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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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openlye night and daye and spoyle those which doe no harme And it followeth after which if it be done by your commaundement be it so well done For a good Prince wyll neuer commaund but good things And so we wil be contented to sustaine the honor of his death This onely wee most humblye beseech your Maiestie that callyng before you and examining the authors of this tumult and cōtention then your grace would iustly iudge whether we are worthy of cruell death or quiet life And then if it be not your pleasure and that it proceedeth not by your occasion which indeede against your barbarous enimies were to badde the more a great deale we are petitioners to your hyghnes that hereafter you wyll vouchsafe to heare vs thus so vexed and oppressed with these kinde of vylanous robberies And verily our Philosophy doctryne did first among the barbarous take place which doctrine fyrst in the daies of Augustus your predecessor when it did raygne and florish thereby your Empire became most famous fortunate and from that time more and more the state of the Romane Empire increased in honor wherof you most happely were made successour and so shall your sonne to Honor therefore this Philosophie which with your Empire sprang vp and came in with Augustus whiche your progenitors aboue al other honored most esteemed And verily this is no small argumēt of a good beginning that since our doctrine flourished in the Empire no misfortune or losse happened frō Augustus time but contrary alwaies victory good and honorable yeres as euer any mā would wishe Onely among all and of all Nero and Domitian beyng kindled by diuers naughty and spitfull persons cauillingly obiected against our doctrine of whom this Sicophanticall slaundring of vs by naughty custome first came and sprang vp But your godly fathers espying the ignoraunce of these oftentimes by their writing corrected their temerous attemptes in that behalfe Among whom your granfather Adrian with many other is read of to haue wrytten of Fundayne the Proconsul and Lieutenāt of Asia And your father your own father I say with whom you ruled in al things wrote to the Cities vnder his signet as the Laersens Thessalonicenses Athenienses and Grecians rashly to innouate or alter nothing of your highnes therfore who in this case is of that sect as your predecessours were yea of a more benigne Philosophicall minde we are in good hope to obtaine our peticion and request Thus much out of the Apologie of Melito who writing to Onesimus geueth to vs this benefite to knowe the true Catalogue the names of al the autentike bookes of the olde Testament receaued in the auncient time of the prymitiue Church Concerning the number names wherof the said Melito in his letter to Onesimus declareth howe that he returning into the parts where these things were done and preached there hee diligently inquired out the bookes aprooued of the old Testament the names wherof in order he subscribeth sendeth vnto him as followeth The fiue bookes of Moses Genesis Exodus Leuiticus Numeri Deuteronomi Iesus Naue The Iudges Ruth Foure bookes of Kings Two bookes Paralipomenon The Psalmes Prouerbes of Salomon The booke of Wisedome The Preacher The song of songs Iob. The Prophets Esay Hieromie twelue Prophetes in one booke Daniel Ezechiel Esdras And thus much of thys matter which I thought here to record for that it is not vnprofitable for these latter times to vnderstande what in the first times was receaued and admitted as autentike and what otherwise But from this little digression to returne to our matter omitted that is to the Apologies of Apolinarius and Melito in the story so it followeth that whether it was by the occasiō of these two Apologies or whether it was through the writing of Athenagoras a Philosopher and a Legate of the Christians it is vncertaine but this is certaine that the persecution the same time was staid Some do thinke which most probably seeme to touch the truthe that the cause of staying this persecution did rise vpon a wonderfull myracle of God shewed in the Emperours campe by the Christians the story wherof is this At what time the two brethren Marcus Antonius and Marcus Aurelius Commodus Emperours ioyning together warred against the Quades Vandales Sarmates and Germaines in the expeditiō against them their army by reason of the imminent assault of their enimies was cooped shut in within the straights and hoate dry places where their souldiours besides other difficulties of battaile being destitute of water fyue dayes were like to haue perished which dread not a little discomfited them did abate their courage Wherin this their so great distresse and ieopardy sodainely wythdrew from the army a legian of the christian souldiours for their succour who falling prostrate vpon the earth by ardent praier by by obtained of God double reliefe by meanes of whom God gaue certaine pleasaunt showers from the element whereby as their souldiors quenched their thirst so were a great number of their enimies discomfited put to flight by the continual lightnings which shooted out of the aire This miracle so pleased won the Emperour that euer after he waxed gentler gentler to the Christians dyrected his letters to diuers of his rulers as Tertullian in his Apologie witnesseth commaūding thē therin to giue thankes to the Christians no lesse for his victory then for the preseruation of him and all his men The copy of which letter hereafter ensueth ¶ Marcus Aurelius Antonius Emperour to the Senate and people of Rome I Giue you hereby to vnderstande what I intend to doe as also what successe I haue had in my warres in Germany and with how much difficultie I haue viteled my campe being compassed about with 74. fierce Dragons whome my Scottes descryed to be within ix miles of vs and Pompeianus our Liefetenaunt hath viewed as he signified vnto vs by hys letters Wherefore I thought no lesse but to be ouerunne and all my bandes of so great multitude as well my vaward mayne warde as reere warde with all my souldiours of Ephrata In whose host there were numbred of fighting men ix hundreth seuenty and fiue thousand But when I saw my selfe not able to encounter with the enemy I craued ayde of our countrey Gods at whose hands I finding no comfort and being driuen of the enemye vnto an exegent I caused to be sent for those men which we call Christians who being mustred were found a good indifferent number with whom I was in farther rage then I had good cause as afterwardes I had experience by their merueilous power who forthwith did their indeuour but without either weapon munition armour or trumpets as men abhorring such preparation and furniture but onely satisfied in trust of their God whome they cary about with them in their consciences It is therefore to be credited although we call them wicked men that they worship God in
as did Melito Quadratus and Aristides before mentioned About the same time also wrote Heraclitus who first began to write annotations enarrations vpon the newe Testament and Epistles of the Apostles Also Theophilus Byshop of Caesaria Dionysius Byshoppe of Corinthe a man famously learned which wrote diuers Epistles to diuers Churches among other writeth exhorting Penitus a certaine Byshop Ne graue seruandae castitatis onus necessario fratribus imponat sed multorum sese imbecilitati attemperet that is that he would lay no yoke of chastitie of any necessity vpon his brethren but that he would consider the infirmitie of other and beare with it Euseb. Lib. 4. cap. 23. Moreouer the sayd Dionisius in his Epistles writing of Dionisius Agiopagites declareth of him how that he was first cōuerted to the Christian faith by S. Paule according as in the actes is recorded and afterwarde was made the first Byshop of Athens but maketh there no mention of his booke de Hierarchia Whereby it maye easely appeare what is to be iudged of that booke Furthermore by the Epistles of the saide Dionisius Corint this wee haue to vnderstande to be the vse at that time in Churches to reade the letters and Epistles such as were sent by learned Bishops and teachers vnto the Congregations as may appeare by these words of Dionisius who writing to the church of the Romanes and to Soter saith This day we celebrate the holy Dominical day In which we haue read your Epistle which alwaies we wil read for our exhortation like as we doe reade also the Epistle of Clement sent to vs before c. Euseb. ibid. where also mention is made of keepyng the Sonday holy Whereof wee finde no mention made in auntient authors before his time except onely in Iustinus Martyr who in his description declareth two tymes most especially vsed for Christen men to congregate together first when any conuert was to be Baptised The second was vpon the Sonday which was wont for ij causes then to be halowed First because saith he vpon that day God made the worde Secondlye because that Christ vpon that day first shewed himselfe after his resurrection to his Disciples c. Ouer and beside these aboue named about the daies of Commodus wrote also Clemens Alexandrinus a man of notable and singular learning whose bookes although for a great part be lost yet certaine of them yet remaine wherin is declared among other thinges the order and number of the bookes and Gospels of the new testament c. The same time moreouer liued Pantenus which was the first in Alexandria that professed in open schoole to reade of whom is thought first to proceede the order and maner among the Christians to read and professe in Uniuersities This Pantenus for his excellency of learning was sent by Demetrius Bishop of Alexandria to preach to the Indeans where he founde the Gospell of S. Mathewe written in Hebrew left there by S. Bartelinewe which booke afterward he brought with him from thence to the Library of Alexandria Duryng all the raigne of Commodus God graunted rest tranquility although not without some bloudshed of certaine holy Martyrs as is aboue declared vnto his Church In the which time of tranquillitie the Christians hauing now some laisure from the foraine enemy begā to haue a little contention among themselues about the ceremonie of Easter which contention albeit of long time before had bene stirring in the church as is before mentioned of Polycarpus and Anicetus yet the variance and difference of that ceremonie brought no breach of Christian concorde and societie among them Neither as yet did the matter exceede so farre but that the band of loue and communion of brotherly life continued although they differed in the ceremonie of the day For they of the West Church pretending the tradition of Paule and Peter but in deede beyng the traditiō of Hermes and of Pius kept one day which was vpon the Sonday after the 14. day of the first moneth The Church of Asia following the ordinance of Iohn the Apostle obserued an other as more shal be declared the Lord willing when we come to the tyme of Victor Bishop of Rome In the meane tyme as concerning the fourth persecution let this hetherto suffise The fift Persecution AFter the death of Commodus raigned Pertinax but few monthes after whom succeeded Seuerus Under whom was raised the fift persecution against the christian saints who raigning the terme of 18. yeares the first x. yeares of the same was very fauourable and curteous to the Christians Afterward through sinister suggestions and malicio●s accusations of the malignāt was so incensed against them that by Proclamations he commaunded no Christians any more to be suffered Thus the rage of the Emperour beyng inflamed agaynst them great persecution was stirred vpon euery side wherby an infinite nūber of Martyrs were slayne as Eusebius in his sixt booke recordeth which was about the yeare of our Lord 205. The crimes and false accusations obiected against the Christians are partly touched before pag. 37. as sedition and rebellion against the Emperour sacriledge murthering of Infants incestuous polution eating rawe flesh libidinous cōmixture whereof certaine in deede called then Gnostici were infamed Item it was obiected against them for worshipping the head of an Asse which whereof it should rise I finde no certain cause except it were perhaps by the Iewes Also they were charged for worshipping the sunne for that peraduenture before the sunne rise they conuented together singing their morning Hymnes vnto the Lord or els because they prayed toward the East but especially for that they would not with them worship their idolatrous gods and were counted as enemies to all men c. The Capitaines and Presidentes of this persecution vnder the Emperour were Hilarianus Vigellius Claudius Hermianus Ruler of Cappadocia Cecilius Capella Vespronius also Demetrius mentioned of Cyprian And Aquila Iudge of Alexandria of whom Euseb. Lib. 6. cap. 5. maketh relation The places where the force of this persecution most raged were Affrica Alexandria Cappadocia and Carthage The number of them that suffered in this persecution by the report of the Ecclesiasticall story was innumerable Of whō the first was Leonides the father of Origene who was beheaded with whō also Origene his sonne beyng of the age thē of xvij yeares should haue suffered such a seruent desire hee had to be Martired for Christ had not hys mother priuily in the night season conueied away his clothes his shirt Wherupō more for shame to be seen then for feare to die he was cōstrained to remaine at home and when he could do nothing els yet he writing to his father a letter with these words Caue tibi ne quid propter nos aliud quam martyrij constanter faciendi propostum cogites that is Take heede to your selfe that you tourne not your thought and purpose for our sake
able to helpe vs. In saying or singing the houres and Mattens of the day the time to be but lost A man ought to cease from his labour no day but onely vpon the Sonday The feastes and festiuals of saintes ought to be reiceted Item such fastes as be coacted and inioyned by the Church haue no merite in them These assertions of the Ualdenses being thus articled out by En●as Siluius I thought to geue them abroad in English as they are in Latine to the intent that as they are the lesse to be doubted being set out of a popes pen so we may the better know both them hereby what they were and also vnderstand how this doctrine now preached and taught in the Church is no new doctrine which here we see both taught and persecuted almost 400 yeares agoe And as I haue spoken hetherto sufficiently concerning theyr doctrine So now we will briefly somewhat touch of the order of theyr life and conuersation as we finde it registred in a certayne olde written booke of Inquisition ¶ Ex Inquisitorio quodam libello MOdus autem Valdensium talis est c. The whole proces commeth to this effect in English The maner of the Ualdenses is this They kneeling vpon their knees leaning to some banke or stay doe continue in their prayers with silence so long as a mā may say 30. or 40. times Pater noster And this they doe euery day with great reuerence being amongest thēselues such as be of their owne religion no straungers with thē both before dinner after likewise before supper and after also what time they go to bed and in the morning when they rise at certain other times also as well in the day as in the night Itē they vse no other prayer but the prayer of the Lord that without any Aue Maria and the Creed which they affirme not to be put in for any prayer by Christ but only by y● church of Rome Albeit they haue and vse y● seuē articles of fayth cōcerning the diuinity and seuen articles concerning the humanity and the x. commaundements and seuen workes of mercy which they haue compiled together in a cōpendious book glorying much in the same therby offer themselues ready to answere any man for theyr fayth Before they go to meate they haue this grace Benedicite Korieeleyson Christe eleyson Kyrieeleyson Pater noster Which being sayd then the elder amongest them beginneth thus in their owne tongue God which blessed the fiue barely loaues and two fishes in the desert before his disciples blesse this table that is set vpon it or shal be set vpon it In the name of the father of the sonne and of the holy Ghost Amen And likewise agayne when they rise from meat the seniour geueth thankes saying the words of the Apocalips Blessing and worship and wisedome thankesgeuing honor vertue and strength to God alone for euer and euer Amen And addeth moreouer God reward them in their bosoms and be beneficiall to all them that be beneficial to vs and blesse vs. And the God which hath geuen vs corporall feeding graunt vs his spirituall life and God be with vs and we alwayes with h●m To which they answere agayn Amē And thus saying grace they hold their hands vpward looking vp to heauē Alter their meat and grace sayd they teach and exhort amongest themselues conferring together vpon their doctrine c. In their doctrine and teaching they were so diligent painefull that Reinerius a writer about their time an extreme enemy agaynst them in a long proces wherin he describeth their doctrine and teaching testifieth that he heard of one which did know the party that a certayne heretick sayth he onely to turne a certaine person away from our faith and to bring him to his in the night and in y● winter time swamme ouer the riuer called Ibis to come to him and to teach him moreouer so perfect they were then in the Scriptures that the sayd Reinerius sayth he did heare and see a man of the coūtry vnlettered which could recite ouer the whole booke of Iob word by word without booke with diuers other which had the whole new testament perfectly by hart And although some of them rather merely then vnskilfully expounded the wordes of 1. Ioan. Sui non receperunt eum Swine did not receiue him yet were they not so ignoraunt and voyd of learning nor yet so few in number but that they did mightely preuayle In somuch that Reinerius hath these wordes Non erat qui eos impedire auderet propter potentiam multitudinem fautorum suorum Inquisitioni examinationi saepe interfui Et computatae sunt 40. Ecclesiae quae haeresi infectae fuerunt●ac in yna parochia Cammach fueruut decem eorum scholae c. That is There was none durst stoppe them for the power and multitude of their fauourers I haue often bene at their inquisition examination And there were numbred 40. churches infected with their heresie insomuch that in one parish of cāmach were x open scholes of them c. Haec ille And the sayde Reinerius when hee hath sayd all he can in deprauing and impugning them yet is driuen to confesse this of them where he doth distinct their sect frō other sectes and hath these wordes Haec verò Leonistarum secta magnam habet speciem pietatis eò quòd coram hominibus iustè viuant benè omnia de Deo credant omnes articulos qui in symbolo continētur Solam Romanam Ecclesiam blasphemāt oderūt That is This sect of Leonistes hath a great shew of holynesse in that both they liue iustly before men and beleue all things well of God and holde all the articles conteined in the Creed Onely they blaspheme y● Romish church and hate it c. Now to touch somewhat their persecutiōs After they were driuen out of Lions they were scattered into diuers sundry places the prouidence of God so disposing that the sound of their doctrine might be heard abroad in the world Some as I sayd went to Bohemia Many did fli● into their prouinces of Fraunce Some into Lombardy other into other places c. But as the crosse commonly foloweth the verity sincere preaching of Gods word so neither could these be suffered to liue in rest There are yet to be seen the consultations of Lawiers Archbishops and byshops of Fraunce as Narbonensis A relatensis Aquēsis and Albanensis deuised amongst themselues and yet remayne in writing for the abolishing extirping of these Ualdenses written aboue 300. yeres agoe wherby it appeareth there was a great number in Fraunce Besides there was a whole councell kept in Theolouse about 355. yeares to fore and all agaynst these Ualdenses The which also were condemned in an other coūcell at Rome before that What great persecutions were raysed vp agaynst thē in Fraunce by these 4. Archbishops before
first written in Greeke by Gregory the 3. and afterward translated out of Greeke into Latine by pope Zachary vide supra pag. 130. Likewise that worthy and Imperiall sermon i●●tu●ed Eusebij pamphili Sermo ad Conuentum Sanctorum hath to thys day wrongfully borne the name of Eusebius Where as in very truth it was made by the good Emperour Constantinus himselfe in his owne heroicall stile in latine and afterward translated out of Latine into Greeke by Eusebius as he himselfe confesseth in hys worke De vita Constant. lib. 4. But as touching this sermon although the name be chaunged so godly and fruitful it is that it ●attereth not much vnder whose name it be read yet worthy to be read vnder the name of none so much as of the Emperor Cōstantine himselfe who was the true author and owner therof Briefly except it be the bookes onely of the new Testament and of the olde what is almost in the popes church but either it is mingled or depraued or altered or corrupted either by some additions interlased or by some diminutiō mangled and gelded or by some glose adulterate or with manifest lies contaminate So that in theyr doctrine standeth little truth in theyr Legendes Portues masse-bookes lesse trueth in their miracles and Reliques least truth of all Neyther yet doe theyr sacramentes remayne cleare and voyd of manifest lyes and corruption And specially here commeth in the mayster bee whiche bringeth in much sweet hony into Popes hiues the maister lye I mean of all lyes where the P. leauing not one cromme of bread nor drop of wine in the reuerent communion vntruly and idolatrously taketh away all substaunce of bread from it turning the whole substaunce of bread into the substaunce of Christes owne body which substaunce of bread if the Pope take from the sacrament then muste he also take the breaking from it for breaking and the body of Christ can in no wise stand litterally together by the scripture Thus then as this is proued by the word of God to be a manifest lye so thinke not much good Reader hereat as though I passed the bondes of modestie in calling it the Archlye or maister lie of all lies Because vppon this one an infinite number of other lyes and erroures in the popes churche as handmaydes doe wayte and depend But forsomuch as I stand here not to charge other mē so muche as to defende my selfe ceasing therefore or rather differing for a time to stir this stinking pudle of these wilfull and intended lyes and vntruthes whiche in the Popes Religion and in papistes bookes be innumerable I will now returne to those vntruthes and impudent lies which M. Cope hath hunted out in my history of Actes Monuments first beginning with those vntruthes which he carpeth in the storye of the foresayde syr Iohn Oldcastle and syr Roger Acton Browne and the rest And first where he layeth to my charge that I cal them Martyrs whiche were traytors and seditious rebels agaynst the king and theyr Country to this I haue aunswered before sufficiently Now here then must the reader needes stay a little at M. Copes request to see my vanitie and impudencye yet more fully and amply repressed in refuting a certain place in my Latine story concerning the kinges statute made at Leiceister whiche place and wordes by him alledged be these pag. 1●7 Quocirca Rex indicto Lecestriae concilio quòd fort●ssis Londini ob Cabhami fautores non erat tutum proposito edicto immanem denunciat poenam his quicunque deinceps hoc doctrinae genus sectarentur vsque●deo in eos seuerus vt non modo haereticos sed perduelliones etiam haberi a● p●o inde gemino eos supplicio suspendio simul incēdio afficiendos statueri● c. E● mox Adeo ille vires rationesque intendebat omnes aduersus Wicklenianos Wicleuiani ad temporis decebantur quicunque Scripturas Dei sua lingua lectirarent Vpon these wordes out of my foresayd Latine booke alledged maister Cope perswadeth himselfe to haue great aduauntage agaynst me to proue me a notorious lyer in three sondry pointes First in that whereas I say that the king did hold his parliament at Leicester adding thys by the way of Parenthesis quod fortassis Londini ob Cobhami fautores non erat tutum c. here he concludeth thereby simpliciter and precisely that the Lord Cobham and syr Roger Acton with his fellowes were traytors c. Whereby a man may soone shape a cauiller by the shadowe of mayster Cope For where as my Dialysis out of the texte speaketh doubtfully and vncertaynely by this word fortassis meaning in deede the king to be in feare of the Gospellers that he durst not hold his Parliament at London but went to Leiceister he argueth precisely therfore that the Lord Cobham sir Roger Acton and his fellowes went about to kil the king Secondly where I affirme that the king in that Parliament made a grieuous law agaynst al such did hold the doctrine of Wickliffe that they should be taken hereafter not for heretiques but also for fellons or rebels or traytors and therefore should sustayne a double punishement both to be hanged and also to be burned c. Here cōmeth in maister Momus with his Cope on his backe and prouing me to be a lyer denyeth playnly that the king made any suche statute vid. pag. 835. line 6. where hys wordes be these Atqui quod haeretici pro perduellionibus deinceps geminatas poenas suspēdij incendij luerent vt nugatur Foxus nullo modo illic traditur c. First here woulde bee asked of maister Cope what hee calleth patriae hostes et proditores if he call these traytours then let vs see whether they that followed the sect of wycliffe were made traytours heretiques by the kings law or not And first let vs heare what sayth Polydore Virgil his owne witnes in this behalfe whose words in his xxii booke pag. 441. be these Quare publice edixit vt si vspiam deinceps reperirentur qui eam sequerentur sectam patriae hostes haberentur quò sine omni lenitate seuerius ac ocyus de illis supplicium sumeretur c. That is wherefore it was by publique statute decreed that whosoeuer were founde hereafter to follow the sect of Wyckliffe should be accounted for traytors whereby without all lenitie they shoulde be punished more seuerely and quickly c. Thus haue you maister Cope the playne testimonie of Polydore with mee And because ye shall further see your selfe more impudent in carping then I am in deprauing of histories you shall vnderstand moreouer and heare what Thomas Walden one of your owne catholique brotherhode who was also himselfe aliue a doer in the same Parliament being the prouincial of the Carmelites saith in this matter writing to Pope Martin whose very wordes in Latine here follow written in
working of some of whome Ioannes Auentinus shall tel vs in his own words shew vs who they be Quibus inquit audiendi quae fecerint pudor est nullus faciendi quae audire erubescunt Illic vbi opus nihil verentur hic vbi nihil opus est ibi verentur c. Who beyng ashamed belike to heare their worthy stratagemes lyke to come to light sought by what meanes they might the stopping of the same And because they could not worke it per brachium seculare by publike authoritie the Lord of heauen long preserue your noble Maiestie they renewed again an old wonted practise of theirs doyng in like sort herein as they did sometymes with the holy Bible in the dayes of your renowmed father of famous memory king Henry the viij who when they neither by manifest reason could gainstand the matter contained in the booke nor yet abide the comming out thereof then sought they by a subtile deuised traine to depraue the translation notes and Prologues thereof bearing the king in hand and all the people that there was in it a thousand lies and I cannot tell how many mo Not that there were such lies in it in very deede but because the comming of that booke should not bewray their lying falshood therefore they thought best to begin first to make exceptions themselues against it playing in their stage like as Phormio did in the old Comedie who beyng in all the fault himselfe began first to quarell with Demipho when Demipho rather had good right to lay Phormio by the heeles With like facing brags these Catholike Phormiones thinke now to dash out all good bookes and amongst others also these Monuments of Martyrs Which godly Martyrs as they could not abide beyng aliue so neither can they now suffer their memories to lyue after their death least the acts of them beyng knowne might bring perhaps their wicked acts and cruell murthers to detestation and therfore spurne they so vehemently against this booke of histories with all kind of contumelies and vprores railing and wondering vpon it much like as I haue heard of a company of thieues who in robbing a certaine true man by the high wayes side when they had found a piece of gold or two about him more then he would be acknown of they cried out of the falshood of the world meruailing and complaining what little truth was to be found in men Euen so these men deale also with me for when they themselues altogether delight in vntruths and haue replenished the whole Church of Christ with fained fables lying miracles false visions miserable errors contained in their Missals and Portuses Breuiars and Summaries and almost no true tale in all their Saintes lyues and Festiuals as now also no great truthes in our Louanian bookes c. Yet notwithstanding as though they were a people of much truth and that the world did not perceiue them they pretend a face and zeale of great veritie And as though there were no histories els in all the world corrupted but onely this history of Actes and Monumentes with tragicall voyces they exclaime and wonder vpon it sparing no cost of Hyperbolicall phrases to make it appeare as full of lies as lines c. much after the like sort of impudencie as Sophisters vse sometymes in their Sophismes to doe and sometimes is vsed also in Rhetorike that when an Argument commeth against them which they cannot well resolue in deed they haue a rule to shift of the matter with stoute wordes and tragicall admiration whereby to dash the Opponent out of countenance bearing the hearers in hand the same to be the weakest slenderest argument that euer was heard not worthy to be answered but vtterly to be hissed out of the Schooles With like sophistication these also fare with me who when they neither can abide to heare their owne doings declared nor yet deny the same which they heare to be true for three or foure escapes in the booke committed and yet some of them in the said Booke amended they neither reading the whole nor rightly vnderstanding that they read inueigh and maligne so peruersly the setting out therof as though neither any word in al that story were true nor any other story false in al the world besides And yet in accusing these my accusers I do not so excuse my self nor defēd my book as though nothing in it were to be sponged or amended Therfore I haue taken these paines reiterated my labours in trauailing out the story again doyng herein as Penelope did with her web vntwisting that she had done before Or as builders do sometimes which build and take down againe either to transpose the fashion or to make the foundation larger So in recognising this history I haue emploied a little more labour partly to enlarge the argument which I tooke in hand partly also to assay whether by any paynes taking I might pacifie the stomacks or satisfie the iudgments of these importune quarellers which neuerthelesse I feare I shall not do when I haue done all I can For well I know that all the heads of this hissing Hidra will neuer be cut of though I were as strong as Hercules And if Apelles the skilfull Painter when he had bestowed all his cunning vpon a piece of worke which no good artificer would or could greatly reprooue yet was not without some controlling Sutor which tooke vpon him Vltra crepidam much more may I looke for the like in these controlling dayes Neuerthelesse committing the successe thereof vnto the Lord I haue aduentured againe vpon this story of the Church and haue spent not onely my paines but also almost my health therein to bring it to this Which now beyng finished like as before I did so againe I exhibite and present the same vnto your Princely Maiestie blessing my Lord my God with all my heart first for this libertie of peace and tyme which through your peaceable gouernement he hath lent vnto vs for the gathering both of this and other like bookes tractations and monuments requisite to the behoofe of his Church which hitherto by iniquitie of tyme could not be contriued in any Kinges raigne since the Conquest before these Alcion dayes of yours Secondly as we are all bound with publicke voyces to magnify our God for this happy preseruation of your royall estate so priuately for mine owne part I also acknowledge my selfe bound to my God and to my Sauiour who so graciously in such weake health hath lent me time both to finish this worke and also to offer the second dedication thereof to your Maiesty desiring the same to accept in worth t●● donation thereof if not for the worthinesse of the thing geuen yet as a testification of the bounden seruice and good will of one which by this he here presenteth declareth what he would if he had better to geue And though the story being written in the popular tongue serueth not so greatly for your own peculiar
