Tax; And this not to be altered without the
consent of the Three Estates in Parliament: And to grant such
other Temporary Supplies, according as the Commons assembled
in Parliament shall from time to time adjudge the necessities of
these Nations to require; And do pray Your Highness, that it be
Enacted and Declared, that no Charge be laid, nor no person be
compelled to contribute to any Gift, Loan, Benevolence, Tax,
Tallage, Aid or any other like charge without common consent
by Act of Parliament which is a freedome the people of these
Nations ought by the Laws to inherit.
8. That none may be admitted to the Privy Council of
Your Highness or Successors, but such as are of known Piety,
and undoubted affection to the Rights of these Nations, and a
just Christian Liberty in matters of Religion, nor without consent
of the Council to be afterwards approved by both Houses of Parliament, and shall not afterwards be removed, but by consent of
Parliament, but may in the Intervals of Parliament be suspended
from the Exercise of his place by your Highness, by your Successors and the Council, for just cause; and that the number of
the Council shall not be above One and twenty, whereof the
Quorum to be Seven, and not under: As also that after your
Highness Death, the Commander in Chief under Your Successors,
of such Army or Armies as shall be necessary to be kept in
England, Scotland, or Ireland, as also all such Field-Officers at
Land, or Generals at Sea, which after that time shall be newly
made and constituted by Your Successours, be by consent of the
Council, and not otherwise:
And that the standing Forces of his Commonwealth shall be
disposed of by the Chief Magistrate, by consent of both Houses
of Parliament, sitting the Parliament: and in the Intervals of
Parliament, by the Chief Magistrate, by the Advice of the Council;
And also that Your Highness and Successours will be pleased to
exercise Your Government over these Nations by the Advice of
Your Council.
9. And that the Chancellour, Keeper, or Commissioners
of the Great Seal of England, the Treasurer or Commissioners
of the Treasury therr, the Admiral, the Chief Governour of
Ireland, the Chancellor, Keeper, or Commissioners of the Great
Seal of Ireland, the Chief Justices of both the Benches, and
the Chief Baron in England and Ireland, the Commander in
Chief of the Forces in Scotland, and such Officers of State there,
as by Act of Parliament in Scotland, are to be approved by Parliament, and the Judges in Scotland hereafter to be made, shall
be approved of by both Houses of Parliament.
10. And whereas Your Highness out of your zeal to the
glory of God, and the propagation of the Gospel of the Lord
Jesus Christ, hath been pleased to encourage a Godly Ministry
in these Nations, we earnestly desire, that such as do openly
revile them or their Assemblies, or disturb them in the Worship
or Service of God, to the dishonour of God, scandal of good men,
or breach of the Peace, may be punished according to Law and
where the Lawes are defective, that Your Highness will give
consent to such Lawes as shall be made in that behalf.
11. That the true Protestant Christian Religion,
as it is contained in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and
New Testament, and no other, be held forth and asserted
for the publique profession of these Nations: And that
a Confession of Faith, to be agreed by Your Highness and the
Parliament, according to the Rule and Warrant of the Scriptures, be asserted, held forth, and recommended to the people
of these Nations, That none may be suffered or permitted,
by opprobrious Words or Writing, Maliciously or Contemptuously
to Revile or Reproach the Confession of Faith to be agreed
upon as aforesaid: And such who profess Faith in God the
Father, and in Jesus Christ his Eternal Son, the true
God, and in the Holy Spirit, God co-equal with the Father
and the Son, one God blessed for ever, and do acknowledge the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament,
to be the Revealed Will and Word of God, and shall in
other things differ in Doctrine, Worship or Discipline,
from the Publique Profession held forth: Endeavours shall
be used to Convince them by sound Doctrine, and the example
of a good Conversation: But that they may not be compelled
thereto by Penalties, nor restrained from their Profession,
but protected from all Injury and Molestation in the Profession of the Faith, and Exercise of their Religion, whilest
they abuse not this Liberty to the Civil Injury of others,
or the Disturbance of the Publique Peace; So that this
Liberty be not extended to Popery or Prelacy, or to the Countenancing such, who publish horrid Blasphemies, or practice
or hold forth Licentiousness or Prophaneness under the
Profession of Christ; And that those Ministers or Publique Preachers, who shall agree with the publique Profession
aforesaid in matters of Faith, although in their Judgement
and Practice they differ in matters of Worship and Discip
line shall not onely have protection in the way of their
Churches and Worship respectively, but be esteemed fit
and capable, notwithstanding such difference (being otherwise
duly Qualified and duly Approved) of any Trust, Promotion
or Imployment whatsoever in these Nations, that any Ministers who agree in Doctrine, Worship and Discipline with
the Publique Profession aforesaid are capable of; And all
others who agree with the publique Profession in matters of
Faith, although they differ in matters of Worship and Discipline as aforesaid, shall not onely have Protection as aforesaid, but be esteemed fit and capable (notwithstanding such
difference, being otherwise duly Qualified) of any Civil Trust,
Imployment or Promotion in these Nations: But for such
persons who agree not in matters of Faith with the publique Profession aforesaid, they shall not be capable of receiving the publick maintenance appointed for the ministery.
