Selected quad for the lemma: book_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
book_n apostle_n church_n doctrine_n 1,965 5 6.0236 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A02464 Against Ierome Osorius Byshopp of Siluane in Portingall and against his slaunderous inuectiues An aunswere apologeticall: for the necessary defence of the euangelicall doctrine and veritie. First taken in hand by M. Walter Haddon, then undertaken and continued by M. Iohn Foxe, and now Englished by Iames Bell.; Contra Hieron. Osorium, eiusque odiosas infectationes pro evangelicae veritatis necessaria defensione, responsio apologetica. English Haddon, Walter, 1516-1572.; Foxe, John, 1516-1587. aut; Bell, James, fl. 1551-1596. 1581 (1581) STC 12594; ESTC S103608 892,364 1,076

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

he hath debated somewhat and so debated as himselfe doth confesse not of any gredy desire of flattering as speaking the thing that ●he doth know to be plausible to his Catholickes but hath written the very same doctrine which he doth firmely beleue to be true which I doe yeld vnto that you haue perfourmed accordingly For as much as hitherto you haue alleadged nothing but phantasticall conceiptes of your owne wandring imagination and fryuolous opinions of your owne gyddy deuise Thoroughout all your bookes no sparke of Scripture no sentence at all of auncient writers besides bare names onely is vouched able to geue any creditt to your cause And therefore you haue sayd well in deéde that your writing doth agreé with your meanyng in all pointes but there is nothing more corrupt then that iudgemēt of yours nor any thing more vayne then your writing And for the thinges themselues whereof you make mention hath bene spoken sufficiently allready to witt of the Popes supremacy of the Popes warres of Purgatory of Sacrifices of Marketts of Pardons of the vncleanesse of Priestes and of their filthy superstition All which disgracementes of Religion from whence they issued out at the first although Haddon affirmed that you were not your selfe ignoraunt albeit you dissembled the contrary yet surely of this you ought not to be vnskilfull except you list to be reputed an open counterfaite that all those Trincketts which you thrust vpon vs vnder the cognizaunce of Religion did sauour nothing of the foundation of Christes Religion of his Apostles or of the Prophetts doctrine but haue bene deuised by other men long sithence the comming of Christ and by couert creéping by litle litle into the Church are grow̄e to this vnmeasurable Rable Which hath bene displayed abroad aboundantly enough before as I Iudge in these same bookes After all these ensueth a common place of the filthy and wicked lyfe of Priestes which being more notorious then can be couered more filthy then can be excused Osorius is driuen to this streight that he can not deny but many thinges are amisse in the maners of Priestes and many things out of order which require seuere and sharpe correction howbeit he doth so extenuate this cryme as that he shameth not to confesse but that the greater part of these Catholick shauelings doe liue most chastely without all blemish of worthy reproch Of the rest he hath good hope yea and doughteth not thereof vpon the confidence that he hath of the good beginnings of the most holy Father the Pope Pius the fifte whose wonderfull godlynes ioyned with marueilous zeale of true Religion cleare and voyde from all ambition greedynesse and rashe temerytye doth geaue vs especiall comfort that it will shortly come to passe that the disorders and dissolute misdemeanours of Superstition and Priestes will attayne to a better reformation But if happely this hope happen not to good successe and though all thinges doe runne into further outrage yea although also no man minister medicine and remedye to this diseased Church yet is not this forthwith a good consequent that good and godly ordinaunces shall for the retchlesse trechery of some euill disposed persons be vtterly taken away And that humaine actions did neuer stād in so blessed an estate as to be cleare frō all matter worthy of reprehension not onely emongest Priestes and Moūckes but also through all the conuersation of Christian congregatiōs And that it standeth not therefore with Reason for the negligence of a few disordered Mounckes to roote out the whole order of Mounckerye and for the wickednes of some Priestes therefore to subuert the whole dignitye of Priesthood and authoritye of Byshopps None otherwise then as if in the holy state of Matrymony many thinges chaunce sundry tymes not all of the best and vnseemely handled yea and that wantonnes grow euen to brech of wedlock yet is it not reasonable that for this cause the whole bond and vowe of mutuall loue and lawfull vniting should be cutt asunder Semblably ought we to determine of the orders of Priestes and Mounckes Emongest whom though all thinges be not done orderly and decently yet such thinges are not by and by to be discontinued which were instituted for godly purposes nor followeth not forthwith if there be some festered members in the cōmon weale which must of necessitye be cutt of that for this cause the whole state of the cōmon weale shall be tourned vpsidowne but rather that the ouergrowē weeds be pluckt vpp and such as be scattering braūches be applyed to better order and reduced to their first patterne And that there is nothing more perillous in Common Weales then the often innouation of good and commendable established ordinaunces and lawes which doth commonly breed not onely a generall contempt of wholesome statutes but for the more part procure an vtter ouerthrow of the whole state according to the testimony of Aristotel who did sometime openly withstād the decree of Hippodamus Milesius made for the aduauncement of such as should deuise good and profitable lawes being of this opiniō that lawes should be comprised within measurable lymitts and boundes that the well keeping of tollerable lawes emported more safetye then the innouation of new To Aunswere this large discourse briefly Osorius could haue alledged nothing more cōmodious in the defence of Luthers cause and nothing more vehemently agaynst these newfangled Romaines For if Aristotel did worthely reproue Hippodamus Milesius Who being not contented with the present state of his owne Countrey did practise an alteration of the state What shall be sayd vnto you who haue so chopt and chaunged all things in the Church that there is not left therein one title so much of Apostolick antiquity or aūciēt Doctrine Therefore if all matters must be reduced to the first foundations what one thing can preuayle more to further the Lutherās desire who in all theyr writings and wishinges haue neuer endeuoured any thing more carefully then that a reformation might be had of the Publicke abuses and corruptions of the churche according to the first most godly institutions to the vtter abolishing of all newfangled vpstartes wickedly supported And those first Institutions I doe call the very first foundations of the Apostolyque doctrine most godlye grounded vpon the holye ghost and the Testament of Christ. From the which how much your doctrine and Traditions do varry I haue sufficiently discouered before For whereas Christ is an infallible principle ground of the Apostolicke doctrine and whereas the chiefe pillers of the Euangelicall buildyng do stand principally vpon this poynt to preach vnto vs euerlasting life promised by the freé gift of God through fayth in Iesu Christ euen by this one marke may easily be discerned of what value and estimation the whole state of the Romish religiō may be accounted which doth not direct vs to Christ but to the Pope not to the onely sonne of God but to the sonnes of
Sacrament of bread and wine is called the body and bloud of Christ. August to Boniface 13. Episto August vppon the psalme 89. August agaynst Adimant 13. The circumstaunces about the Supper of the Lord are to be considered August vpon the wordes of the Lord in Lake Ser. 33. August in Ioh. tractar 25.26 The absēce of the body of Christ more profitable for vsthē his presence An Argument in respect of the profit therof Antichrist An argument from Impossibilitye Contradictiories cann not be together not so much as by miracle A great diuersitie betwixt the auncient Church of Rome and this vpstart Church The lynes and couersatiō of the aunciēt Fathers of the primitiue Church The first age of the Church Deut. 12. Gala. 1. Math. 7. In processe of time the maners and ordinaunce of Christiās were chaūged The middle age of the Church How sure forth humayne authoritye doth binde Ecclesiasticall function consisteth in two thinges chiefly How farre ecclesiasticall power doth extend it selfe In matters appertayning vnto God dew obedience ought to be geuen to the Pastors and Ministers How farre forth obediēce ought to be geuen or not geuē to Pastours of the churche in matters of mens constitutiō What ministers ought to consider in makyng new ordinaunces Of iudiciall power of Churches The difference betwixt Ecclesiasticall temporall Iudgemēts Ecclesiasticall discipline in the primitiue Church The first institution of the primitiue church compared with the tymes of the latter Church The foundation of the christiā Church The foundation of the Romyshe Church The Popes doctrine cōuinced by foure principall pointes The popes Church more like an earthly kyngdome then the kyngdome of Christ. A smale discription of the Romishe Ierarchye A comparison betwixt the kingdome of the Pope and the kingdome of this world Iohn 20. A comparison betwixt the popes kyngdome and Christs kyngdome Luke 20. Mar. 10. Luce. 12. 2. Cor. 10. 1. Cor. 4. 2. Cor. 1. 1. Pet. 5. Rom. 12. The shape of the Romish Ierarchy The counte●faite authoritie of popes The church wickedly defined by the papistes How the Romishe stagers doe counterfayt olde Antiquitye A manifest declaration of the Romish church as it is now to be nothing at all Gregor 4. booke 30. Epistle The order of Cardinalles The electiō of the pope of Rome Cyprian 4. booke Epistle 2. The auncient authoritie of Emperours in sommoning Councelles and in chusing popes A Decree of Charles the great Otto Distinct 6 3. The olde Canons do abhorre priuate Masses Canon 8. The power of both swords cōtrary to the old Canōs The thyrd Coūcell of Carthage Cap. 47. In the new Constitutions 123. 146. Cap. 3. Antiquitie agaynst Images in Churches Origene vpon Leuit. Cap. 16. Chrisost. vpon Math. 1. Homel 2. Vpon Iohn Homel 31. August de opera Monach Malburiensis de pontificibus Lib. 1. An aunciēt law of Englād against pluralities All thynges altered by the pope Out of the Tridentine Councell Generall Councels accordyng to the old constitutiōs aboue the pope The Church of Rome as it is now is conuinced of Nouelty The Councell of Laterane A new doctrine first instituted in the same vnder Pope Innocent 3. Cap. 1. Of the sacrifice of the Masse Of priuate confession The Laterane councell vnder Innocent 3. Cap. 21. Chrisost. in his fourth Sermon of Lazarus Chrisost. vp on the psal 50. hom 2. Chriso vpon the Epistle to the Hebrues homi 31. Tripart histo lib. 9 Cap. 35. Erasmus iu his Apolo The Sacraments of the Romish Church Out of Huntington the 7. booke Out of the Chronicles of Monumetensis Councell of Gangren Cap. 4. Out of the 2. councel of Arelaten 2. cap. Pope Lucius decree distin● 81. Ministri The greatest part of the Romish doctrine newly foūd out and brought in within th●s 500. yeares Apoc. 21. Trueth suffereth violence A figure called Hypotiposis Whereby the state of the Romās Church and the Reformed Churche is expressed In the question of the Churche many things are conteined People buildyng doctrine forme of gouernement Where the Churche of Lutheranes was fourtie yeares ago A Similitude betwixt the restitutiō of Religion the finest of the tounges Reason rēdered why Religion is more pure at this tyme in the Churches then it was in many yeares before The Arte of Emprintyng The reason and obiection of the Catholicks in the defēce of their Church Probable with Deuines Rome built vpon seuen hilles Apocal. 13. The reason of the papistes touchyng the consent and proofe of their vniuersalitie The captious conclusion of the Catholicks The aunswere to the Argument Distinct. 40. Non loca Distinct. 4. Non est A fallax in the Equiuocum which is of diuers significations The Rom. Church doth combate against the true Church of Christ vnder a coulour of christian name Origen vpon Mathew cap. 17. Irene 3. book cap. 4. The trueth is the life of the church Lactant. 5. institu cap. 30. Argumētes made from consent and multitude of authors are weake Math. 10. Eccle. 1. Ieremy 8. Osorious accusation which was properly bent against Doctrine is transposed to maners To what end tendeth the force of Osorius Accusation Osorius doth deny that Luthers doctrine hath any affinitye with the Apostolique Scriptures Pag. 181. Osor. pag. 182. Osorius lying Rhetorick The Argument of Osorius The Aunswere to the Argument Osorius quarell of lyfe and maners Tit. 1. Ill may the Snight the Woodcock twight for his long bill The lyfe of the Lutheranes compared with the Catholickes The vices of maners are not to be imputed to his doctrine The fruites of Luthres doctrine Osor pag. 182. The confutation of hisl aunder Artic. 21. The scoffe of Luthers doctrine Luther offēded with the life of his countrey men Osor. pag. 187. Deut. 18. The argument of Osorius 1. Kinges Act. 1● A true difference betwixt the false and the true Prophett Luther vpon the 130. Psalme Mens iudgemēts in findyng faulte may be free so that they be vpright Out of Valer Ansel. Iohn Stella Out of Bēuo a Cardinall Of couenauntes and promises not alwayes holden true emōgest the papistes Iere. cap. 23. Osorius argument out of Ieremy Aunswere to the argument The fallax of the consequent The aunswere to the Maior The reason to discerne betwixt false and true Prophetes accordyng to Osorius The aunswere of the Minor Osori pag. 190. The place of Ieremy expounded Iohn Husse The prophecy of Iohn Husse touchyng the doctrine of the Gospell to be restored by Luther A small cōtrouersy betwixt Luther and Zuinglius Osor. pag. 191. Of diuisiōs of the churche Dissentions in the Papane church Dissentions amōgst the most godly A full consent of doctrine in reformatiō of Churches The Articles of the chief groūdes of Religion wherin the Ministers of the Church do well agree together How great a concord is ctetwixt many Churches in the matter of the Sacrament Papistes murtherers of Martyrs Osori pag. 192. Osori doth beleue fame Authour of all his vntruthes A prouerbe
doth minister to all men aboūdauntly all thynges sufficient for the obteinyng of euerlastyng health and saluation The whole earth swarmeth euery where with their bookes and wrytinges testifieng the same and this our Age is to to much pestered with them the Authours of which notwithstandyng allready are or may be satisfied if they were not altogether cast ouer into a reprobate mynde with the manifold aūsweres of many learned Fathers and faythfull seruauntes of God euen to the full So might this ghostly Byshopp Ierome Osorius vpon the learned aunswere made by M. Haddon to the slaunderous Libell of his presumptuously pearching to her highnes with flattery and lyes haue stayed his course and by scilēce prouided more wisely for his creditt and good name which otherwise hadd not bene made so notably infamous to the world if this rayling Reply agaynst M. Haddon had not bene published abroad But who can tell whether it hath pleased the Lord to rayse vpp this Iambres against Moyses and to styrre vpp this proude Popishe Holofernes a most notable champion of that Romaine Nabuchadnezer to make so prowde a challenge agaynst his poore Cittie Bethulia who can tell if the Lord haue appointed this Semey to rayle so outragiously agaynst our Dauid who can tell if God haue hardened the hart of this Pharao that so his people Israell might with greater glory passe fromout that miserable captiuitie of that oppressing Egipt Great is the God of Israell and maruelous in his workes He it is who by the onely touche of a small rodde deuided the readd Sea and made the same to become drye lande and a passable way for his people retournyng the waues thereof vpon the pursuyng Enemy to the vtter ouerthrowe of Pharao his Charettes and all his hoaste He it is that gaue the headd of that stought warriour Holofernes into the handes of a seely woman He it is that caused the rodd of Aaron to eate vpp all the roddes of thenchauntours and Sorcerers of Egipt He it is that with the onely breath of his mouth hath daunted the insolencie of this Popishe challenger who beyng esteemed emongest our Englishe Papistes the most notable Prelate of our Age is now by the hand of a weake Englishe Pastour discouered in his colours to be nought els then a vayne bablyng Rhetorician full of wordes altogether voyde of matter All which notwithstanding such is the malicious peruersenes of the world that he onely alone beareth the price and carryeth the greatest creditt and estimation of all the writers of our tyme euery whose sentence is reputed an Oracle from heauē The odde man of the whole world Ierome Osorius not able to be aunswered much lesse to be confused by any Protestaunt whatsoeuer It was hartely wished That the Authour him selfe would haue deliuered his trauayles herein in the Englishe toung that so the vnlettered Englishe man by the Argumentes herein comprised might haue bene able to stoppe the mouthes of the wayward English cauillers and supporters of his quarell But he respected an other ende though not so plausible to his owne countreymen yet much more cōmodious for the generall common weale of Christendome For he right well perceaued though Osorius roaued at England by name that yet he bent his shotte agaynst the generall state of all Christianitie and therefore most necessary that as Osorius made his challenge knowen to the whole world so the world also might be made acquainted with the encounter I would haue sayd the vtter ouerthrow of the same The benefite whereof though haue redounded to many particuler persons within this Realme yet hath not bene so vniuersall as was needefull in respect of the multitude who onely regardyng the name and fame of the man will as I sayd before scarsely be persuaded that he may possibly be aunswered I passe ouer the worthy prayses which the booke it selfe most iustly deserueth both in excellencie of matter and in worthynes of the maner as the faythfull seruaunt of Christ M. John Foxe hath handled it Yet this I dare promise and boldly pronounce that all men that will may by readyng embracyng beleeuing and followyng the doctrine conteined in this booke be throughly furnished as well with the most especiall and principall pointes of Christiā Religion namely our Iustificatiō Election Regeneratiō and Redēption by the onely merite and meane of the most pure and precious bloudshed of that immaculate Lambe slayne before the foundatiōs of the world were layed to the singuler comfort of their soules as also by the Argumentes herein conteined armed at all pointes agaynst all assaultes and practizes of all the massemoungers meritemoūgers pardonmoungers Confessionmoungers and all other of the Popish rable whatsoeuer in the world As to the trāslation I dare not affirme otherwise thē that I haue trauailed therein faythfully accordying to the measure of grace which the Lord hath geauen me not doughtyng but it will atteyne the wished successe if mē will but vouchsafe with the same simplicitie of eye and willingnesse of hart to read search examine and stand vpright in perusing of the same with the which I haue to my poore abilitie trauayled therein Certes my purpose was to profitt my countrey men generally all These fruites of my labours I haue thought good to present dedicate to your honorable patronage moued hereunto by the most cōmendable report and opinion that all men do cōceaue of your honours godly zeale and zealous godlynes to the singuler glory of your name and vnspeakeable cōfort of all the godly To the well acceptyng and good liking whereof I iudge it not altogether so necessary to seeke by any other circumstaunce and persuadible speeches to enduce your honour saue onely the bare cōsideration of the wōderfull fruite that may be reaped by readyng the contentes namely proceedyng frō so well knowen a Spirite of so godly and faythfull a seruaūt of God Wherein albeit the translation atteyne not to so absolute excellencie and perfection as the dignitie of the matter doth require as of right it ought haue bene deliuered in such wise as should not in any respect diminishe the worthynes of the Author yet for as much as it retcheth the ende whereunto it was directed namely the benefitt of the Church of God and the vtter ouerthrowe of that malignaunt Church of Sathan and his ministers I dought not but your honour will vouchsafe thereof accordyngly Iesu Christ the Sonne of our heauenly eternall and euerlastyng Father preserue your honour in all spirituall grace and heauenly wisedome prosper your proceedinges establish your fayth fructifie your studies multiply your consolations and direct all your wayes finally blesse your hartes desire with increase of much honor in this world to the glorifieng of your body and soule in that immortall and glorious kyngdome of heauen for euer and euer Amen Your honours in the Lord. Iames Bell. ¶ To the most Renowmed and Puissaunt Prince Sebastian king of Portingall euerlasting grace peace and most prosperous Reigne in our
