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A46361 A continuation of the accomplishment of the Scripture-prophesies, or, A large deduction of historical evidences proving that the papacy is the real antichristian kingdom to which is added A confirmation of the exposition of the sixteenth chapter of the Revelation concerning the pouring out of the vials / written in French by Peter Jurieu ... faithfully Englished.; Accomplissement des prophéties. Suite. English Jurieu, Pierre, 1637-1713. 1688 (1688) Wing J1200; ESTC R17274 212,359 335

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that kindled the flame which burns to this day 'T is a prodigious blindness in which there is somthing supernatural that men should come so far as to utter such Blasphemies and that at this day men should not be afraid to repeat them Scripture insufficient The Third Affront tho Papists offer to the Scriptures is their asserting them to be insufficient and imperfect and that they cannot serve as a Rule of Faith. They employ their greatest Engins to establish this Principle Councill of Trent Ses 4. that Traditions ought to be regarded with the same reverence and veneration that is given to the Scripture Yea that Traditions excell the Scriptures because the H. Scriptures cannot subsist unless confirmed by Tradition Baron Tom. ● Annal. whereas Traditions keep their strength intire without the H. Writings We stand more in need of Tradition than of Scripture for the Scriptures only furnish us with a dead and dumb letter But Tradition as the Church holds it forth helps us to the true sense which is not indeed distinctly layd down in the Scripture yet is the real word of God. W. Bayly Nothing is more injurious to the Scripture than this Nothing is more contrary to the intention and wisdom of God than to suppose that he hath given a Rule of Faith which cannot regulate Faith which is too short by more than three quarters which is crooked dubious flexible and altogether useless without the aid of another Rule that is unknown to all Christians excepting a small number of Learned men who alone are capable of consulting it Scripture hath no Authority The fourth Affront that Popery offers to the Scriptures relates to their Authority They have no Authority without the testimony of the Church Without the Authority of the Church Bayly we should have no more Obligation to believe the Scriptures than the History of Titus Livius The Scripture Hosius if deprived of the Churches testimony have no more Authority than Esops Fables How know we say they that the Writings which go under the name of Moses are his seeing we never had a sight of the Originals And if we should who could assure us that they were writ by Moses's own hand Again if we could be assured of this what certainty have we that what Moses writ is true Who shall assure us that the Evangelists were Witnesses to all that they report But tho we should believe that they saw and heard all the Actions and Discourses of J. Christ which they report yet they might forgett and lye as every man may deceive and be deceived How can we again know with certainty Pighius that what goes under their names are their true Writings and not corrupted or forged I know not what kind of Temper a man must be of who can read and hear such things without trembling He that should speak at this rate of the Alcoran at Constantinople would be impaled alive An Infidel cannot say more to destroy all the Authority of the Holy Scriptures The several ways used by Papists to take away the Credit of the scripture 'T is not enough to these Gentlemen to affront the Scriptures by these four Accusations 1. That they are not necessary to the Church 2. That they are obscure 3. That they are defective 4. That they have no Authority as to us without the Church there is no Method imaginable which they employ not to dishonour them They tell us that they were writ only Occasionally and not at all with any design to make them a Rule of Faith. An Evangelist or an Apostle wrote a Gospel or an Epistle at random by chance and on particular private designs Afterward the Church collected those loose writings into one Book But seeing these were not writ by one or several persons writing in concert we cannot find in them a System of Faith. Can any thing be said more affronting to the H. Spirit who ordered the pens of these Writers and the occasions that obliged them to write The Papists talk just as if the Apostles had writ meerly on their own designs without any Inspiration But did not the H. Spirit who moved them to write design their writings collected together should be the true Rule of Faith To lessen the Credit of the Canonical books that are truly divine Popery hath joyn'd with them fabulous books a tale of Tobit a Romance of Judith of Bel and the Dragon of Susanna This tends to dispose the minds of men to believe whatever they have a mind to propose seeing the veriest Fables when authoriz'd by the Church ought to be received as Truth and the greatest Truth destitute of the Churches Testimony may be rejected as a Fable This is not yet enough the more effectually to abolish the holy Books and their Authority they affirm that at this time we have not the H. Scriptures compleat Many Books say they are lost we have not the Book of the Wars of the Lord mention'd in the Book of Numbers We have not the Books of Gad and of Iddo Solomon wrote concerning plants from the Cedar even to the Hyssop and I know not how many thousand Parables and Songs which we have not S. Paul wrote a third Epistle to the Corinthians which is lost one to the Church of Laodicea and perhaps many others which are not to be found and who knows whether in all these writings that we have not there were not innumerable things which would have made the Rule of Faith more compleat Perhaps what is come down to us are only some Planks escap'd from a Shipwrack which hath swallowed up the Vessel All the sacred Books of the Old Testament were burnt at the sacking of Jerusalem under Zedekiah Afterward Ezra gather'd what he could of the scatterd pieces There are Popish Authors who discourse at this rate Yea they go further Those Books of Holy Scripture that are preserved are yet corrupted and alterd The Jews out of hatred to the Christian Religion have corrupted the Originals at the best these Originals are lost and the Copies have felt the injuries of Time and the fate that is inevitable to all antient Books having for above three thousand years past thro the hands of so many ignorant persons many things may have been changed in them Besides they are dead Languages in which these Books are written such as we understand not we are not skill'd in their Grammar we know not the signification of their words This is what they discourse at this day Lastly to compleat the Affront they pull away these books out of the peoples hands they affright them with these as if they tended to ruin their souls They tell men that it never was the intention of God to abandon his Scriptures to the indiscretion of the Laity And on this pretence the Scripture is become a secret Book hid under a barbarous Language to which none is allowed to approach unless he is aforehand initiated in their
who writing in a Country of Liberty styleth it the Pitiful Book of F. Crasset For one man who dareth to censure the Impieties of this Book there are numberless multitudes who canonise it and we see in the Instance of the Bishop of Agen and his carriage towards the Monk who preached at Duras at that rate which we related above how those who disapprove the fabulous Theology of the Monks are notwithstanding obliged to treat them with civility even in the places where they have a Jurisdicton over ' em Are not every day such kind of Books printed even under the Nose of the Bishops And are there not modern Saints which exactly resemble the antient ones Witness St. Mary of the Valleys whose life F. Eude hath written and cryed up her Sanctity Witness Magdelen Vigneron whose life written by F. Bourdin in the year 1678. and approved by the Chancellor of the University of Paris and the gravest Doctors contains all the Follies and impieties of the most fabulous Legends Popery is founded on the Fables of the Legends Lastly 't is replyed that we ought not to stumble the ordinary people with the Lying Histories of Popery because that Religion is not founded on ' em Take away all these will they say and 't will not be less true that men ought to adore the B. Virgin invoke the Saints worship the Cross Images and Holy Reliques because these Services are founded on the Authority of the Church I answer 'T is false that these fabulous Histories are not the Foundation of the false Worship and Idolatries of the Papacy This Spirit of Lying and Superstition begun in the Church exactly at the same time The People could never have been perswaded to worship Ashes and Bones if they had not been perswaded that these Reliques did work Miracles The people had never been brought to these wicked Services that make the Virgin Mary equal to Christ if they had not been disposed to them by the high-sounding Fables concerning the Miracles of her Conception her Birth her Life and her Assumtion The Worship of Saints could never have come to that prodigious excess as it now is without the assistance of Monks of their Legends their Cheats their false Miracles and their Fables So that we may say to these refin'd Papists that which St. Augustin said to the Pagans about Cicero This wise Pagan did himself turn into ridicule the Fables and Theology of the Poets yea accused the Poets that they had made such to be Gods who could not have been reckon'd among honest men if they had been men Many of the Heathens made use of this sentiment and driven to it by the Christians condemn'd their own Theology as foolish and impertinent pretending that their Religion was not founded on it But St. Augustin lets 'em see how weak this Entrenchment was and how Pitiful and false this Excuse was And proves particularly to 'em that all their Services the Mysteries of Ceres of Bacchus and Vesta their solemn Playes and in a manner all their practical Religion were built upon the Poets Fables and referr'd to ' em The case of Popery is the very same at this day the wise Papists reject the Romance of the Virgin Mary but notwithstanding their Devotion towards the Virgin the Festivals of her Conception of her Nativity of her Assumtion are founded on these Fables All the Titles which they bestow on her all the Prayers that they address to her all the Offices that they assign to her refer to her fabulous History CHAP. XXIII The Twelfth Character of Antichristianism that fitteth the Papacy is Cruelty and Shedding of Blood. 