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A54576 A compendious history of the Catholick church from the year 600 untill the year 1600 shewing her deformation and reformation : together with the rise, reign, rage, and begin-fall of the Roman AntiChrist : with many other profitable instructions gathered out of divers writers of the several times, and other histories / by Alexander Petrie ... Petrie, Alexander, 1594?-1662.; Church of Scotland. General Assembly. 1657 (1657) Wing P1879; ESTC R4555 1,586,559 1,238

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Virgin foretold of tribulation and schism is come to pass but what she spoke of good Pastors and Reformation is not as yet He was Bishop of Florence in time of the Councel at Constance 17. Pope Gregory the XI by his Bull commanded John Arch-Bishop of Prague to persecute Militzius a Bohemian because he had said Antichrist now reigneth and he had private congregations among whom were some harlots whom he had converted and of whom he said These are to be preferred unto all the religious Nuns Jacob Misnes a writer about the year 1410. testifieth that Militzius said He was moved by the Spirit to search the Scriptures concerning the coming of Antichrist as also to preach at Rome that the Pope is the Antichrist and that the Church is laid desolate by negligence of Pastors she aboundeth in temporal riches and is void of spiritual Also that many now seem to deny Christ because though they know the truth they dare not profess it for fear of men Fox in Act. 18. Henry de Jota or Heuta taught at Vienna in Austria about the year 1380. All men without grace do but sin when they do their best works because the person must be accepted before his works be accepted God and not a Priest forgiveth sin and the Priest doth but declare out of God's word whom God doth binde or loose As Jerome had taught It is better to confess unto a learned Priest although he hath no jurisdiction then to an unlearned Priest having it reservation of cases unto the Pope or his Bishops is not of God's Law but from men since all Priests have a like power of the keys all God's counsels are commandments 19. John Munziger Rector of Ulme about the year 1384. taught The bread of the Eucharist is not God nor should be worshipped as God The Monks contended against him and the matter was referred to the University of Prague there his propositions were approved and nevertheless the bread must be worshipped said they for the concomitancy of the Deity 20. Gerhard Ritter wrote a book about the year 1350. which he called Lachrymae Ecclesiae about the year 1384. Alvarus Pelagius wrote another Planctus Ecclesiae Ubertin Bishop of Chema wrote Onus Ecclesiae The matter of them all is to mourn for the corruptions and abominations of Popes Cardinals Bishops Canons Priests and Monks c. Ubertin in cap. 19. saith A Reformation shall never be but in a general free and godly Councel he saith There is great need of Reformation but I fear this age is not worthy of a lawful Councel In cap. 22. Some Monasteries are more like to Stews of Venice then houses of God Catal. test ver lib. 18. 21. About that time an Epistle was divulged in Germany under the name of Wenceslaus where the Emperor exhorteth Church-men to set themselves at liberty from the thraldom of the Pope saying By the Princes of the Priests the Church is prophaned the Priesthood is defiled all order is confounded all Religion is corrupted all things belonging to laws manners faith or discipline is undone and confounded even that although our Savior suffered many things by men of the Synagogue yet now he suffereth more by our Princes of Priests There is also a vision of an holy man concerning the A vision of the Church estate of the Church He saw a woman with Princely apparel and thought that she was the blessed Virgin but she said I am not she whom thou thinkest me to be but the figure of her for whom thou groanest so oft and prayest to wit the Church whose sorrow is marvelous and her malady flowing from the head through all the members even to the feet and that thou mayest condole the more with me behold the causes of my grief then laying off the Crown she bowed her head unto him and he saw the upper part of her head cut after the manner of a cross into four parts and worms crawling out of her brains and wounds full of matter then she said Behold by those things in my head thou mayest understand the maladies in my other members and having spoken so she vanished In this Epistle is honorable mention of Marsilius de Padua and John de Janduno Morn in Myster 22. John Peter of Ferraria a famous Lawyer of Papia about the year 1397. is usually called Practicus Papiensis as he wrote Practica utriusque Iuris there he saith It is fond to say and abominable to hear The Pope is superior to Caesar The Pope can by no Law have temporal dominion nor possess Cities and Provinces what he hath he hath it by violence The temporal sword should be taken from him or Christendom shall never be at peace By foolishness of Princes are they become the drudges of Priests Whom the Pope absolveth from their oath he maketh them perjured The Clergy have their consciences in their hoods and laying them aside no more conscience appeareth Let some good Emperor arise against them who long since for the cause of devotion and now by avarice have undone all the world and brought to naught the estate of the Empire and of all Laicks John Andreae who was called Speculator Monarcha juris was wont to say Rome was first founded by robbers and now is returned to the same estate All these and more passages are razed out by Index Expurgat pag. 43. of Plantin's Edition 23. In time of Boniface the IX was published a dialogue of Peter and Paul with the title Aureum speculum In the preface the Author saith All the Roman Court from the sole of the foot to the top of the head is manifestly blinded with errors and with the poison of those errors she hath made drunk all the parts of the world almost Then he divideth his matter into three heads saying 1. I will describe the most grievous errors of the Roman Court 2. I will confute her erroneous and uncatholick writings and sayings 3. That all the Court of Rome is in danger of damnation And these I will declare by most true grounds so he prosecureth them severally And after many lamentations as despairing of Reformation Paul saith Only the Son of God I wish would reform his Church And lest it be thought that this was his judgement only he said in the preface All men do groan privately but none dare speak it forth Nor can this manifold corruption be concealed in the Court for when some said The Pope cannot be guilty of simony even in bestowing of Benefices for money his Secretary Theodor a Niem said It seemeth unto me to be very unjust certainly it is uncivil and against good manners to sell for money unto unworthy persons that which should be given freely unto the worthy onely and that the Pope who is above others and from whom others should have a rule of their doings is guilty of such a crime certainly he cannot punish others for that fault whereof himself is guilty And he saith Many good Masters in Divinity
and scorn Religion VVherefore the Kings namely Ferdinand and I●obella did ordain a strict Inquisition that the Monks should search and severely punish all Sarracens and Jewes all whom by one common name they called Maranites who profess Christianism and yet do scorn it When all those were out of the way the blood-thirsty Friers ceased not untill they obtained be the same power of Inquisition against the Believers of the Gospel whom they called Lutherans That censure proceeds in this manner If any man be accused of heresy as they call it by one witnes he is apprehended if he confess not he is tortured untill he confess who confesses and recants he is deprived of all his goods and must at all time wear a Sambieta that is a yellow garment with a red cross and some devils painted upon it and some are condemned to perpetual prison Who will not repent are burnt And if they be bold to profess and speak of their faith while they be in prison their tongues are cutt-out before they be brought forth In the year 1559. King Philip II. returning from Flanders was beaten with a fearfull storm all his ships were lost and he scarcely arrived on land when he said He was delivered from that danger to root Lutheranism out of his Kingdom He came to Hispalis September 24. and immediatly to take away all hope of immunity he causeth to burn Don John Pontius Comes Bailenius and John Consalua a Preacher with some Friers of the Monastry of S. Isidor Then he went to Pincia Pe. Soave in Hist conc Trid. Lib. 5. seemes to call it Vaglia-dolid there he caused burn 28 of the chief Nobility in his own sight and imprisoned Barthol Caranza archb of Toledo and many others of lower condition were burnt as may be seen Loc. cit and in Thuan. yea Charles Prince of Spain was imprisoned and as was reported was poisoned by the Inquisitors at his fathers command An. 1568 because he favoured them of the Low-Countreys a●d was suspect of Lutheranism Many Spainjards for love of the Gospel went into Germany Geneve and some into England especially all the Monks of S. Isiodore nigh unto Sivile This Inquisition was not only in Spain but in others of that Kings Dominions as followeth LI. Albert of Hardenberg writing the life of Wesselus saith The The Reformation in the Netherlands Lord Cornelius Honius the Emperours Counseller in the Court of Holland in Hague and some other learned men in the kingdom of God had found a book Of the Lords supper which seemes to condemn the gross and Capernaitish eating of the Lords body and to teach a spiritual which is also a true and real eating though only by faith They had found this book among the papers of Jacob Hoeckius a Deacon of Naeldwyk as also some other VVritings of Jo. VVesselus concerning purgatory and other purposes and because that book Of the Lords supper was found amongst those of VVesselus they took it to be his which I will not affirm nor deny for it is certain that he had written in the same manner of the Supper Nevertheless I have heard that that written book of Hoeckius was very old and that it had been delivered from hand to hand for the space of two hundred years and that they had kept it as a golden treasure as whereby they understood that the idolatry of worshipping the bread should be extinguisht But these treatises of Wesselus and other books of Hoek coming into the Cloister of Saint Agnes-hill where VVesselus had often resorted as we have heard had given light unto many especially unto Henry Rhodius the father of a Monastry at Urrecht who went to Luther in Wittembergh and shewed him the books of VVesselus and that book Of the Lords supper and entreated him in the name of others also that he would give his judgement of it but Luther fearing that the Lords Supper might be vilified would not approve it whereupon followed some difference between Luther and Carolstad Afterward Luther did writ unto Rhodius a Letter which is printed wich the works of VVesselus and there also is another Letter directed unto Oecolampad craving his judgement of that book Of the Lords Supper and that the books of Wesselus might be printed at Basile but Oecolampad being a modest and peaceable man would not give his judgement of it because he knew that Luther had not approved it but he sent Rhodius unto Zurik and Zuinglius approved it for before that time he was enclining that way and then began to maintain that doctrine yet having heard the judgement of sundry other learned men and after that Oecolampad began to speak more freely c. William Gnapheus Rector in Hague in an epistle dedicatory before his book writes thus The Archbishop remembreth well with what diligence I did teach the young scholars from my youth and how great persecution Satan by his souldiers hath raised up at the first so that I and the honorable Cornelius Honius above named without hearing of our cause in the year 1523. were imprisoned and there we lay together three months and then were confined within the Hague upon Baile for two years in which time the Honorable Honius departed this life But when I after those two years confinement was upon security set at liberty and my adversaries had seen a consolatory Letter which I at the request of some good men had written unto a poor grieved widow woman they caused me to be put in prison again and when the Sophisters of Lovan with their Commissioners had examined mee long enough upon that Letter they put mee into a cloister to suffer pennance for three months upon bread and bier because I had despised that Cloister-life for I had exhorted that widow that she should not be dejected because her son had forsaken his Coul seeing the kingdom of God consists not as Paul teaches Rom. 14 in cloaths or places whereupon the life of cloisterers is principally grounded but rather in constant faith in God and unfained love to our neighbour which faith and love her son might have after he hath gone away as well as when he had his gray Coul. When I was in that cloister saith he in the year 1525 how grievous were those times because of the grievous persecution in the Netherlands and the miserable blood-shedding of the boors in the Upper-land and then I enlarged my little book out of the holy Scriptures for my own consolation and the destruction of the Devils kingdom who had so persecuted mee for a consolatory Letter That this book was printed it was without my knowledge for I had not written it for that end nevertheless it hath done good unto many and brought them to the knowledge of some truth which I understand by that it hath been oft reprinted and one of the Printers hath been beheaded for it so hardly can Satan suffer the publishing of the truth and he hath persued mee untill I must leave my native
He indeavoureth to have the Clergy free from the power of Princes But in the year 773. Charls King Charls his power in Rome did appoint a Synod at Rome where the Pope was with 153. Bishops and Abbots Here Charls recovereth the right which Constantine Pogonatus had let pass with Pope Benedict the II. to wit with common consent the Judges and Doctours of Law thorow the City were ordained to search the ancient Laws and Customs of the Empire how heresies and schisms may be prevented concerning the Apostolical See and the honour of Patriciatus and the Roman Empire Then 1. All the people of Rome grant unto King Charls and transfer into his perso● and his Successours all their right and power in the above-named particulars 2. After their example Adrian with all the Clergy and whole Synod did give unto Charls their right and power of chusing their great High-Priest and ordering the Apostolical See and moreover that all Arch-Bishops and Bishops throughout every Province should receive investiture from him Theodor. a Nyem Secretary to sundry Popes And Gratian. dist cap. 63. Adrianus saith more That who should act against this Decree the Synod would accurse and unless he repent would adjudge his goods unto the Royal Exchequer For this cause many waited upon the Court of King Charls hoping to have Bishopricks and advancement by him Avent Annal. lib. 4. as he did advance the Bishops of Breme Manda Padeburna c. Here is some restraint of the ambition of the Popes for a time Adrian did sit three and twenty years ten months and seventien daies 13. LEO the III. perceiveth the Romans aiming by all means unto a free More power of Charls in Rome government and he feared that either the Popes should be brought under the government of the Senate or they should be overthrown by the Greeks he thinketh it fittest that Rome should be subject unto the Pope and that the Pope should be sure of concurrence from France Catal. test ver ex Regin lib. 2. Sigeber ad an 796. Wherefore without knowledge of the Senate he sent Angilbert Abbot of Saint Richarius to advertise Charls of his election and presenteth unto him in token of loyalty Saint Peter's keys and the Ensign of the City or the Eagle and beseecheth him to send some of his Nobles who might keep the people in obedience by their Oath or Sacrament Ph. Morn in Myster ex Aimoin lib. 9. cap. 89. So soon as the Romans namely Paschasius and Campulus heard of this message they take the Pope and buffet him till they thought he was blind and cast him into the Monastery of Saint Erasmus Platin. But Continuator Eutropij saith they beat out one of his eyes and could not pick out the other because the mercy of God had preserved him and others say both his eyes were strucken out and restored again by miracle But Zonar saith they who were sent did spare him and spoiled him not of his sight Albinus did let him down by the Wall of the Monastery and he fled unto Charls he chargeth many of the Romans of usurpation and he adviseth the King to exact on them an Oath of fidelity Paschasius or Paschalis was there soon after him and accused the Pope of adultery c. Charls dismisseth them both and promiseth to be at Rome within few months In Decemb. an 800. Charls was received in Rome with all shew of honour within 8. daies he goeth into Saint Peter's Church and in presence of all the people and clergy he asketh who had any thing to say against Pope Leo. Paschasius and Campulus had published the Pope's crimes by writ but knowing the King's affection towards both parties they appear not The Bishops who were present answer The Apostolical seat is the Head of the Church and ought to be judged of none Platin. But Ph. Morn in Myster sheweth from Aimoin That because none did qualifie these crimes the Pope was absolved upon his Oath Platina saith his Oath was delayed till the next day and then he sweareth by God and the four Evangelists that all these things were false which they had layed to his charge Whereupon the King declareth him innocent and condemneth his accusers Within few daies 300. of them were beheaded in the Lateran field for their presumption and affected liberty on the 18. of December and on the 25. day Charls was proclaimed Emperour as followeth and from that time the French did alogether possess Rome and all Italy saith Zonar After that Pope Leo could not live at Rome without trouble therefore he sate at Mantua and sometimes did abide with the Emperour He is the first that Bellarmine can Canonizing of Saint● and other novelties find to have canonized a Saint de beat Sanct. lib. 1. cap. 8. He appointed the supplications of three daies before the Feast of Christ's ascension he first brought incense unto the Altars to the imitation of Jews and Heathens He sate 20. years and died An. 816. CHAP. III. Of Divers Countries 1. FEw Pastours of that Country were comparable unto the former in doctrine The corruption of Bishops devotion or zeal as we find in Catal. test ver lib. 8. from Aventin lib. 3. unworthy Priests were promoted covetous adulterous drunkards whose God was their belly given to hunting and hawking as also Pope Zachary complaineth in Epist ad Bonifac. and we will see Acts of Synods against these vices Nevertheless such men were advanced for bribes or other by-respects Likewise Bishops were more ambitious than given to seek souls unto Christ Monks were thought more religious but their religion then for the most part did consist in superstitious ceremonies and rites the people did admire them for their shew of austerity and the Bishops bear with them because they indeavour to draw all men under the obedience of the See of Rome So whilest corruption waxeth in all these Truth faileth especially the opinion of merit was not pratled in private but openly proclaimed and in the Synods they change the phrase Men shall be judged according to their works unto this Men shall be judged for their works or according to merits Preachers did not plead so much the cause of God as their own they corrupt the truth with fables as Gregory in his Epistle to Boniface testifieth and for constitution of their errours they alledge visions as Io. Bale Cent. 1. cap. 91. sheweth how Egwin Bishop of Vigornien did swear before Pope Constantine that in a Vision he was commanded to preach unto the people that the image of Saint Mary should be worshipped and he writ a Book of Apparitions which the Pope approved with his Seals and sent it unto Britwald Primat of England with express command to call a Synod at London and by his authority to recommend that book unto the people So Constantine Bishop of Cyprus in the Nicene Synod Sess 4. said a certain man driving a nail into a Wall pierced the head of Saint
and govern although the Romish Legates were present Besides the Bishops of France and Germany he called the Bishops of Italy Spain and England not to seek any furtherance to his authority said he but for maintenance and defence of the Truth Here was condemed the heresie of Felix Bishop of Urgelitan and Elipand of Toledo who held that Christ is the Son of God only by adoption of his human nature This was the one cause of assembling the Councel 2. Theophylact and Stephen the Pope's Legates did present the Acts of the Synod at Nice to be confirmed and subscribed The Fathers did refuse and did compare the Act of the Councel under Copronymus with the late Acts at Nice The former had condemned the worship and having of Images either privately or publickly the other had authorized the adoration of Images with cloaths incense candles bowing of knees c. They would keep a middle course that it is not altogether unlawfull to have Images in private houses nor Churches but to worship them is contrary to Christian faith and smelleth of Paganism Therefore they discern the Synod of Nice to have been wicked and deserves not the name of Universal nor seventh Councel and they writ some books against the worship of Images wherein they refute particularly all the pretended arguments of them at Nice these books went abroad in the name of Charls Afterwards the worshippers of Images did what they could that no memory should be of the proceedings of this Synod and those books except that they say Charls did somewhat concerning Images But as Chemnitius hath marked in Exam. Conc. Triden par 4. that many old Historians as Egmard Regino Adon and some later as Antoninus Blondus Aventine have written that this Synod did condemn the worship of Images and the Iconalatrous Synod of the Greeks and did Ordain that it should be called neither seventh nor Universal but a Pseudo Synod Cassander in Consult 21. saith in his time was a copy of those books of Charls in the Vatican Bibliotheke And after the Councel at Trent Tilius a French Bishop caused them to be published in Print The Papists in the Cathol apolo tract 2. sect 7. say The book is forged under the name of Charls the Great But were all these Authours Protestants who testifie of them and what can they say unto Hincmarus Rhemen whose testimony followeth in Cent. 9. It is to be marked that all the Councels in the time of Charls the Great do shew in the first words that they were assembled at the command of Charls or Charls commanding and injoining the Councel at Rome not being excepted as Cratian recordeth dist 63. cap. Adrianus saying Charls returning to Rome did appoint a Synod with Pope Adrian in the Patriarchate of Lateran in the Church of Saint Salvator c. Bellarmin de Eccles lib. 4. cap. 5. asketh What Councel ever condemned the Church of Rome or their Popes We have now seen the Pope of Rome condemned in the sixth General Councel and their Doctrine condemned in that other at Constantinople and in the famous Synod at Franckford and in the next Century we shall find another Councel at Constantinople and more in other places and ages contradicting and expressly condemning the Popes of Rome And for continuation of this matter here by anticipation I add the Councel held at Paris An At Paris 825. where the Epistle of Pope Adrian and the Act of the second Councel at Nice was read and censured as is manifest by the decretal Epistle directed unto Lewis and Lotharius of which not far from the beginning these are the words We have caused to be read before us first the Epistle of Do. Adrian Pope which he at the request of the Emperour Constantine and his mother Irene sent over sea and so far as our parvity understandeth as he justly reproveth them who did rashly presume to break down and abolish Images in these parts so is known to have written imprudently that he would have images to be superstitiously worshipped for which cause he also gave order also that a Synod should be assembled and by his authority under an Oath did judge that Images should be set up and worshipped and be called holy where as it is lawfull to set them up but it is wickedness or unlawfull to worship them Baron ad An. 825. § 5. 6. Hen. Spelman in Concil ad An. 787. hath a Synod held at Calchuth in At Calchuth England wherein some things are remarkable Gregory Bishop of Ostien and Theophylact Bishop of Tudert did write unto Pope Adrian the Acts of that Synod in their own name as their work which they had recommended unto the Synod and the Synod had accepted In the Preface they shew it was done in two Kingdomes at several times the one Bishop had gone to the one Kingdom and the other to the other Kingdom Gregory went to York and the Bishop of the place sent unto the King Oswald who then was farther North and hearing of the Legate did indict the Synod and Nota did convene with his Lords both Ecclesiastical and Secular There they say No Roman Priest was sent hither after Augustine till now Ca. 1. They admonish to keep the faith of the six General Councels 2. That Baptism should be administred at set times and no other times unless for great necessity and they who answer for the infant should be obliged to teach him at ripe years the Lord's Prayer and Creed 3. Each Bishop should hold a Synod twice every year and visit his Diocy once a year Ca. 11. Their speech was unto the King and Lords that they should not judge Priests seeing they are Angels Ca. 12. Kings should be chosen by the Priests and Elders of the people and none should be chosen who had been begotten in adultry or incest It seemeth this was the first Act of a Synod in this kind and it may be questioned whether Popish Princes will now consent unto it There they add that none should meddle with the murther of a King and if any did attempt or adhere unto such a crime if he be a Bishop or of Priestly degree let him be deposed and deprived of the Heavenly inheritance as Judas from his place and whosoever shall assent unto such a sacriledge he shall be burned with everlasting fire It may be doubted whether Bishops and Jesuits will consent unto this part of the Canon Unto these Acts did subscribe the King Bishops Dukes and Abbots And in the other Kingdom and Synod Lambert Arch-Bishop of Canterbury subscribed before King Offa and then the Bishops Abbots Dukes and Counts THE THIRD AGE Of the CHURCH OR The History of the Church Fading and of Anti-Christ Rising containing the space of 400. years from the Year of our Lord 600. untill the year 1000. CENTURY IX CHAP. I. Of EMPEROURS IT is said before that Irene did govern the Empire of The erection of the Western Empire Constantinople which was
he leaveth others in their wickedness and hath condemned them unto everlasting death In the Preface before 3 Reg. In all things we have need of aid from the Holy Spirit In 4 Reg. cap. 19. Whosoever by true faith toucheth the death of Christ and truly laieth hope on him shall without doubt be pertaker of his resurrection Catal. test ver lib. 10. 8. Raban Magnentius otherwise surnamed Maurus was famous in the University of Paris for Poesie Rhetorick Astronomy others Philosophy and Theology unto whom neither Germany nor Italy brought forth an equal saith Trithemius He became Abbot of Fulda where he was born and there he writ Commentaries on all the Books of the Bible His Monks were offended that he did so study the Scriptures and did not attend their Revenues as Trithem writeth therefore after 24 years he gave place to their anger and left the Abbey but they besought him to return and he would not but did abide with the Emperour Lewis untill Otgar Bishop of Ments died and Raban succeeded Tho. Walden in the daies of Pope Martin the V. reckoned him and Herebald or Reginbald Bishop of Altisiodor amongst Hereticks because they favoured Bertram Out of some of his works I have picked out these passages In Eccles lib. 4. cap. 7 he saith In meditating and reading The perfection of Scripture the Holy Scriptures we should be wary neither to add any thing to that which is written nor take away from those things which are comprehended by the Authours of Divine Scriptures in those books but we should thing of them with the highest veneration and with all our strength fullfill the commandments thereof Ibid. cap. 1 Man can now be saved no other way but by the death of Jesus Christ who is our Redeemer Ibid. lib. 5. cap. 5 The foundation A sure foundation which the Apostle Paul hath laied is one the Lord Jesus Christ upon this foundation both firm and stable and strong in it self is the Church of Christ builded In Ier. lib. 18. cap. 2. Lest they would say Our fathers were Against merits accepted for merits and therefore did they receive great things from God he adjoineth this was not for their merits but because it so pleased God whose free gift it is whatsoever he bestoweth De modo satisfact cap. 2. 17. Whatsoever one remembreth that he hath done wickedly let him declare it Confession unto the Priest by confession but if thou art ashamed to reveal thy sins before men cease not with continual supplications to confess them unto him from whom they cannot be hid and say Against thee only have I sinned he useth to heal not publishing thy shame and to forgive sin without upbraiding De Eucharist cap. 24. Behold what these two Sacraments do by Two Sacraments baptism we are regenerate in Christ and by the Sacrament of the body and blood regeneration is proved to continue not only by faith but by unity of flesh and blood Here he speaks but of two Sacraments and so he calleth them expressly But de Institut Cleric lib. 1. cap. 31. one may think that he speaks of more Sacraments for he saith Because we have spoken of more Sacraments Baptism and Chrism it remaineth that we speak of the other two that is of the body and blood of Christ But when he calleth the body and blood of Christ two Sacraments it is clear that he calleth the two elements two Sacraments and that is improperly And in cap. 28. of the forenamed book When the baptized person ascends out of the Fount immediately he is signed in the face by the Presbyter with holy chrism here he speaketh not of extream unction as they now speak but of an appendix of baptism as they were wont in those daies and this he calleth improperly another Sacrament but in that chap. de Eucharist he speaketh properly and nameth two baptism and the body and blood of Christ Ibid. cap. 41. And The signs are distinguished from the thing signified because he Christ according to the flesh must pierce the heavens to the end those who by faith are renued and born again in him might more earnestly and confidently long after him he hath left unto us this Sacrament as a visible figure and resemblance a sign and seal of his body and blood that by these things our minds and our bodies by faith may be more plenteously nourished to partake of invisible and spiritual things now it is the sign which we outwardly see and feel but that which is inwardly received is all substance and truth and no shadowing or resemblance and therefore there is nothing but truth and the Sacrament of the very flesh of Christ which is manifested unto us for the very flesh of Christ which was crucified and buried even the Sacrament of that true flesh it is which by the Priest upon the Altar through the word of Christ and power of the Holy Spirit is consecrated and hallowed See how Raban distinguishes that which is received outwardly and inwardly in the Sacrament and he calleth the outward part a visible figure and representation a sign and seal of the body and blood and that which is received inwardly is no shadow or resemblance but substance and truth even the very body of Christ which was crucified and as he saith in the first part of this testimony which hath pierced the Heavens De Institut Cleric lib. 2. cap. 30. Satisfaction is to exclude the occasions and suggestions of sin or not to commit sin again Reconciliation is that which is done after repentance for as we are reconciled unto God when we are converted first from gentilism so we are reconciled when after sin we return Lib. 2. cap. 57. He hath the Confession that was professed at that time saying 9. This is next unto the Creed of the Apostles the most certain faith A confession of faith which our Teachers have given That we should profess the Father the Son and the Holy Spirit of one essence of one power and sempiternity one invisible God so that the propriety of persons being reserved unto each one neither the Trinity should be divided substantially nor confounded personally to confess also that the Father is unbegotten the Son is the only begotten and the Holy Spirit is neither begotten nor unbegotten but proceedeth from the Father and from the Son that the Son proceedeth from the Father by generation the Holy Spirit not begotten but proceeding also that the Son did assume of the Virgin perfect manhood without sin that whom of his goodness only he had created of his mercy he might restore after he was fallen who verily was crucified and rose again the third day and with the same flesh being glorified he ascended into Heaven in the which flesh he is expected to come and judge the quick and the dead and that Christ in one person beareth both the divine and the human nature being perfect in both because neither the
be considered as they are in themselves but as they have reference to another thing for a pledge is of that for which it is given and so is an Image the resemblance of that whose similitude it representeth .... wherefore it is the body and blood of Christ which the Church celebrateth but as a pledge and resemblance The conclusion is Wherefore most noble Prince let your wisdom consider that it is most clearly shewed by testimonies of Scripture and words of the holy Fathers that the bread which is called the body of Christ is a figure because it is a mystery and that there is a great difference between the mystery of his body and his body it self .... And we add saith he that the Bread and Cup which are called the Body and Blood of Christ do represent and are in remembrance of the Lord's death as he said Do this in remembrance of me and Paul expounds How oft ye eat this bread ... shew forth the Lord's death Now some Popish Indices have forbidden this book altogether as unlawfull and those of Doway perceiving that the forbidding of it did occasion men to look after it thought it better to let it go abroad but in some places maimed and in others perverted as where it is said visibiliter they will have it invisibiliter and where it is said secundum creaturarum substantiam they bid to expound it secundum externas species sacramenti Likewise Bishop Usser in Histor Gottes cap. 11 writes that he had seen other books of Bertram in manuscripts and containing the same doctrine especially his book De Praedestinatione which he writ in defence of the doctrine for which Gotteschalk did suffer is extant under the name of Ratrannus Monk of Corbey 22. Remigius Bishop of Altisiodor or of Auxerre about the year 880 was called Doctor Sententiosus he writ many works On Psal 10. he saith All my faith is in Christ by him only do I beleeve to be justified and saved he is my mountain and my refuge for he is my Lord which is God by nature but all ye who are men are infirm as I. On Psal 18. The Heavens declare the glory of God to wit that he saveth not by works of righteousness which we have done but of his own righteousness for all men have sinned and stand in need of the glory of God being justified freely This is the declaring of God's glory that is his mercy which is shewed by the Sun wherein God is glorified ...... So long as we are in this body it cannot be but sin is in us then it reigneth when we consent and make our will subject unto it wherefore the Apostle saith Let not sin reign in your mortal bodies therefore O Lord cleanse me and spare me but so that I be not subject to my own thoughts nor the inticement of others On Psal 21. Adam made the old people by conformity unto him to wit he was a servant but the Lord hath made the new people because he justifieth freely without our preceding merits for we made our selves sinners but the only mercy of God makes us righteous ..... The poor shall eat me that is shall receive the Sacrament of my body and blood and they shall be filled by following me and denying themselves because to eat the Lord is to have a will to follow him in all things and to be one with him On Psal 29. Eternal life is not by merit because we could fall of our selves but we could not rise of our selves but through his will that is only of mercy On Psal 33. Truly they only are blessed they only are saved which are justified by grace and not by their merits On Psal 39 When we live well let us ascribe nothing to our merits but all to the grace of God On Psal 55 If we will offer sacrifice to God we need not seek any thing without to offer within us is the Incense of praise and the sacrifice of faith On Psal 64. Propitiation is miseration shewed after sacrifice So Christ willing to shew mercie propitiari on his people became a Priest praying unto the Father with hands lifted up upon the Cross he offered a sacrifice because he offered himself on the Altar of the Cross he is the Priest he is the Sacrifice the Propitiator and the propitiation On Psal 85. God the Father could give no greater gift unto men then that he made his Word by which he made all things to be a head unto them and did fit these men to be as members unto Him so that He is God with the Father and Man with men who both prayeth for us and prayeth in us and is praied unto by us He prayeth for us because he is Priest and Sacrifice interceding daily with the Father for us He prayeth in us because he is our head neither is this any wonder if Christ and the Church be in one voice because they are in one bodie He is prayed unto by us as our God he is prayed unto in the form of God he prayeth in the form of man there the Creator here a creature On Psal 70. It is a great gift of God and a great knowledge of man to observe and understand that whatsoever he is he is nothing without the grace of God and he is nothing of himself for he which will be any thing of himself he tendeth not to be but who studieth to be something by the grace of God abideth in true being in vero esse This is grace by which we were made when we were not of ungodly we were made godlie of slaves free of damned were assumed into the Kingdom On Psal 96 Let them be confounded who glory in Images for Images are not to be adored neither is an Angel to be adored because it is said in the Revelation See thou do it not Catal. testat veri libr. 10. 23. Paschasius Rathbert Abbot of Corbeyen at the same time writ a book De Eucharistia He saith Ca. 1. Christ hath left unto us his Church no greater thing then this Sacrament and Baptism and the holy Scriptures in all which the Holy Ghost who is a pawn unto his Church doth work inwardly the mystical things of our salvation unto immortalitie But in them is nothing wondrous unto unbeleevers and yet unto them who beleeve nothing is better nothing is given more wonderfull in this World Not that these wondrous things lie open unto the eies but by faith and understanding they are savourie with divine mysteries and in them immortalitie and participation of Christ in the unity of body is granted unto mortal men Ca. 5. We drink Christ's blood spiritually and we eat his flesh spiritually wherein eternal life is beleeved to think otherwise according to flesh is death and to eat the flesh of Christ spiritually is eternal life Ca. 6. Unless one abide in Christ and Christ in him he cannot eat of Christ nor drink his blood And what is it that men eat Behold
industry Here Laws are Enacted for Church-men without Pope or Bishop In this King's time came the Danes with the Peichts into Scotland under two Generals Hubba and Humber they were discomfited in Fife but Constantine was slain King Gregory chased the Peichts which were remaining into Northumberland where he fought so happily with the Danes and Peichts that they were all almost slain by Gregory on the one side and by Alfred King of England on the other and Northumberland was possessed by the Scots granting liberty unto the Saxons to go or abide Because the Britons had aided the Peichts Gregory took from them Cumber and Westmerland and slue their Prince Constantine His brother Herbert considering the hostility of the Scots and Danes chose to make peace with the Scots So Alfred drew up a general peace of all the Christians in Britain against the Danes as a common enemy and it was agreed that Gregory for his valiantness should perpetually injoy Northumberland This Gregory by Act of Parliament at For far did confirm all the priviledges of the Church and ordained that Church-men should not be drawn before Civil Judges but only before their ordinary he granted unto them to make Laws and Constitutions for the good of the Christian faith to discuss all debates concerning Oblations Tithes and Legacies or Testaments to accurse all Rebels and that all persons which were excommunicated should not be heard in Civil Courts Boeth Histor lib. 10. cap. 19. Some Irish men had spoiled Galloway and returned privily therefore Gregory went with all hast into Ireland he fought two Battels against two Governours and vanquished them Dublin was rendred unto him he visited the young King Duncan and protested that he came not for greediness of their Land but to redress the wrong With consent of the people he took upon him the name of Tutor of the King and committed him unto the trustiest of the Nobles permitting them to use their own Laws and requiring only of them that without his seal they would admit no English nor Britan nor Dane amongst them for assurance he took with him 60 men in pledge This Gregory was called the Great and died An. 892. Buchan Histor Scot. 5. The fore-named Alfred was the first King of England who had unction from Rome He divided his movables into two equal portions the one he appointed for uses secular and divided it into three parts one for his family another for building of new works wherein he had great delight and the third he reserved for strangers The other half he dedicated unto uses Ecclesiastical and divided it into four portions one for relief of the poor another to Monasteries the third to the Schools in Oxford where he had erected a School for Grammar another for Philosophy and a third for Divinity whereas before they had neither Grammar nor Sciences because Pope Gregory the I. gave in command that Britain should have no Schools for fear of Heresies but only Monasteries Bale And the fourth part he sent for the relief of distressed Churches without his Realm Sir Hen. Spelman in Concil pag. 176. sheweth that he bewailed the ignorance of the Clergy in his time that few on the South-side of Humber knew the Liturgy in English or could translate an Epistle into the vulgar language yea when he came first to the Throne he found not one on the South-side of Thames Note here they did use the Liturgy in Latine because they had received it so from Rome and because the people in former times did understand it but when the people understood it not the King would have it rather in the vulgar Alfred died An. 901. 6. John Scot who was surnamed Aerigena or born in Aire for distinction from a former born at Melrose and another in the XIII Century born in Dunce otherwise called Subtilis was famous for his pregnant judgement wondrous eloquence and in those daies rare knowledge of the Greek Chaldean and Arabian languages He went to Athens and studied there some years He returned into France and was much respected by Charls the Bald at whose command he translated the Books of Dionysius De Hierarchia into Latine Anastasius Bibliothecary of the Vatican in the Preface before that Translation writeth unto the same King It is wonderfull how that barbarous man which was born at the end of the World and might have been thought to be as far distant in language as he was in conversation from men could understand such things and turn them into another language I mean saith he John Scot whom I have heard to have been a very holy man It is no marvel that he call him barbarous because the Scots before that time and some hundred years thereafter did never acknowledge the See of Rome This John did write a book De Corpore Sanguine Domini against the opinion of carnal presence which was condemned at the Synod of Vercelles as followeth Bellarmin de Eucharist lib. 1. cap. 1. saith This man was the first who writ doubtingly of this matter It is the fault of the Romanists that his book is not extant but since it was not condemned by the Church for the space of 200 years and none of his time spoke against that book he wanted no reason in it He writ a book of 19 Chapters De unica Praedestinatione more curious then sound which was answered by Florus of Lions as is before He writ also a book with a Greek Title 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the distinction of natures Some write In it is the resolution of many profitable questions but so that he followeth the greeks more then the Latines and for this the Pope did persecute him he fled into England and was in account with Alfred and was his Counsellour and Teacher of his children afterwards he retired to the Abbey at Malmsbury where his Disciples murthered him with their pen-knives being inticed thereunto by the Monks because he did speak against the carnal presence as saith Zepper de calumnia haeres Berengar and was accounted a Martyr as is recorded by Guiliel Malmsbu de gest reg Angl. lib. 2. cap. 4. CHAP. V. Of COUNCELS 1. MAny Synods were assembled in the beginning of this Century and all ex jussu Imperatoris as is express in the beginning of them particularly In the year 813 Charls the Great assembled four Councels one of 30 Bishops and 25 Abbots at Mentz In Ca. 4. it was ordained That Baptism should be solemnly administred at Easter and Pentecost but in case of necessity they might baptize at any time Ca. 5. Seeing we have one God and Father in Heaven and one mother the Church one faith and one baptism therefore we should live in one peace and concord if we desire to come into that one and true inheritance in the Kingdom of Heaven for God is not the Authour of confusion but of peace and he saith Blessed are the peaceable Ca. 6. an Act is That fatherless children should not be dis-inherited