like equitie and patience of minde to admitte our confutation thereof into your presence whereby eche partie beyng discouered according to truth your highnes may more certeinly determine of the cause There is a notable Law and an othe established in the Iudgementes of the auncient Athenians To heare with both eares that indifferent eares should be open to eche partie But what maner of custome is vsed now a dayes in this perplexitie and cōbate of opinions where Byshops armed with the aucthoritie of Princes doe stand raunged in mayne battell agaynst the manifest veritie and doe so bende the whole cōsent of their fayth to the one partie that all libertie once to mutter is vtterly cutte of from the other partie But here may some contrary doubtfullnes paraduēture trouble your Royall thought not so much proceedyng from your gracious nature as whyspered into your godly eares by the subtill and slaunderous practizes of glaueryng glosers who vnder the counterfaict vysour of this glorious coūterfaict Church haue wonderfully bewitched the eyes and eares of many noble personadges vnder pretēce of succeeding course of many yeares do make glorious bragges that this new-fangled Church wherein the Romish Byshopp in enthronized is the onely Catholicke Church and the supremacy thereof to be onely obeyed alleadgyng the same Church to be the Empresse and gouernesse of all other Churches and which of right ought to be esteemed aboue all Kinges Emperours as ouer the which Christ hath substituted the Byshopp of Rome his sole Vicar and Vicegerent earth and therfore that all degrees ought and may safely submitt themselues to the aucthoritie and determination of that Churche as which beyng continually vpholden by the power and blessing of the holy Ghost was neuer seene hitherto to haue erred ne yet could by any meanes swarue one title from the right lyne and knowen trade of the true fayth taught in holy Scriptures And that all other persons whatsoeuer sequestering thēselues frō the prescript Rules and Cannons of that Churche cann not chuse but runne headlong into wandryng errours amazed blindenes and extreme maddnes Wherefore those Lutheranes and Hugonoughtes are worthely to be expelled from the vnitie of that Church and deseruedly adiudged to fier and fagottes as most dampnable heretiques not worthy of any fauorable protection no not their writinges so much as to be touched with any mās handes bycause they dare presmoūte once to quacke agaynst the supremacy of that Angelicke Ierarchy As touchyng which slaunderous surmises albeit nothyng cann be more falsely and shamefully imagined then those Sorcerous enchaūtementes it is wonder how much this poysoned Dolldreanche hath betyppledd the sences of many great personadges and hath so long preuailed in great admiration with sundry estates through the onely ignoraunce of learnyng and ouermuch credulitie of godly Princes vntill of late by the incomprehensible prouidence of Almightie God the worthy Arte of Emprintyng was erected by meanes whereof good Letters and Bookes came to the Marte and Printers shoppes discouered the foggy and darkened cloudes of this olde mothe eaten barbarousnes Hereby it came to passe that the tedious deepe doungeons of lothesome ignoraunce beyng surprised with a certein new and cleare dawnyng day of purer doctrine as also of all other liberall Sciences beganne to shyne abroade nor will leaue I trust to ouerspread his brighte glisteryng beames dayly more and more vntill with the inaccessible brightenes thereof it do either thoroughly vanquishe the whole kyngdome of darkenes or at the least chaūge the same into some better countenaunce And to the ende we may conceaue assured hope of good successe herein two thynges do minister vnto vs especiall comfort Wherof the one consisteth in the mearcy of the Lord the other remayneth in your handes that be Kynges and Princes next vnder the God being the Lordes watchmen For the first we haue an infallible Argument which cann neuer deceaue the assured testimony of Iesus Christ who hath prophecied in his holy Scriptures that the same shal be brought to passe the greater part whereof we haue allready experimented to be accomplished in these our dayes That the Lord with the breath of his mouth shall confounde the pride of the Beast so arrogantly vaunting him selfe in his holy Temple For the next That other is of no small force I meane your vigilant wisedomes and singuler godlynes which causeth vs to cōceaue well of you that are Princes whom the Lord of his infinite mearcy hath ordeyned to exercize chief rule and gouernemēt next vnder him vpon the face of the earth especially whenas him selfe hath pronounced out of his owne mouth in the Reuelation of Saint Iohn That he will lende his helpyng handes hereunto saying And the tenne hornes sayth he which thou didst see vpon the Beast are those ●enne Kinges which shall abhorre the Babylonicall Strampett and shall make her desolate and naked and shall deuoure her fleshe and burne her Carkasse in flames of fire for the Lord hath inspired into their hartes to bring this to passe euen as it hath pleased him Apocal. 17. Wherfore awake you noble Princes and Christian Captaines march on in Gods name Atchieue an exployte worthy your noble Race and be no longer trayned with the trayterous sleightes of subtill sycophātes but pursue with the power the godly guidyng of the Lord of hostes Emongest whom I most humbly call vpon your highnes most singuler Paterne of Princely Royaltie not to the ende to teaze you to exercize cruelty agaynst that viperous generation Onely my petition is that for the loue you beare to Iesus Christ and your owne soules health ye vouchsafe to deliuer simple innocentes from the bloudy iawes of those rauenyng Wolues and horrible blouddsuckers That enterchaunge of thynges beyng made the true and pure word of God may be heard what it teacheth And that ye lett lowse the reynes of their licentious insolency no longer so that they do not hereafter abuse you as the Iewes did handle our Lord Iesu Christ whose facē when they had blindefolded they beate his body with whippes There hath bene to many broyles allreády emongest vs Christians to much Christian bloud hath bene spilte to much crueltie and horror hath bene exequuted whiles you in the meane space in whose power rested the staye of this outrage either wincked at their bootchery or at the least left poore innocentes succourlesse in their slaughter houses How long shall this Romishe Nymrod vaunt in his throne how long shall he make a scorne of your patience most excellent Princes when will your Royall hartes and noble courage daunte his pride when will you resume into your handes the whole sword of Iustice the better part whereof the Romishe Russian hath bereft you when will you surcease to be bondeslaues vnto them whom the mighty God hath made vassalles to your lawfull Regimēt how long will ye suffer your mouthes to be mooseled and your eyes muffeled with such blynde errours contrary to the manifest light of the Gospell If
his name Christ teacheth farre otherwise of him selfe Behold I stand at the doore and knocke if any mā heare my voyce and opē vnto me the gate I will enter vnto him and will suppe with him and hee with me O sweéte and most comfortable voyce of our Lord Sauiour Iesus Christ which if once may be throughly rooted in the inward partes of our soule will easely rase out abolish that priuy blind buzzyng in the eares of those Massemongers and Friers But Osorius sticketh fast to his substitution and mainteineth earnestly that the Apostles were assigned to be Christes Uicares on earth whiche should supply his iurisdiction and should enterlace their owne definitiue sentences with his These are both false God is a ielous God and will not geue his honour to any other Hee hath appointed no Uicare and the holy Scripture doth acknowledge no such word neither was it his will that the Apostles should entermedle in his Iurisdiction Your surmise is false quite contrary to his heauenly prerogatiue For Christ onely hath the keyes of hell and death Christ onely is the slayne Lambe and the Lyon of the Tribe of Iuda the roote of Dauid which openeth the booke and louseth the seuen seales therof neither was there any besides him in heauen in earth or vnder the earth that could open the booke and looke into it Our Lord Iesus beyng raysed from death and appearyng vnto his Apostles spake vnto them in this maner All power is geuen vnto me in heauē and in earth Of this power was neuer iote empaired in any respect and neuer shal be What was the Commission of the Apostles then Christ him selfe doth open it in the selfe same place Goe ye therfore and teach all nations Baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost teachyng them to obserue all those sayings which I haue commaūded you This was the Embassie of the Apostles this was their Commissiō Iurisdiction or to speake more playnly bluntly this was their function this was their office To this authoritie the keyes of heauen and remission of sinnes and whatsoeuer els of the same kynde must be applyed S. Paule doth comprehend all these briefly in these wordes Let men so esteeme vs as Ministers of Christ and Stewardes of the mysteries of God You be not Uicares thē Osori you be Ministers ye be not iudges to constitute Lawes as you do wickedly take vpō you but ye be Stewardes to dispose the mysteries of God or at the lest you ought to bee But how belongeth this doctrine of Christ and his Apostles to your Massemongers Confessours They haue an other Romishe doctrine whereby they doe receiue the seély rude people runnyng in heapes vnto them rehearsing their sinnes priuily and in some close corner superstitiously when they haue vttered what them listeth they pronounce ouer them of their own power an absolution in a straūge language in steade of Satisfaction they do enioyne them some fastyng dayes or some long pilgrimages and to make an ende of the play they pike from them a few pēce for their labour This is your vsurped power of Cōfessiōs Osorius which you affirme was geuen first to the Apostles afterwardes to you by a cert●ine title of Succession Tell me now did you euer read that any thyng was whispered into the Apostles eares priuily or that sinnes were seuerally repeated or the people absolued by their owne absolute power or any thyng done in a language not vnderstanded or any penaūce as you tearme it enioyned or at the last any reward taken What vnshamefastnes is this what impietie is it to defend this close superstitious and mercenarie eare confession vnder pretence of the authoritie of our Sauiour Christ example of his Apostles especially whē as none of these was euer instituted by Christ or frequented of his Apostles But your braynes are so be witched and intoxicated with eare confessions that ye shame not to alledge other stuffe yet whiche is most absurde of all the rest You say that it is daungerous for men to bee left in their owne libertie whē they should confesse them selues to God For if it were so we would not willingly yeld to that embacing and throwyng down of our selues which Dauid named to bee the most acceptable sacrifice to God You do heare and acknowledge your owne wordes my Lord then the which I neuer heard any thyng vttered more blockish The matter shal be made manifest by the same example of Dauid which your selfe do alledge Dauid beyng a Patriarche a Kyng and a Prophet and a mā accordyng to Gods hart to vse the wordes of the Scripture was notwithstandyng continunually exercized in this kynde of Confession whiche is betwixt God onely vs in whom there is such store of sorowyng sighyng lamentyng weépyng afflictyng and bewayling as the like hath neuer bene in all your se●●et whisperyngs no not sith the first whelpyng of the same For 〈◊〉 els is there in all that heauenly golden Psalmes of Dauids p●ayer then a mournefull and lamentable confession of sinne ioyned with hartie repentaunce sure hope of pardon Be mercyfull to me O Lord sayth hee accordyng to thy manifold mercies wash me throughly frō my wickednes and clense me frō my sinnes for I do acknowledg● my faultes and my sinne is ●●er before me Agaynst thee onely haue I s●●ed and done wickedly in thy sight Loe here a true and soūde forme of Cōfession fully described in Dauid whō you haue alledged In this cōfession we do exercize our selues In this we remaine in this we do dwell We do also poure out publicke Confessions of sinnes in our Churhes where the godly Minister is harkened vnto which may minister an wholesome plaister to our wounded consciences some sentence 〈◊〉 of the authoritie of the Scriptures These be the keyes wherewith he doth opē the kyngdome of God to thē which do vnfaynedly repent pronounceth vs that are boūde with the chaines of our sinnes freély loosed and deliuered from them in the name of our Lord and Sauiour Iesu Christ. These Confessions as well priuate as publicke these keyes this power of byndyng loosing we doe acknowledge appointed by the Scriptures and practized in the tyme of the Apostles Neither was any thyng done with Iohn in a corner touchyng Confession nor yet with the Disciples of Christ. This matter was referred and ended also to and before God wherof we haue a most manifest example in the Gospell which ought not onely enter the eares but also pearce the very hartes of all well disposed persons When the lost and prodigall sonne had riotously consumed and wasted all his substaunce in so much that he was driuen to eate Peascoddes with hogges he begynneth at the last to call him selfe home and earnestly to deuise how he might be reconciled to his father herein he prayeth no ayde of any Leuite nor sittyng in a
in the remembraunce of Christes death and perseuered in the same Custome The Fathers name it Bread and a Sacrament a mysterie and a figure of Christes body And yet Pope Innocentius commyng lately out of hell with a detestable superstition horrible Sacriledge doth Transubstantiate this mysticall Bread into our Sauiour Iesus Christ. There followed him certeine phantasticall Schoolemen which did most wickedly defile the pure Supper of our Lord with durtie schoole dregges And now at the length starteth by our Osorius a braue champion of this Schoole tromperies Ierome Osorius I say that great Maister in Israell a deépe and incomparable Deuine whō no man exceédeth in witte nor surmounteth in learnyng if a man may beleue him as hee reporteth him selfe Wherfore I would now aske one question good maister Proctour of you of this Transubstātiation whether our Lord Iesus Christ when hee did first institute the Sacrament of the Euchariste did make any mention in his speach of any remouing of the substaunce of Bread of the accidentes that should remayne or whether the substaunce of his body should supply the substaunce of Bread Did Paule touche any of these did the primitiue and Apostolique Churche receiue any such thyng haue the auncient Fathers made mention of any such matter in their bookes Sithence therefore this your wonderfull conuersion of the Substaunce of Bread into the body of Christ whiche your Schoolemen by a more grosse name call Trasubstantiatiō hath bene shapen forged out of these Monasteries whereof not so much as one title can be founde in the holy Scriptures in the Custome of the Apostles in the bookes of auncient Fathers it is a wonderfull straunge matter that a bishop so exquisite in diuinity as you are or would seeme to be would yet vndertake so desperate a cause and obtrude vpon vs such cold schoole dreames in steéde of most apparaūt knowen thynges Ye seé now how pitthily my Peter Martyr hath aunswered you in all thyngs whose soule you would not haue teazed to quarell if you had had any witte For he was worthely esteémed an excellent Deuine amongest the chiefest Deuines of our age whose Scholer you might haue bene in all knowledge and litterature except your eloquence onely in the Latine tounge But you do leaue our Peter now at that length whō if you had neuer prouoked you had done better so neéded you not to doe me so great iniurie as to challēge me for my familiar acquaintaunce with him For if you thinke that ye may with your honesty keépe company and vse frendly familiaritie with that doltish Calfe Angrence hauyng no vtteraunce no witte no sence no vnderstādyng why should not I rather acquainte my selfe with a man not onely excellēt in learnyng but replenished with all comlynesse ciuilitie of maners Make choise of your familiars Osorius as you please Suffer me to enioy myne owne neither is it reason that you should limitte me or I you in this kynde of affaires humanitie cōmon course of mās life requireth that choise be made of frendship as liketh eche mans owne iudgement best not to be ruled by others phantasies Be not you squeymish therfore at the cōmēdations of godly learned men my especiall frendes Martin Bucer and Peter Martyr I loued thē when they lyued I will not forget them beyng dead I frequēted their familiaritie whiles they lyued as much as I might their names remēbraūce of thē though they be dead I will defende as much as I may and if they were now alyue I would esteéme more of a whole yeares conference with them then of one day with you for their conuersation had a certeine discreéte pleasauntnes their conference had a wholesome wisedome the whole course of their demeanour was a most absolute paterne of honestie and godlynesse And I am throughly persuaded that nothing could haue aduaunced my estimation such as it is more then myne acquaintaunce and familiaritie with these two godly Fathers You come at the length to our Church the orders whereof you do captiously snatch at but this ye do so disorderly stāme ringly that all men may iudge that ye did roaue at it in your dreame rather then dispute beyng awake I affirmed that fayth came by hearyng What say you is it no so I sayd also that our Preachers are sent abroad into all the coastes of our Realme to teach the cōmon people their duties in all thynges what will you deny this to be done You can not the matter is manifest But you exclaime and say that our Preachers are Lutherans Bucerans and Caluinistes First of all how know you this to be true then if it be so let the names goe confute their doctrine if you can But this lesson you learned of your Cowled Coockowes to braule alwayes with bare names whē you cā not ouerthrow a sillable of their doctrine Your Maister shyp will not allow that our Parliamēt and publicke assemblie of the Realme should entermedle with matters of Religion for herein ye suppose that the dignitie of Priestes is empayred First what thyng can be publiquely receaued vnlesse it be proclaymed by publique authoritie Then our Prelates and Ecclesiasticall Fathers do propoūde the rules of Religion after that the Prince with the consent of the whole estates do ratifie the same What may be done more orderly or more circumspectly This custome was obserued in the tyme of the kynges of Israell This vsage preuayled in all Counseils vntill that Romishe Ierarche had burst in sunder these lawes with his false ambitious picklockes and had commaūded all thyngs to be subiect to his absolute power I wrate also that there was great reuerence geuen to the holy Scriptures in our Churches and that vnitie and the bonde of peace was wonderfully preserued You demaunde on the other side From whence so troublesome contentions in opinions are raysed in our Churches Shew what contentions there be and we will satisfie your request But if you will not or cā not hold your toūg most wicked rayler require not to be beleued for your onely affirmatiues sake Deale in this maner with your charge of Siluain for ye shall obteine nothyng here but by meare force of Argument I did affirme likewise that our deuine seruice is ministred with vs in the mother and vulgare toūg accordyng to Paules doctrine the approued custome of the Apostolicke Churche what say you to this forsooth you can not like of it bycause it is repugnant to the ordinaūce of Rome and yet you can not well deny so manifest a truth for S. Paule did establish this doctrine of the holy Ghost with so many and so strōg Argumētes as though hee did euen then foreseé in mynde that some such erronious botches would infect our Religion that by such meanes they might blot out vtterly extinguish out of our Churches this most fruitefull worshyppyng of God beyng the very foundation of all Christian godlynes And therfore this godly mā
