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A34964 The church-history of Brittany from the beginning of Christianity to the Norman conquest under Roman governours, Brittish kings, the English-Saxon heptarchy, the English-Saxon (and Danish) monarchy ... : from all which is evidently demonstrated that the present Roman Catholick religion hath from the beginning, without interruption or change been professed in this our island, &c. / by R.F., S. Cressy of the Holy Order of S. Benedict. Cressy, Serenus, 1605-1674. 1668 (1668) Wing C6890; ESTC R171595 1,241,234 706

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among the stains and Errours of his writings they reckon these That he seems to maintain the libertie of mans will And that the law is possible for he sayes it is no impossible thing for men who have a good will to love God above themselves and their neighbours as themselves Yea moreover he denyes concupiscence to be sin Lastly in general they write that the doctrine of Iustification was delivered by the Doctours of this age too negligently and obscurely that is much otherwise than Luther delivered it 34. In the third Century they find yet more things to displease them The Doctours of this age say they for the greatest part admitt free will Thus Tertullian Origen Cyprian and Methodius Again the most sublime article of Iustification is for the most part obscured by Origen and Methodius And as for the doctrine touching Good works the Doctours of this age did yet more decline from the true Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles and Luther then those of the former For they invented and inculcated many voluntary observances Thus Tertullian doth immoderatly extoll chastity and continence Origen attributes to good workes that they are a preparation to salvation and consequently a cause And with the like errour was Cyprian misled who ascribes to good works that they are the Guardians of hope the stay of Faith and cause us to abide continually in Christ to live in God and to attain to heavenly promises and Rewards Then for Pennance the doctrine thereof hath been wonderfully depraved by the Writers of this age They impute remissions of sins to Contrition Cyprian expressely affirmes that sins are redeemed and washed away by penitentiall satisfaction Moreover the same Cyprian speakes dangerously not according to the Tradition of Christ and the Apostles concerning unction in Baptisme saying it is necessary that the person baptised should be annointed with Chrisme that thereby he may become the annointed of God and have the grace of Christ in him And concerning the Eucharist Cyprian does superstitiously faine that some vertue accrews thereto from the person administring it for he sayes the Eucharist sanctified on the altar And again The Priest doth execute the office of Christ and offers sacrifice to God the Father Which phrase of offring sacrifice is used also by Tertullian You may moreover say they observe in the writings of the Doctours of this age Origen and Cyprian not obscure signes of Invocation of Saints And lastly touching the Primacy of the Bishop of Rome Cyprian affirms expressely and without any foundation of holy scripture that the Roman Church ought to be acknowledged by all for the mother and root of the Catholick Church Likewise Origen sayes that Peter by vertue of Christs promise deserved to be made the foundation of the Church The foresaid Cyprian hath moreover on this subiect other dangerous opinions as where he tyes and limits the Pastorall office to ordinary succession And for bids inferiours to iudge Bishops and prelates of the Church 35. It is pitty to proceed any further in producing out of the following Centuries the sometimes sad but most often angry complaints acknowledgments made by these honest German Writers how generally their Patriark Luthers Doctrines have been preiudged and condemned by the fathers and Doctours of Gods Church and the Faith of the present Roman Church asserted The further they proceed in their collection a greater number of yet more Severe Iudges they discover till in short tyme they cannot find one to speake a good word for them And this like a conscionable Iury they attest In so much as one would be tempted almost to suspect that they had been secretly bribed by the Pope to publish their own condemnation 36. These things considered I cannot fore see any probabilitie of a Debate likely to ensue touching this Historie I mean for asmuch as concerns the doctrinall part of it nor any considerable arguments to proove against the result of it that the points of Catholick faith have not been taught through all the ages comprised within its limits And as for the ages following that is since the Conquest by the Normans it is out of all dispute that our forefathers have been Romans in a deeper degree perhaps then wee their children are now 37. But I must acknowledge I am not secure against quarrels for as much as concerns the Christian practises of pietie and vertue commended in the Saints whose Gests are heere related and the reason is because our modern sectaries have a quite different notion of vertue and pietie from that which Catholicks from the beginning to this age have entertained Therefore such Readers missing in this booke storyes of Exploits performed in old tymes such as they magnifie in their primitive red-lettred saints of their new fashioned Calendars and finding practises here exalted for vertues which with their good-will they would renounce in their Baptisme as works and pompes of Sathan I shall not want adversaries good store of all ages and sexes 38. For I confesse that among the hundreds of Saints commemorated in this book of whom not a few are acknowledged for Saints even by the Protestants and which is more for Workers of stupendious Miracles not one can be found of their new Mode Not one can be found magnified as Inventours of new Doctrines opposite to the Common faith of the Church Not one who to spread abroad such