designation of the other Malcolm and his good fame did cross his desire wherefore the King caused him to be poisoned nor could the Authour of the deed be known all men had so good an opinion of the King Then Kenneth propounded unto his Nobility a new designation of his Successour and also propounded the example of other Nations where the eldest son of the King or the nearest in blood doth succeed and if the heir be not of ripe age the worthiest of the Nobility governs the Realm under the name of Tutours and not Kings and by this custom said he seditions bloody wars and murthers are prevented which have been frequent in this Country through the ambition of the Nobility There first he asks the opinion of two which were of highest estimation and who might seem most to oppose this novation They partly for fear and partly to decline ambition did allow the King's purpose and so it passed current that the King's son was declared Governour of Cumberland Now as Kenneth goeth about in this way to establish his posterity he troubleth his conscience and partly with inward gripings for the aforesaid murther and partly with dreams he was so vexed that in a morning he goeth unto the Bishops and Monks and confessed his sin Since King Gregory about the year 855. made some Laws for immunity of the Clergy the Priests had straied from the learning and devotion of the ancients So they brought comfort unto the King not from the mercies of God through Christ but i●●oin him for their own advantage to visit holy places and graves of Saints to kiss reliques to redeem his sin by hearing of Masses and alms-deeds and to account more of Monks and Priests then he had done before Buchan hist li. 6. But Bishop Spotsewood in his History lib. 2. saith They were not yet become so grossly ignorant as to beleeve that by such external works the justice of God is satisfied although some idle toies such as the visiting the graves of the Saints kissing of relicks hearing of Masses and others of that kind which avarice and superstition had invented were then crept into the Church yet people were still taught that Christ is the only propitiation for sin and by his blood the guilt thereof is only washed away Herein his judgment is charitable but how true it is I see not his warrant The King resolves to obey the direction and as he was going to visit the grave of Palladius he lodged with Fenestella Lady of Fettercairne and was treacherously murthered by her in the year 994. Then Constantine son of King Culen at all occasions begun to regret the iniquity of the former novation that thereby the Country would be indamaged and all they of the Royal Blood defrauded For said he what is more foolish then to permit unto Fortune the chief matter of the State What if the King's children through infirmity of body or mind be unapt for government What if babes had been Kings when the Romans Peichts and Danes did oppress the land What is more against reason then to establish that by Law which God in his word hath threatned as a curse Neither is the pretended danger of sedition and murther prevented thereby since there is no less fear of Tutors then of Competitours because those also must be the nearest in blood Wherefore the present occasion is not to be omitted but presently to abolish that Law if it deserve the name of a Law which was enacted by tyranny and fear and the former customs whereby the Kingdom hath flourished from small beginnings is in time to be restored lest it cannot be remedied when a preparative is once past A Parliament was held at Scone within 12. daies after the death of Kenneth and Constantine was proclaimed King The Governour of Cumbria being as yet but young had little assistance but his base brother Kenneth levied an Army for himself and Camped at the water Almound near unto the King and perceiving his number to be lesser then the Kings he sought the advantage of Sun and wind the King relied upon his number and both Captains were slain Then Grim the son or brother-son of King Duffus was proclaimed King by that party The fore-named Malcolm raised an army against him by mediation of Bishop Forthad they agree that Grim shall remain King of the Land by the North-wall of Severus and Malcolm during his life time shall possess the South-part and succeed to the Crown Nevertheless King Grim considering that his seed would certainly be debarred of the Crown began to oppress both parts so that the North-part sought aid from Malcolm and Grim was forsaken by his Army and slain in the year 1016. This tumult for succession is not yet ended as followeth 3. There is extant a Book called Altercatio Ecclesiae Synagogae without the name of the Authour by authority of Chronic. Hirsang it is given to Gisilbert an English Monk who is said to have lived in the beginning of this Century It saith in Ca. 4. The Holy Spirit first makes the will good and then worketh by it truly whatsoever good can be done whether to think or to will or to perfect is to be ascribed unto God and not to man's free-will therefore if God worketh these three things in us to wit to think to will and to perfect surely He worketh the first without us the second with us and the third by us seeing by giving the good will he preveneth us by changing the evil will with consent he joineth us to himself and by furnishing unto our consent ability and facility the inward worker is made manifest externally by our outward work Ca. 8. The righteousness of God is manifested here righteousness is meant not wherewith he is just but wherewith he cloatheth man when he justifieth the ungodly freely Unto this righteousness the Law and the Prophets give witness the Law because by commanding threatning and justifying no man it sheweth clearly that man is justified by the quickning Spirit thorow the gift of God the Prophets because what they fore-told Christ hath fulfilled at his coming ..... We cry unto the most secret ears of God by desires more then by words for unto him who knows all things our wishes are voices if thou desirest good thou hast cried Moses was silent in voice and cried by faith as the woman touching the hem of Christ but others do cry in fear and fail in faith Catal. test verit lib. 11. 4. Fredward a Knight about the year 940. writ a book concerning the Presence of Christ's body in the Sacrament following the doctrine of John Scot and of Augustine Paschasius an Abbot writ against him Ibid. About the year 950. it was reported as a strange thing that Odo a Dane then Bishop of Canterbury turned the bread on the Altar into the flesh of Christ and from flesh into bread again He confirmed the strange doctrine with strange arguments to wit by lying miracles Ibid. 5. At
things of the world that the Prince of this world may not finde any thing that is his in thee c. He did oft call the Clergy Syria Edom the calves of Bethel Idols of Egypt Priests of Baal c. In his other Epistles he saith If thou hadst once tasted the sweetness of wisdom i. e. of the holy Scripture thou wouldest loath all other things in comparison for this giveth abundantly the incomparable treasures of pleasure and the grace of all gifts And again It is necessary to read the Scriptures for that is the table of the tabernacle that is the food by which we breath and live Certainly Christ did use the onely testimony of the word against all the tentations of Satan in the wilderness if therefore an host should come against you guard your self with the buckler of a good conscience and with the sword of the Spirit Again The exhortation of man without the grace of God is but as sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal he onely can give a mouth and wisdom which saith Without me you can do nothing Lord take thou away my stony heart and give a new humble contrite and a heart of flesh In the last of his Epistles he reckoneth the Books of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus Esdras III. and IV. Judeth Tobias Maccabees among the Apocrypha Catol test ver lib. 14. 10. Richard de St. Victor a Scot was held for a learned and good man about the year 1140. He wrote much On Cant. c. 2. The reading and meditation of the Scriptures do strengthen the minde and weaken the enemy so long as they keep this in minde and do it they are hereby most expert to encounter with the enemy De statu hom inter cap. 12. How justly is fr●ewill said to be dead seeing by it self it is never moved unto any good for what good can it do of it self seeing it cannot say Jesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost and indeed it is often moved unto good but never accept by the holy Ghost De sacrif Abrah Mariae If the grace and protection of God be withheld man is thrown down at every suggestion of the enemy and into whatsoever evil and being once thrown down he can never rise by his own power A man can bring forth no bud of good work of himself without working grace and when he hath begun to work he can no way continue without its cooperation Par. 2. in explanat aliquot locor Apost The Law teacheth onely what we should do and addeth not how we may obey and therefore it can justifie none the Gospel teacheth what should be done how it may be done and how that which is not done may be supplied In Apocaly lib. 3. Onely that prayer is acceptable in heaven which the Son offereth unto the Father Catol test ver lib 15. He was the first which taught that the Virgin Mary was born without original sin Io. Maior in gest Scot. lib. 3. cap. 12. 11. Malcolm IV. King of Scots did command Roger Arch-Bishop of The Pope's Legate is forbidden to come into Scotland York and Roman Legate to depart out of the Realm and said It was not reason that the Land should be oppressed by ungodly men bearing glorious names He. Boet. Hist lib. 13. Again in the year 1188. Pope Clement sent another and he had not better success for all did refuse him except John Bishop of St. Andrews and therefore he was banished and he had refuge unto the Pope who by and by sent unto Henry King of England and gave unto him the right of the Crown of Scotland Io. Bale Cent. 3. § 26. in Appen 12. It is recorded that one Fulco came and said unto the English King King Richard's three daughters Richard with great boldness O King thou hast three very bad daughters take good heed unto them and provide unto them good husbands lest by inconvenient bestowing of them thou run not into damage onely but utter perdition unto thy self The King said Thou art mad foolish hypocrite I have no daughter Fulco replieth I do not lye O mighty King for you have three daughters continually in your Court and wholly possess your person and such whores are they that the like hath not been heard I mean mischievous pride greedy covetousness and filthy letchery therefore I say again beware of them and out of hand provide marriages for them The King then took his words in good part by and by calling his Nobles declared unto them them the words of Fulco whose counsel said he I intend to follow not doubting of your consents my Lords thereunto wherefore here before you all I give my eldest daughter swelling pride to wife unto the proud Templars my greedy daughter avarice unto the Cistertian Monks and filthy luxury unto the riotous Prelates of the Church so severally agreeing with all their natures that the like match is not to be found unto them This was about the year 1198. saith I. Fox in Act. 13. Here it shall not be amiss to remember the example of Simon Thurvey Simon Thurvey an English man of Cornwal for a warning to temerarious Students He was a subtil Logician and expert in all Liberal Sciences he left his own Countrey and was a Doctor in Paris many years and trusting to his Philosophy he vaunted that he knew all Christ's Law and by force of disputation he could disprove it all on a suddain he became forgetful of all learning and could not say the Lord's Prayer nor knew the a b c. Mat. Paris reporteth that when he was writing his History Nicola epi. Danelm told him this and had seen this Simon learning to read from his own bastard son as if he had been a childe of six years onely 14. King William went into England to congratulate the safe arrival of Richard from Judea in the year 1199. at that time Harald Earl of Orknay and Caitnes took the Bishop of the Countrey prisoner because he had stopped some suit he had demanded of the King and bereft him of his eyes and tongue William at his returning would revenge this inhumanity and Harald would defend himself by force but his forces were scattered and he was apprehended it was done unto him by the hangman as he had unto the Bishop and then strangled all his male-children were gelded and many of his friends as accessories were fined in money Buchan lib. 7. When this was reported unto Pope Innocentius III. he sent his Legate John Cardinal de monte Celio with a sword richly set with precious stones a purple hat in form of a diadem and a Bull of large priviledges exempting the Church of Scotland from all censures except onely of the Pope or Legate sent by the Conclave the Bull was dated in the year 1209. H. Boeth Hist lib. 13. cap. 8. THE FOURTH AGE Of the CHURCH OR The History of the Church lurking and of Anti-Christ reigning containing the space of 300. years from the year
more licence maketh us all the worse he who is the servant of servants will be Lord of Lords as if he were a God he despiseth the holy assemblies and counsels of his Brethren yea of his Lords he feareth that he be called to account for what he doth dayly against laws and good order he speaketh great things as if he were God he hath new purposes in his head to set up an Empire unto himself that wicked man whom they usually now call Antichrist in whose forehead is written the name of blasphemy I am God I cannot err changeth laws establisheth his own spoileth defraudeth killeth and sitteth in the Temple of God domineering far and wide As in the days of the ancient Sibylla Hydaspes that most ancient King hath under the name of a prophecying childe told the prosperity and named the Romans long before Troy was and Prophets have foretold in dark words that every one cannot understand The majesty of the Roman people by whom the world was governed is now away and the power hath returned into Asia the East shall rule again and the West shall be a servant Kingdoms are multiplied the highest power is I will not say torn but dissolved and broken into many the Emperor is but a title and onely a shadow now there be ten Kings together who have taken their part of the ancient Roman Empire not to rule it but to destroy it Those ten horns which St. Augustine could not understand the Turks Greeks Egyptians Africans Spaniards French English Germans Italians and Sicilians do possess the Roman Provinces and a little horn is grown up among them which hath eyes and a mouth speaking great things especially it compelleth three of these Kingdoms to wit of Sicily Italy and Germany to serve it What is more clear then this prophesie c. 12. Petrus de Vineis Chancellor of the Emperor Frederick the II. wrote Petrus de Vineis against the maners of the Pope's Court. six books of Epistles which were printed in the year 1566. some of them are inserted in Catalog test verit lib. 16. He wrote many in name of the Emperor unto several Princes The second Epistle of the first book he directed unto the Kings and Princes generally exhorting them that they obey not the Pope and his Cardinals who feed upon the alms of the poor and oppress the children of the Church The following ages saith he may be wise when they know what hath been before them and as the wax receiveth impression from the signature so mortal men are framed by example O that I had tasted of such happiness that Christian Princes had left unto us such timely warning as we from the experience of our wounded Majesty do leave unto you the Clergy who are made fat by the alms of the poor do oppress the children when they are ordained Apostolical Fathers though they be the children of our subjects yet forgetting their fatherly duty will not vouchsafe to reverence Emperor nor King What is spoken in borrowed words is clear by the presumption of Pope Innocent the IV. for in a general Councel as he calleth it he durst pronounce a sentence of deposition which he cannot maintain without a strange prejudice of all Kings albeit I was neither summoned nor convicted of any fraud or offence What cause have ye all and every King of every Countrey to fear from the wrath of such a Prince of Priests It is not enough that he attempteth to dethrown us albeit we by the power of God were crowned after the election of the Princes and approbation of the whole Church and people living in the Religion of Christian faith and albeit in respect of the Imperial Diadem no rigor can be exercised against us even though lawful causes were proved against us but the abuse of that Priestly power would so overthrow us that we should be neither first nor last And this indeed ye do when ye obey them who counterfeit holiness and their ambition hopeth to swallow you all O that your simple credulity would beware as Christ hath warned of that leaven of the Scribes and Pharisees how many filthinesses of that Court might ye abhor which shame and dishonesty will not suffer me to name truly the wealthy revenues wherewith they are enriched to the impoverishing of many Kingdoms have made them mad among us Christians are become beggers that the Patarens may be fed among them ye bring down your own houses that ye may build up your adversaries houses there It hath been our care that those things should be written for you albeit not declaring sufficiently what I wish but other things I will acquaint you with in a more private way to wit to what uses your prodigality may employ the riches of the poor What can be done in chusing an Emperor unless peace which we intend by able mediators to establish be at least superficially restored betwixt us and the Church what may we intend concerning the common and particular affairs of all Kings c. In Epist 3. he faith It is no where found that by any Law of God or man the high Priest of Rome may at his pleasure transfer the Empire or judge Kings or Princes by depriving them of their temporal Kingdoms for albeit according to the Law of men or of custom our consecration belongeth unto him yet he hath no more power to deprive us then the Prelates of any other Nation who after their custom do consecrate and anoint their Kings In Epist 13. unto the King of France It is notorious and the world cannot hide it how that Apostolical Father hath impugned our innocency with both the swords for while at his command we were passing over sea he our adversary and enemy invaded the Kingdom of Sicily and hath spoiled it many ways then after our returning into the Kingdom by the manifold intercession of the Alman Princes a peace was made with the Church and though I did my service yet that Apostolical man laid his hands more heavily upon us and proprio motu without any cause on my part he hath devised whatever could be devised to our ruine and by proclaiming the sentence of excommunication against us and by his Missives and Nuntios he publisheth unto all men the titles of defaming us Lastly To supplant us he aspiring as it were to build the tower of Babylon against the fort of David hath called all the Prelates he could unto a particular Councel so aiming to set the East before the North but the wondrous providence of God by whom we live and reign beholding the purpose of so great iniquity and turning his thoughts into nothing hath brought the Cardinals and Prelates both of France and some other Nations into our hands whom many others being drowned in the sea we keep fast as our enemies Let not your Highness marvel si Augustus tenet in Augusto that Caesar keepeth in prison the Prelates of France who would have imprisoned Caesar In Epist
cast down arose Nimrod who as Joseph witnesseth advised men that they should not ascribe unto God what came happily unto them but that it was given unto them for their own vertue and that they trust in their own vertue and not in God the multitude was ready to obey their commands and thought it grievous slavishness to be subject unto God and so he called men from the fear of God and made them proud to the contempt and injury of God nevertheless he brought that sacrilegious presumption into tyranny When the Patriarch Abraham refused it these arose speaking vain and great things boasting that their lips and words were their own and disdaining that God should rule over men Their children the Sadduces Joseph is witness did affirm that both good and evil are propounded to the election of men and each one chuseth this or that according to his own will without God When these were rebuked by the Prophet arose some Hebrews Greeks and Roman Christians saying that according to their merits they had received the grace of faith these were refuted by the Apostle Then arose Pelagius which proudly took arms against the grace of God and his help and when he was condemned by the Catholick Fathers Julian and Celestius renewed the same heresie and when it was quenched again by the Orthodox Fathers it was stirred up again by Cassianus and was lashed by Prosper About that time the same heresie waxed in Britain for which as venerable Beda in his Ecclesiastical History and Henry Honington in Histor Anglor reporteth Germanus of Antisiodore and Lupus of Treda Bishops although the Divels raised a most terrible storm against them by Sea yet they came over and confuted it stoutly But behold when the heresie was a little cut down pestiferous twigs did spring up again as the same Historians have written which the same Germanus and Severus Bishop of Tours coming into Britain did cut down again Moreover before and after these times the Scotiani by sending wholesome Epistles into the bounds of the Roman See did purge out the reliques of this plague as witnesseth the same Beda and holy Prosper maketh mention of them And although this vile fig-tree hath been so oft cut down so oft rooted up burnt and turned into ashes and even trod under foot yet it ceased not to wax so broad so thick and by the vitious juyce of it how much more subtilly so much more dangerously doth it spread therefore I being zealous for the cause of God do put willingly my hand unto this fire for I am not ignorant that these pestiferous Pelagians will with raging mindes and hideous cries bark against me and will seek to tear this paper with violent teeth as those are wont to carp at other mens writings which have nothing of their own hand But as Josephus telleth did not the Chaldeans and Mesopotamians for this cause rise against Abraham did not the ancient Prophets suffer many things from the false prophets for the cause of God did not some ignorants accuse Paul of madness and wrest all his excellent Epistles did not Julian the disciple of Pelagius with so many accusations brawl against Augustine the most glorious follower of the Apostles and the most stout defender of grace against the ungracious Pelagians and did not Julian boast that he would winnow his books and discover and shew the impiety of his writings did not other maintainers of Pelagius in France when Augustine was defunct presume to disprove his writings did not many writers oppose the most wholesome doctrine even of Christ and the Fathers and what am I I know I am not better then our so great Fathers nor greater then my Lord ..... why then should I refuse to suffer with them c. Hence it appeareth that errors have been always abroad in the world and some have opposed them and they who love God should and will oppose the errors as they are able Afterwards he was Confessor to King Edward the III. and then Arch-Bishop of Canterbury 10. About that time a book was written in English called The Complaint and Prayer of a Plough-man the Author of it is said to have been Robert Langland a Priest about the year 1360. Io. Bale Cent. 6. 37. After a general complaint of the iniquity of the time the Author writeth zealously against auricular confession as contrary to Scripture and utility of the Republick and as a device of man against the simony of selling pardons against the Pope as the adversary of Christ since Christ commandeth to bless them who curse us and to love our enemies but the Pope fighteth and curseth for small offences Christ forbade a Priest to be a Lord over his Brethren as the men of these new religions do yea whosoever will live as Christ hath taught he is accounted a fool and if he speak of Christ's doctrine he is called an Heretick and is cursed He complaineth there of the unmarried Priests committing wickedness and by bad example provoking others of images in Churches as idolatry of false Pastors which feed upon their flocks and feed them not nor suffer others to feed them which punish a poor man for his sin and suffer a rich man to continue in iniquity for a little money which punish the violation of mans Law more then the contempt of God's Law which are more worthy to be condemned then Pilate seeing he would once not have Christ condemned but they condemn him now said he in his Doctrine and Servants whom these Priests accurse and burn they have forsaken both the old and new Testaments and taken them to another Law the Canon Law and they comment on God's Word according to their own Laws they are wolves in lamb skins they stand more for their riches which they rob off Christ's flock then they care for the sheep they are become shop-men to the rich Merchant the Pope in selling his wares pardons in every Countrey to make him rich they promise the blessings of Heaven without pain for money Again he speaketh of the Pope that he calleth himself the Successor of Peter whereas Peter did acknowledge Christ and kept the hests of his Law but the Pope hath undone Christ's Law for advancing his own Decretals he calleth himself the Vicar of Christ whereas Christ said Wheresoever two or three are gathered together in my name there am I in the midst of them but the Pope hath made himself a Pseudo-christ or Antichrist since he professeth himself to be the Vicar of Christ and indeed hath undone the ordinances of Christ and maketh himself to be worshipped as God on earth as proud Nebuchadnezzar sometime did therefore all men should leave this Nebuchadnezzar this false god and false christ and his laws which are contrary to Christ's teaching He writeth of Purgatory that if such a thing were no Pope could feel such pains for he might deliver himself as well as others and yet he hath no power to keep himself nor others out of
his flock But the Pope of Rome was so busie against the Pope of Avenion that neither of them had leasure to attend such matters and Wickliff did return It happened that he became sick and there was little hope of his recovery the Friers sent four of their Order and four elder men unto him and wished him then in the hour of his death to recant his former opinions He desired his friends to set him up and then said with a loud voice I shall not die but live and declare the most wicked facts of Friers they left him with confusion and he did recover and wrote a Treatise against the Order of Friers of which Treatise Doctor James maketh mention in his Book called Wickliff's conformity to the Church of England An. 1382. they assembled a Convocation against him to condemn his Doctrine and Books in the very hour of their first meeting all England was shaken with an earth-quake that all who were assembled thought it expedient to surcease for that time At last he died in peace in Lutterworth where he had been Parson An. 1387. Such a God is the Lord that whom he will keep nothing can hurt John Bale hath a catalogue of his Books in five full pages and Aen. Silvius in Histor Bohem. testifieth that more of his Books were extant than of Augustine The late Papists do impute many errors unto him and so did the Councel of Constance but others have cleared him of those imputations especially the above named Antiquary Doctor James And that the reader may see the falshood of those criminations this is one that he condemned all oaths therein savoring of Anabaptism But by the testimony which I have cited out of The path-way it is clear that he speaketh of customary and false swearing and in that same Chapter he saith that to swear by any is the honor of God alone and therefore it is Idolatry to swear by any Saint or creature and by this one instance it may be judged of others The Councel of Constance ordained to take up his body and burn it and so the English Prelates took up his bones forty and one years after his death to burn them such was their rage against the professors of truth At that time happened a rebellion in Ireland Richard A prank of the Bishops the II. went to suppress it while he was there Thomas Arundel Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the other Bishops stole away the hearts of his subjects from him because he had hearkened to the doctrine of Wickliff and perswaded them to advance Henry Earl of Derby to the Crown to the end that both they might be rid of such a Soveraign and have a King for ever obliged to authorise their bloody designs against God's people but all their treason and cruelty could not smother the truth It is bitterly enough marked saith Io. Bale Cent. 6. 25. in Appen that the Earl of Salisbury despised confession Many were called Lollards and the Popish Sacraments at his death Sir John Montague threw down all Images within his Lands John Purvey wrote Books in defence of his Master's Lessons he wrote a Commentary on the Revelations where he saith Seven years are past since the Pope of Rome was generally made known to be the Antichrist to wit from the year 1382. Behold how God bringeth light out of darkness I had not written such things against Antichrist and his Prelates if they had not imprisoned me lest I did speak against them There he applieth all the prophesies concerning Antichrist and the Whore unto the Pope and his Court. The Arch-Bishop had imprisoned this Purvey and by cruel torments caused him to recant seven godly Articles at Paul's Cross but when he was at liberty he spoke more boldly and accused the Pope for denying that the Word of God is sufficient to salvation without the Decrees and Decretals He said also Spiritual men write Books against the Pope and these Books are either hid or burnt nor is any man suffered to preach but which are devoted unto the Pope and good men are drawn into prison but said he more Books and more vehement shall be written against the Pope For these and such other things Henry Chichelay Successor to Thomas imprisoned him again An. 1393. Walter Bruite was in question before the Bishop of Hereford and delivered a book yet extant saith Geo. Abbot against Hill in answer to the first reason in the Register of that Diocy wherein he wrote these and many such positions Bread remaineth in the Sacrament after the consecration the Pope is the Antichrist nothing is to be believed as necessary to salvation but what may be confirmed by Scripture the City described in Revel 7. is Rome justification is freely by Christ alone miracles now are no assurance of truth infants dying before baptism are not therefore condemned auricular confession is not prescribed in the Scriptures the Canon Law is ill grounded the numeral letters of DVX CLERI make up the number 66● worship of Images is Idolatry that men are not rashly to be reputed Saints the Pope hath no power beyond other Saints nor is the head of the Church Papists mistake the keys of binding and loosing the Pope deceiveth men in his pardons absolution is to be sought at the hands of God only Priests use vain prayers in the Mass exorcisms and holy water are unlawful Priests do sin who bargain to sing for the souls of men departed religious men and women are the devourers of widows houses selling of Orders and Dirges is naught the Pope is the Beast with the two horns like the Lamb while he challengeth the double sword temporal goods may be taken from the Clergy offending The same Author loc cit sect 25. saith Yea so far was the Doctrine of Wickliff spread the Pope Gregory XI in the year 1378. did direct his Bull to the University of Oxford against the Doctrine and Articles of that learned man even Rome it self ringing of his opinions in that University neither did his followers die when he died but long after that Pope Gregory the XII did direct another Bull to Oxford in which he useth the same words which his Predecessor had that is that Wickliff did follow the doctrine of Marsilius of Padua and of John of Gandune of unworthy memory Which speech is worth the marking saith Abbot to shew that this man had his predecessors The Copy of this latter Bull is to be seen in a Book which that worthy lover of Antiquities Mr. Hare gave to our University saith he 13. In time of the rebellion against King Richard amongst all the Bishops only Thomas Merks Bishop of Carlile was for him In the Parliament they were not content to depose him but were devising more mischiefs against him Then said Thomas None here present is worthy to pass his sentence on so worthy a King whom they have obeyed as their lawful Prince full twenty two years this is the part of traitors cut-throats
the Pope this was one that if the Turks shall invade Constantinople in the time that the Greeks shall be in Italy the Pope shall send a navy for aid But in two several summers Amurathes did invade Constantinople by Sea and the Pope could not be perswaded to send one ship the Emperor sought but two and Eugenius would send none The History marketh that God did preserve Constantinople at that time and immediately Nicolaus Duke of Piceno took two Cities Bononia and Friuli from Eugenius Sgyrop Hist sect 5. cap. 12. In the year 1443. the Pope made agreement with the chief Romans and returned to Rome in September he would have gone into St. Peter's the second day but all the people were in an uproar crying Away with new tributes and the authors of them Eugenius had laid new tribute on the wine He did not dare to go out of doors that day but discharged the late Impost the next day he went forward the people crying Long may Eugenius live On the nineteenth day thereafter he called an assembly at Lateran and excommunicated all the Prelates at Basil Vladislaus King of Hungary had made peace with the Turks Eugenius sent his Legate Cardinal Julian Perjury is punished though the Pope approve it and perswaded the King to break the peace because without his leave he could not contract with the enemies of Christ At the first onset the company of Asia on the north wing of the Turks Army were put to flight by John Hunniades Prince of Transilvania and General of the Hungarians Then Amurathes took out the Book of the Articles of Peace and lifting up his eys to Heaven he said These are the Articles O Jesus Christ which thy Christians have covenanted with me and have sworn holily by thy name and now they have violated their faith attested by thy name they have falsely denied their God and now Christ if thou be God I beseech thee avenge thy own wrongs and mine and shew the punishment of perjury unto them which as yet have not known thy name He had scarcely uttered these words when behold the fight was suddenly changed Ph. Morn in Myster ex Bonfin Hist Hungar. dec 1. lib. 6. A bloody fight followed at Varna where the Turks prevailed that ye may see saith Aen. Sylv. lib. 1. epist 81. how oaths should be kept not only with the houshold of faith but with enemies also That day the yong King and Julian the false Cardinal and many of the Hungarian Nobility were slain and the Prelates that were in the field for encouraging the Soldiers fled and fell into marishes and all the trinches and ditches were filled with blood of Christians An. 1444. from thenceforth wars prospered not well with the Hungarians The same Pope raised wars in Italy and died An. 1447. 7. NICOLAUS the V. was chosen Pope Felix being alive wherefore many remained neutral and the wars that were begun continued until the year before the Jubilee The Emperor with his Diet at Oschoffenburgh did charge all Germany to acknowledg Pope Nicolaus and he commanded the City Basil to dismiss the Councel before the Feast of St. Martin An. 1548. The Pope Nicolaus sent Aen. Sylvius to perswade Pope Felix to renounce his title they agree that Amadeus shall be a Cardinal and Legate of Germany and of his own Countrey and all his Cardinals and Bishops shall keep their places To procure the favor of the Germans Nicolaus published a Bull Ad sacram Petri sedem and another Vt pacis dated in July An. 1449. wherein he prescribeth some moderation of Annates he approveth and confirmeth all the provisions and Acts of the Councel at Basil and of Pope Felix the V. and their other censures excommunications absolutions c. This Bull is annexed unto the Acts of that Councel after the Decretum quinque conclusionum Such were the times that the Popes framed their Decrees and Bulls according to their own interest and not according to equity nor the voices of them who had called on the holy Ghost That Councel was also confirmed by Pope Sixtus the IV. All troubles being thus calmed so many went to Rome in the year of Jubilee that on a day Peter Barbus Cardinal of St. Mark riding on a mule toward the Vatican and reencountring with the people on Hadrians bridge could go neither forward nor backward for the throng his mule and two hundred men with three horses were extinguished and many fell from both sides of the bridge into the water Platin. The next year Mahumet having received many foils at Constantinople was preparing all his forces against it Then Constantine Paleologus sent unto the Pope and craved help of men and money Nicolaus refused unless the Emperour would cause the Greeks to submit unto his Papal Authority Antonine Bishop of Florence at the same time saith The Pope thought it not reason to spoil Italy of monies for aid of a Nation potent enough if they would bestow their money to hire other Nations Anton. par 3. tit 22. cap. 13. But the Greeks would rather suffer any extremity then be subject unto the Pope so that City was lost unworthily An. 1453. Then Nicolaus hoped to reap a rich harvest he sent Bassarion a Greek whom Eugenius had enticed unto his side at Florence and had given him a red hat with the Bishoprick of Tusculo to be Patriarch of Constantinople the Greeks would not accept him but chose Gennadius Scholarius Many Greeks came then into Italy and many Italians began then to study the Greek Language Bodinus in Daemono sheweth ex Iac. Sprenger a rare dispensation granted by this Nicolaus A German Bishop whom the Pope loved was sick and had learned from a witch that another witch had done him ill nor could he be healed unless that sickness were cast upon the woman which had done it and then she assuredly was to die The Bishop sendeth unto the Pope for an Indulgence to practise this Nicolaus granted it with this clause Of two evils the greatest is to be eschewed He sate eight years 8. CALLISTUS the III. instantly after his coronation produced a Book wherein he had many years before written these words I Callistus Pope vow unto the Almighty God and the holy individual Trinity that I shall pursue by wars interdictions curses and by what other means I shall be able the Turks which are enemies of Christ's name Platin. So he sent sixteen ships under the conduct of the Patriarch of Aquileia into Asia At that time a great Comet appeared which the Mathematicians deemed to portend a great plague wherefore the Pope ordained that the bells be tolled at noon and then all people to fall upon their knees and pray that the plague might fall on the Turks but it fell at home for as the wars were taken in hand suddenly so they ended soon and shamefully Ibid. Callistus ordained the feast of Christ's transfiguration on August 6. granting the like indulgence unto the observers thereof as
word of Luthers propositions and he preached against the superstitious running of the people unto the Eremites In the year 1517. he was called to be preacher of Zurick and at his admission he protested that he would declare the History of Christ out of the Gospell not according to the expositions of men for he would be tied to none but to the mind of the Spirit which he trusted to attain by prayer and meditation of the Scriptures Many rejoiced at this protestation and others were offended Ex vita Zuinglii prefixed unto his Epistles When the books of Luther came into Helvetia he had heard of them but he professed publickly that he would not read them yet exhorted the people to read them diligently Behold his intent he would that the people hearing him and reading the other and knowing that he did not read them might the better see the unity of the Spirit flowing in them both out of Divine Scriptures and so the more willingly believe the Truth And by Gods blessing there followed a wondrous successe as here after we shall heare VIII In January 1519. comes from Pope Leo Carol. Miltitius with a 1519. present of a golden rose and consecrated unto Duke Frederik and with Letters unto his Counseller Degenhart Pfessinger entreating him to assist Miltitius for bannishing Luther that child of Satan In the mean time word is brought that the Emperour is dead Januar. 12 then the eies of all men were toward Frederik as successour whereby Luther had rest for a time and the fury of his adversaries was abated He spoke with Miltitius at Altenburgh and promised silence if the same were enjoyned unto his adversaries and to recant whensoever he shall be covinced of an errour To the same purpose he wrote unto Leo March III. adding he could not recant simply because it would be an imputation unto the Apostolicall See seing many learned and judicious men in Germany understand all the controversy On the first of May Erasmus writes unto the Duke of Saxony that so long as he is President of justice an innocent man should not be given into the hands of ungodly men under pretense of piety all do commend the innocency of Luther nor is he to be thought an heretick who displeaseth this or that man his accusers do but seek their own interests nor should he be rashly condemned of heresy who leadeth a godly life as becometh a Christian In the end of Juny and some days of July there was a disputation at Leipsich betwixt Eccius and Carolstad there was also Luther and Melanchton all under the protection of George uncle of the Duke Frederik When Tecelius heard of this appointment he said So would the Devill and he died in the mean time This disputation is written by many Agrippa telleth the substance of it in few words thus Hoghstrat and Eccius gained nothing but scorne They dispute most of the power of the Pope After the dispute the Duke George touches Eccius and Luther with his hand saith Whither Jure Divino or Jure humano yet the Pope of Rome is the great highpriest This disputation brought forth many books especially from Carolstad and Eccius whereby both their names were much empaired Then Luther publisheth his Sermons of a twofold righteousness of the saving meditation of Christs passion of baptisme of preparation unto death Also a declaration of the propositions disputed at Leipsich concerning the power of the Pope A confutation of the Antidotes falsely imputed unto him by the Monks of Jutrebok And a Commentary on the epistle to the Galatians In October the Bohemians write from Prague unto Luther exhorting him unto constancy and patience and affirming his doctrine to be pure Divinity Likewise Wolfgang Capito wrote from Basile unto him that Helvetia and the country about Rhine even unto the sea did love him yea and the Cardinall Bishop of Sedun a learned and very faithfull man and many other chief men when they heard he was in danger were willing to have bestowed on him not only for his sustentation but a safe refuge where he might either lurk or live openly but when they had seen the coppy of the letter which the Duke had sent unto the Legate they perceived that he had no need of their aid and that they had caused his books to beprinted and spread them in Italy Spain France and England heerin regarding their common cause The same Capito wrote also then unto Erasmus exhorting him that he would not oppose Luther albeit saith he I do misse or wish that he would write otherwise many things yet it is expedient that he be encouraged that young men may be the more heartned for the liberty of the Church I know that the adversaries wish nothing more than to have you provoked against him but it is better to have all the other Divines against You then to have his abettours your enemies many Princes Cardinals Bishops and the best of the clergy do affect his business Schultet Annal. This summer the Monks made it the principall matter of their preaching to inveigh against Luther and so they spread among the people what was before packed up in Latine within the walls of the Schooles and Luther for this cause spread his books in the vulgare language In August the University of Colen and in November the University of Lovan came forth with their bare articles and Sentences of damnation or as Erasmus then spoke prejudged opinions thinking with the fire of words to quench a stronger fire of reason but they made the books of Luther the more vendible The University of Paris had been held most famous for many years their judgement was also exspected but they would not write Erasmus in Epistol ad Cardinal Campeg dated Lovan Natal Nicol. Anno 1520. IX In January 1520. a new broile ariseth upon a Sermon of the Eucharist 1520. that Luther publishes in it he saith It seemes good unto mee that both the Species of the Supper were given unto the communicants Therefore George Duke of Sayony writes unto Duke Frederik accusing Luther of the Bohemian heresy And the Bishop of Misna by a published mandate condemneth that Sermon The Elector answered his uncle that Luthers cause was not legally decerned Unto the Bishops mandate Luther writes he did judge as he had written if it were permitted by authority of a generall Councell and in the mean time the Acts of the last Councell should be obeyed and he thinks that Christ is not partially but wholly under both the bread the wine Januar. 15. Luther writes unto Charles V. and afterwards unto Albert Bishop of Mentz and unto the Bishop of Mersburg humbly beseeching that they would not condemne untill they heare him These two bb admonish him to temper his pen for the love of Christ and to write of other things more usefull for advancing piety than to medle with the Popes power as for themselves they had not leisure to read his books only they