'T Is past all doubt that Antichrist must be a furious Beast and Antichristianism a cruel and persecuting Empire This Character is joyn'd with the preceding The two principal Characters of the Devil are a Lyar and a Murtherer our Lord Jesus Christ saith that he was such from the beginning Now seeing Antichristianism is the Master-piece of this Murthering and Lying Spirit it must be stampt with this impression of its Author This was layd down in the Prediction V. 1. And I saw a Beast rising up out of the Sea Apoc. 13. having Seven Heads and Ten Horns c. V. 2. And the Beast which I saw was like unto a Leopard and his Feet were as the Feet of a Bear and his Mouth as the Mouth of a Lyon. These are three most ravenous and destroying Beasts The Leopard overtakes his Prey with the greatest swiftness the Bear holds it fast and never lets it go the Lyon is the strongest Beast and whose Teeth are most terrible The Mouth of Antichrist is to be the Mouth of a Lyon always dyed red with Blood. V. 7. And it was given to him to make War with the Saints and to overcome them c. V. 15. And he had power to give life to the Image of the Beast and cause that as many as would not worship the Image of the Beast should be kill'd V. 6. And I saw the Woman drunken with the Blood of the Saints Chap 17. and with the Blood of the Martyrs of Jesus V. 24. And in her was found the Blood of Prophets Chap. 18. and of Saints and of all that were slain on the Earth V. 6. For they have shed the Blood of Saints Chap. 16. and Prophets and thou hast given them Blood to drink for they are worthy Behold one of the principal Lineaments of Antichristianism let us see if there be a Kingdom on Earth to which this doth agree better than to the Papacy It is a Lyar like its Father it is a Source of Fables It is not less a Murtherer The Antichristian Idolatry began about the end of the fourth Century and the beginning of the fifth 'T was also exactly at the same time that the Church began to lose the characters of Gentleness Clemency and Patience which are the Characters of the Gospel and turn'd Persecutor She had always been persecuted and had always condemn'd Persecution yet she had contrary to her own principles begun to persecute the Donatists But when Antichristianism which then was only in the bud was come to its full shape 't was then that its Persecuting spirit did fully discover itself I mean in the Wars between the Image-worshippers and the Image-breakers The Image-worshippers opposed the Orders of their Emperors who had a mind to banish this Abomination out of the Church This resistance forced the Emperors to exercise some Severities on the Idolatrous party But when Idolatry had got into power it retaliated its Enemies double The Image-worshippers made all Italy and the rest of the Western Provinces to cast off their Allegiance to the Emperors and in the East they kill'd and massacred all who would not conform to ' em Irene the Mother of Constantin put out the Ey 's of her own Son and after put him to death that she might reign alone Theodora another Empress who made the worship
committed upon England as reported by Matthew Paris or as is set forth in our History of the Papacy Every year there came new Exacters of Tribute who disposed of the wealth of that flourishing Kingdom as if it had been their own who sold Inheritances Moveables and every thing as if it had been an Enemies Country conquer'd by the Sword. This Character was given of one Pope that he was an ambitious Proud Creature insatiable for money that there were No crimes so black and horrid which he would not countenance and commit upon the promise of Money 'T is the portrait which Matthew Paris gives of that great Pope Innocent III. but agrees as well to the rest of 'em as it doth to him In all places the Clergy combin'd together to oppress the Commonwealth insomuch that in those dayes the Princes and Great men found themselves obliged to save themselves from those oppressions by contrary Leagues and Combinations We have to this day extant in Matthew Paris the Act of Union of the Dukes Counts and Peers of France who consulted together how they might maintain their Estates and Interests against the Rapines Frauds and Violence of the Clergy of that Kingdom The insatiable avarice of the Papacy is so palpable and notorious that for seven or eight hundred years past scarce any Author whether Historian Poet or Orator but hath imployed his Pen upon that subject You may read the extract we have made out of Alvares Pelagius the Abbot of Vsberg Petrarch Sannazar Mantuan Espencaeus all of them Authors who lived and dyed in the Communion of the Church of Rome Some of 'em compare the Roman Church to a vast Abyss into which Torrents and Rivers continually run but cannot fill it others to a dreadful Labyrinth in which are all sorts of Monsters but no getting out of it but by money the true Ariadne's thread wherwith to sind the way out Another tells us that every thing is to be sold at Rome Temple Priests Altars Crowns Fire Incense Prayers Paradise and God himself Their eyes must be very fast closed who cannot in all this Perceive the character of the Antichristian Kingdom After all this is it not very pleasant to hear the Gentlemen of Port Royal to draw a Prejudice and Exception against us from our Covetousness and selfishness in Opposition to the Ancient Bishops Concerning them Prejudices against Calvinism chap. 3. they tell us that we do not hear of the Interest of Families of Marriages of base and carnal Passions in the lives of those famous Bishops and of all the great men of Antiquity c. They were all eminent for Holiness and self-denial It may very well be true that in the lives which are wrote of those Great men we hear nothing of the Interest of Families and sordid passions but neither do we hear of their Simony Dispensations for Money and Sale of the Sacraments of Orders of the Body of Christ and of Heaven it self we hear not one word of their selling Pardons for Parricides Incests Buggeries Sodomies Adulteries and the vilest Crimes that can be named The vanity of popish excuses from the foremention'd crimes we accuse them of Now what can they reply to all this will they say that these things are only Stories and Calumnies made by Protestant Ministers Let the Proofs we bring be consider'd and our witnesses heard we have a multitude who affirm all this some of their Saints Bernard Thomas Aquinas Anthoninus Arch-Bishop of Florence besides Petrarch Rodrigue de Zamora Nicolas de Clemengis Sannazar Alvarez Pelagius Baptista Mantuan in short all the Honestest men that the Church of Rome had for three or four hundred years Will they say that the Church is not obliged to answer this and that we are not to make a Judgment concerning a Church by such things as these That 's very pleasant by what then shall we judge Is not a Tree known by its Fruits and a Church by her Works why must not the whole Roman Church be responsible for an Abomination whereof she is guilty both in her Head and Members why must we not lay that to her charge which was setled both by Custom and Law by Rule and Practice Will they say that this is an old business Crimes committed long ago and that we ought not to ascribe it to the present Roman Church that is now recover'd and sound were this true I must say again ought we not to judge of the Roman Church by what she hath been for seven or eight hundred years together If this be a character of Antichristianism as most certainly it is shall any one persuade us that God would ever permit the True Church to have this Character during seven or eight Centuries 'T is little more than an hundred years since the time of Espencaeus who wrote against this horrible Simony The distemper was then in its strength and the Church not cur'd The Clamors of the Lutherans and Calvinists had no place then But why do I urge this are matters much mended in our days Is not the same trade driven at Rome now as formerly selling Dispensations and Licences for all kinds of things Bulls for Translations Dispensations of Age and for Marriages in forbidden degrees for Commendams and a thousand other things what Reformation hath been made as to any of these by the Council of Trent only that she hath raised the price of Dispensations and that which heretofore might be had for a few Pistols will now cost a considerable sum so that the Rich only can get a Licence to Sin. If any man who is guilty of Sodomy or Parricide make his applications to the Court of Rome for absolution may it not be obtain'd now as well as formerly Do we not know that all things may be bought there for Money as well as in sormertimes tho now it be done with more secrecy and in a manner somewhat less scandalous Let us see how the Court of Rome is describ'd by a French Author Balzac one of the wisest and most solid Writers of this Age. At Rome saith he every Ecclesiastick believes the world to reach no farther than his own Head and Feet he thinks that all is made for him Let Monsieur the Cardinal B. arm himself with money and friends against Monsieur the Cardinal P. whom he looks upon as a Turk and an Infidel if he happen to encounter him in the Contest for a Benefice or some other dignity Who knows not that to this day they cause money to be brought to Rome from all parts of the World by their Annates Bulls Dispensations and a thousand other like methods Some whereof may be seen in the extract drawn out of Cardinal Palavicini's History of the Council of Trent compriz'd in a little Book named The New Gospel so far is the Cardinal from being asham'd of this Symony of the Court of Rome that he pleads for it and defends it by twenty reasons and maintains that what
mystical and spiritual reason assign'd for 't But First these are meer Chimaera's and fancies which the first Inventers of these Ceremonies never dreamt of we are told of a learned man in the Church of Rome a Canon of Clugny who hath prepared a book for the press that will confute and shame the Durand's the Biels the Innocent's and the Disciples of such as have wrote of the Mysteries of the Mass for he will prove that all these Ceremonies are without any mystery and that they were only instituted upon motives of commodity and convenience or by meer hazard and occasion but suppose there were a mysterious Intention hidden under these Ceremonies were the service any whit the less carnal for this who allmost is there that understands these Mysteries A man must have been for a long time in a dream to have imagin'd those impertinent reasons which are brought by the mystical Authors of the Roman Church for all the parts of their external worship The Priests themselves do not know them and the People never heard one word concerning them so that they never see any thing but bodily exercise and a worship meerly corporeal and external The most important piece of worship in the Church of Rome is the Mass let us examin it a little whether it hath those two Characters of being Spiritual and Reasonable which are certainly two properties of every Service in the Christian Religion In the Mass the Priest being cloath'd with his Sacerdotal Habit begins with that which they call the Judica the Introitus and the Confiteor There some words taken out of the Psalms are thrust in and mixt with some words of prayer The Priest makes confession of his sins to God to the Virgin and to the Saints he demands absolution and he bestows it on the People he ascendes to the Altar he stoops down below it and mutters some prayers to himself of which no body understands either the sense or the sound He says to the People Cantate Domino i. e. sing to the Lord and yet no man dares sing He repeats several times Kirie Eleison Christe Eleison Greek words whose meaning he knows not for 't is very common that he scarce understands the Latine of the Mass The Gradual is the second part of the Mass in which he sings some kind of songs that are different according to the time and Days on which Mass is read the Deacon prepares himself to read the Gospell he prays to God in Latin that he would purify his Lips the Priest gives him his blessing and makes many signs of the Cross over him The Deacon kisseth the hand of the Priest and makes the sign of the Cross with the thumb of his right hand over the Book over himself upon his forehead his mouth and stomach he perfumes the Book with Incense and being thus well armed against the charms of the Devill by his Grimace and wry-faces he reads the Gospell of the day but the poor People in the mean