are vnprofitable seruants ye haue done but what your bound duety was to doe Luc. 17. Againe here also is to be vnderstand that where such rewardes be ascribed vnto mens deedes it is not for the worthines of the deede it selfe but for the faith of the dooer which faith maketh the worke to bee good in Gods sight for els if an infidell should do the same worke that the christian doth it were nothing but meere sinne before god In that therefore the christian mans worke is accepted be it neuer so small as to giue a cup of cold water the same is onely for his fayth sake that doth it and not for the worke which is done Whereby againe we may learne how faith onely doth iustifie a man and that three maner of wayes First it iustifieth the person in making him accepted and the child of God by regeneration before he begin to doe any good worke Secondly it iustifieth a man from sinne in procuring remission and forgiuenes of the same Thirdly it iusti●ieth the good deedes and workes of man not onely in bringing foorth good fruites but also in making the same workes to be good and acceptable in the sight of God which otherwise were impure and execrable in his sight The office therfore of faith and works is diners and must not be cōfounded Faith first goeth before and regenerateth a man to God iustifieth him in the sight of god both in couering his yll deedes and in making his good deedes acceptable to God clyming vp to heauen there wrastling with God and his iudgement for righteousnes for saluation and for euerlastins life Workes and charitie folow faith and are exercised here vpon the earth glorieth onely before man but not before God in shewing foorth obedience both to God to man Further then this our good works doe not reach nor haue any thing to doe in the iudgement of God touching saluation I speake of our good workes as S. Paule speaketh Rom. 7. as they be ours imperfect For els if our workes could be perfect according to the perfection of the lawe as Christ wrought them in the perfection of his flesh that is if we could perfect them as it is sayd Qui fecerit ea viuet in eis But now seeing the imbecilitie of our flesh cannot atteine thereto it foloweth thereof that all glory of iustifying is taken from workes and transferred onely to faith And thus much concerning the principall contents of S. Paules doctrine Wherein the Church of the auncient Romanes first was grounded planted and so continued in the same or at least did not much alter during the prymityue state of the Church Likewise the same forme of doctrine the latter Romanes also that followed shoulde haue mainteined and not haue fallen away for any mans preaching but hold him accursed yea if he were any Apostle or an Angell from heauen teaching any other doctrine besides that institution which they haue receaued Gal. 1 for so were they warned before by the Apostle S Paule to doe And yet notwithstanding all this forewarning diligent instruction of this blessed Apostle of the Gentiles what a defection of faith is fallen among the Gentiles especially among the Romanes whereof the sayde Apostle also foretold them so long before forepropheciyng That the day of the Lord shall not come except there come a defectiō before and that the man of sinne should be reuealed the proude aduersary of God c. Thei 2 meaning no doubt by this defection a departing and a falling from that faith which the holy ghost had then planted by his ministery among the Gentiles As we see it now come to passe in the Church of Rome Which Church is so gone from the faith that S. Paule taught that if he were now aliue and saw these decrees and decretals of the Bishop of Rome these heapes of ceremonies traditions these masse bokes these Portuses these Festiuals and Legendes these Processionals Dymmes and Sequences these Beades and Graduals the maner of their inuocation their Canons Censures latter Councels such swarmes of superstitious Monkes and Friers such sectes of so many dyuers religions the Testament of S. Fraunces the rule of S. Benedict of S Brigit of S. Anthony c. the intricate subtel●ies labyrynthes of the scholemen the infinite cases and distinctiōs of the Canonistes the Sermons in Churches the assertions in schooles the glory of the Pope the pride of the clergie the cruelty of persecuting Prelates with their officials and promotors he woulde saye this were not a defection but rather a plaine destruccion and ruine of fayth neyther that this were any true Church of Christ but a newe found Religion or paganisme rather brought in vnder the shadow of Christianity wherin remaineth almost no thing els but the name onely of Christ and the outwarde forme of hys religion the true vayne and effect whereof is vtterly decayed as to them which list to examine all the parts of this new Romish religion may some appeare For saue onely that they pretend the solemne forme and wordes of the Crede and are Baptised confessing the name of the father the sonne holy ghost As touching all other points and true sincerity of the Christian faith which they outwardly professe they are vtterly degenerated from that which S. Paule the word of God first had taught them First they cōfesse the father in word but his will in his word expresed they renounce his grace they acknowledg not his benefits and promisses giuen vnto vs in his sonne they receaue not the vigor of his law they feele not the terrour of his iudgements earnestly they feare not his commaundementes they obserue by the traditions and commaundements of their owne Likewise the name of Christ his sonne in worde they confesse but his office indede they deface and deminish his glory they seeke not but vnder his name they do seke their owne the power of his bloud and passion they know not or els dissemble it who neither they admit to be the head of his Church alone nor sauiour alone nor only to be our patrone aduocate but match with him our Lady and other patrons so that euery Parish almost in christendome hath his peculiar patrone besides Christ to hold by In like maner they confesse the name of the holy Ghost But God himselfe knoweth how farre they are from the comfort knowledge and tast of the holy ghost as wel may appeare by their councels by their expounding of Scripture by their superstitious ceremonies by their outward worshipping and Idolatrous inuocation to stockes and stones and dead creatures by their scrupulous obseruatiō of dayes tunes places numbers gestures And no lesse also by their doctrine which defraudeth the poore harts of simple Christians of their due consolation ioy and liberty in the holy Ghost kepeth them still in a seruile bondage and a doubtfull incertainty of their
Philip Emperour after him In the dayes of these Emperours aboue recited was Pontianus bishop of Rome who succeeded next after Vrbanus aboue rehersed about the yeare of our Lord 236. in the xij yeare of Alexander as Eusebius Lib. 6. cap. 28. noteth declaring him to sit vj. yeares Contrary Damasus and Platina write that he was bishop ix yeares and a halfe And that in the tyme of Alexander he with Philippus his Priest was banished into Sardina and there died But it semeth more credible that he was banished rather vnder Maximinus and died in the beginning of the raigne of Gordianus In his Epistles decretal which seeme likewise to be fayned he appeareth very deuout after the common example of other bishops to vphold the dignitie of Priests and of Clergie men saying that God hath them so familiar with him that by them he accepteth the offrings and oblations of other and forgiueth their sinnes and reconcileth them vnto him Also that they do make the body of the lord with their owne mouth and geue it to other c. Which doctrine how it standeth with the Testament of God glory of Christ let the Reader vse his owne iudgement Other notable fathers also in the same time were raysed vp in the church as Philetus Bishop of Antioch which succeded after Asclepiades afore mentioned an 220. and after him Zebennus bishop of the same place an 231. To these also may be added Ammonius the schoolemaister of Origene as Suidas supposeth also the kinsmen of Porphiry the great enemy of Christ. Notwithstanding this Ammonius endued with better grace as he left diuers bookes in defence of Christes religion so he did constantly perseuere as Eusebius reporteth in the doctrine of Christ which he had in the beginning receaued who was about y● days of Alexander Iulius Aphricanus also about the tyme of Gordianus aforesayd is numbred among the old and auncient writers of whom Nicephorus writeth to be the scholer of Origene and a great writer of histories of that tyme. Unto these Doctors and Confessors may be adioyned the story of Natalius mentioned in the fift booke of Eusebius This Natalius had suffred persecution before like a constant confessor who being seduced and persuaded by Asclepiodotus and Theodorus which were the Disciples of Theodorus to take vpon him to be bishop of their sect promising to geue him euery month an hundreth and fiftie pieces of siluer and so he ioyning himselfe to them was admonished by vision and reuelatiō from the Lord. For such was the great mercy of God and of our Lord Christ Iesu that he would nor his Martyr which had suffered so much for his name before now to perish out of his church For the which cause sayth Eusebius God by certaine visions did admonish him But he not taking great heede thereunto beyng blynded partly with lucre partly with honor was at length all the night long scourged of the Angels In so much that he beyng made thereby very fore and early on the morow putting on sackcloth with much weeping and lamentation went to Zephyrinus the bishop aboue mentioned where he falling down before him and all the Christian congregation shewed them the stripes of his body and prayed them for the mercies of Christ that he might be receiued into their communion again from which he had sequestred himselfe before And so was admitted according as he desired After the decease of Pontianus Bishoppe of Rome afore mentioned succeeded next in that place Anterius of whom Isuardus writeth that Pontianus departing away did substitute him his roome But Eusebius writeth that he succeeded immediately after him Damasus sayth that because he caused the actes and deathes of the Martyrs to be written therefore he was put to martirdome himselfe by Maximinus the Iudge Concerning the tyme of this Byshop our writers do greatly iarre Eusebius and Marianus Scotus affirme that he was Bishop but one moneth Sabellicus sayth that not to be so Damasus assigneth to him xii yeares one moneth Volateranus Bergomensis and Henricus Erford geue to him three yeares one moneth Nauclerus writeth that he sat one yeare and one moneth All which are so farr discrepant one from an other that which of them most agreeth with truth it lyeth in doubt Next to this Bishop was Fabianus of whom more is to be sayd hereafter Of Hippolytus also both Eusebius and Hieronymus maketh mention that he was a bishop but where they make no relation And so likewise doth Theodoretus witnes him to be a bishop and also a Martyr but namyng no place Gelasius contra Eutichen sayth he dyed a Martyr and that he was bishop of an head Citie in Arabie Nicephorus writeth that he was Bishop of Ostia a port towne neare to Rome Certain it is he was a great writer and left many workes in the Church which Eusebius and Hierome do recite by the supputation of Eusebius he was about the yeare of our Lord 230. Prudentius in his Peristephanon making mentiō of great heapes of Martyrs buried by ix together speaketh also of Hippolytus and sayth that he was drawn with wild horses through fields dales and bushes and describeth thereof a pitifull story After the Emperour Gordianus the Empire fell to Philippus who with Philip his sonne gouerned the space of vj. yeares an 246. This Philippus with his sonne and all his familie was christened conuerted by Fabianus Origene who by letters exhorted him and Seuera his wife to be baptised being the first of all the Emperours that brought in Christianity into the emperiall seat Howsoeuer Pomponius Letus reporteth of him to be a dissembling prince this is certayne that for his Christianitye he with his sonne was slayne of Decius one of his Captaynes Sabellicus Bergomensis Lib 8. sheweth this hatred of Decius agaynst Philippus to be conceaued for that the Emperour Philip both the Father and the sonne had committed their treasures vnto Fabianus then Bishop of Rome The seuenth Persecution THus Philippus beyng slayne after him Decius inuaded the crowne about the yeare of our Lord 250 by whom was mooued a terrible persecution against the Christians which Orosius noteth to be the vij persecution The first occasion of this hatred and persecution of this tyrant conceaued agaynst the Christians was chiefly as is before touched because of the treasures of the Emperour which were committed to Fabian the bishop This Fabian first being a maryed man as Platina writeth was made Bishop of Rome after Anterius aboue mētioned by the miraculous appointment of God which Eusebius doth thus describe in this sixt booke When the brethren sayth he were together in the Congregation about the electiō of their Bishop and had purposed among them selues vpon the nominatiō of some noble and worthy personage of Rome it chaūced that Fabianus amōg other was there presēt who of late before was newly come out of the
countrey to inhabite in the Citie This Fabian as is sayd thinking nothyng lesse then of any such matter sodenly cōmeth a Doue fleing from aboue and sitteth vpon his head Whereupon all the Congregation beyng moued wyth one minde and one uoyce dyd chose hym for their Bishop In the which function he remayned the space of xiij yeares as Eusebius writeth Damasus Marianus and Sabellicus say xiiij Yeares vnto the tyme of Decius Who whether for that Philippus had committed to him his treasures or whether for the hatred he bare to Philippus in the beginning of his raigne caused him to be put to death Sendyng out moreouer his Proclamation into al quarters that al which professed the name of Christ should be slayne To this Fabian be ascribed certaine ordinaunces as of consecrating new oyle once euery yeare and burnyng the olde of accusations against Byshops of appealing to the sea Apostolicke of not marying within the fift degree of communicating thrise a yeare of offering euery Sonday with such other things moe in his iij. Epistles decretall the which Epistles as by diuers other euidences may be supposed to be vntruely named vpon hym gyuing no signification of any matter agreing to that tyme so do I finde the most part of the iij. Epistle worde for word standing in the Epistle of Sixtus the 3. which folowed almost 200. yeares after him beside the vnseemely doctrine also in the ende of the sayd Epistles contayned where he contrary to the tenour of the Gospell applyeth remission of sinnes onely due to the bloud of Christ vnto the offerings of bread and wyne by men and women euery Sonday in the Church To this Fabianus wrote Origine De orthodoxia suae fidei that is of the rightnes of his fayth Whereby is to be vnderstode that he continued to the tyme of Decius some say also to the tyme of Gallus Of this Origene partly mention is touched before declaring how bolde and feruente he was in the dayes of Seuerus in assisting comforting exhorting and killing the Martyrs that were imprisoned suffered for the name of Christ with such daunger of his owne life that had not bene the singular protectiō of God he had bene stoned to death many tymes of the Heathen multitude Such great concourse of men and women was daily to his house to be catechised instructed in the christian fayth by him that souldiours were hyred of purpose to defend the place where he taught them Agayn such search sometymes was set for him that vnneth any shiftyng of place or countrey could couer him In those laborious trauailes and affayres of the Church in teaching writing confuting exhorting and expounding he continued about the space of 52. yeares vnto the tyme of Decius and Gallus Diuers and great persecutions he sustayned but specially vnder Decius as testifieth Eusebius in his sixt booke declaring that for the doctrine of Christ he sustained bands and torments in his body rackings with barres of iron dungeons besides terrible threates of death and burning All this he suffred in the persecution of Decius as Eusebius recordeth of him and maketh no relatiō of any further matter But Suidas and Nicephorus following the same sayth further concerning him that the sayd Origene after diuers and sundry other torments which he manfully and constantly suffred for Christ at length was brought to an altar where a foule filthy Ethiope was appointed to be and there this option or choyse was offred vnto him whether he would sacrifice to the idole or to haue his body polluted with that foule and ouglie Ethiope Then Origene sayth he who with a Philosophicall mynd euer kept his chastitie vndefiled much abhorring y● filthy villany to be done to his body condescended to their request Wherupon the iudge puttyng incense in his hand caused him to set it to the fire vpō the altar For the which impietie he afterward was excommunicated of the Church Epiphanius writeth that he beyng vrged to sacrifice to Idols and takyng the boughes in his hand wherwith the Heathen were woont to honour their Gods called vpon the Christians to cary them in the honour of Christ. The which fact the church of Alexandria misliking remooued him from their communion Wherupon Origene driuen away with shame and sorow out of Alexandria went into Iewry where beyng in Hierusalem among the congregation and there requested of the Priestes and Ministers he being also a Priest to make some exhortation in the church refused a great while so to do At length by importunate petition being cōstrained therunto rose vp and turning the booke as though he would haue expounded some place of the Scripture only read the verse of the 49. Psalme but God sayd to the sinner why doest thou preach my iustifications why doest thou take my testament in thy mouth c. Which verie beyng read he shut the booke and sate downe weepyng and wayling the whole congregation also weeping lamentyng with him Suid. Niceph. More what became of Origene it is not found in history but onely that Suidas addeth he dyed and was buried at Tyrus Eusebius affirmeth that he departed vnder the Emperour Gallus about the yeare of our Lord 255. and the 70. yeare of his age in great miserie as appeareth and pouertie In this Origene diuers blemishes of doctrine be noted wherupon Hierome some tymes doth inueigh against him Albeit in some places agayne he doth extoll and commend him for his excellent learning as in his Apologie agaynst Ruff. and in his Epistle to Pammachus and Ocean where he prayseth Origene although not for the perfection of his faith and doctrine nor for an apostle yet for an excellent interpreter for his wit and for a Philosopher And yet in his Prologue vpō the Homelies of Origene vpon Ezechiel he calleth him an other maister of the churches after the Apostles And in an other Preface vpon his questions vpon Genesis he wisheth to himself the knowledge of the scriptures which Origene had also with the enuy of his name Athanasius moreouer calleth him singular and laborious and vseth also his testimonies against the Arrians Socrates Lib. 6. cap. 13. After Origene the congrue order of history requireth next to speak of Heraclas his Usher a man singularly commēded for his knowledge not only in Philosophy but also in all such faculties as for a christiā diuine doth appertain This great towardnes of wit and learning when Origene perceiued in him he appointed him aboue all other to bee his Usher or vnderteacher to helpe in his schoole or Uniuersitie of Alexandria in the raigne of Antoninus Caracalla sonne of Seuerus And after in the x. yeare of Alexander Origene departing vnto Cesarea he succeeded in his roome to gouerne the schoole in Alexandria Further also in the time of Gordianus after the decease of Demetrius bishop of Alexandria this Heraclas succeeded to be Bishop of the said Citie Eusebius Lib. 6. cap. 29.
imperiall Proclamation the tenor whereof proceedeth after this effect as is to be sene in Euseb. Lib 7. ca. 13. Emperour and Caesar Publius Licinius Galienus Pius Fortunatus Augustus vnto Dionysius to Pinna and to Demetrian and to all other the like Bishops The bountifull benignitie of my gift I haue willed and commaunded to be proclaymed through the whole worlde to the intent that such whiche are deteined in banishment for discipline sake may safely returne home agayne from whence they came And for the same cause I haue here sent to you the example of my rescript for you to peruse to enioy so that no man so hardy to vexe or molest you And thys whiche you may now lawfully enioy hath bene long since by me graunted And therefore for your more warrant in the same I haue committed the examplar hereof to the custody of Aurelianus Cyrenius my chiefe Steward where you may ●et the copy to see at your pleasure This mandate aboue prefixed did Galienus sent to Dionysius Alexandrinus and to other Byshops as is premised An other rescript also the sayd Emperour sent to other Christian Byshops permitting to them full libertie to receaue agayne their wonted places where they were wont to associate together called of them Caemiteria By this it may appeare that some peace was then graūted vnder this Galienus to the Church of Christ albeit not so but the some there were which suffered Among whome was one Marinus mentioned in Eusebius Lib. 7. This Marinus being a warriour and a noble man in Cesarea stoode for the dignitie of a certaine order whiche by all order of course was next to fall vpon him by right had not the enuious ambitiō of him that should follow next after hym supplanted him both of office life For he accused him to be a Christian and therefore sayd that he was not to be admytted vnto their offices which was against their Religion Wherupon Achaius then being iudge examined him of his faith who finding him to be a christian indede constantly to stand to his profession gaue him .iij. houres to deliberate aduise wyth himselfe There was the same time in Cesarea a Byshop named Theotechnus otherwise called Theodistus who perceiuing him to stand in doubtfull delyberation and perplexitie in himselfe tooke him by the hand brought him into the house or Church of the Christians laying before him a sworde which he had vnder his cloke for the same purpose and a booke of the new Testament so willed him to take his free choyse which of them both he would preferre The souldior immediately without delay ran to the booke of the Gospell taking that before the sword And thus he being animated by the bishop presented himselfe boldly before the iudge by whose sentence he was beheaded and died a Martyr Euseb. ibid. Whose body he beyng dead one Asyrius a noble Senatour of Rome and a man very wealthy among the chief of that order who the same tyme was there present at hys Martyrdome toke vp and bare vpō his owne shoulders wrapping it in a rich sumptuous weede so honourably committed it to the burial Euseb Lib. 7. cap 16. Of which Asyrius the sayde author writeth moreouer this storye howe that in the foresayde Citie of Cesarea the Gentiles vsed ther of an aūcient custome to offer vp a certaine sacrifice by a fountaine side the which sacrifice by the working of the deuill was wont sodainly to vanish out of their eies to the great admiraciō of the inhabiters by Asyrius seing this and pittying the miserable errour of the simple people lifting vp his eies to Heauen made his praier to almightie God in the name of christ that the people might not be seduced of the deuil any lōger by the vertue of whose praier the sacrifice was seene to swimme in the water of the fountaine so the straunge wonder of that sight was taken away and no such matter coulde be their wrought any more Euseb. Lib 7. cap. 17. And because mention is made here of Cesarea there foloweth in the next chapter of the same author a strange miracle if it be true which he there reporteth howe that out of the same City was the woman which in the gospel came to our Sauiour and was healed of her bloudy issue Her house being in the Citye of Cesarea before the doore thereof was set vp a certayne pyller of stone vpon the piller an Image was made of brasse of a woman mekely knelyng on her knes and holding vp her hands as one that had some sute Against the which there was an other Image also of a man proportioned of the same mettall cūningly engrauen in a short semely vestur● stretching forth his hand to the woman At the foote of which piller grew vp a certaine herbe of a straunge kind but of a more straunge opiration which growing vp to the hemme of his vesture once touching the same is saide to haue such vertue that it was able to cure all maner of deseases This picture of the man they say represented the image of Christ. The history is written in Eusebius as is said the credite whereof I referre to the Reader whether he will thinke it true or false If he thinke it false yet I haue shewed him myne author if he thinke it true then must hee thinke with all that this miraculous operation of the herbe proceded neither by the vertue of the picture nor by the praier of the other being both dombe pictures and engrauen no doubt at that time by the hand of Infidels but to be wrought by some secret permission of God his wisedome either to reduce the Infidels at that time to the belief of the storye or to admonish the Christians to consider with them selues what strength and health was to be looked for onelye of Christ and no other aduocate seing the dumbe picture engrauen in Brasse gaue his efficacie to a poore herbe to cure so many diseases This picture saith Eusebius remained also to his time which was vnder Constantinus the great As touching the line and order of the Romaine Byshops hetherto intermitted after the martirdome of Xistus aboue specified the gouernement of that church was conmitted next to one Dionysius about the yeare of our Lord 266. who continued in the same the space of ix yeares as Eusebius saith as Damasus recordeth but onely vj. yeares and two moneths Of his decretall Epistles because sufficient hath bene sayd before concerning that matter I omit to speake After whom succeded Felix in the first yeare of Probus the Emperour about the yeare of our Lord 280. who gouerned that church v. yeares and died as Pla●ina saith a martyr After him followed Eutychianus and then Gaius both martyrs as the histories of some do recorde About the time of these byshops lyued Theodorus byshop of Neocesarea who is otherwise called Gregorius Mognus whome
not regarding your priuate businesses nor esteeming that which shoulde haue bene for the speciall commoditie thereof when it perceaued that cursed vanitie to begin againe to creepe and as a fire negligently quenched when the dead brandes thereof began to kindle and make a great flame by and by without delay ye hauing recourse vnto our pietie as vnto the Metropolitan of all diuine worship and Religion craued remedie and helpe which wholesome minde for your pieties sake it is most manifest that the gods haue indued you with Therefore hee euen that most mightie Iupiter I say which preserueth your most famous Citie to that intent he might deliuer and make free your countrey Gods your wiues and children your housholde Gods and houses from all detestable corruption hath inspired you with this wholesome and willing minde shewing declaring howe worthy notable and healthfull a thing it is to worship to sacrifice to the immortall Gods For who is so void of reason vnderstanding that knoweth not that this thing happeneth vnto vs by the carefull studie of the goodnes of our gods that the grounde denieth not to geue her timely increase nor maketh frustrate the husband mans hope nor that wicked warre dare shew her face vpon the earth nor that the corruption of the aire is nowe cause of pestilence neither that the sea swelleth with immoderate windes neither that sodaine stormes are cause of hurtfull tempestes To conclude that the ground which is as the nurce and mother of all things is not swallowed vp of her deepe chappes and gapings by terrible earthquake neither that the hils made leuell with the earth are not with gaping cliftes deuoured all which euils and greater then these before this time to haue happened euery mā knoweth And all these mischiefes came vpō vs for the pernitious errours sake of the extreeme follie of those wicked men the Christanis when filthinesse it selfe as I may call it so occupied their mindes and ouerranne the worlde Let them beholde the fieldes nowe all about full of corne and ouerflowen as it were with eares of corne Let them vewe the pleasant medowes clothed with flowers and moistned with showers from heauen and also the pleasant and temperate weather Therefore let all men reioyce that by your pietie sacrifices worshipping the maiestie of the most stearne God of battell Mars is appeased that therfore we enioy pleasant firme peace And how many so euer haue left that blind errour and straying of the Christians vnfainedly and be of a better minde let them specially reioyce as men deliuered out of a sodaine great tempest and from a greeuous disease and haue afterward obtained a delectable and pleasant life For doubtlesse if they had remained in that execrable vanitie farre of had they bene chased from your Citie suburbs of the same according to your desire that your Citie by that meanes according to your commēdable diligence clensed from all impuritie and impietie may offer sacrifices according to the meaning of the same with due reuerence of the immortall Gods And that you may perceiue in how good part your supplication yea vnasked and desired we are most willing and ready to further your honest endeuours and graunt vnto you for your deuotion whatsoeuer you aske of our magnificence And that thys thing may be accomplished forthwith aske and haue And thys thing with all speede indeuour you to obtaine which shall bee a perpetuall testimony of pietie exhibited of your Citie to the immortall Gods and shal be a president to your children and posteritie and withall you shall obtaine of vs for this your willing desire of reformation condygne and worthy rewardes Eusebius Lib 9. cap. 7. Thus came it to passe that at the length persecutiō was as great as euer it was and the magistrates of euery prouince were very disdainefull against the Christians which cōdemned some to death and some to exile Among whom they condemned three christians at Emisa in Phenicia with whom Siluanus the bishop a very old man being 40. yeres in the ecclesiasticall function was condemned to death At Nicomedia Lucianus the elder of Antioche brought thether after he had exhibited to the emperour his Apologie concerning the doctrin of the Christians was cast in pryson and after put to death In Amasea a City of Capadocia Bringes the lieftenaunt of Maximinus had at that time the executing of that persecution At Alexandria Petrus a most worthy byshop was beheaded with whome manye other Egiptian byshops also died Euseb. Lib. 9. cap. 7. Nicepho Lib. 7. cap. 44. Quirinus the Byshop Scescanius hauing a hanmyll tyed about hys necke was throwne headlong from the bridge into the flood and there a long while fleeted aboue the water and when hee opened his mouth to speake to the lookers on that they shoulde not be dismaied with that his punishmēt was with much a do drowned Chron. Euseb. At Rome dyed Marcellus the bishop as sayeth Platina also Timotheus the elder with many other bishops Priests were martyred To cōclud many in sundry places euery where were martyred whose name the booke intituled Fasciculus temporum declareth as Victorianus Symphorianus Castorius with his wife Castulus Cesarius Mennas Nobilis Dorotheus Gorgonius Petrus and other innumerable martirs Erasmus Bonifacius Iuliana Cosmas Damianus Basilinus with seuen others Dorothea Theophilus Theodosia Vitalis Agricola Acha Philemon Hireneus Ianuarius Festus Desiderius Gregorius Spoletanus Agapes Chionia Hirenea Theodora and 270. other Martyrs Florianus Primus and Felicianus Vitus and Modestus Crescentia Albinus Rogatianus Donatianus Pancratius Catharina Margareta Lucia the virgin and Antheus the king with many thousād martirs mo Simplicius Faustinus Beatrix Panthaleon Georgius Iustus Leocandia Anthonia and other mo to an infinite number suffered martirdome in this persecution whose names God hath written in the booke of life Also Felix Victor with his parents Lucia the widow Gemenianus with 79 others Sabinus Anastasia Chrisogonus Felix and Audactus Adrianus Nathalia Eugenia Agnes also when she was but 13. yeare old was martyred Euseb. in his 8. booke and 15. chap. rehearseth these kinds of torments and punishmēts that is to say Fire wilde beastes the sword crucifyinges the bottome of the sea the cutting and burning of mēbers the thrusting out of eyes dismembring of the whole body hūger imprisonment whatsoeuer other cruelty the Magistrates coulde deuise All which notwithstanding the godly ones rather then that they woulde doe sacrifice as they were bid māfully endured Neither were the womē any thing at al behind thē For they beyng intised to the filthy vse of their bodies rather suffered banishmēt or willingly killed themselues Neither yet could the Christians liue safely in the wildernes but were fetched euē frō thēce to death and tormentes in so much that this was a more greeuous persecution vnder Maximianus the tyraunt then was the former cruell persecution vnder Maximianus the Prince Euseb. Lib. 9.