Doctrines armed subiects against their Princes demolished altars burnt Churches violated Holy Virgins or invaded the possessions of God Not one who thought his Christian libertie could iustifie sacrilegious lusts in breaking vowes of Chastity and soliciting others to doe the like Here we shall not read of somuch as one Good-wife of the citty or country not one chamber-maid Prentice or Groome disputing with Doctours and Bishops and confuting all the Fathers and Councils of Gods Church c. So that if for want of such qualifications as these all our antient Holy Bishops Martyrs Doctours and Virgins must be unsainted there remains for us no remedie but the old uncomfortable one Patience 39. Yet perhaps this defect or want of heroicall perfections will not so confidently at least in publick be obiected against our Worthies as the vertues for which we commend them A continuall macerating of the flesh with abstinences fastings Watchings Haire-cloathes lying on the cold hard ground and the like these austerities our moderne spiritualists will mock at as uselesse us voluntary self-afflictions concerning which they assure God wil say Who hath required these things at your hands And they will be yet more angry and doe hope that God will be so too against consecrating ones self to perpetuall Virginity or continence in Mariage against secluding ones selfe from all conversation with the world against almost all use of the tongue except speaking to God against an entire submission of the will to the Direction of another and specially against renouncing riches honours Pleasures c. 40. But such
the end the Councill may again be renewed if you please let us honour the memory of S. Peter the Apostle that those who have examined the cause may write to Iulius Bishop of Rome and if his sentence be that judgment ought to be renew'd let it be renew'd and let him appoint Iudges But if he shall approve the cause to be such as that those things which have been acted in it shall not be again reiterated what he decrees herin shall be confirmed if such be all your pleasures The Synod answered This pleases us 7. In pursuance of which there was added this following Canon Gaudentius Bishop said If you please let this be added to this Decree which thou hast pronounced full of Sanctity That when any Bishop shall be deposed by the judgment of neighbouring Bishops and shall publickly declare that his intention is to plead his cause in the Citty of Rome after such an Appeale of a Bishop who seems to be deposed let not another Bishop be ordain'd in his chaire till his cause be determin'd in the judgment of the Bishop of Rome 8. Moreover to provide against tedious delays of causes and incommodities of transporting witnesses to Rome with excessive charges c. the Holy Synod thought fit to adjoyn another Decree in this form Osius Bishop said It is the pleasure of the Synod that if a Bishop be accused and that the Bishops of that Region assembled together shall give judgment against him and depose him from his Degree in case he who is depos'd shall appeale and have recourse to the Bishop of the Roman Church with a desire to be heard before him if the said Roman Bishop shall think it just to have the examination of the cause renew'd let him be pleased to write to those Bishops which are in a neighbour and confining Province signifying that they should diligently examin the matter and determin the cause according to truth and justice But if the Bishop who desires his cause may again be heard shall by Petition move the Roman Bishop to send from his own presence è latere suo a Preist to heare and iudge the cause it shall be in the power and liberty of the Roman Bishop to doe as he pleases and thinks most convenient And if he shall resolve to send persons having his authority from whom they are sent to be present in judgment with other Bishops this shall be left to his own pleasure But if he think sufficient that the Bishops of the said Provinces put an end to the controversy let him doe what in his most wise counsell he shall judge most expedient 9. Thus was the matter of Appeales or Revisions regulated in this holy Synod at which were present no fewer then thirty African Bishops named by S. Athanasius in his Apology So that it may seem wonderfull how the same cause of Appeales could afterward in the next age be question'd by their successours But the true ground hereof was that the Donatists had by their subtilty and malicious diligence abolished all the Copies and true Acts of the Councill of Sardica through Africk in the place of them substituting the Acts of the Anti-Synod celebrated by a few Eastern Bishop at Philippopolis under the title of the Synod of Sardica And their motive was because in the Epistle of that false Council the Arian Bishops made mention of Donatus the Donatist Bishop of Carthage This appears by comparing severall testimonies of S. Augustin as where in a certain Epistle he sayes Fortunius the Donatist shew'd mee a certain Book out of which he pretended to demonstrate that the Councill of Sardica had written to the Bishops of Africa of the Communion of Donatus And ● little afterward he saith Then having taken the Book and considering the Decrees of the said Councill I found that S. Athanasius and other Catholick Bishops yea and Iulius Bishop of Rome no lesse Catholick then they had been condemned by that Councill of Sardica hereby I was assured that it was a Councill of Arians 10. These Decrees touching the Supereminent authority of the Bishop of Rome though they were not presently received in the East by reason of the discession of the Eastern Arian Bishops yet afterwards in the Councill of Constātinople in Trullo call'd Quino-Sextum they were expressly admitted And no shew of doubt can be made but that the Brittish Bishops caried back with them these Decrees into Brittany by which their subordination to the Roman See was evidently declared 11. A f●urth Canon was likewise there established to restrain the frequent repair