while understand nothing The reading being over the Priest returns the Book saying these words Per Evangelica dicta deleantur nostra Delicta i. e. by the sayings of the Gospell may our sins be blotted out The Deacon burns Incense the Priest reads the Creed and turning towards the People he says Dominus vobiscum After the Gradual comes the Offertory in which the Priest taking the dish wherin are the unconsecrated wafers he offers them unto God with these words Holy Father God Almighty and Eternal receive this immaculate sacrifice which I thine unworthy servant offer unto Thee my living and true God for my innumerable sins offences and negligences and for all those who are here present round about and for all faith full Christians Living and Dead that it might be profitable to their salvation in Eternal Life Observe that 't is all this while but meer bread But what kind of Bread think ye little loose leaves of paper made with a little flower and bak't between two Irons This is the propitiatory oblation that is offer'd for the Living and the Dead After this the Priest takes the Chalice and offers it likewise unto God he makes many Prayers that God would bless this sacrifice that he would accept it and that it may be gratefull and well-pleasing to him You must know that this was the sacrifice of the Mass before Transubstantiation was found out plain Bread and wine was then offer'd Judge then whether any man could believe that this was a true propitiatory Sacrifice In this part of the Mass every thing that can be imagin'd is done to make this bread and wine to be a propitiatory Sacrifice They offer it to God they offer it to the honour of the Saints and of the Virgin and say unto the People Pray to God that this Sacrifice which is yours and mine may be acceptable to him 'T is in this part that the Secrets are said they are short Prayers spoken with a low voice but are concluded with a per omnia saecula saeculorum which breaks forth in a voice of Thunder after a deep silence Lastly comes the Canon of the Mass which is an additional peice in favor of Transubstantiation There begins the Consecration and the Body of Jesus Christ then comes upon the Altar There the Priest changes postures and makes an hundred grimaces he speaks and then holds his tongue he stoops down then raiseth himself up and kisses the sides of the Altar He makes many signs of the cross he prays for the Popes for Kings and for him in particular on whose account that Mass is said He offers to the honour of God of the Virgin of the Apostles and of the Martyrs when the consecration is over he rises up and worships After this he proceeds to the true propitiatory Sacrifice He offers the Body of J. Christ praying God that it may be as agreable to him as the Sacrifice of Abel i. e. they compare the Body of our Lord to that of a dead Beast The Priest strikes upon his breast several times he uncovers the chalice and makes many signs of the Cross over the Blood of J. Christ to drive the Devil from it He sings he prays and then sets down the chalice and the consecrated wafers upon the corporal that is to say upon the linnen of the Altar He again takes up the Dish wherin the wafers are he makes over himself a great sign of the Cross and breaks the wafer into three pieces He throws one back into the chalice with the other he makes the signs of the cross over the chalice touching the foot of it the middle and the brim and then he stroaks his eyes with it He covers the chalice again he prays and returns to the side of the People and makes them kiss the Pax so they call a Trenchar or a little board on which is painted a Crucifix or the image of the Virgin. Then he puts himself in a posture to eat the wafer and
much more freely and say that these Visions are the Illusions of the Devil and these Miracles are the Cheats of the Monks Hear with what heat and zeal the good Father replyes 'T is an intolerable rashness says he to give the name of Tales and Fables to those Histories that are related by Authors eminent for Learning and Holiness and to reckon as the Mistakes of a weak understanding such Revelations as have merited the approbation of the Council of Basil of the Popes Gregory II. Urban VI. and Martin V. In the next Page the Reverend Father addeth For my part saith he I shall not think that I wrong the Historians of our Age if I give as much credit to St. Antonin who relates that Vincent Ferrier raised eight and thirty men from the dead as I do to all the stories in Gazetts out of which they make their Histories These grave Authors eminent for learning and Piety as F. Crasset calls'em are St. Antonin Arch-Bishop of Florence Bartholomew of Pisa Author of the Book of Conformities Pelbart of Temiswar the Speculum of Vincent Bernardin de Bustis the Monk Caesarius the Annalists of the Monks and in a word all the Authors out of which we have taken our proofs Our new Converts as they are called ought to be very wary as to this point They persuade'em that all these Extravagancies these Cheats these Fables and Legends are at this day out of date We shall see that in a little time In the mean while they ought to know that F Crasset who asserts the credit of those Books which some despise and decry is esteemed and approved by the whole Gallican Church it self What ought to be said to the superstitious and credulous as to the matter of Legends and that those of his sentiment are still the bulky part of the Papacy What is to be done with such people 'T is best I think to leave 'em to their evil Genius as those Patients whose case is desperate and say to 'em well even remain Fools without judgment and without conscience seeing you have a mind to be so believe that Vincent Ferrier raised 38. from the dead and Jacynthe 52. Take for Gospel the horrible Lyes collected by your Batholomew of Pisa by your S. Antonin by your Caesarius c. But give us leave to look on you as persons given up to a reprobate mind This in my opinion is all that can be said to these wretched creatures If they were capable of hearing reason we might thus bespeak them Consider in the name of God whether it is likely that your Monks and their Disciples have wrought more Miracles in ten years time than all the Prophets the Apostles and Iesus Christ himself have wrought in two thousand years We might add Reflect upon the impertinence of these Miracles which we have proved and judge if it be probable that the Wisdom of God should expose his Power to be turn'd into ridicule by doing mean sottish things and altogether unbecoming his Majesty The Famous Maimonides a Jewish Doctor in his Book of the Foundation of the Law makes an important and judicious remarque The Israelites saith he did not believe Moses because of his Miracles for one that would not believe unless there be Miracles might suspect lest the Miracle should be wrought by Sorcercy and Enchantment But all the Miracles that Moses did in the Desert he wrought them as it were out of necessity and not directly to confirm his Prophecy Thus it was necessary to divide the Red Sea to make a passage for the Israelites and to drown the Egyptians we wanted food therefore he brought down Manna from Heaven c. Indeed this deserves to be remarqu't God scarce ever hath wrought Miracles meerly to work them i. e. such kind of Miracles as are properly prodigies and serve only to discover the power of the Speaker All the Miracles of Iesus Christ and his Apostles were miraculous Cures raising of the Dead multiplying of Bread to feed the people There was always some profit and they were not meer prodigies And this is another evidence of the Falsehood of Popish Miracles that their Saints make impertinent prodigies which are good for nothing change pounds of Butter or heaps of Flegme into Gold make Light to stream out of their fingers make use of the Sun-beams or of the shadows of Trees to hang their Garments on Never any of the real Saints wrought such like Prodigies that are of no use and good for nothing in the world We might further say to these superstitious Creatures examin the Character of those Authors whom you style Eminent for learning and holiness Read their Writings and see if they deserve not very well those titles Men of leaden Hearts of Iron Months of Brasen Foreheads as some of your own Catholicks have called 'em on the account of their stupidity their barbarous style and their impudence in venting notorious Falsehoods for Truths We might also say to them Examin the Authors of the five first Centuries you will find in 'em some relations of Miracles especially in the fifth Century But is it the thousandth part of what is to be read in the Chronicles of Saints who have liv'd in the last seven or eight hundred years The Fathers and the Authors in whom we find the Narratives of these true or pretended Miracles wrought none themselves How comes this to pass Was the Jacopin Vincent Ferrier who raised 38. from the dead a greater Saint than S. Augustin who never rais'd one St. Athanasius the famous Champion of the Son of God and of the Holy Spirit St. Cyprian the glorious Martyr St. Polycarp the famous Disciple of the Apostles wrought no Miracles at all but St. Jacynthe a Polonian Dominican and Father d' Aviano a Capucin shall have the Priviledge to do that which the great Lights of the Church for Learning and Sanctity never did A man must have lost his reason if he believeth this When the Church was sorely assaulted by persecution and Heresie there was little talk of Miracles We might also say to these Gentlemen the Devoto's Pray tell us when the Church was cruelly persecuted by Heathens her Doctrine openly attacqu'd by Hereticks had she not more need to be supported by Signs and Miracles than in the time of S. Francis of S. Dominick of S. John Vincent Ferrier when she reign'd triumph't and was without Enemies And yet we hear of few or no Miracles when one would judg the Church stood in most need of 'em afterward we hear of millions when the Church did not want ' em But these Miracles they 'le say were wrought to authorize the new Religions i. e. the new Orders of Franciscans of Dominicans of Begging-brothers c. This is ingenious and well contrived that God should work a hundred fold more Miracles to establish the Order of St. Francis than he had wrought to establish the Christian Religion Observe well the design of these Miracles
