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A03691 An ansvveare made by Rob. Bishoppe of VVynchester, to a booke entituled, The declaration of suche scruples, and staies of conscience, touchinge the Othe of the Supremacy, as M. Iohn Fekenham, by vvrytinge did deliuer vnto the L. Bishop of VVinchester vvith his resolutions made thereunto. Horne, Robert, 1519?-1580.; Feckenham, John de, 1518?-1585. 1566 (1566) STC 13818; ESTC S104234 173,274 272

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Hosius a great learned and godly Bishop of Spaine to take order and to appeace the contention writinge to Alexander and to Arius a graue also a sharpe letter chardging Alexander with vanitie Arius with want of circumspection shewing them both that it was vnséemely for the one to moue suche a question and for the other to answeare therein vndiscreetly doone of them both And therfore commaundeth them to cease of from suche contentious disputatiōs to agree betwixt them selues to lay aside from thencefoorth such vaine and trifeling questions He pacified also the Schisme at Antioche begonne about the choosinge of their Bishop to whome for that purpose he sente honorable Embassadours with his letters to a great number of Bishoppes that than were at Antioche about that busines and to the people exhortinge them to quietnes and teachinge them saith Eusebius to studie after godlines in a decent manner declaringe vnto the Bishoppes as one that had authoritie ouer thē euen in suche matters what thinges apperteined and were séemely for them to doo in suche cases and noteth vnto them a direction which they should followe And after he had saith Eusebius geuen suche thinges in cōmaundement vnto the Bisshoppes or chiefe mynisters of the Churches he exhorted them that they woulde doo all thinges to the prayse and furtheraunce of Goddes Woorde This supreme authoritie of the Emperour in Church causes is moste liuely expressed by S. Augustine Eusebius where they make mencion of the horrible Schisme stirred by the Donatistes against Cecilianus Bishop of Carthage whose election and orderinge to be Bishoppe of Carthage Donatus and others of his companions misliked and therefore made a Schisme in that Churche The question in controuersie was whether Cecilianus beyng ordered Bishop hauinge the imposicion of handes by Felix were Lawfully consecrated and ordred or not This controuersie made a lamentable trouble amongest the Churches in Aphrike At the length the Donatistes accused Cecilian vnto the Emperour desired the Emperour to appointe some Delegates to iudge of this controuersie And for that all the Churches in Aphrique were banded either to the one party or the other and for that Fraunce was frée from this contention they require iudges to be appointed by his authoritie from amongest the Frenche Bishoppes The Emperour muche grieued y e the Church was thus torne in sundre with this schisme doth appoint Melciades Bishop of Rome and Marcus to be his delegates commissaries in this controuersie with certaine other Bishoppes of Fraunce Melciades colleages or fellowe Bishoppes whom the Emperour had cōmaunded to be there with them for that purpose These commissioners with certaine other Bishoppes accordinge to the Emperours commaūdement met at Rome and after due examinacion had doe condemne the Donatistes and pronounce Cecilianus cause to be good From this sentence of the Bishop of Rome and other Bishoppes his colleages being the Emperours delegates the Donatistes appeale vnto the Emperour not onely accusinge Cecilianus but also Melciades the Bishop of Rome and the other Commissaries Wherfore the Emperour causeth a Synode to be had at Arclatum committinge the cause to the Bishop thereof and other Bishoppes assembled there by his commaundement to be herde and discussed Whereunto he calleth Crestus the Bishoppe of Syracufe a Citie in Sicily by his letters Wherein he declareth in plaine termes that it belongeth to his imperiall cure to sée these controuersies in Church causes to be determined and ended Donatus his companions beinge condemned also by these Bishoppes in the Synode at Arclatum and Cecilianus cléered doo againe appeale vnto the Emperour from their sentence besechinge him to take the hearinge discussinge of the controuersie Who called both the parties together before him selfe at Millayne and after he had herde the whole matter what was to be saide on both sides he gaūe finall sentence with Cecilianus cōdemning y e Donatistes Who after all these thinges thus done as S. Augustine faithe made a very sharpe Lawe against the Donatistes the whiche also his Sonnes after him commaunded to be obserued Athanasius also that moste godly Bishop being ouer muche wronged in the Councell at Tyre did ●lie and àppeale from the iudgement of that Synode vnto Constantine the Emperour declaringe vnto him his griefes beséechinge him to take the hearinge of the matter before him selfe whiche the Emperour assented vnto writinge vnto the Synode assembled at Tyre commaunding them without delaie to come vnto his Courte