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A67922 Actes and monuments of matters most speciall and memorable, happenyng in the Church. [vol. 1] with an vniuersall history of the same, wherein is set forth at large the whole race and course of the Church, from the primitiue age to these latter tymes of ours, with the bloudy times, horrible troubles, and great persecutions agaynst the true martyrs of Christ, sought and wrought as well by heathen emperours, as nowe lately practised by Romish prelates, especially in this realme of England and Scotland. Newly reuised and recognised, partly also augmented, and now the fourth time agayne published and recommended to the studious reader, by the author (through the helpe of Christ our Lord) Iohn Foxe, which desireth thee good reader to helpe him with thy prayer.; Actes and monuments Foxe, John, 1516-1587. 1583 (1583) STC 11225; ESTC S122167 3,006,471 816

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of them that had suffered death for Christ howsoeuer they were alienated should returne to theyr heires or next of kinne or for lacke of them should be geuen to the Church Hee commaunded moreouer that onely Christians shoulde beare office The other he charged and restrayned that neither they should sacrifice nor exercise any more diuinations and ceremonies of the Gētiles nor set vp any Images nor to keepe any feastes of the heathen Idolaters He corrected moreouer and abolished all such vnlawfull manners and vnhonest vsages in Cities as might be hurtfull any waies to the Church as the custome that the Egyptians had in the flowing of Nilus at what time the people vsed to runne together lyke brute beasts both men women and with all kinde of filthines and Sodomitrie to pollute their Cities in celebrating the increase of that riuer This abhomination Constantine extinguished causing that wicked order called Androgynae to be killed By reason whereof the Riuer afterward through the benefite of God yelded more increase in his flowing to the greater fertilitie of the ground then it did before Among the Romanes was an olde lawe that such as were barren hauing no fruite of children should be amerced of halfe their goodes Also that such as being aboue the yeares of xxv vnmaried should not be nūbred in the same priuileges with them that were maried neither should be heires to them to whom notwithstanding they were next in kinde These lawes because they seemed vnreasonable to punish the defect of nature or gift of virginitie by mās lawe hee abrogated and tooke away An other order was among the Romanes that they which made their willes being sicke had certaine prescribed and conceiued wordes appoynted to thē to vse which vnlesse they followed their willes stoode in none effect This law also Constantine repealed permitting to euery man in making his testament to vse what wordes or what witnesses he woulde Likewise among the Romaines hee restrained and tooke away the cruel and bloudy spectacles sights where men were wont with swordes one to kill an other Of the barbarous and filthy fashion of the Arethusians in Phoenicia I haue mentioned before pag. 104. where they vsed to expose and set foorth their virgines to open fornication before they should be maried which custome also Constantine remooued away Where no Churches were there he commaunded new to be made where any were decayed he commāded them to be repaired where any were to litle he caused them to be enlarged geuing to the same great giftes and reuenewes not onely of such tributes and taxes comming to him from certaine sundry Cities which hee transferred vnto the Churches but also out of his owne treasures When any Byshops required any Councell to be had hee satisfied their petitions And what in their Councels and Synodes they established being godly honest hee was ready to confirme the same The armour of his soldiours which were newly come from Gentilitie he garnished with the armes of the crosse whereby they might learne the sooner to forget their olde superstitious idolatry Moreouer like a worthy Emperor he prescribed a certaine forme of prayer in steade of a Catechisme for euery man to haue to learne how to pray and to inuocate God The which forme of prayer is recited in the fourth booke of Eusebius De vita Constantini in wordes as foloweth Te solum noulmus Deum te regem cognoscimus te adiutorem inuocamus abs te victorias referimus per te victorias inimicorum constituimus tibi praesentium bonorum gratiam acceptam ferimus per te futura quoque speramus tibi supplices sumus omnes Imperatorem nostrum Constantinum ac pientissimos eius filios in longissima vita incolumes nobis ac victores custodire supplices oramus per Christum dominum nostrum Amen In English We knowledge thee onely to be our God we confesse thee onely to be our king we inuocate and call vpon thee our onely helper by thee we obtaine our victories by thee we vāquish and subdue our enemies to thee we attribute whatsoeuer present commodities we enioy by thee we hope for good thinges to come vnto thee we direct all our sute petitions most humbly beseeching thee to conserue Constantine our Emperour and his noble childrē in long life to cōtinue and to geue them victory ouer all their enemies through Christ our Lord. Amen In hys owne palace hee set vp an house peculiar for prayer and doctrine vsing also to pray and sing with his people Also in hys warres hee went not without hys tabernacle appoynted for the same The Sonday he cōmanded to be kept holy of all men and free from all iudiciarie causes from markets martes faires all other manuall labors onely husbandry excepted especially charging that no Images or Monuments of Idolatry should be set vp Men of the Clergy and of the ministery in al places he endued with speciall priuileges and immunities so that if any were brought before the ciuill Magistrate and listed to appeale to the sentence of his Bishop it should be lawfull for him so to doe and that the sentence of the Byshop should stande in as great force as if the Magistrate or the Emperour himselfe had pronounced it ¶ But here is to be obserued noted by the way that the Clerkes ministers thē newly creeping out of persecutiō were in those dayes neyther in nūber so great nor in order of life of the like dispositiō to these in our dayes now liuing No lesse care and prouision the sayd Constantinus also had to the maintenance of scholes pertayning to the Church and to the nourishing of good artes and liberall sciences especially of Diuinitie not onely with stipends and subsidies furnishing them but also with large priuilegies and exemptiōs defending the same as by the wordes of his own law is to be seene and read as followeth Medicos Gramaticos alios professores literarum doctores legum cum vxoribus liberis c. In English Phisitions Gramarians and all other prefessors of liberal artes and Doctors of the law with their wiues and childrē and all other their possessions which they haue in Citties we commaund to be freed from all ciuill charges and functions neyther to receaue forren straungers in prouinces nor to be burdened with any publique administration nor to be cited vp to ciuill iudgement nor to be drawne out or oppressed with any iniury And if any man shall vexe them he shall incurre such punishment as the Iudge at his discretion shall awarde him Their stipendes moreouer and solaries we commaunde truely to be payd them whereby they may more freely instruct other in artes and sciences c. Ouer and besides this so farre did hys godly zeale and princely care and prouision extend to the Church of Christ that he commaunded and prouided bookes and volumes of the Scripture diligently and playnly to be written
iurisdiction in which poynt this new Church of Rome hath swarued from the auncient Church of Rome which was as is sufficiently proued THe third point wherein the church of Rome hath broken and is departed from the Church of Rome is the forme of stile title annexed to the Bishop of that Sea As where he is called Pope most holy father vicare generall vicare of Christ successour of Peter vniuersall Byshop Prince of Priestes head of the Church vniuersall Summus orbis pontifex Stupor mundi head Byshop of the world the admiration of the world neither God nor mā but a thyng betwene both c. for all these termes be geuen him in Popish bookes Albeit the name Pope beyng a Greeke name deriued of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which soūdeth as much as Father in the Syracusane speach may peraduenture seeme more tolerable as which hath bene vsed in the old time among Byshops for so Austen was called of the Coūcell of Aphrike Hierome of Boniface other Also Cyprian Byshop of Carthage was called Papa 24. q. 1. cap. loquitur dist 50. cap. De eo tamen Item Clodouaeus or as Rheanus calleth him Ludouicus first Christiā king of Fraūce calleth a certain simpler Byshop Papam Hierome also in his Epistle to Chromatius calleth Valerianus by the name of Pope likewise writyng to Eustachium and Fabiola he calleth Epiphanius beatum Papam In the Apologies of Athanasius we read oft tymes that he was called Papa and Archiepiscopus Ruffinus also Lib. 2. cap. 26. calleth him Pontificem maximum Also Aurelius President in the vi Councell of Carthage was called of the sayd Councell Papa ex cap. 4. vi Concil Carthag And before this Eleutherius Byshop of Rome writyng to kyng Lucius the first Christian kyng in this land calleth him in his Epistle the vicare of Christ. c. But that any of these termes were so peculiarly applied to the Bishop of Rome that other bishops were excluded from the same or that any one bishop aboue the rest had the name of Oecumenicall or vniuersall or head to the derogation of other Bishopps or with such glory as is now annexed to the same that is not to be found neither in histories of the old tyme nor in any example of the primitiue Church nor in the testimonies of auncient approued Doctours First before the Councell of Nice it is euident by Pope Pius the ij that there was no respect had to the church of Rome but euery church then was ruled by his owne gouernance til the yeare of our Lord 340. Then folowed the Councell of Nice wherin was decreed that throughout the whole vniuersitie of Christes Church which was now far spread ouer all the world certaine Prouinces or precincts to the number of foure were appointed euery one to haue his head church and chiefe bishop called then Metropolitane or Patriarch to haue the ouersight of such churches as did lie about him In the number of which Patriarches or Metropolitanes the Bishop of Rome had the first place The Bishop of Alexandria was the second The Bishop of Antioche the third The Bishop of Hierusalem was the fourth Patriarch Afterward in the number of these Patriarches came in also the Bishop of Constantinople in the roome of the bishop of Antioch So these foure or fiue Metropolitanes or Patriarches had their peculiar circuites and precincts to them peculiarly appointed in such sort as one of them should not deale within an others precinct also that there should be among them equalitie of honour wherupon we read so oft in the decrees of the olde Councels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is equall degree of thrones and of honour among priests and ministers Againe speaking of the said Patriarches or Primates we read in the 2. and 3. chap. of the Councel of Constant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is That bishops should not inuade the Dioces of other bishops without their borders nor confound togither churches c. Moreouer the old Doctours for the most and best part do accord in one sentēce that all bishops placed wheresoeuer in the church of God be eiusdem meriti honoris successores Apostolorum that is to be of one merite of like honour and all to be successors together of the Apostles Also he that is the Author of the booke called Dionysius Areopagita calleth all the Bishops 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is of equall order and of like honor c. All this while the Bishop of Rome was a Patriarch and a Metropolitane or bishop called of the first sea but no Oecumenicall Bishop nor head of the vniuersall Church nor any such matter In so much that he with all other Bishops was debarred from that by a playne decree of the Councell of Carthage Can. 39. in these wordes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is That the bishop of the first seat shall not be called the Prince of priests or the high priest or any such thing And least any here should take occasion of cauilling to heare him called bishop of the first sea here is to be expounded what is ment by the first sea and wherfore he was so called not for any dignitie of the persō either of him which succedeth or of him whom he is said to succeede but onely of the place wherin he sitteth This is plainly proued by the councell of Calcedone cap. 28. Wherin is manifestly declared the cause why the sea of Rome among all other Patriarchall seas is numbred for the first sea by the auncient fathers For why saith the Councell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is for that our forefathers did worthily attribute the chiefe degree of honour to the sea of old Rome because the principall raigne or Emperie was in that Citie c. The same also is confirmed by Eusebius Caesariensis declaring quòd excellentia Romani Imperij extulit papatum Rom. Pontificis supra alias Ecclesias That the excellencie of the Romaine Emperie did aduance the Popedome of the Romaine bishop aboue other churches c. Ex Gab. Biel. Moreouer saith the said Caesariensis Nicena synodus hoc contulit priuilegium Rom. pontifici vt sicut Romanorum rex Augustus prae caeteris appellatur ita Rom. pontifex prae caeteris Episcopis Papa vocaretur That is The Councell saith he of Nice gaue this Priuiledge to the Bishop of Rome that like as the king of the Romaines is named Emperour aboue all other kings so the bishop of the same citie of Rome should be called Pope aboue other bishops c. By these places hitherto alledged and such other many more then be here alleaged it appeareth that though these titles of superioritie had bene attributed to the Bishop of Rome yet it remaineth certaine that the said Bishop receiued that preferment Iure non diuino sed humano by mans law not by the law of God And so is the distinction of the Popes proued false where
Abdias and other although they doe not all precisely agree in the tyme. The wordes of Hierome be these Simon Peter the sonne of Iona of the prouince of Galile and of the Towne of Bethsaida the brother of Andrew c. After hee had bene Byshop of the Church of Antioch and had preached to the dispersion of them that beleued of the Circumcision in Pontus Galacia Capadocia Asia and Bithinia in the second yeare of Claudius the Emperour whiche was about the yeare of our Lord. 44. came to Rome to withstand Simon Magus and there kept the priestly chayre the space of 25. yeares vntill the last yeare of the foresayd Nero which was the 14. yeare of hys raygne of whome he was crucified hys head being downe and his feete vpward himselfe so requiring because he was he sayd vnworthy to be crucified after the same forme and maner as the Lord was c. Egesippus prosecuting this matter something more at large and Abdias also if any authoritie is to be geuen to hys booke who following not onely the sense but also the very forme of wordes of Egesippus in this Hystory seemeth to be extracted out of him and of other authors sayth that Simon Magus being then a great man with Nero and his president and keeper of hys life was required vppon a tyme to be present at the raysing vp of a certayne noble young man in Rome of Neros kindred lately departed Wheras Peter also was desired to come to the reuiuing of the sayd personage But when Magus in the presence of Peter could not doe it Then Peter calling vpon the name of the Lord Iesus dyd rayse him vp and restored him to hys mother wherby the estimation of Simon Magus began greatly to decay and to be detested in Rome Not long after the sayd Magus threatned the Romaynes that he would leaue the Citie and in their light flye away from them into heauen So the day being appoynted Magus taking hys winges in the Mounte Capitolinus began to flye in the ayre But Peter by the power of the Lord Iesus brought him downe with his winges headlong to the ground by the whiche fall hys legges and ioyntes were broken and he thereupon dyed Then Nero sorrowing for the death of him sought matter agaynst Peter to put hym to death Which when the people perceiued they entreated Peter with much a doe that he would flye the Citie Peter through their importunitie at length perswaded prepared himselfe to auoyd But comming to the gate he sawe the Lord Christ come to meete him to whom he worshipping sayd Lord whether doest thou goe To whome he aunswered and sayd I come agayne to be crucified By this Peter perceauing hys suffering to be vnderstanded returned backe into the Citty agayne And so was he crucified in maner as is before declared And this out of Egesippus Eusebius moreouer writing of the death not onely of Peter but also of his wife affirmeth that Peter seeing his wife goyng to her Martyrdom belike as he was yet hanging vpon the crosse was greatly ioyous and glad thereof who crying vnto her with a loud voyce and calling her by her name bade her remember the Lord Iesus Such was then saith Eusebius the blessed bonde of Mariage among the Saintes of God And thus much of Peter Paule the Apostle which before was called Saule after his great trauail and vnspeakable labours in promooting the Gospell of Christ suffred also in this first persecution vnder Nero and was beheaded Of whom thus writeth Hierome in his Booke De viris illustr Paule otherwise called Saule one of the Apostles yet out of the number of xij was of the tribe of Beniamin and of a towne of Iewrie called Gisealis which towne beyng taken of the Romains he with his parents fled to Tharsus a town of Cilicia Afterward was sent vp by his parents to Hierusalē and there brought vp in the knowledge of the law at the feete of Gamaliel and was at the death of Stephen a doer And when he had receiued letters from the high Priest to persecute the Christians by the way going to Damascus was stroken downe of the Lordes glory and of a persecutor was made a professor an Apostle a Martyr a witnesse of the Gospell and a vessell of election Among his other manifold labors trauails in spreading the doctrine of Christ he wan Sergius Paulus the Proconsul of Cyprus to the faith of Christ whereupon he tooke his name as some suppose turned from Saulus to Paulus After he had passed through diuers places and countries in his laborious peregrinations he tooke to him Barnabas and went vp to Hierusalem to Peter Iames and Iohn where he was ordained and sent out with Barnabas to preach vnto the Gentils And because it is in the Actes of the Apostles sufficiently comprehended concerning the admirable conuersion conuersation of this most worthy Apostle that which remaineth of the rest of his history I will here adde how the sayd Apostle Paule the 25. yere after the passion of the lord in the second yeare of Nero what tyme Festus ruled in Iewrie was sent vp in bondes to Rome where he remaining in his free hosterie two yeares together disputed daily against the Iewes proouing Christ to be come And here is to be noted that after his first answer or purgation there made at Rome the Emperor Nero not yet fully confirmed in his Empire yet not bursting out into those mischiefs which histories report of him he was at that tyme by Nero discharged and dismissed to preach the Gospell in the West partes and about the coastes of Italy as he himselfe writing vnto Timothie afterward in his second apprehension in his second Epistle witnesseth saying In my first purgation no man stoode with me but did all forsake me the Lord lay it not to their charge But the Lord stood with me did comfort me that the preaching of his word might proceed by me that all the Gentiles might heare and be taught and I was deliuered out of the Lions mouth c. In which place by the Lion he plainly meaneth Nero. And afterward likewise saith I was deliuered from the mouth of the Lion c. And againe the Lord hath deliuered me out from all euill workes and hath saued me vnto his heauenly kingdom c. speaking this because he perceiued thē the tyme of his Martyrdome to be nere at hand For in the same Epistle before he saith I am now offred vp and the tyme of my dissolution draweth on Thus then this worthy preacher and messenger of the Lord in the 14. yeare of Nero and the same day in which Peter was crucified although not in the same yeare as some write but in the next yeare following was beheaded at Rome for the testimonie of Christ and was buried in the way of Ostia The yeare after the passion of the Lord 37. He wrote ix Epistles to seuen
loue his Religion become a christian for that is not written yet thus much he obtained that Antoninus writing to his Officers in Asia in the behalfe of the Christians required and cōmaunded them that those Christians which onely were founde giltie of any trespasse should suffer and such as were not conuicted should not therfore onely for the name be punished because they were called Christians By these it is apparant with what zeale and faith this Iustinus did striue against the persecutors which as he said could kill onely but could not hurt This Iustinus by the meanes and malice of Crescens the Philosopher as is before declared suffered Martyrdome vnder Marcus Antoninus Verus a little after that Polycarpus was martired in Asia as witnesseth Eusebius Lib. 4. Here is to be gathered how Epiphanius was deceiued in the time of his death saying that he suffered vnder Rusticus the president and Adrian the Emperour being of xxx yeares of age which indeede agreeth not neither with Eusebius nor Ierome nor Swide nor other moe which manifestly declare and testifie how he exhibited his Apology vnto Antoninus Pius which came after Adrian Thus hast thou good Reader the li●e of this learned blessed martir although partly touched before yet now more fully amply discoursed for the better commendatiō of his excellent notable vertues of whose small ende thus writeth Photius saying that he suffering for Christ died cheerefully with honor Thus haue ye heard the whole discourse of Iustinus and of the blessed Saints of Fraunce Vetius Zacharias Sanctus Maturus Attalus Blandina Alexander Alcibiades with other recorded and set foorth by the writing of certaine Christian brethren of the same Church place of Fraunce In the which foresaid writing of theirs moreouer appeareth the great meekenes and modest constancie of the said martirs described in these words such folowers were they of christ who when he was in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equal with god being in the same glory with him that they not once nor twise but oft times suffered martyrdome taken againe from the beastes bearing wounds tearinges and skarres in their bodies yet neither woulde counte them selues Martirs neyther woulde they suffer vs so to cal thē but if any of vs either by word or letter woulde call them Martirs they did vehementlye rebuke them saying that the name of martirdome was to be gyuen to Christ the faithfull and true martir the first borne of the dead the captaine of life testifiyng moreouer that martirdome belongeth to such who by their martirdome were already passed out of this life and whom as christ by their worthy confession hath receiued vnto him selfe and hath sealed vp their Martirdome by their ende finished As for thē which were not yet consūmated they said they were not worthy the names of martirs but only were humble and worthy confessours desiring also their brethren with teares to praye without ceasing for their confirmation Thus they performing in deede that whiche belonged to true Martirs in resisting the heathen with much lybertie and great patience without all feare of man being replenished with the feare of God refused to be named of their brethren for martirs And after in the said writing it followeth more they humbled themselues vnder the mightye hand of God by which they were greatly exalted Then they rendred to all men a reason of their faith they accused no man they loosed all they bounde none And for them which so euill did intreate them they praied following the example of Stephen the perfect Martir which sayde O Lord impute not their sinne to them And after againe Neither did they proudly disdaine against them which fell but of such as they had they imparted to them that lacked bearing toward them a motherly affection shedding their plentifull teares for them to God the Father and prayed for their life and saluation and as God gaue it them they also did communicate to their neighbours And thus they as conquerers of all thynges departed to God They loued peace and leauing the same to vs they went to God neither leauyng any molestation to their mother nor sedition or trouble to their brethren but ioye peace concorde and loue to all Out of the same writyng moreouer concernyng these Martyrs of Fraunce afore mentioned is recorded also an other history not vnworthy to be noted taken out of the same booke of Eusebius cap. 3. Which history is this There was among these constaunt and blessed Martirs one Alcibiades as is aboue specified which Alcibiades euer vsed a very straight died receiuing for his foode and sustenaunce nothing els but only bread and water when this Alcibiades now ●eing cast into prison went about to accustome the same straightnes of diet after his vsual maner before it was reueiled by God to Attalus afore mentioned one of the said company being also the same time imprisoned after his first conflict vpon the scaffolde that Alcibiades did not well in that hee refused to vse and take the creatures of God also thereby ministred to other a pernicious occasion of offensiue example Whereupon Alcibiades being aduertised reformed began to take al thinges boldly and with giuing thankes whereby may appeare to all scrupulous consciences not only a wholesome instrucion of the holy Ghost but also here is to be noted how in those dayes they were not destytute of the grace of God but had the holy spirite of God to be their instructor Haec Euseb. The foresaide martirs of Fraunce also the same tyme commended Irenaeus newly then made minister with their letters vnto Eleutherus Bishop of Rome as witnesseth Euseb. in the x. thap of the same booke which Irenaeus fyrst was the hearer of Polycarpus then made minister as is sayde vnder these Martyrs And after their death made Byshop afterward of Lyons in Fraunce and succeded after Photinus Besides this Iustinus there was also the same time in Asia Claudius Apolinaris or Apolinarius Byshop of Hierapolis And also Melito Bishop of Sardis an eloquent learned man much commended of Tertullian who succeeding after the time of the apostles in the reigne of this Antoninus Verus exhibited vnto him learned and eloquent Apologies in defence of Christes Religion like as Quadratus and Aristides aboue mentioned did vnto the Emperour Hadrian whereby they mooued him somewhat to stay the rage of his persecution In like maner did this Apolinaris and Melito stirred vp by God aduenture to defende in writing the cause of the christians vnto this Antoninus Of this Melito Eusebius in his fourth booke making mention excerpeth certaine places of his Apologie in these wordes as followeth Nowe saith he which was neuer seene before the godly suffereth persecution by occasion of certaine Proclamations Edictes proclaimed throughout Asia for vilanous Sichophantes robbers spoylers of other mens goods grounding them selmes vpon those Proclamations and taking occasion of them robbe