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
and copied out to remayne in bublique Churches to the vse of posteritie Whereupon writing to Eusebius byshop of Nicomedia in a speciall letter recorded in the 4. booke of Eusebius De vita Constant. he willeth him with all diligence to procure 50. volumes of parchment well bound and cōpacted wherein he shoulde cause to be written out of the scripture in a fayre legeable hād such things as he thought necessary and profitable for the instruction of the Church And alloweth him for that busines two bublique Ministers Also writeth concerning the same to the generall of hys army to support and further hym with such necessaries as thereunto should appertayne c. ¶ In vewing perusing and writing this story and in considering the Christian zeale of this Emperour I wish that eyther this our Printing and plēty of books had bene in his dayes or that this so heroycal hart toward Christes Religion as was in this so excellent Monarche might something appeare in inferiour Princes raigning in these our Printing dayes c. The liberal hand of this Emperor borne to do al men good was no lesse also open and ready towarde the needie pouertie of such which either by losse of parents or other occasions were not able to helpe them selues to whom he commaunded and prouided dew subuention both of corne and raiment to be ministred out of his owne coffers to the necessary reliefe of the poore men women children orphanes and widowes Euseb. de vita Constant. Lib 4. Finally among al the other monuments of his singular clemencie and munificence this is not to be pretermitted that through all the Empire of Rome and prouinces belonging to the same not only he diminished such taxes reuenewes and impostes as publickly were comming to him but also clearely remitted and released to the contributers the fourth part of the same This present place would require somthing to be sayd of the donation of Constantine whereuppon as vpon their chiefest anchor holde the Byshops of Rome doe grounde theyr supreame dominion and right ouer all the politicall gouernement of the West partes the spiritual gouernement of all the other Seas and partes of the world Which donation to be falsly fained and forged and not to procede from Constantine many arguments might heere be inferred if laisure from other matters would suffer me 1. First for that no ancient history nor yet Doctour maketh any mention thereof 2. Nauclerus reporteth it to be affirmed in the hystorie of Isidorus but in the olde copies of Isidorus no such thyng is to be founde 3. Gracianus the compiler of the decrees reciteth that decree not vpon any auncient authoritie but only vnder the title of Palea 4. Gelasius is sayd to geue some testimony therof in Dist. 15. Sancta Romana but that clause of the said distinction touching that matter in the olde ancient bookes is not extant 5 Otho Phrisingensis who was about the time of Gracian after hee hath declared the opinion of the fauourers of the Papacie affirming this donation to be geuen of Constantine to Siluester the Pope induceth consequently the opinion of them that fauour the Empire affirming the contrary 6. How doth thys agree that Constantine did yeelde vp to Siluester all the politicall dominion ouer the West when as the sayd Constantine at hys death deuiding the Empire to his three sonnes gaue the West part of the Empire to one the East part to the secōd the middle part to the third 7. How is it like that Theodosius after them being a iust and a religious Prince would or could haue occupyed the Citie of Rome if it had not bene his right but had belonged to the pope so did many other Emperors after him 8. The phrase of this decree being conferred with the phrase and stile of Constantine in his other Edictes and letters aboue specified doth nothing agree 9. Seeing the papists themselues confesse that the decree of this donation was writtē in Greeke how agreeth that with truth when as both it was written not to the Gretians but to the Romanes and also Constantine himselfe for lacke of the Greeke toung was faine to vse the Latine toung in the Councell of Nice 10. The contents of this donation who soeuer was the forger thereof doeth bewray it selfe For if it be true which there is confessed that he was Baptised at Rome of Siluester the iiij day after his baptisme this patrimonie was giuen which was before his battaile against Maximinus or Licinius An. 317. as Niceph. recordeth howe then accordeth this wyth that which followeth in the donation for him to haue iurisdiction geuen ouer the other iiij principall seas of Antioch Alexandria Constantinople and Hierusalem when as the Citie of Constantinople was not yet begun before the death of Maximinus or Licinius and was not finished before the xxviij yere of the raigne of Constantine an 339. or if it be true as Hierome counteth it was finished the xxiij yere of his raigne which was the yere of our Lorde 334. long after this donation by their owne accōpt 11. Furthermore where in the sayde constitution is sayd that Constantine was baptised at Rome of Siluester therby was purged of Leprosie the fable thereof agreeth not with the trueth of historie for so much as Eusebius lib. 4. De vita Constantini Hieronymus in Chron. Ruffin lib. 1. cap. 11. Socrates lib. 1. cap. 39. Theodor. lib. 1. cap. 31. Sozomenus lib 2. cap. 34. doe altogether consent that hee was Baptised not at Rome but at Nicomedia and that moreouer as by theyr testimonie doth appeare not of Siluester but of Eusebius bishop of Nicomedia not before his battaile against Maximinus or Licinius but in the xxxj yeare of his raigne a litle before his death 12. Againe where as Constantine in this donation appoynted him to haue the principalitie ouer the other iiij Patriarchall Seas that maketh Constantine contrary to himselfe Who in the Councell of Nice afterwarde agreed with other bishops that al the iiij patriarchal seas should haue equall iurisdiction euery one ouer his owne territorie and precinct 13. In summe briefly to conclude who so desireth more aboundantly to be satisfied touching this matter let hym read the bookes of Marsilius Patauinus intituled defensor pacis An 1324. of Laurētius Valla An. 1440. of Antoninus archbishop of Florence who in hys hystorie plainely denieth the tenour of thys donation to be founde in the old bookes of the decrees Of Cusanus Cardinalis Lib. 3. Cap. 2. wryting to the Councell of Basil Anno 1460. Of Aeneas Syluius in Dialogo of Hier. Paulus Cattalanus An. 1496. of Raphael Volateranus An. 1500. of Lutherus An. 1537. c. all which by many and euident probations dispute and proue this donation taken out of a booke De gestis Syluestri and translated as they faine by one Bartholomeus Picernus out of Greke into Latine not to proceede from Constantinus but to be a thing vntruely
Episcopi mensuram omnes institutae sint exequatae per su●m dioecesin Et omne pondus constet secundum dictionem eius si aliquid cōtrouersiarum intersit discernat Episcopus Vniuscuiusque Domini proprium est necesse vt seruis condescendat compatiatur sicut indulgentius poterit Quia Domino Deo viuenti sunt aeque chari seruus liber Et omnes vno eodem pretio redemit omnes sumus Deo necessariò serui Et sic iudicabit nos sicut antè iudicauimus eos in quos potestatem iudicij in terris habebimus Et ideo opus est vt eis parcamus qui nobis parere debent tunc manutenebimur in Dei omnipotentis proprio iudicio Amen The sayde Ethelstane besides prescribed other constitutions also as touching tithes geuing where hee sayeth and proclaimeth Ego Ethelstanus Rex consilio V●felmi Archiepiscopi mei aliorum Episcoporum mando praepositis omnibus in regno meo in nomine Domini sanctorum omnium vt inprimis reddant de meo proprio decimas Deo tam in viuente capitali quàm in mortuis frugibus terrae Episcopi mei similiter faciant de suo proprio Aldermanni mei praepositi mei c. That is I Ethelstane King charge and commaund all my officers through my whole Realme to geue tithes vnto God of my proper good as wel in liuing cattel as in the corne and fruites of the groūd and that my Byshops likewise of their proper goods and mine Aldermen and my officers and headmen shal do the same Item this I wil that my Bishops other headmen doe declare the same to suche as be vnder their subiection that to be accomplished at the terme of S. Iohn the Baptist. Let vs remember what Iacob said vnto the Lord Of all things that thou geuest to me I wil offer tithes vnto the Lord. c. Also what the Lord sayeth in the Gospel of S. Mathewe To him that hath it shal be geuen and he shall aboūd We must also cōsider how terribly it is written in bookes that if we will not offer our tenths from vs ix partes shall be taken away and only the x. part shal be left vs. c. And in the same place after that he hath assigned the Church rightes to be paide in the place whereto they belong it followeth thus Facite etiam vt mihi mea propria cupiatis quae mihi poteritis recté acquirere Nolo vt aliquid mihi iniuste cóquiratis Sed omnia vestra concedo vobis eo tenore quo mihi mea similiter exoptetis Cauete simul vobis eis quos admonere debetis ab ira Dei transgressione mea Among his other lawes ordinances to the nūber of xxxv diuers things be comprehended pertaining as well to the spirituall as also to the temporall iurisdiction Out of the lawes of this King first sprang vp the attachement of theeues such as stoale aboue xij pence and were aboue xij yeares old should not be spared And thus much briefly concerning the historie of King Ethelstane things in his time done who reigned about the space of xvj yeares And because he died without issue therfore after him succeeded his brother Edmund the yere of our Lord. 940. who reigned vj. yeares King Edmund EDmund the sonne of Edwarde the elder by his thirde wife as is declared and brother of Ethelstane being of the age of xx yeares entred his raigne who had by hys Queene Elgina two sonnes Edwyne and Edgarus surnamed Pacificus which both reigned after him as followeth This Edmund continued his reigne vj. yeares a halfe By him were expulsed the Danes Scottes Normandes and all foreine enemies out of the land Such Cities and Townes which before were in the possession of strangers as Lyncolne Nottingham Derby Stafforde and Leycetour he recouered out of their hands Thus the realme being cleared of foreine power for a time then the king set his study and mind in the redressing and maintaining the state of the Church which all stoode then in building of Monasteries and furnishing of Churches eyther with newe possessions or with restoring the olde which were taken away before In the time of thys Edmund thys I find in an old written story borowed of W. Cary a citizen of London a worthy treasurer of moste worthy Monuments of antiquitie The name of the author I can not alledge because the booke beareth no title lacking both the beginning and the latter end But the words therof faithfully recited be these Huius regis tempore facta est dispersio Monachorum Eushmensis coenobij cum substitutione Canonicorum per Althelmum Vlricum laicos Osulphum Episcopum c. That is In the time of this King there was a scattering or dispersion made of the Monkes out of the Monastery of Eusham and Canons substituted in theyr place through the doing of Athelmus Ulricus lay men and of Osulfus Byshop c. Where as concerning this matter betwene Monkes and other of the clergie first it is to be vnderstande that in the realme of England heretofore before the time of Dunstane the Byshops seas and cathedrall churches were replenished with no monkes but wyth priestes and canons called then clerks or men of the clergy After this beginneth to rise a difference or a sect betwixt these two parties in straitnesse of life and in habite so that they which liued after a straiter rule of holines were called monkes professed chastitie that was to liue from wiues for so was chastitie then defined in those blinde daies as though holy matrimony were no chastitie according as Paphnutius did well define it in the councel of Nice The other sort whych were no monkes but priests or men of the clergy called liued more free from these monkish rules and obseruances and were then commōly or at least lawfully maryed and in theyr life and habite came nearer to the secular sorte of other christians By reason wherof great disdaine emulation was among them in so much that in many Cathedral churches where as priests were before there monks were put in And contrary sometime where as Monkes were intruded there priests and canons againe were placed and monkes thrust out wherof more shal appere here after by the grace of Christ when we come to the lyfe of Dunstane In the meane time something to satisfie the cogitation of the reader which peraduenture either is ignorant or els would know of the first cōming in of monks into this realme and Church of England in the Saxones time this is to be noted according as I finde in old Chronicles namely in the latine history of Guliel de gestis pontificum Angl. recorded touching the same That about thys time of king Edmund or shortly after when hardnes and straitnesse of life ioyned with superstition was had in veneration and
Item to be against the sound doctrine of S. Paule writing these wordes As concerning virginitie I haue no commaundement of the Lord c. Agayne he that cannot otherwise liue continently let him marrie Item that it was agaynst the Canons both of the Apostles and of Nicene councell Moreouer that it was against the course of nature whiche he required that men beyng sequestred from their naturall wiues and women shoulde be coacted to liue as aungels that is to performe that which nature doth not geue And therefore the bishop therin did open a peruicious windowe to vncleannes and to fornication In summe geuing vp theyr answer thus they concluded that they had rather geue vp their benefices then to forsake their naturall and lawfull wiues against the worde of Christ. And finally if maried priests could not please them they should call downe Angels from heauen to serue the Churches But Hildebrand nothing mooued neither with honest reason nor with the authoritie of holy Scripture nor with the determinatiō of Nicene councell nor any thing els followeth this matter calleth vpon the bishops stil with his letters and Legats doth sollicitate their mindes accuseth them of negligence and dastardnes threatneth them with excommunication vnles they cause their priests to obey his decree enioyned them Whereupon a great number of bishops for feare of the Popes tiranny laboured that matter with their priests by all means possible to bereaue them of their accustomed matrimony Amongst other the Archbishop of Mentz perceyuing this acte of taking away Priestes mariage might breede him no little trouble talketh with his Clergy gently admonisheth them of the Popes minde decree and geueth them halfe yeres respite to deliberate vpon the case exhorting them diligently to shewe themselues obedient to the Pope and to him and to graūt with good will that which at length will they nill they needes they must bee forced vnto and therefore of their owne accord to stande content therewith least the Pope should be compelled to attempt wayes of sharper seueritie The time of deliberation expired the Archbishop assembleth his clergy at Erspford the month of October and there willeth them according to the pontificall decree either to abiure for euer all matrimony or els to abrenounce their benefices and Ecclesiasticall liuings The clergy agayne defend themselues against the Popes decree with scriptures with reason with the actes of generall councels with examples of auncestors by diuers strong arguments declaring the Popes decree not to be consonant nor ought to take effect But the Archbishop sayd he was compelled so of the Pope and could not otherwise do but to execute that was enioyned him The clergy seeyng that no reason nor prayer nor disputation would serue layd their heads together cōsultyng among themselues what was best to be done Some gaue counsail not to returne agayne to the Synode Some thought it good to returne and to thrust out the Archbishop frō hys seat to geue him due punishment of death for his deseruing that by the example of him other may bee warned hereafter neuer to attempt that thing any more to the preiudice of the church and the rightfull liberty of ministers After that this was signified to the Archbishop by certaine spies that were amongest them what the clergy entended to do The Archb. to preuent and salue the matter sendeth to the priests as they were comming out certaine messengers bidding them of good hope and to returne againe to the Metropolitane and they should haue that should content their myndes So beyng perswaded they come again to the Councel The bishop promiseth he would doe hys indeuour what he could to reuoke turne the mind of the Bishop of Rome from that sentence willing them in the meane tyme to continue as they had done in their cure and ministery The next yeare followyng Hildebrand y● souldiour of Sathan sendeth his Legate a certaine Bishop called Curiēsis vnto the Archb. of Mentz and assembled there a Councell In the which councel the Archb. againe proposeth the matter commaunding all the clergy vnder payne of the Popes curse there perpetually eyther to abrenounce their wyues or their liuings The clergy defended their cause againe with great constancy But when no defension could take place but all went by tiranny mere extortiō it burst in the end to an vprore and tumult where the Legate and the Archbishop beyng in great daunger hardly escaped with their lyues and so the Councell brake vp By this schisme and tumult it followed that the churches after that in chusing their priests would not send thē to the bishops the enemies and suppressors of Matrimony to be confirmed and inducted but did elect them within themselues and so put them in their office without all leaue or knowledge of bishops who then agreed were determined to admit no priests but such as should take an othe of perpetuall singlenesse neuer to marrie after And thus first came vp the othe and profession of single Priesthood Notwithstanding if other nations had followed the like constancie concord of these Germain ministers the ●iuelish drift and decre of this Hildebrand or rather Helbrand had bene frustrate and auoyded But this greedines of liuings in weak priests make them to yeld vp their godly liberty to wicked tiranny Yet this remayneth in these Germains to be noted what concord can doe in repressing vnordinate requests of euil bishops if they constantly stand to truth and hold together And thus much for banishing of matrimony Now let vs proceede to the contentions betwixt wicked Hildebrand and the godly Emperour But before by the way of digression it shal not be much wide from the purpose to touch a little of the properties of this Pope as we find them described in certaine epistles of Benno a Cardinall writing to other cardinals of Rome Which Benno lyued in the same tyme of Hildebrand and detecteth the prodigious actes and doings of this monstrous Pope First declaring that he was a Sorcerer most notable and a Nicromanser an olde companion of Siluester of Laurentius and Theophilactus called otherwise Benedictus nonus Amongst other Benno Cardinals writeth this history of him How vpon a certaine tyme this Gregorius comming from Albanus to Rome had forgot behynd him his familiar booke of Nicromansie which he was wont commonly to cary alwayes with him Whereupon remembring himselfe entered the port of Laterane he calleth two of his most trusty familiars to set the booke charging them at no hand to looke within it But they beyng so restrayned were the more desirous to open it to peruse it and so did After they had read a little the secrets of the Sathanicall booke sodenly there came about them the messengers of Sathan the multitude and terrour of whom made them almost out of their wittes At length they comming to themselues the spirites were instant vpon them to know wherefore they were called vp wherfore they were vexed Quickly said
de Ou. F. Louel S de Troys I. de Artel Iohn de Montebrugg H. de Mounteserel W. Trussebut W. Trussel H. Byset R. Basset R. Molet H. Malouile G. Bonet P. de Bonuile S. de Rouile N. de Norbec I. de Corneux P. de Corbet W. de Mountague S. de Mounfychet I. de Geneuyle H. Gyffard I. de Say T. Gilbard R. de Chalons S. de Chauward H. Feret Hugo Pepard I. de Harecourt H. de Haunsard I. de Lamare P. de Mautreuers G. de Ferron R. de Ferrers I. de Desty W. de Werders H de Borneuyle I●de Saintenys S. de Seucler R. de Gorges E. de Gemere W. de Feus S. de Filberd H. de Turberuyle R. Troblenuer R. de Angon T. de Morer T. de Roteler H. de Spencer R. de Saintpuinten I. de Saint Martin G. de Custan Saint Constantin Saint Leger Saint Med. M. de Cronu de S. Viger S. de Crayel R. de Crenker N. Meyuell I. de Berners S. de Chumli E. de Charers I. de Grey W. de Grangers S de Grangers S. Raubenyn H. Vamgers E. Bertram R. Bygot S. Treoly I. Trigos G. de Feues H. Filiot R. Taperyn S. Talbot H. Santsauer T. de Samford G. de Vandien C. de Vautort G. de Mountague Tho. de Chambernon S. de Montfort R. de Ferneuaux W. de Valence T. Clarel S. de Cleruaus P. de Aubermarle H de Saint Aruant E. de Auganuteys S. de Gant G. de Malearbe H. Mandut W. de Chesun L. de Chandut R Filz vrs B. viconte de Low G. de Cantemere T. de Cantlow R. Breaunce T. de Broxeboof S de Bolebec B Mol de boef I. de Muelis R de Brus. S de Brewes I. de Lylle T. de Bellyle I. de Wateruile G. de Neuyle R. de Neuburgh H. de Burgoyne G de Bourgh S. de Lymoges L de Lyben W. de Helyoun H. de Hildrebron R de Loges S. de Seintlow I de Maubank P. de Saint Malow R. de Leoferne I. de Louotot G. de Dabbeuyle H. de Appetot W. de Percy H. de Lacy G de Quincy E Tracy R de la Souche V. de Somery I. de Saint Iohn T. de Saint Gory P. de Boyly R de Saint Valery P. de Pinkeni S. de Pauely G. de Monthaut T. de Mountchesy R. de Lymozy G. de Lucy I. de Artoys N de Arty P de Grenuyle I. de Greys V. de Cresty F de Courcy T. de Lamar H. de Lymastz I de Monbray G. de Morley S de Gorney R. de Courtenay P. de Gourney R. de Cony I. de la Huse R. de la Huse V de Longeuyle P. Longespye I. Pouchardon R. de la Pomercy I. de Pountz R. de Pontlarge R. Estraunge Tho. Sauage A little aboue mention was made of the Bishops sea of Shireborne translated from thence to Salisbury The first bishop of Salisbury was Hermannus Normand who first began the new church and minster of Salisbury After whom succeded Osmūdus who finished the worke and replenished the house with great liuing much good singing This Osmundus first began the ordinarie which was called Secundum vsum Sarum an 1076. The occasion whereof was this as I find in an old story booke intituled Eulogium a great contention chanced at Glastenbury betwene Thurstanus the Abbot and his couent in the days of William Conqueror which Thurstanus the sayd William had brought out of Normandy frō the Abbey of Cadonum and placed him Abbot of Glastenbury The cause of this cōtentious battaile was for that Thurstanus conteinning their Quier seruice then called the vse of S. Bregory cōpelled his monkes to the vse of one Williā a monk of Fiscam in Normandy Wherupon came strife contentions amongst them first in wordes then from words to blowes after blowes then to armor The Abbot with his gard of harnest men fell vpon the monkes draue them to the steps of the high aulter where ii were slayne viii were wounded with shafts swords pikes The monkes then driuen to such a straight narow shift were compelled to defend themselues with fourmes and candlestickes wherwith they did wound certain of the souldiours One monke there was an aged man who in stead of his shield tooke an Image of the Crucifice in his armes for hys defence which image was woūded in the brest by one of the bowe men wherby the Monke was saued My story addeth more that the striker incontinent vpon the same fell mad which sauoreth of some monkish addition besides the text This matter being brought before the king the Abbot was sent agayne to Cadonius and the monks by the commaundement of the king were scattered in farre countreys Thus by the occasion hereof Osmundus bishop of Salisbury deuised that ordinary which is called the vse of Sarum and was afterward receiued in a maner through all England Ireland and Wales And thus much for this matter done in the time of this king William Which William after his death by his wife Matildis or Maulde left iii. sonnes Robert Courtley to whom he gaue the Duchie of Normandy William Rufus his secōd sonne to whom he gaue the kingdome of England And Henry the third sonne to whom he left and gaue treasor and warned William to be to his people louing liberall Robert to be to his people sterne and sturdy In the history called Iornalensis is reported of a certain great man who about this tyme of kyng William was compassed about with Mise and Rattes and flying to the middest of a Riuer yet when that would not serue came to the land agayne and was of them deuoured The Bermaines say that this was a Byshop who dwellyng betwene Colen and Mentz in tyme of famine and dearth hauyng store of corne and grayne would not helpe the pouertie crying to hym for reliefe but rather wyshed hys corne to be eaten of Myse and Rattes Wherefore beyng compassed with Mise and Rattes by the iust iudgement of God to auoyd the annoiance of them he builded a tower in middest of the Riuer of Rheine which yet to this day the Dutchmen call Rattes tower but all that would not helpe for the Rattes and Myse swamme ouer to hym in as great aboundaunce as they did before Of whome at length he was deuoured William Rufus William Rufus the second sonne of William Cōquerour beganne his raigue an 1088. And raigned 13. yeares beyng crowned at Westminster by Lanfrancus who after his coronation released out of prison by the request of his father diuers of the English Lords which before had bene in custody It chaunced that at the death of William Conquerour Robert Courtsey his eldest sonne was absent in Almany Who hearing of the death of hys father and how William his yonger brother had taken vpon him the kingdome was therwith greatly amoued in so much that he laid his dukedome to pledge vnto his brother Henry and with that good gathered
thus to come About the yeare of the Lord 1160. it chaunced that diuers of the best and chiefest heades of the Citty of Lyons talking and walking in a certayne place after their olde accustomed maner especially in the Sommer time conferred and consulted together vpon matters either to passe ouer time or to debate thinges to be done Amongst whom it chaunced one the rest looking vpon to fall downe by sodeine death In the number of whom this foresayd Waldus there being amongest them was one Who beholding the matter more earnestly then the other and terrified with so heauy an exāple being as is sayd a rich man and Gods holy spirit working withall was stroken with a deepe inward repētance wherevpon folowed a new alteratiō with a carefull study to reforme his former life In somuch that first he began to minister large almes of his goods to such as needed Secōdly to instruct himselfe and his familye with the true knowledge of Gods word Thirdly to admonish all that resorted to him by any occasion to repentaunce and vertuous amendment of life Wherby partly through his large geuing to the poore partly through his diligent teaching wholesome admonitions more resort of people daily frequēted about him Whom when he did see ready and diligent to learne begā to geue out to them certayne rudi●ents of the Scripture which he had translated himselfe into the French tongue For as he was a man welthy in riches so he was also not vnlearned Although Laziardus Volateranus with other note him vtterly vnlearned charge him with ignoraunce as who should procure other to write and translate for him By other that haue seene his doings yet remaining in old parchment monuments it appeareth he was both able to declare and translate the books of scripture also did collect the doctors mind vpon the same But whatsoeuer he was lettred or vnlettred the byshops and prelats seing him so to intermeddle with scriptures and to haue such resort about him albeit it was but in his own house vnder priuate conferēce could not abide either that the scriptures should be declared of any other neither would they take the paines to declare it thēselues So being moued with great malice against the man threatned to excommunicate him if he did not leaue so to doe Ualdus seing his doing to be but godly and their malice stirred vp vpō no iust nor godly cause neglecting y● threaminges frettinges of the wicked said that god must be obeied more then man to be brief the more diligēt he was in setting forth the true doctrine of Christ against the errors of Antichrist the more maliciously their fiercenes increased Insomuch that when they did see their excommunication to be despised would not serue they ceased not with prison with sword and banishment to persecute till at length they had driuen both Ualdus and all the fauourers of his true preaching out of the city Wherupon came first their name that they were called Ualdenses or pauperes de Lugduno not because the would haue all things cōmon amongst them or that they professing any wilfull pouerty would imitate to liue as the Apostles did as Siluius did falsly belie them but because they being thrust out both of coutrey and goods were cōpelled to liue poorly whether they would or no. And thus much touching the first occasion and beginning of these men and of the restoring and maintayning the true doctrine of Christs gospell agaynst the proud proceedings of popish errors Now concerning their articles whiche I finde in order and in number to be these SOlis sacris literis credendum esse in ijs quae ad salutem c. That is Onely the holy Scripture is to be beleued in matters pertayning to saluation and no mans writing or man besides 2. All things to be contayned in holy Scripture necessary to saluation and nothing to be admitted in religion but what onely is commaunded in the word of God 3. To be one alonely mediator Other saintes in no wise to be made mediators or to be inuocated 4. To be no purgatory but that all men either by Christ are iustified to life or without Christ to be condemned and besides these two neither any third or fourth place to be 5. That all masses namely such as be song for the dead to be wicked and to be abrogate 6. All mens traditions to be reiected at least not to be reputed as necessary to saluation and therefore this singing superfluous chaunting in the chauncell to be left constrained prefixed fasts boūd to dayes tunes difference of meates such variety of degrees and orders of Priestes friers monkes nunnes superfluous holidayes so mady sundry benedictions hallowing of creatures vowes peregrinations with all the rabblement of rites ceremonies brought in by man to be abolished 7. The supremacy of the Pope vsurping aboue all churches and especially aboue all politick realmes gouernments or for him to occupye or vsurpe the iurisdiction of both the swordes to be denied neither that any degree is to be receiued in the Church but onely Priests Deacons and Bishops 8. The communion vnder both kindes to be necessary to all people according to the institution of Christ. 9. Item the church of Rome to be the very Babilon spoken of in the Apocalips And the Pope to be the fountaine of all error and the very Antichrist 10 The popes pardons and indulgences they reiect 11. The mariage of Priestes and of ecclesiasticall persons to be godly and also necessary in the Church 12. Such as heare the word of God haue a right fayth to be the right Church of Christ. And to this Church the keyes of the church to be geuen to driue away wolues to institute true pastors to preach the word and to minister the Sacraments These be the most principall articles of the Uladenses albeit some there be that adde moe to them some agayne deuide the fame into moe partes But these be the principall to which the rest be reduced The same Ualdenses at length exiled were dispersed in diuers sundry places of whom many remayned long in Bohemia which writing to theyr king Uladislaus to purge themselues agaynst the slaundrous accusations of one D. Augustine gaue vp theyr confession with an Apology of theyr christian profession defending with strong learned argumēts the saine which now is receiued in most reformed churches both concerning grace fayth charitye hope repentaunce and workes of mercy As for purgatory they say that Tho. Aquinas is the author thereof Concerning the Supper of the Lord their fayth was that it was ordayned to be eaten not to be shewed worshipped for a memoriall not for a sacrifice to serue for the presēt ministration not for reseruation to be receiued at the table not be caryed out of the dores according to the auncient vse of the primitiue church when they vsed to cōmunicate sitting And this they proue
both by an old chronicle called Chronica gestorum as also by auncient Origen vpon the third booke of Moses bringing in his wordes which be these prouing that this sacramental bread ought not to be reserued Quicunque hunc panem coenae Christi secunda vel tertia die sumpserit non benedicitur anima eius sed inquinabitur Propterea Gabaonitae quia antiquos panes portauerūt ad filios Israel oportuit eos ligna ac aquam portare c. That is whosoeuer receiueth this bread of the Supper of Christ vpon the second or iii. day after his soule shall not be blessed but polluted Therfore the Babaonites because they brought olde bread to the children of Israel it was enioyned them to cary wood and water c. D. Austen of whom mētion is made before disputing agaynst them about this matter of the holy Eucharist vrgeth them with this interrogation whether it be the same Christ present in the Sacrament which is present at the right hand of the father If it be not the same Christ how is it true in the Scripture Vna fides vnus Dominus nostet Iesus Christus One fayth one Lord Iesus Christ If it be the same Christ thē how is he not to be honored and worshipped here as well as there To this the Ualdenses aunswere againe and graunt that Christ is one and the same with his naturall body in the sacrament which he is at the right hand of his Father but not after the same existence of his body For y● existence of his body in heauen is not personall and locall to be apprehended by the fayth and spirit of men In the sacramēt the existence of his body is not personall or locall to be apprehēded or receiued of our bodies after a personal or corporall maner but after a sacramētal maner that is where our bodies receiue the signe our spirit the thing insignified Moreouer in heauen the existence of his body is dimensiue and complete with the full proportion and quātity of the same body where with he ascēded here the existēce of his complete body with the full proportion measure stature thereof doth not neither can stand in the sacramēt Briefly the existence of his body in heauen is naturall not sacramentall that is to be sene and not remembred here it is sacramentall not naturall that is to be remembred not to be sene That aunswere being made to the captious propositiō of D. Augustine The Ualdenses retorting the like interrogation to him againe demaund of him to answere them in the like obiection whether it be all on christ substātially naturally which sitteth in heauen which is vnder the formes of bread and wine and in the receiuers of the Sacrament If he graunt to be Then they did him say seing Christ is as well in the sacrament as in heauen as well in the receiuer as in the sacrament all one Christ in substance nature why then is not the same Christ as well in the brest of the receiuer to be worshipped as vnder the formes of bread and wine in the sacramēt seing he is there after a more perfect maner in man then in the sacrament for in the sacrament he is but for a t●●e and not for the sacraments sake but for the mans cause In man he is not for the sacraments cause but for his owne and that not for a season but for euer as it is written Qui manducat hunc panem viuet in aeternum that is he that eateth this breade shall liue for euer c. Moreouer and besides seing trāsubstantiation is the going of one substance into an other they question againe with him whether the formes of bread and wine remayning the substaūce thereof be chaūged into the whole person of our Lord Christ Iesus that is both into his body soule and diuinitye or not into the whole Christ If he graunt the whole Then say they that is impossible concerning the diuinity both to nature and to our fayth that any creature can be chaūged into the creator If he say the bread is chaunged into the body and soule of Christ not to his diuinity then he seperateth the natures in Christ. If he say into the body alone and not the soule then he separateth the natures of the true manhood c. And so cannot be the same Christ that was betrayed for vs for that he had both body soule To conclude to what part soeuer he would aunswere this doctrine of transubstantiation cannot be defended without great incōueniēce of al sides Ouer and besides Eneas Syluius writing of theyr doctrine and assertions perchaunce as he foūd them perchaunce making worse of them then they taught or ment reporteth them after this maner which I thought here to set out as it is in the Latin ROmanum praesulem reliquis episcopis parem esse Inter sacerdotes nullum discrimen Praes byterum non dignitatem fed vitae meritum efficere potiorem In English The byshop of Rome to be equall with other bishops Amongst priestes to be no difference of degree No Priest to be reputed for any dignity of his order but for the worthinesse of his life The soules of men departed either to enter into paine euerlasting or euerlasting ioy No fire of Purgatory to be found To pray for the dead to be vayn● and a thing onely found out for the lucre of Priestes The images of God as of the Trinity and of saintes to be abolished The halowing of water palmes to be a mere ridicle The religion of begging Fryars to be found out by the deuill That priestes should not incroch riches in this world but rather follow pouerty being content with their tythes and mens deuotion The preaching of the word to be free to all men called thereunto That no deadly sinne is to be tollerate for whatsoeuer respect of a greater commodity to insu● therupon The cōfirmation which bishops exercise with oyle and extreme vnction are not to be counted amongst the sacraments of the Churche Auriculare confession to be but a toy to suffice for euery man to confesse himselfe in his chamber to God Baptisme ought to be ministred ouely with pure water without any mixture of halowed oyle The temple of the Lord to be the wide world The maiesty of God not to be restrayned more within the walles of temples monastaries and chappelles so that his grace is rather to be found in one place then in an other Priestes apparell ornaments of the high aulter vestimentes corporaces chalices patines and other Churche plate to serue in no stead For the difference and respect of the very place to make no matter where the priest doth consecrate or doth minister to them which do require To be sufficient to vse onely the sacramentall words without all other superfluous ceremonies The suffrages of saintes reigning with Christ in heauen to be craued in vayne being not