of Deacons sent by their Bishops to the Emperours Court ad Comitatum in the regulating whereof a particular honour was attributed to the Bishop of Rome for thus runs the Canon If any such come to Rome as hath been said Let them present their Petitions to our most holy Brother and fellow-bishop of the Roman Church that he may first examine whether they be honest and just and consequently afford his diligence and care that they may be caried to Court All the Bishops said that this pleased them well and that the counsell was honest Then Alypius Bishop sayd If such men undertake the incommodities of a long voyage for the causes of pupills widdows and such as are unjustly oppressed they will have just reason to doe so But now they repair thither to make Requests for things which without casting an odious envy on us and which deserve reprehension can not be granted therfore there is no reason that such should be permitted to goe to the Court. 12. The Synod being dissolved the Emperour Constans employ'd his utmost diligence and authority in the execution of its Decrees And wheras the cheifest difficulty was concerning the restitution of S. Athanasius to his See for the Eastern factious Bishops who had made a discession from the Councill had used means to obstruct his return Hereupon Constans wrote to his Brother for his restitution adding withall by way of menacing that if he should refuse to effect it he must know for certain that himself would come thither and in despight of him restore the Banish'd Bishops to their Sees Thus writes Socrates out of the Emperours letter 13. Now what effect this intercession of the Emperour Constans had the same Historian thus continues to relate Assoon as the Eastern Emperour understood these things he conceiv'd in his mind no small greif Whereupon assembling many Eastern Bishops he declared to them how difficult a choice was offred to him and ask'd their counsell what he should doe Their answer was That it was much better to allow Athanasius the administration of his Church then to hazzard a Civill warr Hence it came to passe that the Emperour constrained by mere necessity sent for Athanasius to come to him 14. The year following therefore Athanasius return'd into the East being recommended to the Emperour by letters written in his behalf by Pope Iulius He was
Apostles and by the ten books of S. Clement 7. But as for us we are able according to the authority of Holy Scriptures to give a true and sufficient testimony of our Tonsure and doe affirm that S. Peter ordained this Rite of Tonsure for severall causes First that thereby he might on his head bear a representation of our Lord who ascending the Crosse for our Redemption was Crownd by the execrable Iews in a cruell manner with sharp peircing thorns Next that the Preists of the Old and New Testament might be distinguished by their habit and Tonsure And lastly that the same Apostle and his followers might carry the ridiculous expression of scorn used by the Romans who when they sold their slaves taken in war they were wont to crown them But in the Old Testament this Signe of Tonsure took its Originall if I be not mistaken from the Nazarites who were persons consecrated to God for it is a mark of a Royall and Sacerdotall descent For a Tiara was anciently sett on the heads of the Preists which being enwrapped in fine linnen was round like the Middle Sphere and this is represented by that part of the head which is shorn Now a Crown or Diademe was a golden circle of some breadth which encompassed the heads of Kings And both these signs are expressed on the heads of Clergy-men concerning whom S. Peter saith You are an elect nation a Royal Preist-hood And moreover by this Rite of shaving and polling is signified our duty to cutt off all our vices and that we should devest our selves of our sins as we doe of our haires 8. But there is among you another practise far more pernicious to soules which is that in the observation of the Solemnity of Easter you neglect to follow the Rule of the three hundred and eighteen Fathers who in the Nicene Councill with great sagacity established the Circle of Nineteen years to last to the end of the world by the numbers of Eight and Eleaven and also ordained the Paschall supputation from the fourteenth day of the Moon to the one and twentieth making these the terms of the Paschall Circle which it is unlawfull for any one to transgresse Whereas the Preists among you according to the Account and Circle of Anatolius or rather according to the Rule of Sulpitius Severinus who described a Course of eighty four years doe some-times observe the Paschall Solemnity on the fourteenth Moon with the Iews whereas the Bishops of the Roman Church doe observe neither of these ways of calculation Neither have they decreed that posterity should follow the Paschall Table of Victorius which contains a course of five hundred thirty two years For there was a sort of Heretiks in the East called Tessera-decatitae because they celebrated the Paschall Solemnity on the fourteenth Moon with the Iews who blaspemed our Lord and trode under foot the pearles of the Gospell And for this they were excluded from the Communion of the Church and ranked among the unhappy conventicles of Schismatiks Of these as I remember S. Augustin makes mention in his Treatise of Ninety Heresies 9. But besides these enormities there is another thing wherein they doe notoriously swerve from the Catholick Faith and Evangelical Tradition which is that the Preists of the Demetae or South-west Wales inhabiting beyond the bay of Severn puffed up with a conceit of their own purity doe exceedingly abhor● communion with us insomuch as they will neither ioyn in prayers with us in the Church nor enter into society with us at the Table yea moreover the fragments which we leave after refection they will not touch but cast them to be devoured by doggs and unclean Swine The Cupps also in which we have drunk they will not make use of till they have rubbed and