c. Such a feruency had this Origene being yet young to the doctrine of Christes faith by the operation of Gods heauenly prouidence and partlye also by the diligent education of his Father who brought him vp from his youth most studiously in all good literature but especially in the reding exercise of holy scripture wherin he had such inward mistical speculatiō that many times he would moue questions to his father of the meaning of this place or that place in the scripture Insomuch that his father diuers times would vncouer his brest being a sleepe kisse it giuing thanks to God which had made him so happy a father of such a happy child After the death of his father and all his goodes confiscated to the Emperour he wyth his poore mother and sixe brethren beyng brought to such extreme pouerty did sustaine both himself and them by teaching a schole Til at length being wearye of that profession he transferred his study onely to the knowledge and seeking of diuine Scripture such other learning conducible to the same So much he profited both in the Hebrue and other toungs that he conferred y● Hebrue text with the translation of the lxx And moreouer did conferre and find out the other translations which we call the common translation of Aquila of Symmachus and Theodotion Also he adioyned to these aforesaid other foure translations wherof more is in the story of Eusebius expressed They that write of the life of Origene testifie of him that he was of wit quicke and sharpe much patient of labour a great traueler in the tongues of a spare dyet of a straight life a great faster his teaching his lining were both one his going was much barefoot A straight obseruer of that saying of the Lorde bydding to haue but one coate c he is said to haue written so much as seuen Notaries so many maides euery day could penne The nūber of his bookes by the accōpt of Hierome came to 7000. Uolumes the copies whereof he vsed to sel for 3. d. or a little more for the sustentation of his liuing But of hym more shal be touched hereafter So zelous he was in the cause of Christ and of Christes Martirs that he nothing fearyng his owne perill would assist exhort them going to theyr death kisse them insomuch that he was oft in ieoperdie to be stoned of the multitude And sometimes by the prouision of Christen men had his house garded about wyth souldiers for the safety of them which daily resorted to heare his readings many times he was cōpelled to shift places houses for such as laid waite for him in al places But such was the prouidence of God to preserue him in the middest of all this tempest of Seuerus Among other which resorted vnto him were his hearers Plutarchus was one and died a martyr with him Serenus hys brother who was burned The third after these was Heraclides The fourth Heron who were both beheaded The fift was an other Serenus also beheaded Rhais and Potamiena who was tormented with pitch poured vpon her martyred with her mother Marcella who died also in the fyre This Potamiena was of a fresh and flourishing beautie who because she could not be remoued from her profession was committed to Basilides one of the Captaines there in the armie to see the execution done Basilides receyuing her at the Iudges hand leading her to the place shewed to her some compassion in repressing the rebukes and raylinges of the wicked aduersaries for the which Potamiena the virgine to requite againe his kindnes bad him bee of good comfort saying that she would pray the Lord to shewe mercy vpon him And so went she to her Martyrdome which she both strongly and quietly did sustaine Not long after it happened that Basilides was required to giue an othe in a matter cōcerning his fellowe souldiours which thing he denied to doe plainely affirming the he was a Christian. For their othe then was woont to be by the Idoles the Emperor At the first he was thought dissimulingly to iest but after whē he was heard constantly in earnest to confirme the same he was had before the iudge and so by him committed towarde The Christians marueiling thereat as they came to him in the prison inquired of him the cause of that his sodaine conuersion To whom he aunswered againe and saide that Potamiena had praied for him to the Lord so he saw a crowne put vpon his head adding moreouer that it should not be long but he should be receiued Which things thus done the next day following he was had to the place of execution and there beheaded Euseb. Lib. 6. cap. 5. Albeit the said Eusebius giueth this story of no credite but onely of heare say as he there expresseth As diuers and many there were that suffered in the daies of this Seuerus so some were againe which through the protection of God his prouidence being put to great torments yet escaped with life Of whom was one Alexander who for his constant confessiō and torments suffered was made Bishop afterwarde of Hierusalem together with Narcissus who being then an olde man of an hundred and threescore yeares and three as sayeth Eusebius was vnwieldy for his age to gouerne that function alone Of this Narcissus is reported in the Ecclesiasticall historie that certaine miracles by him were wrought verye notable if they be true First of water by him turned into oyle at the solemne vigile of Easter what time the cōgregation wanted oyle for their lampes Another miracle is also told of him which is this There were three euill disposed persons who seing the soundnes graue constancy of his vertuous life fearyng their owne punishment as a conscience that is giltie is alwaies fearefull thought to preuent his accusations in accusing him first laying an haynous crime to his charge And to make their accusatiō more probable before the people they bound their accusation with a great othe One wishing to be destroied with fire if he sayd not true The other to bee consumed with a grieuous sickenes The third to loose both his eyes if they did lye Narcissus although hauing his conscience cleare yet not able beyng but one man to withstand their accusation bound with such othes gaue place and remooued himself● from the multitude into a solitarie desert by himself where he continued the space of many yeares In the meane time to them which so willingly and wickedly forsweare themselues this happened the first by casualtie of one litle smal sparkle of fire was burnt with his goods and all his familie The second was taken with a great sicknesse from the top to the toe and deuoured with the same The third hearing and seyng the punishment of the other confessed his fault but through great repentance poured out such tears that he lost both his eyes And
hearing the history of the Prophet Ionas The same Hierome moreouer testifieth how he immediatly vpon his conuersion distributed among the poore al his substaunce and after that being ordained a Priest was not long after constituted bishop of the congregation of Carthage But whether he succeded Agrippinus of whom he often maketh mention which also was the first author of rebaptization or some other bishop of Carthage it remaineth vncertain But this is most true he himselfe shined in his office and dignitie with such good giftes and vertues that as Nazianzenus writeth he had the gouernment of the whole east Church and church of Spain and was called the Bishop of the Christian men And to the further setting foorth to the praise of God of his godly vertues wherwith he was indued appearing as well in his owne workes to them that list to peruse the same as also described by other worthy writers he was curteous and gentle louing and ful of patience and therwithall sharpe seuere in his office according as the cause required as appeareth in his first booke and third epistle Furthermore he was most louing and kinde towarde his brethren and tooke much payne in helping and relieuyng the Martyrs as appeareth by his letters to the Elders and Deacons of his Bishopricke that with all study and indeuour they should gently entertaine and shewe pleasure vnto the Martirs in his absence as partly is touched before The third Epistle of his first booke doth declare of what stomacke and godly courage he was in executyng his office and handling his matters Neither was he void of prudence circumspection but was adorned with marueilous modestie wherby he attempted nothing vpon his owne head and iudgement but with the consent of his fellow byshops and other inferiour Ministers that chiefly amōg others doth the 10. Epistle of his third booke witnes He was of a marueilous liberal disposition towards the poore brethren of other countries for so often as he had cause of absence he committed the care of those poore men to his fellow officers and wrote vnto them that of their own proper goods they would helpe their banished brethren to that which was necessary for them as witnesseth the 24. Epistle of his thirde booke He reciteth among other gifts wherewith he was indued as touching the visions and heauenly admonitions of the persecutions that should follow and of other matters touching the gouernment of the Church in his first booke third Epistle and fourth booke and fourth Epistle where he reciteth and expoundeth the forme or maner of a certaine vision which we haue before sufficiently expressed He had moreouer great skill in the foreknowledge of things that should chaunce as may be gathered in the vj. Epistle of his fourth booke Also Augustine doth attribute vnto him many worthy vertues which wryteth much in setting foorth his giftes of humilitie in his seconde booke of Baptisme the fourth chapter against the Donatistes and in his vij booke and xj chap. of his long sufferaunce and patience Also of his curtesie and meekenes by which vertues he concealed nothing that he vnderstoode but vttered the same meekely and patiently Also that he kept the Ecclesiasticall peace concorde with those that were of an other opinion then he was of lastly that he neither circumuented nor did preiudice any man but followed y● thing which seemed good in his iudgement it is manifest in S. Augustine his fift booke De Baptismo contra Donatistas Neyther is this to be passed with silence that Hierome writeth that he was very diligent in reading especially the works of Tertullian For he saieth that he saw a certaine olde man whose name was Paulus which tolde him he saw the notarye of blessed Cyprian being then an olde man when he him selfe was but a springal in the Citie of Rome and told him that it was Cyprians wont neuer to let one daye passe wythout some reading of Tertullian and that he was accustomed oftentimes to say vnto him giue me any master meanyng thereby Tertullian Now a few wordes touching his exile and Martyrdome Of his Epistles which he wrote backe to his congregation leading his life in exile mention is made aboue wherin he sheweth the vertue beseeming a faithfull pastor in that he tooke no lesse care as wel of his owne church as of other Bishops being absent then he did beyng presente Wherin also he himselfe doth signifie that voluntarily he absented himselfe least he should doe more hurt then good to the congregation by reason of his presence as is likewyse declared before Thus from the desolate places of his banishment wherein he was oftentimes sought for he writeth vnto his brethren as in his third booke and x. Epistle is manifest which thing semeth to be done in the raigne of Decius or Gallus But after that he returned againe but of exile in the raigne of this Valorianus he was also after that the second tyme banished of Paternus the Proconsull of Aphrica into the Citie of Thurbin as the oration of Augustine touching Cyprian sheweth or els as Pontius the Deacon saith into a Citie named Fur●bilitana or Curabilitana But when Paternus the Proconsull was dead Galienus Maximus succeded in the rowme and office of Paternus who fynding Cyprian in a garden caused him to be apprehended by his Sergeauntes and to be brought before the Idoles to offer sacrifice which when he woulde not doe then the Proconsul breaking forth in these words sayd Long hast thou liued in a sacrilegious mind and hast gathered togither men of wicked conspiracie and hast shewed thy selfe an enimie to the Gods of the Romanes and to their holye lawes neither could the sacrete Emperours Valerianus Galienus reuoke thee to the secte of their ceremonies At length the wicked tyraunt condemnyng him to haue hys head cut of he patiently and willingly submitted his necke to the stroke of the sword as Hieronimus affirmeth And so this blessed Martyr ended this present life in the Lorde Xistus then being Byshop of Rome as Eusebius noteth in the yeare of our Lorde 259. Sabellicus saith that he was Martired in the raigne of Gallus and Volusianus Lucius being bishop of Rome but that seemeth not like Now remayneth to speake something likewise of hys workes and bookes left behind him although al peraduēture doe not remaine that he wrote wherof some are missing some againe which in the liuery of his name title are not his but such as be certainly his by the style sense may soone be discerned such is the eloquence of his phrase grauity of his sentence vigour of wit power in perswasion so much differing from many other as he can lightlye be imitated but of fewe Of the which his bookes with vs extant as the florishing eloquence is worthely cōmended proceeding out of the schoole of Rhetoricians so is the authoritie therof no lesse reputation not onely
the first telleth a tale concerning this matter In tymes past saith he when the seruice which Ambrose made was more frequented and vsed in Churches then was the seruice which Gregory had appointed the bishop of Rome then called Adrian gathered a Councell together in the which it was ordained that Gregories seruice should be obserued and kept vniuersally which determination of the Councell Charles the Emperor did diligētly put in executiō while he ran about by diuers Prouinces inforced all the Clergy partly with threatnings and partly with punishments to receiue that order And as touching the bookes of Ambrose seruice he burnt them to ashes in all places and threw into prison many priests that would not consent and agree to the matter Blessed Eugenius the Bishop comming vnto the Councell found that it was dissolued iij. dayes before his comming Notwithstanding through his wisedome he so perswaded the Lord Pope that he called agayne all the Prelates that had bene present at the Councell and were now departed by the space of three dayes Therfore when the Councell was gathered agayne together in this all the fathers did consent and agree that both the Masse bookes of Ambrose and Gregory should be layd vpon the aulter of blessed Peter the Apostle and the church dores diligently shut and most warily sealed vp with the signets of many and diuers bishops Againe that they should all the whole night geue themselues to prayer that the Lord might reueale open shew vnto them by some euident signe or token which of these two seruices he would haue vsed in the Temples Thus they doing in all pointes as they had determined in the morning opened the church dores and founde both the Myssals or Masse bookes open vpon the aulter or rather as some say they found Gregories Masse booke vtterly plucked asunder one piece from an other and scattered ouer all the church As touching Ambrose booke they only found it open vpō the aulter in the very same place where they before laid it This miracle Pope Adrian like a wyse expounder of dreames saith that as the leaues were torne and blown abroad all the church ouer so should Gregories booke be vsed throughout the world whereupō they thought themselues sufficiently instructed and taught of God that the seruice which Gregory had made ought to be set abroad vsed throughout the world and that Ambrose his seruice should onely be obserued and kept in his owne church of Mediolanum where he sometyme was bishop Thus hast thou heard brother Reader the full and whole narration of this misticall miracle with the Popes exposition vpon the same which semeth to be as true as that which Daniell speaketh of how the Idoll Bell did eate vp all the meate that was set before him all the night Daniel 14. Concerning the which miracle I need not admonish thee to smell out the blind practises of these night-crowes to blind the world with forged inuentiōs in stead of true stories Albeit to graunt the miracle to be most true vnfallible yet as touching the exposition therof another man beside the Pope percase might interprete this great miracle otherwise as thus That God was angry with Gregories booke and therfore rent it in pieces and scatered it abroad and the other as good lay sound vntouched and at the least so to be preferred Notwithstanding whatsoeuer is to bee thought of this miracle with the exposition therof thus the matter fell out that Gregories seruice had only the place and yet hath to this day in the greatest part of Europe the seruice of Ambrose beyng excluded And thus much touching the great act of Pope Adrian for the setting vp of the Masse By the relation wherof yet this knowledge may come to the Reader at least to vnderstand how that commonly in christen nations abroad as yet no vniforme order of any Missall or Masse booke was receiued as hath bene hetherto discoursed Now from the Popes to returne againe to the emperours from whence we digressed like as Pipinus the father of Charles as hath bene before sufficiently told had geuen to the sea Papall all the princedome of Rauenna with other donations and reuenewes landes in Italy so this Carolus following his fathers deuotion did confirme the same adding moreouer therunto the Citie and dominion of Venice Histria the Dukedome Foroiuliense the dukedom Spoletanum and Beneuentanum and other possessions moe to the patrimonie of S. Peter making him the Prince of Rome and of Italy The Pope agayne to recompence his so gentle kindnes made him to be intituled most Christen king and made him Patricium Romanum Moreouer ordeined him onely to bee taken for Emperour of Rome For these and other causes moe Carolus bare no little affection to the sayd Adrian aboue all other Popes as may well appeare by this letter of Carolus Magnus sent to king Offa what tyme the said Offa as is aboue prefixed sent to hym Alcuinus for entreatie of peace whereunto the foresayd Carolus aunswereth agayne to the message of Offa in a letter the contents whereof be these The tenour of a Letter sent by Carolus Magnus to king Offa answering to his request concerning the intreatie of peace betwene them CArolus Rex Francorum Longobardorum Patricius Romanorum viro venerando fratri charissimo Offae Regi Merciorum Salut Primò gratias agimus omnipotenti Deo de Catholicae fidei sinceritate quam in vestris laudabilibus paginis reperimus exaratam De peregrinis verò qui pro amore Dei salute animarum suarum beatorum Apostolorum limina desiderant adire cum pace sine omni perturbatione vadant Sed si aliqui religioni non seruientes sed lucra sectantes inueniantur inter eos locis opportunis statuta soluant telonia Negociatores quoque volumus vt ex mandato nostro patrocinum habeant in regno nostrolegitime Et si in aliquo loco iniusta affligantur oppressione reclament se ad nos vel nostros iudices plenam ●●stitiam iubemus fieri Cognoscat quoque dilectio vestta quod aliquam benignitatem de Delmaticis nostris vel pallijs ad singulas sedes Episcopales regni vestri vel Ethelredi direximus in eleemosinam Domini Apostolici Adriani deprecantes vt pro eo intercedi iubeatis nullam habentes dubitationem beatam illius animam in requie esse sed vt fidem dilectionem ostendamus in amicum nobis charissimum Sed de thesauro humanarum rerum quum Dominus Iesus gratuita pietate concessit aliquid per Metropolitanas ciuitates Direximus vestrae quoque dilectioni vnum baltheum vnum gladium duo pallia serica c. The cause why this Carolus writeth so fauorablye of Adriā partly is touched before partly also was for the Carolomane his elder brother being dead his wife called Bertha with her two Children came to Adrian to haue them confirmed in their fathers kingdome whereunto