and tyranny of the Prelates denying the Popes authoritie to haue gro●●d of the Scriptures neyther coulde they away with their ceremonies and traditions as Images Pardons Purgatory of the Romish church calling them as some say blasphemous occupyinges c. Of these Albingenses were slayne at times and burned a great multitude by the meanes of the Pope and Symon Ecclesiasticus with other moe It seemeth that these Albingenses were chiefly abhorred of the Pope because they set vp a contrary Pope against him about the coastes of Bugarorum For the which cause the Byshop called Portinensis beyng the popes Legate in those quarters writeth to the Archbishop of Roan and other Byshops in this wise VEnerabilibus patribus Dei gratia Rothomagensi Archiepiscopo eius suffraganeis Episcopis Sal. in Domino Iesu Christo. Dum pro spōsa veri crucifixi vestrum cogimur auxilium implorare potiùs compellimur lacerari singultibus plorare Ecce quòd vidimus loquimur quod scimus testificamur Ille homo perditus qui extollitur super omne quod colitur aut dicitur Deus iam habet persidiae suae praeambulum haeresiarcam quē haereteci Albingenses Papam suum nominant habitantem finibus Bugarorum Croaticae Dalmitiae iuxta Hungariorum nationem Ad eam confluunt haeretici Albingenses vt ad eorū consulta respondeat Etenim de Carcasona oriundus vices illius Antipapae gerens Bartholomaeus haereticorum Episcopus funestam ei exhibendo reuerentiam sedem locum cōcessit in villa que Porlos appellatur seipsum transtulit in partes Tholosanas Iste Bartholomaeus in literarum suarum vndique discurrenrentium tenore se in primo salutationis alloquio intitulat in hūc modum Bartholomaeus seruus seruorum M●sanctae fidei salutē Ipse etiam inter alias enormitates creat Episcopos Ecclesias perfidè ordinare contendit Rogamus igitur attentiùs per aspertionem sanguinis Iesu Christi propensiùs obsecramus authoritate Domini Papae qua fungimur in hac parte districtè praecipientes quatenus veniatis Senonas in oct Apostorum Petri Pauli proximè futuris vbi alij praelati Franciae fauente Domino congregabuntur parati consilium dare in negotio praedicto cum alijs qui ibidem aderunt prouidere super negotio Albingensi Alioqui inobedientiam vestram D. Papae curabimus significari Datum Apud Plauuium 6. Nonas Iulij For somuch as mention is here made of these superstitious sectes of Fryers and such other beggerly religions it might seeme not much impartinent being moued by the occasion hereof as I haue done in Hildegardis before so now to annexe also to the same a certayne other auncient treatise compyled by Geoffray Chawcer by the way of a Dialogue or questions moued in the person of a certayne vplandish and simple ploughman of the country Whiche treatise for the same the author intituled Iacke vpland wherein is to be seene and noted to al the world the blind ignoraunce and variable discord of these irreligious religions how rude and vnskilfull they are in matters and principles of our Christian institution As by the contents of this present Dialogue appeareth the wordes wherof in the same old English wherein first it was set forth in this wise doe proceede Wherein also thou mayst see that it is no new thing that theyr blasphemous doyngs hath by diuers good men in old tyme bene detected as there are many and diuers other olde bookes to shew A treatise of Geoffrey Chawcer Intituled Iacke vpland I Iacke vpland make my mone to very God and to all true in Christ that Antechrist and his Disciples by colour of holines walking and deceauing Christes Church by many false figures where through by Antechrist and hys many vertues bene transposed to vices But the felliest folke that euer Antechrist found bene last brought into the church and in a wonder wise for they bene of diuers sectes of Antechrist sowne of diuers countreys and kindreds And all men knowne well that they be not obedient to Byshops ne liege men to kinges neyther they tyllen ne sowne weden ne repen woode corne ne grasse neither nothing that man should helpe but onely themselues their lyues to sustayne And these men han all maner power of God as they seyn in heuyn in yerth to sell heuyn and hell to whom that them liketh and these wretches were neuer where to bene themselfes And therfore Frere if thine order rules bene grounded on Goddys law tell thou me Iacke vpland that I aske of thee and if thou be or thinkest to be on Christes side keepe thy paciens SAint Paule teacheth that all our deedes should be do in charite and els it is nought worth but displeasing to God and harme to our owne soules And for that Freres challenge to be greatest Clerkes of the Churche and next following Christ in liuing men should for charite axe thē some questions and praye them to grounde theyr aunsweres in reason and in holy write for els their aunswere woulde nought bee worth be it florished neuer so fayre and as mehinke men might skilfully axe thus of a Frere 1. ¶ Frere how many orders be in erth and which is the perfitest order of what order art thou who made thyne order what is thy rule Is there any perfecter rule then Christ himselfe made If Christes rule be most perfite why rulest thou thee not therafter without more why shall a Frere be more punished if he breke the rule that hys patron made then if he breke the heestes that God hymsefe made 2. Approueth Christ any more religions then one that S. Iames speaketh of If he approueth no more why hast thou left his rule and takest an other why is a Frere apostata that leuyth his order taketh an other sect sith there is but one religion of Christ. 3. Why he ye wedded faster to your habites then a man is to hys wife For a man may leaue hys wife for a yeare or two as many men done and if you leue your abitea quarter of a yeare ye shuld beholden apostatase 4. Makith your habite you men of Religion or no If it do then euer as it wereth your religion wereth and after that that your habite is better your religion is better and when ye haue liggin it beside then lig ye your religion beside you and byn apostatase why bye ye you so precious clothes sith no man seekith such but for vayne glory as S. Gregory sayth What betokeneth your great hood your scaplery your knotted girdle and your wide cope 5. Why vse ye all one colour more then other Christen mē do what betokeneth that ye bene clothed all in one maner clothing If ye say it betokenith loue and charite certes then ye be oft hipocrites whē any of you hateth other and in that that ye woole be sayd holy by your clothing Why may not
declareth to extoll himselfe aboue measure and to oppresse y● few that be godly and to haue many fal●e prophets about him which neglecting the word and the name of Christ do preach extoll him only obscuring the name of Christ. The church of Rome and the Pope he describeth in these words I was praying sayd he on my knees looking vpward to heauen nere to the aulter of S. Iames in Paris on the right side of the aultar saw in the ayre before me the body of a certain high bishop all clothed in white silke who turning his backe on the East lift vp his hand toward the west as the Priestes are wont in theyr Masse turning to the people but his head was not seene And as I was considering aduisedly whether he had any head or no I perceiued a certayne head in him all dry leane withered as though it had bene a head of wood And the spirit of the Lord sayd to me This signifieth the state of the Church of Rome Moreouer the same author in his visions well describing the maner of the schole sophisters and Sorbonists addeth in this wise An other day as I was in like contēplation as before I beheld in spirit and beholde I saw a man apparelled like to the other before which wēt about hauing fine bread and excellent wine that hanged about him on both sides And the same hauing in his hand a lōg and an hard flint stone was gnawing hungerly vpon the same as one being hungry is wont to bite vpon a loafe of bread Out of the which stone came two heads of two serpentes the spirit of the Lord instructing me and saying This stone purporteth the friuilous intricate curious questions wherein the hungry do trauaile and labor leauing the substauntiall foode of their soules And I asked what these two heads did meane And he sayd The name of the one is vaine glory the name of the other is the marring and dissipation of religion Also concerning reformation of the church this vision he declareth It happened as I was sayth he in the same City in the house of a certaine noble man a Britaine and was there speaking with certayne I saw a crosse of siluer very bright much like to the Crosse of the Earle of Tholouse But the 12. apples which did hang beside in the armes of the crosse were very vile like the apples which the sea is wont to cast vp And I sayd what is this Lord Iesu and the spirit answered me This crosse which thou seest is the church which shal be cleare and bright in purenes of life and shall be heard and known all ouer through the shrill voice of the preaching of sincere verity Then being troubled with the apples I asked what these apples so vile did signify and he said it is the humiliation of the Church c. This godly man did forewarne as in a certain chro●ticle is declared how God would punish the simony and auarice of the clergy with such a plague that riuers should runne with bloud c. It is sayd that there is remayning a great volume of his visions whiche are not yet abroad for these that be abroad are but a briefe extract out of hys visions and reuelations After y● we haue thus lōg straid in these forrein stories of Fredericke and in the tractation of other matters pertayning to other countreys Now after this sufficient disgression it is time that we returne to our own country agayne where in folowing the continuatiō of time course of the Church we will now adioyne to these good fathers and writers the history of the learned Bishop of Lincolne named Robert Grosted a man famously learned as that time serued in the three toungs both Latin Greeke and Hebrue also in all liberall sciences whose works Sermons yet this day are extant which I haue seene in the Queenes Maiestyes Library at Westminster wherin is one speciall Sermon writtē and exhibited in foure sundry skrolles to the pope and to other foure Cardinals beginning Dominus noster Iesus Christus c. Nicolas Triuet in his chronicle writing of this bishop affirmeth that he was borne in Suffolke in the Dioces of Northfolke who geuing him the prayse to be a man of excellent wisedome of profound doctrine an example of all vertue witnesseth that he being maister of Arte wrote first a Commentary in librum posteriorum of Aristotle Also that he wrote Tractations de sphera de arte comput And that he set forth diuers books concerning Philosophy Afterward being Doctor in Diuinity and expertly seene in all the 3. tongues drew out sundry Treatises out of the Hebrue gloses also translated diuers works out of the Greeke as namely the Testamentes of the xij Patriarches the bookes of Dionisius commenting vpon the new translation with hys owne glose Haec ille Many other workes and volumes besides were written by the said Grosted as De oculo morali de Dotibus De cessatione legalium paruus Cato Annotationes in Suidam in Boetium De potestate pastorali expositiones in Genes in Lucam with a number mo● besides diuers Epistles Sermons and Inuections sent to the Pope for his vnmeasurable exactions wherwith he ouercharged oppressed the Church of England This godly and learned Bishop after diuers conflicts and agonies sustayned agaynst the Bishop of Rome after the example of Fredericke of Guiliel de sancto amore of Nico Gallus and other after minded at length after great labors and trauells of life finished his course departed at Buckdone in the moneth of Octob. an 1253. Of his decease thus writeth Mat. Parisiens pag. 278. Out of the prison and banishmēt of this world which he neuer loued was takē the holy bishop of Lincolne Robert at his manor of Buck●one in the euen of S. Dionise who was an open reprouer of the Pope and of the King a rebuker of the prelats a corrector of the Monkes director of the Priestes instructor of the clerkes fau●or of scholers a preacher to the people persecutor to the incontinent a diligent searcher of the Scriptures A malle to the Romaines and a contemner of theyr doings c. Haec Mat. what a malle hee was to the Romaines in the sequele hereof Christ willing shall better appeare The story is this It so befell among other dayly and intollerable exactions wherein Pope Innocēt was greuous and iniurious manifold wayes to the Realme of England he had a certaine cosin or nephew so Popes were wont to call theyr sonnes named Fredericke being yet yoūg vnder yeres whom the said Innocent the Pope would needs preferre to be a Canon or Prebendary in the church of Lincolne in this time of Robert Bishop of the sayd Church And vpō the same directed down letters to certayn his factors here in England for the execution thereof The copy of which letter by chaunce yet not by chaunce
but by the oportune sending of God came to my hādes as I was pēning this present storye written in the ende of an olde parchment book and otherwise rare I suppose to be foūd As is this Dilectis filijs Archdiacono Cant. magistro Innocēt scriptori nostro in Anglia commoranti salutem Apostolicam benedict Cum dilectus filius noster G. Sanct Eustachij Diaconus cardinalis dilecto filio Fridericho de Lauania clerico nepoti nostro de speciali mandato nostro Canonicatum Lincolniens cū plenitudine iuris canonici duxerit cōferendum ipsum per suum anulum corporaliter praesentialit inuestiens de eodem vt extunc canonic Lincolniensis existat plenum nomen ius Canonici consequatur ibidem ac prebendam si qua vacauerit in Ecclesia Lincol● a tempore quo dudùm litere nostrae super receptione ac prouisione facienda sibi in Eccles. eadem de praemissis venerab fratri nostro Episcopo Lincoln presētatae fuerūt a lioqui post va● caturam conferendā sibi donationi Apostolicae reseruarit decernendo irritum inane si quid de praebēda huiusmodi a quoq̄ fuerit attentatum nec non in contradictores rebelles excommunicationis sententiā vbique promulgando prout in literis eiusdem exindè de cōstitutis pleniùs cōtinetur Nos ipsius Frede rici deuotis supplicationibus inclinati quod ab eodē Cardin. factum est super hoc ratum gratum habentes idem autorit Apostolic duximus confirmandum Quocirca Discretioni vestrae per Apostolica scripta●mandamus quatenus eundem Fredericū vel procuratorum suum eius nomine in corporalem possessionē praedictorum Canonicatus praebēdae autorite nostra inducatis defendatis inductum cōtradictores per censuram Ecclesiasticā appellatione postposita cōpescendo Non obstātibus aliquibus consuetudinibus vel statutis inramentis vel confirmationibus sedis Apostolicae seu quacunque alia infirmitate roboratis vel quòd dictus Frider. praesens non fuerit ad prestandum iuramentum de obseruandis consuitudinib eiusdem Eccles. consuetis Siue si praedicto Episcop vel Capitulo ipsius Ecclesiae communiter vel singulatim ●eu alijs quibuscūque personis a dicta sede indultum existat quòd ad receptionem vel prouisionem alicuius cōpelli nequeant siue quòd nullus alius in eorum Ecclesia nemini prouidere valeat vel quod interdici suspendi aut excommunicari non possint per literas apost sub quacūque forma verborū obtentas vel obtinendas etiamsi totus tenor indulgē tiarum huiusmodi de verbo in verbum in ijsdem literis sit insertus siue quibus alijs indulgentijs quibuscunque personis dignitati vel loco sub quacunque forma verborum concessis a sede Apost vel etiam concedendis per quas effectus huiusmodi prouisionis posset impediri aliquatenus vel differri Tamen volumus ea de certa scientia quantum ad prouisionem factam faciendam Frederico praedicto in Ecclesia Lincoln viribus omnino carere Coeterum si aliqui praedicto Frederico vel procuratori super praemissis vel aliquo praemissorum aliquatenus duxerit apponendum Illos ex parte nostra citari curetis vt peremptoriè infra duorum mēsium spacium post citationem vestrā personaliter cōpareant coram nobis eidem Friderico super praemissis legitimè responsuri Non obstantibus priuilegijs siue quibuslibet indulgētijs personis regni Angliae generaliter vel cuiuis alij personae vel dignitati vel loco specialiter a praedicta sede sub quacunque forma verborum concessis Quod non possunt vltra mare seu extra ciuitatem vel Diocesin suam in iudiciū euocari per literas apost sub quacunque forma verborū obtētas quod priuilegium indulgentias eisdē personis de certa scientia nullatenus volumus suffragari constitutione aedita de duabus dictis in cōcilio generali non obstante Diem autem citationis formam nobis vestris literis tenorem praesentium continentibus fideliter intimetis Quòd si non ambo his exequendis interesse poteritis alter vestrum nihilominus exequatur Datum Perus 7. Cal. Febr. Pontificat nostro anno decimo Which letter to be englished is this Vnto our welbeloued sonnes the Archdeacon of Cant. to maister Innocent our scribe abiding in England greting and Apostolicall benedictiō For so much as our welbeloued sonne G. of S. Eustace Deacon Cardinal vpon our speciall commaūdemēt hath geuen and graunted to our welbeloued sonne Frederick de Lauania a Clarke and our nephew a Canōship in the Church of Lincolne with full power and graunt of the same Inuesting him also corporally and presently with his owne ring in the said canōship to be frō hēceforth Canō of Lincolne to haue ful power of the sayd canonship in the church and a prebend when anye shall fall in the Churche of Lincolne From that time since whiche our former letters of late concerning this receiuing and prouision to be geuen to him in the sayd Church were presēted exhibited to our reuerend brother Bishop of Lincolne Or els after the next auoyding the said prebendship to be reserued to the Apostolical donation to be geuē to him making it void frustrate if the sayd prebēdship shall be geuē to any other man beside and also denouncing the sentence of excōmunication agaynst all them that shall rebell and gainsay the same as in the letters of the sayd Cardinall is more fully contayned We therfore graciously inclined by the deuout supplication of the said Friderick ratifying gratefully approuing that which hath bene done by the said cardinals in the premisses haue thoght good by the authority Apostolicall to confirme Wherefore we geue in cōmaundement by our letters Apostolicall to your wisedomes that you will see the sayd Frederick or his proctor in hys behalfe to be really and corporally possessed in the sayd Canonship or prebēd by our authority also defend the sayd party being therin possessed denouncing the sentence of excommunication against all such as shall withstand the same All maner of customes or statutes to the contrary notwithstāding corroborated either with oath or cōfirmatiōs of the sea Apostolick or by what stay or let soeuer Or whether that the said Frederick be not present to take the oath accustomed to be geuen for obseruing the customes of the sayd church Or whether it be geuen and graunted by the sayd sea to the foresayd Bishop or to the chapter of the sayd church ioyntly and seuerally or to what person or persons els that no man by compulsion should haue admission or prouision for any person in their Church wherby they cannot be interdicted suspended or excommunicate by the letters Apostolicall obtained or to be obtained hereafter vnder what form or words soeuer yea although the whole tenour of the sayd indulgence be inserted word for word in the sayd
when he would haue vomitted out and could not took hys horse went to hun● the beare whereby through the chasing heat of his body to expell the venim And there the good gentle Emperour wickedly persecuted murdered of the P. fel downe dead whom I may wel recount among the innocent and blessed martyrs of Christ. For if the cause being righteous doth make a Martyr what Papist can iustly disprooue hys cause or fayth if persecution ioyned thereunto causeth martyrdome what martyre coulde be more persecuted thē he Who hauing 3. popes like 3. baddogs vpō him at length was denoured by the same The princes then hearing of his death assembled thēselues to a new election who refusing Charles aforesayd elected an other for Emperor named Gunterus de Monte Nigro Who shortly after falling sicke at Franckford through his phisitions seruaunt was likewise poysoned whome the foresayd Charles had hyred with money to worke that feate Gunterus tasting of the poysō although he did partly cast it vp agayn yet so much remained within him as made him vnable afterward to serue that place Wherfore for cōcordes sake being counsailed thereto by the Germaynes gaue ouer his Empire to Charles For els great bloudshed was like to ensue This Charles thus ambiciously aspiring to the Emperiall seat contrary to the mindes of the states and pieres of the Empire as he did wickedly vnlawfully come by it so was he by hys ambitious guiding the first and principall meane of the vtter ruine of that monarchie For that he to haue his sonne set vp Emperour after him conuented and graunted to the Princes electours of Germany all the publicke taxes tributes of the Empire Which couenaunt being once made betwene the Emperour them they afterward held so fast that they caused the Emperour to sweare neuer to reuoke or cal back again the same By reason whereof the tribute of the countryes of Germany which then belonged onely to the Emperor for the sustentation of hys warres euer since to this day is dispersed diuersly into the handes of the Princes and free citties within the sayd monarchie So that both the Empyre beyng disfornished and left desolate the Emperors weakened therby hauing neyther bene able sufficiētly since to defend themselues nor yet to resist the Turke or other forren enemies Whereof a great part as ye haue heard may be imputed vnto the popes c. Hieronimus Marius This Pope Clement first reduced the yeare of Iubeley to euery 50. yeare which before was kept but on the hundreth yeare And so he being absent at Auinion whiche he then purchased withhys money to the sea of Rome caused it to be celebrated at Rome an 1350. In the whiche yeare were numbred of peregrines goyng in and comming out euery day at Rome to the estimation of fiue thousād Praemonstrat The bull of pope Clement geuen out for this present yeare of Iubiley proceedeth in these wordes as followeth What person or persons soeuer for deuotiō sake shal take their perigrination vnto the holy Citty the same day when he setteth forth out of hys house he may chuse vnto him what cōfessor or cōfessors eyther in the way or where els he listeth vnto the which cōfessors we graunt by our authority plenary power to absolue all cases papal as fully as if we were in our proper person there present Item we graunt that whosoeuer being truely confessed shall chaunce by the way to die hee shall be quite and absolued of all his sinnes Moreouer we commaund the Angels of Paradise to take his soule out of his body being absolued and to cary it into the glory of Paradise c. And in an other Bull wee will sayeth he that no paine of hell shal touche him graunting moreouer to all and singular person persons signed with the holy crosse power and aucthoritie to deliuer and release iij. or iiij soules whome they list themselues out of the paines of purgatorie c. This Clement as mine author affirmeth tooke vpon him so prodigally in his Popedome that hee gaue to hys Cardinals of Rome Byshoprickes and benefices whych then were vacant in England and begā to geue them new titles for the same liuinges hee gaue them in Englande Wherewith the king as good cause he had was offended and vndid all the prouisions of the pope within his realme Commanding vnder pain of prisonment and life no man to be so hardy as to induce bring in any such prouisions of the pope any more within his lād And vnder the same punishment charged the two Cardinals to void that realme An. 1343. In the same yeare all the tenthes as well of the templaries as of other spirituall men were geuen paide to the king through the whole realme An. 1343. And thus much cōcerning good Ludouicke Emperour and martyr Pope Clement y● 6. his enemy Wherin because we haue a little exceeded the course of yeares wherat we left let vs returne some what back agayn and take such things in order as belong to the church of the England and Scotland setting forth the reigne of king Edward the 3. and the doinges of the Church which in hys time haue happened as the grace of Christ our Lord will assiste and able vs therunto This foresayd king Edward the second in his time builded 2. houses in Oxford for good letters to wit Oriall colledge and S. Mary Halle Here I omit also by the way the furious outrage and conflict which happened in the time of this king a litle before his death an 1326. betweene the townesmen and the Abbey of Bury wherein the townesmen gathering themselues together in a great multitude for what cause or old grudge betweene them the Register doth not declare inuaded and sackt the monastery And after they had imprisoned the monkes they risted the goodes and treasure of the whole house spoyling and carying away theyr plate mony copes vestimentes sen●ers crosses chalises basens iewels cups masers bookes with other ornaments and implementes of the house to the value vnestimable In the which conflict certayn also on both sides were slayn Such was the madnes then of that people that when they had gathered vnto them a great concourse of seruaunts light persons of that country to the number of 20. thousand to whom they promised liberty freedome by vertue of such writs whiche they had out of that house first they got into their hands all theyr euidences copies instruments that they could finde then they tooke of the lead that done setting fire to the Abbey gates they brent vp neare the whole house After that they proceeded further to the farmes and granges belonging to the sayd Abbey wherof they wasted spoiled and brent to the nūber of 22. manour places in one weeke transporting away the corne horses cartell and other moueables belonging to the same the price wherof is registred to come
and against inuocation of Saintes and preached sincerely of our free iustificatiō by grace referring al mans trust onely to the mercy of God and was an enemy to all superstition With whom also may be adioyned Frāciscus Petrarcha a wryter of the same age who in hys works and hys Italian meeter speaking of Rome calleth it the whore of Babylon the schole and mother of error the temple of heresy the nest of traichery growing and increasing by that oppressing of others and sayeth farther that shee meaning the Popes Court extolleth her selfe against her founders that is the Emperours who first set her vp and did so enriche her And semeth plainly to affirme that the pope was Antichrist declaring that no greater euil could happen to any man then to be made Pope Thys Franciscus was about the yeare of our Lord. 1350. And if time would serue vs to seeke out olde hystories we should finde plenty of faithful witnesses of old and ancient time to geue witnesse with vs against the Pope beside the other aboue rehearsed as Ioannes de Rupe scissian 1340. Who for rebuking the spiritualtie for theyr greate enormities and neglecting their office and duety was cast in pryson Illyricus a wryter in our dayes testifieth that he founde red man old Pamphlet that the sayd Ioannes should call the church of Rome the whore of Babylon and the Pope to be the minister of Antichrist and the Cardinals to be the false prophetes Being in pryson he wrote a booke of Prophesies bearing the title Vade mecum in tribulationem in which booke which also I haue seene he prophesied admonished affliction and tribulation to hang ouer the spiritualty And pronoūceth plainly that God wil purge his Clergy and wil haue priestes that shal be poore godly and that shal faithfully seede the Lordes flocke moreouer that the goods of the church shal returne againe to the lay men He prophesied also the same time that the French king and his army should haue an ouerthrow Which came likewise to passe during the time of his imprisonment Of this Ioannes de Rupe wryteth Froysard in hys time and also Wicklisse of whose prophecies more may be said at more leisure Christ willing hereafter About the same yeare of our Lorde 1340. in the Citie Herbipoli was one named master Cōradus Hager who as appeareth by the old bulles and registers of Otho byshop of the said citye is there recorded to haue mainteined and taught the space of 24. yeares together the Masse to be no maner of sacrifice neither that it profiteth any man ether quicke or dead and that the money geuen of the dead for Masses be very robberies sacrilege of priests which they wickedly do intercept and take away from the poore And sayd moreouer that if he had a stooue full of golde and siluer hee would not geue one farthing for any Masse For the same his doctrine thys good preacher was condemned and inclosed in pryson what afterward became vpon him we doe not finde There is among other old and ancient recordes of antiquity belōging to thys present time a certain monument in verses Poetically compiled but not wythout a certaine morall intituled Poenitentiarius Asini the Asses confessor bearing the date and yeare of our Lorde in thys number Completus An. 1343. In this treatise be brought foorth the Wolfe the Foxe and the Asse comming to Christ and doing penaunce First the Wolfe confesseth hym to the Fox who easely doeth absolue hym from all hys faultes and also excuseth hym in the same In like maner the Wolfe hearyng the Foxes shrifte sheweth to hym the like fauour agayne After thys commeth the Asse to cōfession whose fault was thys that hee being hungry tooke a strawe out from the cheafe of one that went in peregrination vnto Rome The Asse although repenting of his fact yet because he thought it not so heynous as the faults of the other the more hee hoped for hys absolution But what followed After the sely Asse had vttered his crime in auricular confession immediatly the discipline of the lawe was executed vppon hym with seueritie neither was hee iudged worthy of any absolution but was apprehended vpon the same slayne and deuoured Whosoeuer was the author of thys fabulous tale had a misticall vnderstanding in the same for by the Wolfe no doubt was meant the Pope But the Foxe was resembled to the Prelates Curtisans Priestes and rest of the spiritualtie Of the spiritualtie the Lord Pope is soone absoyled as contrary the Pope soone doeth absoyle them in like manner By the Asse is ment the poore laitie vppon whose backe the straite censure of the law is sharpely executed especially when the Germane Emperors come vnder the Popes Inquisition to be examined by hys discipline there is no absolution nor pardon to be found but in all haste he must be deposed as in these stories may partly appeare before And though the matter be not the weyght of a strawe yet what sayeth the holy father the Wolfe if it please hym to make any matter of it Immensum scelus est iniuria quam peregrin● Fecisti stramen subripiendo sibi Non aduertisti quòd plura pericula paslus Plurima passurus quòd peregrinus erat Non aduertisti quòd ei per maxima terrae Et pelagi spacia sit peragranda via Non aduertisti sanctos nec limina sancta Sanctorum sanctam sed nec Hierusalem Ille retransiuit eadem loca tam violentum Ex inopinato sensit adesse malum De Papa Taceo cuius protectio talem Conduxit cuius tu vilipendis opem Totius Ecclesiae fuerit quam nuncius iste Pertulit abstracto gramine damna viae c. And thus they aggerating and exaggerating the fault to the vttermost flye vpon the poore asse deuour him By the which Apologie the tyrannicall and fraudulent practises of these spirituall Romanistes are liuely described Not long after those aboue rehearsed about the yeare of our lord 1350. Gerhardus Ridder wrote also against the Monkes and Friers a booke intituled Lacrima Ecclesiae wherein he disputeth agaynst the foresaid religious orders namely against the begging Friers prouing that kinde of life to be farre frō Christian perfection for that it is against charitie to live vppon other when a man may liue by his own labours And affirmeth them to be hipocrites filthy liuers and such as for mans fauour and for lucre sake doe mixt with true diuinitie fables Apocriphas and dreames of vanitie Also that they vnder pretence of long prayer deuour widdowes houses and with their confessions sermons and burials doe trouble the Church of Christ manifold wayes And therfore perswaded the prelates to bridle and keepe short the inordinate licence and abuses of these Monasticall persons c. Yet I haue made no mensiō of Michael Cesenas prouincial of the gray friers n●r Petrus de Corbaria of whō writeth Antoninus in