cleansed them with sand or ashes They refuse all civil salutations or to give us the kisse of pious fraternity contrary to the Apostles precept Salute one another with a holy kisse They will not afford us water and a towel for our hands nor a vessell to wash our feet Whereas our Saviour having girt himself with a towell washed his Disciples feet and left us a pattern to imitate saying As I have done to you so doe you to others Moreover if any of us who are Catholicks doe goe amongst them to make an abode they will not vouchsafe to admitt us to their fellowship till we be compelled to spend forty dayes in Pennance And herein they unhappily imitate those Hereticks who will needs be called Cathars or Puritans 10. Such enormous errours and malignities as these are to be mournfully bewayld with sighes and teares since such their behaviour is contrary to the precepts of the Gospell and suiting with the Traditions of Iewish Pharisees concerning whom our Saviour saith Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees who cleanse the outsides of Cupps and dishes On the contrary our Lord disdaind not to be present at feasts with Publicans and sinners thereby shewing himself a good Physician who was carefull to provide wholesom cataplasms and medecines to heale the corrupt wounds of those that conversed with him Therefore he did not like the Pharisees despise the conversation of sinners but on the contrary according to his accustomed clemency he mercifully comforted the poor sinfull woman who bewayld the former pollutions of her life and casting herself at our Lords feet washed them with showres of teares and wiped them with the curled locks of her haire concerning whom he said Her many sins are forgiven her because she hath loved much 11. Since therefore the truth of these things cannot be denyed we doe with earnest humble prayers and bended knees beseech and adiure you as you hope to attain to the fellowship of Angels in Gods heavenly kingdom that you will no longer with pride and stubbornes abhorr the doctrines and Decrees of the Blessed Apostle S. Peter nor pertinaciously and arrogantly despise the Tradition of the Roman Church preferring before it the Decrees and ancient Rites of your Predecessours For it was S. Peter who having devoutly confessed the Son of God was honoured by him with these Words Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevayle against it And to thee will I give the keyes of the kingdom of heaven and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shal be loosed in heaven If therefore the Keyes of the kingdom of heaven were given to S. Peter who is he who having despised the principall Statuts and ordinances of his Church can presumingly expect to enter with ioy through the gate of the heavenly Paradise And if he by a peculiar Priviledge and happines received the power of binding and the Monarchy of loosing in heaven and earth who is he who having reiected the Rule of the Paschall Solemnity and the Rite of the Roman Tonsure will not rather
which he had been bred and then he was committed to the care and government of the Holy Abbot Ceolfrid in the new-built Monastery of Saint Paul at Girwy or Iarrow the place of his birth from whom he received the Monasticall Habit. 8. What speciall Masters he found there of ability sufficient to train him up in learning and to bring him to that prodigious perfection therein as that he became the wonder of all Christendom it does not appear There were indeed then in the kingdom o● Kent two eminent Masters in all kinds of Literature S. Theodore Arch-bishop and S. Adrian Abbot of Canterbury But it is without any ground from History that some Modern Writers have sent him thither to Schoole Neither is there any necessity to frame such an imagination For S. Beda himself describing the plenty and richnes of the Library which with immense costs Saint Benedict Bishop provided for his Monastery wee ought not to doubt but that he furnished Masters likewise to make those Books usefull to the Religious Disciples living there Neither indeed was there probably any great necessity of eminent Masters to a Schollar of so vast a capacity as Saint Beda It was sufficient for him to be taught the rudiments of our learning for after that his own naturall quicknes of witt and solidity of iudgment would not faile to make a speedy progresse especially since he enioyd the advantage of so famous a Library of the richnes whereof himself alone was a Proof more then sufficient since it appears by such a world of volumes written by him he wanted not instructions in all manner of Litterature and in all learned languages 9. It is a sufficient sign that he was very early much advanced in learning and in esteem likewise for piety that when he was entring into his twentieth year he was at the request of his Abbot S. Ceolfrid promoted to the Order of Deacon by the famous Bishop S. Iohn of Beverley then newly possessed of the See of Hagustald who by some Writers is affirmed also to have been an Instructour of S. Beda in learning and specially in the study of Holy Scriptures 10. Assoon as he was thirty years old he was by command of the same Abbot advanced to the degree of Preist-hood For in these days that was the age which rendred persons capable of that sublime Order in which the Church proposed to her self our Blessed Saviour for an Example who about those years began the Ministery of his Propheticall Office as the Gospell teaches us Though in succeeding times the same Church for reasons no doubt weighty has diminished six years of that measure 11. At this time S. Beda's fame for learning was so spread even among forrain Nations that Pope Sergius by Letters written to the Holy Abbot Ceolfrid called S. Beda to Rome to be his assistant in Ecclesiasticall affaires dispatches as Saint Ierom had been anciently to Pope Damasus The Epistle of the same Pope saith Baronius is extant to Ceolfrid in Brittany Abbot of that Monastery in which Saint Beda had been educated and was grown