to his words This is my body This is my blood So now sitting in the glory of Majesty he reaches by the hands of Ministers Such is his Divine virtue and power unto communicants his body and blood Therefore the Latine Church was wont to pray before the communion Let us lift up our hearts unto the Lord For as in the first institution of the Supper the Disciples had their eies fixed on the Lord who sitting at table reached unto them the Holy Supper So we should lift up our hearts unto the heavens unto him who sitting in the glory of Majesty reaches in the Supper by the hands of Ministers unto communicants his true body and blood that it may be the meat drink of the inward man who thereby is fed nurished and groweth unto everlasting life Whence Bernard speaking of the Supper saith This is the food not of the belly but of the soul for it is not given to repair the ruin of this life which is a vapor for a litle time but to confer eternal life unto the soul And as the water being sprinkled in Baptism hath done it's part so the bread eaten and the wine being drunken in the H. Supper have done their part but the spirituall virtue is possessed by faith and the verity of Christs body and blood is also maintained So Heming About the year 1571. this controversy waxed hote for in Witteberg Cas Cruciger the later Chr. Pezelius Fr. Widebram Henry Moller and others were against the Vbiquity and for it were these of Iena chiefly and with them were sundry other towns as Brunswic Luneburg c. In the same year Augustus the Elector of Saxony conveeneth the Divines of Witteberg and Leipsich into Dresda there they declared that they held no other doctrin but what was in the Confession of Ausburgh and agreeth with Luther and Melanthon's writings and they published their consent Against this consent Lucas Osiander and Selneccer and Jacob Andreiae did publish other books The Wittebergers wrote their Apology This contention waxeth hoter and hoter untill the year 1577. when George Count of Henneberg in a private conference said unto the Elector The Divines of Witteberg do foster some errors which can not be dissembled nor approved by the sincere Ministers of the Church neither is there hope of true peace among the followers of the Augustan Confession until these errours be noted and condemned The Elector answered I wish an harmony and that the corruptions were marked and that there were some beginning of so necessary and profitable a work I for my part will further it according to my power George undertook it At that time the Papists did upbraid them with their divisions and said There be so many parties among them of the Augustan Confession that if any would leave Papistry they know not unto what sect they shall cleave Osiandet histo Lib. 4. c. 2. shewes another ground of their variance that since the time of that unhappy Interim the corruptions and errors which began at that time could not be amended And it may be added that in all the periods of attempting reconciliations some did hold the points where-in they did agree at those several times and others would not accept them And Melanthon whose authority was much respected did for peace smooth his Common places in the year 1546. and again in the year 1558. for which cause the rigider sort called him a temporizer as also in the year 1552. he wrote a Confession of faith to have bin presented unto the the Councel at Trent This was and yet is called The Confession of Saxony and was subscribed also by the Ministers of Misnia In the year 1578. the Elector and the Count of Henneberg meet again at the marriage of Lewes Duke of Wurtembergh After the solemnity these three being together the Count shewes the Duke what conference had been before for removing the scandal of division then by common advice Lucas Osiander and Balthasar Bidembachius two Divines of Wurtembergh were appointed to pen some Overtures for removing those controversies Liber Concordiae This was done so privily that no other knew it but those Princes yea their Secretaries heard not of it When those two had written their judgement were assembled at Maulbron two Divines of Wurtembergh two of Hennebergh and one of Bada They examin and change as they thought expedient Osiand Lib. Cit. Cap. 3. Then their work was sent unto the Elector of Saxony and he cailed for Jacob Andreae Chemnitius and Selneccer and gave them the book they judge it too brief and enlarge it with other arguments and other questions This book was sent then unto sundry Vniversities and towns to be freely censured that if any thing were to be amended added or empaired they should admonish ingenvously Ibid. Cap. 4. The Electors of Saxony and Brandeburgh caused it to be subscribed by 8000. to wit by sundry Princes Imperial Towns and their Ministers and it was printed in the year 1580. with the title Liber Concordiae It was not examined in a publick Synod and was still conceiled from those Churches which did oppose Vbiquity and some within these Princes Dominions were displaced for refusing to subscribe it and without any reasoning So it turned into the Book of discord and made the greatest rent of all The book contained elleven Heads having first layd this ground that the books of the old and new Testament are the only rule whereby the doctrine of faith is to be judged and all other writtings may be vsed as witnesses only The first Head is of original sin where they teach that it is neither the nature nor any part of the nature of man but a corruption of nature leaving in man nothing sound or uncorrupt and can be known by the revealed word of God only II. of the free-will in the first act of regeneration that God worketh the conversion by the means of the word preached and by opening the heart to hearken so that it is the work of God only making man who is ignorant and unwilling to see and will III. Of righteousnes before God they declare it to be the righteousnes of Christ God-man for which God absolves us from our sins without any respect of the merite of our good works either by past present or to come And faith trusting in Christ and working by love is the only instrument whereby we apprehend the same Neither should a true believer doubt of the remission of his sins notwithstanding his sins of infirmity IV. Concerning good works they hold that these are not the cause of justification nor of eternall life but all men especially the regenerat are debters of good works yet so that they condem those positions Good works are necessary to salvation No man was ever saved without good works and it is impossible to be saved without good works And faith in Christ can not be lost and the elect do retain the Holy Ghost even though they fall into
Austria General of his Army against the Turk did consult of an expert Lieutennant to go with him he was advised to employ Alfonso Duke of Ferraria who thretty years before had been a Commander in Hungary under Maximilian and then notwithstanding his old age was willing to aid Christendom in so great necessity and because he had no children he would provide his inheritance unto his cousin Caesar Estensis and besought the Pope to declare him his heir if it shall happen that he shall not return and for this he profered unto the Pope some thousand Ducats of gould But pope Clemens VIII could not be moved by prayer nor reward to grant this and so through his fault the old Duke left that expedition Da. Chytra in Chron. Saxon. par 5. Nevertheless the Emperour sent his Army against the Turk in Hungary they did not good neither that year nor the next and in the year 1598. by means of the Cham of Tatary was a Treaty of peace between the Emperour and the Turks the articles that were demanded were so high on both sides that their treating was in vain Then was great fear amongst the Christians untill God gave then some space of breathing by raising up some Bassa's against their own Master and as somtimes amongst the Midianites Iudg. 7. the Tatars in the Turkish Army fell into variance with their confederats and fought most cruelly one against another in the year 1599. XII In year 1600. Tiber overflowed his banks to the great damage of Rome in time of the Iubilee the Pope sent a priest Mon●orius to say some prayers and to give an Hosty called Agnus Dei unto the River but the river would not accept such sacrifices The same year the Jesuits persuaded Ferdinand Duke of Austria to expell all the Ministers out of Styria and the people that would not return to their old idolatry were persecuted some were imprisoned and some leaving their lands went away with their families into other contreyes Then all the churches were thrown down that the Protestants had built and many graves were opened in dispite of the dead people Before that time had been peace among the Germans notwithstanding the difference of religion but these firebrands kindled a new persecution and persuaded the Magistrats to oppress their subiects But God made the Turks to punish the Duke Ferdinand so that he losed more another way Osiand Cent. 16. Lib. 4. Cap. 54. XIII It may please some to read a story which Nic. Hemingius hath in VVhere the Christians vvere before the Reformation the end of his catechism his last question is If we should think so of the Popish Masse it seems that for many years the Lords Supper hath not been rightly administred in the world Ans. So do the Papists obiect but they are deceived whill they say that the Supper was not used if not with them for they shut up the Church in too narrow bounds seeing it is spread through as Christ witnesseth and I oppose his alone testimony unto all Priests and devils But if you ask Where was the Church without the jurisdiction of the Pope I answer There were many godly people in the outward society of the Romanists who albeit they were deprived of the use of the Supper yet they under stood rightly the foundations of religion and the articles of faith here he might have said that they received the sacrament with a true faith as he had spoken before of Bernard and certainly many were such Likewise in Turcia Arabia Persia and in Egypt The forme of the Christian Religion in Egypt there were even from the time of the Apostles and tooday are Churches albeit under grievous tyranny as Gods people sometime were in Egypt But lest you think that I speak amiss I will shew you the description of the Supper and liturgy as it is tooday in Arabia and Egypt where Christians are Three years agoe The book was written Hafniae December 4. 1560. in Praefat. an antient and grave man Demetrius by name and Thessalonian by nation being sent by the Patriarch of Constantinople told me many things of the religion of the Christians liuing among the Turks and because he had lived ten years in Cairo that famous city of Egypt which is also called Misrim he declared unto mee the rites of the Church there being translated out of the Arabik the narration whereof I have distinguished thus 1. The Christians in Cairo have many churches all marked with a half moon which is the Turkish badge but without bells they are called by the cry of a man unto their religion and without idols excep that they have historical pictures out of the old and new Testament upon the wals of the churches 2. The Pastor of Antioch is their Patriarch who that he may be known to be Patriarch hath a broad bonnet with a red cross in the midst on his head as the badge of his office 3. Four times yearly to wit the day of the Lords nativity the day of resurrection the day of Pentecost and August 15 all Christians that are there do communicat of both elements there is no difference of laiks and priests but the same mysteries are given unto them both 4. The celebration of the Masse is in this manner The priest puts-on alba pallium after our manner almost excep that he had four red crosses upon his priestly vesture one on his right arm another upon his left arm a third upon his brest and the fourth upon his back that howsoever he turn the badge of Christ the high priest may be seen 5. The priest being so cloathed in the vestiary comes forth and turning unto the people he saith with a lowd voice that he may be heard by all that are present Blessed be the Kingdom of the Father and of the Sone and of the holy Ghost both ever and unto all ages of ages and all the people answereth Amen 6. After this confession he subjoineth a prayer unto the holy Trinity and all the people answereth Amen 7. When the prayer is ended the the people sing Holy Father holy Mighty holy Immortal have mercy on us 8. After this song they read out of the writings of the Apostles first in Greek then in Arabik because many Christians that are there have come from Arabia 9. They sing Hallelujah 10. The Gospel is read in Greek and then in Arabik 11. When the Gospel is ended all the people sing the song which they call Cherubim 12. When that song is ended the chief Minister hath a Sermon for an hour almost for the Sermon is never beyond one hour 13. When the Sermon is ended the words of the Supper are rehearsed out of the pulpit and that upon the four festivals as I said before at the third number 14. Then coming from the pulpite unto the table which is placed in the mist of the Church the priest directing his face toward the people saith Every good gift and perfect donation descends
They shall give signs and wonders that the very elect if it were possible should be deceived Why speaks he as doubting seeing he fore-knows what shall be It is one of two because if they be elected they cannot be deceived and if they be deceived they are not the elect Therefore that doubting of our Lords words designeth tentation because they who are elected to persist shall be tempted to fall by the signs of the Preachers of Antichrist for they shake but fall not It is said therefore if it were possible because they shall tremble and neverthelesse they are called the elect because they fall not Again on Iob lib. 25. cap. 20. in that he saith He causeth an hypocrite to reign for the sins of the people Antichrist may be understood the head of hypocrites for that deceiver feigneth holiness that he may draw into wickedness but for the sins of the people he is suffered to reign albeit many have not seen his principality yet they serve his principality by their sins are they not his members who by a shew of affected sanctily would seem to be what they are not Certainly they come out of his body who hide their iniquities under the cover of sacred honour And in an Epistle to Wimund Bishop of Aversa which is in Gratian. dist c. 8. S● consuetudin he saith If thou oppose custom observe what the Lord saith I am truth and life he saith not I am custom but I am truth And truly to use the words of blessed Cyprian Whatsoever custom how old soever is altogether to be postponed unto truth and custom contrary unto truth should be abolished In lib. 7. Ep. 1. unto Sabinian then his Resident at Constantinople amongst many particulars he saith Shew my most gracious Lords that if I their servant would have medled with the death of the Lombards this day that Nation should not have had either King Dukes or Counts and it might have been in utter confusion but because I fear God I am afraid to meddle with any mans death Certainlie his Successours neither have carried themselves as loyal servants of the Emperours nor have they feared God in this manner nor have they been so sparing of bloud In humilitie he first called himself The servant of the servants of God and his Successours retain the same Title but they will not willinglie hear the name given them by another Pol. Verg. de invent rer lib. 8. cap. 2. for they will be Lord of Lords Concerning the Lords Supper his words are remarkable in Dialog lib. 4. cap. 58. His bodie is taken and his flesh is divided for the salvation of the people his blood is now poured forth not into the hands of unbelievers but into the mouths of believers therefore let us consider what a sacrifice this is for us which for our absolution representeth or follows continuallie the Passion of the only begotten Son Here though he call the brea● Christ's bodie and flesh and the wine the blood and the Sacrament a sacrifice yet he shews 1. That the bread was then divided 2. The wine was given unto the people 3. That the Sacrament is a continual representation or imitation of Christ's passion All which are contrarie to the Doctrine of the Romish Church now nor can they consist with the opinion of transubstantiation Upon other occasions we shall yet see more of Gregorie 3. It was received by many of the ancients in the third Centurie and others Purgatory entreth by degrees following that the souls departing must be purged from corruption lest any unclean thing enter into heaven Origenes wrote this purgation must be by fire and thereupon many have written of a purging or purgation fire as Bellarmin lib. 1. de Purgator cap. 6. hath a role of such testimonies The Fathers did think that all men must passe that fire but they who had committed the most sins or had been most superficial in their repentance on earth must suffer the more pain So Gregor Nissen in Orat. pro mortuis saith He who goeth out of the bodie cannot be partaker of the Divinitie unless the purging fire cleanse away the filth of the soul And Origen in Psal 36. All men must come to that fire even Paul or Bellarm. de Purg. lib. 2. cap. 1. Theodoret. on Cor. 3. saith The day of the Lord shall reveal i. e. the day of judgement if any mans work abide Doctours teach heavenly things but the hearers do chuse according to their own mind what is to be done but in the day of the Lords coming there shall be a sharp and great examination and them that have lived rightly that fire shall make them more glorious then gold or silver but them who have committed iniquitie it shall burn up like wood and hay But the Teacher of good things shall not suffer punishment but shal be judged worthie of salvation for this he saith he shall be saved to wit the Teacher And the work shall be burned that is they who have made themselves evil work For if we read the words so we shall perfectly find the meaning of the words that are written c. Ye see he differeth from the former concerning the faithfull Teacher they who thought that all shall suffer did pray for the souls of all who die in hope of resurrection so excluding the Reprobates only as is manifest in some Greek Liturgies who say We offer unto thee O Lord sacrifice for the Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs and especially for the blessed mother of God and we remember all the faithfull who are dead Bellarm. loc Amongst others he quoteth Lactantius Firmian as a teacher of Purgatory his unsolid and different opinion is Institut lib. 7. cap. 21. thus All souls abide in one place untill the great day and then they must all be examined by fire they who have been perfectly righteous and who are they if the words be taken strictly shall not feel the fire they who have not been so godly shall quickly pass through the fire and be cinged about and the wicked shall burn for ever But Basilius surnamed the Great when he was a dying did expect to be received quicklie among the Angels and Gregor Nazianzen who writ his life did believe that his soul departing should be received in the eternal Tabernacles and with Basil behold the blessed Trinitie Neither did any of the Fathers before Augustine dream of such a place in Hell where they say this purging is before the day of judgement nor speak they of any place thereof and so they knew not of such an Inn in Hell which the Romanists now call the place of Purgatorie yea the Jesuits Duraeus cont Whitek fol. 338. and Bellar. de purgat lib. 2. cap. 2. say expresselie that the Fathers expound that Text 1 Cor. 3. of a metaphorical fire and in cap. 6. of that book Bellarm. saith neither the Fathers nor Gregorie himself know where Purgatorie is nor Petrus Damianus who lived 400. years after
as may fall amongst the Souldiers in their march that none of them durst take an Apple without the licence of the owner upon pain of death The people being bewitched with such fair inducements did submit unto him as their Prince Doctour and Law-giver He deceived some by words and compelled others with the sword unto subjection The Persians as is touched were easily brought to his obedience When they prevailed over Christians they dealt with them without mercy in Jerusalem they shewed more then beastly cruelty in a Church of Caesarea they massacred above 7000. Christians they made Cyprus once without one Christian about the year 700. they slue in Isuaria 150000. and kept 7000. captives At that time Homar their Prince excused all this cruelty with pretext that he did only pursue the worshippers of images for about that time images were frequent in Christian Churches and the Sarazens could not look on an image for religion We may say then Homar was the rod of God correcting the idolatry and will worship of Christians and the same images did give great advantage to this common enemy by dissention of Christians as followeth in the next Century About the same time arose two several Kingdoms of the Sarazens the first in Asia whereof the chief City was builded by the ruines of Babylon and was called Baldac or Baldacut an 630. after two years Mahumet was poisoned by Albunar one of his Disciples to the end he might have experience of his Prophecies for Mahumet had said that within three daies after his death he would rise again But when Albunar had waited 12. daies he found his body torn by dogs and gathered his bones or what was remaining and buried them in a Pitcher at Macha in Persia He delivered other Prophecies but his followers have not as yet found the truth of them Not many years after the erection of this Kingdom the Aegyptians were wearied of the Roman Empire and sent for the Sarazens unto their aid but it was to their greater woe For the Sarazens made a prey of them and erected another Kingdom in Affrick whose Seat was Alcair or Babylon in Aegypt In both Kingdomes the Supream Governour both in Policy and Religion was called Calipha and they ruled the Provinces by Presidents whom they called Sultans or Soldans who were also High-Priests CHAP. IV. Of BRITAIN 1. THe Papishes do brag that the Roman Church is the Mother of all The Roman Church is the Mother of all other Churches Churches and that all Countries who ever believed in Christ were first converted to her faith by such as were precisely sent or at least had their authority from the Pope who lived in the time in which they were converted This say they is so openly set down in the History of the first conversion of every Country as no Protestant were he never so impudent can without blushing deny it So speaketh Thomas Hill a Doctour of Doway in his 4. reason Of his Catholick Religion If the like lies were not frequent amongst them it may seem a wonder how men can be so impudent if they but read the Acts of the Apostles where we have a conversion of Nations without the mention of a Church at Rome And the like may be said if they had read the Recognitions of Clemens whom some call the first Bishop of Rome and some call him the second and some the third all these Books are concerning the conversion of Nations and yet in them is little or nothing of a Church in Rome till he came to the last book and neither is there one word of sending Teachers from Rome into other Nations so that many Nations were converted before any Christian Church was at Rome Other Nations can shew by whom the light of the Gospel came unto them But for Especially not of the old Britans nor Scots Britan say they it is clear That Gregory the I. sent Augustine who is called The Apostle of the English And was not the Christian faith in Britan before that time Read the second Apology of Athanasius and in the first page you shall find that in Constantius time some from Britan were at the great Councel in Sardeis and in the former chapter Sect. 8. we have heard the testimony of Jerom That from Jerusalem and from Britan the Gate of Heaven is equally patent and in other places he mentioneth them and 200. years before him Tertullian against the Jews sheweth That the places of Britan which were unaccessible unto the Romans were subject unto Christ And what places these were Baronius in Annal. ad an 186. Sect. 6. teacheth That it is certain that the Romans did possess the South part of Britan and Adrian caused a Wall to be made betwixt Cart-den and Dumbarton to be a partition between them and the Scots But saith Baronius the Britans who did possess what was on the North-side of the Wall did often pass over and provoke the Romans unto Battel In the time of Eleutherius Bishop of Rome Lucius King of South Britan was a Christian and Baronius cannot deny but long before that the Gospel of Christ had been brought into Britan as saith he Testatur Gilda sapiens And at the same time Donald King of Scotland was a Christian and in the daies of Dioclesian when the persecution was hot in the South part many Christians took their refuge into the North part where the King Crathilint received them and for safety sent many of them into the Isle of Man and there builded a Church unto them that they might serve God freely It is true the South part did change their Inhabitants for division falling amongst them the one party sent for the Saxons for their aid and these were Heathens and subdued all the country except that which is now called South and North Wales and that for their prophaneness and contempt of Religion as Gildas testifieth in a little book de excidio Britannico which is in Bibliotheca Patr. de la Bigne tom 5. About the year 600. Ethelbert had married Bertha Gregory the I. lib. 9. Epist 59. calleth her Aldiberga a Christian who brought with her Lethard a Preacher Beda hist lib. 1. cap. 25. calleth him a Bishop he preached in a Church at Canterbury called Saint Martin's that had been long time before When Augustine was sent by Gregory and came thither he stayed in the Isle of Tenet untill he knew the King's will Beda ibid. By means of Bertha licence was granted and he preached before the King After his conversion Augustine had intelligence of the Britans and sent unto them and craved a meeting with them three of them came unto him he did speak at first fairly and desired them to join with him in conversion of the Heathens They answered We have our own Bishops without their knowledge we may do nothing Then by authority and procurement of the King he inviteth them to a Synod at a place which from him was called Austin-oke or
also that in the end of that Synod the Britan Bishops confessed that it was the right way of justice and righteousness which Augustine taught But it is clear from Beda that the Britans did oppose all that he spoke and they who said so were at the first meeting when Augustine had not discovered himself Likewise out of the Interrogatories that Augustine sent unto Gregory the I. and are with the answers in the end of Gregory's works it is easie to be seen that the first Arch-Bishop of Canterbury was no learned Clark but very superstitious and especially in the eighth answer that he was ambitious in that he did aim to have the Bishop of France subject unto him After the death of Augustine Laurence who did come from Rome with him took his charge he did invite the Scots dwelling in the same Island unto a Synod and thought to have found them meliores saith Beda lib. 2. cap. 4. readier to his mind than the Britans were but he found no less opposition by them for the Scots differed nothing from the Britans Dagan and Columban did refuse all communion with him and would not lodge in the same Inn where any Romish Bishop was If we compare all these premises we may see the cause why our Writers have spoken so diversly of Augustine some calling the English conversion a perversion and i●ebriation and others terming it a gracious conversion to wit when they consider how Pagans by the light of the Gospel were brought unto the faith though tainted with some errours they do with the Angels of Heaven rejoice in remembrance of that English happiness but when they consider that the old Professours of the ancient faith were by the importunity and ambition of Augustine and his successours inthralled in multitude of new inventions and in an unjust subjection yea and that so many were martyred by means at least by suggestion of Augustine justly have they termed this work of Augustine a perversion of the faith so giving this twofold censure in the spirit of discretion and not of contradiction even as Christ knew and approved the works of Ephesus but he had some things against her 2. The difference in observing Easter was thus The Romans in remembrance Difference for Easter of Christ's resurrection did observe the first Sunday after the full Moon of March and the Eastern Church as also the Britans kept the fourteenth day of the Moon on whatever day of the week it fell For this matter was no small debate between the Greek and Latine Churches long before as also in Britain about the year 657. betwixt Finnan a Scot and Bishop of Lindsfarn and Ronan another Scot and coming lately from Rome Finnan was so reverenced by the Romish faction that nothing was altered in his daies and he writ a book Proveteri Paschatos ritu Beda hist lib. 3. cap. 25. This jar was renewed about the year 670. by Wilfrid Bishop of York who had been at Rome Colman a Scot and Successour of Finnan and Cedda who afterwards was Bishop of York defend the old custom alledging as is before that this Island had received their rites from Asia and had kept them from the beginning of their conversion untill this time Wilfrid and Agilbert a Bishop and Agatho a Priest and James a Deacon said Rome should be preferred above Asia because the bones of Peter were at Rome Colman answereth that Anatolius and Eusebius Pamphili do evidently declare what were the rites of Asia and the same were received from John the Evangelist and were followed by Columba whom they could not deny to have been a good and devote man Wilfrid replieth The authority of Peter is greater for Christ said to him Thou art Peter and to thee will I give the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven Then another question was propounded concerning the shaving of the Clergy mens heads which the Scots did refuse But Beda hath not recorded the dispute In the end King Oswin said Seeing these rites were received by Saint Peter and now he is Porter of Heaven I will follow him lest he thrust me back when I come thither Beda loc cit When Colman saw that the authority of a rude Prince did oversway he would stay no longer but excluded his Bishoprick with Eata Abbot of Meilrose and thereafter he carried a Convent of Monks into one of the Isles Hebrides where they lived by the works of their hands Beda ibid. cap. 26. Wilfrid after that contest was accused of pride and misdemeanours but refused to answer and fled Then Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury set another in his place thus the controversie for Easter was ended in England And to end it altogether after other contests about the year 716. Ecbert or Berect as some call him an English man did so prevail amongst the Scots that Easter was kept in the Isle Hu after the Romish manner the 24. of April but he died suddainly The suddainness of his death Beda lib. 5. cap. 23. calleth a confirmation of his doctrine He might as well have said The Lord did approve the fact of Lot's wife 3. About the year 600. Brude King of Peichts though a Christian had The Conversion of the Saxons in Britain conjunct Wars with Ethelfrid King of Northumberland against Aidan King of Scots and Malgo a Duke of the Britans The Scots did prevail with great loss The report is saith Buchan hist Scot. lib. 5. that Columba Boetius calleth him Colm Abbot of the Monastery in Colmkill or Jona did assure his fellows of the victory the same hour of the fight After some years Ethelfrid renewing his forces came against the Scots Aidan waited for the Britans in vain and was put to flight with great slaughter on both sides After that fight Columba died for grief and Aidan was so commoved for the unlucky success and for the want of good Columba and for fear of the apparent danger of Christians from that cruel Pagan that within few weeks he died Not long after Ethelfrid was killed by the Britans as is said before Edwin succeedeth him and thereafter was setled in the general government of the Saxons Then the friends of Ethelfrid amongst whom were his seven sons and one daughter fearing cruelty fled into Scotland King Eugenius the 4. son of Aidan not regarding the hostility of their fathers accepted them and caused them to be instructed in the Christian faith Edwin was slain in Battel an 633. by Penda King of Mercia and Kedwalla King of the Britans there was never a more cruel Battel in this Island for Penda pursued the new converted Christians and Kedwalla would destroy the Saxons wherefore their rage did spare neither age nor sex Buchan hist Then Northumberland was divided into two Kingdomes Osrich cousin german of King Edwin was King of Deira and Eanfrid or Andefrid the eldest son of Ethelfrid was King of Bervici or North part they were both Christians the one instructed by Paulin Bishop of York and the other
should be used in all Churches and Chappels But many did expound that sign the contrary way and would not receive it till Charls did command all Bishops and Priests to use it thorow his Dominions he caused the Mass of Ambrose to be burned and threw many Priests into prison who refused to accept the new Mass The Church of Millain would not change Walafrid Strabo who lived about the year 900. testifieth in his book de Exordiis rer cap. 25. that in his time the Roman Mass was not universally in all Churches but almost saith he in all the Churches of the Latines and no Benedictine Monk did read it In the sixth tom of Biblioth Patr. de la Bigne are many books of several Authours explaining at that time the signification of the Ceremonies injoined in that Mass Their Dedicatory Epistles and Prefaces shew that they were put upon that work by the authority of the King and some time-serving Bishops and the great number of those books is an evident proof of great opposition against that Mass and the rites thereof although the books of the Adversaries have been kept down by the prevailing party Hereunto serveth what Antoninus de Voltelina a Dominican said in the Councel at Trent as is written hist lib. 6. It is clear by Histories that of old every Church had their own Rituals of the Mass brought in day by day rather of custom than by judgement or constitution and that the lesser Churches did follow their Metropolitan or their neighbour greater Churches but the rite of the Roman Church was received in many Provinces for gatifiing the Pope and nevertheless there be yet many Churches whose rites differ very much from the Roman Even in Italy remaineth the rite of Millain differing from the other in the principal parts thereof and that the same Roman hath suffered many changes is clear unto any who readeth the old book called Ordo Romanus Neither in ancient time only but within these few ages certainly before 300. years the rites of Rome were not the same which the Priests observe now in the City of Rome but which the Order of the Dominicans do retain Moreover said he the Vestments Vessels and other Ornaments both of the Ministers and of the Altars which are now in use are so new and transchanged as is easie to be observed by looking on the Books and Pictures that if the old things were brought into the World again none would know them Wherefore if the Fathers will bind themselves to approve the only rites of the Roman Church they cannot want reproof as by prejudice condemning antiquity and the rites of all other Churches and so expose themselves unto the sinistrous interpretations of men wherefore it were better to set upon those things which concern the essence of the Mass without any mention of the rites And in declaring the differences betwixt then-present custom of the Romans and that which was called Ordo Romanus he nameth especially that in this the Communion was given under both the species unto the people Some were offended at his freedom of speech and the Bishop of Quinquecclesiensis did openly profess that the Frier had spoken truly neither could any who loveth truth be offended with him Hence it appeareth clearly that the Church of Rome hath been subject to novations from time to time and the Missal now is not the old book of Pope Gregory the I. More of the Mass followeth in the next Century 10. In the sixth tom of the fore-named Biblioth Patr. is a remarkable piece Amularius Fortunatus of Amalarius Fortunatus Trithemius calleth him Hamularius a very learned man in the Latine and Greek languages a Monk of Luxovia In the Preface he sheweth that he had written another book of Divine Service and thereafter he went to Rome to enquire of the reasons of the rites different there from other Churches and so he did write four other books wherein he describeth what he had heard and what he thought himself on the contrary yet in a mild and moderate way whether for fear to offend or in hope to prevail with fair information it is uncertain He saith In all that I write I hang on the judgement of godly men and holy fathers and withall I say what I think What things are done in the celebration of the Mass are done in the Sacrament of the Lord's Passion as he commanded saying How oft ye do this do it in remembrance of me Therefore the Priest in offering Bread and Wine and Water in the Sacrament representeth Christ the Bread and Wine in the Sacrament do represent his Body and Blood Sacraments should have a similitude of those things whereof they are a Sacrament wherefore let the Priest be like unto Christ so the offering of the Priest upon the Altar is like unto that of Christ on the Cross that which is offered in resemblance of Christ the Priest commendeth it unto God the Father Let the judicious hearer consider for whom are the prayers that the Priest saith after the Communion and he shall find that they sound for them who are refreshed with the heavenly bread No prayer for the dead Lib. 3. in prof It is sufficient that the Bishop or Priest do only bless the Bread and Wine whereby people may be refreshed as in ancient times it was done by the Apostles Lib. 1. Cap. 14. he saith No creature do I by reverencing adore but God all substance which is not God is a creature and a creature is not God the Cross of Christ may be set before me but in my mind I hold Christ as hanging on it The very words of the prayer declare whom we adore we say We adore thy Cross O Lord and we commend and glorifie thy holy resurrection Here are no words of praying but of shewing the adorable Cross and the commendable resurrection of our Lord. And in another place we say God who by the precious blood of thy only begotten Son our Lord Jesus Christ hast been pleased to redeem us grant graciously that who come to adore the life-giving Cross may be freed from the bonds of their sins to whom I pray him I adore I am cast down in body before the Cross but in my soul before God I reverence the Cross by which I was redeemed but I pray unto him who hath redeemed me Then he hath a story of Oswald King of England whom he calleth faithfull and most Christian how he being in danger of his enemies caused a Cross to be set up on a Tree that came first unto his hand in the Field and said unto his Army Let us all bow our knees and all pray together unto the Almighty living and true God that he of his mercy would defend us from our proud and fierce enemy for he knoweth that we have undertaken Wars for the safety of our Nation They all did as he commanded and in the dawning they obtained Victory according to their faith Here Amular gathereth no conclusion
elected that they may beleeve for the Lord himself declareth this when he saith Ye have not chosen me but I have chosen you for if they were therefore chosen because they did beleeve they did first chuse him by believing in him that they may deserve to be chosen But he takes this away altogether who said Ye have not chosen me but I have chosen you And certainly they did chuse him when they did beleeve in him therefore for no other cause saith he Ye have not chosen me but I have chosen you except because they did not chuse that he should chuse them but he did chuse them that they might chuse him because the mercy of God did prevene them with grace and not according to debt This is the immovable truth of predestination and grace In the same place he addeth God hath predestinated us ere we were he called us when we were averse he justified us when we were sinners he glorified us when we were mortal If God be thus with us who shall be against us He who will be against them who are predestinated by God against them who are called justified and glorified let him prepare himself to fight against God if he can For when we hear If God be with us who can be against us None can harm us but he who overcometh God Beda is large on this purpose there out of Augustine Of the Bread and Wine in the Sacrament he saith on Luk. 22. He breaketh the bread which he giveth that he might shew that the breaking of his body was not without his own accord when he saith Do this in remembrance of me the Apostle expoundeth it when he saith How oft ye eat of this bread and drink of this cup shew forth the Lord's death till he come because bread strengthneth flesh and wine worketh blood in the flesh the one is referred unto his body mystically and the other unto his blood And on 1 Cor. 10. at the words The cup of blessing which we bless he saith What ye see is bread and a cup which even your eys declare unto you but what faith requireth to be taught the bread is the body of Christ and the cup his blood This is spoken briefly which possibly may suffice faith but faith requireth instruction he took up his body into the Heaven whence he will come again to judge the quick and the dead there he is now sitting at the right hand of the Father How then is the Bread his Body And the Cup or what is contained in the cup how is it his blood Brethren these things are Sacraments for in them one thing is seen and another thing is understood c. When he saith The Lord breaketh the bread and the bread strengthneth flesh and it is referred unto the body mystically and even our eys declare it to be bread c. Certainly he thought not upon Transubstantiation Beda did translate the Gospel of John the Psalms and some other parts of the Scripture into the Saxons language and he writ an Epistle unto Ecbert Bishop of Lindsfarn wherein he admonisheth him of negligence in his calling and exhorteth him to translate some books of Scripture into the Saxon language that people may read them he telleth him he ought to admonish the King and correct false Monks and the builders of Monasteries if they respect their own ease more then solid vertue Ecbert returneth him answer thanking him for his Christian admonition and thereafter did translate some books of the Bible into the vulgar language as appeareth by the book of Will Butler against the common Translation In Hist Angl. lib. 1. cap. 1. he testifieth that at that time the Island of Britan did with five several languages confess one and the same knowledge of the highest truth and of true sublimity to wit the English Britans Scots Pichts and Latines which last by meditation of the Scriptures is become common unto them all Here he acknowledgeth that the faith of all the four Nations in the Island was one and the same Nevertheless he did observe and deplore the waxing corruption of the Church for in that Epistle to Ecbert he did not approve the specious and spacious buildings of Monasteries and in Samu. lib. 4. cap. 2. he saith Let the Reader behold with tears a thing worthy of tears how far the Church slideth daily into a worse or to speak moderately unto a weaker estate He did write many books as Io. Bale in Cent. 2. testifieth he lived 72 years and died An. 734. 2. In the year 724. Jua King of the West-Saxons was perswaded by his Peter's pence wife Ethelburga to go unto Rome in a Monkish habit and first did grant that a penny should be payed unto the Pope out of every fire-house of his Kingdom which was called Peter's pence and was ever almost payed until the year 1533 when King Henry the VIII shook off the Pope Ethelbert King of the East-Saxons went to marry the daughter of Offa King of Merceland and Offa did perfidiously cause him to be murthered Thereafter his pride was turned into so great repentance that he gave the tenth part of all that he had unto the Church and several lands to the Church of Hereford and then he went to Rome and gave unto the Pope a yearly penny as Jua had done An. 793. Henry Spelman in Concil reporteth out of a book De Vita Offae pag. 171. This penny was given not as a Tribute unto Saint Peter but as an alms for the help of an English Colledge at Rome and it was called Peter's pence because it was ordained to be payed on Peter's day yet certainly thereafter it was called Peter's tribute 3. About the year 786. Charls the Great King of France made a league A League between France and Scotland with Archaius King of Scots which hath continued inviolate untill our time The Saxons and others had spoiled off France by incursions and Charls did seek to adorn his Kingdom with Letters as well as Arms therefore he sought the favour of the Scots and did intreat King Archaius to send unto him Professours of the Greek and Latine languages and of other learning for his University of Paris amongst whom Archaius did send Albinus or Alcwine John Meilrosius so named from the Abbey Melrose Claudius Clemens Antoninus Florent reckoneth them amongst Hereticks who followed the Greek Church because they did oppose the Romish Rites John Meilrosius became Abbot of the Augustinians at Ticino and Claudius was Bishop of Altisiodore or Auxerre They both writ several works as Io. Bale sheweth in Cent. 14. 4. We have mentioned Boniface Bishop of Ments he was an English Boniface alias Winefrid man and called Winefrid he had boldly reproved Ethelbald King of Merceland for Adultry and Tyranny therefore the King sought his life he fled unto Rome where Pope Gregory the II. did regard him for his liberty and sent him into Germany for conversion of the Saxons then of a
together to fight for life and land and killed him An. 812. Zonar and his son Stauratius was wounded in the fight and escaped into Adrianople where he was declared Emperour but after three months Michael Rangabis his brother in-law shut him into a Monastery Then were mutual Embassadours betwixt the two Emperours and a perpetual peace was concluded An. 813. as was touched in Century 8. in Amalarius All these particulars shew evidently that the power of transferring the Empire did not appertain unto the Bishop of Rome and seeing now we have Emperours nearer us they shall be the subject of this History so that some mention shall be of the Eastern Empire 2. CHARLES the Great was crowned Emperour An. 800. in the 33. Charls the Great had care of Religion year of his reign and the 58 year of his age he did fight many battels and was alwaies victorious he had Wars with the Heathenish Saxons for the space of 30 years he did oft times overcome them and granted them liberty upon condition they would imbrace the Christian faith but on every occasion their Duke Wedekind cut off both Loyalty and Christianity At several times when Charls had obtained a Victory he erected a new Bishoprick he founded seven Bishop-Cities in that Province giving them Princely power because he did judge that the fierce people might be tamed by religion rather than by Arms these were Breme Verda Minda Padeburn Osnaburg Hildesem Halberstad Crantz in Saxon. lib. 2. cap. 23. and in cap. 22. he saith Although Charls gave unto the High-Priests power of governing yet the Nobles did not altogether lose their administration whence it came to pass that when the War was ended the Secular power beyond Visurg or the river Veser was acknowledged by them all to belong unto him At last because they had revolted he removed ten thousand of them with their wives and children into Brabant and Flanders and set some French into that Province and left his son Charls there with an Army to keep them in obedience Charls understood that the Latine Translation of the Bible was much corrupted He causeth the Latine Translation of the Bible to be amended through the negligence of Writers and gave it in charge unto Alcwin to amend the Translation who did correct both the Old and New-Testament so doth Baron tom 9. ad An. 908. testifie as also that he had an ancient Copy in Biblioth Valitella carrying Alcwin's name and Alcwin in his Epistle before his sixth book on John speaketh of that his work at the command of the King He laboured much for conversion of the Pagans in Germany and erected publick Schools at Paris Ticine and Osnaburg and furnished them with store of books he received gifts from the Calipha of Aegypt his sons Pipin and Charls died before him In the year 813. when he was grown unable to govern he sent for his son Lewes and for Bernard son of Pipin and in presence of his Peers said unto Lewes Come Lewes and with joy put this Crown upon thy head not for ornament of dignity but for safety of Our Kingdoms and Christian-Commonwealth and henceforth govern thou the Empire with happy success and the Peers did swear fidelity unto him Nor did Lewes look unto the Pope for coronation or anointing untill Pope Stephen fled for refuge unto him as followeth and then he was Crowned again at Aken Charles died in February An. 814. He began a Grammar of the German language but ended it not he changed the names of the Winds and Months from the heathenish manner He writ many books In the Epistle to Alcwin before his books De Divinis Officiis he His testimony in some articles of the faith saith When Christ was at Supper with his Disciples he broke the bread and gave the cup to them in figure of his body and blood and left a great Sacrament which is profitable unto us Lib. 1. cap. 15. The mercy of our Mediatour is above the Legal and Evangelical Precepts through which mercy we are saved not by our works which we have done nor by our willing or running but by his mercy Lib. 3. cap. 25. The miracles which they say have appeared in images if they did not appear truly as no authentical Of Miracles History sheweth were but lies if by some imaginary overshadowing they did appear to deceive mens minds it is most dangerous lest that old enemy by his subtile art by shew of wonders perswade deceitfully to do unlawfull things But if these things did verily appear which cannot be proved by any certain warrant we should understand that when many and wondrous things are done at the pleasure of God by some creatures or in whatsoever creatures they be done yet these things are not to be worshipped by which or in which these wonders are made because the Almighty God who sheweth many signs unto men by visible and palpable things to mollifie the hardness of mens hearts by these visible things doth not work these signs to confirm the worship of any creature for he hath commanded to worship and adore him alone Because God spoke out of a bush unto Moses should the bush therefore be worshipped Because a woman was healed by touching the hem of Christ's garment should hems therefore be worshipped Lib. 4. Cap. 2. The Holy and Catholick Church professeth to serve God not by images nor by men nor aetheral powers but by Christ our Lord Catal. test ver lib. 8. Charls made many Laws and Ecclesiastical Constitutions His Ecclesiastical Constitutions which Ansegisus or Angisus Abbot of Lobien and then Arch-Bishop of Senonen gathered together with the Constitutions of Lewes and divided them into seven books Sinderus testifieth that they were in the Abbey of Saint Gallus and were Printed lately at Paris In the Preface he saith he had appointed these Constitutions with advice of his Priests and Counsellers and that he had followed the example of King Josias who indeavoured to bring the Kingdom which God had given him unto the worship of the true God Lib. 1. He commanded to try the learning and conversation of Intrantes he did forbid private Masses and appealed to the See of Rome but indirectly Ca. 10. He forbiddeth confusion of Diocies or that no Bishop should medle with any Parish of another Diocy he forbiddeth any books to be read publickly but what were approved by the Councel at Chalcedon cap 20. And cap. 42. he forbiddeth to worship Saints Cap. 82. He commandeth that Bishops suffer not the Priests to teach the people other things then are contained in or according to the Holy Scriptures Lib. 2. cap. 3. Although the authority of the Ecclesiastical Ministry may seem to stand in our person yet by the authority of God and ordinance of man it is known to be so divided that every one of you in his own place and order hath his own place and ministery hence it is manifest that I should admonish you all