persecutour in Rome fighting against Constantinus was drowned wyth his souldiours like as Pharao was drowned persecuting the children of Israel in the red sea Unto the which xlij moneths or Sabbothes of yeares if yee adde the other sixe yeares wherein Licinius persecuted in the East ye shal finde iust three hundred yeres as is specified before in the first booke of thys volume pag. 97. After the which fortie and two monethes being expired manyfest it is that the furie of Sathan that is hys violent malice and power ouer the Saints of Christ was diminished and restrained vniuersally through the whole world Thus then the matter standing euident that Sathan after 300. yeares counting from the passion of Christ began to be chayned vp at what time the persecution of the primitiue Church began to cease Nowe let vs see howe long thys binding vp of Sathan shoulde continue which was promised in the booke of the Reuelation to be a thousand yeares Which thousand yeares if yee adde to the xlij monethes of yeares that is to 294. yeares they make 1294. yeares after the passion of the Lord. To these moreouer adde the 30. yeares of the age of Christ and it commeth to the yeare of our Lord 1324. which was the yeare of the letting out of Sathan according to the prophesie of the Apocalips A Table containing the time of the persecution both of the primitiue and of the latter Church with the count of yeares from the first binding vp of Sathan to his loosing againe after the minde of the Apocalips The first persecution of the primitiue Churche beginning at the 30. yeares of Christ was prophecied to continue 42. monthes that is An. 294. The ceasing of the laste persecution of the primitiue Churche by the death of Licinius the last persecutour began An. 324. from the natiuitie of Christ which was from the 30. yeare of hys age 294. 294. The binding vp of Sathan after peace geuen to the church counting from the 30. yeares of Christ began An. 294. And lasted a thousand yeres that is counting from the thirtie yeare of Christe to the yeare 1294. About which yeare Pope Boniface the 8. was Pope and made the 6. booke of the decretals confirmed the orders of Friers and priuileged them with great fredomes as appeareth by his constitution Super cathedram An. 1294. Unto the which count of yeares doeth not much disagree that I founde in a certaine olde Chronicle prophesied and wrytten in the latter ende of a booke which booke was wrytten as it seemeth by a monke of Douer remayneth yet in the custodye of William Cary a Citizen of London alledging the Prophesie of one Hayncardus a gray Frier grounded vppon the authoritie of Ioachim the Abbot prophesying that Antichrist shoulde be borne the yeare from the Natiuitie of Christ. 1260. Which is counting after the Lordes passion the very same yere and time when the orders of Friers both Dominickes and Franciscans began first to be sette vp by Pope Honorius the 3. and by Pope Gregorius 9. which was the yere of our Lord counting after his passion 1226. And counting after the Natiuitye of the Lord was the yeare 1260. Wherof these verses in the author was wrytten Cum fuerint anni completi mille ducenti Et decies seni post partum virginis almae Tunc Antichristus nascetur daemone plenus And these verses were wrytten as appeareth by the sayd author An. 1285. These thyngs thus premised for the loosing out of Satan according to the prophesie of the Apocal. nowe let vs enter Christe willing to the declaration of these latter times which folowed after the letting out of Sathan into the worlde Describing the wondrous perturbations and cruell tiranny stirred vp by him against Christes Church Also the valiant resistance of the Church of Christ against him and Antichrist as in these our bookes heere vnder following may appeare The argument of which booke consisteth in 2. partes first to entreate of the raging furie of Satan nowe loosed and of Antichrist Against the saints of Christ fighting and traueiling for the maintenance of the truth reformation of the Church Secondly to declare the decay and ruine of the said Antichrist through the power of the word of God being at length eyther in a greate parte of the worlde ouerthrowen or at least vniuersally in the whole world detected Thus then to begin wyth the yeare of our Lord. 1360. wherin I haue a litle as is aforesayd transgressed the stint of the first loosing out of Sathan we are come now to the time wherin the Lord after long darknes beginneth some reformation of hys Churche by the diligent industrie of sondry hys faithful and learned seruauntes of whome diuers already we haue foretouched in the former booke before as namely Guliel de Sancto Amore Marsilius Patauinus Ockam Robertus Gallus Robertus Grosted Petrus de Cugnerijs Ioannes Rupescissanus Conradus Hager Ioannos de Poliaco Cesenas wyth other moe whych withstoode the corrupt errours and intollerable enormities of the Byshop of Rome Beside them which about these times were put to death by the saide bishop of Rome as Chastilion Franciscus de Arcatara in the booke before recorded also the two Franciscanes Martyrs which were burned at Auinion mentioned pag. 391. Now to these the Lord willing we will adde such other holy Martyrs and confessors who following after in the course of yeares with like zeale and strength of Gods worde and also with like daunger of their liues gaue the like resistance against the enemie of Christes religion and suffered at hys handes the like persecutions First begynning wyth that godly man whosoeuer he was the author of the Booke hys name I haue not intituled the prayer and complaint of the Ploughman wrytten as it appeareth about thys present time Which booke as it was faithfully set foorth by William Tindall so I haue truely distributed the same abroade to the Readers handes neyther chaunging any thyng of the matter neyther altering many woordes of the phrase thereof Although the oldnesse and age of hys speache and termes be almost growne nowe out of vse yet thought I it so best both for the vtilitie of the booke to reserue it from obliuion as also in his owne language to let it go abroad for the more credite and testimonie of the true antiquity of the same Adding withal in the margent for the better vnderstanding of the reader some interpretation of certaine difficult termes and speches as otherwise might perhaps hinder or stay the reader The matter of this complaining prayer of the ploughman thus proceedeth An olde auncient wryting intitled The prayer and complaint of the Ploughman IESV CHRIST that was ybore of the maid Marie haue on thy poore seruauntes mercie and pitie and helpe them in their great nede to fight against sinne and against the deuill that is author of sinne and more nede nes there neuer to cry to
thē If Christian perfection by the friers Philosophy stadeth in wilfull beggery 12. Item if Christ the high priest had begged wilfully thē did holy Church erre wittingly which ordeined that none without sufficient title of liuing clothing should be admitted to holy orders And moreouer when it is seyd in the canonicall decrees that the bishop or clerke that beggeth bringeth shame vpon the whole order of the clergy 13. Item if Christ had wilfully begged then the example of wilful pouerty had perteyned to the perfection of Christian life which is contrary to the old law which commaūdeth the Priestes which liued then after the perfection of the law to haue possessions and tithes to keep them from beggory 14. Item if Christ did wilfully begge then beggery were a poynt of christian perfection And so the Church of God should erre in admitting such patrimonies and donatiōs geuen to the Church and so in taking from the Prelates their perfection 15. Agayne what will these friers which put their perfection in begging say to Melchisedech who without begging or wilfull pouerty was the high Priest of God and King of Salem and prefigured the order and Priesthoode of Christ 16. And if beggery be such a perfection of the Gospell as the friers say how cōmeth it that the holy Ghost geuen to the Apostles which should lead them into all trueth tolde them no word of this beggerly perfection neither is there any word mentioned therof through the whole Testamēt of God 17. Moreouer where the Prophet sayth I neuer did see the lust man forsaken nor his seed go begging their bread How standeth this with the iustice of Christ which was most perfectly iust if he should be forsaken or his seede goe begge their bread And thē how agreeth this with the abhominable doctrine of friers Franciscan which put theyr perfection in wilfull begging 18. Finally doc wee not read that Christ sent his disciples to preach without scripp or wallet and bid them salute no man by the way Meaning that they should begge nothing of no man Did not the same Christ also labor with his handes vnder Ioseph S. Paule likewise did he not labour with his handes rather then he would burden the Church of the Corinthians And where now is the doctrine of the friers which putteth state of perfectiō in wilfull begging The fift conclusion of Armachanus agaynst the friers was this that Christ neuer taught any man wilfully to begge which he proued thus It is written Actes 1. Christ began to do and to teach If Christ therfore which did neuer wilfully beg himselfe as hath bene proued had taught men otherwise to do then his doing and teaching had not agreed together Item if Christ which neuer begged himselfe wilfully had taught men this doctrine of wilfull begging contrary to his owne doing he had geuen suspition of his doctrine and ministred slaunder of the same as hath bene proued ●t the fourth conclusion before Moreouer in so reaching he had taught cōtrary to the Emperors iust law which ●xpresly forbiddeth the same The sixt conclusion of Armachanus agaynst the Friers was that our Lord Iesus Christ teacheth vs that we should not beg wilfully which he proueth by seuē or eight reasons First where it is written Luke 14. when thou makest a feast call the poore weake lame and blind and thou shalt be blessed for they haue not wherewith to reward thee agayne To this also perteineth that decree of that apostle 1. Thes. 3. He that will not worke let him not eat Furthermore the same Apostle addeth in the same place For you haue vs for exāple how we were burdenous to nomā neither did we eat our bread freely but with labor and wearines toiling both day and night and all because we would not burthē you c. 4. Item where we read in the scripture the slouthful in ā reprehended Pro. 6. why slepest thou O sluggard thy pouerty and beggery is comming vpon thee like an armed man c. And agayne in the same booke of Prouerbs The slouthfull man sayth the scripture for colde would not go to the plough therfore he shal beg in sommer and no man shall geue bun c. Also in the sayd booke of Prouerb last chapter The diligent labouring woman is commended whose fingers are exercised about the rocke spindle And all these places make agaynst the wilfull begging of sturdy Friers 5. Item Frier Frances their owne founder in his owne testament sayth And I haue laboured with mine owne hands and will labor and will that all my frierlings shall labor and litle of theyr labor wherby they may support thē selues in an honest meane And they that cannot worke let them learne to worke not for any couetousnesse to receiue for theyr labor but for example of good workes and to auoyd idlenesse And when the price of theyr labor is not geuen them let them resort to the Lords table aske their almes from dore to dore c. Thus much in his Testamēt And in his rule he sayth Such brethren to whom the Lord hath geuen the gift to labor let them labour faithfully and deuoutly c. wherfore it is to be maruelled how those friers with their wilfull begging dare transgresse the rule obedience of Frier Frauncis their great graundfathers testament 6. Item if Christ at any time did beg or did lacke it was more because he would vse a miracle in his own persō thē because he would beg wilfully as when he sent Peter to that sea to finde a groat in the fishes mouth which thing yee he thought rather to do thē to beg the groat of the people which he might soone haue obteined 7. Item by diuers other his examples he seineth to teach the same as where he sayth The workmā is worthy of his hier Also the workeman is worthy of his meate Math. 10. Luke 10. And whē he spake to Zache that he would turne into his house And so likewise in Bethany and all other places he euer vsed rather to burden his frends thē to beg of other vnacquaynted 8. Item with playn precept thus he sendeth forth his disciples willing them not to go from house to house Luke 10. so as Friers vse now to goe Many other Scriptures there be which reproue begging as where it is sayd The foot of a foole is swift to the house of his neighbor Eccl. 29. And in an other place My childe sayth he see thou want not is the tune of thy life for better it is to die then to lack Eccl. 21. 9. Itē where Christ counselling the young man had him go and sel that he had and geue to the poore and folow him if he would be perfect doth not there cal him to wilful begging but calleth him to folow him which did not beg wilfully The seuenth conclusion of Armachanus is that no wise nor true holy man can take vpon him wilfull pouerty to be obserued alwayes which
ought as neare as I can to chuse the best part Wherfore I surely trust that M. I. Wickliffe is one of the number of thē which are saued The words of Christ moneth me therunto saying Math. 7. Doe ye not iudge that ye be not iudged Luke the 6. Do not condemn ye shal not be condemned and the wordes of the Apostle 1. Cor. 4 Do ye not iudge before the Lord himselfe do come the which shall opē those things that are hid in darknes to manifest the priuities of all hartes Secondly the loue and charity which I ought to bear vnto my neighbor louing him as my selfe doth moue me thereunto Luk. 10. Thirdly his good fame report moneth me the which he hath of the good Priests of the vniuersity of Oxford not of the wicked commōly of the vulgar sort although not of the couetous proud and luxurious Prelates Fourthly his owne workes writings doe stirre me therunto by the which he goeth about with his whole indeuor to reduce all men vnto the law of Christ specially y● clergy that they shoulde forsake the pompe dominion of this world and with the Apostles lead the life of Christ. Fiftly his owne protestations which he doth oftentimes vse in his sentences often repeating the same doth not a litle moue me Sixtlye his earnest desire and affection which he had vnto the law of Christ doth not a litle allure me therunto disputing of the verity therof the which cannot fayle in any one iote or title Whereupon he made a booke of the verity of the holy Scripture approuing euen vnto the vtter most the trueth of Gods law Wherfore it were too foolish a consequēt to say that because the number of the Prelates and clergy in England Fraunce and Boheme do coūt Iohn Wickeliffe for an hereticke that therfore he is an heretick c. Like as the reason for burning of the bookes for it is written in the first booke of Machabees first chapter that they did burne the books of the Lord tearing them in peeces and whosoeuer was founde to haue kept any bookes of the Testament or will of the Lord or the which obserued and kept the lawe of the Lord they were by the kinges commaundemen put to death If then the burning of these bookes by wicked men did argue or proue the euilnesse of the books thē was the law of God euill and nought So likewise the burning of S. Gregories bookes and diuers other sayntes and good men should argue proue that they were euill naughty men Wherupon as it doth not folow that because the Bishops Scribes and Phariseis with the elders of the people condemned Christ Iesus as an heretick that therfore he is an heretick So likewise doth it not follow of any other man The Byshops maisters of diuity monkes and prelates condemned thys man as an hereticke Ergo he is an hereticke For this consequēt is reproued by Iohn Chrisostom which was twise condemned as an hereticke by the Bishops and the whole clergy Likewise S. Gregory in his bookes was condemned by the Cardinals By like proofe also as they affirme M. Iohn Wickliffe to be an hereticke Iohn Duke of Lācaster a man of worthy memory and progenitor of Henry king of Englande should also be an hereticke For the sayd Duke defēded fauored and greatly loued M. Iohn Wickliffe Ergo the sayd Duke is or was an hereticke the consequent is good The Minor is well knowne vnto the Englishmen The Maior appeareth in the Canon where it is sayd he which defendeth an hereticke c. But these thinges set apart I demaund of the aduersary whether M. Iohn Wickliffe be damned for euer or no If he say that he is damned because he is an hereticke I propounde this vnto him whether M. Iohn Wickeliffe whiles he liued held any false doctrine cōtrary to the holy Scripture If he do affirme it let him then shew what doctrine it is and afterward declare that he held it obstinatly And he shall finde that in his bookes he alwayes wrote most commendable protestations agaynst obstinacye and stifneckednesse And by and by after M. Iohn Stokes in his intimation sayth that M. Iohn Wickliffe in Englād is counted for an hereticke This seemeth also false by the letter testimoniall of the Vniuersity of Oxforde vnto the which there is more credit to be geuē then vnto him And this shall suffise for this present Now as we haue declared the testimony of the Vniuersity of Oxford of Iohn Hus concerning the praise of Iohn Wickliffe It followeth likewise that we set forth and expresse the contrary censure and iudgementes of his enemies blinded with malicious hatred and corrupt affections against him especially of the Popes Councel gathered at Constance proceeding first in condemning hys bookes then of his articles and afterward burning of his bones The copy of which theyr sentēce geuen against him by that counsell here foloweth * The sentence geuen by the Councell of Constance in condemning the doctrine and 45. Articles of Iohn Wickliffe THe most holy and sacred councell of Cōstance making and representing the catholick Church for the extirpation of this present schisme and of all other errors and heresies springing and growing vnder the shadow and pretence of the same and for the reformation and amendment of the Church being lawfully congregate and gathered together in the holy Ghost for the perpetuall memory of the time to come We are taught by the acts and historyes of the holy fathers that the catholicke fayth without the which as the holy Apostle S. Paule saith it is vnpossible to please God hath bene alwayes defēded by the faythfull and spirituall souldiors of the Church by the shield of fayth agaynst the false worshippers of the same fayth or rather peruerse impugners which through their proud curiosity will seeme to know more and to be wiser then they ought to be for the desire of y● glory of the world haue gone about oft times to ouerthrow the same These kindes of warres and battelles haue bene prefigured to vs before in those carnall warres of the Israelites agaynst the Idolatrous people For in those spirituall warres the holy catholick Church through the vertue power of fayth being illustrate●●● the beames of the heauenly light by the prouidēce of God and being holpen by the helpe and defence of the Saints holy men hath alway continued immaculate the darcknes of errours as her most cruell enemyes being put to flight ●he hath most gloriously triumphed ouer all But in these our daies the old and vnclean enemy hath raysed vp new cōtētions strifes that the elect of this world might be knowne whose Prince and captayne in time past was one Iohn Wickliffe a false Christian. Who during his life time taught and sowed very obstinatly many articles cōtrary and agaynst the Christian Religion and the Catholicke fayth And the same
and laye men whether in defect of the other they may exercise the action of praier and administration of Sacraments belonging to Priests wherein he declareth the vse receiued in the Popes Churche for women to Raptise which sayth he cannot be without remission of sinnes wherefore seeing that women haue power by the Pope to remit sinne and to baptise why may they not aswell be admitted to minister the Lordes Supper in like case of necessity Wherin also he maketh relation of Pope Iohn 8. a woman Pope mouing certayne Questions of her All whiche for breuitye I pretermitte proceeding to the ministration of prayer and blessing or sanctification appropriate to the office of Priestes as followeth Furthermore as touching the fūction office of praying and blessing whereunto Priestes seme to be ordeined to omitte here the question whether women may pray in Churches in lacke of other meete persons it remayneth now also to prosecute Christ being desired of his Disciples to teach them to pray gaue them the common prayer both to men and women to the which prayer in my estimation no other is to be compared For in that first the whole honor due vnto the deity is comprehended Secondly whatsoeuer is necessary for vs both for the time present or past or for time to come is there desired praid for He informeth vs besides to pray secretly and also briefly secretly to enter into our close chāber and there in secrecy he willeth vs to pray vnto his father And sayth moreouer when ye pray vse not much babling or many words as doth the heathen For they thinke in their long and prolixe praying to be heard Therfore be you not like to thē By the which doctrine he calleth vs away frō the errors of the healthē Gentils frō whom proceed these superstitious maner of actes or rather of ignoraunces as Necromancy the art of diuinatiō other spises of coniuratiō not vnknown to them that be learned for these Necromansers beleue one place to be of greater vertue then an other there to be heard sooner then in an other Like as Balaam being hyred to curse the people of God by his arte of southsaying or cherming when he could not accomplish his purpose in one place he remoued to an other but he in the end was deceiued of hys desire For he intending first to curse them was not able to accurse thē whom the Lord blessed so that his curse coulde not hurt any of all that people After like sort the Nicromancers turne theyr face to the East as to a place more apt for theyr prayers Also the Necromāsers beleue that the vertue of the words of the prayer the curiosity therof causeth thē to bring to the effect which they seek after which is also another poynt of infidelity vsed much of Charmers Sorcerers Inchaūters Southsayers such like Out of the same arte I feare proceedeth the practise of exorcising wherby deuils spirits be coniured to do that wherunto they are inforced by the Exorcist Also wherby other creatures likewise are exorcised or coniured so that by the vertue of their exorcisme they may haue theyr power and strength exceeding all naturall operation In the Church of Rome many such exorcismes coniurations be practised are called of them benedictions or halowings But here I aske of these Exorcisers whether they beleue the thinges and creatures so exorcised and halowed haue that operation and efficacy geuē them which they pretēd If they so beleue euery child may see that they are farre beguiled For holy water being of them exorcised or cōiured hath no such power in it neither cā haue which they in theyr exorcisme do cōmaund For there they inioyn and commaund that whersoeuer that water is sprinckled all vexatiō or infestatiō of the vnclean spirit should auoid and that no pestilēt spirit there should abide c. But most playn it is that no water be it neuer so holy can haue any such power so to do as it is commaunded to wit to be an vniuersall remedy to expell all diseases This I woulde aske of these Exorcistes whether in theyr commaunding they do coniure or adiure the thinges conuired to be of an higher vertue and operation thē their own nature doth geue Or els whether they in their prayers desire of God that he wil infude into them that vertue which they require If they in theyr commaunding doe so beleue thē do they beleue that they haue that power in thē to the which the inferior power of the thing exorcised must obey in receiuing that which is commaunded And so doing are much more deceiued forasmuch as they see themselues that they which are so authorised to the office of exorcising say to the deuill being coniured Go he goeth not And to an other come and he cōmeth not many thinges els they commaūd the inferior spirite their subiect to do he doth not So in like case when they pray to God to make the water to be of such vertue that it may be to them health of mind and body and that it may be able to expulse euery vncleane spirit to chase away all maner of distemperature and pestilence of the ayre being an vnreasonable petition asked sore displeasing to God it is to be feared least theyr benediction their halowing blessing is chaūged into cursing according to that saying that followeth And now O you priests I haue a message to say vnto you If you will not heare and beare well away in your mindes to geue the glory vnto my name sayth the Lord God of hostes I will send scarcety amongest you and I wyll curse your blessings What things and how many are blessed or halowed in the Churche that in halowing thereof displease God and are accursed And therfore according to the saying of S. Iames they aske are not heard because the aske not as they should that they in theyr owne dsires may perish Let a man beholde the blessing or halowing of their fire water incense waxe bread wine the church the aultar the Churchyard ashes belies copes pallmes oile candles salt the hallowing of the ring the bed the staffe of many such like things I beleue that a man shall find out many errors of the hethē Magicians Witches southsayers and charmers And notwithstanding the auncient and old Magicians in their bookes commaund those that be coniurers that they in any wise liue deuoutly for otherwise as they say the spirites will not obey their cōmaūdements and coniuratiōs yet the Romane cōiurers do impute it to the vertue of the holy wordes because they be they which worke and not the holynes of the coniurers How commeth it to passe that they say the thinges consecrated of a cursed and vicious Iauell should haue so great vertue in pronouncing as they say the holy and misticall words as if they were pronoūced of a Priest neuer so
of this poesie or epistle aboue writtē it is not euidētly knowē neither yet doth it greatly skill The matter beynge well considered of their part which here be noted may minister vnto them sufficiēt occasion of holesome admonition either to remember themselues what is amisse or to be thinke with thēselues what is to be amended Diuers other writings of like argumēt both before since haue bene deuised as one bearinge the title Luciferi ad malos principes Ecclesiasticos imprinted first at Paris in Latin And vnder the writing therof bearing this date Anno a palatij nostri fractione consortiumque nostrorum subtractione 1351. Which if ye count from the Passion of the Lord reacheth wel to y● time of Wickliffe 1385. which was aboue vj. yeres before y● examination of this Walter Brute There is also an other epistle of Lucifer prince of darknes ad praelatos mentioned in the Epistle of the schoole of Prage to the vniuersitie of Oxford set forth by Huldericus Huttenus about the yeare of our Lorde as is there dated 1370. which seemeth to be written before this epistle Also Vincētius in Speculo histo lib. 25. cap. 89. inferreth like mention of a letter of the fiendes infernal vnto the clergy men as in a vision represēted before 400. yeres In which the deuils geue thankes to the spirituall men for that by their silence and not preaching the Gospel they send infynite soules to hell c. Diuers other letters also of like deuise haue ben written also recorded in authors Whereunto may be added that one Iacobus Cartusiensis wrytinge to the Byshop of Wormace alleageth out of the prophecie of Hildegardis in these wordes Ideo et diabolus in semetipso de vobis sacerdotibus ait Escas epulantium conuiuia et omnes voluptates in istis inuenio sed et oculi et aures et venter meus et venae meae de spumis illorum plenae sunt et vbera mea plena sunt diuicijs illorum c. 1. Therefore saith he y● deuil may say of you priests in himselfe The meates of banketting dishes and feastes of al kind of pleasure I find in these men Yea also mine eyes mine eares my belly all my vaines be full of their froathing and my brests be full stuffed with their ryches c. Furthermore saith he they labour euery day to rise vp higher with Lucifer but euery daye they fall with him more deepely Hereunto also appertayneth a story written cōmonly found in many olde written bookes In the yeare of our Lord. 1228. at Paris in a Synode of the clergie there was one appointed to make a Sermō Who being much carefull in hys minde solicitous what to say the deuil came to him and asking why he was so careful for his matter what he should preach to y● clergy say thus quod he The princes of hell salute you Oh you princes of the Church gladly geue you thankes because through your default and negligence it cōmeth to passe that al soules go downe to hel Adding moreouer that he was also enforced by the commaundement of God to declare the same yea and that a certayne token moreouer was geuen to the sayde clerke for a signe wherby the sinode might euidently see that he did not lye Ex catall Illyr Fol. 546. ¶ The Bull of Pope Bonifacius the ix agaynst the Lollardes BOnifacius Bishop seruaunt of the seuants of God To the reuerend brother Iohn Bishop of Hereford sendeth greeting Apostolicall benediction We meane to write vnto our welbeloued sonne in Christ Richard the renowmed king of England in forme enclosed within these presents Therfore we will and commaund your brotherhood that as much as ye maye ye study and endeuour your selfe to exhorte and induce the same king to doe those thinges which we haue wrytten vnto him as it is sayde before And notwithstanding that now many a day you ought to haue done it of your self not to loke that wee should perswade you to that effect by vs written you may proceed as well by our authoritie as by your owne for as much as it was geuen you before that here after we may know effectually by your diligence what zeale your deuotion beareth vnto the Catholike fayth and to the conseruing of the ecclesiasticall honour and also to the execution of your pastorall office ¶ Geuen at Rome at S. Peters the xv Kalendes of October the 6. yeare of our bishoplike dignitie ¶ The tenour of the Bull to the renowmed prince Richard by the grace of God king of England of Fraunce whereof mention is made aboue as followeth and is thus much in effect TO our welbeloued sonne in Christ Rycharde the noble king of Englande wee send greetinge c. It greeueth vs from the bottome of our hartes and our holy mother the Church in all places through Christendome lamenteth Wee vnderstande that there bee certayne heresies sprong and do without any condign restraynt raunge at their owne libertie to the seducynge of the faithful people and do euery day with ouermuch liberty enlarge their vndiscreete boundes But howe much the more carefullye we labour for the preseruation both of you your famous kingdome and also the sinceritie of the faith and doe with muche more ardent desire couet that the prosperous state of the same should be preserued and ēlarged the sting of greater sorow doth so much the more penetrate and molest vs for as muche as wee see alas the while in our tyme and vnder the regall presidence of your moste Christyan gouernment a certayne craftye and hairebraine sect of false Christians in the same your kingdom to grow and increase which call themselues the poore men of the treasury of Christ and his disciples and whom the common people by a more sounder name call Lollardes as a man would saye withered darnell according as their sins require and perceyue that they waxe strong as it were preuayle agaynst the diocesās of some places and other gouernors as they meete together not courageously addressing themselues agaynst them as they ought to do whereof chiefly and not vndeseruedly I geue them admonition for that they take thereby the more bolder presumption and stomacke among the vnlearned people And for as muche as those whom we cannot call men but the damnable shadowes or ghosts of men do rise vp against the sound fayth holy vnyuersall church of Rome and that very many of them beinge indifferently learned which to the confusion eternall damnation of some of them they got sitting vppon their mothers lap the sayde Church of Rome doe rise vp or inueye agaynst the determination of the holy fathers with too much presumptuous boldnes to the subuersion of the whole ecclesiasticall order and estate Haue not bene afrayd nor are not yet afrayd publikely to preach very many erroneous detestable and hereticall articles for that they are not put to silence reproued driuen out
the names of them that were murthered wyth the names also of their tormentours And named moreouer time and place where and when they were murthered and where they were buryed Hee affirmed further that they were Sodomites and traitours both to the kyng and the realme with many other crimes which mine authour for tediousnes leaueth of to recite And for the more confutation of the said friers the Londiners caused the sayd Bill to be openly set vp at S. Paules Churche doore in London Which was there red and copied out of very many Thys was doue in the yeare of our Lord 1387. and in the 10. yere of King Richarde seconde Ex Chron. Monachi Albanensis Cuius est exordium Anno gratiae millesimo c. Thus it may appeare by this and other aboue recited how the Gospel of Christ preached by Iohn Wickleffe and others began to spread fructifie abroad in London and other places of the realme and more would haue done no dont had not William Courtney the Archbishop other Prelates with the king set them so forceably with myght maine to gainstand the course therof Albeit as is sayde before I finde none which yet were put to death therfore during the raigne of this king Richard the second Wherby it is to be thought of this king that although he cānot be vtterly excused for molesting the godly innocent preachers of that time as by his brieues letters afore mentioned may appeare yet neither was hee so cruell against them as other that came after him And that which he dyd seemed to procede by the instigation of the Pope and other Byshops rather then either by the consent of his Parliament or aduise of his coūsail about him or els by his own nature For as the decrees of that parliament in all his time were constant in stopping out the Popes prouisions in bridling his authority as we shall see Christ willing anone so the nature of the king was not altogether so fiersly set if that he following the guiding thereof had not stand so much in feare of the Bishop of Rome and his Prelates by whose importune letters calling on he was cōtinually urged to do contrary to that which both right required wil perhaps in him desired But howsoeuer the doings of this king are to be excused or not vndouted it is that Queene Anne hys wife most rightly deserueth singulare commendation who at the same time liuing with the kyng had the gospels of Christ in English with 4. doctours vpon the same This Anne was a Bohemian borne and sister to Wincelaus K. of Boheme before who was maryed to king Richarde about the 5. some say the 6. yeare of hys reigne and continued with hym the space of 11. yeres By the occasion whereof it may seeme not vnprobable that the Bohemians comming in wyth her or resorting into thys realme after her perused and receiued heere the bookes of Iohn Wickleffe which afterward they conueied into Bohemia wherof partly mention is made before pag. 464. The said vertuous Queene Anne after shee had liued with king Richarde about 11. yeares in the 17. yeare of hys reigne changed this mortall life and was buried at Westminster At whose funeral Thomas Arundel then Archb. of Yorke and Lorde Chauncelour made the Sermon In which Sermon as remaineth in the library of Worceter recorded he entreating of the commendation of her sayde these wordes that it was more ioy of her then of any woman that euer hee knewe For notwithstanding that shee was an alien borne she had in English all the 4. gospels with the Doctours vpon them affirming moreouer and testifying the she had sent the same vnto him to examine And he sayde they were good and true And further wyth many wordes of praise did greatly commend her in that she being so great a Lady also an alien would study so lowly so vertuous bookes And he blamed in that sermon sharply the negligence of the Prelates other men In so much that some sayd he would on the morow leaue vp the office of Chauncelour and forsake the world geue him to fulfil his pastoral office for that he had seene and read in those bookes And then it had bene the best Sermon that euer they heard Haec ex libro Wygo In the whiche Sermon of Thomas Arundell three poynts are to be considered first the laudable vse of those olde times receaued to haue the Scripture and Doctours in our vulgare English toung Secondly the vertuous exercise and also example of thys godly Lady who had these bookes not for a shew hanging at her girdle but also seemeth by this Sermon to be a studious occupier of the same The third thing to be noted is what fruit the sayde Thomas Archbyshoppe declared also himselfe to receiue at the hearing and reading of the same bookes of hers in the English toung Notwythstanding the ●ame Thomas Arundel after this Sermone and promise made became the most cruell enemy that might be against English bookes and the authors therof as foloweth after in his story to be seene For shortly after the death of Queene Anne the same yere the king being then in Irelād this Thomas Arundel Archb. of Yorke and Byshop of London Rob. Braybrocke whether sent by the Archb. of Cant. and the clergy or whether going of their owne accorde crossed the seas to Ireland to desire the king in all spedy wise to returne and help the faith and church of Christ against such as holding of Wickleffes teaching went about as they sayde to subuect at their procedings and to destroy the canonical sanctions of their holy mother church At whose complaint the king hearing the one part speake and ●ot aduising the other was in such forte incensed that incontinent leauing all his affaires incomplete he spedde his returne towarde England Where he kept his Christians at Dublin in the which meane time in the beginning of the next yere following which was Anno. 1395. A Parliament was called at Westminster by the commaundement of the Kyng In which parliament certaine Articles or Conclusions were put vp by them of the Gospell side to the number of 12. Which Conclusions moreouer were fastened vp vpon the church doore of S. Paule in London and also at Westminster The copie of which Conclusions with the words and contents thereof here vnder ensueth ¶ The booke of Conclusions or Reformations exhibited to the Parliament holden at London and set vp at Paules doore and other places in the 18. yeare of the raigne of king Richard the 2. in the yere of our Lord. 1395. THe first conclusion when as the Church of Englande began first to dote in tēporalities after her stepmother the great church of Rome the churches were authorised by appropriations faith hope and charitie began in diuers places to vanish and flie away from our Churche for so much as pride with her most