into a perfect man illustrious for his Sanctity and learning Whereupon the same Pope commanded he should be sent to him The tenour of the Epistle is this 12. What words are sufficient to exalt the unexpressible clemency and Providence of our God towards us so as that we may render him worthy praises for his immense benefits bestowed on us whom out of darknes and the shadow of death he hath called and brought to the light of his knowledge Ad a little after he proceeds thus Know that we have with a chearfull mind received the present and grace of Benediction which thy Religious devotion has sent us by the bearer of these And wee doe most willingly comply with those requests which so opportunely and with such a religious solicitude thou hast made unto us Wee doe likewise exhort thy Piety as becomes one who has a true zeale for the advancement of the Holy Church that since there have been of late raised here certain difficulties about Ecclesiasticall causes of great weight the examination and clearing whereof cannot be long delayd thou wouldst not fayle to afford thy devout obedience to our request and without delay to send hither to the shrines of my Lords and thy favourable Patrons and Protectours S. Peter and S. Paul Princes of the Apostles the Religious servant of God Beda a Venerable Preist of thy Monastery that he may here appear in our presence And doe not doubt but as soon as the said causes shall through Gods assistance be solemnly determined he being assisted with thy prayers shall shortly return to thee in safety I doe the more confidently desire this from thee because I doe not doubt but whatsoever he shall contribute to the generall good of the Church will be proffitable to thee and to all committed to thy charge 13. Some Writers are of opinion that S. Beda accordingly undertook this iourney But that is not very probable since Pope Sergius dyed toward the end of this very year in which S. Beda was made Preist and in these Letters he is named Venerable Preist so that there could not intervene space enough for so long a voyage Besides this if he himself had been at Rome he had stood in no need of Nothelm's searching into the Archives of that See for furnishing thence fitt materialls for his History since he himself might more conveniently have done it 14. There doe not occurre in our Ecclesiasticall Writers many more particular matters touching his life Neither indeed can it be expected For what can be said of a solitary Religious man and a student but that he passed his dayes and nights in Prayer to God in Sacred learning and Writing and in Teaching others And thus much he delivers of himselfe in a Postscript to his Ecclesiasticall History So many volumes written by him doe testify almost an impossibility that he should have mispent any hower of his life especially considering how considerable a part of it the dayly attendance to Psalmody in the Church and other Regular observances in the Monastery would require 15. He had saith Trithemius many eminent men his Disciples whom by his example and most fervent exhortations he did incite to a love of Holy Scriptures so that his endeavour was to render them illustrious not so much by studies as religion and sanctity Out of all Brittany men flowed to him desirous to advance themselves in sacred knowledge and piety under his Direction 16. He adioynd to his History a Catalogue of his Works containing about seaventy severall Books Of which some have miscaried Some also were afterward published as having been written after he had made the said Catalogue which as himself testifies was this year when he was fifty nine years old For there is an excellent Epistle of Spirituall advice which he sent to Egbert Bishop of York instructing him in Pastorall Duties Now Egbert
there is not express'd by the Writers of his life Yet our Martyrologe relates on the sixth of Iune that he rested in our Lord with great Sanctity about the year of Christ four hundred and three and the visions and wonders preceding his death are thus related by those who have written his life 8. An Angel of our Lord from heaven appear'd to him with a pleasant countenance saying O worthy soldier of God may the joy of our Lord always encrease in thee and his peace continually remain with thee Be ready prepar'd for e're long God will call thee out of this world and thou shalt meet thy heavenly King with a palm of Victory This celestiall Messenger of God stay'd with him a good space and fill'd his soule with a spirituall sweetnes known only to God A second time another Angell appear'd unto him and sayd I am Michael the Archangel sent to thee from our Lord by whose command I am to acquaint thee with what shall shortly befall Behold I declare unto thee the hour of thy departure for after ten dayes thou shalt ioyfully issue out of thy prison of flesh and escape out of the dungeon of this world With inestimable gladnes thou shalt meet thy heavenly King into whose presence we will beare thee and he will receive thee with glory enrolling thee among the Cittizens and Courtiers of his kingdom 9. It is said that his Mother and sisters were present and assisting at his death being invited thither by the fame of his miracles And after his departure it seems they caried his body back with them into Brittany But afterward when the Pagan Saxons demolish'd the Christian Sepulchers in our Island it was transported again into Flanders for thus we read in his life 10. The Holy man dyed the eighth day before the Ides of Iune and his Body was buried in the Isle of Plet or Plecit where it remained many years illustrious by many miracles But barbarous people afterwards invading the Countrey forced the Brittains to fly into forrain regions at which time the Brethren of the foresaid Monastery took up the sacred Body and carried it with them over the Sea which divides Brittany from Gaule And travelling with this sacred pledge at last they arrived at his own Monastery where they repos'd it Where because it was not