them which have not beleeved in him nor will ever beleeve as the Lord himself saith Matth. 20 The Son of man came ... to give his soul in redemption for many 4. That he beleeve and confess that the Almighty God saveth whom he willeth and that none at all can be saved but whom he will save and that all are saved whom he will save and therefore it is not at all his will those be saved whosoever are not saved as the Prophet saith Whatsoever the Lord willeth he doth that both in Heaven and on Earth And saith Prudent although there be some other things wherein he hath satisfied and subscribed in which being condemned in Pelagius the Church hath universally consented yet these being against him and his followers cleared from his froward expositions by the Apostolical See at the instance of the blessed Aurelius Bishop of Carthage and of Augustine with other 214 Bishops and being published unto all the World by many both Epistles and Books all the Church to day rejoiceth in confesseth preacheth holdeth and shall hold This Epistle of Prudentius is in the 2 tome of the French Councels and by it we may see not only his mind but the universal doctrine of all the Church in all the World as he affirmeth Although Histories do not express whether Aeneas did subscribe these Articles yet it may be gathered from the 99 Epistle of Lupus Ferarien where he commends this Aeneas and saith that Prudentius with the other Bishops did confirm his ordination By authority of Lotharius a Synod was held An. 855. at Valentia the Canons thereof follow hereafter For the present I add the words of Baronius concerning it generally saying The Bishops thought good to bring no other thing into the Church then what the most holy Fathers and faithfull Teachers of the Church had in all sincerity taught formerly in Affrica in the Councel at Carthage and in France in the Councel at Arausicane whereunto we should cleave in all points to wit that the godly are saved no other way but by the grace of God and the wicked are condemned for their own iniquity And that the wicked do not perish because as some say they could not be good but because they would not Then he sheweth that the Acts of this Synod were sent unto Hincmar and that he did by writing condemn these errours But Vsser taxeth Baronius that he hath written of this matter slenderly and from the writings of Hincmar and from Acts of Synods convinceth him especially he declareth from a book of the Church of Lions that there was diversity of opinions among them of Lions concerning the fifth Canon of this Synod which in the end of that book thinks the greatest difference between the Elect and the Reprobates to be that in the Reprobates remaineth the guiltiness of the first transgression which is taken from the Elect by the blood of Christ Also he sheweth that in the year 856 in the moneth of August Charls the Bald did call a Synod at Bonoile by Paris and another in September at Nielph where he gave unto Hincmar the Articles of the Synod at Valentia and what he had received from others in favour of Gotteschalk that Hincmar should answer unto them and that after three years Hincmar did return a great book of God's predestination and of man's free-will as Flodoard sheweth Hist lib. 3. cap. 13 and that the adverse party was not satisfied by that great volumn neither was the authority of the Valentian Synod lessned and therefore An. 859 Charls calleth another Synod in Audemantunno Lingonum where for the instruction of God's people the Canons of the Valentian Synod were voiced and confirmed again and proclaimed only in the fifth Canon they express not the four Articles because they perceive Hincmar was offended by so express condemning them as if they thereby had neglected the limits and law of charity and they did add the name of John Scot unto the nineteen Articles This Synod is called Lingonensis in Concil Gall. tom 3. After 14 daies was a more frequent Synod of twelve Provinces at Saponaria a Village of the City of Tullen where was King Charls and his Nephews Lotharius and Charls sons of the Emperour Lotharius there the Canons of the former Synod and the Carisiac Articles were read again and again great contention was between Remigius and Hincmar with their followers the one pleading for and the other against the Articles of Gotteschalk but as Hincmar writeth in an Epistle Dedicatory unto Charls the Bald the stir was calmed by the wisedom of the Arch-Bishop Remigius exhorting them all to bring unto the next Synod the books of the Catholick Doctours and as they shall find them agreeing unto the Apostolical and Catholick doctrine all should hold together unanimously It appeareth in the Acts of this Synod that it was so soon closed because of the murmurs in the country All this time Gotteschalk was still in Prison in the Monastery of Haultvillier whence he sent forth first a short confession and then a larger one confirmed by testimonies of Scripture and of the ancient Doctours In the end of the latter he craved that there might be a free Synod wherein truth might be made known unto all and errours altogether taken away and he lamenteth that for baseness of his person truth is despised and his adversaries follow not charity and refuse verity only that they may seem victorious Now of all that I have read concerning his Confessions and the writings of both parties I gather that at that time the greatest controversie was concerning the predestination of the wicked unto punishment howbeit there was also some difference concerning free-will and the efficient cause of conversion or of faith and good works And because Hincmar in his Epistle unto Whence was the word Pr●destinatians Pope Nicolaus and Semipelagians make mention of Hereticks whom they call Praedestinati or Praedestinatiani here I add concerning that name that the first who mentioneth it was he who writ the continuation of Ierom's Chronicle for he about the 24 year of Arcadius and Honorius writeth saying At this time began the heresie of Praedestinati which had the beginning from Augustine So it is expressly saith Vsser in Histor Gottes cap. 2. in two old manuscripts one in the King's Bibliotheke and another in the Benedictines at Cambridge although in the Printed books it is not said from Augustine but from the books of Augustine being ill understood And certainly these words of Hincmar are frivolous since Pope Celestine did not write against such an heresie but against the Pelagians as is clear in his Epistles unto Augustine and he doth approve the doctrine of Augustine and Prosper in his Epistle unto Augustine which and the Epistles of Celestine are amongst the Epistles of Augustine writeth saying Many of the servants of Christ which are in the City Massilies think that in the writings of your Holiness against the Pelagian Hereticks whatsoever you
have disputed concerning the calling of the Elect according to the purpose of God is contrary unto the opinion of the Fathers and the mind of the Church But it is sure that the Massilians were Semipelagians And Arnobius on Psal 108. hath this note Mark saith he that it was of his will that he would not Because of the heresie which saith God hath predestinated some unto blessing and others unto damnation In a word whosoever pleaseth to search for this heresie he cannot find that ever there was such an one but that the Pelagians or Semipelagians have used the name to discredit the sound doctrine of Augustine and they seeing his books to be in high esteem and authority in the Church were afraid to put it upon him and they did wrest some conclusions out of his books which they did brand with the odious name of such an heresie 17. At this time was Published an Exegesis or Commentary on thirteen The Exegesis of the Epistle of Paul by Remigius is vindicated Epistles of the Apostle Paul which was lately Printed at Rome under the name of Remigius Rhemensis which lived about the year 540 a Jesuit Baptista Villapand gave out that he had found it at Saint Caecilia in Rome and did publish it as a rich treasure lying so long time in a manuscript Andr. Rivet in Critic sacr lib. 4. cap. 27. sheweth the vanity of the Jesuit seeing the same book was Printed above 30 years before that at Paris two several times and in the Book is mention of Gregory and Beda I add another reason that Exegesis on 2 Thess 2. at these words Except there come a falling away first All Kingdoms shall fall away from the Roman Empire and the man of sin to wit the Antichrist who although he is a man yet shall he be the fountain of all sins Be revealed and made manifest and the son of perdition i. e. a son of the Divel not by nature but by imitation and is called perdition because perdition shall come by him ..... He shall sit in the Temple of God shewing himself as if he were God This may be understood two waies And here he hath first that opinion that Antichrist shall be born at Babylon of the Tribe of Dan c. and then he addeth Or also he shall sit in the Temple of God i. e. in the Church shewing himself as if he were God for as the fulness of God-head did rest in Christ so in that man who is called Antichrist because he is contrary unto Christ the fulness of all wickedness and iniquity shall dwell because in him shall be the head of all wickedness the Divel who is the King above all the children of pride In these words the Apostle demonstrates unto the Thessalonians that the Lord shall not come to judgment untill there be a defection of the Roman Empire Note which now we see fulfilled and Antichrist appearing in the World who shall kill the Martyrs of Christ So far there It is true Chrysostom and others had long before expounded that Text in the same manner but none did apply it in that manner neither could it be applied before that time seeing the Empire of Rome though sometimes more weakned than at other times yet was never solow before the daies of Lotharius then every Nation had their own King and Lotharius had a part of France and a part of Italy and his Successour had no more but a part of Italy As for the appearing of Antichrist we have heard before in Sect. 14. what Gunther and Thietgaud writ unto Pope Nicolaus and in Sect. 15 what Luithpett writ unto King Lewis both which agree with this exposition and application Hence it followeth that this Commentary That Exegesis is not for but rather against Transubstantiation could not be written before this time Next consider for what cause the Jesuit and after him others do commend this Commentary to wit thereby they would prove the fancy of Transubstantiation to have been so old for on 1 Cor. 10. it is said The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ Certainly first it is consecrate and blessed by the Priests and the Holy Ghost and then broken and now although it seem videatur or is seen to be Bread in verity it is the body of Christ of which Bread whosoever communicates he eats the body of Christ And again it is said there That Bread doth pass transit into the body of Christ neither are they two bodies but one body Because the explication of this testimony may serve for clearing many other such testimonies I will set before you the words preceding and following and then confer all together First a little from the beginning of that Chap. it is said He saith not The Rock did signifie Christ but as if it had been in truth The Rock was Christ though certainly it was not so by substance but by signification Likewise speaking of the two sons of Abraham he saith not These signifie the two Testaments but These are the two Testaments Christ then in respect of firmness is the Rock not by substance and the water which did flow out of the Rock signifieth the doctrine of Christ and the grace of the Holy Ghost of which in the Gospel Who thirsts let him come to me and drink c. It is also called a spiritual and following Rock because it signifieth spiritually Christ who followed them of which spiritual Rock following them they did drink because when human help failed them Christ was at hand giving help by whose powet who is the Word of God the Father they were delivered out of the Land of Aegypt and brought into the Land of Promise So far there And in the other place it is written thus The Cup is called Communication i. e. partaking because all do communicate of it and receive a part of the blood of Christ which it containeth in it And the Bread which we break on the Altar is it not a partaking of the Body of Christ Certainly first it is consecrate and blessed by the Priests and Holy Ghost and then it is broken and now although it seem videatur or it is seen to be bread in verity it is the body of Christ of which bread whosoever communicateth they eat the body of Christ because one Bread to wit of Christ and one Body to wit of Christ we many are who eat that Bread the flesh which the Word of God the Father did assume in the Virgins womb in the unity of person and the bread which is consecrate in the Church are one body of Christ for as that flesh is the body of Christ so that bread doth pass transit into the body of Christ neither are they two bodies but one body for the fullness of the God-head which was in him filleth also that bread and the same God-head of the Word which filleth Heaven and Earth and all things therein the same filleth the
obit Quem sacrae fidei vestigia summa tenentem Huic jam quinta dies abstulit ausa nefas Illa dies damnosa dies perfida mundo Quâ dolor rerum summa ruina fuit Quâ status ecclesiae quâ spes quâ gloria cleri Quâ cultor juris jure ruente ruit Post obitum secum vivam procor ac requiescam Nec fiat melior sors mea sorte sua Platina in Iohan. 15. calleth Berengarius famous for learning and holiness He is reported to have been an hearty friend to learning and did breed many Students of Divinity at his proper charge and by means of them his doctrine was sowed through all France and the Countries adjacent this was matter unto his adversaries to envy him the more Albeit he did waver as Peter did and albeit his doctrine was so oft condemned by the Popes yet it could not be rooted out of men for Math. Paris in Hist ad ann 1087. writeth that all France was affected with this doctrine And Math. Westmonast at the same time saith That the doctrin of Berengarius had corrupted all the French Italian and English Nations so that the Berengarians that is the Preachers of the true faith which the Romanists call Heresie against the rising errors did not lurk in a corner And Sigebert Gemblac in Chron. saith Much was disputed by many both for him and against him by word and by writing Ex edit Antwerp anno 1608. where it is to be marked saith Vsser de eccles succes c. 8. that in the Edition at Paris anno 1589. the words For him are omitted Also Thuan in the Epistle Dedicatory of the Hystory of his time hath marked That in Germany were many of the same doctrine and that Bruno Bishop of Treveres banisht them all out of his Diocess but sparing their blood And Io. Tossington a Franciscan in his confession set forth anno 1380. saith thus The heretical sentence which is raised of the dreams of Berengarius affirmeth openly that all the Fathers of the Church and doctors of the second thousand years as they speak that is who have been within 380. years have been after the loosing of Satan and the doctrine which we saith he commonly hold to be the faith of the Church concerning the blessed Eucharist they say It is not right but an error and heresie and the tares of Satan being let loose Vsser c. 3. 6. To defend the words of the former recantation which was given in Twofold eating with the mouth was devised then and is refuted the Synod at Lateran unto Berengarius these flatterers of the Romish Idol have devised a new distinction of orall eating to wit orall eating is either visible or invisible And they called the opinion of eating Christ's flesh visibly the error of the Capernaites and they said the eating of Christ's flesh with the mouth invisibly was the explication of Christ so writeth Ivo Bishop of Carnotum anno 1092. Catalo test ver lib. 12. But the Fathers of higher antiquity condemned all orall eating as Capernaitism neither were the Capernaites so subtile to make such distinctions Yea surely Christ would have made his correction according to their error Behold what Augustine saith Tract 27. in Iohan. Who abideth not in Christ and in whom Christ abideth not without all doubt he neither spiritually eateth Christ's flesh nor drinketh his blood albeit carnally and visibly he with his teeth do press the Sacrament of the body and blood of Christ And Tract 28. What is it they are spirit and life they are spiritually to be understood understandest thou them spiritually they are spirit and life understandest thou them carnally so also they are spirit and life but not to thee They understanding spiritual things carnally were scandalised Here Augustine opposeth carnal eating whether visible or invisible unto spiritual eating and understanding and he saith that carnally men eat not the flesh of Christ but the Sacrament of his flesh 7. Bellarmin writeth in his second Book de Pon. Rom. c. 21. that the great The causes of the schism twixt the Latins and Greeks Schism twixt the Greeks and the Latines began anno 1054. because in that year Michael the Patriarch of Constantinople did excommunicate the Pope and all the Romanists for adding Filioque unto the Decree of the Ephesin Council concerning the procession of the holy Spirit Here we may see who made the Schism the Greeks kept the Decree as it was first enacted but the Latins added Filioque And when in the same place Bellarmine saith It is uncertain when the Latins added it but certainly saith he not before the 600. year and the Greeks espied the addition in the days of Pope Nicolaus LAt this time Pope Leo IX wrote against the Greeks and Michael the Patriarch and Nicolas a Monk wrote against the Latins Of this difference I will speak God willing when I come to the Council at Florence where they disputed this question Why was there so great a Schism then Bellarmin de Cleri li. 1. c. 19. saith The differences were not confined within that one but there were many others of which these are rehearsed by Fox in Act. Mon. out of an old Register of Hereford 1. The Church of Constantinople is not subject but equal unto Rome 2. The Bishop of Rome hath no greater power then the four Patriarchs and whatsoever he doeth without their knowledge and concurrence is of no strength against them 3. Whatsoever hath been concluded or done since the seven general Councils is not of full authority because from that time they convince the Latins to be in an error and to be excluded from the holy Church 4. The Eucharist is not the very body of Christ also whereas the Romish Church doth use unleavened wafers they have great loaves of leavened bread 5. They say that the Romish Church erreth in the words of Baptism for the Romanists say I baptise thee c. but the Greeks say Let this creature of God be baptised in the name c. 6. They hold that the Spirit proceedeth from the Father and not from the Son of this in another place 7. They hold no Purgatory nor that the prayers of the Church do help the dead either to lessen the pain of them in hell or to increase the glory of them who are ordained for salvation 8. They hold the souls of the dead whether elect or reprobate have not their full pain nor glory but are reserved to a certain neutral place till the day of judgement 9 They condemn the Church of Rome because Women as well as Priests anoint children when they baptise them on both shoulders 10. They call our bread Panagria 11. They condemn our Church for celebrating Mass on other days then Sundays and certain Feasts 12. They have neither cream nor oyl nor Sacrament of Confirmation 13. Neither do they use extream unction expounding the place of St James of spiritual infirmity and not of corporal 14. They injoyn
two Gentlemen for cutting his horse tail On the fifth day four Gentlemen did kill him in the year 1171. At Easter Pope Alexander canonized him as a Saint and would have excommunicated the King for his death but the King by his Ambassadors purged himself that he knew not of his death yet because he did carry grudge at him he was forced to renounce the investiture of Bishops and thereby his Kingdom became more slavish then before And the Pope in token of his victory to the shame of the King and credit of the Clergy did pretend some miracles as done by this Thomas after his death and commanded his feast to be kept throughout the Kingdom and the Cathedral which before was called Christ's Church was after that called St. Thomas Becket's and to the end the King might suffer this infamy the more patiently and also to make Ireland the more subject unto the See of Rome Pope Alexander confirmed again unto King Henry the Lordship of Ireland and ordained that the Bishops there should obey the Laws of England For in the year 1155. Murchard or as some call him Dermot mac Morrog King of Leinster being exiled by O. Roricy King of Midia sought aid from Henry II. he sent Richard Strongbow Earl of Penbrok who had married the onely Daughter of Murchard with a considerable Army into Ireland and within a short space he restored his father in law and conquered other Lands so that Henry was jealous of his power and commanded by open Proclamation him and all his Army to return under pain of forfeiture In obedience Richard gave into the King's hand all his purchase and his wifes inheritance and again received as his vassal Weisford Ossoria Carterlogia c. But in the year 1172 Henry went personally into Ireland and the most part submitted themselves unto him as unto their onely and lawful Soveraign whereas in former times that Nation was divided into four petty Kingdoms and several Dukedoms and one of them was chosen Monarch The same Henry did claim the Lands of Northumberland and from the Scots Malcolm the maiden and his Brother William at two several times went to London and did acknowledge the King for these Lands whereas in former times the Heir of the Crown did onely perform that ceremony But then Henry would have more that all the Bishops of Scotland should be under the yoke of the Arch-Bishop The Bishops of Scotland will not submit to the Primate of York of York as their Metropolitan At the first meeting at Norham the Scots put it off but with slender delays The next year Hugo Cardinal de S. Angelo sent into England was for Henry in this purpose and did cite the Bishops of Scotland to compear before him in Northampton they went thither and the Cardinal had a speech of humility and obedience all to perswade the Scotch Bishops to submit themselves unto the Primate of York who was a Prelate of great respect and whose credit in the Court of Rome might serve them to good use A yong Clerk stood up and spake in name of the others his speech is written diversly I shall shew it as I have copied it out of an old Register of Dunkel by the favor of Bishop Alexander Lindsay It is true English Nation thou mightest have been noble and more noble then some other Nations if thou hadst not craftily turned the power of thy Nobility and the strength of thy fearful might into the presumption of tyranny and thy knowledge of Liberal Science into the shifting Glosses of Sophistry but thou disposest not thy purposes as if thou wert lead with reason and being puft up with thy strong Armies and trusting in thy great wealth thou attemptest in thy wretched ambition and lust of domineering to bring under thy jurisdiction thy neghbor Provinces and Nations more noble I will not say in multitude or power but in linage and antiquity unto whom if thou wilt consider ancient records thou shouldest rather have been humbly obedient or at least laying aside thy rancor have reigned together in perpetual love and now with all wickedness of pride that thou shewest without any reason or law but in thy ambitious power thou seekest to oppress thy mother the Church of Scotland which from the beginning hath been Catholique and free and which brought thee when thou wast straying in the wilderness of heathenism into the safe-guard of the true faith and way unto life even unto Jesus Christ the Author of eternal rest she did wash thy Kings and Princes and people in the laver of holy Baptism she taught thee the commandments of God and instructed thee in moral duties she did accept many of thy Nobles and others of meaner rank when they were desirous to learn to read and gladly gave them dayly entertainment without price books also to read and instruction freely she did also appoint ordain and consecrate thy Bishops and Priests by the space of thirty years and above she maintained the primacy and pontifical dignity within thee on the North side of Thames as Beda witnesseth And now I pray what recompence renderest thou unto her that hath bestowed so many benefits on thee is it bondage or such as Judea rendered unto Christ evil for good it seemeth no other thing Thou unkinde vine how art thou turned into bitterness we looked for grapes and thou bringest forth wilde grapes for judgement and behold iniquity and crying If thou couldest do as thou wouldest thou wouldest draw thy mother the Church of Scotland whom thou shouldest honor with all reverence into the basest and most wretchedst bondage Fie for shame what is more base when thou wilt do no good to continue in doing wrong even the serpents will not do harm to their own albeit they cast forth to the hurt of others the vice of ingratitude hath not so much moderation an ungrateful man doth wrack and masacre himself and he dispiseth and minceth the benefits for which he should be thankful but multiplieth and enlargeth injuries It was a true saying of Seneca I see The more some do owe they hate the more a small debt maketh a grievous enemy What sayest thou David it is true They rendered me evil for good and hatred for my love It is a wretched thing saith Gregory to serve a Lord who cannot be appeased with whatsoever obeysance Therefore thou Church of England doest as becomes thee not thou thinkest to carry what thou cravest and to take what is not granted seek what is just if thou wilt have pleasure in what thou seekest And to the end I do not weary others with my words albeit I have no charge to speak for the liberty of the Church of Scotland and albeit all the Clergy of Scotland would think otherwise yet I dissent from subjecting her and I do appeal unto the Apostolical Lord unto whom immediately she is subject and if it were needful for me to die in the cause here I am ready to lay down my
bread of the Mass and that the Eucharist should be carried with lighted candles unto the sick De celebrat Miss lib. 3. tit 41. c. Sanè It followeth to speak of his pride He sat eleven years 3. GREGORY the IX so soon as he was set in his Chair sent a Nuntio Steven into England to crave the tenth part of all movables both of the Nobility and Clergy for maintenance of his wars against the Emperor but under the name of wars against the Infidels Because they refused he excommunicateth them all until they obeyed P. Mornay in Myster The next year he sent his Legates through Europe who by preachings entreatings and excommunications purchased great sums of money as if it had been for aid of the holy Land but it could not be known into what gulf so vast sums were hid but the care of the holy Land was forgot and the charity of men grew cold Mat. Paris Behold the issue it was to repress the Emperor Frederick who is more execrable said the Pope then Pharaoh Nero or any Tyrant He sent his Legate Albert Beham into Germany to deprive all Bishops and to excommunicate all Laicks adhering unto the Emperor or who wished him well But at that time none of the Bishops nor Abbots regarded that commission and being assembled they openly protested That the Priest of Rome had no power in Germany without consent of the Bishops there Let the Priest of Rome feed his Italians said they we who are the dogs of this flock will beat away the wolves lurking under lambs skins what he will do to others ye may know seeing this disguised Vicar so dealeth with us The Pope accursed Frederick Duke of Austria as the chief of that Assembly and Eberhard Bishop of Salzburgh presently absolved him And all the Bishops with one consent accursed the Pope as the enemy of Christian peace a most damnable Arch-Heretick and more pestiferous then the Turks Jews or Tartars seeing he doth such things as those had never done the like Mornay in Myster ex Avent lib. 7. Annal. Boio Then Gregory sent unto the Canons and Monks charging them to choose other Prelates They would not Therefore he charged some of them to compear before him for their rebellion They contemned his summons Then the Princes and Clergy of Germany assembled again but the Pope died This opposition had he abroad neither wanted he enemies at home for in his first year was so great variance between him and the Citizens that he fled out of Rome about Easter to Viterbio and then to Pirusio and having no other means of revenge he excommunicated them all The cause of this sedition was the Citizens claimed an ancient custome and law that the Pope should not excommunicate any of them nor suspend the City with any interdiction for any excess He answered The Pope is less then God but greater then any man consequently greater then a Citizen yea greater is he then any Emperor and seeing he is their spiritual father he may chastise his children and reduce them so oft as they go astray Moreover the Romans alledged that their Bishops were tied to pay unto the Senate yearly tribute both by ancient and late laws of which they have been in use and possession until these days Gregory replied Albeit in time of persecution the Church for her defence and cause of peace had gratified the heads of the City with kindely rewards yet that should not now be pleaded as a debt This strife was not soon ended Mat. Paris ad An. 1234. It would seem incredible almost to read how vast sums of money this Pope did rake together by exactions voluntary offerings confirmations of Bishopricks removing variances betwixt Bishops and Magistrates and other Church-men and especially for dispensing with oaths by all which what inconveniences did arise it cannot be told saith Matth. Parisien ibid. for as there was nothing so hard or absurd wherewith the Pope could not dispense for money so the people trusting to dispensations did little regard how great evil they did As for example Henry King of England being desirous of a taxation did swear in Parliament that he would ratifie some ancient Liberties which they were suing and after the tax was granted he past from his oath by a dispensation At another time the same Henry did sign himself with the cross pretending and swearing that he would go into the holy Land against the Infidels when the money was amassed for his journey he gave over his journey being assured that the Pope would acquit him for 100. or 200. pounds From this sink of dispensations did more and more abound the plurality of Benefices in one mans person Bishopricks were bestowed on men without literature children were made Parsons kinsfolks were married within degrees in a word what kinde of iniquity was not committed under sure confidence of dispensations Matth. Parisien This Gregory made truce with the Emperor An. 1240. and within a few moneths he calleth for the Cardinals John de Columna and Raymond and said I am ashamed of the truce made with the enemy of the Church go therefore unto the Emperor thou John who wast mediator betwixt us and shew him that I will not accept the articles and that I am his enemy John answereth Far be that inconstancy from such an one I will not consent unto this counsel yea I earnestly contradict it Gregory saith Then from this forth I will not hold thee for a Cardinal John answereth Nor will I have thee for a Pope Thus they were parted with mutual defiance Ibid. When the King of France heard of this he commandeth to hold up all the moneys that the Legate had amassed under the name of relief for the holy Land and then the Pope was content to keep the truce Ibid. He was the Author of that hymn Salve Regina c. in which he giveth unto the blessed Virgin the proper worship of Christ In his name were published the Books of Decretals that were collected by Raymond a Dominican He sat fourteen years and died An. 1241. When the Cardinals came together for election Robert Somerset an English Cardinal was likely to have carried it and in the mean time he and some others who did incline that way were poisoned to the great infamy of the Roman Clergy saith Mat. Paris 4. CELESTIN the IV. a very old man attaineth the Chair by promises He sat eighteen days and was poisoned Then the See was vacant twenty and one moneths because the Emperor had some Cardinals under arrest whom at last he dismissed by intercession of Baldwin Greek Emperor and Raymund Earl of Tolouse 5. Here it shall not be amiss to insert the comparison of these former Popes A parallel of preceeding and following Popes with others following as it is in Io. Bale Catal. From Silvester the Il. until this year 1242. that is for the space of 240. years Antichrist did reign in the Roman Church like some accursed Lucifer for in
premunitions resignations in favors commenda's dispensations of age of order irregularity and bodily faults Item the tribute for the favor of expectations from devolutions from Benefices ere they be vacant for priviledges and exemptions of not visiting agreements of reconciled persons transactions that are made with the Pope's good pleasure for exchange of Benefices with dispensation Episcopal mandats expeditions in forma vel ratione congrui for creating Prothonotaries and Notaries Apostolical for letters of colleagues or fellow-helpers for letters of lesser or higher justice for Dignities Secular and Ecclesiastical for new foundations or change of the ancients for reduction of Regular Monasteries into the condition of Secular for restitution in integrum for the fruit to be had in time of absence for legitimations for porcative altars for non obstantiis for dispensations to Secular Canons for revocations and ranversings for tolerations of concubines usually termed Toleramus for rescriptions unto pleas c. Of this merchandise is a Papal book with this inscription Taxa Cancellariae Apostolicae cum Notabilibus juxta stylum hodicrnum Curiae Romanae In this book is a sentence exprest in these words And note diligently that these favors and dispensations are not granted unto poor folks And what gain is amassed of these particulars take an example from the grievances of the Parliament of Paris which they did present unto King Lewes the XI and which was translated into Latin and printed three several times cum privilegto Regis Art 72. And that we may demonstrate particularly how much the Realm hath been exhausted of moneys within these three years it is observed that in the time of Pope Pius twenty and more Arch-Bishopricks and Bishopricks were vacant within the Realm and without doubt partly for the annual tribute which they call Annata and partly for the accessory and extraordinary charges from every City 6000. crowns were paid in sum 120000. crown Art 68. More then sixty Abbeys did vake whereof each one hath paid 2000. crowns at least in sum 120000. Art 74. At the same time Priories Deanries Provestries Preceptories and such other Dignities which are not honored with the Crosier were vacant no fewer then two hundred and for each of these Benefices were paid five hundred crowns in sum 100000. crowns Art 75. It is certain that in the Realm are at least 100000. Parishes and there is none of them in which some man hath not obtained some grace or favor expective and for each one of these were paid 25. crowns partly for the expenses of the way or journey partly for writing the Bulls for the non obstantiis prerogatives annullations and other special causes which depend upon these expectative graces as also for the executorial process that were made upon the same graces in sum 2500000. crowns So far the Parliament of Paris Summa summarum is 2840000. crowns This was paid in three years As also it is found that the tax of vacancies accounted in the books of the Camera from Cathedral Churches and Abbeys in France do every sixth year amount to the sum of 697750. lievers besides Prelacies which are not taxed and other Benefices the exactions of which do almost amount unto the same sum Pag. 77. There was a book printed at Paris An. 1520. with the priviledge of the Parliament of Paris on June 6. of the same year with this title Taxa Cancellariae Apostolicae taxa sacra poenitentiariae item Apostolicae where fol. 36. may be seen the prices and merchandise Apostolical of absolutions Absolution for a Monk wearing pointed shoes and a coat tied up 7. s. Absolutions for a Priest that hath confirmed in marriage persons within degrees forbidden 7. s. For him that hath known a woman within the Church and hath committed other villanies 6. s. For a Priest that hath married persons privily and hath been present at their clandestin weddings 7. s. For a Laick who hath stolen holy things out of a holy place 7. s. For him which hath carnally known his mother sister or his kinswomen by blood or marriage or his godmother 5. s. For him which hath defloured a virgin 6. s. For perjury 6. s. For a Laick which hath killed an Abbot or any Priest inferior unto a Bishop or a Monk or Clerk 7 8 or 9. s. Absolution for the murther of a Laick by a Laick 5. s. For a Priest Dean or Clerk when his supplication is signed with Fiat 18 or 16. s. For him which hath killed his father mother brother sister wife or any kinsman being a Laick because if any of them were a Clerk the murtherer is bound to visit the Apostolical See 5 or 7. s. For a man that hath smitten his wife so that thereupon she hath a mischance or hath brought forth before the time 6. s. For a woman which hath taken any drink or done any other thing to destroy her birth after it was quickened in her belly 5. s. Is not the condition of Christians miserable and hath need to be bewailed So that Fla. Blondus lib. 3. Romae instauratae hath written truly Now the Princes of the world do adore and worship the perpetual Dictator the high Priest and all Europe almost sendeth unto Rome now greater tribute or certainly equal unto ancient times in so far but as every City do receive Priestly benefits from the Bishop of Rome So far Blondus And that this may be understood I shall adjoyn the words of Suetonius in the life of Julius Caesar where writing of France he saith He brought all France into the form of a Province and laid on them to pay yearly in name of tribute four hundred Sestertium and Eutropius lib. 6. saith the same which sum according to the supputation of Budaeus de Asse The Schism betwixt the Latin and Greek Churches is 1000000. crowns or a Million So far ex Bru. Fulm 10. When the Latins did reign in Constantinople the Greek Church was in some manner made subject unto Rome until the year 1230. at this time the seam-ript coat was rent in sunder upon this occasion A certain Bishop was elected unto an Arch-Bishoprick in Greece and came to Rome to be confirmed but could not obtain confirmation unless he would pay a great sum of money unto Pope Gregory the IX The Bishop detesting simony refuseth and returning without confirmation declareth unto the Nobility of the Land the matter as it was others which had been with him did testifie the same Wherefore all the Greeks made a general separation from the Church of Rome After seven years Germanus Patriarch of Constantinople wrote unto the same Gregory humbly intreating to advise upon some means of unity that the truth on both sides being debated by Scriptures the erring party might be reduced the slander be removed and unity be restored offering also that notwithstanding his old and feeble age he would meet him in the middle way The Pope replieth Christ said to Peter Thou art Cephas the power of judging
21. unto the King and Peers of France he saith Lift up your eyes round about hearken with your ears ye sons of men and behold the general scandal of the world lament the division of Nations and the general decay of justice and wickedness proceedings from the Elders of Babylon who heretofore seemed to rule the world but now they turn judgement into bitterness and the fruits of righteousness into wormwood In Epist 31. unto all Prelates he saith A Pharisee anointed with the oyl of wickedness above his fellows the Roman high Priest of our time sitting in the chair of perverse doctrine endeavoreth to destroy what is warranted from above he intendeth to eclipse the rays of our Majesty and turning truth into a fable he sendeth his Letters into divers parts of the world full of lyes accusing the purity of our faith at his pleasure and not with reason He who is a Pope by name onely hath written that we are the Beast rising out of the Sea full of the names of blaspemy and we do aver that he is the Beast of which it is said Another red horse came out of the Sea and he who sitteth upon him taketh away peace from the earth for from the day of his promotion that father not of mercies but of discords a diligent procurer of desolation not of consolation hath turned all the world into scandals and to use his own word in the right sense he is the great Dragon who deceiveth all the world he is the Antichrist whose forerunner he calleth us he is another Balaam hired for a reward to curse us he is the Angel coming out of the bottomless pit having the vials full of bitterness c. By these few passages it may appear what good and learned men have thought of the Pope 13. In the first Book of Epistles written by the now named Petrus de Vineis Philip King of France his Letter to the Cardinals the 34. is in name of Philip King of France directed unto the Cardinals concerning the election of the Pope there he saith What provoketh them unto discord greediness of gold and ambition for they think not what is expedient but what they would have they make more account of their particular interest then the publique and wickedly prefer their gain unto honesty how then shall they rule others who cannot rule themselves who hurt their friends and do good to their enemies and in the end catch nothing unto themselves The Court of Rome was wont to be glorious in knowledge maners and vertue and were not provoked with the menaces of fortune because they thought they were safest under the protection of vertue then of chance but now it cannot be called Curia sed cura a Court but care they love a mark of money better then Mark 's Gospel a salmon better then Solomon they love honor and eschew a burthen they love to be advanced but neglect the profiting of their subjects in piety such cannot be called shepheards but rather impious wolves by whose perfidiousness the holy Mother the Church is trod under foot faith is undone hope is put away and love is pulled up by the roots 14. In the year 1253. was great contention between the Masters of Sorbon Contestation of the Sorbonists against the Minorites in Paris and the preaching Friers who were so increased in number and honor becoming the Confessors and Counsellors of Kings that they would not be subject unto the former Laws and Customs The School-men conveened and were content to want somewhat of their weekly portion to satisfie the Court of Rome from which the Friers had obtained their priviledges or as Mat. Parisien in Henri IV. speaketh their horns after the wasting of a great deal of money and much travel bestowed on both sides some Customs of the University were changed and a kinde of agreement was made In the next year the contention was hotter and the Friers would multiply their number in despite of the University and City the King and City would have preserved the Custom of the School but the Friers had more favor with the Pope because of their great service unto the Court and they carried the victory and the Pope ordained that they might teach Divinity without account of the former order concerning the number In time of this contention the Friers published a book with the title of The eternal Gospel whereof John de Parma an Italian Monk was said to be the Author The eternal Gospel On the other side four Masters of the University set forth another Of the danger of the last times one of the four was William de Sancto Amore and therefore the Friers called the favorers of that book Amoraei In this book the Masters say Now there be fifty five years since some have attempted to change the Gospel of Jesus Christ into another Gospel which they call the Gospel of the holy Ghost and when he cometh the Gospel of Jesus Christ shall be abolished as we are ready to prove by that accursed book Ia. Vsser in his book De Eccles succes cap. 9. ex Henr. Erphurd Chron. cap. 39. and Nic. Eimeric direct Inquisi par 2. qu. 9. sheweth some passages of that cursed Gospel 1. The eternal Gospel is better then the Gospel of Jesus Christ and all the Old and New Testaments 2. The Gospel of Christ is not the Gospel of the Kingdom and therefore it cannot edifie the Church 3. The New Testament is to be annulled as the Old was annulled 4. The New Testament shall continue in power but for six years next to come to wit until the year of incarnation 1260. 5. They who live after that year shall be in the estate of perfect men 6. Another Gospel shall succeed unto the Gospel of Christ and another Priesthood unto his Priesthood 7. None are simply fit to teach men in spiritual and eternal things but such who walk bare-foot c. Many other Articles are in that place now cited The people began to dispise the Friers refused to give them alms and called them hypocrites successors of Antichrist false prophets flatterers and wicked counsellors of Kings and Princes contemners and supplanters of their Ordinaries defilers of Royal beds abusers of confessions c. Mat. Paris ad An. 1256. where it is also written that both those parties sent their Commissioners unto the Court at Anagnia both the books were censured and Pope Alexander ordained that the book of the eternal Gospel should be burnt but privily and so far as might be without discredit of the Friers But the Pope was the more offended at the other book because it was written against the religious Friers therefore he published a Decree to this this purpose Some professing to have the knowledge of the Scriptures but straying from the way of the true sense have plotted wickedness and have uttered very great iniquity against the innocent and upright they have reviled their brethren and laid stumbling blocks before