sayde is no longer bread materiall but that it is turned into verye Christes body and that I sweare here I say that this is false and erroneous c. I say as I sayd c. This being done the 22. day of February aforesayd in the yeare of our Lord 1400. in the chapter house of Sainct Paule in London aforesayd The foresayd Archbishop of Caunterbury in the conuocation of hys prelates Clergy and such lyke men there beeing present caused the fore recited proces of the bishop of Norwich to be read openly publikely to Syr Wil. Sautre otherwise called Chatris And afterward he asked the sayd syr William whether he playnely vnderstood and knew such proces the contents within the same and he sayd yea And further he demaunded of him if he would or could say or obiect any thing agaynst the proces and he sayd no. And after that incontinent the foresayd archbishop of Canterbury demaunded and obiected against the said syr William as diuers others more did That after he had before the Bysh. of Norwiche reuoked and abiured Iudicially diuers errors heresies that among other erroures and heresies by him taught holden and preached he affirmed That in the same sacrament of the aulter after the consecration made by the Priest as he taught there remayned materiall bread which heresie amongst others as erroures also he abiured before the foresayd Bishop of Norwich Hereunto the foresayd William aunswered smiling or in mocking wise saying and denying that he knew of the premisses Notwithstanding he publikely affirmed that he held and taught the foresayd thinges after the date of the sayd processe made by the sayd Bishop of Norwich and that in the same councell also he held the same Then finally it was demaunded of the said sir William why he ought not to be pronounced as a man fallen into heresie and further to proceede vnto his degradation according to the canonicall sanctions whereunto he answered nothing neither could he alledge any cause to the contrary Wheruepon the foresayd Archb. of Cant. by the counsaile and consent of the whole councel and especially by the counsail and assent of the reuerēd fathers and Bishops as also Priours Deanes Archdeacons and other worshipfull Doctours and Clerkes then and there present in the councel Fully determined to proceede to the degradation and actuall deposing of the sayde William Sautre as re-fallen into heresy and as incorrigible according to the sentence definitiue put in wryting the tenoure whereof is in wordes as foloweth In the name of God Amen Wee Thomas by the grace of God Archb. of Cant. Legate of the sea Apostolicall and Metropolitane of all England doe finde and declare that thou William Sawtrie otherwise called Chatris Priest by vs with the counsaile assent of all and singular our felowe brethren and whole Clergy by this our sentence diffinitiue declared in wryting hast bene for heresie conuict and condemned and art being againe fallen into heresy to be deposed and degraded by these presents And from that day being Wedensday there was in the sayde councell prouinciall nothing further prosecuted but was continued with all dependentes till the Friday next insuing Whych Friday approching M. Nicholas Rishton by the commandement of the sayd Archb. of Canterb. being then busied as he said in the Parliament house continued this councel and conuocation with al incidents dependents and occasions growing and annexed therunto to the next day to wit saterday next and immediatly after insuing Upon Saterday being the 26. of the sayd moneth of February the foresayde Archbishop of Canterbury fate in the Byshops seate of the foresayde Church of S. Paule in London and solemnly apparelled in his Pontifical attire sitting with hym as his assistents these reuerend fathers and Bishops of London Lyncolne Harford Exeter Meneuensis Roffensis Episcopi aboue mentioned commaunded and caused the sayd sir W. Sautry apparelled in priestly vestiments to be brought appeare before hym That done he declared and expounded in English to al the clergy and people there in a great multitude assembled that al processe was finished and ended against the said syr William Sautry Whych thing finished before the pronouncing of the sayd sentence of the Relapse against the sayd sir William as is premised he often then and there recited read And for that he sawe the sayde William in that behalfe nothyng abashed He proceded to his degradation and actuall deposition in forme as foloweth IN nomine patris silij spiritus sancti Amen We Thomas by Gods permission Archb. of Cant. Primate of al England and Legate of the Apostolique sea doe denounce thee William Sawtre otherwise called Chautris Chapleine fained in the habite and apparell of a Priest as an heretick and one refallen into heresy by thys our sentēce definitiue by counsaile assent and authoritye to be condemned And by conclusion of all our fellowe brethren fellow byshops Prelates councell prouinciall and of the whole clergy do degrade and depriue thee of thy priestly order And in signe of degradation and actuall depositiō from thy priestly dignity for thine incorrigibility and want of amendment we take from thee the patent and chalice and doe depriue thee of all power authority of celebrating masse and also wee pull from thy backe the Casule and take from thee the vestiment and depriue thee of all maner of Priestly honour Also wee Thomas the aforesayde Archb. by authority counsell and assent which vpon the foresayd William wee haue being Deacon pretensed in the habite and apparel of a Deacon hauing the new Testament in thy hands being an heretique and twise fallen condemned by sentence as is aforesayde doe degrade and put thee from the order of a Deacon And in token of this thy degradation and actuall deposition we take frō thee the boke of the new testament the stole and doe depriue thee of all authority in reading the gospel and of all and all maner of dignity of a Deacon Item we Thomas Archbish. aforesayd by authoritie counsell and assent which ouer thee the foresayde William wee haue being a subdeacon pretensed in the habite vestiment of a subdeacon an hereticke and twise fallen condemned by sentence as is aforesayd do degrade put thee from the order of a subdeacon And in token of this thy degradation actuall deposition we take from thee the albe and maniple and doe depriue thee of all and all manner of subdiaconall dignitie Also wee Thomas Archb. aforesayd by counsaile assent and authority whych wee haue ouer thee the foresayde William an Accolite pretensed wearing the habite of an Accolite and heretike twise fallen by our sentence as is aforesaid condemned do degrade and put from thee al order of an Accolite And in signe and tokē of thys thy degradation and actuall deposition we take from thee the candlesticke and taper and also Vrceolum and doe depriue thee of all and all maner dignity
other sacrament of the Church or article of the fayth then that already is discussed by the holy mother Churche nor shall bring anye thing in doubt that is determined by the church nor shal to his knowledg● priuily or apertly pronounce blasphemous wordes concerning the same nor shall teach preach or obserue any sect or kinde of heresie whatsoeuer contrary to the wholesome doctrine of the Church He that shall wittingly obstinatly attempt the contrary after the publication of these presentes shall incurre the sentence of excommunication ipso facto From the which except in poynt of death he shal not be absolued vntill he hath reformed himselfe by abiuration of his heresie at the discretion of the Ordinary in who● territory he so offeded and hath receiued wholsome penitence for his offences But if the second tyme he shall so offend being lawfully conuicted he shal be pronounced an hereticke his goods confiscate and apprehended and kept by them to whome it shall appertayne The penance before mentioned shal be after this manner If anye man contrary to the determination of the Church that is in p ● decrees decretals or our constitutions prouinciall doe openly or priuily teach or preach any kinde of heresie or secte he shall in the parish Church of the same place where he so preached vpon one sonday or other solemne day or more at the discretion of the ordinary and as his offence is more or lesse expressely reuoke that he so preached taught or affirmed euen at the time of the solemnitic of the masse whē the people are most assembled and there shall effectually and without fraud preach and teach the very truth determined by the church and further shal be punished after the quallitie of hys offence as shal be thought expedient to the discretion of the Ordinary Item for as much as a new vessell being long vsed fauoreth after the head we decree and ordayn that no scholemaisters and teachers what soeuer that instruct childrē in grammer or others whō so euer in primitiue sciences shal in teaching them intermingle any thing concerning y● catholicke rayth the sacrament of the aulter or other Sacramentes of the Church contrary to the determinations of y● church Nor shall suffer theyr schollers to expound the holy Scriptures except the text as hath bene vsed of auncient time nor shal permit them to dispute openly or priuily concerning the catholicke fayth or Sacramentes of the Churche Contrariwise the offender herein shal be greeuously punished by the Ordinary of the place as a fauourer o● errours and schismes Item for that a new way doth more frequently leade a stray then an old way we will and commaunde that no booke or treatise made by Iohn Wickliffe or other whom soeuer about that time or sithence or hereafter to be made be from henceforth read in schooles halles hospitalles or other places whatsoeuer within our prouince of Canterbury aforesayd except the same be first examined by the vniuersitie of Oxford or Cambridge or at the last by twelue persons whom the sayd vniuersities or one of the shal appoynt to be chosen at our discretion or the laudable discretion of our predecessoures and the same being examined as aforesayd to be expresly approued and allowed by vs or our successours and in the name and authoritie of the vniuersitie to be deliuered vnto the Stationers to be copyed out and the same to be sold at a reasonable price the originall therof alwaies after to remayn in some chest of that vniuersitie But it any man shall read any such kynd of booke in schooles or otherwise as aforesayd he shal be punished as a sower offchisme and a fauourer of heresie as the qualitie or the fault shall require Item it is a daungerous thinge as witnesseth blessed S. Hierome to translate the text of the holy scripture out of one tongue into an other for in the translation the same sense is not alwayes easily kept as the same S. Ierome confesseth that although he were inspired yet oftentimes in this he erred We therefore decree and ordayne that no man hereafter by his owne authoritie translate any text of the Scripture into English or any other tongue by way of a booke libell or treatise and if no man read anye suche booke libell or treatise nowe lately set foorth in the time of Iohn Wickliffe or sithence or hereafter to be set forth in part or in whole priuily or apertly vpon paine of greater excommunication vntill the said translation be allowed by the Ordinary of the place or if the case so require by the Councell prouinciall He that shall do contrary to this shal likewise be punished as a fauourer of error heresie Item for that almighty God cannot be expressed with any Philosophicall termes or otherwise inuented of man And S. Augustine faith That he hath oftentimes reuoked such conclusions as hath bene most true because they haue bene offensiue to the eares of the religious we doe ordeine and specially forbid that no maner o● person of what state degree or condition so euer he be doe allege or propone any conclusions or propositions in that catholicke fayth or repugnant to good manners except necessary doctrine pertayning to theyr facultie of teaching or disputing in theyr schooles or otherwise although they defend the same with neuer so curious termes and wordes For as sayth blessed S. Hugh of the Sacramentes that whiche oftentimes is well spoken is not well vnderstood If any man therefore after the publication of these presents shal be conuict wittingly to haue proponed such conclusions or propositions except being monished he reforme himselfe in one month by vertue of this present constitution He shall incurre the sentence of greater excommunication ipso facto and shal be openly pronounced an excommunicate vntill he hath confessed his fault openly in the same place where he offended and hath preached the true meaning of the sayd conclusion or proposition in one church or more as shal be thought expedient to the Ordinary Item no manner of person shall presume to dispute vpon that articles determined by that church as is cōtayned in the decrees decretals our constitutions prouinciall or in the general Councels But onely to seek out the true meaning therof that expressely whether it be openly or in secret nor none shal cal in doubt the authoritie of the said decretals or constitutions or the authoritie of him that made thē nor teach any thing contrary to that determination therof And chiefly concerning the adoration of the holy crosse the worshipping of Images of sayntes going on pilgrimage to certayne places or to the reliques of saintes or agaynst that othes in cases accustomed to be geuen in both cōmon places that is to say spirituall temporall But of al it shal be commonly taught and preached that the crosse Image of the Crucifixe and other Images of Saynts in the honour of them whom they present
geuen credible relation of y● sonne both to the printer to me Furthermore the sayd maister Tindall albeit he did somewhat alter amend the English therof and frame it after our manner yet not fully in al words but that something doth remain fauouring of the old speach of that time What the causes were why this good man seruaunt of Christ W. Thorp did write it● and pen it out himselfe it is sufficiently declared in hys owne preface set before his booke whiche here is prefixed in maner as followeth ¶ The preface of William Thorpe THe Lord God that knoweth all thinges woreth well that I am right sorrowful for to write to make known this sentence beneath written whereby of mine euē christē set in high state dignitie so great blindnes malice may be knowne that they which doe presume of themselues to destroy vices and to plant in men vertues neither dreade to offend God nor lust to please him as their workes doe shew For certes the bidding of God and hys law whiche in the praysing of his most holy name he commaundeth to be known kept of all men and women yong and old after the cunning power that he hath geuen to them The Prelates of this lande and their ministers with the couent of priests chiefly consenting to them enforce them most busily to withstand and destroy the holy ordinaunce of God And there through God is greatly wroth and moued to take hard vengeance not onely vpon them that do the euil but also on them that consent to these Antichristes limnes which know or might know their malice and falshoode dresse them not to withstand their mallice and theyr great pride Neuertheles 4. things moueth me to write this sētence beneath The first thing that moueth me hereto is this that where as it was knowne to certayn frendes that I came from that prison of Shrewsbury and as it befell in deed that I shold to the prison of Caunterbury thē diuers friends in diuers places spake to me full hartily and full tenderly and commaunded me then if it so were that I should be examined before the Archb. of Cant. that if I might in any wife I should write mine apposing and mine aunswering And I promised to my special frendes that if I might I wold gladly doe their bidding as I might The second thing that moueth me to write this sentēce is this diuers frendes which haue heard that I haue bene examined before the Archbyshop haue come to me in prison and counsayled mee busily and coueted greatly that I should doe the same thing And other brethren haue sent to me and required on Gods behalfe that I should write out and make knowne both mine apposing mine aunswering for the profite that as they say vppon my knowledging may come thereof But this they had me that I should be busie in all my wits to go as neare the sentence and the wordes as I could both that were spoken to me that I spake Upauēture this writing may come an other time before the archbishop and hys counsaile And of thys counselling I was right glad for in my conscience I was moued to doe this thing to aske hitherto the speciall help of God And so then I considering the great desire of dyuers frendes of sondry places according all in one I occupyed all my minde my wits so busily that through gods grace I perceaued by theyr meaning and their charitable desire some profite might come there through For southfastnes and trueth hath these conditions where euer it is impugned it hath asweete smell and thereof commeth a sweet fauour And the more violently the enemies dresse themselues to oppresse and to withstand the trueth the greater and the sweeter smell commeth therof And therefore this heauenly find of Gods word wil not as a smoke passe away with the winde but it will descende and rest in some cleane soule that thirsteth thereafter And thus some deale by this writing may be perceaued thorough Gods grace how that the enemies of the trueth standing boldly in their malice inforce them to withstand the fredome of Christes Gospell for which freedome Christ became man shed his hart bloud And therefore it is great pitty sorrow that many men women do their own weyward will nor busy thē not to know nor to do that pleasant wil of God The men women that heare the truth and southfastnes and heare or know of this perceauing what is nowe in y● churche ought here through to be the more moued in all their wits to able them to grace to set lesser price by themselues that they without ta●ieng forsake wilfully bodely all the wrethednes of this life since they know not how soon nor whē nor where nor by whō God wil teach them assay their pacience For no doubt who that euer will liue pittiously that is charitably in Christ Iesu shall suffer now here in this life persecution in one wife or an other That is if we shal be saued it behoueth vs to imagin ful busily the vility and soulnes of sinne and how y● Lord God is displeased therfore so of this vility of bidiousnes of sinne it behoueth vs to busy vs in al our wits for to abhorre and hold in our mind a great shame of sinne euer so then we owe to sorrow hartely therfore and euer fleing all occasion therof And then behoueth vs to take vpon vs sharpe penāce continuing therin for to obtayne of that Lord forgeuenes of our foredone sinnes and grace to abstain vs hereafter from sinne And but if we enforce vs to do thys wilfully and in conueniēt time the Lord if he will not vtterly destroy and cast vs awaye will in diuers manners moue tyrantes agaynst vs for to constrayne vs violentlye to do penance which we would not do wilfully And trust that this doing is a special grace of the Lord a great token of life mercy And no doubt who euer will not apply him selfe as is sayd before to punish himself wilfully neither wil suffer paciently meekely and gladly the rod of the Lord howsoeuer that he will punish him their wayward willes and their impacience are vnto them earnest of euelasting damnation But because there are but few in number that do able them thus faythfully to grace for to liue here so simply and purely and without gall of malice and of grudging herefore the louers of this worlde hate pursue them that they knowe patient meek chaste wilfully poore hating and fleing all worldly vanities fleshly lusts For surely their verteous conditions are euen cōtrary to the manners of this world The third thing that moueth me to wryte this sentēce is this I thought I shall busie me in my selfe to do faythfully that all men and women occupying all their busines in knowing and in keeping of Gods commaundements able them so
Pope and all his rablement cannot proue that they be any part of thys Church Also that the Pope with all his fautours may as well be deceiued by a lying spirite as was Achab and all his prophetes and that one true prophet as was Micheas may haue the verity shewed vnto him contra concilium Also that all good Christians ought to cast from them the Popes lawes saying Let vs breake their bandes in sonder and let vs cast from our neckes those heauy yonkes of theyrs Also that where these prelates doe burne one good booke for one errour perhaps conteyned in the same they ought to burne all the books of the Canon law for the manifold heresies contayned in them ¶ And thus muche out of a certaine olde written booke in parthment borowed ouce of I.B. which booke conteining diuers auncient records of the vniuersitie seemeth to belong sometimes to the library of the Uniuersitie bearing the yeare of the compiling thereof 1296. Which computation if it be true then was it written of him or that he recanted before Thomas Arundell Archbishop at Saltwood where he was imprisoned Whereunto I thought also to annexe a certayne godly and most frutefull Sermon of like antiquitie preached at Paules crosse much about the same time learned clerke as I find in one old monument named R. Wimbeldon Albeit among the auncient registers and records belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury I haue an old worne copy of the said Sermon written in very old English and almost halfe consumed with age purposing the said autor beere of bearing also the foresayd name The true copy of which Sermon in his owne speech wherein it was first spoken and preached at the crosse on the Sonday of Quinquagesima and after exhibited to the Archbishop of Canterburie being then as it seemeth William Courtney here foloweth A Sermon no lesse godly then learned preached at Paules Crosse on the Sonday of Quinquagesima ann 1389. by R. Wimbeldon Redde rationem Gillicationis tuae Luce ●i My dere frends ye shullen vnderstond that Christ autor and doctour of trueth in his booke of the Gospell likening the kingdome of heauen to anhousholder saith on this maner Like is the kingdome of heuen to an housholding man that went out first on the morow to hire workemen into his vine Also about the third sixt nienth and enleuente houres he went out and found men stonding idel And sayd to them Go ye into min vineyerde and that right is I wille geue you Whan the day was agoo he clepid his stuward and high to geue echē man a peny The spirituall vnderstonding of this housholder is our Lord Iesu Christ that is head of the houshold of holy Church And thus clepith men in diuerce houres of the day that is in diuerce agees of the werld As in time of law of kinde he cleped by enspiryng Abel Ennok Noe and Abraham In time of the old law Moses Dauid Isay and Ieremy And in time of grace Apostles Martyrs and Confessours and Virgines Also he cleped men in diuers agees some on childhode as Iohn Baptist some on state of wexing as Iohn the Euangelist some in state of manhoode as Peter and Andrew and some in old agee as Gamaliel and Ioseph of Arimathie And all these he clepeth to trauaile in his vine that is the Church and that in diuers maner For right as yee seeth that in tilling of the materiall vine there ben diuers labours for some kutten awey the voyde braunches some maken forkis and railes to beren vp the vine and some diggen away the olde earth fro the rote and leyn there fatter And all this offices ben so necessary to the vine that if any of them faile it shall harme greatly other destroy the vine For but if the vine be kutte she shall waxe wilde but if she be rayled she shall be ouergo with netles and wedis And but if the rote be fatted with donge shee for feblenes shuld waxe baraine Right so in the Church beth nedefull thes three offices priesthood knythode and laborers To priests it falleth to kut away the void braunches of sinnes with the swerd of her tong To knighthode it falleth to letten wronges and thefftes to ben done and to maintaine Goddis law and them that ben teachers therof and also to kepe the londe from enemies of other londes And to labourers it falleth to trauail bodelich and with ther sore swete geten out of the earth bodillech lifelode for hem and other parties And these states beth also nedefull to the Church that none may well ben without other for if priesthod lacked the people for default of knowing of Gods lawe should waxe wilde in vices and deyen gostely And if the knithod laked and men to rulin the puple by law and hardinesse theeues and enemies shulden so encres that no man shuld liue in peace And if the laborers were nought both knightes and priestes must bicome acre men and herdis and els they shuld for defaute of bodily sustenaunce deye And therfore saith clerk Auicenne that euery vnreasonable best if he haue that that kind hath ordeined for him as kinde hath ordeined it he is suffisaunce to liue by himselfe without any helpe of other of the same kind As if there were but one horse other one shepe in the world yet if he had grasse and corne as kind hath ordeined for such beastes he shuld liue well I now But if there ne were but O man in the world though he had all that good that is therein yet for defaut he shuld deie or his life shuld be wors tha if he were naught the cause is this for that thing that kind ordeineth for a mans sustenaunce without other arraieng than it hath of kind accordeth nought to him As though a man haue corne as it commeth from the earth yet it is no meate according to him vnto it be by mans craft chaunged into bread and though he haue flesh other fish yet while it is rawe as kinde ordeined it till it be by mans trauaile sodden rosted or baken it cordit not to mans lifelode And right so wolle that the sheepe beareth mot by mannis diuers craftis and trauailes be chaunged or it be able do cloth any man and certis O man by himselfe shuld neuer doo all these laboures And therefore saith this clerke it is neede that some be acre men some bakers some makers of cloth and some marchaunts to fetch that that on londe fetteth from an other there it is plentie And certis this shuld be a cause why euery state shuld loue other And men of o craft shuld nor despise ne hate men of none other craft fith they be so nedefull euerich to other And oft thelke craftes that ben most vnhonest might worst ben forbore and o thing I dare well say that he that is neither trauailing in this world on studieng on praiers on preaching for helpe of the people as it falleth to
lying neuer to be clawed of while the world standeth yet shal the posterity to come iudge betwene you me whether shall appeare more honest and true my defence for that worthy lord then your vncourteous and viperuns wrangling against him mooued with no other cause but onely with the peuish spirite of Poperie whych can abide nothing but that sauereth of your owne secte For els how many loud lying legends yea what legion of lies are daily vsed and receiued in the popish church What doltish dreames what fained myracles what blasphemous tales and frierly fables and idle inuētions fighting against the sincere religion doctrine and crosse of Christ And coulde you holde your penne from al these and finde nothing els to set your idlenesse on worke but onely to wryte agaynst the Lorde Cobham Syr Roger Acton Browne Onley Cowbrige with a fewe other whome wyth much a doe at length you haue sought out not so much for any true zeale to rebuke iniquitye as craftely seeking matter by these to deface and blemish the booke of Actes and Monumentes Which seemeth belike to make you scratche there where it itcheth not And if I shoulde after the like dealing take in hand your Popish portues and with like diligence excusse euery Popish martyr and Saint there canonised thinke you maister Cope I coulde not make you out halfe dosen as ranke traitours and rebels to their kings and princes as euer were any of these of your picking out What pope almost hath there bene these last 500. yeares whych hathe not bene a traitour to his Emperor and Prince and to his countrey either openly rebelling against them or priuely conspiring their destruction or proudly setting theyr feete vpon their necks or spurning their crownes of from their heads or making the sonne to fight against the father How many haue they deposed and set vp other in theyr seates how many Emperours and kings haue they wrongfully cursed What Consulles of Rome haue they resisted deposed and put to death What warres haue they raised vp against theyr owne countrey of Rome Yea the continuall holding of the City of Rome from hys lawfull Emperor what is it but a continuall poynt of treason What will you answere mee M. Cope to the Pope which conspired to let fall downe a stone vpon the Emperours head kneeling at his prayers pag. 177. And though this treachery being as big as a milstone seemed but a smal mote in your eye that it could not be espied yet what will you say by the Monke of Swinstede that poysoned king Iohn who was both absolued by his abbot before his treason committed and after hys treason had a perpetuall Masse songe for him to helpe hym out of Purgatorie And what thinke ye in your conscience is to be sayde of Thomas Becket who did inough and more then became him to set the French king and the king of Englande together by the eares Of Anselme likewise and of Stephen Langhton who departed both out of the Realme to complaine of their princes soueraines The like may be said also of Iohn Peckham Iohn Stradford Archbyshop of the same sea notoriously resisted the Kinges commaundement being sent for by king Edward 3. to come to the parliament at Yorke through the default of whose comming the present oportunitie of getting Scotland was the same time lost Richard Scrope Archb. of Yorke was opēly in armes to rebell fight against K. Henry 4. for the which he was condemned put to death And yet notwtstanding Commission was sent downe from the pope shortly after to excōmunicate them which put him to death his treason notwtstanding Read that story sincerely of pope Benedict 12. and of pope Clement 6. And see howe the traiterous rebellion of these two popes against Ludouicus their rightful Emperor can be defended Which Emperor at last was also empoysoned that not without the practise of Pope Clement as doth Hieronimus Marius credibly witnesse In the raigne of K. Edward the 2. mention was made before of Thomas Earle of Lancaster Who with a great number of other nobles and Barons of the realme rose in armour against their prince and therefore at lengthe were put to death as traitours And yet notwythstanding thys treason committed M. Cope if you be so ignorant in our stories that you know it not set your setters on to search and you shall finde it true that certaine Noble men went vp to Rome for the canonising of the sayde Thomas of Lancaster to be made a Saint and obtained the same In so much that in a certayne olde Calendare the name of the sayd S. Thomas of Lancaster is yet extant to be seene In the former booke of these Actes and Monumentes aboue about the pag. 353. or 354. mention was made of Edmund of Abbenden Archb. of Cant. whom although I do not disproue but rather commend in my history for his bold and sage counsail geuen vnto K. Henry the 3. and also for offering the censure of excommunication against the king in so necessary a cause yet notwithstanding the same Edmund afterward about his latter end went vp wyth a rebelling minde to complaine of his king vnto the Pope and in his iourney died before his return who afterward for the same was canonised by the Pope and now shineth among the Saints in the popes Calender Let vs come more neare to these dayes and times and consider the doings of Tho. Arundell Archb. of Canterb. Who being first deposed and exiled for hys contemptuous deserts against the king and afterward comming in wyth Henry Bolynbroke Duke of Herford in open armes and with main force rose against his natural and lawful king thinke you M. Cope thys is not as greate a poynte of treason as that which was done in Thi●kets fields And though he be not placed among the portuous Sainct● yet I thinke nothing contrary but in your heart you will not greatly sticke to say Sancte Thoma ora pro nobis All these thinges well considered tell me M. Cope I pray you is treason suche a straunge and vnketh thyng in your pope catholike churche that your burning zeale of obedience to kings and princes can not read the story of the L. Cobham sir Roger Acton but your pen must needes be inflamed to wryte against them and yet so many traytors in your owne Calenders neither seene nor once spoken of And if the traiterous conspiracy and rebellion of so many your Calender Saintes committed against Emperours Kings and Princes can not stirre your zeale nor moue your pen Nor if the treason of pope Gregory 9. raising warre against his owne city of Rome and causing 30. thousande citizens in one battaile to be slaine pag. 281. deserueth not to be espied and accused as much as this treason of the Lorde Cobham yet what will you or can you answer to me M. Cope as touching the horrible treason of pope Gregory the 7. committed not against
the contents of whych his wrytings do folow Hubertus Dei gratia Cant. Archiepiscop totius Angliae primas dilectis in Christo frat Episco per prouinciam Cant. Sal grat benedictionem D. Papa sicut ex literis ipsius manifestè perpéditur de conuersatione meritis moribus b. Gilberti magistri ordinis de Sempringham miraculis a Deo per eum factis per testes testimonia sufficienter instructus de consilio fratrum Cardin. ipsum mag Catalogo sanctorum decreuit ascribi solemnitatem eius constituit mandauit per Cant. prouinciam solemniter celebrari Insuper corpus eius cum requisiti fuerimus praecepit ad honorem Dei gloriam eleuari Vestra igitur vniuersitas huic mandato cum deuotione congaudeat secundum formam in ipso mandato praescriptam praedicti confessoris Domini depositionem annuam faciatis cum reuerentia solemniter obseruari vt apud Dominum ab illo vestra debeat possit deuotio commēdari necnon ipsius sancti supplex intercessio vobis proficiat ad salutem Valete The summe of the whiche wryting of the Archb. tendeth to thys effecte That forsomuch as the Pope hearyng of the life and myracles of Gilbert Maister of the order of Sempringham by sufficiēt witnes and testimonies hath in his letters commanded him by the aduise of hys Cardinals that the sayde Gilbert should be canonised ascribed in the Cataloge of saintes and that his solemnity shoulde be celebrate solemnely throughout al the prouince of Canterb And also hys body to be taken vp and shrined to the honour and glory of God He therefore at the Popes commaundement wryting vnto them wylleth all the Suffraganes within his prouince of Canterb. yearely to solemnise and cause to be solemnized reuerētly the deposition of the sayd Saint Gilbert Confessor to the entent that theyr deuotion may be commended of the Lord and of him And also that the humble intercession of the sayd Saint may profite them to their saluation Furthermore for the more full canonising canuising I had almost sayd of this new made saint the saide Pope Innocent writing to Hubert aforesayd adioyneth withall a collect of his owne making which is this Plenam in nobis aeterne saluator tuae vertutis operare medelam vt qui praeclara beati Gilberti confessoris tui merita veneramur ipsius adiuti suffragijs a cunctis animarum nostrarum languoribus liberemur Quiviuis regnas c. That is worke in vs O eternal sauior full remedy of thy vertue that we which worship the worthy merites of blessed Gilbert thy confessour being succoured by his suffrages may be deliuered from all languors diseases of our soules who liuest and raignest c. The cōsecration of this one Saint who perhaps was not the worst I thought here to cōmemorate to the intent that the reader measuring by this one the Canonisation of al the rest may iudge the better vpō this cōparison of master Cope whether of vs doth vendicate more impudent authoritie the Pope in his Callender or I in mine or to make the comparison more fit whether is more impudent the pope in his Callendar or els maister Cope in his Dialogues more doltishe But briefly to make an end of this matter with you to canonise or to authorise any saintes for man it is presumptuous to prescribe any thing here to be worshipped beside God alone it is idolatrous to set vp any mediatours but Christ onely it is blasphemous And whatsoeuer the pope doth or hath done in his Calendar my purpose in my Calendare was neither to deface any old saint or to solemnise any new In my booke of Actes and Monuments entreating of matters passed in the churche these latter fiue hundreth yeares I did regulate out a Callendare not for any Canon to constitute Saintes but onely for a table of them which within the same time did suffer for the testimony of the word whom I did and doe take to be good and godly men If any haue other iudgement of them I binde no man to my opinion as the pope doth to his The day will come which shall iudge both them and you In the meane season it shall be best for you M. Cope in my iudgement to keepe a good thing in your head and to quiet your rayling mode A hard thinge it is to iudge before the Lord. Mans iudgement may faile and is vncertayne the iudgement of God is alwayes sure Best is therfore either to be sure by the word and iudgement of God before what you do say or els to say the best Of such slaunderous and intemperate rayling can come no good neither to whome ye rayle vpon nor to your selfe whiche rayleth nor to the church of God that heareth you rayle For them you can not hurt they are gone To your selfe and thoughe your matters be true yet little honesty it will bring to be counted a rayler and if it be vncertayne your state is daungerous and if be false most miserable And as to the Church what great edification can proceede of suche contentions brawling and barkinge one against an other I doe not greatly see And if the zeale of the bishop of Romes church haue so much swallowed you vp that ye cannot but stamp and stare at traytours when ye see them put in Calenders first M. Cope be ye sure first that they be traytours wisdome would whome you call traytours And if ye can so proue thē as ye haue not yet then let your Irenaeus or Critobulus tell me why doth not this flagrant zeale of yours as hote as purgatory burne out and flame as wel against your owne traytors hauing so many in your own Calendare and Church at home And if there be such a Catholicke zeale in you that hath set your gentle brest on such a pelting chase why then is not this your Catholicke zeale equally indifferent Why take ye on so fell on the one side agaynst sir Iohn Oldcastle sir Roger Acton M. Browne c A man wold think you played Hercules furens in Orchestra On the other syde agayne ye are Oleo tranquillior What indiffirencie maister Cope call you this Or what zeale make you this to be Albeit your zeale I iudge not as I know it not Swifte iudgement shall not become me which go about to correct the same in you But this I exhorte you to beware maister Cope that by your owne fruites and doinges euident ye do not bewray this zeale in you to be Non secundum scientiam nor such a zeale as fighteth Pro Domo Dei sed pro demo Pontificis As I sayde I iudge you not You haue your iudge to whome ye stand or fall My counsayle is that ye do not so zeale the Byshop of Rome that for his sake ye lose your owne soule Ye remember the olde vulgar voice it is not good Ludere cum sanctis worse it is Illudere