a matter It is very manifest you say for one of you doth sacrifice to lust an other to frensie an other to the paunche an other to slaūderyng Cursed be thou thou Chapplein of the deuill Thy sect doth publickly worshyp a peéce of bread insteade of a golden Calfe and lyeth grouelyng on the grounde before a God made of bread your solemnities be ló Bacchus ló Venus You are defiled and contaminated with all kynde of wickednesse you do most abhominably mainteine slewes and Brothelhouses and yet in the meane whiles will translate your Idols vnto vs. But ye cā not Osorius Printe and painte and do what ye list ye cā not bring that to passe All the world almost is so well acquainted with your horrible filthy lyfe that a boye of seuen yeares of age can point with his finger at the places the persons and the whole course of your abhominations But where as you adde further that there is one fayth of Luther an other fayth of Bucer an other of Zuinglius and an other of Caluine This is your old quarell alwayes hacked vpon but neuer proued These worthy persons and graue Fathers of the Churche were alwayes of one fayth and of most agreable constācy to the ouerthrow of your erreonious deuises In some pointes they did varie but in the substaunce of fayth they were of one mynde The like blemish happened to Augustine Ierome and Cyprian men very famous for their learnyng vertue in Origine Tertulliā were somewhat greater blottes whose fayth notwithstandyng as farre forth as is agreable with the Scriptures is not discredited by our Deuines ne yet by your owne Maistershyp if a mā may be so bold to tell you as also what I thinke you shall perhaps know hereafter in those your huge Uolumes entituled De Iusticia wherin you are of a cleane contrary opiniō to that learned man August in the thiefest part of all not in any small matter but in the Treatise of righteousnes it selfe wherein is conteined the foundation of our fayth and herein ye wrangle so bitterly so obstinately and so ouerthwartly that Cardinall Poole did wonderfully reprehend your arrogancy herein and thereunto replyed with most godly wordes That the abilitie of man could not bee to much embaced and the power of God could not be to much aduaunced But sith you can presume so much vpon your selfe as with such proude boldnesse to attempt the ouerthrow of so notable a father in the principall point of our Religion We neéde not marueile that ye can not forbeare vs if we varie in small matters of no value for amongest them truely was no litle controuersie in matters of great importaunce if they might haue had vpright iudges and learned vnlike to this our Osorius The functiō of the Apostles was equall their Iurisdiction in all respect one whereby it commeth to passe that amongest them no one may be in hyghest authoritie and this haue we partly approued before by the examples of Paul Peter and Iames and the same also haue I made so manifest in this Booke where I treated of the Monarchie of the Romish Prelate That you haue now no startyng hole to hyde your head in You say that it is euident in the writynges of Clement of Euaristus Lucius Marcellus and Pius that they were of opinion alwayes that the supremacie of the vniuersa●l Churche of Christendome was attributed to the Romishe See You rehearse vnto them Irenaeus Augustine and other holy auncient Fathers Afterwardes you vouche the whole Register of Antiquitie What impudencie is this What vntollerable arrogancie nay rather what retchiesse negligence and singular foolishnesse is this you doe recken vp many Byshops of Rome by name and yet alledge no one sillable so much out of their writinges to establish this prerogatiue of this Romish See no more do you cite out of Augustine and Irenaeus any one title for the maintenaūce of this your Ierarchie Lastly you make mention of all the auncient antiquitie yet vouch no one worde out of all that great number of yeares whereby that may appeare to bee true whereof you make so stoute a warraunt by your bare affirmatiue Is this to be accoumpted a Deuine Do ye defende the Romishe Seé no better Haue you no better a Target to couer this your holy and Emperour-like power Belike ye come vnto vs a new Pithagoras would haue the old Poesie in vre agayne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But we yeld not so much Osorius we receaue not your affirmatiue neither can you wryng any thyng out of our hands in the cōference of matters apperteinyng to fayth more then that you shal be able to Iustifie by good and sounde Argumentes We follow not your sayth as the which we haue tasted to bee almost in all thynges most detestable Wherfore if you meane to wynne any credite herein Let this be a watchword for you that ye must vnfold agayne all that lumpe of confused disputation and abandone those vnmeasurable raylinges forsake those clamorous exclamations renounce that vnaduised rashnesse of bare affirmatiues and argue with probable reasons iustifie with approued Argumentes and make good proofe by expresse sentences of holy Scriptures aūcient Fathers But you are well furnished with Fathers forsooth for in your Bedroll ye haue lapped together not onely the old fathers but vnfold also vnto vs a certeine new Schoole of Fathers That is to say Ecckius Coclaeus Rossensis Pighius Auaunte with all these sworne bondslaues of your Monarchie whereof part were common dronkardes some lechers some traytours the remembrance of whom is odious as yet and notoriously infamous for sundry their notable crimes Or if ye will neédes allowe of these dregges of the Church beyng in deéde the sworne humble vassals of the Romish Seé Yeld me this much agayne my request to peruse the writynges of Bucer Melancthon Zuinglius Oecolampadius Peter Martyr Caluin and Beza men most excellent in conuersation of life and of singular learning And ye shall seé the contagious botches of your Papacie so raked abroad and ransackt by them that ye will neuer hereafter take any regard to any such scabbed Iades if you be wise You seeme to marueile much that I beyng a Ciuiliā and exercized in pleadyng temporall causes would spend my tyme to knowe your mysteries Truly you are herein somewhat to inquisitiue Osorius For albeit I do professe the Ciuill Law yet am I a Christian and desire to be edified in the law of the Lord And if you will haue this much graunted vnto you to apply your selfe to the knowledge of the tounges to be addict wholy to the study of eloquence to raunge in the bookes of Philosopers and will notwithstanding be accompted a ruler of the Roast in Diuinitie as in the speciall peculiar of your own profession looke not so coye vpon vs poore Ciuilians I pray you bycause we geue our endeuour to learne the Statutes of Christian Religion and are desirous to bathe
to your owne saying hath authoritie to dispence with sinnes by vertue of his Bulles not for a day a moneth or for a yeare onely but for euer euer which also keépeth the keyes of heauen at his pleasure wherewith he geueth the kyngdome of heauen vnto some persons and from others locketh it fast which is inuested in the fulnesse of all power is the vndoubted Uicare of God to whose most royall maiestie all and euery other powers and Magistrates must humble yeld submit them selues Whereas I say you allowe of all those titles of dignitie and not onely teache and defend them in this your vnbridled insolēcy but also so lustely couragiously vaūte and rayse vp your crest What doe you els in that blazyng brauerie of speach but coyne to your selfe others a most manifest Idoll which you may worshyp before whom you may prostrate your selfe most lowly humbly make intercessiō vnto And therfore dissemble Ierome as ye liste yet that is your Romish Idoll Your selfe also a manifest Idolatour You must with all willyngly endure all trauaile be it neuer so hard to attaine the fauour and blessyng of that your God perhappes you may picke vp some crommes thereby and through him be promoted so highe that ye may more nearely behold that your earthly God and be enstalled vnder his elbow in his palace wherin you may do sacrifice vnto his Maiestie You say that I do prouoke you to disputation This is vntrue I do not prouoke you but confute your false accusations wherewith you charge vs as mainteinours of a fayth voyde of all vertue and Religion And euer amōg you thrust in the name of Luther What perteineth that to vs Cast out your challenge to some one Deuine in England by name you shall seé how quickly he will take vp your gloue with no labour crush your Sophisticall canes in peéces You do wish me to peruse those your bookes entitled De Iustitia and in thē you say that I may throughly satisfie my selfe touchyng the iustifyeng of fayth Truly I haue perused your Uolumes deuided into threé bookes entitled De Iustitia in the first wherof ye speake much in the commendation of fayth and therein vse testimonies and Argumentes who doth reprehend you herein I pray you And yet all that your endeuour hath obteined no more but to shewe your selfe an vnnecessary arguer in an vndoubted controuersie Of the same stampe also is your second booke wherein you commend much the worthynes of good workes and herein we do nothing dissent from you but will aduaunce the same as much as you will wish vs. But your thyrd booke is almost altogether a Pelagian and beyng throughly poysoned with the heresies of the Greéke Church doth blasphemously inueighe agaynst the freé mercy of God the Father in Christ Iesu and namely agaynst S. Augustine an vnvanquishable patrone of the heauēly grace And therfore this your gaye poppet so gorgiously paynted whiche liketh your selfe so well is partly friuolous ouerwhelmed with to much tattlyng and partly wicked and execrable whiles it practizeth to trāsforme vs from naturall men almost to be Gods Neither am I alone of that opinion for Cardinall Poole also was for the most part of the same Iudgement whō although Rome had maruailously disguised yet all men knew to be farre better man in liuyng and much more expert in Diuinitie then you are he did alwayes withstand your attempt of publishyng in printe that your delicate impe which you as thē did so louyngly embrace and had in so great estimatiō as your owne derlyng And accomptyng the same to be most perillous and pestiferous gaue this famous verdit thereof worthy to be deépely engrauen in the very entrailes of all Christian hartes It is not possible sayth Cardinall Poole it is not possible to yelde to much to the mercy of God nor to abase the strength of man to much If you had had so much grace as to haue conceaued and emprinted in your braynes this doctrine of humilitie abacement you would neuer haue so nakedly stripped Christ of his grace nor so hautely and arrogantly enhaunced the power of mans will ne yet so proudely and boldly reproued and despised S. Augustine But what dare not Osorius doe who accordyng to the nature of his name dare boldly presume vpō all thyngs peraduēture you will demaunde how I knew Pooles mynde herein I will tell you Our familiar very frēd not vnknowen vnto you M. Ascham did sondry tymes aduertize me therof affirmyng that he did heare the same vttered by the mouth of the Cardinall him selfe This also doth trouble you very much bycause I affirmed it to be your own errour as which being imagined in your own braynsicke mazer you would falsely lay to others charge What then did I not say the very truth herein is it not your owne lye your owne haynous acte your owne slaunder yea your owne errour fayned coyned and imagined by your selfe though afterwardes you would poast it ouer to others without cause And yet you spare not to pinche me cruelly for so saying And amongest other scornes reproche me of my stammeryng speach as though I can not speake playnly But in the meane whiles you wryng your selfe by the nose and geue your selfe two foule blowes First of all in the matter it selfe as euen now and els where I haue declared sufficiently Then in the maner of speache where in steéde of barbarous endytyng ye reprehende me for my stammeryng toung Which neuer any person would doe that hath bene enured to write pure and cleane Latine Surely Syr I do speake very playnly and distinctly through the inestimable benefite of God but your toūg doth both stammer and stutte if the report of them be true who haue had conference with you which blemish bycause it proceédeth of nature I would neuer haue obiected against you if you had not first of all vpbrayded me with the same fault wherewith your selfe are naturally encombred At the length you are entred into the treaty of Iustification but first ye snatche at a few sentences of Scriptures which I haue set downe And the same without all reason after a certeine cōtinuall crooked vsage of cauillyng ye writhe and wrest ouerthwartely And therfore I will bid adewe to that your vnmeasurable captious Sophistry and will sift your Diuinitie a whiles which wil appeare to be your own that is to say most foolish detestably corrupt You rehearse out of my writing euē as it is that these workes are vnprofitable to Iustification yet that they ought not be despised bycause Paule doth seéme to verifie both positions Let vs seé what our Doctour Ierome sayth to this for sooth he raungeth abroad to originall sinne altogether besides the cushian He doth cruelly accuse Luther Caluine and Melancthon bycause they do cōdemne all the workes of the most holy men being cōpared with the glory of God And that the same could not be
whom doth by so much more encrease our heauynes in respect of this present entreprise vndertaken agaynst Osorius chiefly by how much we feéle our selues bereft of so singular a Patrone and so altogether dispoyled herein that without wonderfull difficultie scarse any person of knowledge wil be founde able to supply the rest of the aunswere with like successe and commēdation Not for that the matter is of so great importaunce for what can be more easie then to refell the reasons of Osorius wherin is no substaunce at all and his triflyng toyes which are manifold as also to despise his slaunders wherewith he is ouerlauishe but bycause the person will not easily hee founde I suppose which after learned M. Haddon dare presume to entermedle in the cause and to ioyne his owne deuises with M. Haddons writynges So that I feare me now M. Haddon is dead the same wil come to passe in this discourse that Plutarch maketh Relation of of a certeine mā that was not well thought of who rashly and youthfully seémeth to coūteruaile with the politicke prowesse of Themystocles What then bycause we can not atteyne to M. Haddons actiuitie shall we therfore like dastardes fleé the field and leaue the truth of the Gospell succourles in the campe of her enemy the quarell not so much apperteignyng to M. Haddon as to almightie God him selfe and suffer shame to preuaile more with vs then pietie and godlynesse or bycause one champion is takē from the Barriers which was approued at all assayes shall we therfore yeld ouer the conquest of the whole challenge to Osorius And permit this glorious Thraso to triumph and treade downe our cowardize or bycause we preferre our M. Haddon to the first onset in armes shall we therefore beare no brunte of the battell or shall not his valiaunt attempt rather teaze and prouoke vs to pricke on with courage And yet I neither speake nor thinke in this wise as though I did either mistrust the tyme or the wittes of our age so plentyfully florishyng at this season especially wherein I doe know very many that are skilfull enough to mainteyne the quarell if they would either vouchsafe to yeld their endeuour thereto or could be persuaded to thinke that their trauaile would counteruaile their studies And yet albeit happely may be founde some one so nymble of mynde and endued with learning that can Iudge him selfe able enough to performe yet scarse shall ye finde that mā who beyng not otherwise exercized in weightyer affaires will so litle esteéme the losse of his tyme as in such vnprofitable contention snarlyng and snatchyng to spend one houre vpon Osorius that is to say vpon so wayward and melancholicke an aduersary beyng nothyng els but a raylyng brabler Whereby neither profite may redounde to the Reader nor prayse to the victor There is no cause therfore gētle reader why thou shouldst require at our handes that exact and absolute furniture in the supply that is commyng forth should haue bene perfited by M. Haddon either bycause it is not so easie a matter to reach vnto that exquisite plot of his singular Presidēt as to the table of Apelles or els bycause the chiefest of our aduersaries arguments haue bene by sondry persons long sithence crushte in peéces already and are such in effect as deserue rather with discretion to be scorned then with reason to be scanned I will touch onely certeine chief places of the controuersie scattered here and there as they come in the chase and seé to auayle most for his challenge reteinyng my selfe within the lystes of Neoptolemus law that is to say briefly and in summary pointes to touch and away Neither doe I thinke it neédefull to stay long vpon the through debatyng of euery particular point especially bycause threé wordes onely may suffice to ouerthrow the whole Battrye of these threé Inuectiues be they neuer so tedious Forasmuch as the Authour hath vttered nothyng in all his confused worke els but that which sauoreth of lyes slaunders and errours what other reasonable aunswere may any discreét person require then threé wordes onely which when I haue spoken I shal be thought to haue expressed in few wordes all what soeuer that huge rable of that scoldyng and triflyng Sophister doth conteine 1. Mentiris 1. You doe lye 2. Maledicis 2. You do slaunder 3. Falleris 3. You doe erre And to the end it shall not bee sayd that I charge him with a lewde deuise of myne owne imagination cōtrary to the truth of the matter I will alledge certeine euident proofes although not all for it were can infinite labour to number the Sandes of the Sea whereby the diligēt Reader may easily descry his wonderfull vanitie in lyeng his execrable wickednes in slaunderyng and his monstruous blindnes in Diuinitie And first of all this one place offereth it selfe to the viewe wherein two especiall pointes full of haynous accusation are contained That is to say two detestable lyes whelped at one lytter so pregnant is this worme in the one wherof hee doth accuse Martin Luther as though hee did wickedly teache extreme Desperation in the other a bold presumptuous Confidence of Saluation Truely this is a greuous and perillous accusation if it be true Afterwardes out of these two monstruous falsely forged propositions he stampeth a conclusion forth with no lesse false thē malicious wherein he exclameth against Luther as the onely subuertour of all vertue studious Industrie and carefull endeuour Nor is this to be wondred that Osorius doth argue in this wise For whereas euen from the very begynnyng of his booke he hath accustomed him selfe to nothyng els but to a cōtinuall course of lyeng I should maruell more a great deale if hee would now altogether chaunge his Typpet vnlyke him selfe and begyn to speake any thyng truly But the matter goeth well with Luther that his workes are extaunt as yet and are vsually frequented whiche as are true witnesses of his doctrine so cā testifie truely of their maisters innocencie herein Whereupon two thyngs may be easily coniectured whereof the one of great likelyhode is to be suspected either that Osor. hath neuer read those thynges whereat hee cauilleth or that of very nature hee is a notably shaped Sicophaunt Martin Luther sayth he doth teach extreme Desperation I would fayne know where or from whence you haue pyked out this Luther preached many Sermons Cōpiled many bookes some published in his owne coūtrey lāguage Many also turned into the Latine toung The readyng perusing of the which hath recouered many persons I doubt not standyng vpon the very brincke of Desperation in greéuous anguish of mynde amongest whom I do with an vnfained simple and humble conscience thankefully acknowledge before God my selfe to bee one But I did neuer heare of one person so much that hath perished through Desperation by readyng Luthers bookes or hearing his doctrine On the contrary part diuers monumentes and histories are replenished