small like a tree Then the Spirit of the Lord said unto me It signifieth the condition of the Roman Church Again he saith As I was the same way exercised I saw in the Spirit and behold a man walking in the same habit carrying sweet bread on his shoulders and very good wine by his side and he held in his hands a round stone biting it with his teeth as an hungry man biteth bread but he did nothing then two heads of Serpents came out of the stone and the Spirit of the Lord instructing me said This stone is unprofitable and curious questions wherewith the hungry souls are turmoiled when they leave substantial things And I said What meaneth those two heads He said The name of the one is Vain Glory and the other is Overthrow of Religion It is to be observed that about that time the chief questions in the Schools were Whether the bread of the Mass be turned into the body of Christ or whether the substance of it evacuateth what eateth a mouse when she eateth the Sacrament wherein subsisteth the accidents of the bread whether in Christ's body or by themselves c. Again he saith I saw a clear Cross of Silver like to the Cross of Tolouse but the twelve apples of it were like to vile apples that are cast out of the sea What is this Lord Jesus The Spirit said The Cross is the Church which shall be clear with pureness of life and shril with the clear voice of the truth preached Then I said What meaneth those rotten apples The humiliation of the Church-men which shall come to pass Here he prophecied of the Reformation Possevin in Apparto 2. calleth this Robert An excellent Preacher of the Word Mornay in Myster pag. 427. 6. Marsilius Paravinus wrote the book Defensor pacis about the year 1324. there he debateth the question between the Emperor and the Pope and by the holy Scriptures Laws Canons and Histories Ecclesiastical and Civil he maintaineth these positions Christ is the only head and foundation of Rare Theses in those days the Church He made none of the Apostles to be universal Vicar of the Church nor made he the other Apostles subject unto Peter It is more probable that Peter was never at Rome far less had he his seat there who had no fixed seat as also not any of the Apostles The fulness of power in any man is a manifest lye an execrable title the beginning of many evils and the use thereof should be discharged in a good Councel The authority of the keys is that judiciary power that consisteth in dispensing the Word the Sacraments and Discipline Christ whose Vicar the Pope calleth himself did never exercise temporal authority on earth he was subject unto the Magistrate and so were his Apostles after his ascension and they taught others to obey Princes If a Pope usurp temporal authority Princes should by the Law of God resist by word and deed or they are unjust and sin against God and those who fight for the Pope should be accounted the Soldiers of Satan Unto the Pope belongeth not the election nor confirmation of the Emperor but contrarily the Christian Prince with consent of Clergy and People should name the Pope or if one be chosen in his absence he should confirm him If the Pope go astray or be accursed the Emperor should reduce him into the way and judge him in a Councel When Peter lived he might have fallen and erred neither hath the Pope any priviledge against error That that Christ said to Peter I have prayed for thee is to be extended unto the other Apostles Only the Canon of the Bible is the fountain of truth against which Canon we may not believe either Pope or Church Concerning the sense of Scripture or any Article of the faith we may not believe the Pope and his Cardinals seeing not once have they seduced silly souls into hell The Christian Church is the universality of believers and not the Pope and his Cardinals she is represented in a lawful and general Councel A Councel should be assembled by the Emperor with consent of Christian Princes as anciently it was always The Word of God should be the only rule and chief judge in deciding causes Ecclesiastical Not only the Clergy by Lay men also if they be godly and learned should have voice in general Councels The Clergy and Synagogue of the Pope is a den of thieves c. This book was printed at Basil An. 1522. In another Treatise he saith Good works are not the efficient cause of salvation but causa sine quanon Mornay ibid. pag. 452. He was condemned as an Heretick by Pope John the XXIII Catal. test ver lib. 18. Consider what a Modern could say more of this matter and whether they shew not themselves to be ignorant of antiquity who accuse us of novelty 7. The same positions were held by John de Janduno or Gandanensis at the same time as is manifest by his books printed at Venice and Florence So wrote also Luitpold Bishop of Bamberg namely in a Treatise De Translatione Imperii printed Lutet An. 1540. he saith The Authority of governing the Empire belongeth unto the Emperor so soon as he is chosen and the Coronation by the Pope addeth nothing since Caesar is not his vassal nor feudatory The donation of Constantine is but a fable He was also condemned by Pope John Catal. test ibid. Michael Cesenas General of the Franciscans was bolder saying expresly The Pope is the Antichrist and Rome is Babylon drunk with the blood of the Saints Therefore Antonin par 3. tit 21. cap. 5. reckoneth him among the poor men of Lions For the Valdenses still suffered persecution in sundry Countries and under divers names as the adversaries pleased to brand them Many errors are imputed unto them by the writers of those times but because they did abhor the Pope and his Court they were reviled as we have heard from Arnold de Villanova and sought out to the fire as An. 1302. Nogaret the Father of him who took Pope Boniface the VIII was burnt in Aquitania Clemens the V. caused it to be proclaimed to take up the flag of the Cross against them and destroyed 4000 near the Alps whether they had sled Platin. Others went higher unto the mountains of whom some remained in his days saith Antonin par 3. tit 22. cap. 10. From them were the in-dwellers of Angronia and adjacent parts continuing until the Councel at Trent Trithemius testifieth of many that were burnt in Austria about that time howbeit he believing the reports of malice imputeth many errors unto them yet he testifieth that they abhorred the Mass calling the Hosty a god invented by man the Church of Rome a Synagogue of unbelievers and not the flock of Christ they denied all mens merits intercession of Saints the difference of days and meats c. He witnesseth also that the professore of the same doctrine were innumerable in Bohemia Austria
eat the sins of the people and they spake as assuredly of the apparitions adjurations and responses of the dead as if they had learned them from the books of Tundalus and Brandarius or from St. Patrick's cave they play the Tragedies of them in Purgatory and the Comedies of Indulgences in Pulpits as on a Stage with so Soldier-like boldness so thrasonical boasting so arrogant eys changing their countenances stretching out their arms with so various gestures as the Poets feign Proteus transforming themselves they thunder unto the people with windy tongues and Stentor's voice But they which are more ambitious among them and would have the gallantry of eloquence and perfect knowledge these in crying I would say declaring sing poesies tell stories dispute opinions cite Homer Virgil Iuvenal Persius Livius Strabo Varro Seneca Cicero Aristotle Plato and for the Gospel and word of God they prattle meer toys and words of men preaching another gospel adulterating the word of God which they preach not in sincerity but for gain and reward and they live not according to the truth of the word but after the lusts of the flesh and when in the day they have spoken of vertue erroneously they bestow the night in the Stews and this is their way to go unto Christ c. Erasmus in his Annotations on 1 Tim. 1. at the word Vaniloquium speaketh of the School-men at that time thus What shall I say of ungodly questions which are made concerning the power of God and of the Pope whether God can command any evil as to hate himself and forbid all good even the love and worship of himself whether he can make a thing infinite in respect of all dimensions whether he could have made this world even from eternity in a better condition then he hath made it whether he could have made a man that cannot sin ..... There is more work concerning the power of the Pope while they argue of his two-fold power and whether he may abrogate what is decreed in the writings of the Apostles whether he may decree what is repugnant unto the doctrine of the Gospel whether he may make a new Article of faith whether he hath more power then Peter had or equal power whether he hath power to command the Angels whether he can make empty that which is called Purgatory whether he be a man only or as God whether he partaketh of both natures as Christ doth whether he be more merciful then Christ seeing we do not read that Christ did ever bring any out of Purgatory whether among all men the Pope alone cannot err Six hundred such questions are disputed in great volumes ...... and their schools are earnest about such questions and time the swiftest of all things is wasted with these questions which are propounded ridiculously and determined timerariously our time is short and it is a difficult thing to act the duty of a Christian rightly The third power of the Friers was to proclaim and sell Indulgences Because this falleth in often I will here only repeat the Indulgences words of Pa. Paulo in the first book of the Councel of Trent This manner of giving money for pardons was put in practise after the year 1100. for Pope Urban the II. having granted plenary Indulgences and remission of all sins to whosoever would fight in the holy Land to recover and set free the Sepulchre of Christ out of the power of the Mahumetans it is followed by his Suceessors of whom some as always new inventions are inlarged granted it unto those who would maintain a Soldier if they could not or would not go personally in these wars and thereafter Indulgences were granted unto such as would take Arms against Christians not obeying the Church of Rome and many times infinite exactions under these pretences And lib. 8. he saith It is sure and cannot be denied that in no Christian Nation of the East either in ancient or modern times was ever any use of Indulgences of any kinde whatsoever and in the West no proof of them can be brought before Pope Urban the II. from his time until the year 1300. it appeareth that the use of them was sparing and only imposed by the Confessor to free men from punishment after the Councel at Vienna the abuses did increase mightily Pol. Virg. de inven rer lib. 8. cap. 1. saith They reap no small harvest by these Indulgences especially Pope Boniface the IX in whose time such pardons were granted with a full hand not only at sometimes but as Platina witnesseth were sold dayly and every where as any other merchandise not without the dammage of the giver and receiver seeing by these as the vendible remedies or soul diseases many did the less abstain from sin and the power of the keys became contemptible and that was not without cause because as Jerome saith where a reward is the means or interveneth spiritual gifts become the more vile which oh if that age only had seen So far he 31. When the Tartars prevailed first in Asia the Kingdom of the Turks was overthrown and they were divided among themselves into seven families at last they became all subject unto the house of Othoman or Otman Laon. Chalcocon lib. 1. de Reb. Turc He was a victorious and cruel Tyrant and was declared first Emperor of the Turks about the year 1300. all his Successors have kept his name He conquered Prusa a City of Mysia An. 1303. and made it the seat of the Empire His Son Orcanes expelled the Tartars and others of them through dissensions among Christians have raised that great Empire of Asia and subdued the Empire of Constantinople as partly is said and more followeth CHAP. IV. Of BRITAIN 1. KIng Edward sent the marble Chair of the Scots unto London and Troubles between England and Scotland left nothing that he thought could excite the mindes of our Nation to any remembrance of former condition so he promised unto himself a final conquest but a fresh trouble ariseth upon occasion of his tyranny Robert Bruce the Son of the former competitor and John Cumine the Cousin-German of John Baliol beholding at Court the contempt which the Scots did suffer and considering how Edward had abused them against their native Countrey they thought upon a revenge yet they they durst not communicate their thoughts At last John perceiving the other pensive and thinking the same might be the cause of his sadness adventured first to discover his minde and he blamed himself and the other also that their Countrey-men had fallen into such miseries by their procurement and in the mean time were both frustrated There they promise taciturnity and mutual fidelity and they covenant that John shall never pretend any title unto the Crown but assist Robert to recover it and he shall have all the Lands belonging unto Robert and be second unto him in the Kingdom these things were written sworn and sealed Robert followeth King Edward still waiting opportunity Behold
and tokens of bondage and have no Land in Scotland unless they shall dwell in it and if they will not dwell there the Scots should give them for their present possessions 30000 marks of Silver All this time the English were not of one accord for the King followed the counsel of Spencer Earl of Arundel the other Nobility caused the King to banish him but the next year he was restored to the great disturbance of the Kingdom at last they conspire to imprison the King and Hugh Spencer suffered death Tho. Cooper 2. When King Robert came to great age he ordained in Parliament his Successors to wit his Son David a child of eight years old which was espoused to Johanna Daughter of Edward the II. and if he should die without childe he ordained his Son in law Robert Stuart to succeed After he had exhorted the Estates to keep amity and unity he gave them three counsels 1. To beware that the Isles Aebudes be never given unto one man 2. That they never hazzard all their strength in one fight with the English 3. That they make not long truce with them After him Thomas Randolf Earl of Murray was chosen Regent of Scotland he was a good Justiciary and by no means would spare thieves and robbers So that when a Gentleman came from the Pope's Court and thought himself secure because he had obtained the Pope's pardon Thomas caused to apprehend him and said The pardon of sin belongeth unto the Pope but punishment of the body is in the King's hand Buchan lib. 9. 3. An. 1328. Charls the IV. King of France died without children then The title of England unto France Edward the III. King of England his Sisters Son claimeth the Crown of France as nearest Heir The French prefer Philip de Valois the Uncle's Son and they exclude Edward by a Law which they call Salica excluding women from succession At the first when the Estates of France had received Philip Edward did him homage for his Lands in France but when he was denied of a just demand wars began between these two Nations which ceased not altogether until the year 1495. as Tho. Cooper sheweth or rather until the days of Queen Elizabeth for sometimes the French prevailed and sometimes the English even so far as to be crowned at Paris and held Parliaments and had Deputies governing France Sometimes were truce of thirteen years or of ten years but never an absolute peace before Queen Elizabeth In the year 1393. the King of Armenia came into France and shewed how the Turks and Scythians were not only oppressing Hungary but were aiming at the conquest of all Christendom and in the mean time Christians were devouring one another with such words he perswaded both the Kings into a truce for four years Frossard Hist lib. 4. But I leave Civil affairs and return unto the Church 4. In the year 1306. an English Eremite preached at Pauls in London that some Sacraments that were then in use in the Church were not of Christ's institution therefore he was committed to prison Io. Bale ex Io. Baconthorp in Sent. lib. 4. dist 2. q. 1. 5. That John Baconthorp wrote on the Sentences where he followeth the truth in many things especially he refuteth sundry subtilties of Io. Scotus as Baptista Mantuanus hath marked Iste tenebrosi damnat vestigia Scoti Et per sacra novis it documenta viis Hunc habeant quibus est sapientia grata redundat Istius in sacris fontibus omne sophos He wrote de Domino Christi where he proveth that the highest Bishop in every Kingdom should be under Princes Bale Cent. 4. sect 82. 6. Richard Primate of Ireland alias Armachanus was his disciple and taught the same doctrine he translated the Bible into Irish In a Sermon at Paul's Cross in London An. 1356. he said In the estate of innocence none had been a beggar therefore according to that estate unless the law of necessity do press men none desireth nor should be a beggar as neither was Christ willingly a beggar the Law also forbiddeth it Deut. 15. There shall not be a beggar among you He discovered the hypocrisie of Friers in that though they professed poverty yet they had stately houses like the Palaces of Princes and more costly Churches then any Cathedral more richer ornaments then all the Princes more and better books then all the Doctors they had Cloisters and walking places so stately and large that men of Arms might fight on horse-back and encounter one another with their spears in them and their apparel richer then the greatest Prelates These Sermons are extant The next year he appeared before Innocentius the VI. and some of the four Orders of Friers appeared against him and he proved his propositions stoutly and manifestly against them that in many respects they had lest their first rules but saith Walsing in Edwar. III. the English Clergy sent not unto him according to their promises but the Friers wanted not plenty of money and so lite pendente before the cause was decided the Friers obtained a confirmation of their priviledges Armachanus died there at Avenion and was canonized 7. William Ockam was a disciple of Jo. Scotus but he became adversary of his doctrine he was the Author of the Sect of Nominales whereby new occasions of controversies arose to withdraw men from the study of faith He was a follower of Pope Nicolaus the V. and therefore was excommunicated by Pope John Then he thought it more safe to live under the Emperor's protection and he said unto the Emperor Lewis Defend me Caesar from the injury of the Pope by thy sword and I will defend thee by the word by writing and invincible reasons and so they did so long as they lived He wrote a Compendium Errorum of Pope John the XXII and a dialogue between a Clark and a Soldier wherein he handleth these questions 1. Whether Ockam's questions the Pope hath any primacy by right from God 2. Whether Peter had any primacy or was ever Bishop of Rome 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome may err Concerning the Emperor he discusseth 1. Whether one man may discharge the offices both of Priest and Emperor 2. Whether the Emperor hath his power from God only or from the Pope also 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome have any power from Christ to commit any jurisdiction unto Caesar and to other Princes 4. Whether Caesar after his election hath power to rule the Republick 5. Whether Kings anointed by a Bishop receive any power from him 6. Whether these Kings be any way subject unto their anointer 7. Whether the seven Electors give as great authority unto the elected Caesar as succession giveth unto other Princes c. All which he disputeth on both sides and concludeth always against the Extravagants He wrote also against Pope Clemens and calleth him an Heretick the Antichrist an hater of Christian poverty a foe of the Common-wealth an
bodily pains in this world which after their own sayings are far less and the Pope may go down to hell as another man and whereas he taketh upon him to absolve any man without inward repentance he extolleth himself above God This complaint is at length in the Act. Monim written by Io. Fox and these are the chief heads of it 11. In the twenty fifth year of King Edward the III. which was 1364. Laws against the power of the Pope Statutes were made If any procured from Rome a provision to any Abbey Priory or Benefice in England which is said to be in destruction of the Realm and holy Religion or if any man sued out of the Court of Rome any process or procured any personal citation upon causes whose cognifance and final discussion pertaineth to the King's Court these shall be out of the King's protection and their lands goods and cattels shall be forfeited unto the King The narrative of the Act sheweth the cause of it and the King and Commons of the Realm had oft complained that his Realms were impoverished by the Pope giving Benefices to strangers which never dwelt in England the King and Nobility were robbed of their right of patronage the cure was not served and the will of the first founders was not followed The King had oft complained but in vain therefore he resolved to make his Kingdom free from this bondage Morn in Myster pag. 480. sheweth that when Pope Gregory the XI heard of it he cried This enterprise is a renting of the Church a destroying of Religion and usurpation of his right and priviledge Wherefore he sent immediately unto Edward requiring him to annul these Acts. But when the Schism arose no Pope did insist in it until Pope Martin the V. sent more sharp Letters unto King Henry the VI. And he answered An Act of Parliament cannot be annulled but by another Parliament and he would assemble a Parliament within a short space for the same cause but he did it not saith Pol. Virg. Hist lib. 19. In the thirteeth year of Richard the II. this Act was revived in these words If any person within or without the Realm shall seek from the Court of Rome preferment to any Benefice of Cure or without Cure the preferment shall be null and the person shall be banished and his goods shall appertain unto the King and the same punishment shall strike against them which receive or entertain any such person As also it was ordained If any person shall bring or send any summons sentence or excommunication or if any shall make execution of any such summons sentence or excommunication against any person whatsoever shall forfeit all his lands and goods for ever and himself shall be imprisoned and incur the pain of death yea although such a person had obtained the King's licence for petitioning at the Court of Rome he shall sorfeit a years rent It is also observed that before the year 1367. the high offices in England Offices of State as the Lord Chancellor the Lord Treasurer the Lord Privy Seal c. were wont to be for the most part in the hands of the Clergy as also in Scotland until the Reformation but about that time the English Nobility procured that all these offices should be given unto temporal Lords 12. At that time God raised up John Wickliff a couragious witness of Iohn Wickliff truth he was Fellow of Merton Colledge and Master of Baliol Colledge in Oxford and Reader of Divinity there about the year 1370. He began first to oppose in questions of Logick and Metaphysick but such as strawed the way to other things which he intended When he set upon controversies of Divinity he protested publickly in the Schools that his aim was to bring the Church from Idolatry to some amendment In his book entituled The path-way to perfect knowledge near the end he sheweth what travel he had in translating the Bible into English he gathered many old Latine Bibles for saith he the late books are very corrupt and he conferred the translations with the ancient Doctors and common Glosses and especially he was helped by the late translation of Lyra in the old Testament and the fourth time he employed many cunning men at the correcting of his fourth translation Then he wrote that book which I have now named wherein he giveth the sum of every book of the old Testament with some general and useful observations He reckoneth the books according to the Hebrew and sheweth also some use of the Apocrypha for examples of piety patience constancy c. and denieth that they are for proof of faith In chap. 2. he saith The truth of the Gospel sufficeth to salvation without keeping the ceremonies made of God in the old Law and much more without keeping the ceremonies of sinful and unknowing men that have been made in time of Antichrist and unbinding of Satan as it is Apocal. 20. and he calleth it heresie to say otherwise In chap. 1. he saith Christian men and women old and yong should study fast in the new Testament for it is of full authority and open to the understanding of simple men as to the points that be most needful to salvation and the same sentence in the darkest places of holy writ is both open and dark which sentence is in the open places and each place of holy writ both open and dark teacheth humility and charity and therefore he that keepeth humility and charity hath the true understanding and perfection of all holy writ as Augustine proveth in his Sermon of praising charity therefore no simple man of wit should be feared unmeasurably to study the text of holy writ for they are the words of everlasting life as Peter said to Christ Iohn 6. and the holy Ghost stirred holy men to speak and write the words of holy writ for the comfort and salvation of meek Christian men as Peter in his Epistles and Paul Rom. 15. witness And no Clark should be proud of the very understanding of holy writ for that very understanding without charity which keepeth God's hests maketh a man deeper damned as Christ Jesus and James witness and the pride and covetousness of Clarks is the cause of their blindeness and heresie In chap. 10. Though Kings and Lords knew no more of holy writ then three stories of 2 Chron. that is of Jehoshaphat Hezekiah and Josiah they might learn sufficiently to live well and govern their people well by God's Law and eschew all pride and idolatry and other sins But alas alas alas whereas King Jehoshaphat sent his Princes Deacons and Priests to each City of his Realm with the Book of God's Law to teach openly God's Law unto the people ..... some Christian Lords send general Letters unto all their Ministers and Liege-men that the pardons of the Bishop of Rome which are open lies for they grant many hundred years of pardons after doomsday be preached generally in their Realms
Christ that one and the same work of Indulgence shall have vertue sometimes for six years sometimes for seven sometimes for seven hundred sometimes for seven thousand and sometimes full and absolute Then answering unto that position The Church is ruled by the Spirit of God he saith It is true in so far as the Church is holy but not in these particulars whereof she is ignorant and in which she erreth as alas we lament that she erreth grievously as appears by the unsavoury salt the delated Husband-man and the unfaithfull Steward whom Bernard expoundeth to be Mercenaries in place of Shepheards yea and Wolves for hirelings and Devils for Wolves In his Book De subditis superioribus he averreth That the Pope may err and when he erreth he should be resisted Pius the II. did usurp all the Kingdoms of the earth and Sixtus the IV. dispensed with all maner of oaths in causes temporal not only that were already made but that shall be made which is nothing else but to give unto men licence to forswear themselves and deceive others Because the Pope and his Cardinals are contrary unto Christ they are the Antichrist John Ostendorp a Canon of St. Levin in Daventry went once to visit him and Wesselus said unto him O diligent youth thou shalt live until that time when the doctrine of these late Divines and contentious School-men shall be forsaken Wesselus died in the year 1490. and Ostendorp lived until the year 1520. Gerhard Gelderhavrius writeth that he heard his Master Ostendorp report this Prophesie Ja. Triglandius in his Church History against ●tenboga par 3. writeth of him that when Pope Sixtus the IV. was chosen Wesselus went to visit him because he had been his good friend in Paris The Pope bade him ask what he would and it should not be denied unto him He answered I wish that since now you are universal Pope you would demean your self in your office according to your name that in due time you may hear that approbation Come thou good and faithful Servant enter into thy Master's joy The Pope said Why seekest thou not somewhat for thy self He said I crave no more but an Hebrew and Greek Bible out of the Vatican The Pope answered That you shall have but fool thou mightest have sought a Bishoprick or some such thing Wesselus answered Because I have not need of so great things When he died some Friers burnt all his books and papers but he had given sundry books unto others which were collected and printed at Wittemberg in the year 1522. When Luther saw them he spake of the Prophet Elias who thought that he was left alone and yet the Lord had preserved seven thousand that had hot bowed the knee to Baal so said he hath God preserved many thousands from the Idolatry of the Pope And he wrote of him as followeth There is one Wesselus come forth whom they call Basilius a Friselander of Groning a man of wonderful understanding and of an excellent spirit who hath been taught of God as Isaiah hath prophesied of Christians for it cannot be thought or said that he hath learned such things from men as neither I have If I had read those books before mine enemies might have said Luther hath taken all this out of Wesselus we do so agree But by these my joy and courage increaseth and I doubt not but I have learned the truth since he and I do agree in so constant unity and almost in the same words although differing in place and time and occasions And I admire by what mishap it is come that so Christian works were not published by another 37. Among the lights of that time Rodulph Agricola may justly be reckoned he was born in Friseland Ph. Melanchthon writing his life saith Josquin Groningensis had reported unto him that when he was young he heard Vesselus and Agricola often lamenting in their Sermons the darkness of the Church the abuses of the Mass the single life of Priests and that they both taught that men are not justified by works but by faith as Paul oft teacheth and they condemned the multitude of traditions He died An. 1489. Buxtorf Ind. 38. Paul Scriptor teaching on Scotus in Tubing when he came to the fourth Book Dist 10. did speak against transubstantiation and said All things should be tried by the Word of God as a true touch-stone all Scholastical teaching shall shortly be abolished and the doctrine of the primitive Church shall be restored according to the holy Scriptures Conradine Pelicanus was his Auditor and testifieth that he heard him reprove many errors and abuses of the Roman Church therefore the Minorites caused him to be banished and as Rud. Gualter in his Epistle before his Homiles on Matthew testifieth he was put to death as many did suspect being not moved with uncertain conjectures He died at Keiserberg in the year 1499. 39. Nicolaus Rus a Batchelor of Divinity preached at Rome and wrote The Pope hath not such power as is commonly believed the Pope should not be heard when he strayeth from the Scripture his Indulgences are but fraud those only are true pardons which God giveth of his free grace in Christ Saints should not be adored and far less their bones they who are called the Spiritualty to wit the Roman Clergy have packed up all Religion in mens traditions and vain superstitions and they are careless of their office and are Ministers of Antichrist These things are written in his Threefold Cord where he expoundeth the Lord's Prayer the Creed and the ten Commandments which he wrote in the Saxon Languauge that the common people might understand he left Rome and abode there and had many Auditors The Pastors of the Waldenses in Bohemia came and visited him At last he was forced to flee into Liveland where he died 40. Jerome Savonorola a Dominican in Florence taught these Articles 1. Men are justified freely by faith 2. The Communion should be administred in both kindes 3. The Pope's Indulgences are frivolous 4. The keys were given unto the Church and not to Peter alone 5. The Pope hath not from Christ any primacy above other Bishops 6. The Pope followeth neither the life nor doctrine of Christ and therefore he is the Antichrist 7. He who feareth the Pope's excommunication is excommunicated of God 8. He preached against the vices of the Clergy Io. Fox in Act. Mon. Philip Cominaeus did confer with him and testifieth that he was a man of most upright life He foretold that God would raise up a King to punish the Tyrants of Italy and that God would shortly reform the Church therefore some did h●te him and some believed him namely the Senate of Florence was perswaded by his preaching to give way unto Charls the VIII King of France When the league was made in Italy against the French he foretold that Charls should return in safety of his person maugre all the power of his adversaries Charls returning from Naples sent for
manners the power of calling a Councel returns unto the Cardinals which is the most ready remedie in such a necessity especially seing the authority of the Emperour and of the most Christian King and the consent of the Clergie of Italy and Germany doe all concurre in one and it is according to the practise and Acts of the Councels at Constance and Basile Pope Pius V. caused Thomas Manricus revise and gheld or mangle that book as may bee seen in Biblioth Possevini 9. The Waldenses have been often mentioned and their doctrin hath The Confession and a supplication of the VValdenses been related from the report of others now in the year 1508. these of Bohem being accused before their King Vladislaus and fearing a persecution sent unto him the Confession of their faith with an apologeticall supplication Because I have seen this Confession in Fasciculo rerum expetendarum fugiendar only and so it is not common I think good to insert it heer Most glorious King and our most gracious Lord Wee afflicted men and humbly subject unto your Majesty and falsly cloathed with a contemptible name doe first declare our humble request and also our earnest desire of your long health with the increase of every good thing and freedom from every evill in your happie Empire even at it is our duty to wish unto your Highnesse Wee declare unto your Excellencie that heertofore your Grace's Write is come unto us not by common rumor only but by actuall deed also into many of our hands in which Wrire by the accusation of our enemies which have unjustly given forth their Sentence of wicked judgement against us wee understand that wee ar called wicked and ungodly men seducers of ignorant people and through the craft of the Devill more noisom than the false nation of Turks ..... Wherefore wee most humbly pray that your pietie would patiently heare us for the justice of God and for his mercies sake which wee wish continually that God would give unto you and what wee shall now write you may wirhout doubt think that every point thereof comes from the sincerity of our heart for what wee believe in our heart before God that doe wee in this manner professe with our mouth First wee with a believing mind have received this in which now for some space wee having continued doe intend constantly to persevere with a stable mind and free intention to wit All the truth of faith revealed by the Holy Ghost and then by the H. Ghost layd up in the Scriptures and briefly summed up in the Creed of the Apostls and also really keept by the primitive Church and confirmed by signes miracles sinceer teaching and martyredom and lastly diligently explained by the Nicene Councel by the Bishop Athanasius and many Teachers against hereticks this faith wee confesse to be necessary even in this age for the salvation of our souls So lively faith is the universal fundation of mens salvation which faith is by the gift of the Holy Ghost bestowed principally and by the merite of Christs grace is ministerially preached in the Church by the voice of the Gospel and word of truth and is exemplarly confirmed by the Holy Sacraments We believe and confesse constantly while we live by the same fountain of faith that the authour of faith and giver of Salvation is God almighty one in the substance of Godhead but three in Persons the Father Sonne Holy Ghost one God blest for ever By this faith wee believe of God the Father wee believe God the Father and in God the Father We believe of God the Father that he begetteth his only Son eternally whom of his mercy he hath given unto the World for redemption salvation by whose merite the only Father worketh salvation according to the purpose of his own election By the same faith wee believe God the Father when we doe acquiesce upon his testimony which came down from heaven concerning his beloved Sonne This said he is my beloved Sonne hear him Which also the blessed and ever unviolate Virgin Mary said with a suitable mind VVhatsoever said she my Sonne shall say unto you doe it With the lyke faith wee say also that his commandements are faithfull and true and of God that who ever of ripe age living in faith shall forsake these can no way attain salvation through Christ Wee believe in God the Father when wee knowing that he is the almighty maker of heaven and earth love him with our heart and really keep his commandements according to our knowledge and power The Catholick faith which wee have once received from God maketh us believe of Christ believe Christ our Lord and in Christ Wee believe and professe of Christ the eternall wisdom that he is the true and only God equall in Godhead with the Father and Holy Ghost in power wisdom and that he is eternall life proceeding from the Father by perpetuall generation by whom he made the world Who to fulfill the promise made unto the Fathers came personally from the high heavens for the salvation of the Nations was inclosed in the wombe of the Virgine in the fulness of time seen on earth cruelly racked on the cross when Pilate was President of Judea and with his holy blood gave up the ghost when he was taken off the cross he was layd in a rock ye grave and on the third day was raysed from sweet sliep and lastly on the fourtieth day being taken up in a cleare cloud we believe that he reigneth at the right hand of the Father to wit in a most honorable place and most worthy unto him that all the desires of our heart and all the confidence of our hope may be lifted unto that glory prepared by his blood which sitting on the throne of grace pleadeth as a faith full Advocate for them who shall enioy the inheritance of glorie He leaveth not his Church for which he offered him self unto death destitute of grace vertue and aid by his free gift which Church he preserved diligently in the dayes of his flesh unto him every knee of things that live in heaven on earth and under the earth is so subject that they should worship and reverence the Sonne with the same glorie honour and majesty as God the Father and confesse with their toungs that he sits in his glorie and seat of the majesty of his Father Nor shall he at an time descend untill al contrary Nations being made subject under his feet bee at last consumed with everlasting damnation Wee believe Christ Jesus when wee say that his commandements which oblidge us to believe in him trust and love him for attaining the eternall life of glory are true faith full And we believe in Christ when knowing him to be our God and Saviour wee doe imbrace all his words with full faith and loving him with perfect love are united with his true members in faith love Lastly by vertue of the same faith which we
Bishops and priests in the mean time looking on these things as it were thorough their fingers and providing well for their own bellies c. But briefly for rebuking these and such other corruptions in the Church Agrippa was delated by the Masters of Lovan unto the Emperour as an haeretik he defended himself by a published Apologia and for examples sake they condemned him of haeresy because he had said in Cap. 100. The knowledge of the word of God came by no schoole of Philosophers by no Sorbone of Divines and by no colledge of Scholastiks but only God and Christ have given it unto us To which no thing should be added nor paired Unto this their censure he answered in Apolog. Sect. 23. They think these words offensive unto godly eares not that they are contrary unto Scriptures or unto the Church but because it is dissonant from the schooles who seeme to have decreed that Philosophy is necessary unto salvation and they think it all ungodly that their Aristotle hath not imagined But if these Propositions be false the contrary must be true and Catholik to wit not God and Christ only but schooles and Sorbones and colledges have given us the knowledge of Gods word and we may against Gods command adde unto and pair from the canonical Scripture Who would think that the Magistri of Lovan are so fond doting that they will think this proposition Catholike c. And in Sect. 34. he said O Moses ô Salomon ô Paul ô John ô Christ ô Church of God what a Disciple of Satan is this who forgeth calumnies against the words even of the Holy Scriptures what will he answer when he shall stand with me before the throne of Christ to give account that he hath maliciously detracted from the word of God surely in that day many of Magistri nostri will rise and say O Lord in thy name we have boldly slaundered in thy name we have disputed eagerly In thy name we have burnt many men confidently In thy name we have suffred ourselves to be called Masters in Divinity but Christ will say unto them I never knew you c. This Agrippa is called a Necromancer but God will have truth to be justified even enemies being Judges 19. Polydorus Vergilius was born in Urbino and sent by the Pope into England in the dayes of Henry the VIII to gather the Peter-pence because the King saw him a learned man he wished him to stay so he became Archdean of Wells Albeit in his writtings he professeth himself a Papist yet he condemneth the worshipping of images Tractat. on the Lords Prayer Pag. 2 he maintaines the liberty of mariage unto the priests de Inv. lib. 5. c. 4. and in these books he sheweth the novelty vanity of many other abuses of Rome as I have elsew here noted and he plainely describeth the matter and manner of the preachin in his daies saying John the Baptist preached in the desert of Judaea our Saviour preached and commanded his Apostles to preach saying Goe teach all nations and preach the Gospell Whereof some of our Divines are ashamed when they preach or then they are weary of it for when they have perfunctoriously read a part of the Gospell as if then people had no more need of instruction they digresse to their fained quaestions there they wrestle and as if they were mad they vexe themselves wresting the Holy Scriptures as they please they corrupt all they confound all with their cries when their fury is allayed they come to base things talk of the prices of victuals of pedlers lik jests some times they jeere and for the same are they commended by the foolish people and this sort of preaching is most frequently used and most commended But would to God oft times they spred not worse for as no sort of men is so profitable for religion if they would preach the Truth so none doe more harme when they study to preach for to pleas the people for when they have once gotten the name of holyness they doe most harm because they are most easily believed as if they would teach nothing but that men should live better But some who should preach teach nothing at all so that they may justly be called dumbe dogs So either by vanity or silence they suffer Christ to be unknown among the people Some times they prate one thing after another off hand that like flying birds they wote not themselfes where they will end de Inven. rer lib. 5. cap. 9. Again in his treatise de Interpert Orat. Dom. he saith We eat the bread of Christ when we believe that he is the Son of God as it is said he who believeth in me hath eternall life and the priests should distribute this bread unto us by preaching but thou wilt say how can priests feed so many seing the greatest part of them is ignorant of letters and the number of people is infinite Let us also passe by that c. Briefly it is manifest how many things he did not love in the Church then that the Authours of the Index Expurgatorius have fulled 8 pages with the catalogue of these things which now they disallow in that his one work de Invent. rer 20. At the same time some Cardinals Bishops incited Lewes II. King of France against the Waldenses who had continued so many hundred years in these places on this side of the Alpes as if they were incestuous witches and haeretiks and therefore they wished the King to expell them all without examination On the othersyde they sent commissioners to declare their innocency before the King The Cardinals would have debarred them from the Kings presence because the canon-law saith Haeretiks should not be heard Lewes answered If I were to fight against the Turk I would first hear what he would say So he sent for the commissioners of Merindole and Cabriers they reverently declared that they believed the Holy Scripture and the Creed of the Apostles but they leaned not to the Pope and his doctrines if the King shall find other wise they submit themselves most gladly unto his censure The King sent one of his Counsellers Adamus Fumaeus and his confessour N. Parvus à Dominican to inquire whether it where so as they had said They went into these Provinces and after due search they reported that the Infants among them were baptized the articles of faith and the law were preached the Lords day was religiously observed and the word of God was expounded they could find no witchcraft nor whoredom among them but they had no images in their Churches nor ornaments of the masse The King answered with an oath as afterwards Pope Gregory XIII said unto his Cardinals concerning the Calvinists saying These men are better then I and my people Jo. Lampad in Mellif part 3. Also Claudius Seisselius Archbishop Taurin gives them a large testimony of approbation howbeit he following the multitude wrot aganst them 21. An. 1516.