and there to declare before me saithe this moste Christian Emperour whome yee shall not denie to be Goddes syncere mynister howe sincerely and rightly yee haue iudged in your Synode When this Synode was assembled at Tyre the Catholique Bishoppes of Egipt wrote vnto the honorable Flauius Dionysius whome the Emperour had made his Lieutenaunt to sée al things well ordered in that Councell and did desire him that he would reserue the examinacion and iudgemēt to the Emperour him selfe yea they doo adiure him that he doo not medle with their matter but referre the iudgement therof to the Emperour who they ●●ne we well woulde iudge rightly accordinge to the right order of the Churche There were no Churche mattiers or Ecclesiasticall causes wherein the continuall practise of the Churche of Christe in this Emperours time yea and many hundreth yéeres after did not attribute the supreme rule order and authoritie vnto Emperours and Kinges vppon whome all Churche mattiers did depende as witnesseth Socrates who sheweth this reason of that he doth thoroughout his Eccesiasticall History mention so much the Emperours Bicause that of the Emperours saith he after they beganne to be Christians the Churche matters doo depende yea the greatest Councelles haue beene and are called together accordinge to their appointment Eusebius commendeth the great bountifulnes of Constantine towardes al estates But saithe he this Emperour had a singuler care ouer Coddes Churche for as one appointed of God to be a common or vniuersall Bysshop he called Synodes or conuocations of Goddes mynisters together into one place that thereby he might appeace the contentious striainges that were amonge them in sundry places He disdayned not to be present with them in their Synodes and to sit in the middest of them as it had beene a meaner personnage commendinge and approuinge those that bente themselues of good meaninge to godly vnitie and shewed him selfe to mistike on the other side and to set naught by suche as were of contrary disposition The Ecclesiasticall histories make mention of many Synodes or councelles called or assembled at the appointment and order of this Emperour But the most famous and notable was the Nicene councell about the whiche consider and marke what was the occasion by whose authoritie it was summoned and called together and what was the dooynges of the Emperour from the beginninge vnto the dissolueion thereof and yée shall sée plainely as in a Glasse that by the order and practise of the
Catholique Churche notified in the order of this general Councell the supreme gouernment in Ecclesiasticall causes is in the Emperour and ciuill Magistrates your opinion condemned by the vniforme agreement of 318. of the most Catholique Bishoppes in the worlde commendinge and allowynge for moste godly what so euer the Emperour did in or about this councell The occasion of this famous and moste godly councell was the great dissention kindled partly about a necessary Article of our beliefe partly about a ceremony of the Churche Arius incensed with ambitious enuie againste Alexander his Bishop at Alexandria who disputed in one of his lessons or treatises more subtily of the diuinitie than aduisedly as the Emperour layeth to his chardge quarelled Sophistically against him and mainteined an horrible Heresie Besides this the Churches were also deuided amongest them selues aboute the order or ceremony of kéepinge the Easter daie The Emperour sente Hosius with his letters as I saide before into the Easte parties to appeace the furious dissention about bothe these matters and to reconcile the parties dissentynge But when this duetifull seruice of the Emperour tooke not that effect whiche he wisshed and hoped for then as Sozomenus writeth he summoned a councell to be holden at Nice in Bythinia and wrote to all the chiefe Mynisters of the Churches euery where commaundinge them that they shoulde not fayle to bée there at the day appoynted The selfe same also dothe Theodoretus affirme bothe touchynge the occasion and also the summons made by the Emperour Eusebius also writinge the life of Constantine sheweth with what carefulnes the godly Emperour endeuoured to quenche these fiers And when the Emperour saieth Eusebius sawe that he preuailed nothing by sending of Hosius with his letters Considering this matter with him selfe saide that this warre against the obscure enemy troubling the Churche must be vanquished by an other meaning hym selfe Therefore as the capitaines of Goddes armie towardes his voyage he gathered together a Synode oecumenical and he called the Byshoppes together by his honorable letters and that they should hasten themselues from euery place These thinges touching the occasion and calling of this generall counsaile by the Emperour are affirmed to be true also by Nicephorus the Ecclesiasticall historian Yea the whole counsayll in their letters to the Churches in Aegipt and the East partes doo testifie the same Synode to be called by the Emperour saiyng The great and holy Synode was gathered together at Nice