with examples of such as haue runne headlong into vtter dispayre which haue gaynesayd or withdrawen them selues from the doctrine of Luther As touchyng Frauncisce Spira who reuolted from the participation of the doctrine whiche he had once receaued by Luthers preachyng bycause the Recorde thereof is somewhat old I will for this present omit what remaineth in history of him I will more willyngly vse fresher examples of our later age and yet not all ingenerall for it neédeth not neither is any one man able so to doe But I will rehearse some of the most notable And first of all a certeine mā called Iacobus Latomus a man sometymes wellbe seéne amongest the Deuines of Louayne I can not tell whether you your selfe knew him Osorius when he liued This mā mainteinyng the same quarell wherein you do now turmoyle your selfe agaynst Luther is reported to departe this life in the selfe same Desperatiō whereof you make mention who at his very last gaspes brayeng out most horrible and feareful roaring noyse vttered none other sounde in the eares of all men that heard him but that he was vtterly damned and forsaken of God and had no hope of Saluation layed vp in store for him bycause hee did wilfully resiste the manifest truth which he knew before to be most true I will couple two others with hym of the same fraternitie Guarlacke Reader of Diuinitie Lecture amōgest the Gertrudianes and Arnolde Bomelye Scholer to Tilman of the first of whō it is sayd that euen in the last panges before his death he spake in this maner that he had liued desperately could not endure the Iudgemēt of God bycause he did acknowledge his sinnes to be greater then that they could obteyne for geuenesse The other hauyng fully gorged him selfe with the doctrine of Desperatiō wherein he was instructed by his Schoolemaister of distrust surprised at lēgth with intollerable gnawyng of conscience practised first to kill him selfe with his owne Dagger at the last beyng wholy swallowed vp of Desperation dyd cut his owne bowelles out of his body with an other mans knife It shall not be amisse to ioyne vnto those Sadolet Cardinall of Rome who after sondry disputations mainteined agaynst Luther gaue vp the ghost not without horrible trembling and torment of conscience I suppose also that you are not ignoraunt of the like that happened to Cardinall Crescentius Legate of the Apostolique Seé and President of the Tridentine Councell beyng astonyed with sodeine horrour and troublesome abashement of mynde in the same Citie 1552. of whom Iohn Sledan hath made relation in his Commentaries What shall I speake of Castellane Archbyshop of Aurelia of Ponchere Archbyshop of Turone who procured to them selues Gods indignation and vengeaunce as appeared by the wonderfull fearefull passiōs wherewith they were oppressed at the tyme of their death not bicause they did heare Luther and read his bookes but bycause they did cruelly persecute his doctrine In the same Beadroll may be reckoned the remēbraūce of Iohn Eckius whose whole course of lyfe as was nothyng els but a continuall mortall combate agaynst Luther so his yeldyng to nature was so altogether voyde of spirituall consolation that euen in the last gaspes hee vttered no other wordes but of money and certeine thousand of crownes And what neéde I here rehearse out of the Recordes of aūcient Chronicles Minerius Cassianus Renestenses Martinus that miserable Mōcke called Romanus Prattes Lysettes Rusius Morines who beyng horribly plagued by the seuere Iustice of God may be sufficiēt Presidentes to teach you what it is insolently to kicke agaynst the pricke of Gods vnsearcheable prouidence The History of the French kyng Henry the second is yet but freshe in memory and deépely emprinted not in the myndes onely but in the eyes also of all men who extremely boylyng with inward hatred agaynst the same doctrine receaued his deathes wounde in the selfe same eyes wherewith he was determined to view the execution of others and was forced him selfe to become a manifest spectacle of Gods Iustice to all the world before he could bathe his eyes in the bloud of the innocēt And not long after the sayd Henry followed also the kyng of Nauarre who procured vnto him selfe most iust cause not onely of Desperation but of death also through none other occasion but by persecutyng this doctrine which you doe slaunderously reproche to be the doctrine of Desperation I could here make a Register of an infinite nōber not in Englād onely but of other Regions also which after they had receaued wonderfull cōfort out of the sweéte iuyce of this doctrine which you call Lutherane fell headlong into miserable anguishe and gnawyng of conscience by reuoltyng from this doctrine who could neuer attayne one sparckle of quyet mynde before they had reclaymed them selues from their first Apostasie Last of all how many thousandes of men wemen and children young and old can this our age truely recorde who haue shewed them selues more willyng to yeld their carcasses to fier fagottes sword rackyngs and all maner of horrible Torture rather then they would recante and renounce that comfortable doctrine where with they were enstructed which I suppose they would neuer haue done if they had suspected neuer so small embres of Desperation to haue lurked therein But I perceaue what Osorius doth meane by this word Desperation If he could either expresse his mynde aptly and distinctly or were willyng to deale simply and playnly To the ende therefore I may frame myne aūswere hauing regarde to the meanyng of the man rather then to his speach I will examine the maner of his disputyng somewhat more aduisedly Luther doth teach sayth he that no mā ought to place affiaunce of his righteousnes in merites and good workes Goe to and what is concluded hereof Therfore Luther doth teach the doctrine of Desperation A very new founde and straūge maner of Argument framed perhappes after the rule which concludeth from the staffe to the corner I suppose men of Syluane vse this kynde of arguyng in their wooddy forrests But I make this aunswere to the Argument If God had determined that our Saluation should haue bene purchased through godly actions and vertuous endeuour of mans life it were not altogether without reason that Osorius doth speake But for as much as our hope and confidence is limited within the boundes of the fayth of Christ and the foundation thereof builded vpon this Rocke onely I suppose surely that the person which doth allure vs home vnto Christ from confidence of workes and teacheth vs to repose our whole trust in him as in the onely Sanctuary and shoteanker of our Saluation doth declare rather the true way to assured hope then abolishe the same Neither doth he by and by rende in sunder the sinewes of mans endeuour who doth but embace and disable that part from mās power which doth properly apperteine to the sonne of God I thinke that he discouereth rather the well
what sayth Osorius in the Ceremonies of the old law no not so for that were altogether Iewish in Fayth therfore neither yet so in any wise for this is the very doctrine of Luther Uouchsafe therfore a good felowshyp Osorius to escry out one safe Hauen for vs wherein we poore forlorne abiectes may cast Anker saue our selues frō shipwracke Forsooth in workes sayth Osorius and in keépyng the prescribed rules of vertuous lyfe That is to say in Innocencie in chastitie in modestie in abstinence in vprightnesse of mynde in holynesse of Religion in feruentnesse of the spirite in aboūdaunce of the loue of God in earnest endeuour of godlynesse in deédes of righteousnesse dueties of pietie in geuyng much almonesse in obedience in keépyng peacible vnitie and such like ornamentes treasures wherof Osorius in many wordes maketh a long rehearsall Of all whiche vertues there is not so much as one croome or sparckle in these Lutherans and Buceranes and these new Gospellers thē which kynde of people nothyng can bee named more wicked nothyng thought vpon more pestiferous nothyng more troublesome in the common wealth nothyng more readyly armed to rayse maliciousnesse to sow contentious quarelles strife enemitie nothyng more pernicious to procure the destruction of Princes none more geuē to bloudsuckyng and Treason who beyng embrued with all wickednesse licentiousnesse libertie lust with all manner shamelessenesse crueltie and madnesse outragiously rushe into all places whereby they may thrust their Gospell in place and defile all thynges with filthy stenche wheresoeuer they make neuer so litle abode they corrupt the land with trecherous villanies finally they doe poyson the ayre they doe abandone chastitie geue full scope to voluptuousnesse roote out all feare of Gods law and mans law and in all this outrage they promise vnpunishable libertie On the contrary parte I meane in the Court of Rome and in all that most sacred Citie florisheth a farre other maner of countenaunce and Maiestie of seuere discipline and vertuous lyfe And first of all in that most royall hygh and chief Prelate and most renowmed Monarche of all Prelates sittyng in Peters owne chayre In those Reuerend estates of the Tridentine Councell in the worshypfull Massemongers of the Romish Church in the great Doctours of that old Gospel in Monasteries and Dorters the very forgeshops of most pure doctrine in the most chast Selles of holy Nunnes finally in all that sacred Senate and Catholicke people no such Presidentes of wickednesse and abhomination may bee seene no spotte so much of corrupt infection raigneth no ambition no lust no insolencie neither any kynde of malice no quarellyng no crueltie no foule or vnseémely thyng sauoryng of any earthly contagion can be discernable amongest this generation But whole heapes yea huge mountaines of godly and heauealy store doth florishe and abounde no vnquietnesse or molestation of Empires and Princely gouernement no seéde plottes of mortall warres no shew so much of bloudy battell no Treason no ouerthrowe of Kynges and publicke authoritie nor any seditious plātes of cōtentious discorde finally no earthly thyng in the secret closettes of the Romishe Court in so much that if Diogenes would in midday with torche in hād prye neuer so narrowly he should no be able to finde in all the Citie of Rome one Harlot or strumpet so much To conclude it is not possible to heare amōgest that most sacred Catholicke conuenticle any sounde of cauillation at all no mutteryng of outragious slaunders no blaste of cunnyngly forged lyes wherof as all others of that sect are cleare so are these bookes of Osorius chiefly most purely purged wherein appeareth no smatche of brabling distempered affections no lyeng slaunder nor iarre of erronious doctrine no significatiō of a mynde troubled and seuered from the Castle of Reason But all thynges are debated and expounded with peaceble gentlenesse quyet tranquillitie of mynde wonderfull lenitie and mildenesse not with rigorous and malicious wordes not with slaunderous carterlike reproches but with inuincible Argumētes as forcible as the dartes of Achilles or Hector discharged I thinke out of the very guttes of the Troian horse nothyng vttered to the vayne ostentatiō of witte or reuengemēt of spightfull hatred as it were in Triumphe of victory fie beware of that gentle Reader but of a very simple earnest desire to aduaunce vertue pietie for this especiall cause forsooth that those sparkes and Embres of honesty and godlynesse which Luther hath raked vp buryed and vtterly quenched out might once agayne be quickened and florishe in that most sacred Seé of Rome These euen these same bee the workes if ye will neédes know them Catholicke Reader and good deédes of those men wherewith they doe prepare an entyre to true righteousnesse and furnish their iourney to heauen and wherewith as it were with ladders they clymbe by steppe to the purchase of eternall inheritaunce And how els this euen this must bee the right way to heauen But in the meane space with how many foggy and thicke cloudes hath S. Paule the seruaunt of God Apostle of Iesus Christ ouerwhelmed the Christiā people And into how deépe and darkened doungeons hath he drowned our senses Who albeit was rapt into the thyrd heauen had not as yet conceaued this incomprehensible wisedome out of the very forgeshops of mysticall Philosophy Belike he could not escry throughout all the heauens this hidden secret that men are not Iustified by workes but are made righteous by the Fayth of the sonne of God so by fayth that in no respect by workes Finally that the especiall meanes and singular substaunce of our Iustification is in this sorte to bee wayed as that it may not be attayned els where then in Christ onely nor by any other meanes then through Fayth onely in Christ. But if S. Paule had not receaued this doctrine from heauen or had not taught vs the doctrine which he receaued from thence or if you for your part Osorius had disputed after this sort as ye teach now in any Paynyme common wealth or before any Ethnicke Philosophers or amongest the Iewes or Turkes it might happely haue come to passe I suppose that this your Aristotlelike Iustice might haue obteined at the least some resemblaunce of truth or perhappes crept into some credite nay rather it is not to bee doubted but if the Iewes them selues or Turkes were now consederate with you in Portingall in the same Argument they could not scarsely alledge any other proofes then you bryng forth vnto vs at this present neither would I thinke expoūde the same in any other phrase of words then your selfe do vse But now for as much as we contend not together in Tullies Tusculane questions nor in his Academycall probabilities nor in Platoes common wealth nor in the Iewishe Thalmude ne yet in the Turkes Alcaron but in the Churche of Iesu Christ surely ye ought to haue regarded the place chiefly where you were when ye wrate this
feareth that if God behold his workes he shall finde more offences then merites and if he shall deale with vs accordyng to our desertes he shall finde nothyng in vs but damnable Ierome doth so call vs backe frō all confidence in our deédes that he boldly pronounceth that if we cōsider them in their own nature we should vtterly dispayre What and may it not be lawfull for Luther to vtter his mynde with Christ with the godly Prophetes with the holy Apostles with the learned auncient Fathers Are they commēded in the old Gospell for that they spake well and shall Luther Melancthon Bucer and Caluin● be reproched in scoffyng wise with a new foūde name of new Gospellers bycause they thinke and speake the selfe same thyng that they did If Luther were such a kynde of felow as would take part with Epicure and would practize to let louse the reynes to voluptuousnes turning mens myndes vpsidowne and carry them away quyte from vertuous endeuour from loue of godlynesse from their duetie and honest trade of godly lyfe to lust and licentiousnesse and would place all mans felicitie in this corruptible body and the vayne ticklyng delightes therof it were not altogether from the purpose that ye speake Osorius nor you should be much blamed for makyng him companion with Epicure neither would I refrayne my penne so Christ helpe me but would inueigh agaynst him with all my power as sharpely as your selfe But peruse now all Luthers bookes searche sift consider and ponder all Luthers writynges all his exhortations his doctrine his Lessons his Sermons and all his imaginations yea prye narrowly into his lyfe and conuersation if you can shewe out of all these I will not say one place or example but one worde or sillable so much which doth sounde agaynst the loue and practize of vertue which may seéme to rende the sinowes of righteousnesse and holynesse or breéde dislikyng to the embracyng therof or which doe bruyse the fruites of good workes weaken serious trauaile breake of honest industry or hinder godly enterprises from doyng well or by any maner of meanes doe extenuate the feare due to the lawes of God and man Finally where he may seéme to thinke lesse then may bee seéne a perfect Deuine or behaue him selfe more dissolutely in his maners thē he resembleth in honest iudgement Nay rather if he do not employ all the care possible to rayse vp all men in euery place to the dewe feare of Gods law to true obedience and to all honest conuersation and earnestly emprinte into the sight and myndes of all men the renowne dignitie and worthynesse of vertue pic●e and godlynes you shall haue the Conquest But euen the same thyng say you Epicurus did I confesse that to be true Osorius which ye reporte of Epicurus and which you haue very finely pyked out of your M. Cicero Who doth deny in his thyrd booke of Tusculane questions That Epicurus was Authour of any voluptuous sentences and with all sayth that he vttered many and soudry notable sayinges seémely enough for a true Philosopher But what doe ye conclude hereof Epicurus doth commende vertue in some place Luther doth also the lyke Ergo Luther is an Epicurean Why doe ye not also conclude agaynst S. Paule that hee is an Epicurean bycause he doth also the selfe same thyng O rare and singular sharpe witted Chrisippus whiche if had not altogether beéne nooseled in his old Gospell could neuer haue knitte such knots together of meére particular propositiōs neither would this wōderfull Logician haue euer coupled Luther with Epicurus But bycause Osorius hath borowed this Argument out of Cicero we will open his iugglyng boxe in fewe wordes and first of all shew what Cicero speaketh next how west this Ciceroniā doth agreé with Cicero And first as concernyng Cicero Whenas he maketh mētion of Epicurus sentēces he doth not reprehend the quicknesse and nymblenes of his witte but rather prayseth him therfore onely he noteth the scope and end of his doctrine Neither doth he condēne those sentēces which Epicurus spake well but bycause he did so define chief Felicitie as though it cōsisted onely in voluptuousnes herein he founde fault with him and not without cause For Epicurus amongest other his sayinges wrate in this maner That mans lyfe could not be pleasaunt if it were not ioyned with vertue he denyed that fortune was of any such force as to apall the courage of a wise man That the meane lyfe of the poore was better then the riche He denyed also that there was any wise man but the same was also happy Truely all those sayings are worthely spoken by him as Tully him selfe reporteth Now let vs see what Argument our Ciceroes Ape will shape out of all this And Luther sayth hee doth offer the same order perhappes exhorte his Auditory in his writyngs and Sermons to the same dueties of lyfe c. If Luther doe so Osorius he doth very well What then will you finde fault with this No but as Epicurus disputyng sometymes gloriously of vertue did notwithstandyng with his preceptes vtterly wipe away vertue euen with lyke craftie conueyaunce Luther doth subuerte and ouerthrowe all dueties of vertue and godlynesse Speake out Parrotte in what place doth Luther subuerte the dueties of vertue Where doth hee blotte out honesty and godly carefulnesse of good men May this be tollerable in you with slaūders and lyes to deface the good name of a man that neuer deserued it who is also dead to condemne his writynges after you haue geuen him a most cruell wounde to be so voyde of all reason as to be vnable to alledge one Title one place one sillable so much of iust accusation wherfore ye should so do Nor make your slaunderous reproches to carry any shew of truth let vs throughly peruse the begynnynges of Luthers doctrine the proceédyng and dayly increasinges therof let vs sift out the ende and the whole course and purporte of his proceédyng what doth he forth with plucke vp the rootes of vertue which abateth the Affiaunce of mans workes and ascribeth all our saluation to the onely bountie and mercy of God Which doth likewise affirme that the workes of the Saintes in this world if they be examined to the vttermost pricke are not able to counteruaile Gods wrath nor satisfie his iudgement but preacheth that of all partes they neéde mercy directyng vs in the meane whiles to the true marke of assured Confidence is this man to be coupled with Epicurus as though hee should be Authour of the ouerthrow of all honesty or rather shal he be adiudged a good Phisition of the Soule as one that doth minister wholesome medicine agaynst poysoned errours But you will inueigh to the contrary That if that maner of doctrine be admitted wherof Luther is Authour then will all studious care of pietie decay and hauocke will bee made of all godly endeuour and licentious liberty will be