of which you have whole heaps in the Legends 'T is to set on foot the Adoration of the V. Mary Invocation of Saints the Worship of Images of Reliques Purgatory and such like stuff Now is it probable that God should work no Miracles to confirm the Divinity of his Son and of his Holy Spirit which fundamental Articles were once cruelly opposed by the Arrians and afterwards should work Miracles without number to confirm some Devotions which 't is granted are not necessary Cheats discovered even in our Age. We might further say to these Devoto's who would have us believe all the stories of Miracles that are read in the Legends that if in so learned an Age as ours and in places where the Priests have so many Eyes to watch 'em they yet have the boldness to counterfeit Miracles they could surely do so in an Age when they acted behind the Curtain i. e. the ignorance and stupidity of the people who took pleasure in such Cheats And here we might relate to them a hundred Cheats of the Monks in the last Age and in the present one We might instance in the very late and famous Miracle of St. Florent very night Saumur where the Wafer appeared in the form of a little Child for the confounding of the Hereticks who had an Academy i. e. the nursery of their Heresy very nigh the place We might entreat 'em to remember that the Bishop of Anger 's after he had approv'd of this Miracle was ashamed of it when the Cheat came to be known We might produce to 'em the Saint of Troye a Nun that liv'd on consecrated Wafers and felt all the torments of the Martyrs when ever the days of their Passions return'd people flockt from all parts of France to see her but she was found out to be a Cheat by the Bishop of the place in the year 1673. what is acted at this day without doubt might be very well acted formerly Lastly we might tell these Gentlemen that in case God were obliged to be so prodigal of Miracles he ought to have laid 'em out in the Indies where men go to convert the Heathens Notwithstanding we do not find that he hath done so or at present doth so 't is true the Jesuites have publisht a vast number of pretended Wonders wrought by Francis Xavier their Apostle But 't is pretty strange that none knew any thing of these Miracles till after Xavier was dead yea that Xavier himself knew nothing of ' em We have his Letters among those written from Japan wherein the relates every thing he did in that Country excepting his Miracles if God had granted him the Gift of Miracles among the rest he ought to have had the Gift of Tongues But we find that he often complains that he could not edify these Indians because he could neither understand them nor make himself understood by them since Francis Xavier a vast number of Missionaries have gone into those Countreys who have not been able to work Miracles tho they would very fain have done so And yet I suppose the design which carrieth 'em thither viz. to plant the Christian Religion among the Indians is at least as important as the design to establish the Orders of S. Francis or of S. Dominick This is what we might say to such as Father Crasset and their Devoto's What is pleaded by the Papists who would not have us believe the stories of the Legends But there is another sort of men who do us a great deal more mischief These are the Luke-warm with respect to Popery your Libertines in the opinion of Father Crasset but as they account themselves Christians of a Finer-spun Religion These are our Converters in France who have had the best success in seducing those wretched Protestants who had a mind to be deceived These have told 'em you ought not to regard what your Ministers cite out of these rascal Legendary Writers sorry Monks Fabulous Authors who have neither wit or judgment This is not the Religion of people of Fashion The Reign of these Fables in expired you are not obliged to believe these impertinent Tales This is a most dangerous Snare which those who have any care of their Souls ought to take heed of For this end they ought to know that this filthy shameful lying History of Legends hath been the Popish Gospel The Legends have been the Popish Gospel for 7. or 8●0 years for the space of seven or eight hundred years and a Gospel receiv'd with so universala consent that not one man hath been so bold as to question muchless to oppose it The common people sunk into a profound ignorance nourisht their false Piety only with these kind of Fables This already is enough to prove that Popery is Antichristianism for 't is impossible that God should suffer the true Church to sink into so horrid a degeneracy that all the bread they had for their Souls should be only a monstrous heap of ridiculous Fables But further the new Converts ought not to suffer themselves to be deceived this Gospel of the Father of Lyes is at this day in vogue as it was formerly all Italy all Spain have no other Spain and Italy even at this day have no other Gospel but Legends All the devout Clients of the Monks are fed with no other Nourishment The Hero's of the Papacy are the Patrons of these enormities Bellarmin and Baronius both learned men both Cardinals both of great reputation the Possevins the Vasques's the Snares's in a word all that are eminent and considerable in the Papacy do take the part of these fabulous Histories if some few confess that there are some Fables which may be cashier'd this scarce signifieth any thing Have we not an evidence of this in those vast Gollections of the Lives of the Saints begun by the Jesuit Rosweyd and continued by his Successors in that work They are already come to the fourteenth Volum in Folio and other three are every day expected and yet this Martyrology is come hitherto but to the moneth of May so that this Body of Fables will be about forty Volums Vast Volums of Legends printed at this day if the remainder be proportionable And will be the most prodigious work both for matter and bulk that was ever seen since the beginning of the world Ask the Carmelites if they are willing to lose any one of the Priviledges of their Order which were founded on meer Fables Know of the Franciscans and Dominicans if they be in the humour to correct their Annals and blot out those passages which we call Impieties and impure Fables Is it not Father Bouhowrs an Author of great Reputation at this day in France among persons of note who translated the Panegyrick of S. Rose in which we see all the Follies of the old Legends revived Lastly who is the person that hath dar'd openly to oppose and condemn the Book of F. Crasset excepting Mr. Arnaud
their Princes when 't is for the Interest of the Court of Rome And to bind them more firmly to her self she grants them Priviledges which exempt them from the Jurisdiction of their Bishops This makes these Monks take part with the Pope against the Bishops which assists the Design which he hath ever had to bring down Episcopal Authority to make himself the only Bishop and to make all other Bishops to be his Subdelegates The Monks draw all manner of Advantages from these exemptions They have none near them to order and correct them they enjoy the greatest impunitie indulge themselves in Licentiousness Among the Monks the Jesuites Order is the product of as hellish Policy as the world ever knew The Prince of darkness sent it out of the bottomless Pit exactly at the time of the Reformation to support the Papal Monarchy which had felt some shaking Blowes After so many Books written on this matter men cannot but understand the Maximes of the Policy of this detestable Society But the corrupt and Antichristian Moral Doctrine of it is not the least of the Tricks of its Policy Which leads us to consider a new Evidence of the Carnal Policy which prevails in the Papacy 6. Policy a care to flatter the flesh and the senses 'T is the great care which it takes to flatter by all wayes imaginable the Flesh the Passions and Senses by making easy Laws and suting them to corrupt Inclinations by sending out every where loose Directors of Conscience and by furnishing Sinners with means of flattering themselves in their Disorders Hence have proceeded the Simonaical Laws of the Court of Rome Dispensations to marry within the prohibited Degrees to enjoy Bishopricks without having the Age or qualities which are required Indulgences for the most horrid crimes Relaxations of Pennances and the setting a rate upon all sins Lastly from hence 't is that care hath been taken to provide all the Pleasures for the Flesh which it desires Cardinal Pallavicin in this History of the Council of Trent saith that the Form must be suted to the Matter and such Lawes made as agree with Times and Places and that we must not deal with men wholy in the dreggs of Adam as if they were still in a state of Innocence V. The new Gospel Therefore they must be Indulged as to Idleness Excessive Eating and Drinking Playes yea Stewes which are allowed at Rome And that the Church may be able to triumph over Paganism which held men by the Pleasures of Sense she must furnish them with those that are more exquisite and delicious than those of Paganism 'T is from the same design of pleasing the Fleth and the Senses that the External Pomp in Worship proceeds Because men love Playes Theaters and the Pleasures of Sense the Policy of Rome hath introduced all these into Religion that She may engage them to herself by those things of which alone they are sensible Churches are splendidly adorn'd they glitter with Gold their Lights are ordered with great care those that serve at the Altars draw mens Eyes by the pomp of their Vestments in them Musiek sounds and flatters the ears They make Processions which are a marching in Triumph after the mode of the Pagan Romans Yea their very Funerals have Pomp that so even death itself may afford pleasure 'T was once a very difficult matter to reconcile Religion and Lust together But the Papacy hath found out this wonderful Secret by bringing into Religion whatever gratifieth Lust 7 Policy the Tribunals of Confession The Mysteries of the Chairs of Confession are the most profound in the Policy of Rome Nothing could be imagined more effectual and proper to reign over the Consciences of men than to oblige them to come and discover themselves even to the bottom to the Agents of the Papacy Scire volunt secreta domus atque inde timeri A Marryed Woman looking upon a Priest as the Confident of her Disloyalties and the Witness of her Disorders trembles at his Presence and can refuse him nothing A husband that hath disclosed to a Confessor all the Violations of his Promise to his Wife is a fraid lest something should come out which might trouble the quiet of his Family and to avoid this mischief he becomes the Slave of him who knows his secrets A Merchant who hath cheated in Trade will part with some of his Gain to assure himself of the Fidelity of him who is privy to his Crimes But above all on such Occasions when there are but two heads together the Priests say what they please they wind about the Conscience according to their own designs and Interests they rack they loose they bind they terrify they astonish they flatter it And by these different Methods they lead it where it had no Intention to go God knows and Experience hath told us somthing how many dismal effects have proceeded from this mysterious Policy All men are not made alike some are cholerick others are Melancholy and serious these are willing to live austerely others are sanguine and will have pleasure whatever it costs There are Confessors of different Characters according to these different humours Some who will endure nothing at all others who will endure every thing By this means they hold fast all sorts because every one is gratifyed 8 Policy a great external austerity This human Policy which so indulgeth Inward Licentiousness at the same time requires a great External Severity and Rigour For men are willing to give something to God and not being able to give him Fruit they are willing to pay him in Leaves Therefore they love those Customs which have a great shew of Mortification You cannot rid men of this notion that the Christian Religion is a serious thing and an Enemy to the Pleasures of the World. Therefore if the Papacy was licentious in all respects and held no correspondence with the Temper of Religion it would be impossible but men would quickly see through it Therefore it endeavours to keep up a great Appearance of Seriousness in the midst of its innumerable Villanies It ordains above a hundred and sixty Fasts in a year men eat and drink on these Fasts as at other times provided they choose such a diet But no matter they are always call'd Fasts and this makes a great Figure in the Outside of Religion From the same Policy we have the Penitents and Whippers of the Roman Church who tear themselves with Blowes of a Whip when they are hired to do it Thence come the Cloisters Frocks Hair-shirts Whippings Discipline Confinement Silence Solitude and all the strict and severe Rules of the Monks Such Rules and Orders as in show and appearance are very considerable and gain them Reputation with the people but in reality they are not much incommoded by 'em and suffer little by their observance as to any thing of that severity and mortification they pretend to because they are Masters of their own