in patriam reuerti Sed melius visum est propter pacem gentis meae in peregrinatione remanere nesciens quid fecissem inter eos vbi nullus securus esse vel in salubri consilio proficere potest Ecclesia sancta a Paganis vastata altaria periurijs faedata monasteria adulterijs violata terra sanguine dominorum principum faedata c. Moreouer the sayd Alcuinus writing to the foresayd Edelred a little aboue mentioned after the same tenor reporteth Ecce Ecclesia sancti Cuthberti sacerdotum Dei sanguine aspersa omnibus spoliata ornamentis locus cunctis in Britannia venerabilior Paganis gentibus datur ad depraedādum Et vbi primùm post decessum S. Cuthberti ab Eboraco Christiana religio in nostra gente sumpsit exordium ibi miseriae calamitatis caepit initiū c. Item writing to Osbert a noble piere of the Mercians complayning on the same maner sayth Regnum nostrum Northumbrorum penè perijt propter intestinas dissentiones fallaces coniurationes c. Item in another place the sayd Alcuinus writing to Adelard Archbishop of Caunterbury complayneth moreouer Hoc dico propter flagellum quod nuper accidit partibus insulae nostrae quae prope trecentis quadraginta annis à parentibus inhabitata est nostris Legitur in libro Gildae sapientissimi Britonum quòd ijdem Britones propter auaritiam rapinam principum propter iniquitatem iniustitiam iudicum propter desidiam praedicationis Episcoporum propter luxuriam malos mores populi patriam perdidere Caueamus haec eadem vitia nostris temporibus inolescere quatenus benedictio diuina nobis patriam conseruet in prosperitate bona quam nobis misericordissima pietate perdonare dignatus est c. Ouer and besides the same author Alcuinus writyng to the foresayd Edelred king of Northumberland maketh record of a straunge sight which he himselfe did see the same time in the citie of Yorke to raine bloud wherof his words which he wrote concerning the same to the said king Edelred be these Quid significat pluuia sanguinis quam quadragesimali tempore in Eboraco ciuitate quae caput est totius regni in Ecclesia beatiprincipis Apostolorum vidimus de borealibus partibus domus sereno aëre de summitate minanter cadere Nonne potest putari à borealibus partibus venire sanguinem super terram That is what signifieth the rayne of bloud which in tyme of Lent in the Citie of Yorke the chiefe Citie of that dominion and in the church of S. Peter the chiefe of the Apostles we our selues did see to fall from the Church top the element being cleare out of the North partes of the temple c. This wondrous sight testified by Malmesburiensis is thought of Fabian to happen in the second yere of the raigne of Brigthricus as with the tyme doth well agree which was the yeare of our Lord 780. is thought of some expositors to betoken the comming of the Danes into this land which entred shortly after about vij yeres in the 9. yeare of the raigne of Brigthricus king of the Westsaxons Which Brigthricus in defence therof sent foorth hys Steward of his housholde with a small companie which shortly was slaine but by the strength of the sayd Brigthricus and the other Saxon kings they were compelled to voyd the land for that time which was An. 790. To this Brigthricus king Offa as is aforesaid gaue his daughter Ethelburga to wife by whom he at length was impoysoned be●ides certaine other of his nobles vpon whom the said Queene before hym had practised the same wickednesse Who then after that fledde ouer to Charles the great into Fraunce where she beyng offred for her beautie to marrie either to him or to his sonne because she chused rather his sonne married neither the one nor yet the other but was thrust in a Monastery where she then playing the harlot with a Monke was expulsed from thence and ended her lyfe in penury and misery In the meane tyme while this Edelburga was thus workyng her feates in England Irene Empresse of the Greekes was as busie also for her part at Constantinople Who first through the meanes of Pope Adrian tooke vp the body of Constantine Emperour of Constantinople her owne husbands father And when she had burned the same she caused the ashes to be cast into the sea because he disanulled Images Afterward raigning with her sonne Constantine the 6. sonne to Leo the 4. whome also we declared before to be excommunicate for taking away Images beyng at dissention with him caused him to be taken laid in prison Who afterward through power of frends beyng restored to his Empire againe at last she caused the same her owne sonne to bee cast in prison and his eyes to be put out so cruelly that within short space he dyed After this the sayd Irene Empresse with the counsaile of Therasius Bishop of Constantinople held a Councell at Nicea where it was decreed that Images should agayne be restored to the church which Councell after was repealed by an other Councell holden at Franckford by Charles the great At length she was deposed by Nicephorus who raigned after and was expulsed the Empire who after the example of Edelburga aboue mentioned condignely punished for her wickednesse ended likewise her lyfe in much penurie and miserie About the tyme when the foresayd Brigthricus was impoysoned by Edelburga his wife died also king Offa which was about the yeare of our Lord 795. or as some say 802. After which Offa as is aforesayd succeeded Egfert then Kenelphus after whom succeeded Kenelmus his sonne who in his yonger age was wickedly murthered by his sister Quindreda and Askebertus about the yeare of our Lorde 819. And in the Church of Winchecombe was counted for an holy Martyr After him succeded his vncle Ceolulphus whom Bernulphus in the first yeare of his raigne expulsed and raigned in his place Who likewise the third yeare of his raigne was ouercome and expulsed by Egbert kyng of the Westsaxons and afterward slayne by the Eastangles And the kingdom of Mercia also ceased and came into the handes of the Westsaxons ¶ Hetherto I haue brought as thou seest good Reader the confused and turbulent raignes of these vij Saxon kings who after the expulsion of the Britaines ruled and raigned asunder in sundry quarters of this land together vnto this present tyme of Egbert king of the Westsaxons By whom it so pleased God to begin to reduce and vnite all these scattred kingdomes into one monarchicall forme of dominion Wherfore as in the foresayd Egbert beginneth a new alteration of the common wealth here in this land among the Saxons so my purpose is the Lord willing with the same Egbert to enter a new beginnyng of my third booke after a briefe recapitulation first made of such things as in this
the displeasure you doe to them as our owne and proper iniurie For why it were a great dishonour to our Realme and Kingly estate if we should wincke hereat and ouerpasse the same with silence Wherefore if you wil consider and respect the thing that we haue sayde we doubt not but that you will release the Bishoppe of Penestrum with the other Legates and Prelates of the Churche which you to our preiudice doe detaine In desiring of our aide doubtlesse we gaue vnto them a manifest nay neither could they obtain in our kingdom any thing at all which seemed to be against or preiudiciall to your maiestie Let therefore your imperiall prouidēce pōder in the ballance of iustice those things which we wryte vnto you neither let our lawfull request vnto you be frustrate or made in vaine For our realme and kingdome of Fraunce is not so debilitate or empouerished that it will be spurned at or troden vnder your feete Fare ye well The rescript of the Emperour to the same letter of the king of Fraunce OVr Imperiall magnificence hath perused your kingly letters wherein if we had not founde manifest contradiction they might peraduenture haue obteined at our handes all that they required But euen as with a little leauen a whole lumpe of dowe is sowred so a manifest vntruth alleaged hath made the whole argument of your letter both faultie and vnsauerie It is apparaunt that you wanted the vertue of mediocritie in the conclusion of the same your graces letter For that they themselues bewray no lesse then we giue you manifestly to vnderstand many moe besides doth know It is notorious also and to al the world reuealed in what sort that Apostolical father hath impugned our innocencie as well with the one sworde as with the other And howe that whilest we at his commaundement tooke our iourney beyonde the seas the same our enemie and hostile aduersarie inuaded our kingdome of Sicilia and the same not in one place or two but in diuers sondry parts therof hath wasted spoiled and destroied After this when with great intreatie at our returne from Asia we had concluded a peace with him which with vs at his owne pleasure he made And had taken and receiued our deuotion for the same which in seruiceable maner we graunted him The sayde Apostolicall father that notwithstanding hath since that time rather aggrauated his displeasure towardes vs then any thing at all qualified the same and further hath to our depriuation and subuersion excogitate and deuised against vs all the mischiefe hee might or hath bene able no cause in all the worlde geuen of vs to prouoke the same And farther hath promulgated to our great defamation and shame as well by his letters as Legates the sentence of excommunication against vs vnto all nations Lastly hee aspiring to our imperiall state and conspiring our supplantation hath made warre against vs as against king Dauid Gods annointed and hath vnto a priuate Councell for that purpose called all the Prelates he cā get as one that meaneth to set the whole world together by the eares But such is the maruelous wisedom of God by whome we liue and raigne beholding the wicked purpose hee went about confounding the crafty in their craftinesse hath geuen into our hands as well your Prelates of the realme of France as also of other regions and prouinces al which we imprison and detaine as enemies and aduersaries to our Imperiall crowne and person For where there desisted not to be a persecutor there hath not wanted also a sufficient withstander defender Let not therfore your kingly highnesse maruell although Augustus detaineth in prison your French Prelates which haue indeuoured themselues to conspire and so to disturbe our imperiall estate and regiment Fare ye well When Fredericke nowe saw there was none other remedie and that in vaine hee laboured to haue peace wyth the Pope hee prosecuteth his warre to the vttermost and when he had gotten Ludertum and recōciled the same he destroyed the towne of Geminum and Naruia and geueth the spoyle of them vnto his souldiors He gently receiued the yelding vp of Siburnum and wasteth all the countrey rounde about Rome The Pope heere with dismaied and troubled with such as otherwise dissuaded and counsailed him and that things not so well prospered with him and against the Emperour as he wished and desired being in dispaire of obtaining his purpose died for very anger and thought What opinion the Prelates of Germanie at that time had of this Gregory is extant and to be sene by the oration of Eberhardus Byshop of Iuuauence that he made to the nobilitie of Boioria in the Parliament at Reginoburgh written by Iohannes Auentinus in his 7. booke Doubtlesse he not onely brought great and ruinous calamities to the whole Christen cōmon weale and also Empire whilest he sought thus to depresse bridle the Emperour aduance hiz papal sea and dignity but also brought into the church of God much horrible impiety blasphemy and wickednes wherof both Blondus Platina Baleus and others make mention And amongst others that most detestable Catilene Salue Regina in the which hee attributeth the honour and worship onely due to Iesus Christe vnto the virgine hys mother This is he in whose name the booke of the Decretals was set out which to omit the opinion of diuers other learned men Iohannes Baleus calleth it the sinke or puddle of foolishnesse and impietie Doubtlesse Charolus Molineus a man both of singular iudgement in that law which in tribunall courtes iudgements is vsed as also in this painteth foorth the decree of this Gregory in his booke of annotations vnto Platina whose woordes thereof are these Certum est multa capita in ijs mutila decurtata esse vt inuidiosum argumentum lateret c. That is Doubtlesse diuers Chapters in the same booke of decretals be mangled vnperfect that many contentious arguments therein myght lurke For when the ambitious desire of raigning lyke kings tooke them they studied nothing els but how to enlarge and aduance their See and dominion with the Empire it selfe and other kingdomes ofte shaken and weakened through cōtention and this purpose and end had they and none other in al their constitutions The profe wherof Molineus declareth in his boke de regibꝰ Galliae Angliae But many moe examples by the Emperors Princes and Lords Electours of the Empire may be gathered wherof to speake more conuenient place shall serue hereafter In the steade of thys Gregorie was placed Coelestine horne in Mediolanum amongst the Castellians who as Blondus declareth by fained promises offred a league wyth Fredericus and the 18. day after he was created Pope he also died Thus when the author of al this conspiracy was gon Fridericus nowe thinking himselfe free and voyde of that feare which before he had and durst not be absent out of Italy with all
desired of her father to marry with her Whereunto the king her father would not agree vnles he promised to be a Christian. Notwithstanding the other being strōger in power and threatning to get her by warre the king at length was forced to agree In conclusion it happened that the childe being borne betwixt them was ouergrowen all rough with hayre like the skin of a Beare Which childe being brought to the father he commaunded it to be thrown in the fire burned But the mother desiring first to haue the childe baptised caused all things therunto to be prepared The infant being 3. times in water plunged after the Sacrament of holy baptisme receiued incontinent was altered and turned from all his hairy roughnes and sene as fayre and smooth skinned as any other The which thing after the Father saw and beheld was Christened himselfe and all hys house c. In the raigne of this king Walter Merton Bishop of Rochester builded Merton colledge in Oxford In whose raigne also liued Henricus de Gaudano Arnoldus de villa noua Dante 's and other mo And Scotus called Duns Who in his 4. booke of Sent Dist. 18. complayneth of the abuse of excommunication of the Popes keies Where as before excommunication was not vsed but vpon great and iust causes therefore was feared now sayth he it is brought forth for euery trifling matter as for not paying y● Priestes wages c. therefore sayth he it groweth in contēpt Under the same king about the beginning of hys raygn was the yeare so hoat and so drye that from the month of May vntill the month nere of Septēber fell no rayn in so much that many dyed for heat the vulgar people in their reckning of yeares did count the time from the sayd dry yeare long after After P. Benedictus aboue mentioned succeded Pope Clement the 5. who translated the Popes court to Auinion in Fraunce where it remayned the terme of 74. yeares after At the coronation of this Clemēt was present Philip king of Fraunce Charles his sonne and Duke Iohn Duke of Britany with a great number of other men of state and Nobility At which coronation they being in the middle of the pompe or processiō a great wall brake down and fell vpon thē by the fall wherof Duke Iohn with 12. other were slayne king Philip hurt wounded the Pope stroken from his horse lost out from his mitre vpon his head a Carbuncle esteemed to the value of 6000. florence Plat. de vit Pont. By this Clemēt was ordeined that the Emperor though he might be called king of the Romains before yet he might not enioy the title right of the Emperor before he was by him confirmed And that the Emperors seat being vacant the Pope should raigne as Emperor till a new Emperor was chosē By him the orders of the Tēplaries who at that time were too abhominable was put downe at the Counsell of Uienne as hereafter Christ willing shal be declared He also ordeined and cōfirmed the feast of Corpus Christi assigning indulgences to such as heard the seruice therof And as pope Bonifacius afore heaped vp the book of Decretals called Sextus Decretalium so this Clement compiled the 7. booke of the decretals called of the same Clement the Clementines In the time of this Pope Hēricus the 6. of that name Emperor was poysoned in receiuing the Sacrament by a false dissembling Monke called Bernard that feined himselfe to be his familiar frend which was thought to be done not without the consent of the Popes legate The Emperour perceiuing himselfe poysoned warned him to flee escape away for els the Germaines would sure haue slaine him who although he escaped himselfe yet diuers of his order after that with fire and sword were slayne As this Pope Clement the 5. had well prouided now as he haue heard agaynst the Empire of Rome to bring it vnder his girdle insomuch that without the Popes benediction no Emperor might take the state vpon him c. Now he procedeth farther to intermeddle with the Empire of Constantinople Where he first exerciseth his tyranny power of excommunicatiō agaynst Andronicus Palcologus Emperor of Constantinople an 1327. declaring him as a schismaticke and hereticke because he neither would nor durst suffer the Greciās to make their appeale from the Greeke Church to the Pope neither would acknowledge him for his superior c. Whereby it may appeare that the Greek Church did not admitte the Popes superiority as yet nor at any time before Saue onely about the tyme of Pope Innocent the 3. an 1202. at what time the Frenche men with their Captain Baldwinus Earle of Flaūders ioyned together with the Uenecians were set against the Grecians to place Alexius to the right of the Empire of Constantinople vpō conditiō as writeth Platina to subdue the Greeke church vnder the church of Rome Which Alexius being restored and shortly after slayne the empire came to the Frenchmē with whom it remained the space of 58. yeares till the comming of Michael Paleologus in the dayes of Pope Gregory the 9. Who restored the Empire frō the Frenchmen vnto his pristine state again During all which time of the French Emperors the Greeke church was subiect to Rome as by the decretals of Pope Gregory the 9. may appere Then folowed after this that the foresayd Michael Emperor of Constantinople beyng called vp to a councell at Lions by Pope Gregory the 10. about the controuersy of proceeding of the holy Ghost as is aboue specified and obedience to the Church of Rome there because the sayd Michael the Emperor did submitte himselfe the Grecians to the subiection of Rome as testifieth Baptist Egnat He thereby procured to himselfe such grudge and hatred among the Greeke Monkes and Priestes that after his death they denyed him the due honor place of buriall The sonne of this Andronicus was Michael Paleologus aboue mentioned who as ye haue heard before because he was constrayned by the Grecians not to admit any apellation to the Bishop of Rome was accursed by the popes cēsures for an heretick Wherby appereth that the Grecians recouering their state agayn refused all subiection at this time vnto the church of Rome which was the yeare of our Lord. 1327. c. After this Clemēt the 5. folowed Pope Iohn the 22. with whom Ludouike the Emperour had much trouble After whom next in course succeded Pope Benedict the 12. Which Benedict vpō a time being desired to make certayn new Cardinals to this answereth agayne that he would gladly so do if he also could make a new world For this world sayd he is for these Cardinals that be made already Ex scripto Engethusensis And thus much of the Popes now to returne alitle backe to the kinges story agayne In the yeare of our Lord 1307. Which was 34. of the reigne of this king in the
the law and words which the Lord of hostes sent in his holy spirite by the Prophetes aforetime Also Esay witnessing after the same effect cap. 30. sayth For it is an obstinate people lying children and vnfaythfull children that will not heare the law of the Lord which say to the Prophetes meddle with nothing and tell vs nothing that is true and right but speake frendly wordes to vs. c. All this shall be verified when the Prelates begin to hate thē that tell them trueth and haue knowledge like vnto such of whō Amos speaketh chapter 5. They beare him euil wil that reproueth them openly and who so telleth them the playne trueth they abhorre him And therefore sayth the Lord to the Church of Ierusalem Ose 4. Seing thou hast refused vnderstanding I haue refused thee also that thou shalt no more be my priest And for so muche as thou hast forgotten the law of thy God I will also forget thy children and chaunge theyr honor into shame And so shall it be like priest like people c. And many other sayinges there be in the prophets speaking of the deiecting and casting downe of the priestly honor Besides these foresayde signes and tokens hitherto recited there be also diuers other As the backsliding from righteousnes the lacke of discreete and learned Priestes promoting of childrē into the Church with such other like But these being alreadye well noted and marked you may easely iudge and vnderstand whether these times now present of ours be safe and cleare from tribulation to be looked for and whether the word of the Lord be true according to my theame Iuxta est iustitia mea vt reueletur my righteousnes is neare at hande to bee reuealed c. And thus muche of the second part Now to the third part or member of my subdeuision which is concerning the false and perilous opinions of some vpon thys word of my theame vt veniat c. which opinions principally be 4. repugning all agaynst the truth of the canonicall Scripture The first opinion is of such men who hauing to much confifidence in thēselues do think and perswade with themselues that the Prelates be the Church which the Lord will alwayes keepe and neuer forsake as he hath promised in the persons of the Apostles Mathew 28. saying And I will be with you to the end of the world c But this is to be vnderstanced of fayth whereof Christ speaketh Luke 21. I haue prayd for thee that thy fayth shall not fayle Whereof we read Ecclesiast 40. fayth shall stand for euer c. And albeit Charity waxe neuer so colde yet fayth notwithstanding shall remayne in few and in all distresses of the world of the which distresses our Sauiour doth prophecy in many places to come And least peraduenture some shoulde thinke themselues to be safe from tribulation because they be of the church this opinion the Lord himselfe doth contrary in Ieremy the 7. Trust not sayth he in false lying wordes saying the temple of the Lord the temple of the Lord and a litle after but you trust in wordes and lying counselles which deceiue you and doe you no good The second opinion is of them which deferre tyme for thys they well graunt that the Church shall abide trouble but not so shortly thinking thus with thēselues that these causes tokens afore recited haue bene before at other times as well in the churche For both by Gregory and Bernard holy doctors in time past the Prelates haue bene in like fort reprehended both for theyr bribinges for theyr Pompe and pride for the promoting of persons and children vnfitte vnto ecclesiasticall functions and other vyces moe which haue reigned before this in the Church of God more then now and yet by God his grace the Churche hath prospered and stand Doe ye not see that if an house haue stand and continued ruinous a long season it is neuer more neare the fall thereby but rather to be trusted the better Moreouer many times it commeth so to passe in Realmes and Kingdomes that the posterity is punished for the sinnes of the predecessors Whereof speaketh the booke of Lamentations the 5. chapter Our fathers haue sinned and are now gone and we must beare their wickednesse c. Agaynst this cogitation or opinion well doth the Lord aunswere by the Prophet Ezechiel chapter 12 saying Beholde thou sonne of man the house of Israel sayeth in this maner Tush as for the vision that he hath seene it will bee many a day or it come to passe It is farre of yet the thing that he prophecieth Therefore say vnto them thus sayth the Lord God The wordes that I haue spoken shall be deferred no longer looke what I haue sayd shall come to passe sayth the Lord. c. We haue seene in our dayes thinges to happen which seemed before incredible And the like hath bene seene in other times also as we read written in the booke of Lamentations chapter 4. The kinges of the earth nor all the inhabitaunce of the worlde would not haue beleeued that the enemy and aduersary shoulde haue come in at the gates of the Citty for the sinnes of her priestes and for the wickenesse of her Elders that haue shedde Innocentes bloud within her c. by Hierusalem as is sayd is ment thē Church The third opinion or error is very perilous and peruerse of all such as say veniat let come that will come Let vs conforme out selues to this world and take our time with those Temporifers which say in the booke of wisedome Sap. 2. Come let vs enioy our goodes and pleasures that be present and let vs vse the creature as in youth quickly c. Such as these be are in daungerous case and be greatly preiudicial to good men in the Church And if the heades and rulers of the Church were so vile to haue any such detestable cogitation in them there were no place in hell to deepe for them This Church founded by the Apostles in Christ consecrated with the bloud of so many Martyrs enlarged and increased with the vertues and merites of so many Sayntes and indued so richly with the deuosion of so many secular princes and so long prospered hetherto If it now should come into the hands of such persons it should fall in great daunger of ruine and they for theyr negligence and wickednes well deserued of God to be cursed yea here also in this present world to incurre temporall tribulation and destruction which they feare more by the sentence of the Lord saying to them in the booke of Prouerbes cap. 1. All my counsels ye haue despised and set my correctiō at nought Therefore shall I also laugh in your destruction when tribulation and anguish shall fall vpon you Fourthly an other opinion or errour is of such as being vnfaythfull beleue not any such thing to come And this errour
