Dunstan’s, and there prayed for King William
and Queen Mary. The apostolical injunction, he
said, was that prayers should be made for all in authority,
and William and Mary were visibly in authority.
His Jacobite friends loudly blamed his inconsistency.
How, they asked, if you admit that the Apostle speaks
in this passage of actual authority, can you maintain
that, in other passages of a similar kind, he speaks
only of legitimate authority? Or how can you,
without sin, designate as King, in a solemn address
to God, one whom you cannot, without sin, promise
to obey as King? These reasonings were unanswerable;
and Sherlock soon began to think them so; but the
conclusion to which they led him was diametrically
opposed to the conclusion to which they were meant
to lead him. He hesitated, however, till a new
light flashed on his mind from a quarter from which
there was little reason to expect any thing but tenfold
darkness. In the reign of James the First, Doctor
John Overall, Bishop of Exeter, had written an elaborate
treatise on the rights of civil and ecclesiastical
governors. This treatise had been solemnly approved
by the Convocations of Canterbury and York, and might
therefore be considered as an authoritative exposition
of the doctrine of the Church of England. A copy
of the manuscript was in Sancroft’s possession;
and he, soon after the Revolution, sent it to the
press. He hoped, doubtless, that the publication
would injure the new government; but he was lamentably
disappointed. The book indeed condemned all resistance
in terms as strong as he could himself have used;
but one passage which had escaped his notice was decisive
against himself and his fellow schismatics. Overall,
and the two Convocations which had given their sanction
to Overall’s teaching, pronounced that a government,
which had originated in rebellion, ought, when thoroughly
settled, to be considered as ordained by God and to
be obeyed by Christian men.60 Sherlock read, and was
convinced. His venerable mother the Church had
spoken; and he, with the docility of a child, accepted
her decree. The government which had sprung from
the Revolution might, at least since the battle of
the Boyne and the flight of James from Ireland, be
fairly called a settled government, and ought therefore
to be passively obeyed till it should be subverted
by another revolution and succeeded by another settled
government.
Sherlock took the oaths, and speedily published, in justification of his conduct, a pamphlet entitled The Case of Allegiance to Sovereign Powers stated. The sensation produced by this work was immense. Dryden’s Hind and Panther had not raised so great an uproar. Halifax’s Letter to a Dissenter had not called forth so many answers. The replies to the Doctor, the vindications of the Doctor, the pasquinades on the Doctor, would fill a library. The clamour redoubled when it was known that the convert had not only been reappointed Master of the Temple, but had accepted the Deanery of Saint Paul’s,