the Church hath a Soveraign power to damn and save Eckius to make Articles of Faith to fetch Souls out of Purgatory c. The Church must be rich and wealthy and possess almost a third of the revenues of Christendom Bozius because S. Paul saith We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak Touch not mine anointed do my Prophets no harm i. e. All the Bishops and Priests tho they possess all the revenues Eckius yet ought not to bear any publick Charge Saints must be invoked because David saith Bellarm. Let the saints be joyful in glory They govern the world Eckius for David saith They shall have two-edged Swords in their hands They intercede for us in heaven for the Scripture saith For this shall every one that is godly Costerus pray unto thee in a time when thou mayest be found They know our Necessities for God saith to Moses I will make all my goodness pass before thee We must worship the Reliques of Saints for Christ saith to his disciples Not a Hair of your Heads shall perish Bozius The Hairs of your Head are numbred 'T is the B. Virgin which gives us Grace to grow in Faith for 't was said to Adam and Eve Be fruitfull and multiply The Church hath done very well in taking away the Cup from the Laity for God foretold to Eli that his Posterity should entreat the chief Priest to put them into one of the Priests Offices Eckius to eat a piece of bread Confession is of Divine Right and absolute necessity for S. Peter saith that Apostats are like a Dogg that returns to his Vomit Turrian pro Epistol Pontif l. 4. c. 17. The Authors gloss deserves the pains of transcribing it whole What is it to vomit up sins as a sick stomach doth We must follow the strain of the Metaphor Tell us where do we vomit but at the mouth why do we vomit but to ease and purge our selves Grant therefore that the Soul is purged by a certain secret vomiting of sins i. e. by secret Confession or else you give the Apostle the Lye. The Unmarried Life of Priests is of divine Right and of absolute necessity for S. Paul enjoyns a Bishop to be sober and chast Bellarm. Turrian and he reasoned before Felix of Righteousness Temperance and Judgment to come They who have a mind to see a greater number of these Abuses may find it in our Exceptions where we have cited both the Author and Book But here is enough to understand the Spirit of these Gentlemen In earnest we may say that they do very ill when they dispute with so much heat against the Scripture to maintain a certain other Rule of faith which they call Tradition They have good store of Scripture for with their Method there is nothing which they do not quickly and easily find there But if this Method of theirs be good for ought they must permit us to make some use of it and to conclude that by this they discover that they bear no respect to Scripture And that 't is not their fault if it be not accounted the most ridiculous Book in the world CHAPTER VI. The Conclusion of the fourth Character of Antichristianism which is found in the Papacy viz. the Affronts that it offers to the H. Scriptures both in words and actions THat which we have already discourst Exception 14. part 2. chap. 7 8. is enough to verisy that Oracle in which 't was foretold that the Papacy or Antichristianism should blaspheme God his tabernacle and his Saints For the greatest part of those Abuses of Scripture which we have mention'd are real Blasphemies But to finish this Character of Antichristianism we must add a third kind of Injuries which the Papacy offers to the Scripture these are the Affronts that it puts on them to take away all their Credit in the minds of men Here we clearly perceive that the Papacy carries it exactly like an Enemy to the Scripture Men employ against enemies Offensive and Defensive Weapons they strike at them and ward off the Blowes given by them 'T is exactly on this manner that the Papists act towards the Word of God on the one hand they perpetually ward off and repulse they distinguish and wrest it and on the other they accuse they vilify they destroy the Scriptures as much as lyes in their power First the Papists speak with the greatest Disrespect and Contempt of the H. Scriptures with respect to the Need we have of them They assert In the opinion of Papists the Scripture may very well be wanted that the Church may very well want them and with less inconvenience than in those Ages when 't is certain there was no H. Scripture After that these H. Books were written one part of them hath not only been layd out of the way but utterly lost thro the injurie of Wars and the Babylonish Captivities And yet the Church hath always been preserved in her Vigour Catechisme of W. Bayly by the aid of Tradition c. Thus even at this day The Church may be well enough preserved without the Scriptures Another famous Author tells us Costerus that 't is not the intention of God that his Church should depend on these Paper or Parchment Writings Another saith Lindanus That as long as the foundation of Apostolick Tradition remains intire the Church would have no loss if the Scriptures should be lost burnt or destroyed John Faber Vicar of the Bishop of Constance in the time when Zwinglius lived boldly asserted that the Old and New Testaments might well be mist And Cardinal H●sius saith that it would go better with the Church if ther● were no written Gospel I know not what name to give if these are not to be call'd Blasphemies The Papists charge Scripture with Obscurity The Second Affront which the Papacy puts on the Scriptures is an endeavour seeing it cannot abolish them to persuade men that 't is an Obscure Book good for nothing but to occasion heresies Every one saith Bayly the Jesuite makes the Scriptures go in the track of his own fancy All Hereticks make use of them as a Nose of Lead or of Wax The Scriptures saith Coster are very obscure and suffer themselves to be drawn any way like a Nose of Wax and to be applyed to any impious Opinion that you please as a leaden Rule 'T is a dead letter saith Pighius that endures every thing written with Ink and Paper which you may mangle and corrupt with false Expositions T is a Sheath that receives all kinds of Swords not only those of Steel but of Lead of Copper of Wood for you can with its own leave draw it to be on your party by interpreting it as you please We must saith one of these Gentlemen remember this not to refute the Hereticks by Scripture Men disputed against Luther with Scripture 't was this
the Greeks in another we read that Fornication and having Concubines is that which ought to be allow'd 'T was the Canon Law and the Canonists that establisht the Rules of that horrible Simony we mention'd in the foregoing Chapter 'T was they who regulated and confirm'd all the Rites of Popery whereof their vain superstitions and Idolatrous worship is composed 'T is they who have made all the Corruptions of Doctrine and worship to pass into a Law. 'T is they who have made a God of the Pope and spoken so many Blasphemies concerning him a part whereof hath been mention'd in that Chapter where we treated of the Pride of the Popes that he is a God that he can make any thing of nothing and that he is above Emperors and Kings and can dispence contrary to the Law of God that he is the sun of this world and the only Soveraign that he can be judged by no man that if he should lead multitudes of People to Hell or give them over to the Devill no man hath any right to hinder him The stupidity and blindness of men that can fall into this extravagance is not to be exprest or imagin'd Impurities of the Ca●●●●●● The third sort of Doctors who speak for the Papacy and manifest what Spirit it is of are the Casuists In this order of men an impure and diabolick Spirit is very notorious the Spirit of the Beast and of the Dragon for this we have no need of proofs One part of the Roman Church will testifie against the other The writers of Port Royal in our age have laid open the unclean Spirit of Popery in their morals Fully to understand the Filthiness of this spirit you must read the Books which have been writ to instruct the Directors of Conscience and teach them what Questions to put to the Penitents who come to Confession and the works of Burchard Sanchez de Matrimonio Emanuel Sa Tolet and several others and you will find those Instructions can teach a man more Abominations than are known by practice in the most infamous places of Debauchery After this you must read the Decisions of their Casuists upon cases of Conscience and concerning the nature of mortal and venial Sins And you will soon perceive that there are no Crimes which they do not excuse tolerate and make light of According to these men Simple Fornication implies no guilt or malice that to kill an infant in his mothers womb by causing Abortion is no Murder that an unmarried Woman may be made to miscarry to save her credit that it is not Adultery to lye with a married Woman if her Husband consent that a Backbiter who doth calumniate you may be kill'd to prevent reproach A man is not obliged to put away his Concubine if she be necessary to him for his diversion and delight 'T is lawful to desire the death of a Father to enjoy his Estate 't is not necessary to Salvation to believe either Paradise or Hell but only in the general to believe in God the command to love God is not at all obligatory the sin of Luxury Sodomy and Buggery are sins of the lowest rank no one act of Love to God is necessary to Salvation Contrition is sufficient that is the Fear of Hell. Are not these the unclean Spirits coming out of the mouth of the Dragon the Beast and the False Prophet The vanity of their Excuses of their ill Morals The Church of Rome must not think to acquit her self from this Charge on the account of some modern Writers few in number persecuted by the rest and overcome by the multitude of a contrary sentiment For this moral Divinity is allowed of What Sollicitations and incredible pains hath it cost to procure the condemnation of some few of these and the like propositions Even Pope Alexander VII who condemn'd some of those maxims by his decree of the 5th of May 1667. did ratifie the toleration of one of the most frightful of all those Doctrines viz. that Attrition alone caus'd by the fear of Hell without any act of the love of God is sufficient unto Salvation This is a piece of the most monstrous Theology that ever came out of the mouth of the Devil For it destroys the necessity of the first and great Command which is the soul of all Religion Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart 'T is to overthrow the whole of Christianity from top to bottom and open the door of Salvation to those who liv'd and dyed as bad as Devils Alexander VII left all this abominable Morality of the Casuists compleat and all that he condemn'd in 45 Propositions is of little moment except two or three articles Innocent XI whom they make a Saint hath gone somewhat farther I confess but besides that he hath spared all those Maximes that are fatal to the lives of Princes and the safety of their Kingdoms he hath only condemn'd those doctrines that are exprest in the Bull and forbad the teaching of 'em but neither the Books or the Authors are made liable to any Punishment and