by the grace of God and the moste religious Emperour Constantine c. The Bishoppes as I said before when they thought them selues or their Churche iniuried by others were wont to appeale and flie vnto the Emperour as the supreme gouernour in al matters and causes Temporall or Spirituall the whiche appeareth moste playne to be the practise of the Church by these Bishops called vnto the Nicene counsaill For when they came to Nice supposing them selues to haue nowe good oportunitie beyng nighe vnto the Emperour to reuenge their priuate quarelles and to haue redresse at the Emperours handes of suche iniuries as they thought them selues to susteyne at others byshops handes eche of them gaue vnto the Emperour a Libell of accūsatiōs signifiyng what wronges he had susteyned of his felowe Bishoppes and prayed ayde and redresse by his iudgement The Emperour forseyng that these pryuate quarelings if they were not by some policy and wyse deuise sequestred and layde aside would muche hynder the common cause tooke deliberation appointing a day against the which they shuld be in a readines and commaunded them to prepare and bring vnto him all their libelles and quarelling accusations one against an other Marke by the waie the craft and practise of Sathan to stay and ouerthrow good purposes that euen the godly fathers and Bishoppes wanted not their great infirmities preferring their own priuate trifles before the weighty causes of Gods Churche And the wisdome zeale and humblenes of this moste christiā Emperour who so litle estemed his own honour and authoritie that he wold rather seeme to be inferiour or for the time no more than equall with his subiectes to the ende he might by his humbling of him selfe aduance and exalt Gods glory to the edifiyng and quietnes of his Churche The day came whiche was the day before the first Session should be in the councell as Socrates saith the Bishoppes did not sleape their owne matters but had their billes in a readines and deliuered them vnto the Emperour This vigilant noursefather vnto Gods Churche had cared and deuised so diligently for the common cause as the Bishoppes had doon for their priuate quarelles and therefore when he had receiued their Libelles very politiquely saieth bicause he woulde irritate none of them for that tyme That the daie of generall iudgement should be a fitte time for these accusations and Christe the Iudge then woulde iudge all men As for me it is not leafull to take vpon me the iudgement of suche Priestes accused and accusing one an other Whereunto neuertheles he added this priuy nippe to pynche them withall For of all other thinges saith he this is least seemely that Bishoppes shoulde shewe them selues suche as ought to be iudged of others And so caused the Libelles to be cast into the fire giuing them an earnest exhortation to peace and quietnes The next daye after after they assembled at the Emperours palayce he commaunded them to go into the councell house to consult of the matter the councell house was within Themperours pallayce trimly furnished with seates aptly ordred for suche purpose as it were in rowes They entred in and wayted without any doinges till the comming of the Emperour whose seate was of gold placed at the first beginning of the rowes who being entred and placed in his feate maketh an oration vnto them declaring the contētions sprong vp amongest them selues to be the occasion wherfore he called them togither and the ende is saith he that this disease might be healed through my ministery After this he maketh an earnest exhortatiō mouing them to quietnes forgiuing one an other for Christ commaundeth saieth he that who will receiue pardon at his hande shall also forgiue his brethren After this moste graue exhortation to vnitie and concorde in truthe he giueth them leaue to consult of the matters in hande prescribeth vnto them a rule whereby they muste measure trie and discusse these and all other suche disputations and controuersies in matters of Religion to witte Sanctissimi spiritus doctrinam praescriptam The doctrine of the moste holy spirite before writen For saieth he the bookes of the Euangelistes and of the Apostles and also the prophecies of the olde Prophetes doo euidently teache vs of Goddes meaning VVherefore laiyng a syde al discorde of enemitie let vs take the explications of our questions out of the saiyngs of the holy Ghost When the parties waxed warme in the disputations and the contention somwhat sharp then