entertained with due honour a certain Noble Marques call'd Arnulphus appointed by God to be the instrument of the safety of many men removed it to the Monastery of Blandinium in Gaunt together with the precious Relicks of the famous Confessour Bertulpus Which Translation was made on the third day before the Nones of December when Clotharius raigned in France On which day yearly to this time the sacred Body is caried in a solemne Procession And what miracles were wrought severall times during such Processions Cap-grave relates III. CHAP. 1. Constans quiets Gaule and comes into Brittany 2 3. A Synod at Sardica where Brittish Bishops come 4. Gests of the Synod 5.6 c. Of Appeales to Rome c. 12.13 c. S. Athanasius restor'd and again banish'd 15.16 Constans his death 1. IN the yeare three hundred forty two as Paulus Diaconus writes great commotions began in the Roman Empire For the Nation of the Franks setling themselves in Gaule used all hostility against the Romans But this trouble was quickly appeas'd by the Emperour Constans who coming out of Illyricum ●ought with and subdued them After which he pass'd over into Brittany which usually follow'd the motions of Gaule This appears from Iulius Firmicus who in a Book dedicated to the same Emperour recounts this journey performed during the tempestuous season of Winter telling him that the Brittains at the unlook'd for sight of him were affrighted into obedience 2. Four yearts after this upon occasion of great combustions especially in the Eastern Empire the two Emperours ioyn'd to call a Council intended to be Oecumenicall For the Eastern Bishops of the faction of Eusebius Bishop of Nicomedia Cheif-Pillar of the Arians had condemned S. Athanasius in two Synods at Tyre and Antioch On the contrary Iulius Bishop of Rome in a Synod of Italian Bishops received him into his Communion notwithstanding the intercession of the Orientals who sent to Rome their Decree of the condemnation of S. Athanasius Wherupon a Schism between the Eastern and Western Churches being likely to break forth to prevent it the Orthodox Emperour Constans earnestly solicited his brother Constantius ro joyn with him in calling a Generall Councill therby to preserve inviolate the heritage of their Fathers piety by which he had establish'd the Empire destroyed Tyrants and reduced to his obedience many barbarous Nations 3. Hereupon a Synod was assembled the year following at Sardica in Illyrium to which there came out of the Western Empire about three hundred Bishops and out of the East onely seaventy sixe Now among the Western Bishops some there were who came out of Brittany as S. Athanasius in whose cause especially the Synod met expressly affirms naming one of them to wit Restitutus Bishop of London who twenty years before had been at the Councill of Nicea to establish the Faith of the Consubstantiality of the Son of God In which regard to treat more particularly of this Synods affairs appertains to our present History for therby will appeare the conformity of the Brittish Churches in those dayes to the Faith and Discipline of the Catholick Church 4. For as much therfore as concerns the Acts of this Synod the principall was a confirmation of Faith establish'd in the Council of Nicéa Next the declaring the innocence of S. Athanasius Marcellus Asclepas and other Orthodox Bishops persecuted and chased from their Sees by the Arian faction together with the deposition and excommunication of their adversaries Then succeeded a condemnation of those Eastern Bishops which deserted the Synod and made a Schismaticall Assembly at Philippopolis neer Sardica where they likewise publish'd Decrees and Canons in contradiction to the lawfull Synod 5. Then touching matters of Disciplin establish'd in this holy Synod the most considerable was the confirming by an expresse Canon the lawfullnes of Appeales that is Petitions for Revisions of Episcopall causes From all other Churches both Eastern and Western to the See Apostolick of Rome The form of which Canon is as followeth 6. Osius Bishop said This must likewise necessarily be added That it may not be lawfull for Bishops to passe out of their own Province into another Province in which there are Bishops unlesse peradventure they be invited by their Brethren least they should seem to shut the dore of Charity But if it happen that in any Province a Bishop have a contention against his Brother Bishop one of the two may call out of another Province a Bishop to judge the cause But if any Bishop shall be judged and condemned in any cause yet thinks his cause to be good In this case to
cites for it William of Malmsbury Huntingdom Florentius Mathew of Westminster c. 3. I have thought expedient saith he to describe here out of the Acts of S. Birinus a wonderfull Miracle beseeming an Apostolick man which is omitted by S. Beda It was thus The Holy man being arrived to the shore of the Brittish Sea and ready to take ship celebrated the Divine Mysteries offring to God the Sacrifice of the Saving Host as a Viaticum for himself and followers After which the season being proper he was hastily urged to enter the ship and the wind serving thē they sayled speedily when on the sudden Birinus called to mind that he had lost a thing infinitely precious to him which by the urging hast of the Sea-men having his mind other ways busied he had left behind him at land For Pope Honorius had bestowed on him a Pall or Corporal upon which he consecrated the Body of our Lord and afterward used to wrap in it a particle of the said Sacred Body which he hung about his neck and allways caried with him but when he celebrated Masse he was wont to lay it by him upon the Altar Armed therefore with Faith he by Divine inspiratiō went down frō the ship into the Sea and walkd securely upon it to the shore Where finding what he had left behind he took it and in like manner returned to the ship Which he found standing still immoveable whereas a little before he had left it sailing extreme swiftly When he was entred into the ship not one drop of water appeared on his cloathes Which the Marriners seeing kneeld before him and worshipped him as a God and many of them by his preaching were converted to the Faith of Christ. 