398Prefatory note.
An English
Parliament was summoned by Cromwell,
as Lord Protector, to meet at Westminster on the 17th September 1656. At
this time Admiral Blake was pursuing his victorious career, and combating
on the ocean the inveterate enemy of England and English Protestantism, —
Spain. In order to obtain the supplies requisite for the maintenance of
the war, the Parliament was convened, and Dr
Owen preached on the occasion. The Parliament agreed to support the
Protector in the war, and voted him for the purpose £400,000. The sermon of
Owen is remarkable for the tone of cheerful
gratitude pervading it, for the peace and freedom which the nation now
enjoyed. While contrasting present advantages with the evils from which
the country had been delivered, he warns his audience against any course
that might expose them, under the judgment of God, to the loss of
privileges so dearly won, and against indulging in the strife and
animosities which would “turn judgment into wormwood, and truth into
hemlock.” — Ed.