therfore this kind of Morality doth obtain as much as ever and by this the sect of the Jesuites is risen to that point of grandeur where we now see them Because of their ins●uence in all the Popish Courts of Europe and 't is to be observ'd that they are the great sticklers for these Morals which are no better than Infernal the Iesuites I say who are fully possest with the spirit of Popery who are the great Bulwark of that Religion and have preserv'd it from ruin for one hundred and fifty years They are the true Mouth of the false Prophet We can never sufficiently describe how many unclean spirits have come out of this Mouth of the Jesuites Popish Authors themselves have taken the pains to keep a register of 'em the many Books which complain of their Theology and cry out of their Morals and Doctrine would make a considerable Library Alphousus de Vargas a Spaniard hath wrote a Book intitl'd the Stratagems of the Jesuites Among other things he there tells us that about the year 1625. the Spanish Jesuites had the impudence to compose a Systeme of Divinity which overthrew the whole Christian Religion one of them named John Baptista Poza made a book in honour of the Virgin and of her immaculate Conception called Elucidarium Deiparae Wherein he utters so many Prodigies and Blasphemies that the other Monks tho sufficiently drencht in Superstition could not but abhor it This deserves to be considered in the Original or in the relation we have given of it in our Legall Exceptions Part. I. chap. 3● the Spanish Jesuites were so far from condemning their Brother for this that they undertook the desence of him and his Book In the same place we find a Censure of the Apostles Creed composed by the same Spanish Jesuites which is the most scandalous piece that ever saw the light For
oven and stirr'd not till they were half burnt and cover'd over with Ulcers Her Bed was made of very hard planks without a Mattress without Blankets or any coverings on the planks thick logs of wood at some distances one from another filling the empty spaces with Brick-bats and sharp Pebbles this was her bed These Stones pierced into the Planks and much more into her Flesh so that her Body was always cover'd with Blood with Bruses and wounds Behold after what manner this Saint lived six and twenty years We ought in Charity to believe that the Legend of this Saint is a Romance like the rest and that there was never any person so sottish as to make a ragoust of such a long and smarting torment But ought we not to discern a spirit of Reprobation in those who draw such pieces on design to give us an Idea of the most excellent Sanctity What an extravagance is it to believe that God requires such like things or is pleased with them where have we any Commands any Examples of them Because we shall have occasion in the following discourses to speak again concerning Legends I intend not at the present to insist longer on the Evidences of this Spirit of Reprobation T is sufficiently manifest from other instances Vanity of the excuses for the impure genius of the Legends To avoyd the force of this Evidence the Papists now speak with great Contempt of these Legends and Legendaries They cite concerning them Lewis Vives Claudius Espencaeus one Canus Bishop of the Canaries who have spoken very ill of these Books and of their Authors they say that these are Fables which men of sense despise But to what purpose is this 'T is so far from disproving our Evidence that it strengthens it These are so many witnesses for us even among our very Enemies Let Monsr Arnaud and those of his Character call these Legendaries pitiful Authors as much as they please This is not at all against us For it must be granted that for five or six hundred years these Legends were the Gospel of the Papacy The Bible was a Book lockt up and prohibited utterly unknown by the Laity they know read heard nothing preacht besides these impertinencies No other Spirits came out of the mouth of the false Prophet and the Beast Is it credible that God would suffer that the true and real Church should for so many Ages be nourisht with nothing but this filth Therefore tho it should be true that the Reign of this Legend-Gospel is past and ended is it less true that it lasted five or six hundred years But I add you must not be over-persuaded that it is ended Go into Spain and Italy you will find that the Devotion of the people there is still nourisht with this diet Know that the most learned and grave Authors which the Papacy hath had in later times have repeated all these impertinencies The Jesuite Turseline hath in this Age given us in his elegant Latin the Legend of our Lady of Loretta together with all her false Miracles Lipsius famous among the learned men of this age hath wrote Books to propagate such Fables And but the other day F. Crasset hath printed on very good paper and a large Letter a Collection of such Extravagancies The wickedness of Popish Preachers and their genius We may joyn their Preachers with the Authors of the Legends For before the Reformation the sermons in the Church of Rome were nothing but Stories and Fables taken out of the Legends The same unclean spirit coming out of the Mouth of the false Prophet is to be discern'd in them When for a long time the Pulpits had been forsaken by the ordinary Incumbents the Mendicant Friars took possession of them The Bishops and Curates lived in a stupid Lethargy and a brutal Ignorance The Priests scarce understood Latin enough to read and say Mass and at the same time lived in Drunkenness Whoring and the most horrid Disorders the Monks finding the Pulpits forsaken entred into possession of them But good God! what kind of Preachers Their Sermons were heaps of Extravagancies If they were to preach of Charity or of the Passion of Christ they took their Exordiums from the heads of Nilus and philosophiz'd upon the Twelve Signes of the Zodiack They read a Text for fashion sake but came not near it by many miles The Fryar spake neither of S. Peter nor S. Paul he cited only the Seraphick and Angelick Doctor the subtil the Irrefragable Doctor He fell upon some thorny School controversy of which he discourst in barbarous language As to Morality they put off some cold and childish allegories some wrested applications of Texts of Scripture some ridiculous paraphrases on Scripture passages some sottish notions which were taken for flights of Wit and efforts of Imagination some ridiculous Fables which were often obscence and filthy We may see the proofs of all this in the printed Sermons of that time which are come down to us Menot Oliver Maillard Barelett are at this day the Varities of Libraries and those who are curious preserve them as Originals of Impertinences And in truth tho at this day the Popish Pulpits especially in France are amended there remains enough in the Sermons of the Monks and in their Countrey Preachers to convince us at what rate they formerly preacht Impurity of the Books of Monkish Devotion After their Preachers we will rank the Authors of Books of Devotion And we must seek the Devotion of the Papacy in the Monks for as for the Bishops and Curates we may affirm that for several ages they have renounced even the Profession of it All the Religion of a Curate consisted in saying Mass very punctually in singing Vespers and Mattins without either understanding or attention the rest of his time he spent in Idleness and Debauchery But in what doth the Monkish Devotion consist In erecting Fraternities as they call them among which the principal are that of the Rosary of the Jacopins that of the Rope-Girdle of S. Francis's order that of the Scapulary of the Carmelites that of the Girdle in the Augustinian Order These are styl'd Arch-fraternities The grand business of the Monks is to draw into these Fraternities the devoutest Men and Women that can be found but especially Women who are rich and have the disposal of their Estates Those that are poor will not serve the end and design of their devotion is to gain large Almes and Gifts to themselves By the Fraternities saith the Bishop du Bellay the Monks impovreish whole Parishes destroy the Hierarchy get into their own hands the Government of the Church like Boares and Foxes that spoyle the vineyard with their strength and cunning Every Brother or Sister of these Fraternities wear under their Clothes either the Scapulary or the Rope-girdle or the Girdle of Augustine To these they add Letters of Adoption to have a share in the Whippings Fastings and other pretended Mortifications
Character of Antichristianism which is found in the Papacy Idolatry in its height confess'd by the Papists themselves Antichrist must e an Idolater according to Prophecies Dan. 11. IT cannot be doubted that the Religion of Antichrist must be an Idolatrous Religion First we read that he should worship Mauzzim Dan. 11.38 But in his estate he shall honour the God of force Hebr. Mauzzim and a God whom his Fathers knew not shall he honour with Gold and Silver and with pretious Stones and with pleasant things He shall worship Idols of silver and gold And S. John saith concerning the subjects of the Antichristian Monarchy Revel 9. V. 20. And therest of the men which were not kill'd by those plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands that they should not worship Devils and Idols of Gold and Silver and Brass and Stone and of Wood which can neither see nor hear nor walk The whole thirteenth chapter sets forth the Antichristian Monarchy as an Idolatrous State. Ver. 4. Its subjects worship'd the Dragon which gave power unto the Beast They worship the Beast itself V. 8. And all that dwell upon the Earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the Book of Life of the Lamb. The second Beast with two horns exerciseth the power of the first Beast in his presence V. 12. And causeth the Earth and them that dwell therein to worship the first Beast whose deadly wound was healed Altho these Adorations principally refer to the slavish Obedience that the Subjects of the Antichristian Kingdom do yield to the Head of this Kingdom 't is nevertheless certain that this Obedience is here set forth as an Idolatry and that it is really so Lastly this Babylonian Empire is described to us by the emblem of a notorious Harlot which was to commit abominable fornications with the Kings of the Earth and make all men drunk with the Wine of her Fornications V. 1. Come hither Chap. 1● I will shew unto thee the judgment of the great Whore that sisteth upon many waters V. 2. With whom the Kings of the Earth have committed Fornication and the Inhabitants of the Earth have been made drunk with the Wine of her Fornication Now every body knoweth that when the Scripture speaks of a Body a Society a Church the Fornications and adulteries which are charged on them signify Idolatries Therefore 't is certain that Idolatry must be one of the Characters of the Antichristian Kingdom Several ways by which the Papacy is guilty of Idolatry Let us see if this Character be found in the Papacy It is Idolatrous 1. In the Adoration of the Pope in giving divine Honours divine Attributes to him viz. a divine Power and an Universal Authority which are put in his hands 2. The Papacy is guilty of Idolatry in the Adoration of the Sacrament of the Altar which is nothing but Bread and yet all divine Honours are given it 3. It is Idolatrous in the account of the Invocation of Saints for the worship which is given to the Virgin to Angels and Saints makes them second-rate Gods to whom Honour of the same kind are orderd to be given that are given to the Great God. 4. Lastly The Papacy