done by him we beleue assuredly is done either to expresse his power or to make his glory discernable or to commend his Iustice or els to discouer the wonderfull riches of his mercy Wherfore when Luther doth affirme that with GOD all thynges are done by an absolute Necessitie whether they come by destiny chaunce or any fortune at all why should not it be as lawfull for him to speake so as for Osorius to speake in the lyke phrase and in lyke titles of words That God is of Necessitie the best the most iust and the most wisest But I heare the sounde of an Argument from the Popish Diatriba They say that they abridge not God of his power no nor that they can do it neither would at any tyme otherwise then as him selfe hath abridged it Although there be nothyng but that the omnipotency of God can bryng to passe yet would he haue nothyng lawfull for him selfe to do that might be contrary to his Iustice. And bycause it is an horrible matter that any man should be damned without euill deseruynges and that it is not reason that good workes should be defrauded of their due reward therfore it must needes follow accordyng to the rule of Iustice that God should chuse thē whom he would haue to be saued for the good workes whiche he did forsee to be in them and condemne the other lykewise for their euill doynges For otherwise if he doe not regarde the workes then were not his Iustice constaunt and permanent This Obiection must be ouertaken after this maner It is one thyng to treate of Gods Election and an other thyng to treate of his Iudgement As concernyng the Iudgement of God it is euident that no man is damned vnlesse he haue deserued it for his wickednesse and that no man is saued vnlesse some matter be founde in him whereunto his saluation may be imputed It is farre otherwise in Election and Predestination which is accomplished accordyng to Gods Freé determination and coūsell without all respect of workes either goyng before or commyng after Or els how can that saying of the Apostle be true Not of workes but of him that calleth c. meanyng thereby the Free Election of GOD Whereupon let vs heare Augustine very aptly discoursing in his booke De Praedestin Grat. It is sayd not of workes but of him that calleth The elder shall serue the younger He doth not say of workes done before but when the Apostle spake generally not of workes here he would that men should vnderstand it both of workes done and already past and workes not as yet done that is to say workes past which were none at all and workes to be done which as yet were not done c. Workes therfore haue both their tyme and their place Certes in Electiō they haue neither tyme nor place Neither is any thyng here of any value but the onely will of God which neither dependeth vpon fayth nor vpon workes nor vpō the promises but workes fayth and the promises and whatsoeuer els doe all depend vppon it For neither are our deédes vnto him a rule to direct his Election by but our deédes are directed by his Election as the effectes do consequētly depend vpon the causes and not the causes vpō the effectes Neither doth God worke vnrighteously in the meane tyme in this if he take mercy on whō he will take mercy or if he harden whō he will harden And why so For sooth bycause he is indebted to no man For sithence we are all in generall euen from our mothers wombes ouerwhelmed drowned in this puddle of originall sinne he may accordyng to his good pleasure haue mercy on whom it pleaseth him and againe passe ouer whom soeuer hym lysteth and leaue them to them selues that is to say not take mercy vppon them Whereupon all men may easily perceaue aswell the Reprobates what it is whereof they may iustly accuse thē selues as also they that are chosen how much they are indebted to God for his great and exceédyng mercy Euen as if one man kill an other with a sworde no man doth therfore accuse the sword but he rather is knowen to be in faulte which did abuse the sword to murther with as good reason for asmuch as men are nothyng els but as instrumentes of wickednesse onely in Gods hand they that yeld of Necessitie are not so much in fault as he rather deserueth to be blamed that caused them to do wickedly If so be that men whom God hath created after his owne Image were such kynde of Instrumentes whiche lyke vnto a sword or sawe were driuen not of them selues and without any motion or consent of their owne or if God were such a Royster or hackster that would delight in the slaughter of men the similitude were not altogether to be mislyked Now to graunt vnto them that the wills of men are directed and are subiect to a stronger power then they are able to resiste yet do they not suffer onely as Instruments brutish and senselesse doing nothyng them selues in the meane whiles Men are drawen in deéde but with their owne wills as Augustine maketh mention Neither is any man euill but he that will him selfe And if man will be of his owne accord euill who ought to be blamed therfore but him selfe For where shall we say that sinne is but where a will is founde to committe Sinne But Osorius ceaseth not as yet frō his chatteryng They that doe affirme that God hath seuered out of all the vniuersall masse of mākynde some whō he would prepare to euerlastyng glory and some others whom he would appoint to euerlastyng destruction not for any other cause but bycause it so pleaseth him doe plucke Gods prouidence vppe by the rootes The Lutheranes do alledge none other reason of Gods Predestination besides his will onely Ergo The Lutheranes do foredoe and plucke the prouidence of Cod vppe by the rootes I beseéche you Osorius if as yet you haue not cast away all feélyng of an honest and sober Deuine vtterly returne to your selfe at the length In deéde say you so Do they foredoe Gods prouidence which say it is so for none other cause but bycause it pleaseth him c. What kynde of Argument doe I heare from you Cā God be pleased to do any thyng that is not most correspōdent to reason or cā any Reason be of all partes so absolutely perfect that can disagreé frō the chief and principall patterne of his will or do you seéme a reasonable man that doe talke so fondly But I beseéche you Syr. For as much as the will of God whether soeuer it bende and encline it selfe is nothyng els but a most perfect Reason of it selfe and of all partes most absolute and without blemishe and for as much also as Reason it selfe is nothyng els then the very rule of Gods will nay rather for as much as the will of God is the very essence
pure elegancy of Cicero do seeme in his iudgement childishe stammerers in vayne haue Augustine Ierome Ciprian Ambrose Gregory Bernard in vayne haue the Romish Prelates and all other expositours both of the Greéke and the Latine Churches in vayne haue Angrensis Dalmata Alphonsus Turianus Andradius bestowed great and paynfull labours in writīg whose style and forme of phrase if be throughly viewed and considered peraduenture the more part of them will be found to differre as farre from the finesse of Cicero as Haddon doth That I may be so bolde to make no menciō at all of Scotus Sotus Lōbardus Gratiane Thomas de Aquino Raphaell Gabriell and such like trasshe yea how many may a mā pyke out from amongst the most famous and true Christian deuines who of sett purpose haue abased their stile not because they could not write so loftely of the thinges that you esteéme of so ga●ly but because they were of this minde that this hawty loftinesse of affected Eloquence woulde not agreé with the naturall simplicitie of the Gospell Whereupon Ierom writing to Pammachius seemeth in this respecte to haue him in the more estimaciō because he despised Cicero in respect of Christ and farther also is of this Iudgement that in the expositiō of scriptures the nycetye of speache ought not onely to be dissimuled but also vtterly eschued because it might be more profitable for all ingenerall Christ our sauiour accompteth the high and great thinges of this worlde to he execrable and abhominable in the sight of God And the Prophet Esay doth with wonderfull manacing threaten Manasses the day of the Lord agaynst all things that be fayre beautifull florishing things of this world Paule in enlarging the knowledge of the Euangelicall doctrine durst not beginne the same with high and lofty Rhetoricall speache nor furnishe his wordes with humayne Eloquence not because it was hard for him to do so if he listed but chose rather to refrayne least the Crosse of Christ sayth he might be made voyde and of none effect I speake not this because I would haue men tyed to such a necessitie now a dayes by his example namely sithe the Gospell of Christ doth so florish euery where as though it might not be lawfull in these dayes with what soeuer ornamentes yea of greattest estimatiō to beautifie the speache to applye the same to the vse of Christes congregatiō But yet must modest discretiō be vsed here Truely if Plato were of opinion that the last end of Eloquence was that we should deliuer vtter things acceptable to God how much more thē is the same to be required in a Deuine Aud therefore as concerning the Grace and dexteritie of Cicero whatsoeuer it be that eyther Nature did emplant in him or Industry did attayne as I despise it not but rather very well like of it and do wonder at so excellent a gift of God in him so agayne do I not reprehend in any man to immitate him so that his imitation be ioyned with Christian simplicitie so that it be done not to hawke after the proud estimation of the worlde nor to the vayne glorious ostentation of witte nor for anye priuate glory finally so that it be so applyed that discret imitation may be clearely voyde of vayne affectation Nowe what shall we say to them who reiecting all other teachers of maners and doctrine do employ all their endeuour to file vpp their tongues so addict themselues altogether to Cicero alone and so amazedly dote vpon him onely that thinke it a lesse fault not to be a Christian almost then not to be a Ciceronian nor iudge hym scarse worthy the reading though he be neuer so Christian a wryter that doth not frame hys stile after Ciceroes patterne and sauor altogether of hys delicate speache And that is the cause as I suppose why Osorius doth recken that Haddon doth wryte nothing purely and nothing playnly Not because he hath corruptly or fasly written but that it seémeth to Osori that he hath not written like a Ciceronian because hee doth not throughly resemble his dexteritie loftines although in deéde he be not very farre behinde hym And therfore this sweete man doth wōder what waywardnes of minde forced him to be so bold as to wryte agaynst Osorius and cōmaundeth him to learne of him if it please the Muses how hawty and vehement interrogations must be applyed in place fitte for the same Last of all in steade of a Rhetoricall acclamation concluding with a Satyricall skoffe he doth aduertize hym To procede in writing franckly as hym listeth and because he will encourage hym to wryte more franckly and freely he telleth him that he may freely wryte without daunger because no man of any iudgement or skill will blame him in this respect that he is addicted to Cicero more then is needefull If there were any sense or feélyng of right or wrong in all your body or if there were any reason in all these your vnmanerly tauntes and rascallike scoffes Osorius I could acquite you with the lyke and could be contented to space them vnto you in Haddons behalfe But now for as much as this your speach is so aboundaūtly replenished with vanitie and folly what were better for me to doe then accordyng to the counsell of the wise man To aunswere a foole accordyng to his foolishnesse Briefly therfore and bycause I make hast to the end of your booke to aūswere not to your Argumentes which in deéde are none but to aunswere your scoffes and nyppyng conceiptes not altogether vnpleasauntly yet neuerthelesse somewhat truly Surely I do geue you harty thankes Osorius not for myne owne cause onely but in the publicke name of all the learned generally for the thynges wh you haue taught vs hetherto in these your notable books For so haue you taught as we all can not but be merry and receaue singuler delight at your doynges For what is he that can absteine from laughing that shall heare you disputyng vpon those matters in wh you seéme to behaue your self no more aptly then as though a blind man should discerne betwixt colours and a Camell Iudge of dauncing You take vpon you to determine franckly betwixt true and false Religiō very hautely and proudely but yet much more impudently And yet it shal be as easie a matter for a mā to finde as much Relligion in Tullies Offices yea and as true as this your Relligion is which you haue so gloriously painted out in these your bookes hetherto a fewe sparckles onely except Likewise also throughout the whole course of the rest of your discourse how often haue your friuolous and confused Argumentes moued me to myrth and laughter As where you thrust your selfe to stoughtly into the matter of Iustification Predestination in all which kinde of doctrine notwtstādyng you seéme as meére a straūger as though you came new frō India neither dare once so much all the while in all your
agreéd vpon confirmed and published before the whole Councell after the Testimony of Rob. Gagni in hys 10. booke Whereunto Constant. Phrigio addeth further saying which I would to God fayth he had bene hitherto obserued and kept But whatsoeuer hath any smack of sounde doctrine is abolished Thus much he To this also may be annexed that which Thom. Rhedonēs a Frenchman a Carmelite Frier and a Martyr wrate hereof who because he sayd that in Rome were many abhominations and that the Church needed much reformation and the vnlawfull cursinges of the pope ought not to be feared was after many tortures burned at Rome in the tyme of this same Eugenius in the yeare 1436. out of Antonine and other partes 3. title Cap. 10. I suppose that there is no man now that doth not very playnely perceaue and see though I would surcesse here to prosequute any more how men may duely and vprightly esteéme of all this whole Seé and pontificall religion whiche seémeth for no other purpose erected but to some discorde and rayse vppe vproares and Tumultes Whereupon it seemeth so much the more straunge to me that Osorius dare be so shamelesly Impudent to obiect sectes and sedicious troubles to our Churches sithence himselfe cannot with honesty deny so many cruell and mortall diuisions of factions so many contentious Seditions and mutines to haue sprong vp and continued euen in the innermost bowells of that most sacred Seé being also of so lōg continuance and which himselfe cannot by any meanes blotte out to speake nothing in the meane time of those sectes of errors and wicked doctrine moyling and turmoyling one agaynst an other in such an vnmeasurable quantitie skattered abroad that there is skarse any one thing wherein they agreé amongst thēselues and differ from vs but that in the same they flee cleane away not from vs onely but from Christ himselfe also But to let passe these sectes and factions of the Romanistes I will tourne agayne to the obiections that do properly touche vs. For thus doth Osorius contend agaynst vs accusing the Gospell that we professe on this wise as though it yelded none other fruits but sectes troublesome cōmotiōs And thys he affirmeth commeth to passe for none other cause but because we haue shaken of the authoritie of the pope which if had neuer bene banished or if might be restored to her auncient estimation in our Churches These Tumultes either had neuer bene or els might haue easily bene pacified All which tend hereunto at the laste to witte that we should humbly submit our selues to the Bondage of the Pope for this is the pleasaunt bayte whereat Osorius would haue vs fayne to be hooked this is his whole practise and endeuour But before hee shall be able to allure vs to that he must furnishe hys hookes agayne with fresher bayte somewhat more handsomely couched For with this touchangle he may fishe a good while catch a foole at the last But go to Let vs eyther imagyne and confesse vnto him that these sectes and Diuisions of opinions do waxe somewhat rawe in many places after that this romish Authoritie is neglected what shall he winne thereby doth he surmise this to be matter sufficient to make vs forsake the Gospell of Christ and to knitt the romishe halter vpon our neckes agayne or doth he iudge it a reasonable matter because there want not some in some places that are ouer greedely geuen to sectes and deuisions that it may not therefore be lawfull for others which teache sound doctrine to professe boldly before the people the rules and order of good and honest lyfe But where hath Osorius gone to schoole for this Logick or Sophistry rather to frame an argument from that whiche is not the cause as though it were the verye cause and to conclude a meere fallaxe of the Accident for a true and a knowne matter which maner disputation if may be admitted I seé no cause to the contrary but by the same reason the Orator Tertullus might seeme to hane had as good a challenge long sithence agaynst the Apostle as this our Tullian Rhetorician doth now mayntayne agaynst the Lutheranes For in the Apostles tyme neither wāted stoare of false Apostles and false brethren dogges euill workmen Philetians Hermoginistes Simonistes and Nicholaitans neyther was there any lack of faccious Fyrebrāds amōgst the Corinthians which did practize to withdraw the Galathians from the simplicitie of the engraffed word fayning themselues to be Iewes when as in deéde they were nothing lesse After them ensued Chorinthians which denyed that Christ was come in the flesh many Antichristes Libertines Seuerianes Nouatianes Sabellianes Nepotianes Manicheans Arryans Pelagianes Cataphrigianes Donatistes And yet for all this Christiā Religiō ought neuer the worsse to be esteemed by reason of these sects troublesome faccions wherewith it was entangled what one Age of the Church was euer without some such as entruding themselues among the other godly teachers and ministers of the Church would not now and then minister much matter of discention and deuision for as one maner of wheate doth not fructifie alike in euery soyle so can there none so pregnaūt an earth be found in the which the good carefull husbandman shall sow the pure and cleane corne of the Euangelicall wheate neuer so carefully but that the same Enuious man will forthwith creépe in and throw amongst the same noysome Darnell and hurtfull weédes Neither doth the wheate cease therefore to be any more wheate because it is intermedled with Chaffe and Darnell Euen so no more hurtfull is this wilfull and ouerthwart waywardnes of cōtrary sectes to the sound doctrine of the pure truth Nay rather it could not appeare to be a true Church at all vnlesse it were assaulted now then with such kynde of Batterye If it were so that these dissentions of opinions did but nowe onely peepe abroad eyther by Luther as author or by anye hys allowance your obiection perhappes might serue to some purpose But who hath euer more earnestly or more effectually oppugned those Phanaticall faccions of opinious then Luther hath done Let not this accusation of Osorius be filed vppe amongst the other hys false reproches and lyes vnlesse all the writinges and speaches of Luther euery where yea and experience it self do Iustifie my saying to be true Who did euer more sharpely rebuke the seditious vproares of Mūster then Luth. did who did more seriously zelously confute the frantick articles and vnreasonable requests of the Boores of Germany whēas not one of all your generation opened his mouth to the contrary then Luther did who appeased and pacified their Tumultes but the Protestantes Lutheranes what writing can be of more emportaunce then that of Luther agaynst the confederates of Mūster After these sprong vpp also the secte of the Laweles which through Luthers industry trauell and wryting was by and by husht vppe the Author thereof being reclaimed And it
and veniall faultes rather No. But euen the most hainous the most wicked not to be named Lust murthers Conspiracies Treasons Tumultes Pride Sauadgenesse Vproares Destructions and Dispensations and what not I maruaile of one thing much that whiles you are exquisite skilfull in numbring and multiplying our faultes as that no horror and filthinesse of life can be found in all yonr Rhetoricke whiche you haue not by all wayes meanes of Amplification stretched out to the hard hedge agaynst the Lutheranes That ye forgot to obbrayd the Lutheranes with one poore abhomination amongest all the rest which my selfe will not name here but will referre you ouer to the gentle remembraunce of Cardinall Casus and to his brethren and to that Catholicke crewe and most holy children of that most holy mother Church S. Maryes But I returne to our owne Catalogue what say you that all those abhominations therfore raunge abroad with vs vnpunished yea in deéd Syr. What with vs English men onely or do ye not cōprehend in the same Cataloge Frēch men also Germaynes Danes Switzers Bohemyās Polans Rettes Scottes all other natiōs Fautors of the Lutherāes doctrine also Yea truely whersoeuer throughout the whole world the doctrine of these men hath bene published wheresoeuer these new Gospellers doe set theyr feete on the ground they doe defyle the heauēs the ayre and the earth with the horror of theyr iniquity Good words good Syr. What be those notorius crimes so common and generall amongest vs alone that the same cannot be found any where among you Catholickes yes but not so much In deéd do you thinke that there is not euen as much and will you geue me leaue then to aunswere hereunto as I thinke Surely I will not speake much neither is it neédefull namely in a matter so apparaunt This one thing will I speake boldly and the same also no lesse truely then as Demetrius on a time was sayd to aūswere Lysimachus A Strūpet doth behaue her selfe more modestly amongest vs Osorius then Penelope doth amongest you By this one bethinke your selfe now Osorius what my opinion is of all the rest And yet do I not in the meane space deny but that we are by many degreés farre vnlyke to the life which the Apostles did lead and which indeéd beseémeeh the true professors of the Apostolicke doctrine Neuerthelesse as we dot glory much of our vertues so neither do we so stroake and flatter our selues in our vyces but we iudge the same worthy of sharpe correction and chastisement But whē you haue reckoned vppe all the spottes of our ill fauoured life and agrauated the filthinesse thereof as much as you may yet are you to aunswere me directly to this namely whether ye think these faultes to be proper to men or to doctrine if vnto mē let your exclamation therefore touch them which haue deserued to be exclaymed agaynst They be Lutheranes say you that be so abhominable There be Lutheranes also that do liue godly And I thinke that all your Catholickes doe not lead theyr liues like Apostles Now if the former faultes be proper to the doctrine But it hath bene long sithence declared that this doctrine is none other then which Christ and his Apostles deliuered Wherefore if these faultes and licentiousnes of life be imputed to the doctrine and professors of the same doctrine then look about you Osorius how farre your slaunderous speéch doth stretche and whom you touch therewith for euen all those whom you doe accuse for Lutheranes do beleue in Christ and not in Luther nor do acknowledge any other Author of theyr faith then all other Christian men doe so that this profession can not iustly be charged with any crime which cleaueth not fast to the Gospell of Christ and is common also to the Apostles themselues But the doctrine of Luther say you hath discouered vnto them this liberty and ministred occasion of this dissolute life If it shall be enough for Osorius to affirme in bare wordes onely that whereof he hath not hetherto made any proofe nor is euer able to iustify We are vtterly ouerthrowen for he imputeth all that huge heape of haynous abhomination to Luthers doctrine And why so Syr Byshoppe how do you proue this to be true Luther did open the fountaynes of the Gospel of grace he did display abroad to the view of the world the freé promises of God which had bene pent vppe in a deépe doungeon of long scilence and almost pyned awaye with long emprisonement he raysed vpp and recomforted with the comfortable confidence in the Medyatour consciences that were vtterly foredone and forelorne yea and this not altogether vnfruitfully he discouered the force and efficacy of fayth learnedly he confuted the vayne talkatiue opinion of vayne confidence in mans righteousnes the part of the Law which consisteth of workes he bounde within her proper lymittes and boundes he enclosed it within her peculiar persons and Tymes and seuered it cleane from the Gospell he called backe the slippery mindes of men from carnall superstition and fryuolous Iewish zeale to the spirituall worshipping of God and true Religion It followeth Forasmuch as Luther Melancthon Bucer Martyr Caluine and others of the same crew haue stuffed their bookes full of these thinges and taught the same also openly in theyr Sermones euery where what haue these new Gospellers brought to passe by theyr new doctrine be therto as yet els then cut in sunder the very Sinowes of seuere discipline scattered abroad ouer the whole world lycentious lust murthers and vproares filled all common weales with abhominations Tumultes pride Bondage vproares vnpunished liberty to sinne outrage and all abhominable infections of mischiefes and vntimely deathes in steed of Concord Cleanesse modesty freedome Religion peace I beseéch you Osor. for the loue you beare to your chastity modesty freédome and Religion what aunswere canne you make hereunto Can it not be lawfull for vs to preach the Gospell of God but that we shall forthwith ouerthrow all vertue may we not comfort and cherish wounded and pyned cōsciences but we must withall open an high way for the wicked to raunge in all outrage vnpunished Is it not possible to distinguish the law from the Gospell● to make a difference betwixt the workes of the Law and the righteousnesse of fayth to display the force of the heauenly grace but we must be accounted enemies of Gods law and rooters out of honesty Is this the manner of your reasoning and the superaboundance of your eloquence or the barraynenesse of your iudgement or super infirmity of your slippery braynes And yet what wonder is it though Luther be so infamed sithence Paule himselfe being in the same predicament could not by any meanes escape the venemous snatches of like vypers nor could skarse shake them away from his hand For so we read that it was obiected against Paule yea euen of his owne brethren namely That he taught a defection from