golde and rich coueringes as Eneas Siluius writeth were aboue the number of two hundreth Ioannes Cocleus in his booke De historia Hussitarū speaking of the bookes of Wickliffe testifyeth that he wrot very many bookes sermons and tractations Moreouer the said Cocleus speaking of himselfe recordeth also that there was a certaine Bishop in England which wrot vnto him declaring that he had yet remayning in his custodye two huge and mighty volumes of Iohn Wickliffes workes which for the quantity therof might seme to be equal with the workes of S. Augustine Haec Cocleus Amongest other of his Treatises I my selfe also haue found out certayne as de censu veritate scripturae Item De Ecclesia Item De Eucharistia confessio Wickleui whiche I entend hereafter the Lord so graunting to publish abroad As concerning certayne aunsweres of Iohn Wickliffe which he wrote to king Richard the 2. touching the right and title of the king and of the Pope because they are but short I thought here to annexe them The effect whereof here foloweth ¶ Iohn Wickliffes aunswere vnto K. Richard the second as touching the right and title of the king and the Pope IT was demaunded whether the kingdom of England may lawfully in case of necessity for his own defence deteyne and kepe backe the treasure of the kingdome that it be not caried away to forreine straunge nations the pope himselfe demaunding and requiring the same vnder pain of censure and by vertue of obedience Wickliffe setting a part the minds of learned mē what might be sayd in the matter either by the canon law or by the law of England or the ciuil law it resteth saith he now onely to perswade and proue the affirmatiue part of this doubt by the principles of Christes law And first I proue it thus Euery natural body hath power geuen of God to resist agaynst his contrary and to preserue it selfe in due estate as the Philosophers knew very well In somuch that bodyes without life are indued with such kinde of power as it is euidēt vnto whom hardnes is geuen to resist those thinges that woulde breake it and coldnes to withstād the heat that dissolueth it Forsomuch then as the kingdome of England after the maner and phrase of the Scriptures ought to be one body the clergy with the communalty the members thereof it seemeth that the same kingdome hath such power geuē him of god and so much the more apparaunt by how much the same body is more precious vnto God adorned with vertue knowledge For somuch thē as there is no power geuē of god vnto any creature for any end or purpose but that he may lawfully vse the same to that end and purpose It followeth that our kingdome may lawfully keep backe and deteyn theyr treasure for the defence of it selfe in what case soeuer necessity do require the same Secondarily the same is proued by the law of y● gospell For the Pope cannot challenge y● treasure of this kingdom but vnder the title of almes consequētly vnder the pretence of the works of mercy according to the rule of charity But in case aforesayd the title of almes ought vtterly to cease Ergo the right and title of chalenging the treasure of our Realme shall cease also in the presupposed necessitie For so much as all charitie hath his beginning of himselfe it were no worke of charitie but of meere madnes to send away the treasures of the realme vnto forreine natiōs wherby the Realme it selfe may fall into ruine vnder y● pretence of such charitie It appeareth also by this that Christ the head of the Church whom all Christen Priests ought to follow liued by the almes of deuoute women Luke 7.8 He hungred and thyrsted he was a straunger and many other miseries he sustained not onely in his mēbers but also in his owne body as the Apostle witnesseth Cor. viii He was made poore for your sakes that through his pouertie you might be rich wherby in the first endowīg of the Church what soeuer he were of the Clergy that had any temporall possessiōs he had the same by forme of a perpetuall almes as both writinges and Chronicles do witnesse Whereupon S. Barnard declaring in his 2. booke to Eugenius that he could not chalenge any secular dominion by right of succession as being the vicar of S. Peter writeth thus that if S. Iohn should speake vnto the pope himselfe as Barnard doth vnto Eugenius were it to be thought that he would take it patiently But let it be so that you do challenge it vnto you by some other wayes or meanes but truely by any right or title Apostolicall you can not so doe For how could he geue vnto you that which he had not himselfe That which he had he gaue you that is to say care ouer the Church but did he geue you any Lordships or rule Harke what he sayth Not bearing rule sayth he as Lordes in the Clergy but behauing your selues as examples to the flocke And because thou shalt not thinke it to be spoken only in humility and not in verity marke the word of the Lord him selfe in the Cospell The kinges of the people do rule ouer them but you shall not do so Here Lordship and dominion is plainely forbidden to the Apostles and darest thou then vsurpe the same If thou will be a Lord thou shalt lose thine Apostleship or if thou wilt be an Apostle thou shalt lose thy Lordship For truely thou shalt depart from the one of them If thou wilt haue both thou shalt lose both or els thinke thy selfe to be of that number of whom God doth so greatly complayne saying They haue raigned but not through me They are become Princes and I haue not knowne it Now if it do suffice thee to rule with the Lord thou hast thy glory but not with God But if we will keepe that which is forbidden vs let vs heare what is sayd he that is the greatest amongest you sayth Christ shal be made as the least and he which is the highest shal be as the minister and for example set a childe in the middest of thē So this then is the true forme and institution of the Apostles trade Lordship and rule is forbidden ministration and seruice commaunded By these wordes of this blessed man whom the whole Church doth reuerence and worship it doth appeare that the Pope hath not power to occupy the Church goodes as Lord therof but as minister and seruaunt and proctor for the poore And would to God that the same proud greedy desire of rule Lordship which this seat doth chalenge vnto it be not a preamble to prepare a way vnto Antechrist For it is euident by the Gospell that Christ through his pouerty humility suffering of iniury got vnto him the children of his kingdome And moreouer so farre as I remember the same blessed mā Barnard in his 3. booke writeth also
Iohn Wickliffe wrote certayne bookes which he called a Dialogue a Trialogue besides many other treatises and works the which he both wrot and taught in the which he wrot the aforesayd and many other damnable execrable articles The which his books for the publication and aduauncement of his peruers doctrine he did set forth opēly for euery man to read Wherby beside many offēces great hurt damages of soules hath ensued in diuers regions countryes but specially in the kingdomes of England and Boheme Against whom the maisters and Doctors of the Vniuersities of Oxforde and Prage rising vp in the truth and verity of God according to the order of schooles within a while after did reprooue and condemne the sayd Arcicles Moreouer the most reuerent fathers the archbishops and bishops for that time present of Cāterbury Yorke and Prage Legats of the Apostolick sea in the kingdome of England and Boheme did condemne the bookes of the sayd Wickliffe to be burnt And the sayd Archbishoppe of Prage commissarye of the Apostolicke sea did likewise in this behalf determin iudge And moreouer he did forbid that any of those bookes whiche did remayne vnburned should not be hereafter any more reade And agayne these things being brought to the knowledge vnderstanding of the Apostolicke sea aud the generall councell The Bishop of Rome in his last Councell condemned the sayde bookes treatises and volumes commaunding them to be openly burned Most straightly forbidding that any men which should beare the name of Christ should be so hardy either to keep read or expound any of the sayde bookes or treatises volumes or workes or by any meanes to vse or occupy them either els to alledge thē opēly or priuely but to their reproofe infamy And to the intent that this most daūgerous and filthy doctrine should be vtterly wiped away out of the Church he gaue commaundemēt through out al places that the Ordinaries should diligētly enquire and seeke out by the Apostolick authority and Ecclesiasticall censure for all such bookes treatises volumes workes And the same so being found to burne consume thē with fire prouiding withall that if there be any such foūd which will not obey the same processe to be made agaynst them as agaynst the fauourers and mayntayners of heresies And this most holy Synode hath caused the sayd 45. Articles to be examined and oft times perused by manye most reuerend fathers of the Church of Rome Cardinals Bishops Abbots maisters of diuinitye and Doctours of both lawes besides a great number of other learned men the which Articles being so examined it was found as in truth it was no lesse that many yea a great number of thē to be notoriously for heretical reproued and condemned by the holy fathers other some not to be Catholick but erroneous some full of offence and blasphemy Certayn of thē offensiue vnto godlye eares and many of thē to be rashfull and seditious It is found also that his bookes do contain many Articles of like effect and quality and that they doe induce and bring into the Church vn●oūd and vnwholesome doctrine contrary vnto the fayth and ordinance of the Church Wherefore in the name of our Lorde Iesu Christ this sacred Synode ratefying and approuing the sentēces and iudgements of the Archbishops counsell of Rome do by this theyr decree and ordinance perpetually for euer more condemne and reproue the sayd Articles and euery one of them his bookes which he intituled his Dialogue and Trialogue all other bookes of the same author volumes treatises workes by what name so euer they bee entituled or called the which we wil here to be sufficiently expressed and named Also we forbid the reading learning exposition or alledging of any of the sayd bookes vnto all faythfull Christians but so farreforth as shall tend to the reproofe of the same forbidding all and singular Catholick persons vnder the payn of curse that from henceforth they be not so hardy openly to preach teach or holde or by any meanes to alledge the sayd Articles or any of them except as is aforesayd that it do tend vnto the reproofe of them commaunding all those bookes treatises works and volumes aforesayd to be openly burned as it was decreed in the Synode at Rome as is afore expressed For the execution wherof duely to be obserued and done the sayd sacred Synode doth straitly charge commaund the ordinaries of the places diligently to attend looke vnto the matter according as it appertayneth vnto euery mās duty by the Canonicall lawes and ordinaunces What were these articles here condemned by this coūcell collected out of all his workes and exhibited to y● sayd Coūcell to the number of 45. The copy of them foloweth vnder written * Certaine other Articles gathered out of Wickeliffes bookes by his aduersaries to the number of 45. exhibited vp to the Councell of Constance after his death and in the same councell condemned BEsides the 24. Articles aboue mentioned there were other also gathered out of his books to the number of 45. in all which his malicious aduersaryes peruersly collecting and maliciously expounding did exhibite vp to the Coūcel of Constance which to repeat all though it be not here needfull yet to recite certayn of them as they stand in that Councell it shall not be superfluous 25. All such as be hyred for temporall liuing to pray for other offend and sinne of simony 26. The prayer of the reprobate preuayleth for no man 27. Halowing of Churches confirmation of children the Sacrament of orders be reserued to the Pope Bishops onely for the respect of temporall lucre 28. Graduations and Doctorships in Vniuersities and Colledges as they be vsed cōduce nothing to the church 29. The excommunication of the Pope and his Prelates is not to be feared because it is the censure of Antechrist 30. Such as foūd build Monasteries do offend sinne and all such as enter into the same be mēbers of the deuil 31. To enrich the Clergy is agaynst the rule of Christ. 32. Siluester the Pope Constantine the Emperor were deceiued in geuing taking possessions into the Church 33. A Deacon or Priest my preach the word of God with out the authority of the Apostolick sea 34. Such as enter into order or religion monasticall are therby vnable to keep Gods commaundements and also to atteine to the kingdome of heauen except they reurne from the same 35. The Pope with all his Clergye hauing those great possessions as they haue be heretiques in so hauing the secular powers in so suffering them do not well 36. The Church of Rome is the sinagoge of Sathan neither is the Pope immediately the vicare of Christ nor of y● Apostles 37. The Decretals of the Pope be Apochripha and seduce from the sayth of Christ and the Clergy that study them be fooles 38. The Emperor and secular Lordes be seduced which so enrich
to Absolon and his talke was with Ioab the sonne of Saruia and Abia●har the priest which toke part with Adonias But Sadoc the priest and Banaias the sonne of Ioaida and Nathan the Prophet and Semei and Serethi and Felethi and all the power of Dauids host were not on Adonias part This was the cause of the deposing of Abiathar because hee toke part with Adonia that he shuld be king against Salomon the eldest sonne of king Dauid wherefore it is wrytten in the thirde boke and second chapiter of the kings The king sayd vnto Abiathar the priest goe your wayes vnto Anatoth thine owne fielde for thou art a man of death but this day I will not slay thee because thou hast caried the Arke of the Lorde before my father Dauid and diddest labour in all things wherein my father laboured Then did Salomon cast out Abiathar that hee should be no more the priest of the Lord that the word of the Lord might be fulfilled which he spake vpon the house of Hely in Sylo Beholde the most prudent king Salomon according to the wisdome which was geuen him of God did exercise hys power vpon the sayd priests putting him out of his priesthode setting in his place Sadoc the priest this was a greater matter thē to take away the temporalities If then in the law of Christ whych nowe raigneth ouer vs a byshop should likewise rebell against the true heire of the kingdome willing to sette vp another for king why shoulde not the king or his heire haue power in like case to take away the temporalities from him so offending Item it is also euident by the king Nabuchodonozor whych had power geuen him of God to lead away the children of Israel with their priests and Leuites into the captiuity of Babylon as it is wrytten 4. booke of the kings 25. chapter Item it is red in the 4. boke of kings and 12. chapter How that Iosias the most godly king of Iuda according to the wisdō which God had granted him toke away all the consecrate vessels which Iosaphat Ioram and Ochosias his forefathers kings of Iuda had consecrated and those which hee himselfe had offered and all the treasure that could be found in the temple of the Lord and in the kings pallace and sent it vnto Azahel king of Syria he departed from Ierusalem Marke how this most holy king exercised hys power not onely in taking away the temporalities of the priests but also those things which were consecrate in the temple of the Lord to procure vnto the common wealth the benefite of peace Item in the 4. boke and 18. chapter of the kings it is wrytten howe that the holy king Ezechias tooke all the treasure that was found in the house of the Lord and in the kings treasurie brake downe the pillers of the temple of the Lorde and all the plates of gold which he himselfe had fastned therupon and gaue them vnto the king of the Assyrians yet was hee not rebuked of the Lorde therefore as hee was for his other sinnes as it appeareth in the 2. boke of Paral. 32. chapter for so much then as in time of necessity all things ought to be in common vnto Christians it foloweth then that the seculere Lordes in case of necessitie in many other common cases may lawfully take away the mooueable goodes from the cleargie when they do offend Item it is also read in the 12. of Mathewe that the disciples of Iesus for to slake their hunger vppon the Saboth day pulled the eares of corne and did eate them and the Pharisies rebuked them therefore vnto whome Christ aunswered Haue ye not read what Dauid did when hee was hungry and those that were wyth him howe he entred into the house of the Lorde and did eate the shew breades which it was not lawfull for hym neither for them that were with hym to eate but only for the priests This story is written in the 1 boke of the kings and 21. chapter And the commandement in the 12. of Deuteronomie Whereby it appeareth that it is lawfull in time of necessitie to vse any thing bee it neuer so much consecrate Otherwise children by geuing their moueables to the consecration of any temple shoulde not be bound to helpe their parents which is contrary and against the Gospel of S Mathew in the 16. chapter whereas our Sauiour sharply rebuked the Pharisies that for their owne traditions they did transgresse the commaundement of God Item Titus and Vespasian seculer princes had power geuen them of God 24. yeares after the Lordes Ascension to take away the temporallities from the priestes whych had offended agaynst the Lordes holy one And thereby also berest them of their liues and it seemeth vnto many they did and might worthely doe the same according to Gods good wil and pleasure Then forsomuch as our priests in these dayes may transgresse and offend as much and rather more against the Lordes annoynted it followeth that by the pleasure of God the seculer Lordes may likewise punyshe them for their offence Our sauiour being king of kings and high bishop wyth hys disciples did geue tribute vnto Cesar as it appeareth Mathewe 17. and commaunded the Scribes and Pharisies to geue the lyke vnto Cesar Mat. 22. Whereby hee gaue example vnto all priestes that shoulde come after hym to render tribute vnto their kinges whereupon blessed S Ambrose in his 4 boke vppon these wordes in the 5. of Luke cast out your nettes wryteth thus There is an other kinde of fishing amongst the Apostles after which manner the Lord commanded Peter only to fish saying cast out thy hoke and that fish which cōmeth first vp take hym And then vnto the purpose he sayth It is truely a great spirituall document wherby all Christian menne are taught that they ought to be subiecte vnto the higher powers and that no man ought to thinke that the lawes of a king here on earth are to be brokē For if the sonne of God did pay tribute who art thou so great a man that thinkest thou oughtest not to pay tribute He payed tribute which had no possessions and thou which daily seekest after the luker of the world why doest thou not acknowledge the obedience and duetie of the worlde Why doest thou thorowe the arrogancie of thy minde exault thy selfe aboue the worlde when as thorowe thine owne miserable couetousnesse thou art subiect vnto the worlde Thus writeth S. Ambrose and it is put in the 11. quest 1. Magnum quidem He also wryteth vppon these wordes in the 20 of Luke shewe me a pennie whose Image it hathe if Christ had not the Image of Cesar why did hee pay any tribute He gaue it not of hys owne but rendred vnto the worlde that which was the worldes And if thou wilt not be in daunger of Cesar possesse not those things which are the worldes for if thou hast richesse thou
lamentable and dolerous genealogie of mortall and deadly sinnes did chalenge that place by title of heritage and this conclusion is generall and approued by experiēce custome and maner as ye shall after heare The second conclusion that our vsuall Priesthode which tooke his originall at Rome fained to be a power higher then aungels is not that Priesthoode which Christ or●cyned vnto his disciples This cōclusion is thus proued forso much as the Romish priesthod is done with signes and pontificall rites and ceremonies and benedictions of no force effect neither hauing any ground in scripture for so much as the Bishops ordinall and the new Testament do nothing at all agree neither do we see that the holy Ghost both geue any good gift through any such signs or ceremonies because that he together with all noble good giftes cannot cōsist and be in any person wyth deadly sinne The corolary or effect of this conclusion is that it is a lamentable and dolorous mockerye vnto wise men to see the Byshops mocke play with the holy Ghost in the geuing of their orders because they geue crowns for their characters and markes in stede of white hartes this caracter is the marke of Antichrist brought into the holy Church to cloke and colour their idlenesse The third conclusion that the law of chastity enioyned vnto priesthode the which was first ordeined to the preiudice of women induceth Sodomy into the church but we doe excuse vs by the Bible because the suspect decree doeth say that we should not name it Both reason experience proueth this cōclusion Reason thus forsomuch as the delicate feeding and fare of the Clergy will haue either a naturall purgation or some worse Experience thus for somuch as the secrete triall and proofe or suche men is y● they do delite in women And whensoeuer thou doest prooue or see such a man marke him well for he is one of the number The corolarie of this conclusion is that these priuate religions with the beginners therof ought most chiefly to be disanulled as the original of the sinne and offence But God of hys might doth of priuie sinnes send open vengeance The fourth conclusion that most harmeth the innocent people is this that the fained miracle of the Sacrament of bread inducoth al men except it be a very few vnto idolatry For somuch as they thinke that the body whych shall neuer bee oute of heauen is by the vertue of the Priestes wordes essentially included in the little breade the which they doe shewe vnto the people But woulde to God they would beleeue that which the Euangelicall Doctour teacheth vs in his Trialoge Quòd panis altaris est accidentaliter Corpus Christi i. that the breade of the aulter is the body of Christ accidentally for so muche as wee suppose that by that meanes euery faithful man and woman in the law of God may make the Sacrament of that bread without any such miracle The corolarie of this conclusion is that albeit the body of Christ be endowed with the eternal ioy the seruice of Corpus Christi made by Frier Thomas is not true but painted ful of false miracles neither is it any maruell for so much as frier Thomas at that time taking part with the Pope would haue made a myracle of a hens egge and we knowe it very well that euery lie openly preached and taught both turne to the rebuke opprobry of him whych is alwayes true without any lacke The 5. conclusion is this that the exorcisme halowings consecrations and blessings ouer the Wine Bread Waxe Water Dyle Salte Incence the Aulter stone and about the Churche walles ouer the Westiment Chalice Miter Crosse and Pilgrimstaues are the very practises of Nigromancy rather then of sacred diuinity This conclusion is thus prooued because that by suche exorcismes the creatures are honored to be of more force power then by their own proper nature for we do not see any alteration or chaunge in any creature so exorcised except it be by false faith which is the principall poynt of deuilish art The cocolarie of this is that if the booke of exorcisation or coniuring of holy water which is sprinkled in the Church were altogether faithfull and true we thinke certainly that holy water vsed in the Churche were the best medicine for all kinde of sicknesse and sores Cuius contrarium experimur i. the contrary wherof daily experience doth teach vs. The sixt conclusion which mainteineth much pride is that a king and Bishop both in one person a Prelate and iustice in temporall causes a Curate an Officer in worldly office doth make euery kingdome out of good order This conclusion is manifest because the temporalty and the spirituality are two parts of the holy vniuersal Church and therfore he which addicteth himself to the one part let hym not intermeddle wyth the other Quia nemo potest duobus Dominis seruire wherfore to be called Amphroditae whyche are men of both kindes or Ambidextri which is such as can play with both handes were good names for suche men of double estates The Corolary of thys conclusion is that therupon we the procuratours of God in this case doe sue vnto the Parliament that it may be enacted that all suche as be of the clergie as well of the highest degree as of the lowest shuld be fully excused and occupy themselues with their owne cure and charge and not wyth others The seuenth conclusion that wee mightely affirme is that spirituall prayers made in the church for the soules of the deade preferring any one man by name more then an other is a false foundation of almes whereuppon all the houses of almes in England are falsly founded This conclusion is prooued by two reasons The one is that a meritorious praier of any force or effect ought to be a worke proceeding from meere charity and perfect charity accepteth no person because thou shalt loue thy neighbor as thy self Wherby it appeareth that the benefit of any temporall gift bestowed geuen vnto priestes and houses of almes is the principall cause of any speciall prayers the which is not farre different from sunonie The other reason is that euery speciall prayer made for men condemned to eternall punishment is very displeasant before God And albeit it be doubtful yet is it very likely vnto the faithfull Christian people that the founders of euery suche house of almes for their wicked endowing of the same are for the most part passed by the broad way The corolary is that euery praier offorce and effect proceeding of perfect charitie woulde comprehend generally all such whom God wold haue saued and to liue The marchaundise of special praiers now vsed for the dead maketh mendicant possessioners other hierling priestes which otherwise were strong enough to worke to serue the whole realme And maintaineth the same in idlenesse to the great