is Idolatrous because it obligeth men to fall down before Images of Wood of Stone of Gold and Silver The Idolatry of the Church of Rome may be consider'd either in their Worship itself or in the excesses of this Worship For instance in the Invocation of Saints either as it is generally owned by all the Members of the Roman Church or as it is explain'd by the bygotted Monks and Priests who are excessive in every thing and keep no bounds Thus the Idolatry as to Images may be considered either as layd down in the Decrees of their Councills or in the modern softning explication by which 't is palliated or in the Practice and downright Divinity of true Papists I will not here undertake to prove the charge of Idolatry upon the Roman Church on the account of the Services which she Authoriseth by her Canons and the unanimous Consent of her Doctors This would necessarily lead us into Controversy where we should be obliged to wash off the false colours which the modern Papists make use of to prove themselves no Idolaters neither in adoring the Sacrament or in the Invocation of Saints or in worshipping of Images In a word we should be engaged in a long debate whereas in this Treatise I design to take my arguments only from indisputable matters of fact and which are not debated After this Method I have proved all my preceeding characters of Antichristianism from History and Testimonies taken from the Books of our adversaries which themselves cannot gain-say And thus I will here prove the Idolatry of the Papacy by those Excesses which are own'd for such by all those of the Roman Church who pretend to any honesty and purity Mr. Arnaud and the Papists of his strain do in manner plainly confess that the disciples of F. Crasset and such like are Idolaters by their own Method of explaining and practising the Invocation of Saints and Worship of Images I shall assist those Gentlemen by setting down our Arguments Palpable Idolatry in the Books that direct the Devotion of the people We cannot I suppose be blamed if in discovering the nature of the Popish Worship we make use of the Authors who have wrote Books to guide the Devotion of the People Now if their Directions be not Idolatrous and lead not directly to Idolatry we are content to be counted Lyars First these Books and these Teachers ascribe without any scruple a Divinity unto creatures They call the V. Mary a Deity and Goddess One of these Authors thus speaks to her Damian serm 7. in natif Virg. O Virgin have you forgotten your Humanity because you have been Deifyed 'T is a Cardinal of the Church of Rome who spoke at this rate in the eleventh Century which lets us see that these Idolatrous Excesses are not new Binet Marq. de Predest A much later Writer saith of the Virgin that She is advanced to a kind of equality to God. Another that Her bosom is the Ocean of the Deity O Holy Lady saith another to her I know that nothing is hid from you and that by your Deity you exactly understand all my faults Bonaventare The Lord hath said to our Lady Sit thou at my right hand untill I make thy Enemies thy footstool I suppose that to sit at the right hand of God is the same as to obtain divine Honour at least we take it so when we explain the Article of Christs Ascension The Iesuite Delrio giveth the Virgin the Titles of optima maxima i. e. most good and most great We know that the Romans gave these to none but the supreme of their Gods and that Christians have bestowed them on the Infinitely Perfect Being The Iesuite Tursellin with innumerable
new Temples and Chappels are every day built to her Honour How those have far'd who condemn'd this Excess It may yet be said that there are some in the Church of Rome who condemn this excess Mr. Arnaud in his Apology for the Catholicks cites his good Friend the Bishop of Castoria M. Pavillon the Bishop of Alet and some others and above all we have the Advice of the H. Virgin to her Indiscreet Votaries which takes away all These abuses But these sorts of writings which are but a few are so far from convincing us that this Idolatry is past that it teaches us the contrary that it is yet in vigor At that very time when that little Book came forth there were those who said That a man might be assur'd of his salvation tho he liv'd in Sin if he did but bear any devotion to the Virgin that God could not damn those who had any external Devotion to the Virgin that Devotion to the Virgin was a sign of Predestination that the virgin brought back her votaries from Hell to give 'em space to repent that a man might be saved without the Love of God if he apply'd himself to our Lady that a man might render all Honours to the Virgin tho he forgot that which was due unto God that the Virgin is more merciful than J. Christ that the Virgin is an Inferior Divinity without whom there can be no access to God that she is the Mediatrix of Mankind and hath a great deal of Merit which she never receiv'd from her Son that she is the Joynt-Redeemer and Saviour of the World with J. Christ that we may appeal from God's Tribunal to hers that she hath an Empire and Kingdom distinct from that of the Father that she may be plac't parallell with her Son that Mercy belongs to her but Justice to Christ that we may apply our selves only to her and neglect her Son that Devotion to the Virgin may be prefer'd to the Love of God and trust in him that we may put our confidence in Images and that a difference is to be made between the several Images of the virgin as to efficacy and vertue and consequently that there must be a difference in our Devotion to ' em If those wicked and abominable Extravagancies are past and forgotten this modern Author was much to blame to give so particular an account of them in order to his charge against them that could be of nouse but to revive ' em But for the fuller conviction that these Impieties are still the Religion of the Papacy we must consider how that Book The Advice of the Virgin c. Was receiv'd viz. as an Heretical Book Father Crasset a famous Jesuite wrote an answer to it he treats the Author in his Preface as one that deserv'd the Inquisition and 't is certain had he been in the hands of the Spanish Inquisitors they would have burnt him as a Lutheran In a word Father Crasset confutes him and establisheth all those Impieties which the other had condemn'd he doth I say establish and confirm 'em one after another proving the truth of 'em and the Piety of the practice of these things supporting his own Opinion by the testimony many hundred Authors which he thinks of great weight and this Book is printed with Approbation and Priviledge and sold publickly throughout all France On the contrary the Book of The Advice c. and other such pieces are disperst very secretly concealing the Authors names and with evident tokens of being dislik't and discountenanc't 'T was not long ago that the Cordeliers of Rheims caus'd this Inscription to be put upon the Frontispiece of their Convent Deo Homini Beato Francisco Utrique Crucifixo To God-man and to S. Francis who were both Crucified Some or other abhorring this Blasphemy wrote against it but was forc't to hide himself under the name of S. Saviour and to print his paper with great Secrecy Few at this day dare openly condemn these extravagances In the mean while it may be said that there are great numbers of Papists in France cur'd of these Follies I grant and believe it and 't is that which makes me hope that Popery will ere long be banisht out of France but it must be observed that those very men who in their hearts it may be condemn those foolish Devotions to the Saints do yet practice 'em to appear Good Catholicks in the eyes of the World. We gave an instance in the late Marshal de Faber who was of all men the least taken with these Fooleries and perfectly despis'd the Roman Religion And yet after his death among his Papers were found Bulis and Letters of Filiation that he had procur'd to have a part in the merits of the Monks we also mention'd the Example of the Arch-Bishop of Rheims one of those who would be thought to be free and disingag'd from the Errors of the vulgar and yet hath caus'd the Confrairies of S. Sebastian to be set up in his Metropolitan City with all kinds of Indulgence annext plenary fuller and most full Lastly we have given the Relation of a matter of Fact which all Paris is witness to and whereof the Narrative hath been printed 'T is the Translation of the Reliques which the Princesse Palatine bequeath'd to the Abbey of S. Germain des Pres. The Ceremony was perform'd by the Arch-Bishop of Paris with all the Impiety and Idolatry that could have been practis'd in an age of the grossest Ignorance Nevertheless this Arch-Bishop of Paris is in all appearance one of the moderate men of the Religion of Mr. Arnaud and the Bishop of Meaux who condemn the Devotions of the Monks To all these Examples I will add another 't is of Father Mascaron as Formerly he was call'd but now Bishop of Agen. A Benedictine Monk named Dom Gabriel Preacht at Duras on the day of our Lady in March 1686. in his sermon he vented all the Impieties and Extravagances wherof we have given some Instances in the foregoing Chapters This made a great noise the new Converts complain'd of it the Bishop was wrote to about it who sends Dom Gabriel the following Letter From Reole 4. Aug. 1686. YEsterday Sir I had a Letter imparted to me which I judged you would be glad to read a copy of the subject of it was this A Benedictine Father of the Convent in this City who preacht the last Lent at Duras made a sermon on the day of our Lady in March wherein he made use of several very bold and extravagant Expressions concerning the veneration due to the H. Virgin in so much that not only New Converts but many of the ancient Catholicks were scandaliz'd at it among others that were offended were the Curate and the First Consul of the City who sent their complaints to this Preacher to have had him repair that fault in his next sermon But as he resus'd to do so every one on either side took