at the humble sute of Bonifacius by chaunce againste righte be chosen thorough the vndiscreete contention of the Electours wee permitte neither of them to be Prieste or Pope but wee iudge him to remaine in the Apostolique sea whome the diuine iudgement and the common consente dothe appointe from amongest the Clergy in a newe Election Vppon this woorde where the Emperour saithe wee permitte the Glosar saith and so the Emperour dothe not onely abrogate the clayme of bothe those that be chosen in the contention but dothe make them bothe for that time vnable and dothe decree an other to be taken out of the Clergie for that time Againe the Glosar interpretinge this the diuine iudgement saithe this is the meaninge that the Emperours will and election muste stande the Clergy and the whole people acceptinge with thankefull minde whome the Emperour doth choose For the Emperours were called in those daies holy and their rescriptes and iudgementes Diuine Here you sée by the Popes decrées and Glosars that the Emperour had the supreme rule and gouernement in Churche causes and this was the continuall practise of the Churche for the most parte yea euen the Bishoppes of Rome before they were ordered and consecrated had their election ratified and confirmed by the Emperours their Lieutenaunt or other Princes Sabellicus speakinge of the contentious entraunce of Damasus the first into the Papacy whiche was not without great bloudshed as Volateranus saith dothe note the ambition of the Prelates to be the cause of suche contention about their atteininge of such roumes For now saith he the ambicious desire of honour had by litle and litle begon to entre into the mindes of the Bishoppes The whiche was proued ouer true not onely in the elections of the Bishoppes of old Rome but also in many Bishoppes of other Cities especially of newe Rome These diseases in the Churche mynisters and the disorders thereout springyng the Emperours from time to time studied to cure and refourme wherefore Theodosius and Valentinianus when they sawe the great hoouing and shoouinge at Constantinople about the election of a Bishop after the death of Sismius some speakinge to preferre Philippus other some Proclus both beinge mynisters of that Churche did prouide a remedy for this mischiefe to witte they them selues made a decrée that none of that Churche shoulde be Bishop there but some straunger from an other Churche and so the Emperours sent to Antioche for Nestorius who as yet was thought both for his doctrine and life to be a fitte pastor for the flocke and made him Bishop of Constantinople As Constantinus and Theodosius the elder euen so Theodosius the seconde a very godly Emperour hauing practisinge the supreme gouernment in Ecclesiasticall causes séeinge the horrible Heresies spronge vp deuidinge the Church but specially by Nestorius did by his authoritie call the thirde generall councell at Ephesus named the firste Ephesine councell geuinge streight commaundement to all Bishops wheresoeuer that they shoulde not faile to appeare at the time appointed and further vsed the same power and authoritie in the orderinge and gouerninge thereof by his Lieutenaunt Ioannes Comes Sacrensis that other Godly Emperours had béene accustomed to vse before him accordinge to the continuall practise of the Churche as it is plainely set foorth in the booke of generall Councelles In this councell there happened so gréeuous contention betwixt Cyrillus Bishop of Alexandria and Iohn Bishop of Antioche bothe beynge otherwise godly and learned men that the councell was deuided thereby into twoo partes the occasion of this Schisme was partely that Cyrillus and certaine other with him had procéeded to the condemnation of Nestorius before that Ioannes with his company coulde come and partely for that Ioannes of Antioche suspected Cyrillus of certaine Heresies misdéeminge that Cyrill had made the more haste to confirme them before his comminge He therefore with his associates complaineth and laieth to Cyrilles chardge that he did not tarie accordinge to the commaundement of the Emperour for the comminge of the Bishoppes of other Prouinces whiche were called thither from all partes by the commaundement of the Emperour That whan the noble Erle Candidianus commaunded him by writinge and without writinge that he shoulde presume no suche matter but that he and those that were with him shoulde abide the comminge of the other Bishoppes neuerthelesse he procéeded that he and his companie were the authours of dissention and discorde in the Churche and that they had geuen the occasion that the rules of the Fathers and the decrées of the Emperours were broken and troden vnder foote wherefore they iudge Cyrill of Alexandria with Memnon Bishop of Ephesus to be deposed frō their Bishoprikes and Ecclesiasticall mynistery the other their associates to be excommunicate The whiche their doynges they signifie to the Emperour Theodosius by their Sydonical letters to vnderstande his pleasure in allowing or disallowyng of their Synodicall actes After this came the Bishoppe of Romes legates before whome in the councell Cyrillus and Memnon offered vp their libelles deposinge a contestation againste Iohn and his partie to haue them cited and render the cause of their deposition The Bishoppe of Romes legates with the consent of the councel on that parte sendeth for Ioannes and his parties who returneth this answeare Neither sende you to vs nor wee to you bicause wee looke for an answeare from the Prince touchinge you Therefore saith Liberatus Cyrill and Memnon seekinge to reuenge them selues did condemne Iohn and all those that stoode with him