vniforme holye doctrine may be sowne and planted in the churche of God namely in thys our prouince of Caunterbury so much as is vs doth lye to the encrease of fayth and seruice of God first rooting the euill weedes and offenditles which by the meanes of peruerse preaching mad doctrine haue sprong vp hitherto and are lyke more hereafter to grow purposing by some conuenient way with all dilligence possible to withstand them in tyme and to prouide for the perill of soules whiche we see to ryse vnder pretence of the premisses also to remoue al such obstacles by which the sayd our purpose may be stopped by the aduise and assent of all our Suffragans and other Prelates being present in this our conuocation of the Clergie as also of the procuratours of them that be absent and at the instaunt petition of the procurators of the whole Clergie within this our prouince of Canterbury for the more fortification of the common law in this part adding thereunto punishment and penalties condigne as be here vnder written we will and command ordayne and decree That no maner of person seculer or reguler being authorised to preach by the lawes now prescribed or licenced by special priuiledge shal take vpon him the office of preaching the word of God or by any meanes preach vnto the clergy or Laitie either within the Churche or without in English except he first present himselfe and be examined of the Ordinary of the place where he preacheth And so be ing found a fitte person as well in maners as knowledge he shall be sent by the sayd Ordinary to some one Church or more as shal be thought expedient by the sayd Ordinary according to the quallitie of the person Nor any person aforesayd shall presume to preach except first he geue faythfull signification in due forme of his sending and authoritie that is That he that is authorised doe come in forme appoynted him in that behalfe and those that affirme they come by speciall priuiledge do shew their priuiledge vnto the Parson or Vicare of the place where they preach And those that pretend themselues to be sent by the ordinary of the place shall likewise shew the Ordinaries letters made vnto hym for that purpose vnder hys great seale Let vs alwayes vnderstand the Curate hauing the perpetuitie to be sent of right vnto the people of his owne cure But if any person aforesayd shal be bidden by the ordinary of the place or any other superiour to preach by reason of his errors and heresies whiche before peraduenture he hath preached and taught that then and from thēceforth he abstayne from preaching within our prouince vntill he haue purged hymselfe be lawfully admitted agayne to preach by the iust arbitrement of him that suspended and forbad him And shall alwaies after that cary with hym to al places wheresoeuer he shall preach the letters testimoniall of him that restored him Moreouer the Parish Priestes or Vicares temporall not hauing perpetuities nor being sent in forme aforesayd shall simply preach in that Churches where they haue charge onely those thinges whiche are expressely contayned in the prouinciall constitution set forth by Iohn our predecessour of good memory to helpe that ignorance of the priests which beginneth Ignorantia Sacerdotum Which book of constitutions we would should be had in euery parish Church in our prouince of Caunterbury within three monthes next after the publication of these presentes and as therein is required that it be effectually declared by that priestes themselues yearely and at the tunes appoynted And least thys wholesome statute might be thought hurtfull of some by reason of payment of money or some other difficultie we therfore will ordayne that that examinations of the persōs aforesayd and the making of theyr letters by the Ordinary be done gratis and freely without any exaction of money at all by those to whome it shall appertayne And if any man shall willingly presume to violate this our statute grounded vpon the old lawe after the publication of the same he shall incurre the sentence of greater excommunication ipso facto whose absolution we specially reserue by tenoure of these presentes to vs and our successours But if anye such Preacher despising this wholsome Statute and not weying the sentence of greater excommunication doe the secōd time take vpon hym to preach saying and alledging and stoutly affirming that the sentence of greater excommunication aforesaid cannot be appoynted by the Church in the persons of the Prelates of the same That then the Superiours of the place doe worthely rebuke him and forbid him from the Communion of all faythfull Christians And that the sayde person hereupon lawfully conuicted except he recant and abiure after the maner of that Church be pronounced an hereticke by the Ordinary of the place And that from thenceforth he be reputed and taken for an hereticke and schismaticke and that he incurre ipso facto the penalties of heresie and schismacie expressed in the law And chiefly that his goodes be adiudged confiscate by the law and apprehended and kept by them to whome it shal appertayne And that hys faurours receiuers defenders being conuicted in all cases be likewise punished if they cease not of within one month being lawfully warned therof by theyr superiours Furthermore no clergy man or parochians of any parish or place within our prouince of Cant. shall admit any man to preach wtin their Churches churchyardes or other places whatsoeuer except first there be manifest knoweledge had of his authoritie priuiledge or sending thither according to the order aforesayd Otherwise the Churche churchyarde or what place whatsoeuer in whiche it was so preached shal ipso facto receiue y● Ecclesiasticall interdict so shall remayne interdicted vntill they that so admitted and suffered him to preach haue reformed themselues and obtayned that place so interdicted to be released in due forme of law either frō the Ordinary of y● place or his superiour Moreouer like as a good housholder casteth wheat into the ground well ordered for that purpose therby to get the more encrease euen so we wil and commaund that the preacher of Gods word comming in form aforesayd preaching eyther vnto the Clergy or Laity according to hys matter proponed shal be of good behauiour sowing such seed as shal be cōuenient for his auditory And chiefly preaching to the Clergie he shall touche the vices commonly vsed amongst them and to the Laitie he shall declare the vices commonly vsed among them and not otherwise But if he preach contrary to this order then shall he be sharpely punished by the ordenary of that place according to the quallitie of that offence Item for as much as the part is vile that agreeth not with the whole we do decree and ordayn that no preacher aforesayd or any other person whatsoeuer shall otherwise teach or preach concerning the sacramēt of the aulter matrimony confession of sinnes or any
hand vpon a booke and heare hys charge and if his charge to his vnderstanding were vnlefull he would hastely withdraw his hand vpō the booke taking there onely God to witnes that he would fulfil that lefull charge after his power And the maister of diuinitie sayde then to him thus Certaine he that layeth his hand vpō a booke in this wise and maketh there a promise to do that thing that he is commaunded Is obliged therby by boke othe then to fulfil his charge For no doubt hee that chargeth him to lay his hand thus vpon a booke touching the booke swearing by it and kissing it promisinge in this forme to do this thing or that wil say and witnes that he that toucheth thus a booke and kisseth it hath sworne vpon that booke And al other mē that see that man thus do and also all those that heare hereof in the same wise wyll say and witnes that this man hath sworne vpon a booke Wherefore the maister of diuinitie sayde it was not lefull neyther to geue nor to take any such charge vpon a booke for euery booke is nothing els but diuers creatures of which it is made of Therefore to sweare vpon a booke is to sweare by creatures and this swearinge is euer vnlefull This sentence witnesseth Chrisostome playnely blaming them greatly that bring forth a booke for to sweare vpon charging Clarkes that in no wise they constrayne any body to sweare whether they thinke a man to sweare true or false ¶ And the Archbishop and his Clarkes scorned mee and blamed me greatly for this saying And the Archb. manassed me with great punishment sharpe except I left thys opinion of swearing ☞ And I said Sir this is not myne opinion but it is the opinion of Christ our sauiour of S. Iames of Chrysostome other diuers saints and doctours ¶ Than the Archb. had a clarke read this homely of Chrisostom which homely this clerke held in his hand writtē in a roule which roule the Archb. caused to be taken from my fellow at Caūterbury And so then this clark read this role til he came to a clause where Chrisostome sayth that it is sinne to sweare well And then a clark Malueren as I gesse said to the Archb. Sir I pray you were of him how he vnderstādeth Chrysostome here saying it to be sin to sweare well And so the Archbish. asked me how I vnderstode here Chrisostome And certaine I was somwhat afraid to aunswer hereto For I had not busied me to study about the sense therof but lifting vp my minde to God I praied him of grace And as fast as I thought how Christ said to his apostles When for my name ye shall be brought before Iudges I shall geue into your mouth wisedome that your aduersaries shal not against say And trusting faithfully in the word of God I said Sir I know wel that many men women haue nowe swearing so in custome that they knowe not nor wil not know that they do euil for to sweare as they do But they thinke and say that they do wel for to sweare as they do though they know wel that they sweare vntruely For they say they may by their swearing though it be false voide blame or temporal harme which they shoulde haue if they sweare not thus And sir many men and women maintaine strongly that they sweare well when that thing is sooth that they sweare for Also full many men women say nowe that it is well done to sweare by creatures when they may not as the say otherwise be beleeued And also ful many men and women now say that it is wel done to sweare by God and by our Ladye and by other saints for to haue them in minde But since al these sayings are but excusatious and sinne mee thinketh sir that this sense of Chrisostom may be alleaged wel against all such swearers witnessing that al these sinne greuously though they thinke themselues for to sweare in thys foresayd wise well For it is euil done and great sinne for to sweare truth when in any maner a man may excuse himselfe without othe ¶ And the Archbishop sayd that Chrysostome might bee thus vnderstand And then a clerke sayd to me wilt thou tarye my Lorde no lenger but submit thee here mekely to the ordinance of holy Church and lay thy hand vpon a booke touching the holy Gospell of GOD promising not onelye wyth thy mouth but also with thine hart to stand to my Lords ordinaunce ☞ And I sayd Sir haue I not told you here how that I heard a maister of diuinity say that in such case it is al one to touch a booke and to sweare by a booke ¶ And the Archb. sayd There is no maister of diuinitie in England so great y● if he hold this opinion before me but I shall punish him as I shal do thee except thou sweare as I shall charge thee ☞ And I sayd Sir is not Chrisostome an ententife Doctour ¶ And the Archb. sayd yea ☞ And I sayd if Chrisostome proueth him worthye great blame that bringeth forth a booke to sweare vpon it must nedes followe that he is more to blame that sweareth on that booke ¶ And the Archb. said if Chrisostome ment accordingly to the ordinance of holy church we wil accept him ☞ And then said a clerke to me Is not the word of God God himselfe equipolient that is of one authoritie ¶ And I sayd yea ☞ Then he said to me why wilt thou not sweare then by the Gospell of God that is gods word since it is al one to sweare by the word of God by God himselfe ¶ And I said Sir since I may not now otherwise be beleued but by swearing I perceiue as Austen saith that it is not spedeful that ye y● should be my brethren should not beleue me therfore I am redy by the word of God as the lord commaunded me by his word to sweare ☞ Then the Clarke sayd to me Lay then thine hand vpon the booke touchinge the holy Gospell of God and take thy charge ¶ And I said Sir I vnderstand that the holy Gospell of God may not be touched with mans hand ☞ And the Clearke sayde I fonded and that I sayde not truth ¶ And I asked this clerk whether it were more to reade y● Gospel to touch the Gospell ☞ And he said it was more to read the Gospell ¶ Then I said Sir by authority of S. Hierome the gospel is not the gospel for reading of the letter but for the belief that men haue in the word of God That it is the gospel that we beleue and not the letter that we read for because the letter that is touched with mans hand is not the Gospel but the sentence that is verily beleued in mās hart is the Gospel For so Hierome saith The Gospel that is the vertue of Gods word is not
in that leaues of the boke but it is in the roote of reason Neyther the Gospel he sayeth is in the writing aboue of the letters but the Gospell is in the marking of the sentence of scriptures This sentence approueth S. Paule saying thus The kingdome of God is not in word but in vertue And Dauid saith The voice of the Lord that is his word is in vertue And after Dauid sayth Through the word of God the heauēs were formed and in the spirite of his mouth is all the vertue of thē And I pray you sir vnderstand ye wel how Dauid sayth then in the spirit of the mouth of y● Lord is all the vertue of angels and of men And the clarke sayd to me Thou wouldest make vs to fond with thee Say we not that the Gospels are written in the Masse booke ☞ And I sayd Sir though men vse to saye thus yet it is vnperfect speech For the principal part of a thinge is properly the whole thing For lo mans soule that may not now be sene here nor touched with any sensible thing is properly man And al the vertue of a tree is in the roote thereof that may not be sene for do away the roote the tree is destroied And sir as ye sayd to me right now God hys word are of one authoritie And sir S. Hierome witnesseth y● Christ very God very mā is hid in the letter of the law thus also sir y● gospel is hid in the letter For sir as it is ful likely many diuers men and womē here in the earth touched Christ saw him knew his bodely persō which neither touched nor saw nor knewe ghostly his godhead Right thus sir many men now touch see write read the scriptures of gods law which neither see touch nor read effectually the gospel For as the godhead of Christ that is the vertue of God is knowen by the vertue of beliefe so is the Gospel that is Christes word ¶ And a clerke said to me These be full misty matters and vnsauery that thou shewest here to vs. ☞ And I said Sir if ye that are maisters know not plainly this sentence ●e may sore dread that the kingdome of heauen be taken from you as it was frō the princes of priests and from the elders of the ●owes ¶ And then a Clerke as I gesse Malueren sayde to me Thou knowest not thine equiuocations for the kingdom of heauen hath diuers vnderstandings What callest thou the kingdom of heauen in thys sentence that thou shewest here ☞ And I said Sir by good reason and sentence of doctors the Realme of heauen is called here the vnderstanding of Gods word ¶ And a clerke said to me From whom thinkest thou that this vnderstanding is taken away ☞ And I sayde Sir by authoritie of Christ himselfe the effectuall vnderstanding of Christes word is taken away from al them chiefly which are great lettered men presum to vnderstand high things wil be holden wise men desire maistership high state dignitie but they wyll not conforme them to the liuing and teaching of Christ of his Apostles ¶ Then the Archb. said Wel wel thou wilt iudge thy soueraignes By God the king doth not his duety but he suffer thee to be condemned ☞ And then an other Clerke sayd to me Why on Fryday that last was counsailedst thou a man of my Lordes that he should not shriue him to no man but onely to god ¶ And with this asking I was abashed And then by and by I knew that I was subtilly betraied of a mā that came to me in prison on the Friday before cōmoning with mee in this matter of confession And certaine by his words I thought that this man came then to me of ful feruent and charitable will But now I know he came to tempt me to accuse me God forgeue him if it be his wil. And withal mine hart when I had thought thus I said to this clerk Sir I pray you that ye would fetch this man hether and all the wordes as nere as I cā repete them which that I spake to him on Friday in the prison I wil rehearse now here before you all and before him ☞ And as I gesse the Archbishop said then to me They that are now here suffice to repete them How saidst thou to hym ¶ And I sayd Syr that man came and asked me in diuers thinges and after hys asking I aunswered him as I vnderstoode that good was And as he shewed to me by his wordes he was sory of hys liuing in court and right heauy for his owne vicious liuing and also for the viciousnes of other men and specially of priests euil liuing herefore he sayd to me with a sorrowfull hart as I gessed that he purposed fully within short time for to leaue the court and to busie him to know Gods lawe and to confirme all hys life thereafter And when he had sayd to me these wordes moe other whiche I would rehearse and he were present he prayed me to heare hys confession And I sayd to him sir wherefore come ye to me to be confessed of me ye wote wel y● the Archb. putteth holdeth me here as one vnworthy either to geue or to take any sacrament of holy Church ☞ And he sayd to me Brother I wote well and so wote many other moe that you and such other are wrongfully vexed and therefore I common with you the more gladly And I sayd to him Certayne I wote well that many men of this court and specially the priestes of this housholde would be full euill apayd both you with me if they wist that ye were confessed of me And he sayd that he cared not therfore for he had full little affection in them And as me thought he spake these wordes and many other of so good will and of so high desire for to haue knowne and done the pleasant will of God And I sayd to hym as with my foresayd protestation I say to you now here Syr I counsayle you for to absent you from all euill company and to draw you to them that loue and busie them to knowe and to keepe the preceptes of God And then the good spirite of God will moue you for to occupy busily all your wittes in gathering together of all your sinnes as farre as ye can bethinke you shaming greatly of them and sorrowing hartely for them Yea syr the holy Ghost will thē put in your hart a good will and a seruent desire for to take and to hold a good purpose to hate euer and to flie after your cūning and power al occason of sinne and so then wisedome shal come to you from aboue lightening with diuers beames of grace and of heauenly desire all your wittes enforming you how ye shall trust stedfastly in the mercy of the Lorde knowledging to him onely
of the king or els to the statute an 15. Richard chap. 2. Where the penalty is made fine and raunsome Or els to the statute an 5. Richar. 2. chap. 6. where suche assemblies be made playne treason in fine statuti And as here is matter of treason sufficiently contained so for heresie likewise the same statute referreth them to y● ordinaries and to the lawes properly to heresie appertayning and to the statute an 2. Henr. 4. chap. 15. where the penaltie is burning Also to the statute an 5. Richard 2. chap. 5. So that in this present statute here mention is conteined as ye see although not in expresse words yet inclusiuely by referring to other statutes not repealed bothe Lollardery which is punished with burning and forcible entrees which is punished at the kinges pleasure And thus much concerning the secōd vntruth which M. Cope vntruely noted in me 3. The third vntruth which he noteth in me concerning this matter is this wherein he reporteth mee that I say there was no other cause of deuising this sharp law punishment against these mē but onely for hauing the scripture bookes And therfore here is noted in the margent Foxi dolus malus but let M. Cope take heede hee deceiue not himself and other For my part I remember no such place in this my Latine story where I so say Onely my wordes be these added in the latter ende of the place aboue recited Wicleuiani verò dicebantur quicunque id temporis Scripturas Dei sua lingua lectitarent c. That is They were called Wicleuistes whosoeuer at that time read the Scripture in english or vulgare tongue c. I say not that for the scriptures being read in the english tongue therfore the law was enacted but so is M. Cope disposed to construe it What law statuts were made against writing or reading of any booke in English or in any other tonge cōtrary to the Catholick that is y● Romish sayth or to the determinatiō of the holy Church that is of Rome read I beseech thee the bloudy statute made an 2. Hen. 4. chap. 15. aboue specifyed pag. 523 Also read the constitution prouinciall of Thomas Arundell aboue mentioned pag. 524. lin 9. Where it was decreed that the text of holy scripture should not be had or read in the vulgare tongue frō the time of M. Iohn Wickliffe for euer after vnlesse the sayd translation be approued first by the ordinary or by prouinciall councell vnder pain and punishment of heresy Now let the reader iudge whether y● reading of scripture bookes in the english tongue by the making or translating of Wickliffe or from the tyme of Wicliffe downward be coūted heresy or not As for the approuing of the ordinary or of the prouincial councell added in the end of the sayd constitution maketh more for a shew or pretence then for any iust exception or any true intention For what man hauing those Scriptures translated in English would either present them to their ordinaries being so set against the reading of such bookes or what ordinarie would or did euer yet since Arundels tyme approoue any such translation presented vnto them Or els why did the good Martyrs of Amersam suffer death in the begynning of kyng Henry the viii for hauing and reading certaine bookes of Scripture which were as is saide onely foure Epistles of S. Paule with certaine other prayers And the other which heard them but onely reade did beare fagottes and the same tyme the children compelled to set fagots vnto their fathers at which time Longlande being then Byshop of Lincolne preaching to them at y● stake sayde that whatsoeuer they were that did but moue hys lippes in reading those chapters were damned foreuer as when we come to that tyme by the grace of Christ shall hereafter more amply and notoriously appear And where thē is this Dolus malus Foxi margined against me for craftie dealing in my story Moreouer where M. Cope proceeding farther in this matter asketh me how was the Lorde Cobham obedient to the king whē as for the feare of him the king durst not then keepe his parliament at London To whom I aunswere agayne asking likewise of M. Cope howe was the king then afrayd to hold his parliament at London for the Lord Cobham when the Lord Cobham at that time was in Wales And here M. Cope thinking to haue me at a narow straight and to holde me fast biddeth me tell him howe it coulde be otherwise but the Lorde Cobham must needes haue fautours And who should these fautours be sayth he but syr Roger Acton Browne their fellowes The which mighty question of M. Cope I answer agayn howe can sir Roger Acton Browne and their fellowes be then fautors of the Lord Cobham for whome the King durst not hold his parliament at Londō when as the sayd Roger Acton Browne and the rest were put to death a whole yeare almost before the Parliament at Leycester began And now as I haue hitherto briefly and truely aunswered your askinges M. Cope let me be so bolde with you agayne to propounde to you likewise an other question For so much as you haue put me to the searching of the statutes in this matter wherewith before I was not muche acquainted now out of the same statutes riseth a doubtfull scruple or questiō worthy to be solued The cause is this that for asmuch as so many good martyrs and Saints of God hetherto in this realme of England haue bene burned frō the time of king Henry 4. Hen. 5. Hen. 6. Hen. 8. to the time and in the time of Queene Mary my question is that you with all your learned councell about you wil tel me by what law or statute of the realme were these men brent I know the auncient custome hath bene that heretickes conuicted by a prouinciall councell were wont to be left to the secular power But how wil ye proue me these hereticks were either conuict by such prouinciall councell or that these seculare men ought to be your butchers in burning them whō ye haue committed to them If ye alledge the vi Articles made in the reigne of king Henry the 8. those articles neither did serue before the time of king Hēry the viii neither yet were they reuiued after his time If ye alledge to y● statute made an 5. Richar. 2. cap. 5. In that statute I aunswere is conteined no matter of burning but onely of arrest to be done at the certificatiōs of the prelates wtout any further punishmēt there mentioned To conclude if ye alledge the statute made an 2. Henr. 4. chap. 15. and reuiued in the reigne of Queene Mary mentioned before pag. 523 To that statute I answere that although that pretensed statute appeareth in forme of wordes in the Printed book to geue vnto the temporall officers authoritie to bring them to the stake and to burne them whom the Bishop deliuereth Yet is it