to worship them without Images as they had done for 170 years The same S. Augustin relates the words of Seneca who admired the folly of men who made very abasing representations of their Gods calling by that name lifeless things at which they would be affrighted if they should begin to stir of themselves Common sense made a Pagan speak at this rate and 't is very amazing that the same common sense assisted by divine Revelation should not at this day inspire the Papists with the same sentiments They give a Religious worship to lifeless sensless stones which if they should begin to move and speak would seem much more worthy of worship but in such a case men would fly from them as monsters and tremble at them as prodigious Papists believe as Pagans did that the consecration of Images confers a virtue to them Those Pagans who went the highest in their esteem of Images asserted that by virtue of their consecration they became not Gods but the dwellings of the Gods and that their deities were present with those Images i. e. with a presence of virtue and operation For they did not believe that the very substance of Jupiter was in such a manner fastned to his Image at Rome that he was not at all present with his Images in Greece Now I beseech you what real difference is there between this Opinion and that which the Papists have concerning their Images The Council of Trent declares that it would not have people believe that there is more virtue in one Image than in another But doth this hinder the devout vulgar from thinking otherwise Do they not believe that there is a far greater virtue in the Images of our Lady of Loretto and Montferrat than in those at Paris If not why do they take such long journeys to visit and kiss those Images which are in other Countreys Why do some Images work miracles and others none Why are the Priests who are the Jaylors and Keepers of such Images so wealthy Why are the Chappell 's where those Images are kept so rich and stored with treasure if one Image is not better than another Pagans gave no other worship to their Images than what Papist● give theirs The more moderate Papists are continually telling us that their Images have nothing divine in them that they are only meer representations by which they honour the Saints The Pagans said the very same concerning their Images Who saith one of them that is not a fool Celsus apud Origin can imagin that the Statues are Gods and not the Images and representations of the Gods There is not a Papist who dare speak with so much contemt of his Images as Plato spake of the Heathen ones He said that we owe a much greater honour to our Parents than to the Images of the Gods and that the Images having no Souls can do us neither good nor evil There is no Roman-Catholick who builds Chappels to his surviving Father and Mother or burns Incense to them And there is not one who dare say that our Ladies Images that are famous for their miracles are good for nothing and do neither good nor hurt They will indeed confess that the Image doth not work the Miracles But they say that the Virgin works the Miracles at the presence of her Images as God worketh grace in men at the presence of the Sacraments They cannot therefore say that they do neither good nor hurt for then we might say the same of the Sacraments Therefore we must not imagin that the Pagans tho they have not found out the pretty distinctions of Latria and Doulia of absolute and relative adoration did not make a great difference between the worship they gave their Gods and that which they gave their Images If there were among the Pagans some so stupid that they did not distinguish the Image from the Original there are some such among the Papists their own Authors do confess it Otherwise setting aside the sentiments of the heart 't is plain that the external honours that the Papists give their Images are exactly like these that the Pagans gave their Statues This is a point that cannot be contested or needs to be proved But here we ought to observe what we remarqued before Papists more superstitious as to Images than the Pagans concerning the service that is done to the dead that Popery much surpasseth Paganism in the Worship of Images The madness for Images never was so excessive among the Pagans as it is among the Papists 'T was never seen that these did run from one end of the world to the other to adore a forreign Image every one was content with his own Gods. 'T was never seen that Images were surrounded with worshippers who expected miracles from them They had no book Legends of the miracles wrought by their Images 'T is true Isis and Esculapius as they pretended did some miraculous cures But the least Popish Saint hath done more than the greatest Pagan Deities And there is no proportion between the Fabulous Histories of miracles written by Pagans and those written by false Christians 'T is not now I suppose difficult to see a near Conformity between Popery and Paganism as to these five objects of worship 1. The supreme God. 2. Angels 3. Dead persons 4. Reliques And 5. Images We should now have proceeded to show their Conformity as to Ceremonies of worship But the Parallel would be over long because so easily made For we may truly affirm Ceremonies of Popish service borrowed from Paganism that there is nothing in the External worship of Popery that is not an imitation of Paganism Their holy water is come in the room of the Lustrat Waters of the Heathens Their Patron Saints succeed the Pagan Penates and Lares i. e. houshould Gods Their Canonisations the Roman Apotheoses's Their Pope the High-Priests Their Cardinals the Colledges of Augurs Their Priests those of Paganism Their Altars the Pagan Altars Their Lamps always burning the perpetual Fires that were kept in the Temples Their Processions the Pomps of the Circus Their Shrines that which the Heathen call'd the Chariots of the Gods Their Perambulations the Amberales Their Carnaval the Baccanals Their Benedictions and Consecrations that which the Pagans call'd Lustrations Their Purgatory the Subterraneous Mansions whither the Pagans said Souls went down to be purged Is not this a strange Event which falls out to the Confusion of Popery that at Rome and divers other Places the Pagan Idols and Temples have only chang'd their Names without changing their Uses 'T is affirmed that the Image of the Capitoline Jupiter at Rome is changed into that of S. Peter only instead of a Thunderbolt the Keys are put in his hands At Bordeaux formerly an Antique of Jupiter going up to Heaven on an Eagle serv'd on Ascension-day to represent Jesus Christ going up to Heaven The Temples of Heathenish Gods have been consecrated to Saints Those who write
be done as She desired The Angel brought her a Branch of a Palm-tree from Paradise and bid her take care that this Branch be carried upon her Biere at her Burial He likewise gave her Mourning Garments that She might dye in a suitable and becoming Habit according to the Age and wear Mourning for her self Mary desires two things of her Son by the Mediation of the Angel First that She might be buried by all the Apostles Secondly that her Soul might see no Demon when it left her Body The Angel returns and leaves the Branch of Palm-tree which immediately became glittering and glorious every of its leaves shin'd like the Morning-Star The Virgin full of joy assembles the Holy Women together who were wont to visit her and gives them an account of her approaching Death St. Iohn was at this time preaching at Ephesus in the midst of his Sermon a noise of Thunder is heard and a Bright Cloud takes him up and carries him thro the air to the very door of Mary's House He goes in the Virgin and this Apostle embrace one another with abundance of Tears he is informed by Mary that within three days She should dye All the other Apostles arriv'd soon after in the same manner carried thro the Air. They were strangely surprised and astonisht to find themselves in that place St. Iohn unfolds the Mystery they came in they wept sorely and adored the H. Virgin. After a great deal of Worship and much discourse Mary received the Communion recommended her Soul to her Son fell upon her knees and put herself in a posture and preparedness to dye About the third hour of the day i. e. about nine a clock in the forenoon Iesus with the nine Orders of the Angels and the Assembly of the Patriarchs Prophets Martyrs Confessors c. i. e. with all the Court of Heaven came and stood round about his Mother's Bed. He and all the Celestial Company sung a melodious Song which began thus Come mine Elect and I will set Thee upon my Throne c. The Virgin answer'd Behold I come for in the beginning of thy Book it is written of me that I should do thy will O God! And with these words She gave up the Ghost When the Soul was departed the Body spake of it self saying I thank thee Lord that I am thy Glory remember me because I am thy Workmanship and have kept that which thou hast intrusted with me The dead Body which nevertheless could speak became so bright and luminous that the Virgins who washt it tho they might touch it were not able to look upon it When the Body was to be carried to the ground the Apostles made many Complements and Civilities to one another concerning the places of honour in the Ceremony for they were not it seems of the humour of the Monks who at the like meetings do oftentimes quarrel who shall go first so as to knock one another with the Crosier-Staff Peter and Paul carried the Body and Iohn the Palm-branch before the Biere the other Apostles followed As they were marching along in due order and Ceremony Iesus Christ covered with a Cloud with all his Angels overtakes 'em and joyning their Voices to those of the Apostles they sung the Obits in honour of the Virgin with a ravishing Melody and at the same time the whole Air round about was perfumed with a most grateful Odour The furious Iews being enraged at this spectacle thought it a very proper occasion to rid their hands of all the Apostles at once The High Priest with both his hands laid hold on the Biere to stop it but both were immediately wither'd and dryed up and fell off from his Arms at the Wrests the Remainder of the Enemies Troop was struck with Blindness The miserable High Priest of the Iews made a grievous Out-cry for the loss of his two Hands Peter tells him there was no cure for him on any other terms than these that he devoutly kiss the Biere of Mary and immediately turn Christian He did so and was healed presently Peter also gave him one of the Dates that grew on the Branch of Palm therewith to stroke the Eyes of those who were struck with Blindness and by so doing all that numerous Company recovered their sight After this the Convoy of the Virgin 's Body performed their journey without any Let or Molestation even to the Valley of Iehosaphat where they laid the Corps of the Mother of God in a new Sepulcher hewn out of a Rock as that wherein the Body of the Lord Jesus was laid When they had thus interred the Corps they remain by it three days which they spent in prayers At the end of three days a bright cloud encompasseth the Sepulcher Angelical voices are heard round about it and a sweet Odour perfumes the place Iesus descends from heaven salutes the Apostles and speaks to them after this manner Peace be unto you what kind of Honour and Glory think you do I owe to my Mother To which they replied It seems just O Lord to thy Servants that as after having conquered Death thou reignest for ever and ever in like manner that thou raise the Body of thy Mother and cause it to sit down for ever at thy Right-hand Thereupon the Soul of Mary immediately appeared and the Lord Iesus said unto it Arise my Well Beloved left up the Tabernacle of Glory the Vessel of Life Thou art fair my dearly Beloved and there is no Spot in thee as thou hadst no Spot so thy body shall not see Corruption At these words the Body of the Virgin arose and was united again to her Soul and ascended to Heaven with her Son. Behold after what manner the whole business was transacted according to the Relation of Pelbart de Temeswar a sober and grave Author whose Honesty and Credit is canonised afresh by Father Crasset within these eight or ten years So that we have no reason to doubt of his Testimony or suspect his Authority Not but that there are many who do not believe him especially in France but of such we may say that they are not thorough-pac'd Catholicks The Sermon concerning the Assumption of the Virgin was left out of the Service of the day by the Chapter of the Cathedral of Paris Anno 1668. which before that time was wont to be read but by doing so they have not much pleased or edified the devouter Romanists CHAPTER XIX A Continuation of the Romance of the Virgin invented to support the Idolatry of the Papacy ONe would think that the History of any person should be ended when we have traced it to the Grave But it is otherwise in regard of the B. Virgin. She hath done many more considerable things since her Death than ere she did in her Life time So that the continuation of her History if we should be exact and particular in our account of it would be much larger than that which hath already been related of her