not the peace of God and so long an high priest hath not been in the Church as there hath not been peace ...... who were not content to kill the bodies of men cruelly for mantaining the truth but would destroy the souls beloved of God the spouse of Christ that noble spoile of hell that reward purchased by the blood of Christ have they trode under feet killed and devoured c. This he wrote from his castle Steckelberg Decemb. 1. 1517. There indeed he commends Pope Leo wishing as it seemes he were such an one but a little after that he speakes more freely for when Pope Leo sent unto Germany to extract tithes for preparation of warrs against the Turk the Princes of Germany assembled and there in presence of the Emperour one being demanded to give his advice had a large discourse Ort. Gratius writes it was said to be the Oration of Vlric Hutten Among other things he saith Yee would expell the Turk I commend your purpose but I fear that yee mistake the name seek him in Italy not in Asia our Kings are able to defend their own Dominions from him in Asia but all Christendom is not able to danton the other the one hath skirmished with his nighbours and as yet hath done us no harm but the other oppresseth every where and thirsteth after the blood of miserable people yee can not satiate this Cerberus with a flood of gold there is no need of armes nor an Army tithes will be more forcible then garrisons of souldiers When I doe weigh the matter seriously I see two wayes are propounded one at the command of superstition craves gold the other if wee refuse threatneth the Popes curse take either of the two as you will but ô fond and superstitious opinion of men who think him to be the God of heaven he who duely considereth seeth that all are carried at the becke of the Florentines Not to give is offensive and to give is gracious the thunder of Christs vicar is not to be despised but every bolt is not to be feared especially when it is directed by humane affections I feare the indignation of Christ but not of the Florentines This is the cause of the Florentines and not of Christ The last yeare upon no small charges were the wars carried on against Francis D. of Urbine who was expelled out of his Dominion that Laurence Medices might have it Lewes was not provident enough to leave more gold ..... When the Urbin Duke is away the lyke fortune is threatned against the Prince of Ferraria and then wee must salute Laurence Medices a Citizen of Florence King of Hetruria This shall be the effect of the tieths and this is the craft of the Italian Turk who by the convoy of superstition entreth into our bowels c. 23. About that time the study of learning was in a manner revived in many parts of Europe for Pope Leo X. erected some Colledges at Rome Cardinal Francis Ximenius Archbishop of Toledo caused the Bible called Complutensia to be printed An. 1515. in four languages the Hebrew with the Chaldaick Greek Latine translations Henry VIII did endowe the Universities of England Francis King of France did the lyke there so also did Charles in Low-Germany as we heard before of Wittenbergh and Frankford Because Sanctes Pagnin and Arias Montanus had translated the Bible word for word which did not so well agree with the Latine phrase Francis Vatablus the Kings Professor of the Hebrew tongue at Paris translates the old Testament in a clearer style And here Andrew Cratander the Printer then at Basile deserves to be remembred hee was both learned and wealthy and upon his charges set many learned men a worke to translate the books of John Chrysostom Cyrillus Alexandrinus Theophylactus and such other antient Greek Authours which then began to speak Latine in his house as the Emperour Charles V. testifies in Exemp privilegii before the works of Cyril After him a litle later in time was Robert Stephanus that learned and famous Printer at Paris it appeares in his Respons ad censuras Theolog. Paris that when he was Corrector in the shope of his father-in-law Simon Colen he caused to be printed a little New Testam corrected in sundry texts conforme unto the Greek for this cause the Sorbonists cried out against him as worthy to be burnt for saith he they called that corruption whatsoever was purged from the dregs of their common ignorance This was in the yeare 1522. I make mention of him in this place especially because of that which followes in that his Answer he saith I may speak this truely when I did ask them he is speaking of the Masters of Sorbone In what place of the New Testament is that written they did answer like shameless whores They had read it in Ierom. or in the Decrees but they knew not what the New Testament was Even so ignorant were they that they knew not the New Testament was wont to be printed with and after the old Testament This saith he will be though prodigious and yet most true and certain which I shall relate a few years agoe one of Coledge was wont to say dayly I wonder that these young men talk of a New testament I was above 50. years of age and knew not what a New Testament was Oh blindness and also desperate shamelesness So far he But how gross soever was the ignorance of many not only of the vulgar sort but of those which were called Rabbies nevertheless all Sciences and languages were polished every where as there were at that time many learned men and so by mercifull providence the world was prepared for a Reformation 24. And here Erasmus a Roterdamer deserves to be remembred about that time he was busy in translating some Greeke Fathers into Latine and in delivering some Latine Fathers from the moths and gathering from sundry Bibliotheks the dispersed Copies both of the one sort and the other so that by his diligence many Printers were held in worke and Europe was furnished with books more abundantly than ever before and in the year 1516. he published a translation of the New Testament out of the Greek by the permission of Pope Leo that worke as it was acceptable unto good men so it did provoke the implacable hatred of the idle Monks against him they had their quarells against him before that for in the year 1508. he had been in Italy and in his returning he wrote a part of what he had seen and heard in a little book under the title 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the praise of folly and in a jocund way brings Folly as speaking what He thought among other things Folly speaking of the preachers saith They have devised a foolish faith but a pleasant persuasion to wit If one shall look upon a painted Polyphemus Chrystophorus he shall not perish that day or if one shall in the prescribed words pray unto Barbara he shall return safe from
of evill that may follow The Pope inclineth the first way and commandeth that all be buried in silence Nevertheless the Cardinall of Capuasent these heads into Germany which some say was done by advice of the Pope to the end many might conceive hope of a Reformation in Rome Pe. Soave ibid. When November was approaching the Pope by his Bull nameth Vicentia to be the place of the Councell and because winter is at hand he nameth the first day of May in the year 1538. to be the first day of assembling At that time he sent his Legats to Vincentia and he went to Nice in Liguria under shew to make concord between the Emperour and Francis but as some said to persuade them both to quit Millain unto his son He dealt with them to send Prelats unto the Councell they had excuses and he was easily contented When he could effectuat nothing he returns and recals his Legates from Vicentia and by his Letters dated July 28. he prorogated the Councell unto Easter in the next year Pope Paul had been oft advised by the Cardinals to accurse King Henry VIII but he judged it safer to keep up his sword than draw it when he knew it could not pierce as certainly it is effectuall according as men do conceive of it But now King Henry had not only beheaded Cardinal Fisher this was an eye-sore to all the Cardinals and published books twice against the Popes authority of calling the Councell but lately also he had summoned Saint Thomas archb of Canterbury who had suffered death in defense of Papall authority and was Canonized by Pope Alexander III. and since the year 1171. had been worshipped in the Romane Church to appeare in Court had condemned him for treason and in pursuite of the condemnatory Sentence had caused the hang-man to take up his reliques and burn them and throwe the ashes into the river and had escheated all the treasure and ornaments that were dedicated unto S. Thomas And the Pope having now some hope by conference with the King of France at Nice that if he had peace with Caesar he wold invade England Upon Decemb. 17. An. 1538. accurseth Henry and ordaines that all his favourers shall be deprived of all honours and goods he commandeth all his subjects that they acknowledge him not as their Lord and all forreiners that they have not any commerce with English men and all Princes to rise in arms against him and take his King om and goods for their prey But what place this curse had it appeares saith Pe. Soave by the Leagues that the Emperour the French King and other Princes made with King Henry not long thereafter When the Pope heard that the Germanes were seeking a Conference of Divines he propoundeth this unto his Consistory and said It was necessary to determine some thing concerning the Councell Some Cardinals said Nothing could be concluded untill the Princes were reconciled Others more politick said There was more danger to be feared from Nationall Conferences than from the Councell and therefote it is more safe not to cast off a Councell but to suspend it at the Popes will indefinitely and so if any danger were appearing from any Nationall Councell or Conference he might prevent it by appointing time and place And so Juny 11. by a published Bull the Councell was suspended til the Pope should appoint time and place In the year 1541. he promised unto the Emperour to hold a Councell the next year and he would send a Legate unto the Diete at Spira to advise of the time and place and he shewed his opinion to name Vicentia He acquaintes the Venetians with this purpose They refuse because they had lately made peace with the Turke and if they consent that the Councell be within their bounds where they will treat of warr against him he will say that they conspire against him When the Emperour came into Italy Paul meets him at Busset by Parma and dealeth with him to give the Dutchy of Millain unto his son's son which had married Margarite the Emperours base Daughter and if he would do this the Pope profered to enter into league with him against France to give 150000. crowns yearly for some years and make some Cardinals of his nomination The Emperour demandeth 1000000. crowns presently and as many within a short space This he refuseth The Emperour spake not of the Councell because he had made it cleare that the stay was not his fault and he thought on other remedies after the warr They parted in shew of friendship but from that time he enclined more to aid France While he is so full of doubts he understandes that the Emperour had made a league with Henry VIII against Francis then he thinks it necessary to joyn with France The Emperour is informed how hardly the Pope had taken with his league sent him answer that Francis had made a league with the Turk and by his aid the Turks Navie had spoiled the sea-townes of Naples and why may he not then make a league of just defence with him who is a Christian albeit he deny the Pope to be the head of the Church yea and with the Popes expresse consent Francis had sought aid of the Protestants which are more adverse unto the Pope than the King of England is The Pope should ex officio have accursed the French King when he heard of his league with the Turke but it is cleare that he is an accepter of persons for when the Turkish Navy did assaile and spoile other parts of Italy they did no harme unto the dominions of the Pope and when they came to Ostia for fresh water and the Romans were amazed at the report thereof the Cardinall of Carpo who at that time of the Popes absence was his Vicar told the Citizens they needed not to feare But it did provoke the Pope yet more that the Emperour would not permit his Legate Cardinall Farnesius to go unto the Diet at Spira and had decreed concerning religion w●thout his knowledge yea to the evident contempt of Papall authority And again more that when in September An. 1544. Charles and Francis were reconciled Charles propounded this condition that they should both restore the old religion and amend the Court of Rome whence as from the fountain all these evills had flowed and to this effect they should force the Pope to assemble the Councell But the Pope did not feare their purpose to reform the Court because he knew they had contrary ends and he knew how to divide them when they came to the point and to make his own advantage Only this did vexe him that it shall be said They did force him to assemble a Councell Therefore he resolves to dissemble all his offences and prevented their solicitation by proclaming the Councell at Trent against March 15 and in the same Bull he exhortes the whole Church to give thanks for the peace between the two Monarchs whereby they may the
alive or other wayes put to death for the cause of religion John oecolampade in the year preceeding was retyred into a Monastery for feare of trouble but when he heard of the publick edict he set forth some Sermons and a book of Confession for which Glapio the Emperours Chapelan did threaten him mischief but he with consent of the Friers went away in safety Martin Bucer had been a Dominican 15 years at that time he left that Order and was Chaplaine unto Fredederik Prince Palatin and President of the Imperiall Councell the next year he was called to be Preacher at Landstall When Luther was lurking the Augustinians of Wittembergh put away the private Masse because it was an execrable abuse of the Lords supper and turned into a propitiatory sacrifice c. The Electour requires the judgement of the University then Justus Jonas Jo. Dolcius Andr. Carolstad Jerom Schurff Nic. Amsdorff and Phil. Melanchton approove the reasons of the Augustinians the Elector ratifieth their Act and not only dischargeth private Masses in the Cloister but in the open Church and then in the Church of the Castle Then and there also images were broken down auricular confession was forbidden both elements were delivered unto the people and Andr. Carolstad teaches that Civill courts should be ordered not by the law of man but of Moses he set forth a book of the lawfulness of Priests-mariage and against the vowes of Monks When Luther heard hereof though he did not approve all that was done and written yet he wrote unto Spalatinus August 15 Carolstad must have some liberty for he will not be content if any do oppose him Erasmus was offended that any Reformation was begun without the authority of a Generall Councell and he wrote unto Peter Barbire August 13. saying It can not be told how many and what kind of men did at the first love Luther when I had read a few pages of his books I did foresee the matter would turn to a broil I do so hate discord that even verity with sedition is unpleasant unto mee .... As I think many things are received in the Church which may be changed to the great good of Christian religion So nothing pleaseth me which is done tumultuously And in another dated August 23 he saith I wish it were true that Christiern King of Denmark said unto me while we were talking of such a purpose Gentle purges worke not but efficacious potions shake the whole body I see no good issue unless Christ himselfe turne the temerity of men into good c. Albert archb of Mentz began again to sell pardons in Hala of Saxony then Luther wrote unto him from his Pathmos Novemb. 25. threatning him that if he leave not that idol of pardons greater evils will be sent on him and if he dismisse not these which for eschuing fornication have marryed he will make known openly some things both of him and other bb which they desire to be buried in silence The Bishop returnes answer Decemb. 21. shewing that he had read his Letter with good lyking and afterwards he shall have no cause to complain of him and he will live as becomes a Christian Prince for which end he requires his prayers and of other good men seing that is the gift of God alone he can take admonitions in good part and wisheth well unto Luther for Christs cause The University of Paris sent forth their judgement against Luther's books and Ph. Melanchton opposeth it with this inscription of his book Against the famous Decree of the Parisians the apology of Melanchton for Luther Likewise Henry VIII King of England wrote against Luther in defense of the seven saeraments and the power of the Pope When Leo heard of it he sent unto him the title defender of the faith as Alexander VI. had given unto the King of Spain the title of Catholick King and I know not what other Pope did first call the King of France The most Christian King But saith Pe. Soave Luther was not dashed with authority but laying aside the due reverence of his person wrote against him with such bitterness of words as he had used against the puny Doctors and the medling of the King in this cause did not satisfy many in this controversy and as it hapneth in debates most do favour the weaker party and do much commend their weak endeavours Immediatly after the publishing of the Edict at Worms Hugh Bishop of Constance sendeth the Popes Bull and that Edict unto the town of Zurik and commandeth them to obey both the one and the other and he inveighes against Zuinglius and his followers Wherefore Zuinglius gives account unto the Senate and to the colledge of the Chanons of what he had taught and he writes unto the Bishop especially pressing that he forbeare not the priests with their concubines which wickedness saith he brings the clergy into contempt and is a very lewd example unto the people And he wrote unto the Swisers generally that they should remember a former licence which the Magistrats had granted unto the priests to have a concubine for saving the honesty of other mens wives which licence though ridiculous yet necessary for the time should be amended by turning fornication into lawfull marriage The Bishops command gave courage unto the black Friers to write against Zuinglius and he ceaseth not to defend his own doctrine he published 67. conclusions containing the summe of his doctrin and the abuses of the Clergy The Senate for removing such strife do appoint a convocation of all the Clergy within their jurisdiction against January 23. promising free liberty of reasoning unto both parties and by Letters invite the bb of Constance Curia and Basile either to come personally or to send their Commissioners There were assembled about 600. priests and as they called them Divines The Bishop of Constance sent in his name John Faber who afterward was Bishop of Vienna The Burgermaster beginneth saying It is not unknown what dissension hath arisen in the cause of religion therefore this assembly is called especially that if any can speak against these 67 conclusions of Zuinglius now made known unto them all he may now speak the same freely Faber shewes his Commission and alledgeth it was not a pertinent place nor time to decide things of that kind which appertain properly unto a Generall Councell and the Pope and Princes have agreed that one shall be called shortly Zuinglius said as Pe. Soave reports that is but a trick to deceive people with vaine hope and to keep them in grosse darknes it were better in the mean while to search some particulars that are sure and undoubted by the word of God and the received custom of the Church untill a more copious clearing of doubts come by a Councell When Faber was urged again and again to shew what he could speak against that doctrine of Zuinglius he said I will not deal with him by word but I will confute
zeal of piety in the closure he saith Well Illustrious Prince stirr up that sparke which hath begun to kindle in thee and let fire come from the house of Savoy as from the house of Joseph and let all France be kindled by thee yea let that holy fire burn and increase that at last France may be truly called for the Gospel's sake the most Christian Kingdom as heretofore for that wicked service of Antichrist in shedding blood it was wickedly called most Christian Dated Septemb. 7. An. 1523. The particulare persecutions that were in that year I leave unto the Martyrologies XVII In the year 1525. Erasmus was persuaded by Henry VIII King The mutuall respect of Luther Erasmus of England and by Card. Wolsey Bishop of York to write against Luther which he did under that inscription diatribe de libero arbitrio Against that book Luther sent forth another de servo arbitrio The eyes of all men were then towards these two as if two bulls of Bashan were to rencounter But lyke two war-ships they were both sparing For Erasmus writing unto Melanchton saith You maruell why I have sent forth a book of free-will I had three sorts of enemies Divines and haters of learning were assaying every where to undo Erasmus both because I had hinted them in my books and because I had brought that most florishing Colledge into Lovan and that I had infected all that Country with tongues and good Letters as they speak These had persuaded all the Monarchs that I was asworne friend of Luther Therefore my friends seeing that I was in danger gave some hope unto the Pope and the Princes that I was to do some what against Luther and I did entertain this hope for the time and in the interim men not awaiting my book did provoke me with their pamphlets So I could not eschue but send forth what I had written or els I had offended all the Monarchs which would have thought that I had deluded them and these turbulent bodies would have cried that I keeped up for feare and looking for some what more sharpe would have raged more furiously Lastly because an epistle of Luther is in all mens hands where in he promiseth to hold his quill off me if I will also be silent men would have thought that here is a compact twixt us Moreover the Professors of heathnish letters at Rome themselves being more heathnish were wonderfully raging against me as it seemes envying the Germans Therefore if I had set forth nothing I had given occasion unto these Divines and Monkes and these clay-bakers at Rome whose Alpha if I be not deceived is N whereby to persuade the Pope and Monarchs what they were endeavoring Finally these furious Evangelicanes had been the more angry For I have handled the matter very modestly and yet what I writ it is according to my own mind albeit I will gladly quite it when I shall be persuaded of what is more right And what Luther thought of this book wee may understand by an epistle unto Spalatin dated Feri● 3. omnium Sanct saying It is incredible how I disdain thar book De libero arbitrio as yet I have reade but two shiets of it it is grievous to answer so learned a book of so learned a man This year by authority of Frederik King of Denmark notwithstanding all the opposition of the Bishops Copenhagen Malmoy and other towns especially the diocy of Vibergh forsook Popery and made open profession of Reformation So did George de Polentia Bishop of Sambia in Prussia and the town of Coningsberg there So did Henry Duke of Meklenburgh At Brunswik the Minorites held a Synode and setforth some propositions concerning prayer to Saints and the sacrifice of the Masse but not only the learned did impugne them but the people after much contention did expell the Minorites Jodoc Cownt of Hoia made a Reformation in his Land It began also at Anneberg and Cygnaea in Misnia at Gotha in Thuringia at Noribergh and Noerdling at Lichstall Scaphusen and some other places in Heluetia though at the same time some towns there made a combination against the Reformation Abr. Schultet Annal. XVIII The main business of that year was the work of Card. Campegius An example of Papal fraude Legate of Pope Clemens This Pope was altogether against the calling of a Councell and thought upon wayes to put it out of the thoughts of them who were desirous of it He considered the Grievances of Germany and resolves to give some satisfaction yet so that neither his authority nor gain of the Court may be abaited He findeth that these Grievances were not only against the Romane Court but against the bb and their officials against Curats and priests of Germany So he resolves to send an active man who may make some Reformation in these smaller things and he thinks if Germany be satisfied in these particulars concerning themselues they will not enquire further To this end he sends Campegius unto the Diet of the Princes at Norinbergh he had a long oration admiring that so many wise Princes would suffer any change in that Religion wherein they were born and their Ancestours had died and that they considered not how this change tendeth not only to condem all theit forefathers and the destruction of their souls but likewise to a rebellion against Civill Powers The Pope regardes not his own interest but in compassion toward Germany hath sent him to search out meanes of healing these maladies throughly It is not the purpose of his Blessednes to prescribe any thing unto them and far less expects he that they will prescribe any thing unto him but rather that they will think upon expedient salves And if this diligence of the Highpriest be now refused they can not blame him herea●ter The Emperour was then in Spaine and the Princes give thankes for the Popes good affection they shew that they are sensible of their own calamities as they had represented unto Pope Hadrian both their maladies and what salves they thought expedient and as yet they had received no answer and if he had any commission in that matter they entreat him to deliver it Campegius answereth that he knowes not whether any thing in that kind was propounded unto the Pope or his Cardinalls but he knowes their good affection and he hath full commission to concurre with them in what they shall judge conducible and he knowes what Cesar and they had done in the Diet at Worms and some had obeyed that Edict but why others had not obeyed it he knowes not but it seemes expedient that chiefly they would take a course to prosecute that Edict As for that they speak of Propositions tendered unto the Pope Hadrian he knowes not whether the Pope hath heard of them but this much three Coppies were brought to Rome and the Pope had seen one of them but he and the Cardinals did judge that these things were not done by Order of
place it seemes not expedient to be in Italy but in Germany where the controversy is for the most part Nor thought they it reasonable to oblidge themselves by oath to observe the decrees absolutely for that is contrary unto Christian liberty unless they knew what were to be the forme of the Councel who were Moderatour especially that the party defendent were not Mederator whether the Acts were to be determined by tradition or by the holy Scripture alone Ibid. In the next year Pope Clemens died but by the providence of God thus the liberty of religion was confirmed by the Pope as well as by the Emperour XXX An. 1533. George Duke of Saxony banished out of Lipsia 1533. all who would not go to Masse Luther hearing of this ordinance wrote unto the Protestants there exhorting them to suffer death rather than do against conscience and he called Duke George an Apostle of Satan George accuseth Luther before the Elector not only that he had reviled him but had stirred his subjects unto rebellion The Elector chargeth Luther to make his clear purgation or he must suffer Luther publishes a book declaring that he had exhorted the Lipsianes not to resist their Prince but rather to suffer which concerneth not rebellion Jo. Sleidan commen lib. 9. That year Erasmus publisheth a treatise De amabili Ecclesiae concordia but this Neutrall forme pleaseth neither Papists nor Protestants and the next year Luther accuseth him that he did but mock religion and turn it all into doubts sporting himself with ambiguous words whereas religion requireth plainness and cleareness Osiand Epit. cent 16. lib. 2. c. 26. XXX The Franciscan Friers were in danger at Orleans An. 1534. upon A craft of the Franciscanes in France this occasion The Praetor's wife by testament willed that she should be buried without pompe here husband desirous to satisfy here will hath a care to bury her beside her father and grandfather in the cloister without shew and he gave unto the Monks sixe crowns they expected much more and therefore they divisea way to make up their losse they accuse the defunct of Lutheranisme and cause a young Monke go upon the roof of the Church in the night time and make a noise an exorcist adjureth the wicked spirit to declare what he is whether he be that lately damned soul and for what sinne The Monk was informed what to answer and how They take witnesses The fraud was tryed the Friers were imprisoned and the young monk revealeth all The King hearing this voweth to throw down the Monastery but fearing that it might be matter of joy unto the Lutherans he dismisseth them In November of the same year in Paris and other places of France even within the Kings palace about one time of the night were papers set up against the Masse and other points of religion Inquiry was made many were apprehended and racked and burnt in the next year King Francis excuseth King France writes unto the Protestants in Germany him to the Protestants assembled at Smalcald that seing they intended the destruction of the Commonwealth said he the Germanes should not blame him more than he did blame them for suppressing the bowres or Manzerianes and he having a purpose to revenge himself on the Emperour craves by the same Ambassade that the Protestantes would make a league with him for reformation of religion So he pretendeth and entreates them to send some Divines namely Melanthon to dispute with the Masters of Sorbon he said He knew certainly that many superstitions were creept into the Church by insufficiency of priests and the Pope assumeth too much authority how beit by mans law he is the highest of all bb yet not by Gods word the traditions of the Church may be altered as time requires and therefore he is desirous to hear reasoning that things amisse may be amended He said also Pope Julius had excommunicated King Lewes XII John King of Navarre because they held that the Pope hath not power to call a Councel without consent of Christian Princes and he had raised Monarchs against them offring their Kingdoms as a prey In end he concludes suting a league without the Emperour They answer Without the Emperour they could and would do nothing In this assembly the former league was continued for ten years and into it were received all who were willing to professe the Augustan Confession So that they were 15. Princes and 30 Cities Cownt de Nassow was also admitted Henry VIII sent thither requiring that they would not admitt a Councell which would not abolish the abuses of former times or would confirme the Popes power They also required of him that he would receive the Augustan Confession but that he would not do That year Vergerius the Popes Legate had gone unto all the Princes The policies of Vergerius in Germany severally shewing them that the Pope had called the Councel to conveen at Mantua They all gave him one answere that they would advise in their meeting at Smalcald and there they told him they hope that Caesar will not depart from his promise and decree that the Councel should be in Germany nor can they understand what it meaneth that the Pope promiseth to provide for the safety of them which shall assemble when they look back into former times nor how in the Councell the way of treating can be rightly ordered where he who hath so oft condemned them will have the power in his hand Nor can it be rightly called a Councel where the Pope and his priests command all but where men of all conditions in the Church even Seculares also have a like power Vergerius had also been with Luther at Wittembergh and said The Church of Rome made great account of him and were sory for the want of such a man who might do good in the service of God and the Church which two are inseparable and the court was ready to vouchsave him all favour it was displeasant unto them that former Popes had used such bitterness against him Nor had he who professeth not Divinity a purpose to dispute controversies with him but to shew him the weight of humane reason how expedient it were unto him to be reconciled unto the Church he may consider that doctrine of his was not heard before those 18 years and hath brought forth innumerable sects where of each accurseth another whence many tumults and broils have arisen and therefore it can not bee from God but he was singularly blown up with selve-love who would endanger all the world rather than not to vent his own opinions seing he had continued without sting of conscience the space of 35 years in that faith wherein he was baptized he should still mantaine it He may remember how Aeneas Sylvius was once addicted unto his own opinions and hardly attained unto a silly chanonry in Trent but when he changed his opinions he became a Bishop and then a Cardinal and lastly was Pope and
in the judgement of the Masters of Sorbon what manner of Divine worship will they prescribe Art VIII on Matt. 22. 12. Annot. The marriage garment is faith Censure This annotation is hereticall Ans Forrein Nations I know will wonder at this barbarity and truly I am ashamed of our shame Albeit it were the greatest glory of the Kingdom of France if it were cleansed from such vile naughtiness under which it fainteth for so long time It is a heresy to call faith the marriage garment I will not mention the antient and Classicall Doctors which have thought so let the matter be considered without the defense of man Art IX on Jam. 2. 17 Annot. Faith without works is not faith Censure This proposition is hereticall Ans I grant historicall faith by which the devils do tremble is called faith but I speak with James who affirms that faith without works is dead ...... But these reverend fathers think that heaven will fall unless they maintain their formless faith by which Christians may bee without Christ Art X. on Ps 31. 4. Annot. Sela is added to shew that this sentence is remarkable where wee are taught how sin is forgiven to wit by believing in God who only can forgive sin O the singular grace and bountifulness of God toward men confessing their sins Censure This annotation is hereticall taking away sacramental confession and the power of the keies where it is said Who only can forgive sin seing the hierarchicall priests may forgive sin in their manner although only God forgive authoritatively and chiefly Ans But Christ dealt more tenderly with his most fierce enemies for when they objected unto him God only can forgive sin he did not call them hereticks for that but rather confirming what they had said he teaches that he had that power because he is one God with the Father Matt. 9. 6. If it be an heresy to give this honour unto God that he only can forgive sin then God is an heretick who affirms by the Prophet saying I even I blot away your inquities for my own sake Esa 43. 25. Wee know that men do forgive in their manner when they forgive the injuries that are done unto them Matt. 6. 14 And because the Apostls are not only the witnesses of the forgiveness of sin and by their teaching do seal it in the consciences of men but lykwise they do offer it as a thing wherewith they are entrusted the duty of forgiving sin belongeth unto them also Joh. 20. 23. But this hindereth not that the power of forgiving sin should be ascribed unto God wholly And indeed if it be not lawfull to speak of the remission of sin unless mention be also of confession we must put away all the Scripture which presseth that doctrin so oft and never speakes one word of auricular confession Art XIII on Ps 47. 10. Annot. Only God can help men Censure This annotation is hereticall taking away the help of the Saints Ans Why do they not rather complain that the mutuall help of men is taken away But so all men might have clearly seen that they do carp maliciously at a pious saying and yet I think not they were so wary for they look alwise unto their own gain and what ever superstition is lucrative they will fight for it lustily The condition of France is wretched and to be bewailed that none dar speak of faith and trust in God of praying unto him or of any part of his worship but these butchers will draw him as an heretick into the fire If a preacher say simply We should pray unto God the cry goeth He smelleth of heresy because he nameth not praying unto Saints If any say Trust in God that is intolerable because he speaks not of confidence in Saints But if prayer to Saints brought not lucre unto them they would let them sliep If is sufficient unto mee that the reader seeth they condem the first rudiment of the faith For by whatever way we be helped God only doth help whether by means of men or by another means and who do not acknowledge that all creatures are the instruments imployd by God is more foolish than a beast Art XV. on Esa 63. 16. Annot. According to the late Translation Abraham neither doth nor can help us Censure This is hereticall taking away the help of Saints Ans. If they do make such account of the Saints help why do they prefer Barbara Nicolaus unto Abraham the Father of believers yea why do they forget him in their praiers both publick and privat and cry so much unto Cristopher Antony Catherin and such others There is not any Breviary or Missal that obttudes not such Mediators upon God and never a worde of Abraham ..... But let the Holy Ghost plead for himself who hath spoken by the mouth of Isaiah my annotation is but a paraphrase of the Prophets words These are a few of many This Robert steven did first distinguish the verses of the Bible with arithmetical figures XL. John Calvin living as a Student at Basile published his book of The discipline in the Church of Geneva Christian Jnstitutions in the year 1536. and 25. year of his age The same year he went into Italy to visit the Dutchess of Ferrara Doughter of Lewes 12. King of France In his returning he was chosen to be Professor of Divinity in Geneva where the trueth of the Gospel had been preached before but as yet many Citizens did affect Popery The same year was penned a form of Christian doctrine and discipline together with a short catechism containing the chief heads of Religion those were published and all were required to swear the observance of that doctrine and discipline Many did refuse yet the Senate and people did swear thereunto An. 1537. The adversaries were not reformed from the scandalous licence and courses in which they had lived under Popery and antient feuds through occasion of the Savoyan warrs were not layd aside Though the Ministers did fairly and then more sharply admonish them yet they prevailed not so that Farel Caluin and Carold openly professed that they could not administer the sacrament of the Lords Supper unto people who live in so bitter enmity and so averse to Church-discipline For this cause the Sindics or Magistrats which were chosen in the end of that year not hearing the Ministers sent a command unto these three to depart out of the City within two dayes These Magistrates did so miss-carry themselves In their office that within two years they were found guilty some of murther and some of other misdemeanures and were condemned some to death and others to exile Then the Citizens ceased not from entreating the City of Strawsburgh by their Deputies and the mediation of Zurick untill they brought again Jo. Caluin Septemb. 13. An. 1541. Then he professed that he could not confortably exercize the Ministry among them unless with the teaching of the gospell discipline were also established So
countrey c. He had gone into Embden and lived there untill the year 1557 when he sent the book with the dedication unto the States of Holland That book was written in way of a dialogue between Theophilus and Lazarus of which I add a passage or two Lazarus asketh Whereunto doth the Spirit lead the children of God Thophilus answereth Vnto the love of holiness and hatred of sin they are also said to have a delyting and resting heart upon the bountifulness of our heavenly Father in all their necessities sufferings and adversities for the power of Christian faith is of such virtue that it drives through all persecution and suffering unto the acknowledging and feeling of the good will of God toward us with which will of God a Christian believer is so well satisfied that he strives no way against it that the vile flesh of old Adam should suffer here and the wicked will should not have always the dominion Lazarus Whence comes that Christian faith Theophi The knowledge of faith comes by hearing Gods word but the lively feeling and the delight which we get by hearing reading and thinking-upon that word is the gift of God which is powred and ingrafted by the Holy Ghost into the hearts of believers Paul teaches this clearly saying I have planted Apollos watered but God hath given the increase Laza. What is that faith Theoph. Christian faith is a lively fast feeling and trust into the love and mercy of God our heavenly Father manifested unto us in his only begotten Son Jesus Christ Laza. I confesse that I should have my refuge unto the Lord God as the Apostles did but I can not believe that God is so neer us as he was with them in the ship Theoph. Albeit God is not with us visibly as he was with them nevertheless he is with us and in us by his Divine power mercy and anointing of the Holy Ghost especially God is very neer unto them that are grieved in heart the whole Scripture declares in many places that the Lord God holdes us in the hand of his counsell and keeps us under the protection of his wings as a henn keeps her chickens yea can a mother forget her child and not have pitty on the son of her wombe and albeit she should forget him yet I will not forget you Is not this a great comfort that God pittieth us as a mother doth her children Saith not God unto his chosen people He that touches you touches the apple of mine ey ....... Laza. Can we not deserve the kingdom of heaven how comes that Theoph. It is because by nature we are altogether the children of wrath in ourselves we are unclean and begotten of them that were unclean so that the Prophet said truly All our best works and righteousnesses is as a filthy cloath where of we may be ashamed to come into the presence of God and far less can we deserve any good for them If we could satisfy the wrath of God by our good works then Christ had died in vain and we were Saviours of ourselves nor had we need to give God thanks for his mercy to wards us in Christ The kingly Prophet confesses this when he saith Lord enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight can none that lives be justified And that we may do any thing acceptable unto God we must be born again by the quickning water of the Holy Ghost who translates us from the kingdom of deceiving Satan into the kingdom and government of our Lord Iesus Christ So long as we are not by the Spirit of faith purged from our in-bred infidelity and grafted into Iesus Christ as our true Vine to bring forth by him the fruit of life we continue like to bad and unprofitable trees c Lavater Minister of Zurik shewes in a Narration of the Sacramentary strife that in the year 1524. John Rhodius and George Sagan two learned men coming to Zurik conferred with Zuinglius concerning the Sacrament and hearing that he was of the same judgement with them in that question did thank God that they were delivered from the contrary error and as yet they had not shewd the Letter of Honius in which the word Is in the institution of the Supper is expounded Signifieth which exposition Zuinglius did think most convenient That Letter of Honius is large but there he saith Our Lord Iesus had many a time promised remission of sin unto believers and at his last Supper he willing to confirm their hearts added a pawn unto his promise that they might be in no more doubt as a Bridegrom who would assure his Bride that she doubt no more of his love gives her a ring saying Take this there give I thee myself She receiving this ring believes that the Bridegom is her's turns away her heart from all other wooers and thinks how she may please that her spouse So is it with them who receive the Eucharist as a pawn from their Bridegrom c. At that time lived John Pistorius or Baker of Woerden he was a Priest and had been instructed by Io. Rhodius in S. Jerom's School in Utrecht because he married a wife he was accused by the Inquisitors imprisoned and burnt An. 1525. He was a learned man as appeares by his books printed lately These few particulares shew how the light of the Gospel began to breake out in the Netherlands so that even before Luther arose God had preserved from time to time ●ome few believers in the midst of the grossest darkness as also we may under stand how the truth was hated and persecuted as I touched before in the life of Charles V. and more may be seen in the book of Martyrs in the Netherlands about the year 1540. the persecution was hott and then many went from Flanders and other Provinces into England Trigland in his Church histo against V●enbog par 3. King Henry accepted them and placed them in several towns not only for enuy against the Pope but because many of them were wool-weavers and by them he brought that trade into his kingdom In the year 1550. they obtained liberty under the Kings seal that the Dutch and French Churches should continue in their Church-Discipline and order as they were then begun though not conform unto the Disciplin and ceremonies of the English Church and to hold Synods by themselves and that was in every congregation to chuse their own Ministers ruling Elders and deacons but with this condition that when they had chosen a Minister they should crave and obtain the consent of the King or of his heirs or ●uccessors as also when in their Synode they shall chuse a new Superintendent John Lasco was Superintendent at that time and Minister of a Congregation in London by advice of other Ministers Gualter Delen Martin Flandrus Francis Riverius and others he drew-up a book of Discipline prescribing the form of election of Ministers Elders and deacons directions concerning prayers