which were spoken of a litle before who euery mā for himselfe affirmed with an othe that which he had said Amongest whom Iohn Protyway parishe priest of S. Clemēts in Prage whē he should come to confirme his testimony added more that Iohn Hus should say that S. Gregory was but a rimer whē he did alleadge his athoritie against him Unto whō Iohn Hus answered that in this point they did him great iniury for somuch as he alwaies esteemed and reputed S. Gregory for a most holy doctor of the Church These contentions and disputations being somewhat appeased the Cardinall of Florence turned himselfe toward Iohn Hus said Maister you know well inough that it is written that in the mouth of two or three witnesses all witnes is firme and stable and heere you see nowe almost 20. witnesses against you men of authority worthy of credite amongst the whych some haue hearde you teach these things themselues the other by report common brute or voice do testify of your doctrine and altogether generally bring firme reasons proofes of theyr witnesse vnto the which wee are forced constrained to geue credite and for my part I see not howe you can maintaine defend your cause against so many notable wel learned men Unto whom Iohn Hus answered in this maner I take God and my conscience to witnes that I neuer taught any thing neither was it euer in my minde or fantasie to teach in such sort or maner as these men here haue not feared to witnesse against me that which they neuer hearde And albeit they were as many more in nūber as they are for all that I do much more esteme yea and wtout comparison regard the witnes of my Lord God before the wytnes and iudgement of al mine aduersaries vpon whom I do in no poynt stay my selfe Then sayde the Cardinall againe vnto him it is not lawfull for vs to iudge according to your conscience for we can not chuse but that wee must nedes stay our selues vpon the firme euident witnes of these men heere For it is not for any displeasure or hatred that these men do witnes thys against you as you doe alleadge for they alleadge and bring foorth suche reasons of their witnesse that there is no man that can perceyue any hatred in them or that we can in any case be in dout thereof And as touching M. Steuen Paletz whereas you say you do suspect him that he hath craftly deceitfully drawen out certaine poyntes or articles out of your books for to betray them afterward It semeth that in this point you do hym great wrong for in myne aduise he hath vsed and shewed a great fidelitie and amitie towarde you in that he hathe alleuiated and moderated many of your articles much more then they are in your owne bookes I vnderstand also that you haue like opinion of diuers other notable men and specially you haue sayd that you do suspect M. Chauncellour of Paris then whome there is no more excellent and Christian man in all the whole world Then was there read a certayne article of accusation in the which it was alledged that Iohn Hus had taught obstinately defended certayne erroneous Articles of Wicliffes in Boheme Whereunto Hus answered that he neuer taught any erroures of Iohn Wickliffes or of anye other mans Wherefore if it be so that Wickliffe haue sowed any errours in England let the English men look to the themselues But to confirme theyr article there was alleaged that Iohn Husse did withstande the condemnation of Wickliffes articles the which was first condemned at Rome afterward also whē the Archb. Swinco with other learned men held a conuocation at Prage for the same matter when as they should haue bene there condemned for this cause that none of them were agreeing to the Catholicke faith or doctrine but were either hereticall erroneous or offensiue he aunswered that he durst not agree thereunto for offending hys conscience and specially for these Articles that Siluester the pope and Cōstantine dyd erre in bestowing those gret gifts rewards vpō the church Also that the pope or Priest being in mortall sinne can not consecrate nor baptise This article said he I haue thus determined as if I should say that he doth vnworthely consecrate or Baptise when as he is in deadly sinne and that he is an vnworthy minister of the Sacramentes of God Here his accusers with their witnesses were earnest and instant that the article of Wickliffe was written by the very same wordes in the treatise which Iohn Husse made agaynst Stephen Paletz Uerely said Iohn Husse I feare not to submit my selfe euen vnder the daunger of death if you shall not find it so as I haue sayd When the book was brought forth they founde it written as Iohn Husse had sayd He added also moreouer that he durst not agree vnto them which had condemned Wickliffes articles for this Article the tenthes were pure almes Here the Cardinal of Florence obiected vnto him this argument as touching the almes it is required that it shold be geuē freely without bond or duety But tenthes are not geuen freely without bond or duety therefore are they no almes Iohn Hus denying the Maior of this Sillogismus brought this reason agaynst him For somuch as rich men are bounden vnder the payne of eternall damnation vnto the fulfilling of the 6. works of mercy which Christ repeteth in the 25. chap. of Mathew and these workes are pure almes Ergo almes is also geuen by bond duety Then an Archbishop of Englād stepping vp sayd if we all be boūd vnto those 6. workes of mercy it doth followe that poore men which haue nothing at al to geue should be damned I answere sayd Husse vnto your antecedent that I spake distinctly of rich men and of those which had where withall to doe those workes they I say were bound to geue almes vnder payne of damnation He answered moreouer vnto the Minor of the first argument that tenthes were at first geuen freely and afterward made a bond and duetie And when as he woulde haue declared it more at large he could not be suffered He declared also diuers other causes why he coulde not with safe conscience consent vnto the condemnatiō of Wickliffes articles But how soeuer the matter went he did affirme say that he did neuer obstinately confirme any Articles of Wickleffes but only that he did not alow and consent that Wickliffes Articles should be condemned before that sufficient reasons were alleadged out of the holy Scripture for theyr condemnation of the same minde saith Iohn Hus are a great many other Doctors and maysters of the Uniuersitie of Prage For when as Swinco the archbishop commanded all Wickliffes bookes to be gathered together in the whole City of Prage and to be brought vnto him I my self brought also certayn books of Wickliffes which I
gaue vnto that Archbishop desiring him that if he found any error or heresie in them that he would note and mark thē and I myselfe would publish them openly But the archbishop albeit that he shewed me no errour nor heresie in them burned my bookes together with those that were brought vnto him notwtstanding that he had no such commaundement from Pope Alexander the fifth of that name But notwithstanding by a certaine pollicie he obtayned a Bull from the sayd Pope by meanes of Iaroslaus Bishop of Sarepte of the order of Franciscanes that all Wickleff●s books for the manifold errours contayned in them wherof there was none named should be taken out of all mens handes The archb vsing the authoritie of this Bull thought he should bring to passe that the king of Boheme and the Nobles shold consent to the condemnation of Wickliffes bookes but therein he was deceiued Yet neuerthelesse he calling together certayn deuines gaue them in cōmissiō to sit vpon Wickliffes bookes and to proceede agaynst them by a diffinitiue sentence in the Canon law These men by a generall sentence iudged all those books worthy to be burned The which when the Doctors Maysters and Shollers of the vniuersitie heard report of they altogether with one consent accord none excepted but onely they which before were chosen by the Archbishop to sit in iudgement determined to make supplication vnto the king to stay the matter The king graunting their request sent by and by certain vnto the Archbishop to examine the matter There he denyed that he woulde decree anye thing as touchinge Wickleffes bookes contrary vnto the kinges will pleasure Wherupon albeit that he had determined to burn thē the next day after yet for feare of the king the matter was passed ouer In the meane tyme Pope Alexander the fifth beyng dead the Archbishop fearing least the Bull whiche he had receiued of the pope would be no longer of any force or effect priuily calling vnto him hys adherentes and shutting the gates of hys Court round about him being garded with a number of armed souldiors he consumed and burned all Wickliffes bookes Beside this great iniurie the Archbyshop by meanes of his Bull aforesayd committed an other lesse tollerable For he gaue out commaundement that no man after that time vnder payne of excōmunication shold teach any more in Chappels Wherunto I did appeale vnto the Pope who being dead and the cause of my matter remayning vndetermined I appealed likewise vnto his successor Iohn 23. Before whom when as by the space of 2. yeres I could not be admitted by my aduocates to defend my cause I appealed vnto the high Iudge Christ. When I. Hus had spoken these wordes it was demaunded of hym whether he had receiued absolution of the pope or no he aunswered no. Then agayne whether it were lawfull for him to appeale vnto Christ or no. Whereunto Iohn Hus answered Uerely I doe affirme here afore you all that there is no more iust or effectuall appeale then that appeale which is made vnto Christ for asmuch as the law doth determine that to appeale is no other thinge then in a cause of griefe or wrong done by an inferior iudge to implore and require ayde and remedy at a higher Iudges hand Who is then an higher Iudge then Christ Who I say cā know or iudge the matter more iustly or with more equitie when as in him there is found no deceit neyther can he be deceiued or who can better helpe the miserable oppressed thē he While Iohn Hus with a deuout and sober countenaunce was speaking and pronouncing those words he was derided and mocked of all the whole councell Then was there rehearsed an other Article of his accusation in this maner that Iohn Hus for to confirme the heresie which he had taught the common and simple people out of Wickleffes bookes sayd openly these wordes that at what time a great number of Monkes and Friers and other learned men were gathered together in Englād in a certayne Church to dispute agaynst Iohn Wickliffe could by no meanes vanquishe him or geue him the foyle sodenly the church doore was broken open with lightning so that with much a doe Wickleffes enemies hardly scaped without hurt He added moreouer that he wished his soule to be in the same place where Iohn Wickleffes soule was Whereunto Iohn Hus answered that a douscine yeares before that any bookes of Diuinitie of Iohn Wickleffes were in Boheme he did see certayne workes of Philosophie of hys the which he sayd did merueilous delite and please hym And when he vnderstoode the good and godly life of the sayd Wickleffe he spake these wordes I trust sayde he that Wickleffe is saued and albeit that I doubt whether he be damned or no yet with a good hope I wish that my soule were in the same place where Iohn Wickleffes is Then agayne did all the company iest and laugh at hym It is also in hys accusation that Iohn Hus did counsaile the people according to the example of Moyses to resist with the sword agaynst all such as did gaynsay his doctrine And the next day after he had preached the same there were found openly in diuers places certaine intimations that euery man being armed with hys sword about him should stoutly proceede and that brother shoulde not spare brother neyther one neighbor an other Iohn Husse aunswered that all these thinges were falsly layd vnto hys charge by his aduersaries for he at all times when he preached did dilligently admonishe and warne the people that they should all arme themselues to defend the truth of the Gospell according to the saying of the Apostle with the helmet and sworde of saluation and that he neuer spake of any material sword but of that which is the word of God And as touching intimations or Moyses sword he neuer had nothing to doe withall It is moreouer affirmed in hys accusation and witnes that many offences are sprong vp by the doctrine of Hus. For first of all he sowed discord betweene the Ecclesiastical and the politick state whereupon folowed the persecution spoiling and robbery of the Clergie Bishops And more ouer that he through his dissention dissolued the vniuersitie of Prage Hereunto Iohn Hus briefly aunswered that these thinges had not happened by hys meanes or default For the first dissention that was betweene the Ecclesiasticall and politicke state sprang and grew vpon this cause that pope Gregory the 12. of that name promised at his election that at all times at the wil and pleasure of the Cardinals he would depart from and geue ouer hys seate agayne for vnder that condition he was electe and chosen This man contrary and against Winceslaus king of Boheme who was then also king of the Romaynes made Lewes Duke of Bauaria Emperour A few yeares after it happened that when as P. Gregory would not refuse and geue ouer
and aduersary of S. Peter of our Lorde Iesus Christe and also the vicare of Iudas Iscarioth I aunswere the wordes of my book are these If he which is called the vicare of S. Peter walke in the wayes of Christian vertues aforesayd we do beleue verely that he is the true vicar and true Byshop of the Church whiche ruleth but if he walke in contrary pathes and wayes then is he the messenger of Antechrist cōtrary both to S. Peter and our Lord Iesus Christ. And therfore S. Bernard in hys 4. book did write in this sort vnto pope Eugenie Thou delitest walkest in great pride and arrogancie being gorgeously and sumptuously arayd what fruit or profite do thy flocke or sheepe receiue by thee If I durst say it these be rather the pastures and feedinges of deuils then of sheepe S. Peter S. Paul did not so wherfore thou seemest by these thy doings to succeede Constantine not S. Peter These be the very wordes of S. Bernard It followeth after in my booke that if the maner and fashion of his life and liuing be contrary to that which S. Peter vsed or that he be geuen to auarice and couetousnes then is he the vicar of Iudas Iscarioth which loued and chose the reward of iniquitie dyd set out to sale the Lord Iesus Christ. As soone as they had read the same those which ruled and gouerned the coūcell beheld one an other making mockes and moes they nodded theyr heades at hym The xi article Al such as doe vse Symmony priests liuing dissolutely and wantonly do hold an vntrue opinion of the 7. Sacramentes as vnbeleuing bastardes and not as Children not knowing what is the office duety of the keyes or censures rites and ceremonies neither of the diuine seruice of the Churche or of veneration or worshipping of reliques neither of y● orders constituted and ordeined in the Church neither yet of indulgences or pardons I answere that it is placed in this maner in my book Thys abuse of authoritie or power is committed by such as doe sell make marchandise of holy orders and get and gather together riches by Symonie making fayres and markets of the holy Sacramentes and liuing in all kynd of voluptuousnes and dissolute maners or in any other filthy or vilanous kind of liuing They do polute and defile the holye ecclesiasticall state And albeit that they professe in wordes that they do know God yet doe they deny it again by their deeds and consequently beleue not in God But as vnbeleeuing bastardes they holde a contrarye and vntrue opinion of the 7. Sacramentes of the Church And this appeareth most euidently for somuch as all suche doe vtterly contemne and despise the name of God according to the saying of Malachy the first chapter Unto you O Priestes be it spoken which doe despise and contemne my name The xii Article The papall dignitie hath hys original from the Emperours of Rome I answere and mark wel what my wordes are The preeminence and institution of the Pope is sprong and come of the Emperours power authoritie And this is proued by the 96. distinction for Constantine graunted thys priuiledge vnto the Bishop of Rome and other after hym confirmed the same That like as Augustus for the outward and temporal goodes bestowed vpon the Churche is counted alwayes the most high king aboue al others so the bysh of Rome shold be called the principal father aboue all other bishops This notwithstanding the papall dignitie hath hys original immediately from Christ as touching hys spirituall administration and office to rule the Church Then the Cardinall of Cabray sayd in the tyme of Constantine there was a generall Councell holden at Nice in the whiche albeit the highest rowme and place in the Church was geuen to the Bishop of Rome for honours cause it is ascribed vnto the Emperour wherefore then do you not aswell affirme and saye that the Papall dignitie tooke hys originall rather from that councel then by the Emperours authoritie and power The 13. article No man would reasonably affirme weout reuelation neyther of hymselfe nor of any other that hee is the heade of any particular Churche I aunswere I confesse it to be written in my booke and it followeth straight after Albeit that through hys good liuing he oght to hope and trust that he is a member of the holy vniuersal Church the spouse of Iesus Christ according to the saying of the Preacher No man knoweth whether he be worthy and haue deserued grace and fauour or hatred And Luke the 17. when ye haue done all that ye can say that you are vnprofitable seruauntes The 14. Article It ought not to be beleeued that the pope whatsoeuer he be may be the head of any particular Churche vnles he be predestinate or ordayned of God I aunswere that I doe acknowledge thys preposition to be myne and thys is easie to proue forsomuche as it is necessary that the Christian faith shuld be depraued for somuch as the Churche was deceiued by N. as it appeareth by S. Augustine The 15. article The popes power as Uicare is but vayne and nothing worth if he do not confirme addresse hys lyfe accordyng to Iesus Christ and not followe the maners of S. Peter I answere that it is thus in my book that it is meet and expedient that he which is ordayned vicar should addresse and frame himselfe in maners and conditions to the authoritie of hym which did put him in place And Iohn Hus sayd Moreouer before the whole councell I vnderstand that the power and authoritie in such a pope as doth not represent the maners of Christ is frustrate and voyd as touching the merite and rewarde which he shold obtayne and get therby and doth not get the same but not as concerning hys office Then certayne others standing by asked of hym saying where is that glose in your book I. Hus answered you shall finde it in my treatise agaynst M. Palletz wherat all the assistaunce looking one vppon an other began for to smile and laugh The 16. Article The pope is most holy not because hee doth supply and hold the rowme and place of S. Peter but because he hath great reuenues I answere that my words are mutilate for thus it is written He is not most holy because he is called the vicar of S. Peter or because he hathe great and large possessions But if he be the follower of Iesus Christ in humilitie gentlenes paciēce labour and trauayle and in perfect loue and charitie The 17. Article The Cardinals are not the manifest and true successours of the other Apostles of Iesus Christ if they liue not according to the fashion of the Apostles keping the commaundementes and ordinaunces of the Lord Iesus I answere that it is thus written in my booke and it proueth it selfe sufficiently For if they enter in by an other way then by the dore whiche is the
make nothing for the purpose for albeit anyman be not a true Christian is he not therefore true Pope Byshop or Kyng when as these are names of office and to be a Christian is a name of merite and desert and so may any man be a true Pope Byshoppe or King although he be no true Christian. Then sayd Iohn Hus if Pope Iohn the xxiij were a true Pope wherefore haue ye depriued him of hys office The Emperour aunswered the Lordes of the Councell haue now lately agreed thereupon that he was true Pope but for his notorious and manifest euill doinges wherewithall he did offend and trouble the Church of God and dyd spoyle and bring to ruine the power thereof he is reiected and cast out of his office The second Article The grace of predestination is the bond whereby the body of the Church and euery parte and member thereof is firmely knitte and ioyned vnto the head The aunswere I acknowledge this Article to be mine and it is proued in the text out of the eight chapiter to the Romaynes who shall seperate vs from the charity and loue of Christ. c. And in the tenth chapter of Iohn My sheepe heare my voyce and I know them and they followe me and I geue them eternall life neyther shall they perish eternally neither is there any man which shal take them out of my handes This is the knotte of the body of the Church and of our spirituall head Christ vnderstanding the Church to be the congregation of the predestinate The third Article If the Pope be a wicked man and specially a reprobate then euen as Iudas the Apostle he is a Deuill a Theefe and the Sonne of perdition and not the head of the holy mylytant Churche for so muche as he is no parte or member thereof The aunswere My wordes are thus if the Pope be an euill or wicked man and specially if he be a Reprobate then euen as Iudas so is he a Deuill a Theefe and the Sonne of perditition How then is he the head of the holy militant Church where as he is not truely no member or part thereof for if he were a member of the holy Churche then shoulde he be also a member of Christ and if he were a member of Christ then shoulde he cleaue and sticke vnto Chryste by the grace of Predestination and present iustice and shoulde be one spirite with God as the Apostle sayth in the first Epistle to the Corinthians the sixt Chapter knowe ye not that your bodyes are the members of Christ The 4. Article An euill Pope or Prelate or reprobate is no true pastour but a theefe and a robber The answere The text of my booke is thus If he be euill or wicked thē is he an hireling of whom Christ speaketh he is no sheepe heard neither are the sheepe his owne Therefore when he seeth the wolfe comming he runneth away and forsaketh the sheepe and so finally doth euery wicked and reprobate man Therefore euery such reprobate or wicked Pope or Prelate is no true Pastour But a very theefe and a robber as is more at large proued in my booke Thē sayd Iohn Hus I doe so limitte all thinges that such as touching theyr desert are not truely and worthely Popes and shepheardes before God but as touching their office and reputation of men they are Popes Pastors and Priestes Then a certayne man rising vp behinde Iohn Husse clothed all in silke sayd my Lordes take heede least that Iohn Hus deceiue both you and himselfe with these hys gloses and looke whether these thinges be in his booke or not for of late I had disputation with him vpon these Articles in the which I sayd that a wicked Pope c. was no Pope as touching merite and desert but as touchyng his office he was truely Pope Whereupon he vsed these gloses which he had heard of me and did not take them out of his booke Then Iohn Hus turning himselfe vnto him sayd did you not heare that it was so readde out of my booke and this did easily appeare in Iohn xxiij Whether he were true Pope or a very theefe and robber Then the Bishoppes and Cardinals looking one vpon another sayd that he was true Pope and laughed Iohn Hus to scorne The 5. The Pope is not neither ought to be called according vnto his office most holy For then the king ought also to be called most holy according to his office Also the tormentors lictors and deuilles ought also to bee called holy The aunswere My wordes are otherwise placed in this maner so ought a fayner say that if any man be a most holy Father then he doth most holyly obserue and keepe hys Fatherlynesse And if he be a naughty and wicked Father then doth he most wickedly keepe the same Likewise if the Byshoppe be most holyest then is he also most good and when as he sayth that he is Pope it is the name of his office Wherupon it foloweth that the man which is Pope being an euill and reprobate man is a most holy man And consequently by that hys office he is most good And for so much as no man can be good by hys office except he do exercise vse the same his office very well it followeth that if the Pope be an euill reprobate man he cannot exercise or vse his office wel Forsomuch as he cannot vse the office wel except he be morally good Mat. 12. How cā you speak good things when you your selues are euil immediatly af●er it foloweth If the Pope by reasō of his office be called most holy wherefore should not the King of Romaynes be called most holy by reason of his office and dignity When as the Kyng according vnto Saynt Augustines minde representeth the Deitye and Godhead of Christ and the Priest representeth onely hys humanity Wherefore also should not iudges yea euen tormentours be called holy forsomnth as they haue theyr office by ministring vnto the Church of Christ. These thinges are more at large discoursed in my booke but I cannot finde or knowe sayth Iohn Husse any foundation whereby I shoulde call the Pope most holy when as thys is onely spoken of Christ. Thou onely art most holy Thou onely art the Lord. c. Shoulde I then truely call the Pope moste holy The 6. Article If the Pope liue contrary vnto Christ. Albeit he be lawfully and Canonically elect and chosen according to humayne election yet doth he ascende and come in another way then by Christ. The aunswere The text is thus if the Pope liue contrary vnto Christ in pride and auarice how then doth he not ascend and come another way into the sheepe folde then by the lowlye and meeke doore our Lord Iesus Christ But admitte as you say that he dyd ascend by lawfull election the which I call an election principally made of God and not according vnto the common and vulgare constitution and ordinaunce of men yet for all that it is