4. This custom of carying with them the Consecrated Body of our Lord was practised from the beginning of the Church many proofs whereof are in Tertullian S. Cyprian S. Ambrose writing of his Brother Satyrus S. Basile c. Which pious custom saith Baronius as the fervour of Religion introduced so Religion as holy hath in latter times forbidden it Formerly a firm Faith incited to the doing that which Reverence afterward disswaded In both cases Gods faithfull people deserve commendation as we read both the confidence and the modesty of the Apostles praised in the Gospel both when they were sorrowfull to want our Lords presence for a moment and likewise when S. Peter desired his absence saying Lord goe from mee for I am a sinfull man 5. S. Birinus being thus arrived in Brittany with an intention to visit the inmost rudest parts of the Island according to his promise to Pope Honorius he found at his landing so full a harvest that as William of Malmsbury says he thought it a folly to goe any further or to seek out sick men whom he should cure when as in the place where he already was there were not any sound Thus it hapned to S. Birinus as it had formerly to S. Augustin who being sent to the Deiri in the North stayd at the very entrance into the Island in the South He has notwithstanding found a more favourable esteem among Protestant Writers then S. Augustin did thought both taught the same Doctrin For B. Godwin calls him a man of great zeal and devotion and Camden says he was illustrious for his Sanctity even to a miracle c. 6. At his first coming S. Birinus addressed himself to King Kinegils to whom he with a modest boldnes expounded the Summ of the Christian Faith which he was come so far to preach for his salvation The Doctrines of Christianity were not now become strange even among the Pagans in Brittany But withall it fell out very happily that at the same time the most vertuous and Victorious King of the Northumbers Oswald as S. Beda stiles him was then present at the West-Saxon Court being come thither to demand King Kinegils his daughter for his wife This pious King gave his royal testimony to the Truth of the Doctrine preached by S. Birinus which was suitable to that received in the whole kingdom of the Northumbers And this he did so effectually that King Kinegils submitted his iudgment to the King and Bishop desiring to be conducted to the gate which opens into Heaven Hereupon he was sufficiently catechised and after that admitted to Baptism in which by a pious commerce King Oswald became Spirituall Father to him whose daughter he presently after maried 7. The King being thus converted the whole Province generally followd his example for according to S. Birinus his Acts the people hastned in great troops to heare the H. Bishop preach and with their hearts humbly embraced the Doctrine taught by him And no wonder for besides the sanctity and innocence of the Preacher God was present with him to confirm his Doctrin by Miracles One particularly is recounted in the said Acts after this manner There was in the Province a certain ancient Woman who a long time had been deprived both of her sight and hearing To her it was suggested by revelation that she should repair to the Holy Bishop for her cure She delayd not therefore but took with her a Guide to conduct her The Bishop therefore seing the womans piety immediatly made the sign of the Crosse upon her eyes and ears whereupon both her sight and hearing were restored to her 8. The Christian Faith being thus spread in that Kingdom both the Kings saith S. Beda assigned to the Holy Bishop the Citty called Dorinca to be his Episcopall See Where severall Churches were erected and consecrated and great multitudes gained to Christ after which he went to our Lord. This Citty Dorinca is the same which is now called Dorchester not the principal town of Dorsetshire but another of that name seated near Oxford Which at this time belonged to the West-Saxons but afterward passed to the Mercians 9. This Holy Bishop not being by profession a Monk instituted in his Church at Dorchester a Community of Canons who lived in a kind of Regular Observance and according to S. Gregories directions imitated the Institut of the Primitive Church during the Apostles times wherein not any of them esteemed that which he possessed to be his own but they had all things common In the said Church this Holy Bishop and seaven and twenty of his Successours continued the space of four hundred fifty seaven years 10. Fifteen years S. Birinus laboured with great fruit in cultivating this our Lords vineyard and at last in the year of Grace six hundred and fifty received his reward on the third of December on which day he is commemorated in our Martyrologe He was buried saith S. Beda in the same Citty o● Dorchester and several years after his sacred Body was translated into the Citty of Winchester by Hedde Bishop of the same Citty and reposed in the Church of the Blessed Apostles S. Peter and S. Paul 11. This passage of S. Beda was