in prison and in bandes daily looking for death although for the secrete iudgements of God I dare not say whether this be my last Epistle for nowe also almighty God is able to deliuer me Another letter of Iohn Hus wherin he comforteth his frendes and willeth them not to be troubled for the condemnyng of his bookes and also declareth the wickednesse of the Clergy MAister Iohn Husse in hope the seruaunt of God to all the faythfull which loue him and his statutes wisheth the truth and grace of God Beloued I thought it needefull to warne you that you should not feare or bee discouraged because the aduersaries haue decreed that my bookes shall be burnt Remember how the Israelites burned the preachynges of the Prophet Ieremy and yet they could not auoyde the thynges that were Prophecied of in them For after they were burnt the Lord commaunded to write the same Prophecie agayne and that larger which was also done For Ieremie sittyng in prison spake and Baruch which was ready at his hand wrote This is written either in the 35. or 45. chapiter of the Vision of Ieremie It is also written in the bookes of the Machabees that the wicked did burne the law of God and killed them that had the same Agayne vnder the new Testament they burned the Saintes with the bookes of the law of God The Cardinals condemned and committed to fire certaine of S. Gregories bookes had burnt thē all if they had not ben preserued of God by the meanes of Peter Gregories minister Hauing these things before your eyes take heede least through feare you omit to read my bookes and deliuer them to the aduersaries to bee brent Remember the sayings of our mercifull sauiour by whych he forewarneth vs. Math. 24. There shall be sayeth he before the day of iudgement great tribulation such as was not from the beginning vntill this day neither shall be afterwardes So that euen the elect of God shoulde be deceiued if it were possible But for their sakes those dayes shal be shortened Whē you remēber these things beloued be not afraid for I trust in God that that schoole of Antichrist shall be afraide of you and suffer you to be in quiet neither shall the Councell of Constance extende to Bohemia For I thinke that many of them which are of the Councell shall die before they shall get from you my bookes And they shall departe from the Councel and be scattred abroad throughout the partes of the world like storkes and then they shall knowe when winter commeth what they did in sommer Consider that they haue adiudged their heade the Pope worthy of death for many horrible factes that he hath done Go to nowe Aunswer to this you preachers which preach that the Pope is the God of the earth that he may as the Lawyers say make sale of the holy things that he is the head of the whole holy Church in verity wel gouerning the same that he is the heart of the Church in quickening the same spiritually that hee is the well spring from the which floweth all vertue and goodnesse that he is the sonne of the holy church that hee is the safe refuge to which euery Christian mā ought to flie for succour Beholde nowe that head is cutte off with the sworde nowe the God of the earth is bound now his sinnes are declared openly nowe that well spring is dried vppe that sunne darkened that heart is plucked out and throwne away least that any man should seeke succour thereat The Councell hath condemned that head and that for this offence because hee tooke money for indulgences Bishopprickes and other such like But they condemned hym by order of iudgement which were themselues the buiers and sellers of the same marchandise There was present Iohn Byshop of Lytomissia who went twise about to buy the bishoprike of Prage but others preuented him O wicked men why did they not first cast out the beame out of their owne eyes These men haue accursed and cōdemned the seller but they themselues which were the buiers and consenters to the bargaine are without daunger What shall I say that they doe vse in this maner of buying and selling at home in their owne countreis For at Constance there is one Bishop that bought another which sold and the Pope for allowing of both their factes tooke bribes of both sides It came so to passe in Bohemia also as you knowe I woulde that in that Councell God had sayde he that amongst you is without sinne let him geue the sentence against Pope Iohn Then surely they had gone all out of the Councel house one after another Why did they bowe the knee to him alwaies before this his fall kisse hys feete and call him the most holy father seeing they saw apparantly before that he was an hereticke that hee was a mankiller that he was a wicked sinner all which things nowe they haue found in him Why did the Cardinals chuse him to be Pope knowing before that he had killed the holy Father Why suffered they him to meddle with holy thinges in bearing the office of the Popedome for to this ende they are his counsailours that they shoulde admonish him of that which is right Are not they themselues as guiltie of these faults as he seeing that they accoūted these things vices in him and were partakers of some of them themselues why durst no man lay ought to his charge before he had fledde from Constance but assone as the secular power by the sufferaunce of God laide holde vpon him then and neuer afore they conspired altogether that he shoulde not liue any longer Surely euen as at this day is the malice the abhomination and filthinesse of Antichrist reuealed in the Pope and others of this Councell Nowe the faithfull seruaunts of God may vnderstande what our sauiour Christ meant by this saying when you shal see the abhomination of desolation which is spoken of Daniel c. who so can vnderstand it c. Surely these be great abhominatiōs pride couetousnesse symonie sitting in a solitarie place that is to say in a dignitie voide of goodnesse of humilitie and other vertues as we do now clearely see in those that are constituted in any office and dignitie O howe acceptable a thing should it be if time would suffer me to disclose their wicked actes which are nowe apparant that the faithfull seruaunts of God might knowe them I trust in God that he wil send after me those that shall be more valiant and there are aliue at this day that shall make more manifest the malice of Antichrist and shall geue their liues to the death for the truth of our Lord Iesus Christ who shall geue both to you and me the ioyes of life euerlasting This Epistle was written vppon S. Iohn Baptistes day in prison and in colde yrons I hauing thys meditation with my selfe that Iohn was beheaded in his prisone
Christ. FOrsomuch as euery man both by the law of nature and also by Gods law is commaunded to doe that vnto an other man which he woulde haue done vnto himselfe and is forbidden to do that thing vnto an other which he would not haue done vnto himselfe as our Sauiour sayth all things whatsoeuer you wyll that men should do vnto you the same doe you vnto thē for this is the law and the Prophetes yea the lawe is fulfilled in this one poynt thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy self We therfore God being our author hauing respect as much as in vs lieth vnto the said law of God the loue of our neighbor before did send our letters vnto Constaunce for our dearelye beloued frende of good memorye Mayster Iohn Husse Bacheler of Diuinitye and Preacher of the Gospell Whome of late in the Councell of Constaunce wee knowe not with what spirite beeing ledde you haue condemned as an obstinate hereticke neither hauing confessed any thing neither being lawfully conuict as were expediét hauing no errours or heresies declared or layde agaynst him but onely at the sinister false and importune accusations suggestiōs and instigations of his mortall enemies and the traytours of our kingdome and Marquesdome of Morauia And being thus vnmercifully condemned you haue slayne him with most shamefull and cruell death to the perpetuall shame and infamy of our most christian kingdome of Boheme and the famous Marquesdome of Morauia as we haue written vnto Constance vnto the most noble Prince and Lord the Lord Sigismund king of Romaynes and of Hungary the Heyre and Successor of our kingdom the which was also read and published in your congregations whiche wee will here also haue enrolled and haue burned him as it is reported in the reproch and contempt of vs. Wherfore we haue thought good euen now to direct our letters patentes to your reuerences nowe present in the behalfe of Maister Iohn Hus openly professing and protesting both wyth hart and mouth that he the sayd Mayster Iohn Hus was a iust good and Catholicke man and a long season worthely commended and allowed in our kingdome for his life and conuersation He also preached and taught vs and our subiectes the law of the Gospell and of the holy Prophets and the bookes of the olde and new Testament according to the exposition of the holy Doctors approued by the church left many Monumēts in writing most constantly detesting and abhorring all errors and and heresy continually admonishing both vs and all faithfull christians to do the like diligently exhorting all men as muche as in him lay by hys words writings and trauel vnto quietnesse and concord so that vsing all the diligence that we might we neuer heard or coulde vnderstand that Mayster Iohn Hus had preached taught or by any meanes affirmed any error or heresy in his Sermons or that by any maner of meanes he had offended vs or our subiectes either by word of deed but that he alwayes led a quiet and a godly life in Christ exhorting all men diligently both by his word and workes as much as he might to obserue and keepe the law of the Gospel and the institutiōs of the holy fathers after the preaching of our holy mother the church to the edifying of mens soules Neither did these premisses which you had so perpetrated to the reproch both of vs and our kingdom and Marquesdom suffice content you but that also without all mercy and piety you haue apprehended imprisoned and condemned and euen now peraduenture like as you did Mayster Iohn Hus you haue most cruelly murdered the worshipfull man Mayster Ierome of Prage a man abounding in eloquence Mayster of the seuen liberall artes and a famous Philosopher not being seene heard examined neither conuict but onely at the sinister and false accusation of hys and our accusers and betrayers Furthermore it is come to our knowledge and vnderstanding which we do not without great griefe rehearse as we may also euidently gather by your writings how that certayne detractors odible both to God and men priuy enuyers and betrayers haue wickedly and greuously albeit falsly and trayterously accused vs our kingdome and Marquesdome aforsayde before you in your councell that in the sayde kingdome of Boheme and Marquescome of Morauia diuers errors are sprong vp which haue greuously and manifoldely infected both our hartes and also the hartes of many faythfull men in so much that without a speedy stop or stay of correction the sayd kingdome and Marquesdome together with the faythfull Christians therein should incurre an irrecuperable losse and ruine of theyr soules These cruell and pernitious iniuries which are layd vnto vs and to our sayd kingdome and Marquesdome albeit most falsly slaunderously howe may we suffer for so muche as through the grace of God when in a maner all other kingdomes of the world haue oftentimes wauered making Schismes and Antipapes our most Christian kingdome of Boheme and most noble Marquesdome of Morauia since the time they did receiue the Catholicke fayth of our Lord Iesus Christ as a most perfecte quadrant haue alwayes without reproofe stucke vnto the Church of Rome and haue sincerely done theyr true obedience Also with how greate costes and charges and great trauell with what worship and due reuerence they haue reuerenced the holy mother the church and her pastors by theyr princes and faythfully subiects it is more manifest then the day light vnto the whole world and your selues if you will confesse the truth can witnes the same also Wherfore that we according to the mind of the Apostle may procure honest and good thinges not onely before God but before men also and least by neglecting the famous renowne of the kingdom and Marquesdom we be foūd cruel towards our neighbours hauing a stedfast hope a pure and sincere conscience and intent and a certayne true fayth in Christ Iesu our Lord by the tenour of these we signify and declare vnto your fatherhoods to all faythfull Christians openly professing both with hart and mouth that whatsoeuer man of what estate preheminence dignity condition degree or religion so euer he be which hath sayd or affirmed eyther doth say or affirme that in the sayd kingdome of Boheme and Marquesdome of Morauia heresyes haue sprong vp which haue infected vs and other faythfull Christians as is aforesayd the onely person of our most noble prince and Lord Sigismund king of Romaynes and of Hungary c. our Lord and heire successor being set apart whom we trust and beleue not to be guilty in the premisses all and euery such man as is aforesaid doth lye fasly vpon his head as a wicked and naughty traytour betrayer of the sayd kingdome and Marquesdome and most traiterous vnto vs most pernitious hereticke the sonne of all malice and wickednesse yea and of the deuill himselfe who is a lyar and the father of all lyes Notwithstanding we for
neuer confesse her selfe to any priest neyther obey him because they haue no power to absolue any man from theyr sinnes for that they offēd dayly more greeuously then other men and therefore that men ought to confesse themselues onely vnto God and to no priest Item the said Margery said to this deponent that the people did worship deuils which fell frō heauen with Lucifer which deuils in theyr fall to the earth entred into the Images which stand in the Churches and haue long lurked dwelled in thē so that the people worshipping those Images commit Idolatry Item she sayd more to this deponent that holy bread holy water were but tri●es of no effect or force that the belles are to be cast out of the Church and that they are excommunicate which first ordeined them Moreouer that she should not be burned although she were conuict of Lollardy for that she had a charter of saluation in her body Also the sayd deponent sayth that Agnes Bethem her seruant being sent to the house of the sayd Margery the Saterday after Ashwēsday the said Margery not being wtin found a brasse pot standing ouer the fire with a piece of baken and Otemeate sething in it as it is said Agnes reported to this deponent There were also besides this deponent diuers other worne and examined vpon the sayde Margery as Iohn Brunley and Agnes Berthē seruauntes to William Clistand which altogether confirmed the former depositions Thus much we haue thought good to note as concerning Margery Backster which we haue gathered out of the old monumentes and registers But what became of her after this her accusation because we finde no mention made in the sayd registers we are not able to declare The same yeare also were the like depositions made by one William Wright agaynst diuers good men as here foloweth First this deponent sayth that William Taylor tolde Iohn Piry of Ludney in the house of Iohn Bungay of Beghton in the presence of I. Bungay Robert Brigges wright of Martham and Iohn Usher that all the good men of Martham which were fauorers helpers to that good man William White are euill troubled now a dayes and that the sayd William White was a good holy doctor and that the best doctor after him was William Euerden whiche wrought with the sayde William Taylour of Ludney by the space of one moneth and that the first Sonday of the same moneth the sayd William Euerden did sit all day vpon the table at worke saying to the sayd William Taylor that he would not go to Church to shew hymselfe a Scribe or Pharisy and the second sonday he put on Gentle mans apparell and went to Norwiche to harken how the Byshop and his ministers vsed the poore Christians there in prison Also the sayd William Wright deposed that Willyam Taylour of Ludney was one of the secte went to London with Syr Hue Pye and had conuersation oftētimes with Syr William White hauing often conference vpon the Lollardes doctrine Item that Auise wife of Thomas Moone is of the same sect and fauored them and receiueth them often and also the daughter of Thomas Moone is partly of the same sect and can read English Item that Richard Fletcher of Beckils is a most perfect doctor in that sect and can very well and perfectly expound the holy Scriptures hath a booke of the new law in English which was Syr Hughe Pyes first Itē that Nicolas Belward sonne of Iohn Belward dwelling in the parishe of Southelham is one of the same sect and hath a new Testament which he bought at London for 4. markes and 40. pence and taught the sayd William Wright and Margery his wife and wrought wyth them continually by the space of one yere and studied diligently vpon the sayd new Testament Itē that Thomas Bremner Turner of Dychingame is perfect in that sect and law Iohn Clarke the younger of Bergh had the beddinge and apparell of William Euerden in his custody after the returne of William White from Bergh and is of the same secte Item William Bate Taylour of Sething and hys wife and his sonne whiche can reade Englishe very well are of the same sect Item William Skiruing of Sething receiued Ioane the wife of W. White into his house being brought thither by William Euerden after theyr departure from Martham Item William Osborne of Sething I. Reue glouer and Bawdwin Cooper of Beckels are of the same sect Item Iohn Pert late seruaunt of Thomas Moone is of the same secte and can read well did read in the presence of William White and was the first that brought Sir Hugh Pye into the company of the Lollardes which assembled oftentimes together at the house of the sayd Tho. Moone and there conferred vpon theyr doctrine Item Syr Hugh Pye bequeathed to Alice seruaunt to William White a new Testament which they then called the booke of the new law was in the custody of Oswald Godfrey of Colchester Iohn Perker Mercer of a village by Ipswitch is a famous Doctour of that secte Also he sayd that father Abraham of Colchester is a good man Item the sayd William Wright deposeth that it is read in the Prophesies amonges the Lollardes that the sect of Lollardes shal be in a maner destroyed Notwithstanding at the length the Lollards shall preuayle and haue the victory agaynst all theyr enemyes Also he sayd that Tucke knoweth all of that Sect in Suffolke Norfolke and Essex Besides these there were many other ●he same yeare troubled whose names being before expressed in the table of Norfolke men here for breuityes sake we omit further to untreat of passing ouer to the next yere folowing which was 1430. Ex Regist. Norw IOhn Burrell seruaunt to Thomas Moone of Ludney in the Dioces of Norwiche was apprehended and arrested for heresy the 9. day of December in this yeare of our Lord 1430. and examined by Mayster William Bernam the Bishops commissary vpon the articles before mentioned and diuers others hereafter following obiected agaynst him In primis that the Catholicke Churche is the soule of euery good Christen man Item that no man is bounde to fast the Lent or other fasting dayes appoynted by the Church for they were not appoynted by God but ordeyned by the priestes and that euery man may eat flesh or fish vpon the same dayes indifferently according to his own will euery friday is a free day to eat both flesh and fish indifferently Item that pilgrimage ought not to be made but onely vnto the poore Item that it is not lawefull to sweare but in case of life and death Item that Masses and prayers for the deade are but vayne for the soules of the dead are eyther in heauē or hell and there is none other place of purgatory but this world Upō the which Articles he being cōuict was
disordinate persones we may well and vpon probable causes repute deme culpable not only of heretical prauitie but also of high treason and as rebels to our persone Maiestie and violatours of the peace and dignity of our Realme as with all breakers and trespassours against the sacred Canons of the Churche who dare so presumptuously aduenture to worship the said Richard as a Sainct whereas it is not lawfull to worship any manner of person be he neuer so holy before he be canonised by the authority of the B. of Rome We therefore being very carefull for the good preseruatiō of our peace and desirous to abolish from out al the coastes of the same al maner Idolatry do charge command you that in certain places within your liberties wher you shal think most cōuenient you cause forthwith proclamatiōs to be made on our behalf straightly charging that no person from hencefoorth presume to resort to the place where the saide Richarde was executed vnder colour of Pilgrime or for any other cause of deuotion what so euer nor send any offering thither nor worship him hereafter openly or secretly nor adiudge esteme repute name or talke of him as otherwise iustified or innocent then such as the said reuerend father by his former definitiue sentence hath pronounced him to be vpon paine and penaltye to be taken and reputed for an hereticke or a fauourer of hereticks and to receiue condigne punishment prouided for hereticks And that you arrest all euery person whom you shall finde to do any thing cōtrary to this our Proclamation and the same so arested commit to our prisone there to remaine vntil we shal thinke good to send countermaund for their deliuerance Witnes the king at his Manor of Estampstede the 15. day of Iuly in the 18. yere of his reigne Per ipsum Regem Like writtes and to the same effect were directed to al the shrines through all the realme bearing all one and the same Date By the vertue of which letter the Maior and sheriffes did such diligence that shortly after that cōcourse and seking of the people was left of After the burning of thys man which was about the moneth of Iune in the same yere about Nouember a connocation was called by Henry Archbish. of Cant. wherein was propounded among the clergie to consult with them selues what way were best to be taken for the remoouing a way the law of Premuniri facias for so were the harts then of the temporalty set against the ecclesiasticall sort that where any vantage might be geuen them by the law they did nothing spare by reason whereof the churchmen at that time were greatly molested by the sayd law of Premuniri and by the kings writtes and other inditements to their no smal anoyance By long consultation and good aduisement at last this way was taken that a petition or supplicatiō should be drawen and presented to the king for the abolishing of the foresaid lawe of Premuniri facias and also for the restraining of other briefes wryts and inditements which seemed then to lie heauy vppon the Clergy This bill or supplication being contriued and exhibited by the Archbish. of Canter and of Yorke vnto the king standing in neede the same time of a subsidie to be collected of the cleargie thys aunswer was geuen to their supplication on the kings behalfe that for somuche as the time of Christenmaste then drewe neare whereby he had as yet no sufficient leisure to aduise vppon the matter he woulde take therein a farther pause In the meane time as one tendering theyr quiet he would send to al his officers and ministers wtin his realm that no such briefe of Premuniri shoulde passe against them or any of them from the saide time of Christenmas till the next Parliament An. 1439. Ex Regist. Cant. In my former edition of Acts monuments so hastely rashed vp at that present in such shortnesse of time as in the sayde booke thou mayst see gentle reader declared and signified among many other matters therein contained there is a shorte note made of one Eleanor Cobham Duchesse of Gloucester of Syr Roger Onley knight priest it should haue ben printed which two persons about the yeare of our Lord. 1440. or the next yeare following were condemned the one to death the other to perpetual prison Of this litle short matter maister Cope the Popes Scout lying in priuie wait to spie faults in al mēs works wherso euer any may appeare taketh pepper in the nose falleth againe vnto his olde barking against mee for placing these foresayd persons in my booke of Martyrs but especially he thinketh to haue great vantage against me for that in the same story I do ioyne withal one Margaret Iourdeman the witch of Eye condemned also wyth them the same time and burned for practising the kings death by an image of waxe c. To answere hereunto first I say as I before sayde that I professe no such title to wryte of Martyrs but in generall to wryte of rites and Monuments passed in the church and realme of England Wherein why should I be restrained from the free walke of a story wryter more then other that haue gone before me Secondly touching my commendation of Sir Roger Onley and the Lady Eleanor if maister Alane be therewith offended I aunswer that I commended them for sauoring and fauoring of the truth of Christes doctrine For the fact if any such were in them I do not commend them And although I did commend them yet neither did I it w e any long tarying vppon it nor yet all together vpon mine owne head without some sufficient warrant of authoritie For why may not I as well beleeue Iohn Bale as M. Alane beleue M. Fabian especially seeing I do knowe and was priuie that the saide Iohn in recognising his Centuries followed altogether the history of Leland De Catalogo virorum illustrium which booke being borowed of master Cheke I my selfe did see in the hands of the foresayd Iohn Bale what time we were both together dwelling in the house of the noble Lady Duches of Richmond Wherefore if he thinke me so leud to speake without mine authors he is deceiued And if he thinke mine authors not to be beleeued then let thys Nomothetes or iolly Dictator come foorth and prescribe vs a law what authors he would haue vs to take and what to refuse For els why is it not as free for me to credite Iohn Bale and Leland as for him to credite Robert Fabian and Edw. Hall especially seeing they had seene hys bookes and workes left behinde him wherupon they might better iudge and so did neuer these Thirdly for the name of Roger Onley if Cope denie that there was any such name in stories mētioned but that there was one called Roger Bolingbroke c. heereby it may appeare that either his prompter out of England deceiued him or els that hee going
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 Tower where he beyng adiudged for a traytor was priuely drowned in a but of Malmesey What the true cause was of his death it can not certainely be affirmed Diuers coniectures and imaginations there be diuersly put forth Some partly impute it to the Queenes displeasure Other suppose it came for taking part in the cause of his seruaunt which was accused and cōdemned for poysonyng sorcery or inchantmēt An other fame there is which surmiseth the cause hereof to rise vpō the vayne feare of a foolish Prophecie commyng no doubt if it were true by the craftie operation of Sathan as it doth many tymes elles happen among infidels and gentiles where Christ is not knowen where among high Princes and in noble houses much mischief groweth first murther and parricide thereby ruine of auncient families and alteration of kingdomes The effect of this Prophecie as the fame goeth was this that after kyng Edward should one reigne whose name should begyn with G. And because the name of the Duke of Clarence beyng George began with a G. therfore he began to be feared and afterward priuely as is aforesayd was made away ¶ By these experimentes and mischieuous endes of such Prophecies and also by the nature of them it is soone to be seene from what fountaine or author they proceede that is no doubt from Sathā the auncient enemy of mākynd and Prince of this world agaynst whose deceitfull delusions Christen men must be well instructed neither to maruell greatly at them though they seeme straunge nor yet to beleue them though they happen true For Sathā being the Prince of this world in such thyngs worldly can foresee what will follow and cā say truth for a mischieuous end and yet for all that is but a Sathan So the dreame of Astiages seeing a vine to growe out of his daughter which should couer all Asia and fearing thereby that by his nephew he should lose his kingdome proued true in the sequeale thereof and yet notwithstanding of Sathan it came and caused cruell murther to folow first of the shepheards child then of the sonne of Harpagus whome he set before his owne father to eate Ex Iust. lib. 1. Likewise Cyrus was Prophetically admonished by his dreame to take him for his guide whome he first met the next morow In that also his dreame fell true and yet was not of God In the same number are to be put all the blind Oracles of the Idolatrous Gentiles which although they proceede of a lieng spirit yet sometime they hit the truth to a mischieuous purpose The like iudgement also is to be giuen of Merlynes Prophecies The Sorceresse mentioned 1. Reg. 28. raising up Samuell told Saule the truth yet was it not of God In the 16. chap. of the Actes there was a Damosell hauing the spirit of Pytho who said truth of Paule and Sylas calling them the messengers of the high God and yet it was a wrong spirit The vncleane spirits in geuing testimonie of Christ saide the truth yet because their testimony came not of God Christ did not allow it Panlus Diaconus recordeth of Ualence the Emperour that he also had a blinde Prophecie not much vnlike to this of king Edward which was that one should succeed him in the Empire whose name should begin with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereupon one Theodorus trusting vpon the prophecie began rebelliously to hope for the crowne for his labour felt the paines of a traitour Notwithstanding the effect of the prophecy folowed For after Ualence succeded Theodosius Wherfore Christen Princes and noble men all Christes faithfull people must beware learne 1. First that no man be inquisitiue or curious in searching to knowe what things be to come or what shall happen beside those things only which are promised and expressed in the word 2. Secondly to vnderstand what differēce there is and how to discerne the voice of God frō the voice of Sathan 3. Thirdly how to resist and auoide the daunger of false and diuelish prophecies Many there be which being not cōtented with things present curiously occupy their wittes to search what is to come and not geuing thanks to God for their life whiche they haue will also know what shall be chance them how when their end wil come how lōg Princes shal reigne and who after shall succeede them and for y● same get vnto thē southsaiers astrologers sorcerers coniurers or familiars And these are not so much inquisitiue to search or aske but the deuill is as ready to aunswere them who either falsly doubleth with thē to delude thē or else telleth them truth to worke them perpetuall care sorow Thus was Pope Siluester the sorcerer circumuented by the diuell who told him that he should be at Hierusalem before he died and so it fell For as he was saieng his Masse at a chappell in Rome called Hierusalem there he fell sicke and within three daies after died vide sup pag. 167. To King Henry the fourth also it seemeth it was prophecied that he should not die before he went to Hierusalem who being brought to the Abbots chamber of Westminster and hearing the name of the chamber to be called Hierusalem knew his time to be come and dyed pag. 557. By such deceitfull prophecies it can not be lamented inough to see what inconuenience both publikely and priuately groweth to the life of men either causing thē falsly to trust where they should not or else wickedly to perpetrate that they woulde not as may appeare both by this king and also diuers moe So was Pompeius Crassus and Caesar as writeth Cicero deceiued by the false Chaldeis in declaring to them that they should not but die in their beds and with worship and in their olde age Of such false trust rising vpon false prophecies S. Ambrose in his booke of Exameron writeth speaking of rayne which being in those parties greatly desired was promised and prophecied of one certainely to fall vpō such a day which was at the changing of the new Moone but sayth S. Ambrose there fell no such raine at all till at the praiers of the Church the same was obteined geuing vs to vnderstand that raine commeth not by the word of man nor by the beginnings of the Moone but by the prouidēce and mercie of our creatour Ex Ambros. in Examer Ioan. Picus Earle of Mirandula in his excellent bookes written against these vaine startellers and Astrologers Lib. 2. writeth of one Ordelaphus a prince to whom it was prognosticate by a famous cunning man in that science called Hieronimus Manfredus that he should enioy long continuance of health and prosperous life who notwithstanding the selfesame yeare and in the first yeare of his mariage deceassed and after diuers other examples added moreouer vpon the same he inferreth also mention and the name of a certaine rich
the Proconsull Respite from persecution The second destruction of the Iewes Hierusalem reedified enlarged Some write that the place where Christ was crucified was taken into the walles Hierusalem called by a new name Aeliopolis Antoninus Pius Emperour Anno. 140. The letter of Antoninus Pius to the common of Asia A notable argument of the Emperour to proue the good conscience of Christians and the false conscience of the Heathen He meaneth Hadrian which adopted this Antoninus of hys sonne in law to be hys sonne heyre O noble edict M. Antoninus Verus Emperour Anno. 162. Policarpus the blessed Martyr Byshop of Smyrna Ex Euseb. hist. Eccles Lib. 4. Cap. 15. Hieron in Catalogo Twelue Martyrs in Asia The cruell and beastly handling of the Christian Martyrs The singular patience and constancie of the Christians Germanicus a most constant Martyr Quintus a Phrigian to hardie hold Polycarpus flyeth persecution Policarpus prayeth for the church Policarpus hath a visiō of hys burning Policarpus pursued and taken Policarpus might escape and would not Policarpus falleth to prayer Policarpus refuseth to doe sacrifice Policarpus comforted by a uoyce from heauē Policarpus allured to chaunge hys name would not consent A faythfull seruaunt of Christ his Lord. Policarpus ready to geue reason of hys doctrine Policarpus obedient to higher powers Policarpus threatned with wilde beastes An example of brotherly loue The willing minde of Policarpus to suffer His prayer before hys death The thankesgeuing of Policarpus A miracle shewed An example of much cruelty The Iewes enemies alwayes to the Christians Marke that he sayth we loue them and worshippe them not Twelue Martyrs put to death in Smyrna Ex Irenaeo lib. 3. cap. 3. Euseb. Lib. 4. cap. 14. Anno. 167. Germanicus Ex. Euseb. lib. 4. cap. 15. Histor. eccle The olde age of Policarpus Policarpus the scholler of Iohn Irenaeus lib. 3. Cap. 1. The Epistle of Policarpus to the Philippians Iustification by fayth Ex Euseb. lib. 5. cap. 20. Irenaeus conuersaunt with policarpus Policarpus conuersaunt with the Apo●tles The authoritie of Policarpus in the Churches of Asia Policarpus came to Rome Polycarpus conferreth with Anicetus The East church and Romaine Church differre about Easterday Ex Nicepho Lib. 4. cap. 39. Difference of ceremonyes caused no breach of charitie in the Primitiue Church Socrates deceiued in hys Tripart hist. Ex Euseb. Lib. 4. cap. 17. Metrodorus Pionius Carpus Papylus Agathonica Martyrs Felicitas with her 7. Children Ianuari Felix Philipus Siluanus Alexander Vitalis Martialis Martyrs Iustinus Martyr Ex Euseb. Lib. 4. Cap. 16. Crescens A Philosopher procurer of the death of Iustinus Crescens a rayling Philosopher and a malicious rayler A slane of fame and feare Crescens proued an vnlearned Philosopher Tacianus cōmended The prayse of Iustinus Martyr Ex Catalogo Hiero. The death and martirdome of Iustinus the noble Philosopher and a Christian Martyr Praxedis Potentiana Christian virgines Ptolomeus Lucius Martyrs Euseb. lib. 4. Cap. 17. The boldnes Christian constancie of Lucius Lucius condemned and Martyred The third also condemned and Martyred A place of Gracianus suspected Concordus Martyr Concordus spitteth 〈◊〉 face of 〈◊〉 Idole The story of Vincentius suspected of vntrueth Ex Isuardo Vincenti● Henrico de Erford Symmetrius Florellus pontianus Alexander Caius Epipodus Victor Corona Marcellus Valerian Martyrs Aucthors in the writing the miracles of Martyrs suspected Getulus Corcal●● Amantius Primitiuus Ma●tyrs The vii sonnes of Symph●rosa Crescens Iulianus Nemesius Primiti●us Iustinus Statteus Eugenius Martyrs The persecution in Lyons and Vienna two Cities in Fraunce Ex Euseb. lib. 5. Cap. 2. A letter of the brethren of Fraunce to the brethrē of Asia Vetius Epaegaethus Martir The stoutnes of a godly young man The faynting of certaine weake Christians False slaunders of the Christians The rage of the Heathen against the Christians The cruell handling and great patience of Blandina Sanctus a Martyr The notable constancy of Sanctus The cruell tormentors of Sanctus A miraculous working of God Byblydes an holy Martyr Eculeus ad quintum feramen Diuers Martyrs strangled in prison Other martyrs dyed in prison ●hotinus a blessed martyr The rage of the people agaynst Pbotinus The comfort of the godly standing to their confession The denyers of their confes●io● comfortles and notwithstanding punish●d The spitefull handling of Gods people Maturus and Sanctio Martyred Blandina brought forth agayne Attalus commaunded to pryson The denyers returning agayne to their confession Alexander the Phrigian Martyred The worthy pacience and constancie of Attalus Blandina and Ponticus 〈◊〉 brought forth Ponticus Martyred Blandina Martyred Apoc. 22. Iustinus Priscus Bachius Iustinus father Iustine desirous of Philosophy Iustine proueth all sectes of Philosophy Iustine a Platonist The end of Plato hys Philosophy Ex Euseb. lib. 4. cap. 8. Iustine beginneth to fauour Christen Religion Iustine goeth into desert Iustinus miraculously conuerted by an olde man The vanity of the olde Philosophers reproued The doctrine of the Prophetes commended The vtilitie of reading the Prophetes Prophetes to ●● credited for tw● causes Iustinus baptised Diatriba Iustinus an earnest defender of Christ. Two Apologies of Iustinus The summe of his Apologies The second A-Apology of Iustine The Lord take away this spirit of fury condemning innocentes before they be conuicted Ex Euseb. lib 4. Cap. 16. A place of Epiphanius found faulty C●m dignitate latus pro Christo pertulit The singuler modesty of the foresayd Martyrs declared Ex Euseb. lib. 5. cap. 2. The holy Martyrs refuse to be called Martyrs Ex Euseb. Lib. 5. ca ● Alcibiades The straite fasting of Alcibiades corrected by the holy Ghost A lesson for scripulous consciences Irenaus newely made minister and cōmended to Eleutherius Appollinaris and Melito exhibited Apologies to the Emperour for the Christians Ex Euseb. Lib. 4. cap. 26. The summe of the Apologye of Melito The Christians Religion began with the Empire of Rome Christen religion maketh common weales to florish The bookes of the olde Testament autentike and receaued Ex Eusebio ibidem A miraculous rayne obtayned by the Christians Antoninus Verus M. Aurelius Commodus Emperrours The discrepance betweene Eusebius and Platina Anno. 175. Quitnes geuen to the Church Appollonius Martyr Appollonius accused by hys owne seruaunt Apoollonius exhibiteth an Apology of hys fayth to the Senate An old wicked law of the Romaines The ridiculous pride of the Emperour Vincentius Eusebius Peregrinus Potentianus Martyrs Iulius a Senator conuerted to Christ. Ex Vincen lib. 10. cap 119. Henr. de Erfor Peregrinus sent to Fraunce and Martyred at at Rome Ex Platinain vita Sixti Iulius with hy● family baptised and after Martyred Xistus Byshop of Rome The trifling ordinaunce● of Xistus S. Peter celebrated the Lordes supper onely with the Lords prai●● Plateua ●● vita Sixti The ordinaunce of Xistus suspected Telesphorus Byshop of Rome and Martyr The ordidaunces of Telesphorus Lent fast and the originall therof examined Montanus first brought in