Edward and Zealous of the Reformed religion Henry would not suffer Gardener to come into his presence in time of his sicknes but called oft for Cranmer to receive spirituall confort Jo. Foxin Acts. Great joy was among the Fathers at Trent and Rome when they heard of his death Pe. Soave But they where disapointed as followes IV. Pope Paul seeing that England had left him and fearing the like departure ● Light persecution continue in Scotland of Scotland creates David beton one which was not entred into the order of priesthood Cardinal S. Stephani de Mon●e Coelio and sent him as his Legat to prevent defection Strict inquisition was made at his command in the year 1538. many both in Edinburgh and Sant Andrewes for fear did abjure the reformed Religion Notwithstanding his opposition the light of the Trueth spreads in the cloisters and the Friers preach against the ignorance and malice of the Bishops In February 1538. the bishops held a meeting at Edinburgh There two Friers Killore and Beverage two priests Duncan Simson and Thomas Forrest and a gentle man Tho. Forrester were condemned and burnt upon the Castle-hill Thomas Forrest had been Vicar of Dolor and was delated unto the Bishop of Dunkell for preaching every sunday to his parishoners upon the Epistles Gospels of the day the Bishop desireth him to forbear seing that diligence brought him into suspicion of heresy but said he if you can find a good Gospell or a good epistle that makes for the liberty of the holy Church teach that and leave the rest Thomas answereth I have read both the New testament and the old and I never found an ill epistle or an ill gospell in any of them The Bishop replieth I thank God I have lived well these many years and never knew the old nor new I content mee with my Portuise and Pontificall and if you leave not those fantasies you will repent when you can not mende it He answered he thought it his duty to do as he did and had layd his account with any danger that may follow The sommer following Jer. Russell a gray frier and Thomas Kennedy a young man of Aire not above 18 years of age were at Glascow accused of heresy because the Bishop Gawin Dumbar was thought cold in the business Mrs John Lawder And. Oliphant and frier Maltman were sent from Edinburgh to assist him The young man would have saved his life by denying the point● layd to his charge but when he heard Russel's answers he falls upon his knees and saith Wonderfull o Lord is thy love and mercy towards mee a miserable wretch for even now I would have denied thee and thy son the Lord Jesus Christ my only Saviour and so have thrown myself into everlasting condemnation thou by thy own hand hast pulled mee back from the bottom of hell and given mee to feell most heavenly comfort which hath removed the ungodly fear that before oppressed my mind now I defy death do what yee please I praise God I am ready The Frier reasoneth a long time with his accusers and when he heard nothing from them but bitter and menacing speeches he said This is your houre and power of darknes now yee sit as Judges and we stand and wrongfully are condemned but the day comes which will shew our innocency and yee shall see your own blindness to your everlasting confusion go on and fulfill the measure of your iniquity At these words the Bishop was moved and said These rigorous executions hurt the cause of the Church more than wee think of and therefore in may opinion it were better to spare the mens lives and take some other course with them These which were sent to assist said If he will follow any other course than which had been kept at Edinburgh he could not be esteemed a friend of the Church So he consentes to their cruelty All the time the fire was a preparing Rusell comforts the young man and useth such speeches Fear not brother for he is more mighty which is in us than he who is in the world the pain which wee shall suffer is short and light but our joy consolation shall never have an end death can not destroy us for it is destroyed already by him for whose sake wee suffer let us strive to enter by the same straite way which our Saviour hath taken before us The hearers were wonderfully moved with these and such words and seeing their constancy Spotswo in the Histo Lib. 2. At that time Geo. Buchanan was imprisoned for his poësie written against the Franciscans but he escaped out of prison The Bishops intend to use the like cruelty in all parts of the realme nevertheless day by day not only the learned but even those of whom such gifts could scarcely have been expected began plainly to paint forth the hypocrisy of friers and ignorance of priests Bishop Beaton becomes sick and commits his charge to his nephew the Cardinal which did succeed him At his first entring to shew his grandure he calleth to Sant Andrews in Maje 1540. eight Earls Lords 5 Bishops In May Anno 1540. 4 Abbots with a great number of Barons Priours Deans and Doctours and sitting in a chaire somewhat above them all because he was a Cardinal he speaks of the danger of the Catholick Church by the increase of hereticks and their boldnesse even in the Kings Court where they finde too great countenance He named Sir John Borthwick commonly called Captain Borthwick and some call him Provest of Lithgow whom he had caused to be summoned for dispersing the English New Testament and books of Jo. Oecolampade Melanthon and Erasmus and for maintaining diverse heresies and the Cardinal craves their assistance in proceeding in justice against him Among other articles these were read 1. The Pope hath no greater authority over Christians then any other Bishop hath 2. Indulgences granted by the Pope are but to deceive poor souls 3. bb priests and other clerks may lawfully marry 4. the heresies commonly called the heresies of England and their new liturgy is commendable and should be embraced c. He appeares not and is condemned for these particulars as an heresiarch and is ordained to be burnt in effigie if he can not be apprehended He sled into England and King Henry imploieth him in a commission to the Protestant Princes in Germany for a confoederation in defense of their common profession Some years preceeding King Henry had sent the Bishop of S. Davids with some English books unto his nephew K. James aiming to induce him unto the like Reformation and in that year he craves a meeting at York to treat of the common good of both kingdoms The King was advised by the Nobility to prepare for that journy and he returnes answer that he will come But the Cardinal and clergy fearing the effects of that Conference set themselves against it they cast the seed of discord among the Counsellers
with greater audience than ever he had before There the Earles Marshall Glencairn and others advise him to write unto the Regent an exhortation unto the hearing of Gods word He obe●et● them but it was in vain He is called by his flock at Frankford to return he goeth against the mind of many but promiseth to return if they abide constant in the trueth Then the Bishops summon him again for no-compearance they burn him in effigie at the cross of Edinburgh in July An. 1556. He wrote his appeal and caused it to be printed and directed it unto the Nobility and Commons of Scotland William harlaw preaches publickly in Edinburgh so did John Douglas a Carmelite and sometimes in Lieth Paul meffin preacheth ordinarily in Dundy and many leaving the Cloisters preach in all parts of the Country and the number of professors of Reformation was multiplied When the priests saw that they were much deserted they complain unto the Bishops and the Bishops judge it vain to summon these Preachers for heresy therefore they complain unto the Regent and accuse the Preachers of mutiny and sedition The Regent knew that the multitude of all sorts were earnest that way and saith It is safer to delay for a time all contrary course let the hereticks have some way and wee shall wait our opportunity Buchan Hist Lib. 16. V. After the death of King Henry followes a blessed Reformation in Publik Reformation in England under King Edward England for he had caused his young son Edward to be well instructed by Do. Cox and Edward L. Herford who then was called Protectour of England and Duke of Somerset both loved the Reformation and did his endeavour that the true light of the Gospell might shine everywhere He had a good helper Tho. Cranmer archb of Canterbury The King also was of singulare gifts above his age one of the rarest Princes that had been in many ages yea it is doubted if ever he had an equall in prudence besides his knowledge of Sciences and languages Greek Latine and French So he as another Josias purgeth the temple of the Lord from Popish idolatry and false invocation and would have brought it to greater perfection if time and life had answered unto his godly purpose It may be easily conceived how difficult it was to Reform all things at the first when the greatest part of the Privy Counsell of the Bishops and Nobility were open or close Papists but his purpose was not to leave one hoo●e of the Romish Beast and did forbid that the Masse should be permitted unto his sister In ● is first year by authority of Parliament the sacrament of the Lords supper was administred unto the people with both elements and Cranmer did translate and in some measure purge the Missal and Breviary In the second year that book under the name The book of common prayer and administration of Sacraments was by act of Parliament to be used in all churches and chappells and that none practize nor speak against it nor any part of it Providing also that they who are acquainted with other languages may use that which they understand best in chappells but not in parish-churches In this third year an Act was made against all books called Antiphoners Missals grailes processionals manuals legends pies portuisses paimers and other books whatsoever used before for service in the Church of England in English or Latine other than were then or after shal be set forth by the King Item against all images of stone timber alabaster or earth graven carved or painted in any church or chappell except only images or pictures upon any tombe for monument only of any person which had been of good reputation The book of Common prayer was some what amended in the year 1552. He put the Popish Bishops and priests to silence and removed them from their Benefices Bo●er Bishop of London was removed and for contumacy was condemned to perpetuall prison in the Tower and Do. Ridley became Bishop of London Gardener was deposed from Winchester c. But he killed none yea when the Counsell would persuade him to burn a woman Joan but●her he said What will yee send her quick to the Devill in her errours When the Reformation was first intended a generall Visitation of the Bishopricks was made by certaine prudent and learned men which were appointed Commissioners for severall Diocies and unto every Company two or three preachers were adjoined to preach at every Session and dehort the people from their wonted superstition and inform them in the trueth And that they might proceed the more orderly in their Comm●ssions or visitations 32 persons as in the time of King Henry VIII were appointed to prescribe certain instructions and orders of Visitation The troubles in Germany at that time did contribute by the gracious providence of God to the furtherance of the Gospell in England Tho. Cranmer by Letters brought Martin Bucer Paul Fagius Peter Martyr and other learned men in the year 1548 and 1549 their coming was most acceptable unto the King country Fagius an expert Hebrician and Bucer were sent to be Doctors in Cambridge and Martyr was designed Reader of Divinity in Oxford But as Theod. Beza in ●esp ad Fr. Balduin Vol. 1. Tractat. Pag. 322 edit An. 1570. hath observed in epist Buceri da●ed Cantabrig Januar. 12 An. 1550 concerning the purity of rites the advice of no forreiner was sought what they could do they did not fail both by word and write to advise the people to chuse good Pastours and to endeavour more purity both in doctrine and rites but some through mans wisdom and vanishing thoughts would glue God and Belial with the leaven of Antichrist And John à Lasco a Polonian was then a preacher of a Dutch congregation in London he in his preface before his book de Ecclesiastico ordine saith That most holy King was desirous to have the whole Religion so reformed throughout a●● the king ●om that he was carefull of no other thing almost but because some Lawes of the country were in the way that the publick rites of Divine worship especially which had been in use under Popery could not be purged out as the King himself would and I was instant for the forrein Churches it pleased them at last that the publick rites should be purged out of the English churches by degrees so soon as they could by the lawes and in the mean time forreiners which in this respect were not so tied unto these lawes of the Country should order their churches freely and without any respect unto the rites of t●e Country if their doctrin were only Apostolicall for so it may come to passe that the English churches also might be moved by unanimous consent of the Estates to embrace the Apostolical purity and some tooke t● is so ill that they did strive against the K● purpose So far he yea they did so strive and were so malicious that they did accuse the Duke of
historically in such paroxisms and great revolutions the like practise is scarcely evitable and certainly is contrary unto the Standing law of the Land and is condemned by the adverse party and yet mantained or at least the Actors have been cleared by their own party having the Supream power whether the practise was in good or evill as appeareth by the Parliament of England in that same year justifying or absolving all them who had done the like against the lawes made under Q. Mary and Standing for the time un-repealed as I hinted before and also by the Parliament of England absolving them who had torn and burnt the English Bibles and service-Service-books and had killed the Ministers c. in the year 1553. which was contrary unto the Law of the Land made in time of King Edward 6. and Standing at that time unrepealed The Regent hearing of those things gave presently order unto the French Companies to march toward Sant Andrews and sent proclamation to all the parts about to meet her in armes the next morning at Couper The Lords went thither the same night accompanied with a hundred horse only and so many foot but such was the readiness of men that before ten of the clock the next day they grew to 3000. Rothes and Ruthuen brought many Gentle men with them some came from Lothian and the towns shew great resolution The next day was foggy about noon the aire began to clear then the Frenches sent some to view the fields and these returning began to ●aint of their courage wherefore a Post was sent to Falkland to shew the Regent that the Lords were stronger than was supposed as also that there was mutiny in their own army some openly professing that they would not fight against their Country-men for pleasure of strangers These newes moved her to yeeld unto a treaty of peace so Lindsay and Waughton were employed by the Duke who commanded the Scots in the Regents army to confer with the Lords they would not suffer the two to Another treaty of peace come neer their army and said They knew the Regent had sent these forces against them and if they will invade they shall find them ready to defend but they professing their purpose of peace and that they were sent for that effect were admitted the Lords say They had been so oft abused by the Regent's promises that they can not trust her words any more But if She will send away the French men and give suretie that no violence shall be used against them of the true Religion they shall not be unreasonable They reply The Frenches can not be sent away untill the French King were advertised and She can give no other security but her own word nor stands it with her honour to do otherwise Because peace could not be concluded truce was made for 8. dayes upon condition that the Frenches shall be removed into Lothian and before the expiring of that time some shall be sent to Santandrews with authorised power to make a firm peace This truce was signed in name of the Queen by the Duke and Dosell Junie 13. So the Lords of the Congregation did first remove and at Couper they had a publick thankesgiving unto God that their enemies were disappointed and the next day the Armie was dismissed and the Lords went to Santandrews waiting but in vain for the makers of the peace and in the mean time complaints were brought dayly from Perth against him whom the Regent had set in the Provosts place and did oppresse them The Earle of Argile and Lord James did advertise the Regent and craved that the town may be restored to their former liberty No answer was returned wherefore the Lords went and sumoned the Provost Captains and souldiers to render the town assuring Perth se● free them if they will hold out and any one of them be killed in the assault all their lifes shall pay for it The Provost answered at first they had promised to keep the town and they will defend it to the last drop of their blood So they answered the second summons being confident that the Regent would send relieff But when the besiegers began to play upon the west and east parts of the town at once they within profered to depart if relief came not within twelve hours Thus the town was yielded and restored to their liberties Junie 26 The next day they consult what to do with the Bishop of Murray who was then dwelling in Scone and having many Scone is burnt souldiers there about had despitefully threatned the town The Lords wrot unto him that unless he come and assist them they could not save his Palace But these of Dundie considering his pride and especially how violent he had been against Walter mill would march to Scone some persons were sent to hinder them but because they had found in the Church a great parcell of his goods hid to preserve them the multitude could not be stayd till the ornaments as they terme them of the Church were destroyed The Lords did so prevaile that for that night the Church and place were spared and they brought away the multitude The same night the Bishops servants began to fortify again and to do violence unto some carrying away what baggage they had gote and the next day some few persons went again to behold what they were a doing the Bishops servants were offended and began to speak proudly and as it was affirmed one of the Bishops sons with a rapier thrust thorow one of Dundy because he looked in at the Girnell-door When this was reported the towns men of Dundie were enraged and sent word to the inhabitants of Perth that unless they would support them to avenge that iniurie they would never concur with them in any action The multitude was easily enflammed and quickly set all the palace in a fire Many were offended and an antient woman hearing them take it so ill said Now I see Gods judgements are just and that no man can save where God will punish since I can remember this place hath been nothing els but a den of whoremongers it is incredible how many wifes have been abused and young women de flowred by these filthy beasts which have been fostered in this Den and especially by that wicked man who is called The Bishop if every one knew alswell as I they would praise God and no man would be offended With these words many were pacified Histo of Reforma The day preceeding news was brought that the Regent had ordered a garrison to lye in Sterlin to seclude the Congregation of the one side of Forth from the other the Lords made hast to prevent that and riding all night came early in the morning where the altars and images and abbey of Cambuskenneth were thrown down and on the fourth day marched toward Edinburgh doing the like at Lithgow The Lord Seton being Provest of Edinburgh had undertaken the protection of the black
what they were doing in Scotland sent unto Queen Elisabet requiring to bring back her Forces and he would render Calais which was taken in her sisters time The Queen answereth That fisher town is not to be weighed with the hazard of Britanne Then the Kings Counsellers were desirous of peace but thought it disgracefull to treat with his subjects Wherefore he entreats the Queen to mediate a peace so the English Secretary and a Doctour Wotton Dean of Canterburry were sent with the French Ambassadours into Scotland While these were upon Queen Regent dieth their journy the Queen Regent dieth through displeasure and sicknes in the castle of Edinburgh Juny 10 An. 1560. Before her death she desired to speak with the Duke the Earls of Argile Glencairn Marshall and Lord James unto them she bemoaned the troubls of the realm and entreated them to study peace and to perform these particulars that were lately written in that Letter unto her then bursting forth into tears she asked pardon of them all and disposing herself for another world she sent for John willock the Preacher of the town and conferring with him a pretty space she professed that she did trust to be saved by the death and merites of Jesus Christ only Shortly after her death truce was made for hearing the Ambassadours and peace was concluded at Edinburg among other articles the 8th was that the King nor Queen shall depute no strangers in the administration of Civil and common Justice nor bestow the publick Offices upon any but born subjects of the realm 9. that a Parliament shall be held in the month of August next for which a commission shall be sent and it shall be as lawfull in all respects as if it had been ordained by expresse command of their Majesties providing all tumults of warre be discharged and they who ought by their places to be present may come without fear So on July 16. both Frenches and Englishes did return home and a solemne thankesgiving that day was in the Church of S. Giles by the Lords and others professing true Religion XI In the midst of these broyls the Counsell did nor forget the condition of the Church and as it is said expressely in the beginning of the first The Reformation goethon book of Discipline on the 29 day of Aprile in that year 1660. they gave Order unto the Ministers to conveen and draw up in writing and in a book a common order for reformation and uniformity to be observed in the discipline and policy of the Church This they did as they could for the time before the 20 day of May but it was not allowed by the Counsell untill January 17. following After the solemn thankesgiving in July the Commissioners of Borroughs with some Nobles and Barons were appointed The first plantation of Ministers and Superintendents to see the equall distribution of Ministers as the most part shall think expedient so one was appointed unto every chief burgh and City they appointed five whom they called Superintendents What was their office appeares by the first book of Discipline wherein it is written thus Wee consider that if the Ministers whom God hath endowed with his singular graces among us should be appointed to severall places there to make their continuall residence that then the greatest part of the realm should be destitute of all doctrine which should be not only the occasion of great murmur but also be dangerous to the salvation of many and therefore wee have thought it a thing expedient at this time that from the whole number of godly and learned men now presently in this realm be selected ten or twelve for in so many Provinces we have divided the whole to whom charge and commandement should be given to plant and erect Kirks to set order and appoint Ministers as the former prescribes to the countries that shal be appointed to their care where none are now And by their means your love and common care over all inhabitants of this realm to whom you are equally debtors shall evidently appear as also the simple ignorant who perchance have never heard Iesus Christ truly preached shall come to some knowledge by the which many that are dead in superstition and ignorance shall attain to some feeling of godliness by the which they shall be provoked to seek farther knowledge of God and his true Religion and worship where by the contrary if they shall be neglected then shall they not only grudge but also seek the means where by they may continue in their blindnes or return to their accustomed idolatry and therefore we desire nothing more earnestly than that Christ Jesus be once vniversally preached throughout this realm which shall not suddenly bee unless that by you men be appointed and compelled faithfully to travell in such Provinces as to them shal be assigned Here they designe the boundes for ten Superintendents and then it is added These men must not be suffered to live as your idle Bishops have done heretofore neither must they remain where they gladly would but they must be preachers themselves and such as may not make long residence in any place till their Kirks be planted and provided of Ministers or at least of Readers Charge must be given to them that they remain in no place above twenty dayes in their visitation till they have passed through their whole bounds They must preach thrice at the least every week and when they return to their principall Town and residence they must be exercised likewise in preaching and edification of the Kirk and yet they must not be suffered to continue there so long that they may seem to neglect their other Kirks but after they have remained in their chief town three or four months at most they shal be compelled unless by sicknes they be retained to re-enter in visitation In which they shall not only preach but also examine the life deligence and behaviour of the Ministers as also the order of their kirks and manners of the people They must further consider how the poor be provided how the youth be instructed They must admonish where admonition needeth and redresse such things as by good counsell they may appease And finally they must note such crimes as be hainous that by censure of the Kirk the same may be corrected If the Superintendent be found negligent in any the chief points of his office and specially if he be negligent in preaching of the word and visitation of the kirks or if he be conuicted of such crimes as in common ministers are damned he must be deposed without respect of his person or office Though Bishop Spotswood professe to set down all the book of Discipline yet of all this that I have written he hath but foure lines but he omits not the bounds of each Superintendent Then after the manner of the election of the Superintendent it followes in the book thus the Superintendent being elected and appointed unto his
such as disobeied or contemned the Superintendents in their function 3. That punishment be appointed for the abusers and contemners of the Sacraments 4. That no Letters of Session or warrant from any Judge be given to answer or pay tythes unto any person without speciall provision that the parishoners retain so much in their hands as is appointed for maintenance of the Ministry And that all such as are given heretofore be called in and discharged 5. That the Lords of the Session or any other Judges proceed not upon such Precepts or warnings past at the instance of them which lately have obtained fues of Vicarages and Manses and Churchyards and that sixe a kers if so much there be of the Gleeb be always reserved to the Minister according to the appointement of the book of Discipline 6. That no Letters of Session nor other Warrants take place untill the stipends contained in the book of Disciplin for maintenance of the Ministers be first consigned in the hands at least of the principalls of the parishioners 7. That punishment be appointed against all such as purchase bring home or execute within this realm the Popes Bulls The Tenour of the Supplication was this Please your Honours and the Wisdoms of such as are presently conveened with you A supplication of Barons burgesses in Counsell to understand that by many arguments we perceive what the pestilent generation of that Roman Antichrist within this realm pretends to wit that they would erect their idolatry take upon them Empire above our consciences and so to command us the true subjects of this realm and such as God of his mercy hath under our Soveraine made subject unto us in all things to obey their appetites Honesty craveth and conscience moveth us to make the very secrets of our hearts patent to your Honours in that behalf whichs is this That before ever these tyrants and dumb dogs empire above us and above such as God hath subjected unto us that wee the Barons and Gentle men professing Christ Jesus within this realm are fully determined to hazard life and whatsoever we have received from God in temporall things Most humbly therefore beseeching your Honours that such order may be taken that we have not occasion to take again the sword of just defence unto our hands which we have willingly after God had given Victory both to your Honours and us resigned over into your hands to the end that Gods gospell may be publickly preached within this realm the true Ministers thereof reasonably maintained idolatry suppressed and the committers there of punished according to the lawes of God and men In doeing whereof your Honours shall finde us not only obedient in all things lawfull but also ready at all times to bring under order and obedience such as would rebell against your just authority which in absence of our Soverain wee acknowledge to be in your hands bes●eching your Honours with upright judgement and indifferency to look upon these few ar●icles and by these our Brethren to signifie unto us such answer again as may declare your Honours worthy of that place whereunto God after some danger sustained in his mercy hath called you And let these enemies assure themselves that if your Honours put not order unto them that we shall shortly take such order that they shall neither be able to do what they list nor to live upon the sweat of the browes of such as are not debters unto them Let your Honours conceive nothing of us but all humble obedience in God But let the Papists be yet once again assured that their pride and idolatry we will not suffer This Supplication was sent by the Master of Lindsay the Lords of Lochinvar Pharniherst and Whittengham Tho. Menzies Provest of Aberdien and Ge. Lovell burgess of Dundy The Lords and Counsell made an Act ordinance answering to every head of these articles and commanded Letters to be answered thereupon At this time Lord James Stuard had returned from France and brought Letters from the Queen praying them to entertain quietnes and to suffer nothing to be attempted against the Contract of peace which was made at Lieth till her own coming home and to suffer the Religion publickly established to go forward c. This second fall got Satan after he had begun to trouble the Religion once established by Law The Histor. of Reformat Lib. 3. That book closeth with these words The books of discipline have been of late so often published that we shall forbear to print them at this time hoping that no good man will ref●se to follow the same till God in a greater light establish a more perfite By these and many passages of the book it is cleare that at that time they did not judge it to be the constant rule of Disciplin in all time coming and so we will find that within few years the Assembly thought upon another Order XIV August 19. An. 1561. The Queen arrives at Lieth very many The Queens arrivall of all ranks come to congratulate her safe return much mirth was that week in Halirudhouse and Edinburgh On Sunday August 24. when preparation was for the Masse in the Chappell-Royal the hearts of the godly were stirred and some said openly Shall that Idol be suffered to take place again within this realm It shall not One carrying the candle was sore affrighted No Papist durst speak against them but Lord James took upon him to keep the Chappell-door when the Masse was ended the Priest was convoied betwixt the Lords of Coldingham Halirudhouse unto his chamber The next day the Queen comes into Privy Counsell Some were sent unto the Noblemen severally with these or such persuasions Alas will you chase our soverain from us She will incontinently return to her Galeys and then what will all Nations say of us may we not suffer her a litle while I doubt not but she will leave it if we were not assured that She may be won we should be as great enemies to the Masse as ye can bee her Uncles will go away and then we shall rule all at our pleasure would not we be as sorry to hurt the Religion as any of you would bee With these persuasions the fervency of many was abated and An Act concerning Religion an Act was made wherein her Majesty ordaines Letters to be directed and proclaimed that all the subjects should keep peace and Civil society while the Estates of the realme may be assembled and her Majesty shall have ●aken a finall order by their advice which her Majesty hopeth shall be to the contentment of all the Law bidding that none should take in hand privately or openly any alteration of the State of Religion or attempt any thing against the same which She hath found publickly universally standing at her arrivall under pain of death With certification that if any subjects shall come in the contrary he shall be held for a seditious person and raiser
equal in the thing signified or diverse in visible signes and the same in the intelligible signification those were promissory and these are demonstrative or as others speak the old were prenuntiative and the new are contestative Therefore it is not expedient to put that in a Decree Others said The opinion of the Lutherans and Zuinglians must be condemned without descending into particulares seing they say there is no difference but in rites and no other difference hath been shewed Article 6 Immediatly after the sin of Adam the sacraments were instituted by God and by means of them grace was given The Dominicans would have this absolutly condemned The Scotists said It is probable because of the sacrifices and circumcision and if as Thomas saith children were saved before Christ by faith of their parents children now are in a worse estate seing the faith of parents availes not their children without baptism for Augustin holds if a parent were carrying his child to be baptised and the infant to die on the way this infant were condemned They all condemned the 7. and 8. articles In the sacrament grace is given unto him only who believes that his sins are remitted Grace is not alwayes given in the sacraments nor unto all in respect of the sacrament itself but when and where and to whom it pleaseth God The 9. article denying a character in a sacrament gave occasion of more talking Soto said It is grounded on holy Scripture and was ever held as an Apostolical Of the character of the sacrament tradition albeit the word character was not vsed by the Fathers Others said Gratian makes no mention of it and Scotus saith It is not necessary by the words of Scripture nor Fathers but only by authority of the Church this is vsual unto that Doctor by a kind of courtsy Then it was questioned What is a character where is it Some called it a quality and those were of four several opinions as there be so many sorts of qualities Some called it a spiritual power some an habite others a spiritual figure and others called it a metaphorical quality Others called it a relation Some said It is ensrationis No less variety was for the subiect of it some placed it in the essence of the soul some in the understanding some in the will and some in the tongue or hands Then how many sacraments have a character Some said Only three which are not iterated Others said That is probable but not necessary Others said It is a necessary article of faith because Innocentius 3. mentioneth it and it was so defined by the councell of Florence Article 10. All Christians of what soever sexe have equal power in the ministration of word and sacraments Albeit none VVho may administer hold this article so much as the Romish Church doth especially in baptism yet they condemned it as contrary unto Scripture to tradition and the use of the Church As also they condemned article 11. A bad Minister conferreth not a sacrament Article 10. Every pastor hath power at his pleasure to protract or contract or change the forms of the sacraments It was distinguished as having a double sense by formes may be understood the essential words as it is said A sacrament hath a sensible element for the matter and a word for form or may be understood the rites which include some things not necessary but decent In the first sense they made a canon condemning the article and for the other they made another canon that albeit accidental things admit mutation yet when a rite is received by publick authority or confirmed by common custom it should not be in every mans power to change it excep the Pope only Concerning article 3. of the Minister's intention they would not change from the councel of Florence holding the Minister's intention necessary But what Of the ministers intention intention The common opinion was Intention to do as the Church doth is sufficient Here arose a difficulty Because mens opinions are different in that What the Church is their intention to do as the Church doth might also be different Some said It might rather be said It is not different when one hath the same aime to do what was instituted by Christ and observed by the Church though a false Church be taken for the true if the rite be the same The Bishop of Minori said It is no difficulty among the Lutherans for the Minister's intention but it is otherwise amongst us holding that the sacrament gives grace and it seldom happeneth that grace is obtained by any other means surely little babes and many having but small understanding are saved no other way If a priest having the charge of 4. or 5000. souls were an infidel or hid hypocrite and had intention not to do as the Church doth it must follow that the children are damned and all penitents and communicants were without fruit Neither is it sufficient to say Faith suppleeth the defect because faith suppleeth nothing to the children according to our doctrine neither availeth it unto others so much as the sacrament and to attribute so much unto faith were to take it from the sacraments as the Lutherans do He nameth other in convenients and then said He who saith God suppleeth by his omnipotency will sooner make one believe that God hath provided that such accidents should not happen by ordaining that to be a sacrament which is administred according to the instituted rite albeit the Minister hath another intention This doth not cross the common doctrine or Florentin counsel because that intention is only to be understood which is manifested by external work tho inwardly it may be contrary He confirmed this by example of Athanasius being a child and the censure of his fact by the famous Alexander Bishop of Alexandria The Divines abode still for the intention either actual or virtual as if without it a sacrament can be of no force And to speak by anticipation this Bishop wrote a little book of this question the year following and said The determination of the Synod is understood and should be expounded in this his sense The 14 article was readily condemned Sacraments were ordained only to cherish faith There was not much debate of baptism or confirmation some of them were calumnies and others were contradictory to all their Divines They agreed ●asily in framing the anathematismes Difficulty in framing the decree● but no way could they agree in the positives of doctrine nor of reformation In the doctrine every sect was stieve for their own opinions wherefore some said Positive articles are not necessary lest one party be condemned Others said The order that is begun can not be left and diligence may be used to satisfy all parties Some said Albeit the factions were contentious in delivering their opinions yet all submit unto the determination of the Synod Others said Such protestations of submission are terms of reverence and should be ansvered with
own cousine without dispensation therefore he consulted how to dethrone him but the puissance of his father and father in law seemed to with stand all the power that the Pope could make against him Osian cent 16. Lib. 3. c. 62. 66. 67. ex Beuth. Nigrin In his Bull against Queen Elisabet he saith Christ hath made the Pope the only Prince over all Nations and kingdoms and applieth unto himselfe properly what was said figuratiuely to the prophet Jere. 1. I have set the over nations c. In his bull before the Breviary he complaines of the multitude of Missales and Breviaries vsed in his time and he commandeth that one for all excep those that had been in use above 200 years So that as yet there is not an uniformity among them as some would make the simple folk believe He did confirm all the liberties that were granted by any of his predecessours unto all and every sort of begging friers and did discharge all Bishops from restraining them in any way Before his time were some footsteps of antient truth to be seen in the Canon-law but this Pope commanded Thomas Manrig Master of the Apostolicall palace to review both the decrees and the decretales and blot out of them what was offensive as they spoke and so in the year 1572. the Canon-law came forth with many defects as I did touch before when I spoke of Gratian here I add one or two exemples Dist 1. C. 1. the glosse saith Apocrypha that is without a certain authour as the Wisdom of Solomon Ecclesiasticus Judith Tobit and the book of Maccabees these are called apocryphi and yet are read but perhaps not generally De poenit dist in princi utrum the glosse saith Sines are forgiven neither by contrition of the heart nor by confession of the mouth but only by the grace of God Ibid dist 3. c. 25. the glosse saith in baptisme originall sin is washed away that it shall not hurt but not that it is not He did the like with many others Writers namely with the work of Cardinal Cajetan as appeares by comparing the lately printed Commentary on Tho. Aquin. with the edition at Venice An. 1523. This Impius was a most cruell enemy of them who would not embrace the Canons at Trent and therefore he caused burn many at Rome as Julius Zoanetus Pet. Carnesius Bart. Bartoccius Aonius Palearius c. He attempted many things against Elisabeth Queen of England whom he did excommunicate and against the Neither-Landes he stirred up the civill wars of France and was the prime plotter of the massacre An. 1572 but sawe it not for he died in May preceeding In the election of the Pope it was then an appointment of the Colledge that none should be chosen without consent of the two parts the King of Spain knowing this appointment hath by pensions and preferments assured a third part of them to be at his devotion in the election and so he hath exclusive power that without him a Pope can not be chosen He proceeds also by his Oratout to propound and name four or five of whom if they chuse one he is satisfied The colledge distastes this course but there is no remedy therefore next discretion is to chuse one whom they do judge least able or willing to follow him At that time they were mightily enflammed and banded themselves against him nevertheless in end the publick necessity and their own particulares made them yeeld unto one of his nomination But because the means of attaining and maintaining the Papall crown are clean contrary in the one fashioning themselves unto all mens humours and in the other looking that all men should accommodate themselves unto the Papall honor the King is often disappointed of his aim Sande's Relation II. GREGORY XIII did use many meanes to restore Popery and to confirm the power of the Pope every where for this cause he erected two colledges of Jesuits or Seminaries at Rome in favours of Germane and Englishes and gave unto them large revenues but such as had before appertained unto other Societies as the English Jesuites in their apologie ch 2. sect 6. which was answered by Tho. Bilson say that the foundation of their colledge was instituted long before to an hospitall of their Nation The Popes aim was that so many Germanes and Englishes being Jesuited there might be employed to bring back Germany and England under the yoke of Rome and the Jesuites did vant that this Pope had gifted them with large revenues He also did ●oment the wars in France and Low Countries and he pressed the Emperour to expell all Protestants out of his own inheritance if not out of the Empire By his Bull An. 1572. he did annull all power given by other Popes concerning the Index expurgatorius and forbidden books as not being done sufficiently and gave another order with command to be only acknowledged Where as Pope Pius V. had ordained many passages to be blotted out of the Canon-law Gregory caused restore some of these passages but added another glosse contrary unto the text He keeped the Jubilee An 1575 and on March 31. he caused publish his Bull excommunicating all Hussites Wick●levests Lutheranes Zuinglians Caluinists Hugonots Anabaptists Trinitarianes and all others dissenting from the Church of Rome and all their abettours and all that have or print or sell any of their books .... and ordaining that this Bull shall be published by all Patriarches Ordinaries in every place at least once every year in all Churches After that year he sent Indulgences unto the Bishops of Germany without money but only for saying so many Paternosters and so many Ave Maryas and for so many almes In the year 1577. he confirmed the Fratermity of the Virgine Mary and by Bull he gave Indulgences for a year unto all who would say a Rosen crown unto the Virgine that is if they would say five Paternosters and fifty Ave Maryas Under pretence of planting Christian Religion he planted the Jesuits in Poland Transsylvania Livonia East and West Indies c. Whence it is that the Jesuites do write so much of their miracles in remote Countries and that they have baptised so many thousands which were paganes but they may the more boldly say so because few in Europe can controle them in the particulares He made his base son Charles boncompagno Marques of Vineola and then Duke of Sora and he was so liberall of Peters revenues unto his friends that Papirius Masson the writer of his life is fain to apologize him for it He published a Bull dated Tusculi An. 1581. 6. cal Mart. wherein he writs thus Seing the Fathers of the Councell at Trent were interrupted by time that they could not finish the Breviary as they intended and they had by decree referred all that matter unto the judgement and authority of the Romane Pope and in the Breviary are two things principally to wit one containes prayers hymnes that should
because the Popish Party understood it that works are necessary to make up justification and to promerite salvation At last in a Conference at Altemburgh in the year 1568. the question was debated and they agreed in these terms New obedience and good works both external and internal are necessary unto believers and such who turn unto God But they could not condescend to use the words necessary unto salvation The Wittebergers said Works are necessary not indeed by necessity of efficiency but of presence and those of Jena denyed not the necessity of presence but they said Such a phrase should be shunned because of scandal and for fear of error or mistaking for why should we use dangerous words with the erroneous sophisters and then parget or plaster them with glosses when we have safer words 2. A more grievous contention was renewed for the Vbiquity of Christs body here I wil use the words of George Calixtus Professor in Julia in his Consultatio de Tolerantia Certainly seing the omnipresence of Christs flesh was not known nor heard in the vniversal Church even untill Stapulensis Luther it might yet have been not known albeit it were built upon a solide foundation and a necessity of believing it might have not been layd upon the vulgare or the learned And indeed but two passages one out of the book PERI TOU RETÒU and another ex Majore Confessione are the only at least the main whereupon Luther buildes the Vbiquity and that was done by him when he was earnest against his adversaries to establish any way the presence of the Lords body in the Eucharist the former book was published in the year 1527. and the other in the next year in the year 1529 by procurement of Philip the illustrious Landgrave of Hass was the Conference at Marburgh there Luther and Zuinglius agreed in all articles excep the Eucharist .... And Luther neither did judge nor press the omnipresence as a point of doctrin wherein he craved assent In the Confession of Ausburgh the third article is of those mysteries but with no or very slender touch of omnipresence Neither at that time nor any time following in the disputations between the Reformed and the Popish came the omnipresence into question or controversy therefore Luther suffered it to be buried in silence Yea and in the year 1537. when he wrote the articles of Smalcald he averred expressly that there was no controversy between him and the adversaries the Papists concerning the Trinity the Incarnation the Person of Christ seing said he we confesse the articles on both sides But what the Papists have taught or do teach concerning those articles may be known by their writings especially the vnanimous consent of the Schoolmen and seing in all these is not a jota concerning the omnipresence it is manifest also that Luther did leave it and prosess agreement in the doctrin of the Person of Christ with them who did not acknowledge vbuiquity ........ And so while Luther lived that question was asleep which some men did waken up again about the year 1562. of whom the principals were John Br●ntius and Jacob Andreae Neither have I pleasure nor is it necessary to repeat all the history but it is certain this later man spared no travell untill he persuaded some to embrace Vbiquity and forced it upon others and nevertheless the could not persuad all that embrace the Augustan Confession or as they speak the Lutherans not the Danes not the Holsatians nor those of Norinberg Helmstad and many more Therefore some of those who are called Lutherans are at this day for Vbiquity and against them are all other Christians both Greeks or of the East part of the world and Papists and Calvinians So far Calixtus For justifying his words concerning the Danes I add the testimony of Nic. Hemingius Professor of Divinity and Preacher in Coppenhaghen at that time In his Catechism he expounding the Article of Christs ascension saith This Article must be understood of Christs true body and the bodily placing thereof in heaven lest we think either that the humane nature in Christ is swallowd up by the Divine or that it is diffused into the whole world with the Divine seing both these do most openly deny Christs manhood Is not Christ every where Yes truly by communication of properties according to that Joh. 3. None ascends into heaven but he who came from heaven But it 's certain that when the Lord spake these words with Nicodemus his body was circumscribed on the earth wherefore the saying of Christ must be understood by communication of properties So Cyprian He ascended into heaven not where the Word God was not before but where the Word made flesh sat not before to wit by bodily placing Again he speaking against the errors concerning the Lords Supper saith What say you of them who say that the manhood is every where with the Godhead These for eschuing the error of them who deny that we receive the flesh and blood of the Lord in the Supper fall into this horrible error that they assert the manhood of Christ to be every where with the Godhead whose opinion is above in the Article of ascension clearly confuted and the Angel said plainly unto the women He is risen he is not here Here truly either the Angel lied which is horrible to think or they are deceived who say that the humanity of Christ is everywhere with the Divinity by which he filleth all things or is every where Also Paul saith Phil. 3. that our bodies shall be made like unto the glorious body of Christ But who daraver that our bodies shall be infinite that they may be every where Truly thus the trueth of humane nature should be destroyed Therefore neither was Christs body made infinite after his resurrection Moreover the Holy Fathers confess that Christs body is circumscribed For Nazianzen saith that the same Christ is circumscribed and uncircumscribed earthy and heavenly comprehensible and incomprehensible for that is the diversity of the two natures humane and Divine which Diversity because the Eutychians denyed they were justly condemned of heresy How then say the Catholicks that Christs body and blood is truly in the Supper The true body and blood of Christ are in the Supper together with the bread and wine not by conjunction of nature but Sacramental For Luther and the Holy Fathers testify that it is not carnal nor an including of the body in the bread or of the blood in the wine so that place and body touch one another and the place yields unto the body Wherefore unto this true presence of Christs body and blood in the Supper it is no way necessary that his manhood be every-where with the Godhead but it is enough to believe tha● as at the institution of the Supper the Lord sat with a circumscribed body and nevertheless he gave unto his disciples his body to be eaten and his blood to be drunken and that ●ruly according