Provided, That this Clause shall not be construed to
extend to such Ministers or publique Preachers, or Pastors
of Congregations: But that they be disenabled, and that
they are hereby disenabled to hold any Civil Imployment
which those in Orders were or are Disenabled to hold,
by an Act, Entituled, An Act for Disenabling all persons
in Holy Orders, to exercise any Temporal Jurisdiction or
Authority. And that Your Highness will give Your
Consent, That all Laws, Statutes, Ordinances and Clauses
in any Law, Statute and Ordinance, so far as they are
contrary to the aforesaid Liberty, be Repealed.
12. That all Acts and Ordinances of Parliament made
for the abolishing of Archbishops and Bishops, and for the
abolishing of Deans, Deans and Chapters, Canons, Prebends, and other Offices, and Titles, of, or belonging to
any Cathedral, or Colegiate Church or Chappel, and for
the sale or other disposition of the Lands, Rents and
Hereditaments, unto any or either of them belonging, or
for the sale or other disposition of the Lands, Rents, and Hereditaments of the Late King, Queen, or Prince; or of the Lands of
Delinquents, Fee-farm, or other Rents, Forest-Lands, or any of
them; Or any other Lands, Tenements, Rents, or Hereditaments,
lately belonging to the Commonwealth, shall no way be
impeached, but that they do remain good and firm; And
that the security given by Act and Ordinance of Parliament,
for any sum or sums of monies, by any of the said Lands,
the Excise, or by any other Publique Revenue; and also
the Securities given by the Publique Faith of the Nation,
and the engagement of the Publique Faith for satisfaction
of Debts, may remain firm and good, and not be made
void by any pretence whatsoever.
13. That all and every person and persons, who have Aided,
Abetted, Advised, or Assisted in any War against the Parliament, since the first day of January, 1641 (unless he or they
have since born Arms for the Parliament, or your Highness, or
otherwise given signal testimony of his or their good affection
to the Commonwealth, and continued faithfull to the same) and
all such as have been actually engaged in any Plot, Conspiracy
or Design, against the person of your Highness, or in any Insurrection or Rebellion, in England or Wales, or against the Parliament in Scotland, since the sixteenth of December, 1653. And
for Scotland, that all and every person or persons, who have been
in Armes against the Parliament of England, or against the
Parliament in Scotland, before the first day of April, 1648;
(except such as have since born Armes in the service of the Parliament of England, or your Highness, or given other signal
testimony of their good affection) and every person or persons,
that since the said first day of April, 1648, have been in Armes, or
otherwise aided, abetted, advised, or assisted in any War against
the Parliament of England, or your Highness (except such
persons who having been in Armes, or otherwise aided, abetted,
advised, or assisted in any War against the Parliament of
England, or your Highness, since the first day of April, 1648, and
were not in Arms against the Parliament of England, or against
the Parliament of Scotland, before the first day of April, 1648,
and have since the first day of March, 1651 (Old style) lived
peaceably, and thereby given testimony of their good affection
to the Parliament, and your Highness), be made uncapable for
ever, of holding or enjoying of any Office or Place of Publique
Trust, in these three Nations, or any of them.