Moyses Howbeit it was so much the lesse to be marueled That the same should be obiected agaynst Paule in that tyme especially when as the Iewes were yet chiefe rulers of the Temple it selfe and Moyses ordynaunces were as yet in their chiefe force and authoritye What and haue we profited this farre now at the length after so great and long labors employed after so many aduertizements of thapostles after so many instructions of the holy ghost after so many examples of the Church after so many miracles so many bookes so many testimonyes of learned men so many helpes of sownd doctrine that we must after all these neédes ●unne back vnto old Iewishnes agayne may we not now skarcely open onr mouthes to preach Iesus Christ the Sonne of God but we must seéme Iniurious to Moyses For what els did Luther meane Whereunto els tended all his doctrine trauaile endeuour and thought but that the gracious mercy of God discouered in the Gospell might through his minystery he commended to weak● and aflicted consciences and glorified of them In which maner of doctrine yf any thing seéme displeasaunt to your minde let your owne minde and Imagination offend you rather then Paule or Luther For there lurketh a plague or pestilence not in the Doctrine but in the minde which in my iudgement seémeth to be such as that if you had liued in the tyme of Christ with the Scribes and Pharises being of the same mind wherewith you gnaw this doctrine so viperously now you might haue bene fellow mate with them which cryed out Crucifige Crucifige agaynst Christ. Not so say you but the wickednes and abhominations of this age doe much displease me with that am I worthely offended And what good or godly man is not throughly displeased herewith Peruse who will the writings of Luther Melanckton Bucer Zuinglius Martyr Caluine and he shall easely peceaue that this deadly decay of Godly lyfe was no lesse greuous to euery of them then to your selfe that I neéde neuer speake of this besides to witt that Luther being very oftentymes disquieted with the maners and vnthankefulnes of his own countrey men did long before with a very propheticall vehemencye foretell that the same lamentable slaughter should befall them for their vngratefull contempt of Euangelicall lyfe wherewith not long after they were greuously pinched And how then may any reasonable man credit you Osorius that lye so impudently vpon these men whom you make to be Authours and standerbearers of all those mischyeues and Tumultes But here is yet another argument clowted vppe and patcht together with the lyke stuffe whereby he would proue vpon trust of hys Rhethoricke That these false Prophets Lutherans were not sent from God Let vs first note the wordes which he citeth out of the Scriptures Marke well sayth he What the Lord spake of a false Prophet The Prophet that is puft vp with pride and will speake in my name the thing that I doe not commaund him to speake or in the name of any other straunge Godds let him be slayne And if in your secret conceypt you thinke with your selfe how shall I vnderstand that it is not the word of God that he hath spoken Take this for a signe Whatsoeuer that Prophet shall Prophecy in my name and it come not to passe that hath not the Lord spoken but the Prophet himselfe hath imagined it through the pride of his owne hart and therefore thou shalt not feare him c. Where is this Seéke for it Reader in the old Testament or in the new for eyther it pleased not Osorius to note the place or perhappes it serued not for his purpose so to doe But the place is to be found in the 18. Chap. of Deut. Go to and what is it that this wonderfull Philosopher of this world hath pyked out of these words Forsooth hauing vttered this much first by way of preamble It followeth now sayth he that we see what Luther Melancton Bucer Caluine and the other iolly companions haue promised and vndertaken to doe what hope they haue geuen of their glorious promises to witt that it should come to passe that they would call home agayne the discipline of the Gospell to her auntient sinceritye restore Religion hold vpp the Church that was ready to fall downe That is to say that they would fully restore the decayed fayth of the Church restore lenitye Chastitye Concord Vnitye Modestye Obedience Charitye together with godlynes and great bountye of godly loue All these things wherof they promised largely and in many wordes to bring to passe it lacketh so much of thacomplishment of their promise that they haue left all things in farre more worse case more peruerse more filthy and more deformed by the meanes of their goodly trauayle as men that haue placed Sacrilege in stead of Religion Crueltye in stead of Lenytye Tumults in stead of Peace Ciuill warre in stead of Concord Licentiousnes of lyfe in stead of chastity Contempt of Magistrates in stead of Obedience Pride in stead of Modestye Finally in stead of Charitye and Pietye Enmitye and hatred amongest good men Monstruous wickednes and vtter ouerthrow and confusion of all common weales The matters being so to conclude at the last who can thinke that any man may doubt that these men were sent from God or moued by his holy spirite Breéfly passing ouer all friuolous circumlocutions of words to gather the whole matter agayne together into a shorte breuiate Behold here a full sillogisme after this maner and forme The Prophets which doe prophecie in the name of God yf it come not to passe as they haue prophecied are not sent from God It is so farre of that Luther Melancton Bucer or Caluine haue performed the thinges that they promised that all haue proued in farre more worse case Ergo. Luther Melancton Bucer and Caluine were not sent from God but are lying Prophets and therefore according to Gods lawe worthy of euerlasting death I am in doubt whether I may aunswere or laugh Thone of both paraduenture the Reader will looke for t thother the fondnes of the argument doth perswade me to doe For what can be spoken more senselesly what can be more crookedly wrested out of the whole Scriptures what could haue bene attempted more cruelly and falsly agaynst godly personages what could haue bene concluded more absurdly First there is a place vouched out of the Scripture wherein the people is taught how they may discerne a false Prophet frō a true namely by the true successe euent of thinges as farre forth as the thinges foretold doe happē or not happē And yet in this behalfe also speciall consideratiō of choyse ought to be hadd some secret inspiration of the holy ghost For although Caiphas be sayd to haue foretold as the trueth was Yet will you not geue him a place emongest the holy Prophets So also neither did Balaam lye altogether when in a Propheticall speach he
With like outrage did Queéne Alfrithe kyng Edgar his wife most cruelly murther Edward the Martyr her sonne in law by meanes wherof she might place into the kyngdome her owne sonne Egelrede At the last repētyng her of her former wickednes did erect two Abbayes in satisfactiō of her murther to witt Amesbury and Werwell about the yeare of our Lord. 979. Kyng Athelstane hauyng slayne his brother Egwyne whō he drowned tyrānously in the Sea after the slaughter of his brother did builde two Abbayes namely Mydleton and Michelney enriched them with great reuenewes for the Redemption of his brothers soule and forgeuenes of the murther Upon the same occasiō or not much vnlike was Battell Abbay first founded which kyng William the Conquerour after he hadd woo●ne the fielde and slayne a great multitude of notable Souldiours did cause to be builded in the same place for the release of the soules and Sinnes of all such as were slayne in that battell I haue thought good to sett downe a brief note of these the like whereof I could haue rehearsed many more All which albeit I had rypped abroad would haue bene sufficient Presidentes that they all had one maner of begynning and one cause of foundation namely none other then which might vtterly deface the glory of Christ the assuraunce and trust of our Redemption and withall the whole Grace and comfort of Christes Gospell O holy foundation of Monckish Religion O wonderfull monumentes of maruelous holynesse O sweéte and smoathe Deuine that can so amyably persuade vs to retourne to these principles and foundations wherein he seémeth in my Iudgement to endeuour nothyng els then to bryng vs Christians in belief that forsakyng Christ and renouncyng the doctrine of the Gospell we should repose the saluation and redemption of our soules and the forgeuenes of our Sinnes not in the Sonne of God but in Monckes and Monckeries But lett vs pursue Osorius by the tracke of his foote whiles he hasteneth to the end of his booke who glauncyng away from the Moūckes at the last doth begyn to proyne his feathers and to make a shew of his proper witt to Kinges and Princes And here he rusheth vpon the poore Lutheranes with an horrible accusation of high Treason And why so I pray you whether because the life of Princes hath bene preserued by them or de●owred by theyr practise No. But treason hath bene conspired agaynst theyr lyues and theyr Crownes and vproares raysed As in Germany agaynst Charles the Emperour In Fraunce agaynst Henrye the Kyng in England against Edward who he doth affirme was poysoned by the Lutherans Agaynst Queene Mary In Scotland agaynst the King whom he affirmeth to be horribly murthered Yea Syr in this last you speake true indeéd but to name the Author of this murther you play mumme budgett Yea and not agaynst these Princes onely but agaynst many more prynces besides Osorius doth boldly say conspyracies to haue bene attempted by the Lutheranes And why doth he not emongest the Kynges and Princes of Germany Fraunce England and Scotland before named reckon vpp also Prynces of Turky of Scithia of Persia of India of Aethiopia with their Emperors Kinges and Potentates The great Sophye Emperour of Persia and Moskouia Prester Iohn And sithence he taketh so great a delight in lying why doth he not with as shamelesse a face exclayme that the Lutheranes haue conspired Treasons and procured poysons agaynst those persons forasmuch as hys lying therein cann beare no better countenaunce then it doth in the rest But forasmuch as these slaunders are wisely and sufficiently aunswered before by mayster Haddon in the first book it were labor lost to abuse the Readers time in refuting those vntruthes which be alreadye confounded before especiallye sithence this cause doth neither concerne the doctrine which we do professe and sithence Osorius will be proued a lyar herein by no person more easily then by the Scottish Queéne her selfe to speake nothing in the meane space of the publique and generall testimonies of Germany Fraunce and England Therefore passing ouer those Princes I will frame my selfe to the other part of his complaynt which concerneth our most gracious Queéne Elizabeth aboue all the rest And here I beseéch theé gētle Reader lett it not seéme tedious vnto theé to pawse a whyles that thou mayst perceiue how like a Deuine Osorius doth behaue himselfe For framing himselfe to discourse vpon Ecclesiasticall gouernement which he doth constantly denye is not meéte shoulde be committed to the creditte of a Temporall King much lesse to a Queéne in any respect which because the Queénes Maiesty shall not take in ill part as though he defaced any part of her honor he doth very humbly craue pardon of her grace with an honorable preface For he is not the man that will presume to extenuate any part of her honour but rather doth wishe with all hys hart that she may of all partes so abound in vertue that she may be shrined for a Saynct We do ioyfully embrace the godly modesty of this sweéte Byshopp and loe because we will not be found vnthankefull vnto him for the vertues that he doth hartely wish to our gratious Queéne we in requitall of his curtesy doe pray to GOD to endue him with as much of his heauenly grace as may conuert him from a vayneglorious papisticall Babler into a frendly follower and embracer of the infallible truth of the Gospell But lett vs returne agayne to the Ecclesiasticall supremacy of Osorius which he doth yoake so fast to the Byshopp onely that he doth vtterly exclude all other kinges and Queénes especially from all charge ecclesiasticall So that he verilye adiudgeth that there cann come no greater infamy to Religion thē that all Churches ceremonyes and all ordinaunces of the Church all priestly dignityes and holynesse should be subiect to the gouernement of a woman For these be his owne words wherein what he meaneth himselfe either he doth not sufficiently expresse in telling his tale or els my blockishnesse surely can not comprehēd his deépenesse He doth so swell in hawtynesse of speéch that whiles he endeuoureth with waxed winges to fleé beyond the view of common sence aboue the bright cloudes of playne Grammer that through the heat of his skalding braynes he hath drowned himselfe in the deépe and by reaching beyond his reach he reacheth nothing at all Wherefore renouncing once at the length this curious cripsing and blazing brauery of hawtye speéch begyn once at the last to declare vnto vs in playne tearmes distinctly and playnely what your Rhetoryck meaneth by these wordes that all holynesse should be subiect to the gouernement of a woman If you meane of thinges that are of thēselues holy and deuine your quarrell is altogether vntrue wherewith you charge the Queénes maiesty For where did the Queéne euer desire to gouerne or where did she euer desire to beare rule ouer all holy and sacred thinges and this holynesse whereof you make mention
of the Euangelicall doctrine to glister and shyne farre and wyde abroad ouer all Christendome at this tyme which because was not so resplendisaunt and lightsome in the tyme of certeine of our forefathers of late yeares whereas neuerthelesse Christ did alwayes preserue embrace his Church with lyke mercye and fauour therefore he accompteth this Gospell of Christ to be a new straunge Doctrine contrary to Christ and this also not Osorius alone supposeth to be so but many other Deuines wandring inlyke error who are maliciously wroth agaynst Luther as though he a few others were the first deuisours and coyners of this Gospell Thē which vntrueth can nothing be more vntrue Nay rather if Luther had neuer bene borne if Bucer or Caluine had neuer taught yet could your ignoraunce and shamelesse errors haue no longer lurked in darknes through one singuler and especiall prouidēce of God not that whereby Luther was sent abroad into the world but by that inestimable benefite of Gods blessing prepared for the behoofe of his Church I meane the singuler and most excellet Art of Emprinting By this meanes it pleased Gods good mercy both to prouide for the weaknes of his Church withall auēge himselfe vpon your Tyrannous cruelty by a certein secret vnsearchable maner For imediately after Iohn Husse Ierome of Prage the most holy Martyrs of God were by your horrible fury and wickednes consumed to ashes and the veritye of the Gospell suppressed by your Tyranny could neither be suffred to speake franckly nor shew her face abroad boldely nor eskape your rauenous gaping freély skarse x. yeres were come gonne before that in place of two poore Prophetts almighty God had raysed vpp all the holy Prophetts Patriarches Apostles Euangelistes and all the holy doctours of the Church Martyrs Confessours and Interpretours of holy Scripture as it were a certeine army of heauenly knightes armed at all poyntes to encounter your outragious assaultes who because could not be permitted to speake openly in the Church through your tyranny begann to presse forth boldly now in the open Printers shopps and to leape into euery mans bosome and handes and withall to bewray your ignoraunce and Tretchery and to discouer not new wellsprings of Doctrine but to skoure and make cleane the olde fountaines and Conduyt pypes of the Gospell of grace stoppt vp by the popish Philistines And hereupon begann to spreadd abroad with glystering beames the large encrease of this gladsome Doctrine which if be so combersome a block in your way you may not therefore wreake your anger vpon Luther but deuise make some prouiso for these Printers for these bookes for learning and for Languages and to tell you as the trueth is you must excommunicate God himselfe Who durst be so hardy to bestow his vnspeakable mercy vpō this later and declining age of his Church in relieuing comforting her long and werysome trauaile with so many and so plentifull graces and aydes of true Doctrine and sound vnderstanding that would prouide for her sicknes so many learned Phisitions and Doctors not Luther Zuinglius Bucer and Caluine but Moses the Prophetts Apostles Euangelistes and cannonicall Scriptures through the reading and dayly perusing of the which if Christian hartes being better enlightened doe now feéle and perceaue sensybly that which our forefathers were forced to groape after in darkenes you ought not to muse thereat at much lesse to enuye and maligne it Wherefore as touching the grayheadded age of this Doctrine whereat you doe barke so impudently with your currish snarling for as much as we doe professe nothing els then the same that is comprehended within Gods booke and which before our tyme was taught by Moses aucthorized by the Prophetts Apostles what meaneth this your I will not say reason but vnreasonable insensibilytye with such vnsauery subtlety so to wryth wrest that to the defacing of this Doctrine which Haddon did conceaue of the outward lybertye and freédome of the Preachers only as though this doctrine were of no better creditt and no longer continuaunce then these last thyrty yeares and so shamelesly by many hundred yeares to preferre the auncienty of Mahumets sect before the knowledge of this Gospell But it had bene more conuenient for you good syr to haue learned by diligent enquirye whether this comparison of sectes doe not serue more fittly with that your pampered Papane for asmuch as that heathenish Paganisme and your prophane Papacye were both whelped nere about one tyme and almost within the compasse of one yeare which yeare we doe accompt by the reueled computation in S. Iohn to be the sixe hūdreth sixty and sixe Now that this deépe Deuine hath reasonably well beaten his braynes about matters of Diuynitye he doth beginne to cast a new floorish about and will haue a cast at the prosperitye and stayed estate of Princes presuming vpon his politique wisedome to councell kinges and Queénes and chiefly aboue others our gracious Queéne Elizabeth with what modesty she ought to attemper the prosperous successes and happy tranquillitye of her estate That she trust not to much to fawning fortune that there is nothing certeine in the course of this lyfe and many perills are to be feared in matters most pleasaunt and prosperous to the viewe and that no thing is more daungerous then carelesse securitye because as after light followeth darkenesse and after Calme come Clowdes euen so the whole course of this lyfe hath his continuall enterchaunges Ioy sometymes surprised with sodeyne sorrow agayne heauinesse chaunged into honour that all thinges are carryed about in a certaine vehement whyrling vnstablenesse as it were the fleyng vanes of a windemill forced about with Boreas blastes The thinges that are now aloft be sodenly throwen downe and contrarywise the things that be simple base doe at an instant mount aloft And that it commeth oftē to passe that whom God is most displeased withall those same he will ouershadow with more fruitfull aboundaunce of vertue grace and endue them with happy assuraunce not of fyue yeares onely but of many yeares continuaunce that so the greater that their fall is the deeper may their wound be according to the old prouerbe the higher wall the greater fall Briefly that there is no state of honour so firme so sure garded wherein a man may assure himselfe of a minute in safetye which doth euidently appeare by the example of Craesus who being vanquished of Cyrus and prepared vpō a pyle of wood ready to be bourned did cry vpō Solon with a lowd voyce and being demaunded by Cyrus who that Solon was Craesus doth declare the councell that he long before had receaued of that Solon whereupon Cyrus commaunding him to be taken downe from the stacke of wood after that he had thereby learned to bridle his Choler did not onely preserue him on lyue but hadd him in great reuerence and estimation This farre forth Osorius euen out