cause of many troubles in ages following insomuch as the See Apostolick was oft appeald unto to decide the Controversy raised between the two Churches which contended earnestly whether of them were possessours of his Relicks The summ of which controversy though hapning in a far remote age yet pertinent to the present subject I will here deliver that I may shew the esteem which the Monuments of our Holy Ancestours deserve at our hands 12. S Birinus as hath been said instituted in his Church of Dorchester a Colledge of Canons Regulars which lived in a Community under a certain Rule Which Colledge in processe of time was seised upon by other Canons called Seculars who dividing the revenews among themselves each of them lived and enioyd separatly his portion But in the Raign of King Steven by the procurement of Alexander Bishop of the Diocese the Regulars were restored These men bearing a great respect and devotion to thei● Prime Patron and Founder whose Body they were perswaded still remained among them by Letters demanded leave of the Pope to place his Relicks more decently and to adorn his Monument Hereupon the Pope Hono●ius the third wrote to Steven Langton then Arch-bishop of Canterbury and Cardinal to examine all things well and accordingly proceed in satisfying the said Canons The Arch-bishop committed the affair to the diligence and prudence of the Arch-Deacon 13. Then broke out the pious contention between the Monks of Winchester and Canons of Dorchester Those of Winchester placed the summ of their cause in the testimony of Saint Beda But they of Dorchester produced severall witnesses and among the rest a certain Canon who deposed up on Oath that a former Canon called William in his hearing oft protested that by Vision in sleep a certain man appearing to him had commanded him to search such a sepulcher in the Church of Dorchester before the Altar of the Holy Crosse and that there he should find the Body of S. Birinus Whereupon search having been made by the Abbots permission and in his presence together with the Canons they found a Bishops Body entire with two stoles and other Episcopall ornaments of a red colourd silk together with a Crosse of metall upon his breast and a Chalice a little below it 14. Moreover in further confirmation they added proofs of severall miracles as of a certain young man deaf and dumb cured there who affirm'd that he was commanded in a vision to repair to that And being cured at the Sepulcher of S. Birinus he spoke in the English tongue Whereupon one of the Canons said in a ieasting manner He who taught thee to speak was no Courtier otherwise he would have taught thee a better language And three days after he spoke perfectly both in French and English Other Miracles also were alledged as of a blind man receiving sight a leper cleansed and two dead persons restored to life c. 15. As to the testimony alledged from S. Beda the Abbot answerd That Historians doe not relate all things from their own sight but oft by hear-say Therefore S. Beda might have been misinform'd and for a proof that he was so the Abbot acknowledged that the Body of a certain Bishop called Bertinus the tenth from S. Birinus had been translated to Winchester Which body had been buried in a corner of the Church near the dore a place unfitt for the Prime Patron of the See He added that after the Invention of Saint Birinus his Body a certain Anchoret a holy man named Mathew living at Haliwell near Oxford heard a certain voyce saying to him Birinus under the pavement Bertinus behind the dore He concluded that since many Miracles were wrought at Dorchester and not any at Winchester this was a certain proof that the Sacred Body had not been translated 16. Notwithstanding all which allegations yet would not the Arch-deacon presume to pronounce sentence in favour of the Canons but sent a particular relation of all the Acts to the Pope Who in a Second Letter expressed so much deference to the single authority of S. Beda that he would not determine the Controversy but gave order for another Search to be made in the Church of Winchester and an enquiry whether any like Miracles had been wrought there by the same Saints Intercession demanded by devout persons c. But what proceedings were further made in the matter and whether the Controversy were decided does not appear in any of our Authours Probably permission was given to both Churches to shew honour to the Saint since it was likely and very ordinary in such Translations to divide the Relicks V. CHAP. 1.2 c. Sigebert after his exile King of the East-Angles 5.6 c. He sends for Felix to convert his Kingdom who is made Bishop of the East-Angles His Piety c. 10. Quichelm King of the West Saxons baptized and dyes 1. THE year of our Lord six hundred thirty six as it was mournfull to the Eastern Church for then did the Saracens possesse themselves of the Holy Citty Hierusalem So was it ioyfull happy to the Kingdom of the East-Angles in Brittany who were then again converted to the Christian Faith and held it more constantly then they had done in the days of King Redwald or his Son Erpenwald For now Sigebert deservedly sirnamed Pious raigned there to whom that Kingdom was beholding for learning and the Province for the Christian Faith Who after a Monasticall profession was assumed to the Royall Purple and that purple adorned with Martyrdom 2. This Sigebert was not as Pits supposes a Son of King Redwald but only a half Brother to Erpenwald by the Mother as William of Malmsbury testifies And being very gracious among the Subjects for his vertues in the Raign of Redwald was commanded as heretofore Edwin had been to depart the Court least his eminent probity and endowments should prove preiudiciall to Erpenwald heyr to the Crown 3. Sigebert being thus through envy expelled the Court left the Prrvince and Island also and sayld into France where civility learning and Religion flourished He had not yet given up his name to Christ but he was naturally of so good a disposition that any thing that was good would easily make an impression in his mind To qualify the anguish and tediousnes of his banishment he gave himself to the study of human learning and by inquisition into Naturall causes he was lead to the knowledge of the First supreme Cause 4. His most frequent conversation was with learned men among which the most eminent were Desiderius Bishop of Cahors as appears saith Pits by mutuall Letters between them still extant in the Monastery of Saint Gall among the Swizzers and Felix a Burgundian Preist who afterward became the Apostle of his Countrey the East-Angles By discourse with these learned and pious men he quickly perceived the vanity of Idols and Pagan Rites how unproffitable and noxious to mens soules were the Gods worshipd by