pontif Lib. 4. Ex Roger. Ho 〈◊〉 Eabia c. Anno. 1116. Assemble of the nobles at Salisbury Thurstine refuseth to professe subiection to the Arch. of Cant. Thurstine promiseth to renounce hys archbishopricke Anno. 1118. Pope Calixtus breaketh promise with the king Thurstine sacred archbishop of Yorke by the Pope agaynst the kinges minde Concision Rhemense Actes of the councell of Rhemes The Actes sent to the Emperour The Emperour agreeth not to the popes inuesting The councell deuided Ex Rog. Houed Henry the Emperour excommunicated Agreed that England shoulde haue no other Legate from Rome but onely the Archb. of Cant. England spoyld by the popes legates All the custome of the Realme graunted of the pope Anno. 1120. The popes letter to the King The king compelled to receaue Thurstinus for feare of the popes curse Thurstinus restored Anno. 1122. Wil. Archb. of Cant. The gray Friers first came into England Anno. 1125. Priestes payd for their wiues Ex Roger. Houed El Guliel Gisburnēsi Ex Henrie Hunting lib. 7. The Abbey of Gilburne bailded S. la ues hand Reading Abbey foūded Matilde daughter of K. Henry heyre to the crowne Geffry Plātagenet Henry 2. borne of Matilde the Empresse Anno. 1130. The priorie of Norton founded Three terrible visiōs of the king Three vowes made of King Henry Anno. 1131. Danegelt released The Church relieued Iustice rightly administred Bishoprike of Carlile newly erected by king Henry The Citie and Paules Church of London burned Honorius the 2. Mathaeus Partsiensis A romishe statute concerning priestes wiues and Concubines Mariage forbid to the seuenth degree The Popes Legate geuing preceptes of chastitie was found with an harlot Lotharius Emperour Arnulphus Martyred at Rome The history of Arnulphus Arnulphus Martyr Ex Tretimio A booke called Tripartitum written 400. yeares agoe Number of holy dayes Curious singing in Cathedrall Churches The world ouercharged with begging Religions Promotion of euill prelates Supersluitie of apparell in Bishops families Byshops seales abused to get mony Non residentes in benefices Rash bestowing of benefices Wastefull spending of the Church goods Old bookes of Councels lost by the negligence of the clerkes The vnchaste lyfe of priestes condemned by the nature of the storkes Amendment of lyfe ought first to begin with the priestes The realme of Fraunce interdited King of Portingale deposed The Knights of the Rhodes and Templars Pope 〈◊〉 centius the second Hurly 〈◊〉 betweene Popes The pope curse proclaymed agaynst 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 any priest The death of K. Henry Anno. 1135. Periury iustly punished Ex Chris. Anglico in certi aut●ris The Bishop of Sarum and of Lincolne take● prisoners of the king and led with ropes about their neckes Roger. ●eued in 〈◊〉 Steph. Ex Fabian In vita Step. Anno. 1136. K. Stephen Building of Castles in England The cruelty of the Scots agaynst the Englishe man Anno. 1140. Maude the Empresse came into England agaynst Steuen King Steuē●ken prisoner What it is for princes to be hard and straite to their subjectes K. Stephen and Robert Erle of Glocester deliuered by exchaunge Ex incerti autoris chronise The decease of Geffry Plantagenet Henry Duke of Normandy Henry entereth into England Theobalde Archbishop of Cant. Peace betwene king Steuen and Duke Henry concluded The death of K. Steuen S. William of Yorke Gracianns the compiler of the popes decrees Petrus Lombardus maister of the sentence Petrus Comestet Hugo de sancto Victore Bernardus Clareualensis Hildegare Ioannes detemporibus The fewes crucified a christen body at Norwich The order of the Gilbertines The Lordes prayer and the Creede in Englishe Matthaeus Pariensis lib. Chron. 4. Steuen king of England Cursing with booke bell and candle Anno. 1138. Pope Lucius the ij warring agaynst the Senators Spirituall excommunication abused in temporall causes Hadrianus a Pope an Englishman Anno. 1154. King Henry the second Thomas Becket chauncellor of England Anno. 〈◊〉 Gerhardus Dulcinus Preaches agaynst Antichrist of Rome Ex 〈◊〉 Gisbaron si Anno. 11●● Fredericus Barbarosa Emperor The pope displeased that the Emperour did not held his right stirrup The Emperour holdeth the Popes stirrup The Popes old practice in setting Princes together by the eares War more gaynefull to the Pope then peace Warre stirred vp by the Pope The pope driuen to entreate for peace The godly proceedings of Frederick the Emperour agaynst the pope A letter of Pope Hadrian to the Emperour Fredericke The Emperours name before the Popes A seditious and proud letter of the pope to the Bishops of Germany Well bragged and like a Pope Scripture well wrasted Ex Radenuico in appendice Frisingensis See the ambitious presumption of a proude priest Note here a couragious hart in a valiaunt Emperour An example for all princes to follow Note The order of Erenu●● Anno. 1159. The saying and iudgement of P. Adrianus of the papall sea The popes rather successors to Romulus then to Peter Pope Alexander the third Alexander curseth the Emperour Anno. 1164. Volateran ●ken with a ●tradiction Concilium 〈◊〉 The clergie ●ounde to ●he vowe of ●hastitie Papi●tes are not so much in pro 〈◊〉 chastitie as in desining chastitie Tho. Becket Archb. at Cant. Becket no martyr Herberturde busebam Ioan. Charnot A lanus Abbot of Tenchbury Gulselmus Cantuariensis Tho. Becked described What commeth of blinde zeale destitute of right knowledge The life of Tho. Becket Polydorus mistaketh the mother of Becket Ex Roberto Cri●eladensi Ex Florilego 〈…〉 The 〈◊〉 of van●● recited betweene 〈◊〉 king 〈◊〉 Archb. The kings custome Out of an Englishe Chronic●● as it appearreth 〈◊〉 en cured French●● Erle ●●lord 〈◊〉 The lawes of Claredoun Beckets additiō Saluo ordine suo The Bishop of Chichester The stubberne wilfulnes of T. Becket T. Becket relenteth to the king Becket yeldeth to the king Saluo ordine left out in the composition Becket repenteth of hys good deede A letter of pope Alexander to T. Becket Becket enterprising agaynst the king● 〈◊〉 to flye out of the realme Becket taunted of the king Ex Rogero Houed pr● parte historia continuas a post Bedam The kinge to be the Pope Legate The ce●sty dissimulation of the Pope The popes secret letters to Becket More then an C. murthers done by the clergye Guliel Neuburg lib. 2. ca. 16. Becket cited to Northampton The Archbish. condemned in the Councell of Northamtō in the lo●●e of all hys moueables Becket required to geue an accompt The verdite of Winchester The counsell of the Bishop of London Canterbury Winchester Chichester Moderate counsell Lincolne Exceter Worcester Becket the Archbishop replyeth agaynst the Byshops A great ●●ielle growen in the church because that Byshop may no●●● aboue 〈◊〉 and prince Becket destitute and forsaken Becket 〈◊〉 with 〈◊〉 nes when he should appeale A masse of S. Steuen 〈◊〉 saue hym from hys enemies Becket answere to the Bishops ●●c●●t appealeth to Rome London appealeth from the Archbish. A masse to charme away persecutors Becket caryeth with hym the sacrament going
prison and after burned at Auinion Anno. 1354. Ex Ionn Prosiardo volu 1. cap. 211. Ex scripta Godfri de Fontanis A contention in France betwene the Prelates and the Friers there A sermon of the Bish. of Byters to the students of Paris agaynst the Friers That is the Dominicke Friers and the Franciscane Friers The constitution of Pope Innocent 3. Omnis vtriusque sexus The Friers priuilegies proued contrary to the Popes constitution The Bish. Ambianensis Friers ought not to preach in Churches without special licence of them to whom the church belongeth The Friers reply against the Prelates Herode and Pilate were made friends in crucifying of Christ. An other sermon against the Friers Bishop Ambianensis In veritates c. Veritie in three partes consisteth The Friers proued with a lye The Friers priuilegies confuted in disputation at Paris A seditious commotion betweene the townes men and the scholers in the vniuersitie of Oxforde Procession for peace The holie procession would bring no peace Transubstātiation will not helpe in time of need A conquest of the scholers of Oxforde The vniuersitie of Oxford dissolued for a tyme. The towne of Oxford interdicted Chaunted to the Commissary of Oxford to haue the al ife of bread and ale and other priuilegies aboue the Maior of the towne An holsome decree of a good Archb. not to abstaine from bodely labour vpon certaine holy dayes A parliament Simon Sudbury Archb. of Cant. The Nuns of S. Bridges order This Ladye Blanch was Duckesse of Lancaster Dead men excommunicated by the Pope The Popes messengers hanged The feast of the speare and of the holy nailes En histor Criekladensis 46. Bonifacius 25. An vntruth in Polyd. Virgil. This Adam Mirimouth was compiler of the story of K. Edw. The first great plague in England The vestmēts wherin S. Peter sayd Masse or els the papists doe lye Canterbury Colledge builded in Oxforde The conclusion of this booke Antichrist in his pride The loosing out of Sathan The fift booke The yeares and tyme of loosing out Satan examined Apoc. 10. The place of the Apocal 20. Expounded for the loosing out of Satā What the loosing of Satan doth meane in Scripture Three reasons The first reason The 2. reason The 3. reason Apoc. cap. 13. Xlij monethes in the Apocal. cap. 13. examined What time Satan was tied vp About what time and yeare Satan was let out by the coūt of the Apocalips The ceasing of persecution in the primitiue church The binding vp of Sathan The time of losing of Sathan The time of Antichrist examined Verses prophesying of the comming of Antichrist The argument of the bookes after folowing Anno. 1360. A brief rehearsall of faythfull learned men which withstood the proceedings of the Pope The author of the plowmans prayer not knowne An olde booke intituled the ploughmans prayer written as seemeth about Wickliffes tyme. The complaynt of Esal applied to these times * Forward that is couenant The law of Christ standeth on two partes * Amid Paradise that is in the middest of Paradise Abraham * Held him forwarde that is kept promise with him Gods loue to man Feile times that is oft tymes Special precepts or lessons of the Gospell Christes sheepe stopped from cleane water compelled to drinke puddel * Syth that is afterward * Binemen that is take away * Herying that is wor●hipping The honouring of God standet● in i●● ●hing●● * Nemeth that is taketh Against anricular confession Sinnes forgiuen without ●hrist * Heigheth that is exalteth Obiection of the priestes to maintain ●hrist Answere to the obiection Penaunce for sinne is mans ordinance and not Gods Mischiefes that come by auricular confession Popish priestes charged wich Simony * Beth that is bee * By nemet's that is taketh away The Pop● breaketh the law of loue mercye The Pope would be a father but he beareth no loue To forsake the world is not to liue in ease from company True seruice of God stādeth not in long prayer but in keeping Gods commandements * Chargen that is they care for * Behited that is promised * Kunnen that is they can * Heryeth that is worshippeth Singing in churches falsly called Gods seruice Weping for sinnes better seruice then singing in church The order of p●●estes not made to offer Christs bodie The sacrament of the body of the Lord abused * Fullen that is baptise Priests principally sent to preach not to say masse or to make the lords bodie He that speaketh Gods teaching is holden an heretike What inconuenience by the vnmaried liues of priestes He complain●th of the idlenes of priestes What is the true church of Christ. * To fore ●hat is before * Herying that is worshipping * Heriers worshippers He complaineth of images in churches He cōplayneth of false pastors that liue by their Booke but feedeth not them * Lesew that is pasture * Beth that is bee Against hirelings * Sweuens that is dreames * Bliue quickly * Meste most Popish priests neither reach themselues nor wyl suffer other beside thēselues to teach * I hightest promised * We●en know * Tweyne that is two * For that i but. He complaineth for punishing litle faults and to l●t great faul●es escape If he be an heretike that breaketh mans lawe what is the P. that breaketh Gods lawe A leud mā that is a lay man Against the canon law The popes l●w against Gods lawe in causing men to accuse themselues Mowē that is may Tooke kept that is tooke heede The breakyng of the popes lawe more punished then the breaking of Gods law For to that that is therfore Pilate more commended then the pope The Pope breaketh patience Christes vicare and his priestes will suffer nothing No temporall word geuen to Peter Thilk things those things faith commeth not by outward force Pope breaketh the rule of charitie of mercy and of patience Or then before that The P. breaketh the law of swearing Nole 1. would not Seruant of seruants the popes stile abused Thralles that is to say bond men Pride of priests Meekenes commended in Ministers Vicar in earth not tollerable in the pope Swe●●ens that that is dreames Mastership and Lordship in Preachers False glosers Nele that is will not Pouertie of Christ not folowed Couetise Pouertie counted s●lly Nele th●● will not God is serued of the worst A lesson for them that haue goods well to spel them Seggen that is do say The pouertie of Christ rightly considered A poore kyng and a proud Vicar howe ioyne these two together Christ a seruant vpon earth the pope a Lord. The pope for his right and riches wil pleade fight and curse Propriety of goods here ● not take away but charitie is required to helpe the neede of our neighbour The Pope a mainteyner of theeues and robbers Christ a good shepeheard in d●●●e Comparison betweene the popes sheepheards and Christ. * But for that is but because * Within forth i. inwardly * Lesew
34. Ex titu 9. Ex an 14. Regis Richardi secund● tit 6. Tit. 24. Against vsury Ex. tit 29. Vide articulum Tit. 29. Ex An. 17. Reg. Rich● Titul 33. Ex an 20. Reg. Rich. 2. tit 22. Here the Archb. of Cant. goeth contrary to himselfe Titul 32. Tit. 36. Ex 21. an Reg. Rich. titul 15. Ex tit 16. Tho. Arundell Archb. of Cant. proued a traitour by parliament Ex tit 17. Anno. 1399. The depo 〈◊〉 of kyng Archb. the 2. The Story 〈◊〉 ●●ge ●●entable ●l●es and vertues mixt ●● K. Rich. What it is ●● the sixe in mainte●●nce of the Gospell A●●icles 33. ●●l against K. Richard Gods special lauour necessary for princes ●al ● The king ledde with lewde counsayle The nobles vp in armes against certaine of the kings counsailours Ex. Chron. D. Albani The second preparatine to the kings deposing I. Waltam B. of Salisb. makebate Tho. Arundell Archb. of York Londiners sauourers of Wickliffes doctrine Ex histor D. Albani cuius sic habet initium An. gratia c. Londiners complayned of to the king by the Byshops Beati pacifici The court remoued frō London to Yorke The 3. preparatiue to the kings deposing The king aresting his owne Vncle caused him to be put wrongfully to death The king aresting his owne Vncle caused him to be put wrongfully to death Erle of Notingham made duke of Northfolke The duke of Northfolke and duke of Hereford banished Tho. Arundell banished as a traytor by parliament Ann. 1399. What euil company doth about a kyng K. Richard returneth from Irelande to Milford hauen K. Richard forsake of his su●ie●s What it is for a prince to be beloued of his subiectes K. Richard agreed to resigned ● crowne The kyng committed to the Tower The wordes of Henry Duke clayming the crowne K. Henry 4. inthroned and crowned Anno. 1400. W. Sautre Martyr W. Sautre brought before the byshops in the conuocation The articles 〈◊〉 Sautre The answer of W. Sautre giuen vp in writing The crosse materially not to bee worshipped A man predestinate rather to be worshipped than an Angell that is to say neither can be worshipped without idolatrie How bread remaineth in the Sacrament The conuocation continued W. Sautre agayn examined Determination of the Church so to be folowed as it is ioyned to the will of God The sentence against W. Sautre A certaine processe against W. Sautre presented by the Bish. of Norwiche Proces against W. Sautre Ex Regist. Cantuar. Sentence of relapse Sentence of degradation The pattēt and chalice takē frō him The booke of a new Testamēt taken frō him The Albe taken from him The candlesticke taper taken from hym The holy water bucke coni●●ed from him He meaneth the legend booke as saith the Register The Surplice taken from him The church dore keyes taken from him Priuilege of the clergie taken from him The priestes cap taken from his head maketh vp all in all The cruell decree of the king agaynst Sawtre Preposterous zeale without knowledge Admonition to Princes K Henry the first of English kinges that tormented the Christians with fire Much murder beheading in K. Henryes time the 4. * It is to be doubted Ex calendario 〈◊〉 Anno 1403. Archb. of Yorke and L. Moubray against King Henry 4. L. Bardolfe Henry Percy Earle of Northumberland agaynst the king Ex histor Scala mūdi Articles set vpon church dores against K. Hen. 4. Ann. 1405. A bill of articles s●typ against king Henry 4. K. Henry periured K. Henry changed with vnluthe K. Henry charged with treason agaynst his soueraigne K. Henry charged with a●●●d●ring of his prince K. Henry charged with the orders of the church K. Henry charged with tyranny The K charged with euill gouernement K. Hen. charged with oppression and periury Three causes declared Earle of Westmerland against the Archb. Falsehood in 〈◊〉 The Archb. of Yorke craftely circumuented The Archb. of Yorke L. Tho'Moubray with many Yorke shire ●●n executed The Earle of North●berland L. Tho. Bar. dolfe slaine Anno. 1408. Abbot of 〈◊〉 Anno. 1409. Iohn Badby martyr Ex Regist. Tho. Arundel The articles read The Sacrament of Christes body I can not blame ye that ye are so angry for it was not for your profite The sentēce o● the B. of Worcester against Iohn Badby A table of monkes and friers about the condemnation of Iohn Badby Quare fremuerunt g●ntes Psal. 2. Scribes with Pharises The aunswere of Iohn Badby to the articles The substance of bread not chaunged in the Sacrament The cōstancy of Iohn Badby before the Archb. The Bishops make sure work The Archb. 〈◊〉 and Iaylor A stiterunt reges terrae principes conuenerunt in vnum aduersus c. Psal. 2. Note here murdring wolues in sheepes cloathing The pri●● labourc●● to turne Badby The sacrament solemnely brought to Smithfield at the burning of Badbye All the power of man set against the Gospel The Gospel of Christ counted as wicked and hereticall The cruell statute ex officio A bloudie law of king Henry 4. A bloudy statute The lawe of Maximinus and the statute ex officio compared A cruell constitution by the Archb. agaynst the Gospellers with 13. articles Blasphemy not of pure man but of true God Hee meaneth here of Thomas Becket his predecessour who had ●is braynes beat out in the time of K. Hen. 2 Scripture clarkly applyed This geare hangeth togea ther lyke germa●es lyppes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 marke this you Grammarians Marke well the popes diuinitie An argument far fet that true doctrine conssisteth in making one head of the Church How aptly he painteth the proceedinges of his owne popish Church Apos 6. The figure of the black horse in the Apoc. doctorly expo●ded Behold the true image of Wolues vnder sheepes clothing The first cōstitution No priestes to preach but by limitation of the prealates A ioly mene to bring the world into such darknes Constit. 2. Constit. 3. what tyrāny is this to bynde the preachers mouth what to say Constit. 4. A barre for the preachers Const. 5. A caueat for schoolemasters Const. 4. Books of Iohn Wickliffe forbidden Constit. 7. He confesseth that S. Ierome erred in his translation And yet the said Archb. cōmēded Queene Anne for hauing the scripture in Englishe Constit. 8. Termes and propositions in disputing to be obserued Constit. 6. Authoritie of the popes decretals not to be doubted d vnder pain● of heresie Adoration of the crosse * With all abhomination Constit 10. No priest to celebrate without their letters of orders Constit. 11. Oxford famous for sincere religion Inquisition to bemade through Colledges and halles of Oxforde I would 〈◊〉 like were vsed nowe for the banishing of papistry Constit. 12. Constit. 13. Easier to o●fend against the princes law then against the byshops Iohn Puruey Iohn Edward Iohn Becket Iohn Seynons abiured The articles 1 Their arcle cōmonly was thus that who so taketh vpon him the office of a
Prieste though he haue no cure of soules nor licence of his ordinary is bounde to preach the Gospel The examination of the constant seruaunt of God Williā Thorpe This history 〈◊〉 set forth corrected by M. W. Tyndall The preface Gods lawes must be knowe● and folowed Foure caused ●● setting forth ● 13 examination The 2. 〈◊〉 Truth leaueth alwayes a sweet ●mel behinde it Godly counsell geuen if it may be followed Persecution followeth the true Church The cause why persecution is suffered to come The third cause Edification of other necessary to be considered The 4. cause The assistance of God neuer fayleth the that are persecuted Examinatió of William Thorpe before Tho. Arundell Archb. Loyteryng prelates cánot abyde trauellyng preachers The grace of God and of my Lord of Cant. be 2. thinges Your ordinaunce and why not to Gods ordinance if it please your grace 〈…〉 crea●● of 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 ●hat is the holy church The true notes of the true church What heresie in this beliefe I pray you my Lord The old Testament and new Doctors so to be folowed as they folow the word To sweare by a booke whether it be lawfull How where and when to sweare Behold the popish procedings whereto they tende No maruell why for Christ and Antichrist how can they agree It is prety when Pharao iudgeth Moses harde hearted Where learned you my Lord to call your brother Racha He meaneth Gods Martyr Williā Sautrey The order and 〈◊〉 of his bringing vp Phillip Repington made bish and a persecutor Happy be 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worth 〈◊〉 coue●●● 〈◊〉 pitie 〈◊〉 pre●●● cannot 〈…〉 popish 〈◊〉 A worthy 〈◊〉 sa●●● of M. Iohn Wickliffe M. Iohn 〈…〉 Ramington 〈◊〉 Her●●● Dauy 〈◊〉 I. 〈◊〉 The testimony for Wickliffe out of the mouth of his own aduersary Many such 〈…〉 our 〈◊〉 Repington became a pers●cut●r after he was made byshop The sacrament after consecration materiall bread Articles obiected against William Thorpe Holesome enough for mans soule though not for your kitchyn O Shreuesbury thouhast a cause to repēt th●e in that thou wouldest not rec●iue the truth whē it was offered thee The Romish church must be stablished by persecuting of true preachers A sure trust in Gods truth cōfoūdeth the malice of tyran●es If the touchstone might try truth should be knowne The description of the right Christians in Shreuesbury The Catholikes of Shreuesbury Shreusbury except thou turne frō thy wicked wayes thou canstnot receiue the trueth Ierusalem troubled by the p●eaching of Christ. The worde of God ought truly to be preached If this lesson had bene well folowed the world had not bene brought to such darknes by blind dumme priestes An effectuous prayer God graunt in all ministers Why 〈◊〉 pr●●ched without 〈◊〉 byshops l●cence He answereth to 〈◊〉 question ●●●cerning 〈◊〉 letter of ●●cence The incōuenience● of seeking of the bi●●ops letter or lycence The witnes of the preachers i● the good life of the folowers Two mine of soueraignes He meaneth prelates that be vnuertuous Two maner ●●●be●ing 〈◊〉 folowing their do●●ges and examples 2. ●● suffering their ●ranges Wicked 〈◊〉 are not 〈◊〉 folowed in euill Well reaso●● my lord 〈◊〉 lyke a 〈◊〉 Obedience 〈◊〉 be ge●● but in 〈◊〉 leful 〈◊〉 lawfull 〈◊〉 pre●mption 〈◊〉 stādeth 〈◊〉 your ●●●derfull ●●bition 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 they 〈◊〉 priest●ood they resent to 〈◊〉 Math. 10. 〈◊〉 vlt. 〈◊〉 10. The office 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of ●●●●ching Priests that 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 people 〈◊〉 Doctrine of 〈◊〉 Discipline of workes Priests not 〈◊〉 sent ●● preach 〈◊〉 cōmanded to preach Gregorius Lincolniensu Whatsoeuer a man doth leauing that ●alone which hee is ●●●chieflye ●●und to do is sinne Yet this byshop plucketh him not by the 〈◊〉 nor burneth not of his hand a● Bone● did Holychurch 2. Partes of the Church Well helpt forward M. Clark The foresayd articles renued against Thorpe The vertue of the sacrament standeth in the beliefe more then in the outward signe Material bread The papistes haue none other defence for thē but onely the Church Euery ordinance of Churchmen byndeth not our fayth The greatest Doctors of the church be Apostles S. Paule calleth it bread The Canō of the masse calleth it bread S. Austē calleth it bread The secreat of the masse on Christmas day nameth it a terrene substaunce My Lord can reuile apace he can declare but a little Choke him vp my Lord. To graunt the reall being of the body without bread is as much as to graūt the a●cident to be without the subiect Against proud Sophisters Templum domini Templum domini The church stood 〈◊〉 till the 〈◊〉 broke 〈◊〉 Transubstantiation brought in by ●●yer Tho. Aquin. It is happy he did not flye in his face as ●●nner did The 2. point touching Images Thorpe charged with an vntru●th Man a worshipfull image of God Though m● accept the painting of or caruing of images yet is it not the right way to learn to serue God The image of the Trinitie A similitude of the kings seale or letters to proue the worship of images No similitude to be made betwene erthly thinges spirituall namely when Gods word doth expresse to the contrary So you say my Lorde but God saith cōtrary in his commandem●ts Painters deuotion the Popes diuinitie do well agree Preparation of the painters to make a faire and a deuout Image The true ●ookes and ●alenders to ●on God ●etter ●ot my 〈◊〉 than ●● see blind 〈◊〉 there ●● be wor●●ipped The ●ight ●●●ice of a C●●●stian My Lord ●●●ryea ●●il not ●●●were Gods nay Note this ●●worship●●●s and ●●●nteiners ●● Images The Syna●●●●e of Antichrist will haue authoritie Great miracles done by ●mages but my Lorde doth not tel by whose power Myracles importing worship to be done to Images may well be suspected not to come of G●d A Christian man ought not to vow seeke nor how nor pray nor offer nor kille an Image For the vnfaithfulnes of men the deuill may worke myracles The worde of God suffiseth vs to saluation without myracles That which is of nature vnknowne cannot be resembled by any visible creature knowne Holy church of your owne building The 3. article Pilgrimage Two maner of Pilgrimages The true pilgrimage is to trauell in heauenly thinges Euery good worke is a good steppe to heauen The maner and examples of saintes Pilgrimage displeasaunt to God Goods euill bestowed in pilgrimage The incōueniēce that commeth by pilgrimage Well spoken my Lord for Lincolnshire bagpipes And why then blamed Boner Philpot for singing in the stockes A new found way to grace of the bishops making Instrumētes musike of the old testament how they are to be applyed and vsed in the new testament Orgaynes in the Church A fitt comparison my Lord like your selfe The saying of Ierome You sweare my Lord. The 4. article concerning priestes tithes A paradox without Gods word A difference to be put betwixt the old law and the new Priestes had the x. part of
popes diuinitie how the bloud of christ s. rueth to purchase their patrimonie This Schisme cōtinued 40. yeares He stirreth vp the Emperour Sigismund Loripidē rectus deridcat aethiopus album Note the vile flattery of these papistes when they would haue any thing of the Emperor for their purpose The proctor of the councell calleth for the sentence The Cardinall of Cābray cōmāded Iohn Hus. to keepe silence Iohn Hus could not be heard in the councell Iohn Hus committeth his cause to the Lord Christ. Marke the vnshame fast nes of thē to faine what they list Iohn Hus againe slaundered The councel doth call it hereticall to appeale to Christ. Contempt of the popes excōmunication laide to Iohn Pus The sētence read against Iohn Hus. They shall bring you before their councells they shall persecute you and cast you in prisō and bring you before kings presidents for my nāe c. Luke 21. * The sayde concelium malignantium Many shall come in my name and shal deceiue many Marke 13. To appeale to Christ is deragatory to the popes holynes Veritie condemned for heresie I. Hus cleareth himself of obstinacy They condemne the bokes written in the Bohemian tongue which they neuer read Hus prayeth for his enemies I. Hus commanded to put on the priestes garmentes I. Hus his oration vnto the people The disgrading of Iohn Hus. The wordes of I. Hus vnto the Emperour The crowne of Iohn Hus pared away with sheares The marueilous constancie and courage of the blessed martyr The paper with the inscription set vpon Husses head The protestation of Iohn Hus as he was ledde to the place of execution The prayers of I. Hus well liked of the people Ex epist. Ioan. Hus. 31. The paper with deuils fell from his head At the praier of Hus the paper with deuils fell downe The martyrdome of b●essed Iohn Hus. Precious in the sight of God is the death of hys saintes The hart of Iohn Hus beaten with s●aues and consumed with fire The ashes of Iohn Hus cast into the riuer of Rh●ine The author and witnes ●● this story ● Iohn Pizibram is thought to be his name Ex Cochleo lib 2. de Hist. H●ssit Ex Cocbleo dehist Huss lib. 4. The Empe●●ur excuseth him self of the death of I. Hus. Ex epist. Iohn Hus. 33. The Emperour vncurteous to Iohn Hus. Pilate more moderate to Christ then this Emperour to Iohn Hus. A letter of Iohn Hus to the people of Prage An other letter of I. Hus. An other letter of I. Hus. The tormēts of the martirs vnder the olde and new Testament He meaneth be like that he should moue the king in these matters contayned in this Epistle Vide supra pag. 553. Another letter of Iohn Hus. The Councell cond●ne bookes which they vnderstand not Prayse of Bohemia The abhomination of the Coūcell of Cōstanc● described I. Hus seemeth here to prophesi● of the Councell as it came to passe The Councell afraide to be t●ied by the scriptures This cardinall was Cardinall Cambrensis S. Katherine disputed with 50. doctors cōuerted them but I. Hus could not conuert his 59. Doctors Good bookes of good men haue bene burn●d of olde time Good men with their bookes to be burned no newes I. Hus seemeth to prophesie of the Councell of C●ns●●nce The blasphemous opinion of Lawiers and papistes touching the soueraintie of the Pope One Symonist condemneth an other The bishops of the Councell noted of Symonie Pope Ioh. made a pope being knowen to be a murderer Antichrist now first beginneth to be reuealed in the Pope A prophesie of Iohn Hus. A note for all noble mē to marke to folow A worthie lesson for all ministers prelates S. Augustin meaneth not here of all but of the common sort of light persons This Palletz was the chiefest enemy of I. Hus procurer of his death Michael de Causis another bitter enemy of Iohn Hus. Iohn Hus prayeth for his enemies A prophecy of Iohn Hus The example of Christ. The prayer of I. Hus to Christ. A zealous letter to I. Hus from London ●●amples of the olde martirs Wicked Palletz The visions of I. Hus by dreames A Prophesie of Maister Hierome of Prage This taylers name was Andrew a Polonian Prophetia Prophetia Prophetia Note that then priestes were not maried and therfore he willeth him to auoide all company of women H● repenteth his gay garmentes He repenteth his playing at the chesse Iohn Hus from his gay garments cōmth to his white coate Iohn Hus condemned for no erroneous doctrine wherein he was culpable Cochleus ralleth against Iohn Hus without cause Ex Chocleo Lib. 2. Hist. Hussitarum pag. 88. The story of Hierome of Prage Hierome commeth to Constance The safe cōduct was required but in vaine of the Emperour The intimations of Hierome of Prage set vp in diuers places of the towne of Constance Safe conduct ●●nied to Hierome Hierome returneth toward Boheme with the testimonies of the Lordes of Boheme Hierom apprehēded in the way by Duke Iohn Michaell de Causis and Palletz enemies to Hierome Hierome of Prage cited by the councell whē he was taken This Duke Iohn in histories is comōly called the sonne of Clement Hierome is brought bound vnto Constance by Duke Iohn The coūcell neither would geue him libertie safely to come nor freely to go M. Hierome was accused by M. Gersō with cōmendation of his eloquence Gerson renueth olde matters The maister of the vniuersitie of Coleine This man would accuse but he lacked matter The maister of the vniuersitie of Heidelberg Crucifige Crucifige cum Hierome is cōforted by the Notarie Et tu de illis es Luc. 22. Vitus the companion of Iohn de Clum Hierom straightly bound hande and foote Vitus had to the Archbishop of Rigen Vitus bound by othe Hierome hanging in the stock● was fedde with bread water Peter bringeth meate to Hierome Hierome in greatsicknes calleth for a confessor M. Hie●ome was kept in irons in prisō the space of one yeare The forced abiuration of Hierome Hierom is made here to say not his own minde but what pleased them Hierome after his abiuration returned into prison Hierom accused a new by Causis Palletz and the Carmelites The Cardinal of Cambray with certaine other Cardinalles labour for the deliuery of Hierome Si dimittio hunc non es amicus Caesaris The Patriarke of Cōstantinople gaue sentēce of death both against M. Hus and M. Hierome of Prage Ann. 1416. Hierome brought againe before the councell False witnesse against Hierome The dexteritie of Hierom in confuting his aduersaries False witnesses Audience hardly geuē to Hierome to speake for himselfe The oration of Hierome had before the councel Socrates Plato Anaxagoras Zeno Rupilius Bo●tius Moses Ioseph Esayas Daniell The Prophetes Susanna Iohn Baptist Christ. The Apostles The false witnesse of Hierome ●●felled Hierome commendeth the life and bewayleth the death of Iohn Hus. Hierome repenteth his speaking against Iohn Hus. Hus neuer