adultery or other crimes and continue in them V. Of the law and the gospell they say Whatsoever in the holy Scripture is against sin belongs unto the law and the gospell properly is the doctrine teaching what man who hath not satisfied the law should believe to wit that Christ hath satisfied for all our sins and hath obtained remission but in a large sense the doctrine of repentance may be called the gospell And they condem it as pernicious and false to say The gospell properly is the doctrine of repentance or that it is not the only preaching of Gods grace VI. concerning the use of the law Albeit believers be free from the curse and coaction of the law yet they are not lawless but the law must be preached both unto the unconverted and converted yet with this different issue that those who obey for fear of the curse are said to do the works of the law and who being regenerat do obey willingly as if there were no curse nor reward are said to obey the law of Christ and the law of the mind neither are they under the law but under grace VII concerning the Lord's Supper they first condem those as crafty and deceiving Sacramentarians who believe the true presence of the very substantial and lively body and blood of Christ and that the presence and eating of it is spiritual by faith next they hold that the body and blood of Christ is truly and substantially there and is truly distributed with the bread and wine and received not only by them who come worthily but by the unworthy albeit by the one sort unto their confort and the other to their judgement and damnation unless they repent And the grounds of this their faith are 1. Jesus Christ is very God and man in one person undivided and inseparable 2. the right hand is every where and Christ in his manhood is set at the right hand of God 3. the words of the institution are not false 4. God knowes many wayes and can be present as he pleaseth neither is he tied to that only way which the philosophers call Local And so the body of Christ is present not only spiritually but also bodily yet not Capernaiticaly but in a spirituall and heavenly manner in respect of the sacramental union Thirdly they condem Popish transsubstantiation the sacrifice the refusing of the cup c. VIII of the person of Christ they say albeit the Godhead and manhood of Christ retain their several properties yet they are vnited personaly not as two planks conioined but as iron and fire or he soul and the body Wherefore among other articles they condem them who hold that only the manhood suffered and only the Godhead is present with us in the sacrament and in all our crosses or that this presence is not in respect of his manhood and the Sone of God doth not all the works of his omnipotency in and with and by his manhood and Christ in respect of his manhood is not capable of omnipotency and other Divine properties IX Concerning Christ's descending into hell they say It should not be curiously disputed but be believed simply that he descended into hell and overcame the power of death and Satan but when and how it can not be known in this life X. concerning Eclesiastical ceremonies which are not commanded nor forbidden in the Worde they say those are not any part of Divine worship and may be changed as the edification of the Church in several times and places shall require yet without levity and scandal and in time of persecution when a constant confession is required nothing should be yielded unto the enemies of the gospell or for their sake XI Concerning eternal predestination first they distinguish between prescience and predestination prescience say they is common to the estate of the godly and ungodly and is not the cause of sin in any man but predestination or election concerneth the godly only this can not be searched among the hid decrees of God but in the reveeled word which teaches that God hath shut up all men under unbelief that he might have mercy on all and willeth not that any man should perish but rather that all men should repent and believe in Christ neither is any saved but who believe in him And where it is said Many are called but few chosen it is not to be so understood as if God would not have allmen to be saved but to shew that the cause of the damnation of the wicked is their not-hearing or contempt of Gods word And they have no mention of reprobation They have a twelth Head against the heresies of Anabaptists Arians and Antitrinitarians This book was the occasion of an open separation The next year the Divines of the Palatinate reply under the name of Admonitio Neostadiana confirming the ortho doxe doctrine concerning the Person of Christ and the Supper shewing the false imputations of errors examining the authority and true sense of the Augustan Confession discovering the indirect means of penning and seeking subscriptions of that book and demonstrating the uniust condemnation of the true doctrine When this book was published some that had subscribed the former book declared that they had subscribed with limitations and not absolutely as the book was published and they recalled their subscriptions and the contrivers of that book replied under the title Apologia Erfurtensis So much was written pro and con The points wherein they insist most were the question of the Lord's Supper the communication of the Divine attributes unto the manhood and vniversal grace Unto those of the Palatinate were joyned the Princes and Ministers of Anhalt and Nassaw the Helvetians and many Cities of Germany besides those of other Nations Untill this day it is cleare that those Vbiquitaries inveigh most bitterly against their adversaries and impute many errors unto them falsely by which two means they a lienate the simpler sort from all reconciliation This difference occasioned the compacting of the Harmony of Confessions After that time there were other Conferences between these parties but all in vain V. In Constantinople the Muffti or highpriest of the Turks dealt with Troubles in the Greek Church Amurathes to take all the churches of the city from the Christians The Greeks Armenians and other Christian Nations did interceed in the contrary alledging the liberty that was granted by Mahomet 2. and others his successors The Muffti answered That liberty was granted when few Turks were in the city but now when there be so many of their own Religion Christians should have no place within the walls Two churches were taken from them and Amurathes turned all his wrath against the Patriarch and caused lead him in an iron-chain through the city and then banished him unto Rhodes Sundry causes were alledged as that he had caused the Christians receive the new Calendare of Rome to the scandal of many he had pronounced a Sentence of divorcement against a Noble
disobey to proceed against them with censures of the church .... 6. Because Bihops are to be charged to remove the corruptions of that estate the particulares are named to wit 1. That they be content to be Pastors or Ministers of a flock 2. They shall usurp no criminall jurisdiction 3. they shall not in Parliament vote in name of the Church without commission from the Church 4. That they take not up for mantenance of their ambition and riotousness the emoluments of the Church which may sustain many Pastors and help the Schooles poore but be content with a reasonable living according to their Office 6. They shall not domineer over the particular Eldership but be subject unto it 7. That they usurp not the power of Presbyteteries 8. They shall not take further bounds of visitation than the Church committs unto them Withall they shall promise that if the G. Assem shall find any other corruption in that estate they shall be content to be reformed by the assembly according to the word of God VII Because many send their children over sea into places where superstition and Papistry is maintained Under pretence of seeking further learning And others of perfect age go away under the same pretense and become for the most part corrupt in religion It is ordained that the parents of these children or that heerafter shall send their chidren into such places shall be charged by their own Ministers to call their children home again with all convenient expedition Under the pain of excommunication And they who being of perfectage have gone or shall go into such places shall be charged in like manner to remove themselues out of these places Observe 1. how these lea●es of the books were taken away it will appear hereafter at the year 1587. 2. The historicall Narration shewes that James Bishop of Glasgow did not submit at that synod but at last he did yeeld and his submission in write was brought unto the next assembly As also Commission was given in that Octob. unto certain Ministers to charge Patrik Bishop of Santandrews for transgressing the tenor of his former submission and to charge him to forsake the corruptions of the estate of a Bishop in his person as they shall be particularly specified unto him and if he refuse after due admonitions to excommunicat him That commission was renued in July year 1579. to charge him de novo to quite the particular corruptions and to charge him with these offences 1. That having submitted unto the assembly he went thereafter and voted in Parliament 2. he gave Collation of a Vicarage having no power where the Vicarage lyeth 3. albeit he had consented unto all the Heads of the Policy but four yet he opposed it in the Parliament In a word all the Bishops were brought into subjection did submitt and quite the corruptions of that estate and obeyd the Act that was made against Bishops in Iuly 1580. In that assembly the Bishop of Dunkell who had been deposed before for not recovering a Tack made to the Earle of Argile was charged to dimitt his Bishoprick and report the losse of dilapidation of the rents Under the pain of excommunication So far there which for brevity I conjoin here Seing Bishops had never the allowance of the Nationall assembly and being intruded were subdued in this manner at that time how can any man say unless he be ignorant of the estate of the Church or petverse in mind that the only governement of the Church of Scotland was by Bishops and Superintendents when the second Confession of faith was subscribed to wit in the year 1581 XVI The assembly conveenes at Edinburgh July 7. year 1579. Thomas Smeton is chosen Moderator 1. John Duncanson the Kings Minister The 37. Assembly brings a Letter from his Ma. in these words Right trusty and welbeloved wee greet you heartily well Understanding of your present assembly at Edinburgh and for the rumors that pass of some things that are to be treated among you that may seem prejudiciall to that good order of government of the church and ecclesiasticall policy heretofore long travelled-in and hoped-for Wee have taken occasion to shew our mind in this behalf unto the Minister of our own house and some other of your number hapning to be present with us in this cause We have thought meetest to use them as our Messingers to carry our letter whereby wee will heartily desire and affectuously admonish you that in this our young age the time being subject to so many difficulties and imperfections to bestow your common care and good wills to entertain peace quietnes in Gods fear and Our due obedience forbearing any proceeding at this time that may touch matters heretofore not concluded by Our lawes or received into practise but whatever in the former Conferences touching the Policy of the Church was remitted to be reasoned and decided by Our States in Parliament let it rest without prejudging the same by any of your conclusions at this time seing Our Parliament now so shortly approaches and that Wee are well pleased and content that before the same such matters as are not yet fully reasoned may be further consulted upon and prepared to pass in form of lawes And the meetest for that work to be expressly emploid therein to the end the things conferred agreed upon may be presented to Our Estates to be approved in Our said Parliament and due execution to follow for the advancement of Gods true religion and the repose of you and other our good subjects the members of the church of God within our realm and for this cause that yee will not only be the authors and persuaders of common peace concord among all of your own function but among all other Our subjects generally as in the particular Churches where yee travell that some men too busy to work the contrary effects may find themselves disappointed and that Our wholl Estate by your exemple may be rather disposed to conform themselves to a godly peaceable course of living which wee are assured shall be pleasing to God and to us it will be most acceptable as yee may persuade yourselves of our willing inclination to set forward this action according to Gods will and word with all the diligence and good means that may be used and so looking to be informed of this Our reasonable request admonition Wee commit you unto the protection of God At our castle of Sterlin July 5. 1579. It was directed To our trusty and welbeloved the Ministers and others of the Church presently assembled at Edinburgh This Letter was humbly received read and ordained to be registred In answer after some dayes Commission and full power was given first unto ten Barons with all the Commissioners of Provinces and sixe other Ministers and such as shall be directed from the Burghs or the most put of that number To conveen where the Parliament shall hold two dayes before it's meeting
J. Christ correction of manners and administration of the holy Sacraments and declares that there is no other face of Church nor other face of religion than is presently by the favor of God established within this realm and that there be no jurisdiction ecclesiasticall acknowledged than which is and shall be within the famin Church or which flowes there from concerning the premisses 3. All markets and faires were forbidden to be keept on the Sabboth-day or in any Church or churchyaird so all handy-work on the Sabboth-day all gaming playing passing to taverns and aile-houses and wilfull remaining from their parish-church in time of Sermon or prayers and a pecuniall mulct layd upon the transgressours respective to be payd for the use of the poor of the parish 4. An Act was made concerning these who send their children out of country 5. Every housholder having lands or goods worth 500. pounds was obliged to have a Bible which at that time was printed in folio and a Psalme book in his house for the better instruction of themselves and their families in the knowledge of God 6. In the table of Acts not printed is mention of a Commssion anent the Jurisdiction of the Kirk the last part thereof Observe 1. The Parliament in the year 1560. is acknowledged to have been a lawfull Parliament 2. We may see that the disciplin at that time in the Church was authorised and ordained to continue Moreover what was the estate of the Church at that time wee may learn from an Epistle of Andrew meluin unto The. Beza dated Nouember 13. An. 1579. Wee have not ceased these fyue years to fight against pseudepiscopacy many of the Nobility resisting us and to presse the severity of discipline wee have presented unto his Roiall Majesty and three Estates of the realm both before and now in this Parliament the form of discipline to be insert among the Acts and to be confirmed by pulick authority wee have the Kings minde bended toward us but many of the Peers against us for they alledge if pseudepiscopacy be taken away one of the Estates is pulled down if presbyteries be erected the Rojall Majesty is diminished if Church-goods be restored unto the lawfull use the Kings treasury is emptied Seing the B. with Abbots and Priors make up the third Estate and all jurisdiction both ecclesiasticall and politicall belongeth unto the King and his Counsell and things ecclesticall should by their Sentence be adjudged unto the Kings treasure That they do speak or think so the cause in many is ignorance in others a wicked life and evill manners and in many a desire to catch the goods of the Church which yet remain or fear of losing what they have taken and what shall I say of that they hold that the Sentence of excommunication is not lawfull untill the cause be known by the Kings Counsell for they knowing their own guiltiness are feared for the Sentence of the Presbytery not so much for fear of Gods judgement as for terror of the civill punishments which by our lawes and practise do follow lastly whill they have regard unto the wisdom of the flesh more than unto the reveeled word of God they wish that all things should be carried in the name and at the beck of a Bishop or one perpetuall overseer and would have nothing administred by the common sentence of the Presbytery The Lord in mercy sweep away these evills from his Church This epistle is in Vindic. Philadelph Pag. 41. Immediatly before this Parliament the Duke d'Obigny afterwards styled Earle of Lennox came into Scotland towit in the last week of Septemb. as Spotswood shewes in Histor Pag. 308. Now if we conferre that time with what is written in that page his splene may appeare against the truth for he makes the Duke's coming to be a cause of variance betwixt the King and the Church at the Assembly preceeding where no difference was appearing but afterwards some what followes Jelousies and emulations were in the winter following among the Noble men as the Earle of Athol Chancelor was envied and died and others fled out of the Country but no variance did as yet appeare betwixt the King and the Church-men XVII In Aprile 1580. a Proclamation was made in the Kings name 1580. ex deliberatione Dominorum Consilii charging all Superintendents and Comnissioners and Ministers serving at Kirks to note the names of all the subjects alsweel men as women suspected to be Papists or ...... And to admonish them ...... To give confession of their faith according to the Form approved by the Parliament and to submit unto the disciplin of the true Church within a reasonable space ...... And if they faile ...... That the Superintendent or Commissioners present a catalogue of their names unto the King and Lords of the Secret Counsell where they shall bee for the time between and the 15. day of July next to come to the end that the Acts of Parliament made against such persons may be executed The Assembly conveens at Dundy July 12. here was the Laird of Lundy Commissioner The 38. Assembly from the King Commissioners c. James Lowson is chosen Moderator 1. Some spake against the Privy Conference as if tyranny and usurpation might creep-in by it and liberty were taken from other members nevertheless after reasoning it was judged expedient to continue 2. John Craig one of the Kings Ministers delivereth this Letter from the King Trusty and welbeloved friends Wee greet you well Wee have directed toward you our trusty friend the Prior of Pettinweem and the Laird of Lundy instructed with Our power for assisting with their power and counsell in all things that they may tending to the glory of God and preservation of Vs and Our Estates desiring you heartily to accept them and Our good will committed to them for the present in good part so wee commend you to Gods blest protection From our palace of Falkland July 11. 1580. 3. Forsomuch as the Office of a Bishop as it is now used and commonly taken in this realm hath no sure warrant authority nor good ground out of the Scriptures of God but is brought in by folly and corruption of mens inventions to the great overthrow of the Church of God The wholl assembly in one voice after liberty given to ail men to reason in the matter and none opponing himselfe to defend the said pretended Office Finds and declares the same pretended Office used and termed as is above said Unlawfull in itselfe as having neither ground nor warrand within the Word of God And ordaines all such persons as use or shall use hereafter the said Office shal be charged to dimit simpliciter quite and leave-off the same as an Office whereunto they are not called by God And to desist and cease from all preaching ministration of the sacraments or using any way the office of Pastors untill they receive de novo admission from the Generall assembly Under the pain of
The power of Presbyteries 1. The power of a Presbytery is to give diligent labours in their own bounds that the churches be keept in good order to enquired diligently of naughty ungodly persons and travell to bring them into the way again by admonition and threatning of Gods judgement or by correction 2. It appertaines to them to take heed that the word of God be purely preached within their bounds the Sacraments rightly administred the disciplin mantained and the church-goods incorruptly destributed 3. It belongs unto them to cause the ordinances made by the Assemblies Provinciall and Generall to be observed and put execution 4. To make constitutions which concern TÒ PREPON in the Church or good order for their particular churches Providing that they change no rule made by the Provinciall or Gener. assemblies and that they shew unto the Provinciall the rules which they make and to abolish constitutions tending to the hurt of these churches 5. It hath power to excommunicate the obstinat His Majesty agrieth in this manner It hath power to excommunicat the obstinat formall process being led and due intervall of time 6. Faults to be censured in the presbytery are heresy papistry idolatry witchcraft consulters with witches contempt of the word not resorting to hear ●he word continuance in blasphemy against God and his truth perjury fornication dunkennes these things for the present and more when order shall be taken in the Conference IV. Particular The power of Church-Sessions or Counsels Churches if they be lawfully ruled by a sufficient Minister and Session have power of jurisdiction in their own congregation in matters ecclesiasticall to take order therewith and what things they can not conveniently decide to bring them unto the Presbytery XI Commissioners are appointed to present unto his Majesty and Counsell the humble petitions complaints Articles and Heads delivered to them and humbly to crave his Ma s answers thereunto To treat conferr reason thereupon and upon such heads and articles as shall be propounded unto them by his M. or his Commissioners and what herein shall be done to report unto the Assembly For clearing what is here I will only adde from The Historicall Narration that the Synod of Fife did cut off Pa. Adamson as a rotten member not only for the notoriety of offenses for which he was suspected before but likewise for impugning the setled order of Generall assemblies and presbyteries for contempt of the Synod and for other notorious slanders whereof he was to be accused but refused to underly the tryall The next day after the Sentence pronounced against him two of the Bishops servants went to the church of the city at time of publick prayer as the custome was then evening and morning on the days when there was no Sermon and without any citation or process caused Samuel Cuningham Reader pronounce the Sentence of excommunication against And. Melvin James Melvin and some others who he thought had been most forward against the Bishop Wee see in the last Session of this Assembly the censure and tryall of this fact was remitted unto the Presbytery I have not read what was done in the matter but I knew the man and that he could never be admitted unto the Ministry though he often suited it untill another change came into the Church and then he was promoted by a Bishop into an obscure charge and was hatefull all his days and durst scarcely appear in a presbytery The bare narration of the proceedings of this Assembly as they be extracted out of the Assemblies books confute the perverse imputations and slanders of the contrarily minded The rest of that year the King was taken up partly with setling some troubles in the Isles and Kentyre and partly in the Articles of a League with England and immediatly thereafter with a process that was intended and went on against his mother This last purpose was occasion of some variance be twixt the King and the Ministers of Edinburgh For XXIII In January of the year 1587. the King hearing that the death 1587. of his mother was determined gave order unto the Ministers to pray for her The adversarics of the Church-disciplin say The Ministers denied it absolutely and they call that denyall a barbarous inhumanity But Vindiciae Philadelp Pag. 56. shew that the Papists were plotting the destruction of Queen Elisabeth nor was Queen Mary free of these plots and by that means the ruln of religion was intended and the Ministers of Edinburgh answered unto the King that they would pray for the salvation of her soul but they could not pray against her punishment if she had deserved and in that case his Majesty should rather give God thanks because they understood that both his person and the Church would be delivered from imminent danger For whosoever trespasseth against the publick no man should preferr his particular interest unto publik duty This answer did not satisfy the King he did appoint the third of February for solem prayers to be made in behalf of his mother and commanded Pat. Adamson to preach that day John Couper a young man was set up in the pulpit before the Bishop came The King seeing him said That place was appointed at this time for another but seing you are there if you will obey the charge and pray for my mother you shall go-on He replied He will do as the Spirit of God shall direct him Whereupon he was commanded to leave the place and because he made no haste the Captain of the Guard went and pulled him out and he burst out into unreverent speaches Then the Bisbop went up In the after-noon the young man was called before the Counsell where Wi. Watson Minister accompanying him for offensive speaches the two were discharged from preaching in Edinburgh during his Ma s pleasure and Couper was sent prisoner to Blackness The The 48. Assembly Assembly conveenes at Edinburgh Juny 20. Andrew Melvin Is chosen Moderator I. Two Ministers being directed unto the King to sute his Ma s presence report that he had named the Lord Secretary and Justice-Clerk to be present and concurre and they had promised to be present as their opportunity could serve yet willing that the Assembly according to his Ma s mind do treat before any other thing of John Cowper's cause and nevertheless after some reasoning were content it be delayd till the next day and that the brethren of the Conference shall consider it II. His Ma s Commissioners offer theyr concurrence to the recovery of the Assemblie's books if it may be known in whose hands they are The Moderator craves that if any can give light in this matter they would shew it and namely Pa. Galloway who was directed by the last Assembly unto the King to seek the delivery of the Register he answereth that his Majesty promised to deliver them John Brand declares that at the last Assembly in his house Pa. Adamson in presence of David Ferguson said he knew
the King was commoved for the dis-honor he apprehended done unto him that day therefore they left off their commission and vvent to their lodgings The next day the King vvent to Lithgovv all that vvere not ordinary inhabitants in Edinburgh vvere commanded to leave it the Lords of the Session vvere vvarned to be ready to remove and to sit vvhere they shall be advertised by the next proclamation the Magistrates vvere commanded to search and apprehend the authors of that hainous attempt Some of the burgesses vvere committed to sundry vvards the Ministers of Edinb were commanded to enter into the castle of the town because the Kings wrath was hotest against them and to the end the chief Octavianes might use them at their pleasure After advice with some others it was thought expedient they should withdraw themselves till the present flamm were over For all the diligent inquisition which was made many daies no ground could be found of any conspiracy against the King or any other only when the tumult was raised one or two cried to have some of the Octavianes abusers of the King to take order with them for which words they were fined If there had been any intention to do harm unto any man what could have himdred then from doing it there was no party in readiness able to withstand them Yee see then the tumult of Decemb. 17. was no just cause to move the K. to charge the Government of the Church nor to wrong the wholl Nationall Church for the tumult of one town howbeit their fact had been grounded on bad intentions nor may Ks thrust Christs government to the door for the faults of men and bring-in what forms they please But as no just occasion was givē so that tumult can not serve so much as for a pretence seing as it is now discovered the alteration was intended before December 17. On the 20. day Pa. Galloway was sent unto the K. at Lithgow but was not suffered to come neer the King only a copy of a Band was sent unto him whereof mention was made before to be subscribed by the Ministers Under pain of losse of their stipends but he and others after him refused for many reasons The questions whereof mention was made before 55. in number came forth in print soon after and the Convention of the Estates and of the Ministry was appointed to be held at Perth February 29. for consulting upon and determining the jurisdiction spirituall of the Church alswell in application of doctrin as the whole policy in all these questions the main point of policy to wit the superiority of Bishops was conceiled howbeit chiefly aimed at In time of these sturs in Scotland began throughout England the more solemne and pious observation of the Lords The keeping of the Lords day began in England day upon occasion of a book set forth An. 1595. by P. bound Doctor of Divinity and enlarged with additions An. 1606. wherein these following opinions were maintained 1. The command of sanctifying every seventh day as in the Mosaicall decalogue is moral and perpetual 2. Whereas all other things in the Jewish Church were taken away priesthood sacrifices and Sacrament this sabbath was so changed that it still remaines 3. There is a great reason why we Christians should take ourselves as streightly bound to rest upon the Lords day as the Jewes were upon their sabbath it being one of the moral commandements whereof all are of equal authority 4. the rest upon this day must be a notable and singular rest a most carefull exact and precise rest after another manner then men are accustomed 5. Schollers on that day are not to study the liberal Arts nor Lawyers to consult the case nor peruse mens evidentes 6. Sergeants Apparitors and Sumners are to be restrained from executing their offices 7. Justices not to examin causes for the conservation of the peace 8. Ringing of more bells then one that day is not to be justified 9. No solemn feasts nor wedding dinners to be made on that day 10. all honest recreations and pleasures lawfull on other dayes as shooting fencing bowling on this day is to be forborn 11. No man to speak or talk of pleasures or any other worldly matter It is almost incredible how taking this doctrine was partly because of its own purity and partly for the eminent piety of such persons as maintained it so that the Lords day especially in Corporations began to be precisely keept people becoming a law to themselves forbearing such sport as by Statute were yet permitted yea many reioicing at their own restraint herein On this day the stoutest fencer layd down his buckler the skilfull Archer unbent his bow counting all shooting to be besides the Mark May-games and Morish-dances grew out of request and good reason that bells should be silenced from gingling about mens leggs if their ringing in Steepls were judged unlawfull some were ashamed of their former pleasures like children vvho grovvn bigger blush themselves out of their rattles and vvhistles Others forbear them for fear of their Superiors and many left them off out of a Politick compliance lest othervvise they might be accounted licencious Yet the learned vvere much divided in their judgement about these doctrines some embraced them as antient truths consonant to Scripture long disused and neglected and now seasonably revived for the encrease of piety Others conceived them grounded on a wrong bottom but because they tended to the manifest advancing of religion it was pitty to oppose them seing none have just reason to complain being deceived into their own good But a third sort flatly fell out with these positions as galling mens necks with a Jewish yoak against the liberty of Christians that Christ as Lord of the Sabbath had removed the rigor thereof and allowed men lawfull recreations that this Doctrine put an unequal Lustre on the Sunday on set purpose to eclipse all other holy dayes to the derogation of the authority of the Church that this strict observance was set up of faction to be a character of difference to brand all for Libertines who did not entertain it How ever for some years together in this controversy Dr bound alone carried the Garland none offering openly to oppose yea as he in his second edition observes many both in their preachings writtings and disputations did concurr with him in that argument and though Archb. Whitgift in the year 1599. by his Letters had forbidden those books any more to be printed and Sir John Popham Lord chief Justice in their year 1600. did call them in yet all their care did but for the present make the Sunday set in a cloud to arise soon after in more brightness for the Archb. his known opposition to the proceedings of the Anti-episcopal Brethren rendred his actions more odious as if out of envy he had caused such a pearle to be concealed and some conceived though it was most proper for Judge Popham's place to punish
is most properly a Pastor he that hath not received imposition of hands and hath received from Christ pastorall gifts and a call from a flock obeyth the call in feeding that flock conscienciously Or he that hath received imposition of hands and hath the charge of 100 or 200 flocks and they never seek him nor see him but he waites upon other affaires not belonging to a pastorall charge I grant in the Court of Rome and in the judgement of Satan a ceremony is better then substance But the question is Which of the two is the truest Pastor in the ballance of the Sanctuary Can any consciencious man think as the Court of Rome judgeth Another motive may be thought that since that Writer was guilty of perjury for many times had he subscribed that Confession abjuring Hierarchy and yet took a Prelacy one after another he could not speak nor write a good word of that disciplin into which he had sworn so oft nor of the maintainers of it but with some spight as appeares throgh all his booke which he calleth The History of the Church of Scotland but may rather be called The calumnies and railings against the Church of Scotland whereof he was an enemy and by which he was justly and solemly excommunicated in the year 1638. What is in that book of the faith doctrine or piety of the Church Many of these calumnies in this posthum book he had written before in a Reply ad Epist Philadelphi and it was told him in the Vindiciae that he had written against his conscience It is said Pag. 50. Why should one believe a man who makes not conscience of his words And Pag. 56. Whatsoever may have the shew of a reproach this ingrateson scrapeth together to spue it out against his Mother the Church In which words envy which appeares throughout vented it self wholly for what can be said or forged in a Narration more wickedly than to be silent in that which is good and to proclame what is evill or which may make a shew of evill And Pag. 67. Should not a Bishop whe though he were a Papist yet should at least have the shaddow of gravity be ashamed to fain like a brawling wife what all men know to be false And because in that pamphlet he had written as he doeth oft in this later book that the King applied himself contrary to his mind unto the will of the Ministers it was told him Pag. 59. What can be spoken more vilely and unworthily against the Royall honor then that he applied his will unto the wicked endeavours of his subjects and loosed the raines unto the boldnesse and crimes of wicked men But this is the imprudence by the just judgement of God of flatterers that when they wold most earnestly catch they do most offend So that in a word whosoever regardeth the honorable memory of K. James VI. or the credite of the Church of Scotland will not believe that book of lies and calumnies I return unto that Assembly I. The first three Sessions were taken up with the election of a Moderator and Clerk and one ordinance that Acts of every Assembly should be formed by certain brethren and be publickly read before the dissolving of the Assembly and be in-booked II. The 4. and 5. Sessions have some particulare references III. In Sess 6. The Commissioners that were appointed to deall with the excommunicat Earles report their diligence severally and that they submitt themselves unto the Church in all the prescribed articles The Assembly ordaines the same Commissioners to see the performance of their promises in all the articles so far as possibly can be performed for the time and after performance to absolve them from ●he Sentence of excommunication and to receive them into the bosom of the Church IV. In Sess 7. Notes in form of declaration of certain of the Acts of the G. Ass holden at Perth in Febr. last for explaining his Ms and the Assemblie's meaning for the satisfaction of them which were not acquainted therewith and which are ordained to be registred in the Acts of this present assemb 1. Concerning the lawfulness of the said Ass holden at Perth it 's declared that one of the reasons moving the brethren to acknowledge the lawfulnes of that Ass is found to have been that the Commissioners of the Church had accorded with his Maj. therein as is expressely set down in his Maj. Letters 2. The reason moving the Ass to grant the more willingly to the second article concerning the reproving his Maj. lawes was that his Maj s earnest constant affection to the religion and obedience to the word was evidently known unto the said Ass and that it was his Ms declared will intention alwayes to frame his lawes wholl Government according to the same for this cause the Ass agreeth to the said article 3. Concerning the article ordaining no mans name to be expressed in pulpit excepting notorious crimes c. the point of notoriety is further defined If the crime be so manifest and known to the world ut nulla tergiversatione celari possit 4. Concerning the Article ordaining that no convention of Pastors bee without his Ma. consent c. His Ma s consent is declared to be extended to all and whatsoever form of G. Ass or speciall permitted authorized by his law and as they have warrant in the word of God As being the most authentick form of consent that any King can give 5. Concerning the article of providing Pastors to Burghs It is declared that the reason thereof was is that his Majesty was content and promised that where the Gen. assembly findeth it necessa●y to place any person or persons in any of the saids townes his Majesty and the flock shall either give their consent thereunto or a sufficient reason of the refusall To be propounded either unto the wholl Assembly or to a competent number of the commissioners thereof as his Majesty shall think expedient V. Answers to the rest of his Maj s questions as they were propounded by his Majesty and his Commissioners in the present assembly 1. Concerning the propositions craving that before the conclusion of any weighty matters ●oncerning the estate of his Hieness or of his subjects his Ma s advice approbation be craved thereunto that the same being approved by his Ma. may have the better execution and if need require be authorized by law the assembly craves most humbly that his Ma. either by himselfe or his Commissioners in matters concerning his estate or the wholl estate of his subjects and others of great weight importance that have not been treared before would give his advice and approbation thereunto before any conclusion of the same And for the better obedience to be given to the like statutes in all time coming that his Majesty would ratify the same either by Act of Parliament or Secret Counsell as shall be thought needfull The which his Majesty promiseth to
do according to his proposition which was accepted and allowed by the wholl assembly 2. The Assembly ordaines that there be an uniformity in the ordination of Ministers throghout all the Country by imposition of hands and that they be admitted to certain flocks upon the which they shall be astricted to attend according to Acts of Assemblies made before And ordaines that none who is not admitted to the Ministry be permitted to teach in publick and great places except upon very urgent necessity in defect of actuall Ministers they be ordained to supply such wants by the presbyteries provinciall or generall assemblies who shall take diligent order that they keep themselves within the bounds of their gift and specially in application 3. That no Pastor exerce any jurisdiction either in making constitutions or leading process without advice concurrence of Session Presbitery Provinciall or Generall Assembly 4. That all Sessions be elected with consent of their own congregations 5. That all Sessions Presbyteries and Provincialls use such form in all their processes as may be found lawfull formall and able to abide tryall the which shall be registred in matters of importance And to this effect ordaines the proceedings of privat Sessions to be sighted at Presbyteries and the proceedings of Presbyteries at the Provinciall Synods and the proceedings of the Synods at the Generall Assemblies 6. That in the Exercise when the Ministry are conveened at their Presbyteries no application be used 7. That in the determination of matters of importance where the votes shall be different upon two or three only nothing be concluded till better resolution and that in such difference he who sustaines the negative shall give Rationem negandi 8. The Presbyteries shall meddle with nothing in their judicatory which shall not befound without controversy proper to the Ecclesiasticall judgement and that in this an uniformity be keept in all the Countrey 9. That all processes and acts be extracted unto all parties having interest where is a written process 10. Assembly delayes to answer the article concerning summary excommunication untill the next Generall Assembly and in the mean time suspends all summary excommunication Yet in great crimes a publick intimation thereof is to be made and the committer is to be suspended à sacris and prohibited à privato convictu 11. If any Presbytery shall be desired by his Majesties missive to stay the proceeding of any thing prejudiciall to the Civill Jurisdictions or privat mens right it is ordained that the Presbytery shall desist in that matter untill they send unto his Majesty for his satisfaction therein VI. In Sess 9. The king being present declares that seing the shortness of time hindreth sundry things of weight not only concerning particular flocks but the estate of the wholl Church as the planting of particular congregations and of all the Churches remaining as yet unplanted in default of honest entertainment and a solid order to be taken for the sustentation of all the Ministry that they be not compelled as heretofore to wait upon the Modifiers of stipends and his care and earnest desire ever hath been and as yet continues that every Church may have a Pastor honestly sustained Therefore he willeth them to consider whither it be not expedient that a generall commission be granted to certain brethren to conveen with his Majesty for effectuating the premisses For this end fourteen Ministers are named or any seven of them to conveen with his Majesty and to make such Overtures as they can best devise concerning the constant Plat and generally to give their advice to his Majesty in all affaires concerning the well of the Church and entertainment of peace and obedience to his Majesty with expresse power command to them to propound unto his Majesty the petitions grievances of the Church in generall and of every member thereof as shall be shewd unto them Promitten c. VII A supplication of John Retorford who was deposed by the presbytery of Santand was referred by the preceeding assembly unto this and now is referred unto the above mentioned commissioners or any seven of shem to be examined and decided VIII James wood of Bonitoun craves a conference in matters of religion and that the assembly would interceed betwixt his father and him as he professes to give all satisfaction both to them and his father that he may be absolved from excommunication The assembly appointes certain brethren to deale both with him and then with his father IX The next Assembly is appointed at Sterline the first tuysday of May 1598. It is clear by the first Act of this Assembly and by the Notes of declaration that this Assembly was not content with the booking of the former Acts. II. By the gratious providence of God ● plot was discovered in the same moneth of May Hugh Barclay of Lady-land been committed the year preceeding in the castle of Glasgow and escaping went to Spain that year entred into the Isle Elsa with some complices intending to fortify it for the service of Spain John Knox getting intelligence went with some others into the Isle Hugh thought that none in the Countrey knew of his purpose and all his folks being abroad in the Isle came to see who these were and when he perceived that they were set for apprehending him he ran into the sea and drowned himself The Popish Earles hearing this newes did the more readily perform obedience unto the articles that were demanded of them And this shewes that the fear of the former year was not altogether vain III. Concerning this generall Commission The The first step of bringing-in Episcopacy again Historicall Narration observeth that whereas before Commissioners were appointed to present articles petitions or grievances unto the King Parliament and Counsell now these have commission to sit with the King and exerce jurisdiction and they having accesse unto the King when they pleased and commission to sit and consult with him began to change their manners they would rule both in and out of Assemblies Matters which were to be treated in the Generall assemblies were first prepared by them at Court Some were put in the roll for fashion and were not made privy to the secret plots for seven were sufficient ●o site and plot what they pleased So these Commissioners were a wedge taken out of the Church to rent her with her own forces and this generall commission was the very needle to drawe-in episcopacy In Juny following these conveeening with the King at Falkland reduced the Sentence of deposition pronounced by the Presbytery of Santandrews against John retorford for non residency and not waiting on his calling but practizing Medicine In July they removed David Black out of Santand and placed George gladstanes in his roome who was one of these commissioners and thereafter B. of Santandr They displaced also Robert Wallace another Min. there because he had spoken against John Lindsay Secretary and this they did against the will of