one of them as S. Ambrose Hierom Augustin do affirme and likewise others For the teaching hereof by a playne example I described as it were a certayne triangle forme or figure the which I cald the shield of fayth Therfore vtterly to exclude and take away the erroneous and wicked vnderstanding therof the which peraduē tture some men may gather thereby I do say affirme declare that I neuer made the sayd figure neither named it the shield of faith to that intent or purpose that I woulde extoll or preferre the opinion of vniuersalities aboue or before the contrary opinion in such sort as though that were the shield of faith that without the affirmation therof the Catholicke faith coulde not be defended or maintained when as I my selfe would not obstinately sticke thereunto But this I said because I had put example in the description of the Triangle or form that one diuine essence consisted in three subiectes or persons in themselues distinct that is to saye the father the sonne and the holy Ghost The article of the which Trinitie is the chiefe shield of fayth and foundation of the Catholicke truth Furthermore that it may be euident vnto all mē what the causes were for the whiche I was reputed thought to stick to and fauour some time I. Hus. I signifie vnto all men by these presentes that when as I heard him oftentimes both in his sermons and also in the schooles I beleleued that he was a very good man neither that he dyd in any poynt gaynsay the traditions of our holy mother the Church or holy doctors in somuch as when I was lately in this Citty and the articles which I affirmed were shewed vnto me whiche were also condemned by the sacred Councell at the first sight of them I did not beleeue that they were hys at the least not in that forme But when as I had further vnderstood by certayn famous Doctours maysters of Diuinitie that they were hys articles required for my further information and satisfaction to haue the bookes of hys own hand writing shewed vnto me wherin it was sayd those articles were contayned The which books when they were shewed vnto me written with his owne hand which I did know as well as mine owne I found all and euery one of those articles therein written in like forme as they are condemned Wherfore I do worthely iudge and thinke him and his doctrine with his adherents to be condemned and reproued by this sacred coūcell as hereticall and without reason Al which the premisses with a pure minde and conscience I do heare pronounce speake being now fully and sufficiently informed of the foresaid sentences and iudgementes geuen by the sacred councell agaynst the doctrines of the sayd Iohn Wickleffe and Iohn Hus and agaynst their own persons vnto the which iudgement as a deuout Catholike in all thinges I doe most humbly consent and agree Also I the foresayd Hierom which before the reuerend fathers the Lordes Cardinals and reuerend Lordes Prelates and Doctours and other worshipful persons of this sacred Councell in this same place did heretofore frely and willingly declare and expound myne intent and purpose amongest other thinges speaking of the Churche did deuide the same into three partes And as I did perceaue afterward it was vnderstanded by some the I would affirme that in the triumphant Church there was fayth Whereas I do firmly beleue that there is the blessed sight and beholding of God excluding all darke vnderstanding knowledge And now also I do say affirm declare that it was neuer my intent and purpose to proue that there sholde be fayth speaking of fayth as fayth is commonly defined but knowledge farre exceeding fayth And generally whatsoeuer I sayd eyther there or at any time before I do referre and most humbly submit my selfe vnto the determination of this sacred Councell of Constance Moreouer I do sweare both by the holy Trinitie and also by the most holy Gospell that I will for euermore remayne and perseuere without all doubt in the truth of the Catholicke Churche And all such as by their doctrine and teaching shall impugne this fayth I iudge them worthy together with their doctrines of eternall curse And if I my selfe at any time which God forbid I should doe presume to preach or teach contrary thereunto I will submit my self vnto the seueritie of the Canons and be bound vnto eternall payn and punishment Wherupon I do deliuer vp this my cōfession and tenour of my profession willingly before this sacred generall councell and haue subscribed and written all these thinges with myne owne hand AFter all this they caused hym to be caryed agayn vnto the same prison but not so straightly chayned bound as he was before notwithstanding kept euery day wyth souldiors and armed men And when as afterward his enemies which were appoynted agaynst him as Michaell de causis wicked Palletz with other their companions in these affayres vnderstood knew by the words talke of M. Hierome and by other certayn tokens that he made the same abiuration recantation not of a sincere pure minde but onely to the intent thereby to scape their hands they together with certayne Friers of Prage of the order of Carmelites then comming in put vp new accusations agaynst the sayd M. Hierome and drew the same into Articles being very instant and earnest that he shoulde answere thereunto And forsomuch as his iudges certaine Cardinals as the Cardinall of Cambray the Cardinal de Vrsinis the Cardinall of Aquilegia and of Florence considering the malice of the enemies of M. Hierome dyd see the great iniurie that was done vnto him they laboured before the whole Councell for hys deliuery It happened vpon a certayn day as they were labouring in the Councell for the deliuery of the sayd M. Hierome that the Germaynes and Bohemians his enemies with al force and power resisted against it crying out that he should in no case be dismissed Then start vp one called Doctor Naso which said vnto the Cardinalles we maruaile much of you most reuerend fathers that your reuerences will make intercession for such a wicked hereticke for whose sake we in Boheme with the whole clergy haue suffered much trouble mischiefe and peraduenture your fatherhoodes shall suffer and I greatly feare least that you haue receiued some rewardes eyther of the king of Boheme or of these heretickes When as the Cardinalles were thus rebuked they discharged themselues of mayster Hieromes cause and matter Then his enemies aforesaid obtayned to haue other iudges appointed as the Patriarcke of Constantinople a Germayne doctour forsomuch as they did knowe that the Patriarch was a greeuous enemy vnto M. Hierome because he being before appoynted iudge by the Councell had condemned Iohn Hus vnto death But M. Hierome would not aunswere them in prison requiring to haue open audience because he woulde there finally
nowe come to manifest their innocencie before the whole Church and to require open audience where as the laitie may also be present The request was graunted them and being further demanded in what poynts they did disagree from the church of Rome they propounded 4. Articles First they affirmed that all suche as woulde be saued ought of necessitie to receiue the Communion of the laste supper vnder both kindes of bread and wine The second Article they affirmed a●l ciuil rule and dominion to be forbidden vnto y● Clergy by the law of God The thirde Article that the preaching of the worde of God is free for all men and in all places The fourth Article as touching open crimes and offences which are in no wise to be suffered for the ●●oiding of greater euill These were the onely propositions whyche they propounded before the Councell in the name of the whole realme Then another ambassador affirmed that he had hard of the Bohemians diuers and sundry thinges offensiue to Christian eares amongst the which this was one poynte that they should preach that the inuention of the order of begging Friers was diabolicall Then Procopius rising vppe sayde neither is it vntrue for if neyther Moises neyther before hym the Patriarkes neither after him the Prophets neyther in the new lawe Christe and hys Apostles did institute the order of begging friers who doth dout but that it was an inuention of the deuil and a worke of darkenesse This answere of Procopius was derided of them all And Cardinall Iulianus went about to prooue that not onely the decrees of the Patriarkes and Prophetes and those things which Christ and his Apostles had instituted to be onely of God but also all such decrees as the church shuld ordaine being guided through the holy ghost be the workes of God All be it as he sayde the order of begging Friers might seeme to be taken out of some parte of the gospel The Bohemians chose out 4. diuines which shuld declare their Articles to be taken out of the Scriptures Likewise on the contrary part there was 4. appoynted by the councell This disputation continued 50. dayes where many thinges were alledged on either parte whereof as place shal serue more hereafter by the grace of Christ shal be sayd when we come to the time of that Councel In the meane season while y● Bohemians were thus in long conflicts wyth Sigismund the Emperour and the Pope fighting for their religion vnto whome notwtstanding all the fulnesse of the Popes power was bent against them God of his goodnesse had geuē such noble victories as is aboue expressed and euer did prosper them so lōg as they could agree among thēselues as these things I say were doing in Boheme King Henry the 5. fighting likewise in Fraunce albeit for no like matters of religion fell sicke at Boys and died after he had raigned 9. yeres 5. moneths 3. wekes and odde daies from his coronation This king in his life and in all hys doings was so deuout seruiceable to the Pope and his chapleins that he was called of many the Prince of priests who left behind him a sonne being yet an infant 9. monthes and 15. dayes of age whom he had by Quene Katherine daughter to the French king married to him about 2. or 3. yeares before The name of which Prince succeeding after his father was Henry 6. lefte vnder the gouernement and protection of his vncle named Humfrey Duke of Gloucester ¶ The names of the Archbishops of Canterbury in this fifte Booke conteined 54 Simon Islepe 17 56 Simon Langham 2 57 William Witlesey 5 58 Simon Sudbery 6 59 William Courtney 15 60 Thomas Arundel 18 61 Henry Chichesly 29 THE SIXT PART OR SECTION pertaining to the last 300. yeares A preface to the reader ACcording to the fiue sondry diuersities and alterations of the Churche so haue I deuided hetherto the order of thys presente Church story into fiue principall partes euery part containing 300. yeares So that nowe comming to the laste 300. yeares that is to the last times of the Church counting from the time of Wickleffe For as muche as in the compasse of the sayd last 300 yeres are contained great troubles and perturbations of the Church with the meruailous reformation of the same through the wonderous operation of the almighty all which things cannot be comprehended in one booke I haue therefore disposed the sayd latter 30. yeares into diuers bookes beginning nowe with the sixt booke at the raigne of king Henry the vj. In which booke beside the greeuous and sundry persecutions raised vp by Antichrist to be noted here in is also to be obserued that where as it hath of long time bene receyued and thought of the common people that this religion now generally vsed hath sprong vp and risen but of late euen by the space as many do thinke of 20. or 30. yeares it may now manifestly appeare not onely by the Acts and Monuments heretofore passed but also by the hystories here after following howe this profession of Christes religion hath bene spread abroade in Englande of olde and auncient time not onely from the space of these 200. late yeares from the time of Wyckleffe but hathe continually from time to time sparkled abroade although the flames thereof haue neuer so perfectly burst out as they haue done within these hundred yeares and more As by these hystories here collected gathered out of Registers especially of the Diocesse of Norwich shall manifestly appeare wherein may be seene what men and how many both men and women within the sayde Diocesse of Norwich haue bene which haue defended the same cause of doctrine which now is receiued by vs in the Church Which persones althoughe then they were not so strongly armed in their cause and quarel as of late yeres they haue bene yet were they warriours in Christes churche and fought for their power in the same cause And although they gaue backe through tyrannie yet iudge thou the best good Reader and referre the cause therof to God who reuealeth all things according to his determined will and appoynted time THis yong prince being vnder the age of one yeare after the death of his father succeeded in his reigne and kingdom of England Anno 1422. and in the 8. yeare was crowned at Westminster and the 2. yeare after was crowned also at Paris Henry bishop of Winchester Cardinall being present at them both raigned 38. yeres and then was deposed by Edwarde the 4. as heere after Christ willing shall be declared in his time In the firste yeare of his raigne was burned the constant witnesse bearer and testis of Christes doctrine William Tailour a Priest vnder Henry Chichesley Archbishop of Canterbury Of this William Tailour I read that in the dayes of Thomas Arundell hee was first apprehended and abiured Afterwarde in the daies of Henry Chichesley aboute the yeare of our Lorde 1421. which was
February vppon the which day the 4. orders were appoynted to declare theyr censure vppon the Articles in the chapiter houses of Paules first appeareth Frier Tylle for the Blacke Friers then Frier Winchelsey then Frier Low After Frier Ashwel eche Frier for his order seuerally bringing his heresy as is aboue specified Thus the verdict of these 4. orders being geuen vp to the Archb. and seuerally eche order comming in with hys heresye which was the 20. day of February Hereuppon commeth downe a wryt from the king directed to the lord Maior and Sheriffes of London De heretico comburendo dated the 1. day of March Anno 1. of his raigne The copic whereof remaineth in the recordes of the Tower beginning thus Rex Maiori vicecomitibus Wherupon the sayd William Tailour condemned as a relapse first was disgraded and after to be burned and so was committed to the seculare power who their being had to Smithfield the 1. day of Marche with Christian constancie after long imprisonment there did consummate his Martyrdom 1422. The maner of his disgrading was all one with the disgrading of Iohn Hus before for the Papistes vse but one forme for all men First disgrading them from Priesthode by taking from them the chalice and patine From deaconship by taking from them the gospell booke and tunicle From Subdeaconship by taking from them the Epistle booke and Tunicle From Accoluteship by taking from them the Cruet and Candlesticke From an Exorcisie by taking away the booke of Exorcismes or Graduall From the Sextonship by taking away the churchdoore key and surplis And likewise from Benet in taking away the surplis and first tonsure c. Al which they orderly accomplished vpon this godly Martyr before his burning Iohn Florence a Turner IDon Florence a Turner dwelling in Shelton in the Diocesse of Norwich was attached for that he helde and taught these heresies heere vnder wrytten as they called them cōtrary to the determination of the Church of Rome In primis that the pope and Cardinals haue no power to make or constitute any lawes Item that there is no day to be kept holy but onely the Sonday which God hath halowed Item that men ought to fast no other time but of the Quatuor temporum Item that Images are not to be worshipped neyther that the people ought to set vp any lightes before them in the Churches neither to go on pilgrimage neither to offer for the dead or with women that are purified Item that Curates should not take the tithes of theyr parishioners but that such tithes shuld be deuided amōgst the poore parishioners Item that al such as sweare by their life or power shal be damned except they repent The displing of Iohn Florence Upon wensday being the second day of August in the yeare of our Lorde 1424. the sayde Iohn Florence personally appeared before William Bernam Chauncellour to William byshoppe of Norwich whereas he proceding against him obiected the first article touching the power of the Pope and Cardinals to which Article the sayde Iohn Florence answered in thys manner If the pope liued vprightly as Peter liued he hath power to make lawes otherwise I beleeue hee hathe no power But being afterward threatned by the iudge he acknowledged thathe had erred and submitted himselfe to the correction of the church and was abiured taking an othe that from that time forward he should not hold teach preach or willingly defend any errour or heresie contrary to the determination of the church of Rome neither maintaine helpe or aide any that shal teach or hold any such errors or heresies either priuely or apertly and for his offence in thys behalfe done hee was enioyned thys penance following Three Sondaies in a solemne procession in the cathedral Church of Norwich he should be displed before al the people The like also shuld be don about his parish church of Shelton three other seuerall Sondaies hee being bare headed bare footed bare n●cked after the maner of a publicke penitentiarie his body being couered wyth a canues shirt and canues breches carying in his hande a taper of a pounde waight and that done he was dismissed Richard Belward of Erisam in the Dioces of Norwich RIchard Belward of Erisam in the Diocesse of Norwiche was accused for holding and teaching these errours and opinions heere vnder wrytten contrary to the determination of the church of Rome In primis that Ecclesiasticall ministers and Ordinaries haue no power to excommunicate neither can excommunicate And all be it that a Bishop doe excommunicate any man God doth absolue him Item that he held the erronious opinions and conclusions that Syr Iohn Oldcastle helde when he was in prison affirmed that Syr Iohn Oldcastle was a true Catholicke man and falsly condemned and put to death without any reasonable cause Item that such as go on pilgrimage offering to images made of woode and stone are excommunicate because they ought to offer to the quicke and not to the dead and that the Ecclesiasticall Ministers that is to say the curates do sell God vppon Easter day when as they receiue offerings of such as should communicate before they do minister the Sacrament vnto them Item that he counselled diuers women the they should not offer in the Churche for the dead neither wyth women that were purified Item that he blamed diuers of his neighbors that refused his doctrine saying vnto thē truly ye are sooles that deny to learne the doctrine of my sect for your neighbours which are of my sect are able to confound and vauquish al other that are of your sect Item that the Saintes whych are in heauen ought in no case to be prayed vnto but onely God Item that the sayd Richard keepeth schooles of lolardy in the English tong in the towne of Dychingham and a certaine Parchment maker bryngeth hym all the bookes containing that doctrine from London The 5. day of July 1424. the sayde Richarde Belward was brought before Iohn Byshop of Norwich sitting in place of iudgement wheras the foresaid Articles were obiected against the sayde Richarde whych he there denyed whereupō the bishop appoynted him an other day to purge himselfe the monday next after the feast of S. Marget vpon which day being the 24. of Iuly in the yeare aforesayd he appeared againe before the Bishop and brought wyth him 9. of his neighbors to purge hym vpon those articles and there did solemnely purge himselfe And afterwarde for somuch as the said Bishop suspected the sayd Richarde Belward greatly of lolardie hee commaunded him there presently to sweare vpon the Euangelistes that from that day forwarde he should not wittingly preach teach or defend any error or heresy contrary to the churche of Rome neither aide assist fauour or maintaine priuely or apertly any maner of person or persons that should hold or maintaine the sayde errours or heresies In the presence of M. William Bernam Iohn Wadden