who suffered many displeasures at Ephesus thorough the pride of these twaine The Emperour sendeth to the whole Councell his answeare in writinge on this sorte Wee allowe the condemnation of Nestorius Cyrillus and Memnon the other actes and condemnations whiche you haue made ▪ wee disallowe obseruinge the Christian Faithe and vprightnes whiche wee haue receiued of our Fathers and progenitours c. Certaine of the Bishoppes did satisfie the Emperour whome he commaunded to enter into the Churche and to ordeine an other Bishop for Constantinople in the place of Nestorius These thinges thus doone the Emperour dissolued the Councell and commaunded the Byshoppes to departe euery man to his owne countrey Within a while after the Emperour perceiuinge the dissention betwixte Cyrill and Iohn to continewe whiche he thought was not to be suffered called Maximianus and many other Bishoppes that were then at Constantinople with whome he consulted howe this Schisme of the Churches might be taken away Whose aduise had the Emperour sente a noble man named Aristolaus with his letters to Cyrill and Iohn commaundinge them to come to an agreement and vnitie betwixte them selues otherwise he woulde depose and banishe them bothe Whereuppon followed a reconciliation betwéene the twoo Bishops and muche quietnes to the Churches Eutyches stirred vp muche trouble in these daies wherefore he was cited to appeare before Flauianus Bishop of Constantinople and other Bishoppes assembled in a Synode
the Clergy and the people elected Gregory the firste called afterwardes the great But the custome was saithe Sabellicus which is declared in an other place that the Emperours should ratifie by their consent the election of him that is chosen Pope And to stay the Emperours approbation saith Platina he sente his messengers with his letters to beseeche the Emperour Mauritius that he woulde not suffer the election of the people and clergy to take effecte in the choyse of him c. So muche did this good man saithe Sabellicus seekinge after heauenly thinges contemne earthly and refused that honour for the whiche other did contende so ambiciously But the Emperour beynge desirous to plante so good a man in that place woulde not condescende to his request but sent his Embassadours to ratifie and confirme the election Richaredus Kyng of Spaine rightly taught and instructed in the Christian faithe by the godly and Catholique Bishoppe Leander Bishop of Hispalis did not onely bringe to passe that the whole nation shoulde forsake the Arianisme and receyue the true faithe but also did carefully study howe to continue his people in the true Religion by his meanes newely receiued And therefore commaunded all the Bishoppes within his Dominions to assemble togeather at Toletum in the fourth yéere of his reigne and there to consulte about stayinge and confirminge of his people in true faithe and Religion of Christe by godly discipline Whan the Bishoppes were assembled in the conuocation house at the kinges commaundement the king commeth in amongst them he maketh a short but a pithy and most Christian oration vnto the whole Synode Wherein he sheweth that the cause wherfore he called them together into the Synode was To repaire and make a newe fourme of Churche discipline by common consultation in Synode whiche had béene letted longe time before by the Hereticall Arianisme the whiche stay and let of the Arians haeresies it hath pleased God saithe he to remoue and put away by my meanes He willeth them to be ioyfull and gladde that the auncient manner to make Ecclesiasticall constitutions for the well ordering of the Churche is now thorough Gods prouidence reduced and brought againe to the boundes of the Fathers by his honorable industry And laste of all he doth admonishe and exhorte them before they beginne their consultation to faste and pray vnto the Almighty that he will vouchesaulfe to open and shewe vnto them a true order of discipline whiche that age knewe not the senses of the Clergie were so muche benūmed with longe forgetfulnes Whereuppon there was a three dayes faste appointed That doone the Synode assembleth the kinge commeth in and sitteth amongst them he deliuereth in writinge to bée openly redde amongest them the confession of his Faithe in whiche he protesteth with what endeuour and care beyng their king he ought not onely to study for him selfe to be rightly geuen to serue and please God with a right Faithe in true Religion but also to prouide for his subiectes that they be thoroughly instructed in the Christian Faithe He affirmeth and thereto taketh them to witnes that the Lorde hath styrred him vp enflamed with the heate of Faithe both to remooue and put away the furious and obstinate Heresies and Schismes and also by his vigilaunt endeuour and care to call and bringe home againe the people vnto the confession of the true faith and the communion of the Catholique Churche Further alludinge to the place of S. Paule where he saith that thorough his mynistery in the Ghospell he offreth vp the Gentiles vnto God to be an acceptable