2 September 1596 A.D. Andrew Melville’s
2-Kingdom Speech
September 2: Andrew Melville’s
Two-Kingdom Speech
The
day is lost to church history. We know the month and the year of the Two
Kingdom Speech of Andrew Melville. That month and year was September
1596. But the exact day is lost to us. So this author is going to put it
on September 2, this day in Presbyterian history, because it is too important
not to consider it.
The
elders of the General Assembly were meeting in Cupar, Fife, Scotland. Due to a
breach of faith on the part of King James, the assembly had decided to sent a
deputation to seek the resolution of their concerns. Heading that deputation
was James Melville, who was chosen because of his courteous manner and the
apparent favor he had with the king. Along side him, out of the spotlight,
was his uncle, Reformation leader Andrew Melville.
Barely
had James Melville begun speaking before the king cut him off and accused him
of meeting in a seditious manner with other elders of the kirk, and bringing
causeless fears before the people of Scotland. Andrew Melville stepped in,
despite his nephew’s attempt to keep him silent, by taking the king’s robe by
the sleeve, and saying that the king was “God’s silly vassal.”
“Sir,”
said Andrew Melville, “we will always humbly reverence your majesty in public;
but since we have this occasion to be with your majesty in private, and since
you are brought in extreme danger of your life and crown, and along with you
the country and the Church of God are like to go to wreck, for not telling you
the truth and giving your faithful counsel, we must discharge our duty, or else
be traitors both to Christ and to you. Therefore, Sir, as divers times before I
have told you, so now again I must tell you, there are two kingdoms in
Scotland: there is King James, the head of the commonwealth, and there is
Christ Jesus, the King of the Church, whose subject James the Sixth is, and of whose
kingdom he is not a king, nor a lord, nor a head, but a member. Sir, those
whom Christ has called and commanded to watch over his church, have power and
authority from Him to govern his spiritual kingdom, both jointly and severally;
the which no Christian king or prince should control and discharge, but fortify
and assist; otherwise they are not faithful subjects of Christ and members of
his Church. We will yield to you your place, and give you all due
obedience; but again, I say, you are not the head of the Church; you cannot
give us that eternal life which we seek for even in this world, and you cannot
deprive us of it. Permit us then freely to meet in the name of Christ, and
to attend to the interests of that Church of which you are the chief
member. Sir, when you were in your swaddling clothes, Christ Jesus reigned
freely in this land, in spite of all his enemies. His officers and ministers
convened and assembled for the ruling and welfare of his Church, which was even
for your welfare, defense and preservation, when these same enemies were
seeking your destruction. Their assemblies since that time have continually
have been terrible to these enemies, and most steadfast to you. And now, when
there is more than extreme necessity for the continuance and discharge of that
duty, will you (drawn to your own destruction by a most pernicious counsel)
begin to hinder and dishearten Christ’s servants and your most faithful
subjects, quarreling them for their convening, and the care they have of their
duty to Christ and you, when you should rather commend and countenance them, as
the godly kings and emperors did? The wisdom of your counsel, which I call
devilish, is this, that you must be served by all sorts of men, to come to your
purpose and grandeur, Jew and Gentile, Papist and Protestant; and because the
Protestants and ministers of Scotland are over strong, and control the king,
they must be weakened and brought low by stirring up a party against them, and,
the king being equal and indifferent, both should be fain to flee to him. But,
Sir, if God’s wisdom be the only true wisdom, this will prove mere and mad
folly; His curse cannot but light upon it; in seeking both ye shall lose both;
whereas in cleaving uprightly to God, His true servants would be your sure
friends, and He would compel the rest counterfeitly and lyingly to give over
themselves and serve you.” (Melville’s Dairy, pp. 245, 246, quoted in W.M.
Hetherington, “History of the Church of Scotland” p. 105.
Words to Live By:
Charles Hodge says in commentary on
Romans
13:2
“we are to obey all
that is in actual authority over us, whether their authority be legitimate or
usurped, whether they are just or unjust. The actual reigning emperors were to
be obeyed by the Roman Christians, whatever they might think as to his title to
the scepter. But if he transcended his authority, and required them to worship
idols, they were to obey God rather than man. This is the limitation to all
human authority. Whenever obedience to man is inconsistent with obedience to
God, then disobedience becomes a duty.” (Commentary
to the Epistle to the Romans, by Charles Hodge, p. 406)
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