the lesse was he minded to throw you out of your right But in the meane space as was most cōueniēt for him and most commodius for you he thought it not amisse to geue you frendly aduise according to the sage Counsayle of Aristophanes Lett euery man deale in the matters wherein he is skilfull exercized Not because he would haue you estraūge your affection from the knowledge of Gods trueth but because he sawe you abuse the sacred Scriptures of God most peruersly wrested by you to deface the veritye of Christes gospell therefore he gaue you this counsayle not that you should renounce your profession but that you should restrayne the vnbridled insolency of your penne not that you should not reade any thing in these profound misteryes of heauenly wisedome but that in reading those bookes you should learne first to vnderstand well what you doe reade in them before you take vpon you the person of an Expositor not because he cōplayned of any defect of witt or pregnaunt capacitye in you but because in explaning these controuersies he found in you a greater mayme of iudgement then want of witt and thys also not he onely and alone sawe in you For I know many besides him both godly learned who conceaue of you herein as much as Haddon did And I thinke there is no man though but meanely exercised in the conference of holy Scriptures who perusing these your Inuectiues that will not easily descry the same mayme and want of Iudgement that others doe finde in you and withall wishe and geue aduise with Haddon that your industry may from henceforth be wholy applyed to this kinde of learning to your singuler profite and increase in knowledge but would hartely desire that your penne sithence it delighteth so much to vaunt out her skill may be employed to such kinde of matter as may procure your greater commendation in disputing and may lesse abuse the Reader by your Iudgement Bidd adiewe to these dispightfull reproches and peruersnesse of brabbling sett a side partialitye cursed custome of euill speaking and blind affections And let vs now weye in vpright ballaunces of indifferent iudgement those your bookes so exquisitely slaūderous which you haue hitherto published touching the order and administratiō of most sacred Religiō euen as it were in despight of Diuinytye What may any man finde in them commendable for a learned Deuine or aunswerable to the soūd doctrine of Christes Euangelye There be skattered here and there certein sentences takē out of the very bowells of holy scriptures but I pray you how vnaptly applyed how contraryly misconstrued and how iniuriously mangled In how great choler doe you moūt as it were an vnentreatable Orbilius against godly and learned men whom you call enemies of Religion of whom it might haue beseémed you to haue learned your lesson rather then to haue controlled them with your Ferula You say that you haue entred vpon a most iust complaynt and most true discouery of our wickednesse and abhominable filthynesse of lyfe In slaundering and reproching whereof you doe employ the greater part of your discourse which being layd open by you shall finde no place to be shrowded or coloured by any protection of mine Yet in the meane time you may not be ignoraunt hereof good Syr that it is not enough for a man to snarle and barcke openly at other mens faultes vnlesse he ioyne withall an vpright consideration namely with what affection vpon what occasion by whose perswasion and vpon what certeintye in trueth he may iustifye his raunging so at ryott If you haue taken vpon you to inueigh so insolently agaynst other mens maners carryed by ouermuch creditt of tale-bearers and secret whisperers or the report of fleeing fame as ye confesse in one place of your writing which is commonly geuen to speake the worst and to make a Camell of a gnatt what doe you herein els then willingly bring your selfe into deserued obloquy and to be noted of that filthy disease of gyddy credulitye But if you haue coyned the same out of your owne ydle braynes how can you cleare your selfe of intollerable Sychophancye In both which you may doe very well to enquire what your owne conscience will tell you in your eare In maners lykewise common conuersatiō of lyfe in the order and discipline of vertues you doe alledge much matter the same not altogether amisse but yet in such wise as you make no distinctiō betwixt the gospell and the law and by vtter shew expresse your selfe a morall Philosopher rather then a Christian Deuine or at least not vnlike those Deuines whom S. Paule in his Epistle to Timothe doth note by these wordes They would fayne seeme to be Doctours of the Law sayth he and yet vnderstand not what they speake nor what they doe iustifie c. Neuerthelesse you proceéde on still and keépe a foule coyle but with bare brawlyng onely and castyng your cappe agaynst the wynde you kicke sturdely but altogether agaynst the pricke you are a prety bow man but your luck is very ill you are a good Piper but an illfauoured Fiddler you prate hard but you proue nought you builde a pace but not vpon the Rocke nor doe you couch your stoanes with Euangelicall lyme and morter but with Babylonicall durte and playster wherein you builde not the consciences of men but highe steépe Memphyticall steéples as I may tearme them very stately and notorious in stately turretts of lofty speaches but groūded vpon no sure foundation of truth Of all which if we should make a proportionable accompt accordyng to the noumber of wordes heaped vpp together with a tedious lauishenes of toung and hoyste vpp a loft euen beyond the cloudes they be infinite and incomprehēsible but if we measure them accordyng to the qualitie of their substaunce they be wythered wyndeshakē leaues If we consider the truth of them they be vntruthes lyes If we sift them accordyng to the rules and fourme of Logicke there will almost nothyng els appeare in all this glorious Iocado akane of wordes then as was some tyme noted in Anaximenes by Theocritus A great floodd of wordes but neuer a droppe of water Lett any man peruse the will or that can spare so much tyme this whole discourse of the true and false Church of the Romish Lordly Maiestie of the inuocation of Sainctes of worshypping of Images of Mounckery of coacted single lyfe of vowes of ceremonies of Sacramentes of Ecclesiasticall and Temporall preéminence and of all other thynges which this monstruous deépe Deuine so long and so much exercised in Readyng Diuinitie as he persuadeth him selfe hath either forged of his owne imagination or scraped from some where els not out of the closettes of Crispine but botched and patcht vpp together out of the ragges and refuse of Hosius Pighius Latomus Eckius Roffensis and such like clouters euery where the discourse and the handlyng of the matter will easily discouer it selfe how in
142. Osori Expositiō vpō the Epistle of S. Paule to the Romaines Pag. 142. Wherin the sauetie of a Christian consisteth accordyng to Osorius Pag. 142. Phil. 3. The true vnderstādyng of iustification accordyng to S. Paule Rom. 7. Rom. 4. Rom. 3. Ephes. 2. Pag. 143. Deut. 4. 5. Rom. 2. A double obseruation of the law Deut. 27. Gallat 3. Iames. 2. Galat. 3. Wherefore the law iustifieth not What workes doe signifie by Paule Rom. 4. 5.2 3.7.9.13 The righteousnesse of the Iewes Pag. 143. The fayth and righteousnesse of Abraham Rom. 4. Gene. 15. Rom. 4. The fayth and righteousnesse of Dauid Psal. 142. The righteousnesse of Iob. The fayth and righteousnesse of Paule Phil. 3. The fayth and righteousnesse of Cornelius before god The riche young man in the Gospell The Pharisie praying in the temple Nathaniell the true Israelite The scope of Paules disputation to the Romaines Workes of the Ceremoniall and Morall law both are excluded frō Iustificatiō Osori doth take the workes excluded frō Iustification for the Ceremonies of the law Pag. 142. ● 140. ● Fayth hath no place almost with Osorius Pag. 143. Osori obiection confuted Osori doth erre in the rules of Logicke Osori Paralogisme from the insufficient enumeration of partes The Ceremonies of the law very hardly abrogated in the primitiue church Actes 15. The morall law abrogated not in respect of the vse but in respect of Iustificatiō Psal. 142. Galat. 3. Rom. 4. Osori Iudgement of Iustificatiō The fruite of good workes betwixt the Papistes Protestates to be wayed indifferently The markes of true righteousnesse among the Papistes An exhortatiō to the Readers The prayse of Cicero and other aūciēt Philosophers discoursing vpō vertue The difference betwene Morall and Christian Philosophy The end of Christian Philosophie Whom Osorius doth chiefly imitate Vertue to be embraced of all men True innocencie in mankynde loste long sithence Osor. obiection cōfuted By what meanes we doe recouer true innocencie Psal. 31. How the grace of God doth geue righteousnes to men Bern. in Sermo 23. super Cant. Basil. in Psal. 32. Orig. ad Rom. Lib. 9. Cap. 12. Aug. Epi. 105. Ad Sixtum Baūl in Psal. 32. Aug. de Ciuit Lib. 19. Cap. 27. Aug. Retra Lib. 1 Cap. 19. Ierome Our saluation consisteth not in our owne righteousnesse but in the free mercy of God Iob. Euen the most perfect workes of men of no valew with God Paule Dauid August in Psal. 94. Ier. in Esay Cap. 64. Luther defended agaynst Osorius Osori pag. 141. Cicer. Tuscul Lib. 3. Osori accuseth Luther to be an Epicurean Pag. 141. How absurdely Osorius doth cōpare Luther with Epicurus Osorius Rom. 3. Luther falsely accused to bee the Authour of wicked boldnesse The opiniō of Schoolemē and Papistes touchyng the waye of righteousnes is false wicked Hosius Osorius Rosfenfi● against Luther Congruum Cōdignum Conueniencie and worthynes Pag. 141. ● ● Thess. 5. Osori ibid. O●or cauill agaynst the Lutherans workes A threefold lye of Osorius Disablyng of workes Desperatiō Confidēce After what maner Luther teacheth Confidence and Desperatiō and how not Pag. 141. marg The marke of Osorius accusation cōsidered Pag. 145. Two lyes vttered by Osorius Onely faith doth Iust●tie The testimonies of most auncient writers touchyng Onely Fayth An Argument from the propositiō exponent to the exclusiue The vocable Onely Ambr. in 1. Cor. 1. Chrisost. in Epist. Paul ad Galat. Cap. 3. Chrisosto Homel 4. in Timoth. Basil. in Homel De Humilit Basil. in Psal. 32. Theophil in Epist. ad Rom. Cap. 3. Thom. Aquin in 1. Tim. 1. Lect. 3. Rom. 3. Pag. 145. Osori his Obiection framed out of the Epistle to the Galat. Cap. 5. The Aunswere Bernarde Rom. 2. The summe of Paules disputation comprehēded in one Syllogisme Gallat 3. Rom. 4. Galat. 2. Right of inheritaūce is not promised to workes as Paul affirmeth Osori takē tardy That is ●o say a scourger Fallacia a dicto secundū quid ad Simpliciter Fallacia a non Causa vt Causa Fayth doth iustifie both the persons and the workes Pag. 141. 146. A double lye made by Osorius Pag. 146. Workes are not examined a part by thē selues in gods Iudgemēt Tit. 3. Collos. 2. Rom. 3. Dauid terrified with the terrour of the law Pag. 146. Osor. obiection in the behalfe of righteousnes by workes agaynst righteousnes of faith Rom. 2. 2. Cor. 5. Iohn 5. Pag. 146. Collos. 3. Iohn 11. The Obiection cōfuted Fallacia a nō causa vt causa The words of Christ expounded The person accepted not for the workes sake but the workes for the persons sake An Obiection The Aunswere * Pag. 146. The words of Christ not wel vnderstoode but crookedly wrested by Osorius Osor. fallax a Concreto ad Abstractum Mercy forgeueth our ill deedes Imputation acknowledgeth our well doynges for good An other Obiectiō of Osorius In what wise Osori doth ascribe Saluatiō of Gods mercy Hosius August de temp 49. August de Spirit Liter Cap. 33. Basil. in Psal. 32. Ephes. 1. In what thyng our redemption chiefly consisteth Remission Bernard Serm. 23. in Cant. August in prima quinquagena in Prolog Psal. 31. Imputatiō The defeéco of mercy doth not abolish Iustice Ill workes whom they do condēne and whom not Iohn 3. How christ is called a Iudge how a Redemer Luce. 21. Iohn 5. Luke 22. 1. Cor. 1. Gods iudgement two fold according to August De Consens Euang Lib. 2. Cap. 30. The Innocencie of Christ is the righteousnesse of Christians Gods Imputation in respect of Christ and in respect of vs. Of the reckonyng to be made in the last Iudgement The diuersitie of thē which shal rēder an accompt is distinguished In Osorius writynges order wanteth and in distinguishyng thinges Methode Accordyng to workes For the works sake Osori doth deny that good works to followe Luthers fayth Pag. 146. What maner of workes doe follow Osori fayth Pag. 146. Luthers fayth yeldeth no good workes accordyng to Osorius Pag. 146. Ibidem The fayth and workes of Osorius A shewe of Osorius fayth Iohn 6. Iohn 1. 3. Math. 9. Math. 8. Mar. 5. A comparison betwixt the fayth of Osorius and Luthers Fayth The righteousnesse of sayth accordyng to the Scriptures Osori doth neuer name in his booke this worde Imputatiō A playne demonstration that Osori geueth small credite to the wordes of Christ. 2. Thess. 2. Apoc. 13. Pag. 146. Osori doth discusse the sayth of Luther Note here the cauill of Osorius The doctrine of Luther touchyng good workes Rom. 14. Aug. in prima quinqua gena ex Prologo Psal. 31. August Workes are not in any other respect accōpted for good in the sight of god then in respect of Christ thorough faith Good workes are Iustified by fayth Pag. 146. The Argument recoyleth backe vpon Osor. him selfe Pag. 146. Pag. 147. Osori Argument faultie in the forme A twosold kyngdome of Sinne. Rom. 6. The substaunce of the Argument is discussed Iob Esay Dauid Daniell
Ionas Iohn Iero. in Ezec. Lect. 14. Cap. 46. August ad Bonif. Lib. 3. Cap. 7. August de Spirit Lit. Cap. ● Basil. in conc de humilit Aug. Lib. cont 9. Cap. ●● Aug. Serm. de temp 49 August de Spirit Liter Cap. 11 Ierom. ad Ctesiphon cōtr Pelag. Tomo 3. Ierom. cōtr Pelag. Lib. 1. The holy and perfect life of Oso compared with S. Frācise Osor. Lib. 2 Cap. 100. How great the force of Popish cōfession is Pag. 148. Osori Argumentatiō discussed To be irreprehensible how it is taken in the Scriptures Rom. 8. August Epist 95. The Cause and end of Election Osori Obiection The confutatiō of the Obiection August de natura gra Cap. 53. 1. Timo. 5. 1. Tit. 3. 1. Timo. 6. Tit. 2. Collos. 1. How holynes frayltie be concurraunt in the holy ones Rom. 7. Of Predestinatiō and Freewill Pag. 149. 150. 151. Hercules not able to stād agaynst two yet Osorius agaynst foure Osori more couragious in accusing then in arguyng Osori his stinolous foolish treatyng of Free will The principall partes of Osor. accusation reduced into certeine places Luther in his Assertiō Article 36. Pag. 151. The repulse of the cauill Will cā not be seuered frō Reason The substaunce of Freewill is neuer seuered from Nature Adam created in absolate freedome How mans will is free not free The title onely of Freewill The name of Freewill without effect August vpō the wordes of the Apost Serm. 13. Luther doth not take away will from man but freedome from will The words of Luther touchyng title onely are expounded Freewill beyng with out grace whiles she doth what it can of it selfe sinneth deadly Of Luthers Hyperbolicall maner of speach Outragious Hyperbolicall speaches in the Popish doctrine The Papistes can neither away with fayth onely nor with grace onely Luthers vehemencie whereupon it began August de grat Lib. A●bit Cap. 16. Aug. in his booke de bono perseuerentie Cap. 13. The differences of tymes and persōs must bee distinguished Foure degrees of Freewill after Lomband 2. Lib. Distinct. 25 Freewill weakened after the fall but here must be obserued a distinctiō of actions Naturall actions Ciuill actions belongyng to the vse of common lyfe Actions merely spirituall Fiue kyndes of Questions 1. Quest. Aug. vpon the worde of the Apostle Serm. 2. 2. Quest. Ambros. of the callyng of the Gētils Lib. 1. Cap. 3. Capacitie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 August Epist 46. August de grat Lib. A●b Lib. 1. Cap. 15. Mans freedome is twofold How freedome of will must be cōstrued How Free-will must be taken 3. Quest. Whether will be free to those thynges whiche are ruled by reason The Maister of the Sentences 2 booke Dist. 24.25 Nazienzenus in Oratione 4. Quest. August de peccat merit Lib. 1. Cap. 5. Aug. writyng against 2. Epistles of the Pelag 1. booke Cap. 2. Iohn 8. In the same booke the. 3 Chap. Aug. of the wordes of the Apostle Serm. 13. Aug. of the wordes of the Apostle Serm. 2. 11. De Ecclesiastic Dogmatibus 21 Mans will how it is free not free 5. Quest. Whether nature beyng not regenerated haue any free motiōs in spirituall thinges Reason Will. Freewill in respect of spirituall functions is not onely weakened in vs but altogether blotted out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 power Aug. de bo●● no perseue Cap. 6.13 Luthers proposition of bonde will defended The bare Freewill of man beyng deuoyde of grace is none otherwise thē as a dead man without a Soule 1. Cor. 1. Aug. in his booke of Retract Aug. En●hirid Freewill of it selfe vtterly lost Os●c 13. The Grace of God without our Free-will onely sounde and perfect August de Nuptijs cōc●p Lib. 2. Cap. 3. Pag. 148. Whether our conuersion be the worke of God onely Pag. 149. An aunswere of August De peccat merit Lib. 2 Cap. 18. August De peccat merit Lib. 2 Cap. 5. August De peccat merit Lib. 2. Cap. 5. Obiection Aunswere out of August Freewill hath no power of her selfe either of the whole or of any part to worke A Fallax a Diuisis ad Coniuncta Pag. 149. Against the 2. Epistle of the Pelag. 1. booke Cap. 18. The sutteltie of the Argument framed by not yeldyng cause sufficient August agaynst the 2. Epistle of Pelag. 1. booke Cap. 19. Grace doth not knocke alone but openeth mans will also August de verbis Apost Sermo 13. O Lord opē thou our lyppes Obiection Aunswere Aug. vpon the wordes of the Apostle the. 15. Sermon August de grat Lib. Arbit Cap. 16. Freewill is made naked of all maner merite Aug. in the same booke the 13. Chap. Pag. 149. The beatyng down of Osorius Argument Ezechiell 11. Chap. and 36. Chap. The Fallax from the proposition Secundum quid to Simpliciter Osori double fault Aug. contra Iulian. Lib. 4. Cap. 3. Aristotles Ethickes booke 3. Cap. 1.5 Obiection The Aunswere How mans will doth execute the force of an instrument By what meanes wil doth both worke and suffer Aug. Lib. de Correp gratia Cap. 2. How will demeaneth it selfe passiuely and actiuely Mans will is taken for an Instrument yet free neuerthelesse Wherein the papistes do attribute to much to Freewill Pag. 149. 1. Cor. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The state substaunce of the questiō of Free-will How it is to be vnderstāded that the Apostles were together workers with God The Argument of Osorius and the Papistes Tne Aunswere How Luthers wordes are to be cōstrued An other Argument of Osorius Pag. 149. An Aunswere Phil. 2. The double errour of Osorius Pag. 149. Osori doth attribute our Saluation partly to Grace partly to Freewill Osorius Obiection Aunswere August de grat Lib. Arbit Otherwise worketh Gods Spirite otherwise mans Freewill the diuersitie of them both Will doth nothyng in good things but whē it is holpen applyed Grace doth plye but is neuer plyed Examples of mās will beyng hindered euen in the euill whiche it purposed Will obeyeth the spirite of God many times whether it will or no. The exāple of Paule Peter August de Correp grat Cap. 8 Ierem. Cap. 10. Luther in his booke of Assertions Art 36 Prouer. 16. Man is not altogether depriued of free will to euil though the same be many tymes stayed Pag. 151. Pag. 152. Osor. lyeng rayling agaynst ●uther Melācthon Caluine c. Osor. Pag. 151. Freewill is not of powder simply absolutely to make his wayes euill August de Ciuita Del Lib. 5. Cap. 9. Aug. in the same place August de Correp gratia Luthers Artic. 36. Osorius a lyeng Rhethoritian a grosse Logician Mans Free-will is an Instrument of Gods Grace Esay Ezechi Cap. 11. 36. This worde freedome is discussed distinguished Luther Lib. de S●r●o Arb. Cap. 46. August The power of doyng wāteth not but it ●● the freedome of power that wanteth August de bono perseuer Lib. 2.