Sacrifice he saithe to the Bishoppes That he offreth by their mynisterie this noble people as an holy and acceptable Sacrifice to God And laste of all with the rehersall of his faithe he declareth vnto the Bishoppes That as it hath pleased God by his care and industry to winne this people to the faith and vnite them to the Catholique Churche so he chardgeth them now to see them staide and confirmed by their diligent teachinge and instructinge them in the trueth After this confession was redde and that he him selfe and also his Quéene Badda had confirmed and testified the same with their handes subscripcion the whole Synode gaue thankes to God with many and sundry acclamacions saying That the Catholique Kinge Richaredus is to be crowned of God with an euerlastinge crowne for he is the gatherer togeather of newe people into the Churche This Kinge truely ought to haue the Apostolique rewarde who hath perfourmed the Apostolique office This done after the Noble menne and Bishoppes of Spaine whome the woorthy Kinge had conuerted and brought to the vnitie of Faithe in the Communion of Christes Churche had also geuen their confession openly and testified the same with subscription the Kinge willinge the Synode to goe in hande to repayre and establishe some Ecclesiasticall discipline saithe to the Synode alludinge to S. Paules saying to the Ephesians to this effect That the care of a kinge ought to stretch foorth it selfe and not to cease till he haue brought the subiectes to a ful knowledge and perfect age in Christ and as a kinge ought to bende all his power and authoritie to represse the insolence of the euill and to nouris he the common peace and tranquilitie Euen so ought he muche more to study labour and be carefull not onely to bring his subiectes from errours and false Religion but also to see them instructed taught and trained vp in the trueth of the cleere light And for this purpose he dooth there decree of his owne authoritie commaunding the Bishoppes to see it obserued that at euery Communion time before the receipt of the same all the people with a loude voice together doo recite distinctly the Symbole or Crede set foorth by the Nicen councell When the Synode had consulted about the discipline and had agreed vpon suche rules and orders as was thought moste mete for that time and Churche and the kinge had considered of them he doth by his assent and authoritie confirme and ratifie the same and first subscribeth to them and then after him all the Synode This zelous care and carefull study of this and the other aboue named princes prouiding ruling gouerning and by their princely power and authouritie directing their whole Clergy in causes or matters Ecclesiasticall was neuer disallowed or misliked of the auncient fathers nor of the Bishoppes of Rome till nowe in the latter dayes the insaciable ambicion of the Clergy and the ouermuche negligence and wantones of the Princes with the grosse ignorance of y e whole Laity gaue your holy father the childe of perdicion the full sway to make perfect the mystery of iniquitie Yea it may appéere by an Epistle that Gregorius surnamed great Bishop of Rome writeth vnto this worthy king Richaredus that the Bishop of Rome did much cōmende this carefull gouernement of Princes in causes of Religion For he moste highly commendeth the doinges of
Churche commaunded that no Legate of the Churche of Rome shoulde be suffred to entre into Germany with out he were called or hyred of the Emperour nor woulde suffer that any man vnder the maner of appellation shoulde goo vnto the Courte of Rome After the death of Adrian the fowrth the Cardinals fel out amongest them selues for the Election of a newe Pope some stryuinge to haue Rowlande other some cōtendinge to haue Octauian a man saith Vrspurg in all pointes honest and Religious Herevpon sprange an horrible Schisme and greate discorde Rowlande sent his Legates to the Emperour Fredericus 1. and desired him that he woulde take vp and ende this contention by his authoritie The Emperour commaundeth them both to come vnto him at Ticinum where foorthwith he sommoned a coūcell to be holden about this matter mindinge to examine bothe their causes and by searchinge to trye whose cause was the more honest Rowlande beynge afraide to haue the matter come to this tryall getteth him to William of Sicilia the Emperours mortall enemie and within twelue daies putteth on his Cope and nameth him selfe Alexander for he purposed béelyke to make a conquest of the matter He alleaged his ellection to be good out of al doubte and that he sente for the Emperours ayde and not for his arbytrement and therefore thought not good to bringe his case into doubtfull question The Emperour beynge offended with him for that he woulde not obey his appoinctement sente twoo Bishops to cite him to come vnto the Councell by the name of Cardinall and not Pope But Rowlande refused confutinge their Citacion with this Maxime or Principle Romanum Pontificem a nemine iudicari debere the Pope ought not to be iudged of any man But whē these Legates