Provided, that nothing in this Article contained, shall extend
to put any incapacity in this Article mentioned, upon any
English or Scotch Protestants in Ireland, who, before the first
day of March, 1649, have born Arms for the Parliament, or
your Highness, or otherwise given signal testimony of their
good affection to this Commonwealth, and continued faithfull
to the same.
14. And that your Highness will be pleased to consent, that
nothing in this Petition and Advice contained, nor your Highness assent thereto, shall be construed to extend to the dissolving of this present Parliament, but that the same shall continue
and remain, untill such time as your Highness shall think fit to
dissolve the same.
16. And that nothing contained in this Petition and Advice,
nor your Highness consent thereunto, shall be construed to
extend to the repealing or making void of any Act or Ordinance,
which is not contrary hereunto, or to the matters herein
contained, but that the said Acts and Ordinances not contrary
hereunto, shall continue and remain in force, in such manner
as if this present Petition and Advice had not at all been had
or made, or your Highness consent thereunto given.
17. And that all Writs issued out of the Chancery, and all
Writs and Patents of the Justices of the one Bench, and of the
other, Barons of the Exchequer, Commissions of Oyer and
Terminer, Goal-delivery and Justices of the Peace, And all
other Commissions, Patents, and Grants, made and passed
under the Great Seal of England, Scotland or Ireland, shall
stand good and effectual in the Law, notwithstanding this
Petition and Advice, or your Highness assent thereunto, or any
Law, Statute, or Custom to the contrary; And that all Writs,
and all Commissions, Indictments, Informations, Process,
Actions, Suits, Bills or Plaints, taken out, or now depending in
any Court of Record at Westminster, or any other Court of
Record, in England, Scotland, or Ireland, or in the Town of
Berwick upon Tweed; And all Process, Pleas, Demurrers, Continuances, and Proceedings, in every such Writs, Indictments,
Informations, Actions, Suits, Bills, and Plaints, shall be returnable, stand good and effectual, and be prosecuted and sued
forth, in such manner and form, and in the same state, condition and order, the Style and Teste of Proceedings, after
passing of these presents, being made conformable thereunto,
this present Petition and Advice, or your Highness assent
thereunto, or any Law, Custome or usage to the contrary
thereof in any wise notwithstanding: And that any variance
that shall be occasioned by reason thereof, touching any the
said Writs, Process, or proceedings in the Name, Style, Teste, or
otherwise, shall not be in any wise material as concerning any
default or errour to be alledged or objected thereunto.
18. And that your Highness and your Successors will be
pleased to take an Oath, in such form as shall be agreed upon by
your Highness and this present Parliament, to govern these
Nations according to the Law.
And in case your Highness shall not be satisfied, to give
your consent to all the matters and things in this humble
Petition and Advice, that then nothing in the same be deemed
of Force, to oblige the people of these Nations in any particulars
therein contained.
And these our desires being granted by your Highness, we shall
hope (through the rich mercy and goodness of God) that it will
prove some remedy to those dangers, distractions and distempers
which these Nations are now in, and be an effectual means to
remove those jealousies and fears which remain in the mindes
of many men concerning the Government of this Commonwealth; And thereby we shall be enabled and encouraged with
all chearfulness, to the setling of such things, which shall be
further necessary for the good of these Nations, and be most
ready to joyn with You in promoting the work of reformation,
happily begun by your Highness, the regulating Courts of
Justice, and abridging both the delayes and charges
of Law Suits, and apply our selves to such other
courses and counsels as may be most like to heal
our breaches and divisions, and to restore these poor Nations to a
Union and consistency with themselves, and to lay a foundation
of further confidence between your Highness and them, to the
rejoycing of the hearts of our friends and terrour of our
Enemies.