in tymes past by ignoraunce had all vnder hys possession yet neyther must he thinke that violence will alwayes continue neyther must he hope for that now which he had then for so much as in those former dayes bookes then were scarse also of such excessiue price that few coulde attayne to the buying fewer to the reading studying therof which bookes now by the meanes of this arte are made easie vnto al men Ye heard before pag. 665 how Nicholas Belward bought a new testament in those dayes for foure markes and 40. pence where as now the same price will serue well 40. persons with so many bookes Moreouer in the pag. 411. col 1. it was noted and declared by the testimony of Armachanus how for defect of bookes and good authors both vniuersities were decaied and good wits kept in ignoraunce while begging Fryers scaping all the wealth from other priestes heaped vp all bookes that coulde be gotten into theyr owne Libraryes where eyther they dyd not diligently applye them or els did not rightly use them or at least kept them from such as more fruitfully would haue perused them In this then so great raritie and also dearth of good books when neither they which could haue books would well vse them nor they y● woulde could haue them to vse what maruell if the greedines of a few prelates did abuse the blindnes of those daies to the aduauncement of themselues Wherefore almighty God of hys mercifull prouidence seeing both what lacked in the church and how also to remedy the same for that aduauncement of his glory gaue the vnderstanding of this excellent arte or science of printing whereby three singular cōmodities at one time came to the world First the price of all bookes diminished Secondly toe speedy helpe of reading more furthered And thirdly the plenty of all good authours enlarged according as Aprutinus doth truely report Imprimit ille die quantum non scribitur anno 1. The presse in one day will do in printing That none in one yeare can do in writing By reason whereof as printing of bookes ministred matter of readyng so readyng brought learning learning shewedlight by y● brightnes wherof blind ignorance was suppressed errour detected finally Gods glory with trueth of hys worde aduaunced This facultie of Printing was after the inuention of Gunnes the space of 130. yeares which inuention was also found in Germany an 1380. And thus much for the worthy commendation of printing ¶ The lamentable losing of Constantinople ANno 1453. Constantinus Paloelogus beyng Emperour of Constatinople the 29. day of the month of May the great Cittye of Constantinople was taken by the Turke Mahometes after the siege of 54. dayes which siege began in the beginning of Aprill Within the city beside the Citizens were but onely 6000. rescuers of the Greekes And 3000. of the Uenetians Gennues Against these Mahometes brought an army of 400. thousand collected out of the countryes and places adioyning nere about as out of Grecia Illirico Wallachia Dardanis Triballis Bulganis out of Bithynia Galatia Lydia Cecilia and suche other which places had the name yet of Christians Thus one neighbour for lucre sake helped to destroy all other The Cittie was compassed of the Turkes both by the sea land Mahometes the Turke deuided his armye in 3. sondry partes which in 3. partes of the citty so bette the walles and brake them downe that they attempted by the breaches therof to enter the cittye But the valiauntnes of the Christians there in wanne much cōmendation whose Duke was called Iohn Iustinianus of Genua But for so much as the assaultes were great and the number of the Christian souldiours dayly decreased fighting both at the walles and at the Hauen agaynst such a multitude of the Turkes they were not able long to hold out Beside the armyes which lay battering at the walles the Turke had vpon the sea his nauy of 200. and 50. sayle lying vpon the hauen of the City reaching from the one side of the hauens mouth vnto the other as if a bridge should be made frō the one banke to the other Which hauen by the cittizens was barred with yron chaines whereby the Turks were kept out a certayne space Agaynst whiche nauy 7. ships there were of Genua within the hauen and 3. of Creta and certayne of Chio which stoode agaynst them Also the souldiours issuing out of the Cittie as occasion would serue did manfully gaynstand them and with wild fire set their ships on fire that a certayn space they could serue to no vse At length the cheynes being brast a way made the Turkes nauy entred the hauen and assaulted the Cittie whereby the Turke began to conceiue great hope and was in forwardnes to obtain the Citie The assault and skirmish thē waxing more hoate Mahometes the tyraunt stode by vppon an hill with hys warriours about him crying houling out vnto them to skale the walles and enter the towne otherwise if any reculed he threatned to kill them and so he did Wherefore a great number of his souldiours in theyr repulse and retire were slaine by the turkes men being sēt by his commandement to slay them and so they were iustly serued and well payd theyr hyer Although this was some comfort to the Christians to see and behold out of the Cittie the Turkes retinue so consumed yet that hope lasted not long Shortly after by rage of warre it happened Iustinian the Duke aboue named to be hurt who notwithstanding that he was earnestly desired by Paloelogus the Emperour not to leaue his Tower which he had to keepe seeing hys wound was not deadly daungerous yet could he not be intreated to tary but lefte his standing and his fort disfurnished setting none in his place to award the same And so this donghty Duke hurte more with hys false hart then with force of weapon gaue ouer and fled to Chius where shortly after for sorrow rather then for sorenes of wound he died Many of his souldiours seeing their captayne flee followed after leauing their fort vtterly destitute without defence The Turkes vnderstanding y● vantage soone brast into the cittie The Emperour Paloelogus seeing no other way but to flee making toward the gate eyther was slayne or els troden down with the multitude In the which gate 800. dead mēs bodies were found and taken vp The Cittie of Constantinople thus being gotte the Turkes sacking and raunging about the streetes houses and corners did put to the sword most vnmercifully whō soeuer they found both aged and young matrones virgins children and infants sparing none the noble matrones and virgins were horriblye rauished the goods of the cittie the treasurers in houses the ornaments in churches were all sackt and spoyled the pictures of Christ approbriously handled in hatred of Christ. The spoyle and hauocke of the citie lasted three dayes together while the barbarous souldiours murdered and rifeled what them
the Bishops handling and of his Articles in his history maketh no memoriall Belike it made but little for the honestye of his great maister the Pope From persecution burning in England now out of the way to digresse a little to speake of forraine matters of the church of Rome you remēber before in the latter end of the Councell of Basill howe Eugenius was deposed Of whose conditiōs and martiall affayres how he made war agaynst Sfortia a famous Captaine of Italy and what other warres he raised beside not onely in Italy but also in Germany agaynst the City and Councell of Basill I shal not need to make any long rehearsall After his depositiō ye heard also how Foelix duke of Sauoy was elected pope Wherupō another great schisme folowed in the church during all the life of Eugenius After his death his next successor was pope Nicholas the fift who as you before haue heard brought so to passe with the Emperour Fredericke the third that Foelix was contented to renounce and resigne his papacy to Nicolas and was therfore of him afterward receiued to the rowme of a Cardinall for his submission Friderick for his working was confirmed at Rome to be full Emperor there crowned an 1451. For Emperors before they be cōfirmed crowned by the pope are no Emperors but onely called kinges of Romaynes This Pope Nicholas here mentioned for to get gather great sūmes of mony appoynted a Iubile in the yeare of our Lorde 1450. at whiche time there resorted a greater number of people vnto Rome thē hath at any time before bene seene At which time we reade in the story of Platina to haue happened that I thought here not vnworthy to be noted for the example of the thing As there was a great concourse of people resorting vp to the mount Uaticane to behold the Image of our Sauior which there they had to shew to Pilgrimes the people being thicke going to fro betwene the mount the City by chaunce a certayn Mule of the Cardinals of saynt Marke came by the way by reason whereof the people not being able to auoyde the way one or two falling vpon the Mule there was such a prease and throng vpon that occasion on the bridge that to the nūder of two hundred bodyes of men and three horses were there strangled and on each side of the bridge many besides fell ouer into the water and were drowned By meanes of which occasiō the Pope afterward caused the smal houses to be plucked downe to make the way broder And this is the fruite that commeth by Idolatrye Ex Platin. In the time of this Pope one Mat. Palmerius wrote a booke De Angelis in defending whereof he was condemned by the Pope and burned at Corna an 1448 Ex Tritemio After him succeeded Calixtus the thyrd who amongest diuers other things ordeined both at noone and at euening the bell to tole the Aues as it was vsed in the popish time to helpe the souldiours that fought agaynst the Turkes for which cause also he ordeined the feast of the transfiguration of the Lord solemnising it with like pardons and indulges as was Corpus Christi day Also this Pope proceding contrary to the Councels of Constance and Basill decreed that no man should appeale from the Pope to any Councell By whome also Sayncte Edmunde of Caunterbury with diuers other were made Sayntes Next after this Calixtus succeeded Pius secundus otherwise called Aeneas Syluius who wrote the two bookes of Commentaries vpon the Councell of Basill before mētioned This Aeneas at the time of the writing of those hys bookes seemed to be a man of an indifferent and tollerable iudgement and doctrine from the which he afterward being Pope seemed to decline and swarue seeking by all meanes possible how to deface abolish the bookes which heretofore he had written ¶ Sentences attributed vnto this Pius THe diuine nature of God may rather be comprehended by fayth then by disputation Christian fayth is to be considered not by what reason it is proued but from whom it proceedeth Neyther can a couetous man be satisfied with money nor a learned man with knowledge Learning ought to be to poore men in stead of siluer to noble men in stead of golde and to Princes in stead of precious stones An artificiall oratiō moueth fooles but not wise men Suters in the Lawe bee as Byrdes the Courte is the bayte the Iudges be the nettes and the Lawyers be the Foulers Men are to bee geuen to dignityes and not dignityes to men The office of a Byshoppe is heauy but it is blessed to him that doth wel beare it A Bishop without learning may be likened to an Asse An euill Phisition destroyth bodies but an vnlearned Priest destroyeth soules Mariage was taken from Priestes not without great reason but with muche greater reason it ought to be restored agayne The like sentence to this he vttereth in his second book of the Councell of Basil before specified saying peraduenture it were not the worst that the most part of priestes had theyr wiues for many shoulde be saued in Priestly mariage whiche nowe in vnmaryed Priesthoode are damned The same Pius also as Celius reporteth dissolued certayne orders of Nunnes of the order of S. Briget and S. Clare bidding them to depart out that they should burne no more nor couer a Harlotte vnder the vesture of Religion This Pius if he had brought so much piety and godlinesse as he brought learning vnto his Popedome had excelled many Popes that went before him It shall not be impertinent here to touch what the said Eneas called Pius the Pope writeth touchinge the peace of the church vnto Gaspee Schlick the Emperors Chaūcellor in his 54. Epistle All men do abhorre and detest schisme The way to remedye this euill Charles the French king hath shewed vs both safe and briefe which is that princes or their Oratours should conuent c assemble together in some cōmon place where they may cōclude vpon matters amongest themselues To bring this to passe it were needfull writinges to be sent agayne to all Kynges and Princes to send theyr Oratours to Strawes borow or to Constance with theyr full authority there to entreate of matters appertayning to the peace of the Church Neyther woulde it require so great expenses Forasmuch as we see the yeare before 300. gildernes to be sufficient Constantine the Emperour bestowed not muche more in the congregation of the Councell of Nice And this way could not be stopped neyther could the Pope or the Councell withstād it or make excuse as though this might not easily be done without them For why the secular princes may conuent and assemble together will they nill they and yet notwithstanding vnity may there be concluded For he should be an vndoubted Pope whom all Princes would obey Neyther do I see any
which hee aunswered agayne what nede I say that I beleeue that thing I know There the Inquisitor something stirred wyth the matter as hote as a toste as they say cried out with a loude voice maister Ioannes maister Ioannes maister Ioannes say Credo say Credo Then he answered Credo After thys being demaunded whether he had wrytten any treatise concerning the binding of humaine lawes to one Nicolas of Boheme and whether he had written any treatise of the Ecclesiasticall power of indulgences pardons and of fasting and other treatises he beleued that he had so written and had conferred with diuers learned men Also that he had sent to the Bishops of Wormes a certaine treatise of fasting Many other interrogatories were ministred vnto him whereof some were vaine some false Such as were more principal here we will briefly touch leauing out superfluiti●s Being demaunded whether hee was a fautour of the Bohemians he sayde he was not Also being demaunded concerning the Sacrament of the holy body and bloude of our Lorde whether he thought Christe there to be contained really or only diuinely and whether he dyd beleeue in the sayde Sacrament the substaunce of breade there to remaine or onely the fourme thereof to thys he aunswered not denying but the body of Christe was there really contained and also wyth the body of Christe the substaunce of bread to remaine After this he was demaunded his opinion concerning religious men as Monkes Nunnes or begwines whether he thought them to be bound to the vow of chastitie or to the keping of any other vow and whether he said to the Friers Minorites any such worde in effecte I can not saue you in this your state and order Thys he confessed that he had sayde howe that not your religion saueth you but the grace of God c. not denying but they might be saued Item being required whether he beleued or had wrytten that there is no mortall sinne but whyche is exprest to be mortal in the canon of the holy Bible to this he answered that he did so beleue as he hath written til he was better informed Likewise being required what he thought of the vicar of Christ in earth he aunswered that he beleeued that Christe left no vicare in earth For the confirmation whereof he alledged and sayde that Christ ascending vp to heauen said Ecce ego vobiscum sum c. Behold I am with you c. In the which wordes he plainly declared that hee would substitute vnder him no vicare in earth and sayde moreouer if a vicare signified any man which in the absence of the principal hath to do the works of the principall then Christ hath no vicar here in earth In like maner concerning indulgences and pardons such as the church doth vse to geue they demanded of him whether they had any efficacy what he thought thereof who answered againe that he had written a certaine treatise of that matter what hee had wrytten in that treatise he would persist therin which was thus that he beleeued that the treasure boxe of the merits of Saints could not be distributed of the Pope to others because that treasure is not left here in earth For so it is wryttē in the Apocalips Opera enim illo●um sequuntur illos c. that is their workes follow them Item that theyr merites could not be applied to other men for the satisfaction of theyr paine due vnto them and therefore that the Pope and other Prelates cannot distribute that treasure to men It was obiected to him moreouer that in the sayde his treatise he called pardons indulgences Pias fraudes fidelium that is holy fraudes and deceits of the faithful Also being demaunded what he thought of the halowing and blessings of altars chalices vestiments wax cande●s palmes herbes holy water and other diuine things c. Hee aunswered that they had no spirituall vertue and power in them to driue away deuils and that holye water hath no more efficacie then other water not hallowed as concerning remission of veniall sinnes and driuing away deuels and other effectes which the schoole doctours do attribute to it Item for degrees of mariage forbidden in the Scryptures he beleueth that all Christian men vnder deadly sin are bound vnto the same Item that he beleeueth that God may geue grace to a man hauing the vse of reason without all motion of Free wil. Also he thinketh that S. Paule in his conuersion dyd nothing of his owne free wil for his conuersion He beleeueth moreouer that God may geue such grace to a manne hauing the vse of reason not doing that which in hym is Item he affirmed that nothing is to be beleued which is not conteined in the Canon of the Bible Also that the elect are saued onely by the grace of God Besides al these moreouer he was charged with the old opinion of the Grecians which they dyd holde contrary to the Romaine church vnto the time of the councell of Ferraria aboue mentioned concerning the proceedyng of the holy Ghost The Wednesday next following 3 Doctours the suffragane Herwicus Iacobus Sprenger were sent vnto him with perswasions to exhort him and when he would not stand to their Canons wherby they went about to refute his doctrine he was then demanded of Herwicus why he would beleue rather the 4. Euangelists then the Gospel o● Nicodemns To whō he answerd because he wold Being asked againe why he beleued the 4. Euangelists he said because he so receiued of his parents Then being demaunded why he would not beleue the Doctours because said he their doctrine is not canonical scripture Againe it was to him obiected why he would be credited himself when he preached seing he would not beleue the holy doctors To whome hee answered in this wise saying that he did preach as his duety was but whether they gaue credit to his words he did not care Thys examination being ended after these Articles were condemned by the Inquisitour his assistance then said he after this maner As you do with me if Christ himselfe were here he might be condemned as an heretike After this they sent diuers to him to haue communication with him and to perswade him sending also to him with his Articles a forme of asking pardone at length within 3. or 4. daies after hee was content to condescend vnto them and to submit himselfe to their holy mother Churche and the information of the Doctors In the boke of Orthuinus Gratius and in Paralypomena adioyned to Abbas Vrspergensis we reade these woordes wrytten of this Ioannes de Wesalia Dempto solo articulo de processione spiritus sancti in alijs videtur non ita graui censura c. That is except onely the Article of the proceeding of the holy Ghost in other Articles it semeth that he was not to be chastened with so sharpe censure if respit and space had ben geuen
him if good councellours had bene aboute him if all they which did accuse and molest him had not bene de via realium as Thomistes that is of the sect of Thomas which Thomists were set at that time against the other sect of the seculars which were called Nominales and therfore they so spited this Doctour because he did not hold with their Thomas against whome otherwise had it not ben for that cause they would neuer haue ben so fierce and malitious in proceding against him I take God to witnesse which knoweth all things that this processe which was made against him for his reuoking burning of his bookes did greatly displease M. Engeline of Brunswick a great diuine and also M. Iohn Reisersberge being both learned and famous men but namely M. Engeline thought that too much malice and rashnesse was shewed in handling of that same man and did not feare to say that many of his articles and the greater part thereof might be holden well inough and greatly blamed the mad and phantasticall dissention of the Thomists seeking by all maner of wayes how to get the triumph ouer the seculare deuines c. Haec ille Although thys aged and feble old man by weakenesse was constrained to geue ouer vnto the Romish clergy by outward profession of his mouth yet notwithstāding his opinions and doctrine declared his inward heart of what iudgement he was if feare of death present had not otherwise enforsed him to say then hee did thinke Agayne although he had reuoked after their minds yet we reade no such fourme of recantation to be prescribed to hym to read opēly vnto the people as the vse is here in England The story of this man is more fully to be found in the bokes of Orth. Gratius c. As touching the raigne of this Fredericke Emperor seeing we haue comprehēded hetherto sufficiently the most principal matters in his time incurrent we wil now passe forwarde the Lorde guiding vs to Maximilian after I haue first geuen a briefe memorandum of 3. valiant Princes and Captaines florishing in the same time of thys Fredericke in Germaine Of the whych was one Albert Duke of Saxonie who for his renoumed and famous acts was called by publique voyce Dextera manus Imperij The ryght hande of the Empire The other was Albert Marques of Brandenburge to whome also the name was attribute named of Pope Pius to be Achilles Germanicus The third was Fredericke Earle Palatine surnamed Victoriosus who manfully defended the fredome and maiesty of the Empire from the fraudulent oppressions of the popes tirāny In the yeare of our Lorde 1484. in this Emperours time dyed Pope Sixtus the 4. a little before touched a monster rather of nature then a prelate of the Church Of him writeth Platina that vniustly he vexed al Italy with warre and dissension Agrippa writing of hym sayeth that among all the bawdes of these other latter dayes whych were builders of brothelhouses this Pope Sixtus 4. surmounted all other who at Rome erected a stewes of double abhomination not onely of wemen but also c. wherupon no small gaine redounded to his coffers For euery suche common harlot in Rome paide to him a Iuly peece the sumnie wherof grew in the yere some while to 20000. at length to xl M. duckets Wherunto accordeth right wel the Epitaphe of Iohn Sapidus which in the ende heere of we will annexe Iohn Carion also speaking of this Bishop witnesseth him to be a man rather borne to warre then to Religion For hee warred against Uitellius Tiphernates agaynst the Florentines the Uenecians whome he excommunicated and did not absolue till hee died also against Columnenses against Ferdinandus king of Apulia and Duke of Calabria also against other nations and Princes moe Ex Ioan. Laziardo Of the sayde Pope it is recorded that he was a speciall patron and tutor to al begging Friers graunting them to haue and enioy reuenues in this worlde in the world to come euerlasting life Among the which Friers there was one named Alanus de rupe a Blacke Frier which made the Rosary of our Ladies Psalter so they terme it and erected a certaine new fraternitie vpon the same called Fraternitas Coronariorum pertaining to the order of the Dominickes of the which order Iacobus Sprenger one of the condemners of Ioannes de Wesalia aboue mentioned was a great aduācer and especially this Pope Sixtus 4. who gaue to the sayd fraternities large graces and priuilegies Concerning the institution of this Rosary there was a booke set forth about the yere of our Lord 1480. in the beginning wherof is declared that the blessed virgin entred into the celle of this Alanus and was so familiar with him that not onely she did espouse him to her husband but also kissed him with her heauenly mouth and also for more familiaritie opened to hym her pappes and powred great plentie of her owne milke into his mouth For the confirmation whereof the sayde Alanus this holy babe sayth the storie did sweare deepely curssing himselfe if it were not thus as he had made relation This fabulous figment when I read in the centuries of Iohn Bale I began with my selfe to mistrust the credite therof and had thought not to trouble the reader with suche incredible forgeries But as the prouidence of God worketh in all things so also it appeared in thys that the very same booke came to my hands at the wryting hereof wherein this selfe same narration is conteined wherein I found not onely this to be true which in Ihon Bale is expressed but also found in like manner an other wonder as prodigious as this where in an other place not farre off is storied in the same booke howe that about the time of S. Dominicke there was a certaine matrone in Spaine named Lucia which being taken captiue by the Saracenes hauing her husband killed was caried great with childe into the Turkish land When the time of her labour came shee being left desolate among beastes and hogs and remembring thys twise holy Rosary first instituted sayth the booke by S. Dominicke and afterwarde renued by Alanus eftsoones the holy virgin was ready and stoode by her receiued the childe at her trauaile supplying all the partes of a diligent midwife and moreouer causing a Priest sodenly to appeare gaue the childe to be Christened calling it after her owne name Marianus and so was shee wife to Alanus midwife to Lucia and Godmother to Marianus Which story if it be true then is the Popes Canon by thys example to be controlled whiche permitteth midwiues in time of necessity to baptise seeing the blessed Uirgine playing the parte her selfe of a midwife durst not Baptise thys childe without a priest It followeth more in the storye that by the helpe of the sayd blessed virgin this Lucia our Ladies gossip after her Purification was restored with her childe safe to her country