not to be marue●led that Monckeries were so soone ouerthrowen as that they stode so long Of the holynesse of ceremonies with Osorius Luke Iohn Collos. 2. Galat. 4. Mens traditiōs ceremonies are not altogether sequestred from a Christian mans lyfe How great a perill is in ceremonies Christian Relligiō almost wholy turned into ceremonies Images Crosses Altars throwē downe Ezechiah Iosiah Iozaphat Gedeon Epiphanius in an Epistle to Iohn Byshopp of Ierusalem Phillippicus Leo Isaurick Cōstantine Leo 4. Greeke Emperours agaynst Images Images banished by the coūcels of Constātinople Elibertine and francksord Out of the councell of Constātinople Ex Elibertino co●cil can 36. Lactant. instit book 2. cap. 19. Chrisostōe Amphilochius Theodore Byshopp of Ancira Portraictes Eusebius Bysh. of Pamphil. The reasōs of Bysh. alleadged in the counsell of Constantinople Deut. 20. 2. Cor. 6. A figure called contraposition betwixt the decrees of God and the Popes Math. 10. 1. Iohn 5. Out of the Decrees of the Trydentine counsel 9. Sesio Iere. 10. Abacu● 3. The wicked and preposterous iudgements of the Papists in worshipping of Images Osor. pag. 178. Osorius slaunder agaynst Luther touching contrition and good workes condēned is confuted Articul 31. How this sentence that the Righteous man doth offend in euery good worke is to be taken Gregory vpon Ioh. 9. August in his 3. booke of confess cap. 7. August to Boniface 3. book ca. 7. The words of Constantine to Acesius Aug. in his 1. booke de perfectione iustitiae Aug. in his booke of the perfection of righteousnes Of the auntient ordinaunces of the Church The ordinaunces of the primitiue church taken away now by our Catholicks The complaynt of abolishing the auntiēt ordinaunces of the Church appliable to none so much as to the Papists By what meanes the Romanistes haue altered al thinges in the Church Osorius pag. 178. Osor. pag. 180. An aunswere in the behalfe of the Lutheranes liues agaynst slaūderyng It is one thyng to iudge of maners an other thing to iudge of doctrine Dogges in the pallace of Rome Osori pag. 180.181 The popes blynd Decrees cā not away with the light of the Gospell The cauill of Osorius agaynst the lyues of Lutherans Osori rayseth all his slaunders of hearesay The fruites of the Gospell beyng restoared Doctrine ought not to be iudged after the qualities of mens manners Osorius malice agaynst the Lutherans Many are vntruely termed Lutherans that be no Lutherans Mauy counterfets lurke in the Church vnder presence of the Gospell The approued integritye of the-Protestāts The lyfe of Cranmer Archb. of Cant. The marriage of Crāmer defended The name of a Concubine more holy with the Papistes then the name of a wife Nichol. Ridley Byshop of London Ferrar Bish. of Saynt Dauids Iohn Hooper Bish. of Worcest Glocester Famous men martyrred vnder Queene Mary Tho. Bilney Ioh. Bradford The liues of those which were burnt in Queene Maries raigne Erasmus testimony cōcerning Luther See Osorius in his 1. booke 69. Roffensis of the doctrine of Luther Luthers doctrine not other then all other true Christians The Fallax of the consequent An Argument rightly deduced frō Signes Doctrine not to be applyed to maners but maners to doctrine Osorius pag. 181. 182. Of prescription of Antiquitye Osorius doth accuse the reformed Churches of Noueltye The reformed Churches now a dayes doe not vary frō the Apostles institution in doctrine Maner of lyfe thought neuer so disorderous maketh not an heretique The cause that enflameth Osor. agaynst the Lutheranes is not the life but the state of their doctrine The foundation of the questiō is not of maners but of the principles and groūdes of Religion The condition agreed vpō concerneth the triall of antiquitie The papists exception agaynst the obscurenes of the scriptures Of an vnpier in Ecclesiasticall causes A Request to the excellent king of Portingall The Antiquity of the Romish Religion coūterfaite The false accusation of Noueltie agaynst the Lutherans The law of Prescriptiō Distinct. 8. August Gregory Custome Antiquitye Prescriptiō Cyprian distinc 8. No custome may prescribe agaynst the king much lesse anye Custome may prescribe agaynst god A defence agaynst the accusation of Nouelty falsly charged vpon the reformed Churches by Osorius Of the merites of Christ. Of true cōfidence Tertulian touching prescription agaynst Heretiques Exod. 20. Of inuocation worshipping c. Of Sacraments Out of Iustine Of the freedome of Mariage Heb. 13. 1. Timo. 4. The mother tongue in Churches The Communion vnder both kindes Of Images Of right● and Ceremonies Of the power of free-will Of iustifiyng fayth Rom. 3. Galat. Galat. How fayth onely doth iustifie and whom Luther Caluine Melancthō Musculus Bullinger P. Martyr Hul. Zuinglius Occolampadius Iohn Iuell Gualter Rodolfe Theodore Beza The Lutherans acquited from all reprehention of Noueltye An olde quarrell of the Catholicks touching Noueltye Of the supremacy titles of the Pope The titles of the Romaine pope Math. 23. The outragious dignitie of the pope Chrisost. ad Romanos homil 23. Gregory The supremacy was first graunted by Phocas to Boniface The fulnes of power beganne in the tyme of Hildebrand Pope Cardinalls The election of the Pope translated from the Emperour and the people of Rome vnto the Cardinalls Of the Masse and her appurtenaunces The vse of Corpes in the Church Priuate Masses The Communion of the laye people abbridged frō thrice to once in a yeare by Clement 3 Vnleauened bread One part of the Cōmunion taken away from the lay people Corpus Christi day Of Image Of transubstantion of Eleuation of carying abroad of the Sacrament Of marriage of priestes and choyse of meates Of the Popes decrees and decretals Extrauaga de Maiorit obed cap. vnam De maior it obedientia cap. Solitae Of Moūcks Fryers Three vows of Moūkerye Sixe wings of Seraphin Aemilius in his 5. booke Carthusianes Castersianes Templars Premonstratenses Gilbertines Dominicanes Franciscans Eremites Augustines Carmelites Nuns of S. Clares order Out of the Councell of Lateran Innocent 3. Cap. 13. Minorites Augustine anes Crossebeabeares Whippers Iesuites In the Romish Churche are many things new altogether nothing auncient sauoring of thapostolique Antiquitye The carnall presence of Christ no where but in heauen The carnall presence of Christ one of the Popish doctrine How the Papistes dp doe differ from the Apostles in the ministring of the communiō Priuate Masse Hebr. 9. 8 10. 1. Tim. ● The true doctrine of trāsubstantion iuuented by the pa●istes Transubstātiation was neuer knowen to the Apostles Many thou sandes of Martyrs lost theyr liues for this Transubstātiatiō The Churche of the Pope a Murtherer The papist cā rēder no iust cause of sp●llyng so much Christian bloud It is one thing to reuerence the Sacramēts an other thyng to turne Christ into a Sacrament The words of Christ. This is my body Christs wordes bespirit and lyfe Christ is called by sondry names in the Scriptures Christ is called bread in the Gospell By what similitude the
and v●●ncet for a Christian Purgatory is a witnesse of Gods clemency and Iustice also An Aunswere to Osorius of the Iustice and Clemencye of God The reason of Osorius Luke 16. Gods Iustice must needes be satisfied iu Purgatory The chief reason of the Catholickes wherupon they grounde their Purgory An Aunswere to the Argument of Osorius touchyng the Salte The Purgatory of Osorius cōsuted Osor. pag. 200. Dauids punishment after pardō for his fault An Aunswere Osor. pag. 201. 1. Cor. 1. Rom. 4. A place of Peter cited by Osorius 1. Pet. 4. Math. 11. 2. Tim. 3. Osorius Argument The Aunswere 1. Pet. 3. 1. Pet. 4. 1. Pet. Cap. 4. Osor. pag. 221. 1. Pet. 3. 1. Thes. 4. 2. Thes. 4. Osor. cutted Sophisme The Soules in Prison A new proofe of Purgatory neuer hard of before 1. Pet. 3. The errour of Osorius turned back into his bosome by cōtraposition The place of Peter skanned The ordinary Glosse 1. Pet. 3. Nicholas Lyra vpon the 1. Peter 3. Out of an other patch of some other Gloser patcht vpp to the Glose of Lyra. The Gloser vpon 1. Peter 3. Luke 17. Out of the same Gloaser Mounteyne men Low Coūtrey men Out of Frācisce Marcion and others Foure mansiōs in hell Osori pag. 201. 1. Cor. 15. Osorius obiection out of the wordes of S. Paule Osorius doth erre in the meaning of S. Paule The place of Paule expounded 2 Paraly 9. Chrisost. vpon the 1. of the Corin. Cap. 15. What it is to be Baptized for the dead Cyprian to Fortunatus in his exhortation to Martirdome Aug. in his booke of Confession In the lyfe of Nazianzene The Argument of S. Paul deryued from the Reason that leadeth to an Absurditye Chrisost. in the same place Purgatory Baptisme two conttary elemēts Iacob 2. Such as are Baptised in Christ Iesu neede not feare any purgatorye Baptisme profitable 3. maner of wayes Chrisost. vpon the Actes of the Apostles homel 1. Thom vpon the Corin. 1.15 cap. lect 4. It is not lawfull to be baptized twise To be Baptized for the dead according to the Deuines Chrisost. vpon the 1. Cor. cap. 15 Iero. vpon the Corin. Cap. 15. Out of the ordinary Glose Thomas Aquinas vpon the Cor. 1. cap. 15 cap. 4. Paludens dist 21. que 1. Bonauenture Osor. pag. 202. Osor. pag. 202. Osorius opinion very absurd Three kindes of Baptisme AEquiuoce diuersly signifiyng in one word or terme Purgatory is cōfirmed by the Supplications Sacrifices of the Church Osori pag. 202. Oso Argument for the creditt of Purgatory Petitio principij a Demaund back againe of the first propositiō Iohn 5. Luke 23. Rom. 6. Basile and Chrisosto in their Lyturgies Cyria lib. 3. Epist. 6. Aug. Sermo de verbis Apost Magist. sētent Lib. 4. Distinct. 45 Osori pag. 204. 205. 1 Co● 1. ● 1. Cor. 15. Colos. 1. The place of Paule to to the Colloss misunderstoode of the papistes The onely merites of Christ suffice not with the papistes The treasure of the Church Ruth 4. Out of S. Bonauentu Lib. 4. Dist. 10. Quest. 3 S. Bonauēture in the foresayd Distinct. Blasphemy Prophane Sacrilege Heresy Error Fraude A stale iest The Refutation Col. cap. 2. Heb. 10. Psal. 115. The merites of Sainctes are nothyng worth but the merites of Christ. August vpon the Gospell of Ihon the 84. Treatise Aug. in the same place Osor. pag. 203. The dearth of Osorius Church Osor. pag. 203. Osor. pag. 202. The onely oblation of Christ doth not satisfie the papistes The wrath of God is pacified with the bloud of Christ. The Sacrifices of Papistes are with-out bloud and do wāt the bloud of Christ. Ergo the Sacrifices of the papistes do not pacifie the wrath of God Collos. 1. Hebr. 10. Luke 23. Ephes. 2. An Hystory of Germany out of Wolfgang Musculus his commō places The Masse and Popes pardons are contrary ech to others The summe of the Romish stations doth surmount the number of 1000000. yeares Heb. 9. Aug. contra aduers. leg Prophet lib. 1. Cap. 18. Agayne vpō the 64. Psalm Actes 86. Rom. 5. 1. Iohn 2. What time the Turkish power beganne to preuaile agaynst the Christians The fruites of Masses and the popishe Sacrifice The popish Religion an offence and stumblyng blocke to the lewes The Venetians loste Cypres for all their Masses The tyranny of the Turke is not to be imputed to any thyng more then to the Popishe Masses Osori pag. 203. Christ departing hence did not leaue behinde him his body bloud but a Mistery thereof only and that also to eate and not to Sacrifice Argumēts agaynst the Sacrifice of the Altar Argumēts agaynst the sacrifice of the Altar Dionis Clemens constitu apost lib. 6. cap. 30. Ambros. de virg lib. 2. Ierome vpon the psal 86.97 Aug. quest no●i veter testa lib. 2. Aug. vpon the wordes of Christ after S. Luke Christ. vpon the Actes 2. hom Gregory de consecra dist 2. quid sit By what reasō Christ is called the bread of lyfe A dooble feeding in the Sacrament How the body of Christ is receaued in the Supper and how the bread is receaued How bread and the body are both receaued in the Cōmunion Gene. 9. Leuit. 7. Leuit. 17. Leuit. 6. Christ could not geue his body for an oblation in his Supper without the breache of the Law Iohn 6. August de doctrin Christi Psal. 81. Iohn 10. Math. 16. Theodoret Dialo 2.2 Col. de Sacramen lib. 4. Cap. 4. Tobi 5.10 Ephe. 6. A description of the Popish maner of Sacrificing Ite Missa est The popish breadworshyp How much the popishe Masse doth differ from the Supper of Christ the vsage of the Apostles The profanyng and Idolatrous transforming of the Lordes Supper emōgest the papistes The solutiō of Hosius Obiection The Solution of the obiection Osor in his 3. booke Pag. 183. An Argumēt against transubstātiation A Fallax a secundum quid ad simplicitur How the body of Christ is present and not present in the supper How the Papistes do remoue Christ from the mistical Supper Obiection Aunswere The cutted Sophisme of the Papistes Rom. 15.13 Philipp 4. Heb. 13. An other Arugment of the aduersaries Aunswere One Priest many Ministers The onely priest of the new Testament The merites of christ are applied by fayth not by sacrifice An Argument out of Malachy Cap. 1. The Sacrifice of the new Testament the two proper ties therof Aunswere Malach. 1. The place of Malachy expounded Rom. 15. Psal. 18. Psal. 127. Esay 11. Rom. 15. Epipha lib. 3. Serm. 79. Tertulli against Marcion 4. book Tertul. contra I●daeos fol. 4. Tertulli to Scapula Irene in his 4. booke Cap. 32. The same Irene ca. 33. Aug. contra aduers. leg Prophet lib. 1. cap. 20 Eusebius de monstr in his first booke Ierome vpō the Prophet Malach Cap. 1 Ioh. Damascen de orthodoxa fide Lib. 4. Cap. 14. Esay 64. Act. 10. 1. Tim. 2. Euseb. demōst
Euāg lib. 1. cap. 6. Chrisost. to the Heb. Homil. 17. Eusebius demonst lib. cap. 10. Nazianzen Iustinus Martyr in Dialo cum Triphone Augustine contra aduers leg prophe August in lib. quest 61. August cōtra Faust. 20. cap. 21. A comparison betwixt the passeouer and Christ. An Argument out of the Trident Councell Aunswere Aug. de ciuitat dei lib. 10. cap. 5 By what reasō Melchizedech did represēt the Type of Christ. Melchizedech is denyed to offer bread wine for a Sacrifice A comparisō betwixt Melchizedech and Christ. No lykenes betwixt the Sacrifice of the Masse and Melchizedech Melchizedech a king and a Priest The place of Melchizedech his offring is expounded Gene. 14. Iosephus libro 1. Antiquitat Cap. 10. The Trydētine Councell Sess. 6. Can. 3. Aunswere Luk. 22. 1. Cor. 11. Tetullia in Apologetico Argumētes of the aduersaries by witnesses and cōsent of Doctours Obiection out of Cyprian Lib. 2 Aunswere to Cypriās wordes August against Crescentius Heb. 11. Cyprian in the same Epistle In the 2. booke the 3. Epistle An Obiect out of Ierom out of hys Epistle written to Marcellus Aunswere An Allegoricall Argument doth conclude no truth The Obiection out of Augustine quest vete no. Testa quest 109. Aūswere to the Obiection An obiection out of Hesychi writing vpō Leuiti lib. 1 cap. 4. Aunswere out of August in the 23. Epistle Out of the Maister of the Sentences 4. book 12 distinct Glossa Cōment de Consecrat Distinct. 2. Semel An Obiection out of Iren. Lib. 4. Cap. 32. An Aunswere to the place of Irene The Sacrifice of the Masse expiatory and propitiatory Tridenti Councell Sess. 6. cap. 3. Out of Steuen Gardiner and other Irenaeus lib. 4. Cap. 32. Irenaeus Cap. 33. Ambrose treating vpon virgins Chrisost. in psal 95. Chrisost. in psal 26. August de tempore ser. 125. The second counsell of Nyce Euseb. demonst lib. 1. cap. 10. Cyrill us ad Reginas Cyrill agaynst Iulian lib. 10. The Eucharist doth not forgeue sinnes but doth represēt the memory of a true forgeuenesse Sinod Trident sessi 6. cant 3. Out of the Canon of the Masse Osort pag. 199. 202. 204. The Apostles ordinaunces Authoritie of Fathers Osor. pag. 209. Disgracementes of Religion 1. Tim. 4. Osori pag. 203. Osorius pag. 203. August cōtra lib. 2. cap. 14. August in the same place The Authoritie of the Pope is denyed to be lawfull The kyngdome of Antichrist The cauillatiō of Osori of the Memory of vertue abolished A cauillation of Razyng of Church Chrisost. ad Rom. 23. Gregor Epist 64. lib. 3. Aug. contralite petilia lib. 2. cap. 33. Of Reliques The Maunger wherein Christ was layde The foreskin of Christ. The Altar whereupon Christ was Circumcised The swathling cloutes and Cradel of Christ. The Piller where vnto Christ did leane when he disputed in the temple Water pots The Shoes The Reliques of Christes bloud The Tables whereas Christ made his last supper The bread of the supper The knife that stucke the pascall Lambe The Cupp The platter The towell wherewith Christ did wash his disciples feete Broken bread The Reliques of the Crosse. The Title of the Crosse. The Nayles of the Crosse. The Speare head The crown of Thornes Christes coate without a seame The Vernycle of Veronica Christ wynding sheete The Reede The Spōge The xxx pence The Grieces in Pilats Iudgement hall The Crosse which appeared to Constantine in the ayre The fotestepps of Christ vpon the earth Our Ladies heare Our Ladies Milke Our Ladies smocke Our Ladies kerchiefe Our Ladies kirtell Our Ladies girdle Her slipper Her Shoe Her Coambes The wedding Ring of our hady Iosephes hose and his boanes Monstruous pictures Images Out of Alanus Copus in his Dialogues The dagger the buckler of Michaell The feathers of the holy ghost The Coales of S. Laurence The Reliques of Iohn Baptiste Diuers scrappes of Iohn Baptistes head in sondry places His Iawes A peece of his eare The whole headd of Saint Iohn at Rome His Arme. His Finger His Ashes His shoe His heary shyrt His Altar A lynnen Cloath The sword that behedded him The bodies of Peter Paule Peters law Peters brayne Peters sl●pper Peters Chayre and his massing vestmentes Peters sword The staffe wherewith he walked The blocke whereupon he was beheaded Sixe bodies of the Apostles The cupp of S. Iohn Anne the Mother of our Lady Three bodyes of Lazarus Mary Magdalen hath two bodyes S. Longius the blinde knight with his speare Three kings of Colleine S. Denis two bodies S. Stephens body His headd His bones The Stones wherewith he was Stoned to death S. Laurence● body His Arme. His gredierne S. Laurence Coales His coate with long sleeues The bodies of Geruase and Prota●us S. Sebastian multiplied into iiij bodyes Petronilla the daughter of Peter S. Susans two bodies S. Helene Vrsula and the eleuen thousand Virgines Two bodies of Hyllary Two bodies of Honoratus Gyles Simphorianes many bodyes S. Lupus S. Ferreol The boanes of Abrahā Isaac and Iacob August in in his book de opere Monachorū cap. 28. Osor. pag. 204. Osor. pag. 204. Osor. pag. 205. Osorius pag. 206. Aristotel Hippodamus Milesius The principles and chiefe groundes of the Popish doctrine The cause of the first b●ildinges of Abbyes in England Ethelbert King of Kent Ealbalde sonne of Ethelbert Anno. 618. Ethelrede kyng of Mercia Anno. 681. Berthewalde For what cause Monasteryes were ●rected at the first Out of the Cronicle of Osberne vpon the lyfe of Dun stane and out of Malmes b. Roger Houedē and others King Edgar Osori pag. 208. Osor. pag. 208. Osori doth exclude Princes frō Ecclesiasticall gouernement Chrisost. vpon the 13. to the Romaines Osor. pag. 208. Osor. pag. 209. How pernitious the obedience of the pope hath alwayes bene to Christiā Princes In the yere of our Lord 1404. To much lenitie of Princes towardes the Pope Tim. 5. Constantinus Theodosius Lndouicus Pius Ambrose did enstruct Theodosius the Emperor Rom. 3. It apperteineth to the Ciuill Magistrate to gouerne ecclesiasticall causes The Triper tite history 1. booke cap. 5. Socrates lib. 1. cap. 5. Socrates lib. 5. cap. 10. Action 2. Iustinian in cap. de Episcop Cle●isis Ierome Augustine Chrisostome Paule the Apostle Actes Cap. Osori pag. 209. Grego lib. 11. Epist 8. 2. quest 5. Out of the auncient recordes and Hystoryes of England AEsopes Crow Osori pag. 209. Osori pag. 209. Osor. pag. 210. Osor. pag. 211. The booke of Wisedome the first chap. Ex plutarcho de vitis The cruelty of the Portingalles agaynst Gardiner an Englishe man ●x Abbat vspergens Ex staurastico Iohā Francisci Pici Mirandule Apocal. 19. Osori pag. 211. The doctrine of the Gospell is not now first sprong vpp but is renewed frō out lōg darkenes in to a more freedome of lightsomnesse Apoc. 11. The aūciēt witnesses professours of the Gospell Rob. Grostred By●h of Lyncolne The Gospell of Christ as it is true so is it not