from the Emperour came to Octauiā he straight ways obeied theybrought him to Papia Vrspur saith that Rowlande was oftentimes monished to come and did contemne all those monitions The Emperour satte in the Councell as Radeuicus Frisingensis who wrote his actes witnesseth and made an oration vnto the Bishoppes wherein he declareth and that by the example of his auncestours Constantinus Theodosius Iustinianus and of later time of Carolus Magnus and other that the power and authoritie to call Councelles where the Churche is troubled with any schismes or other perillous distourbance belongth to the Emperour Notwithstandinge he committed the difininge of the controuersie to their wisedome and gaue them thereunto authoritie The councell debateth the cause consulteth with men learned in the lawe and so concludeth that Octauians election was good and adiudgeth him to be the right Bishop of Rome When they had thus tryed out the matter ●redericus the Emperour saith Platina Confirmat Octauianum Pontificem Confirmed Octauian Pope The Emperour within a while after sente Octauianus new confirmed Pope towardes Rome who dyed in the iourney After whose death the Emperour called an other councel at Wirtzberge as Auentinus writeth wherein were a greate number of Archebishoppes and other Bishoppes and also may of the nobles and states of the Empyre In this Councell a statute or Decree was made by common consente That from hencefoorth none shoulde be Pope onelesse he were created by the consent of the Emperour accordinge as the custome had bene of longe and auncient time This worthy Emperour whom the Chroniclers call Christianissimum moste Christian for his zeale towardes Goddes Churche endeuored not without great perill to him selfe and his estate to reteine the iurisdiction due to the Princes and thereby to refourme the horrible disorders that were growen so highe that they ouerwhelmed the Churche as in lyke sorte diuers other Emperours and Kinges bothe before and after had attempted but in vayne for the wealthy pride the fierce power and trayterous treachery of the Pope and his Prelates was so mighty violent and subtile that there was no earthly power able to withstande or matche with them And therfore Erasmus compteth the Popes of this time and those that folowed to be the Vicars and successours of Iulius Caesar of Alexander the the great of Croesus the ryche and of ●erxes the mighty rather then of Christe the onely Emperour gouernour of the Churche Bernarde calleth Eugenius 3. in his great pompe and pride rather the successour of Constantinus the highe Emperour then of Peter the humble Apostle And Abbas Vrspurg who lyued at this time when the Popes had spoyled the Emperour and other Princes welnighe of all iurisdiction rulinge all by theyr owne Decretalles nowe aboute this time set foorth as they listed maketh a lamentable complainte of the horrible pryde and couetousnesse of the whole clergie and concludeth with these woordes Gaude mater nostra Roma c. Reioyce O our mother Rome bycause the scluses of the hidden treasures in the earthe are opened that riuers and heapes of money maye flowe vnto thee in great abundance Be glad of the iniquitie of the sonnes of men bicause money is geuen to thee for the recompence of so great euilles Be mery and iocund for discordes sake which is thy helper bicause she is rushte out of the infernal pit that plētiful rewardes of money might be heaped vpō the thou hast that which thou hast alwaies thyrsted after synge pleasant balades for through mennes malitiousnesse not by thy Godlinesse thou hastouercome the worlde About this time the kinge of Cicilia and Apulia had a dispensation from the Pope for money to Inuesture Archebishoppes or Bishoppes with staffe or crosier rynge palle myter sandalles ●r slippers and that the Pope mighte sende into his dominions no Legate onlesse the kinge shoulde sende for him Our Englishe Chroniclers make report that the Kynges of this Realme hadde not altogeather leafte of their dealinge in Churche matters but continued in parte their Iurisdiction aboute Ecclesiastical causes although not without some trouble The Popes Legate came into Englande and made a councell by the assent of kinge William the Conquerour And after that in an other Councell at Winchester * were put downe many Bisshops Abbottes and Priours by the meanes and procurement of the Kinge The kinge gaue to Lanfranke the Archbisshoprike of Cantorb and on our Lady day the Assumption made him Archebishop On whit Sonday he gaue the Archbishoprike of Yorke vnto Thomas a Canon of Bayon When Thomas should haue béene consecrated of Lanfranke there fell a strife betwixt them about the liberties of the church of Yorke The controuersie beinge about Churche matters was brought and referred to the Kinges iudgement and Thomas by the Kinges commaundement was faine to come againe to Lanfranke to be sacred And afterwarde when there grew greater contention betwixt these twaine about Churche matters the Bishop of Rome remitted the matter to be determined before the Kinge and the Bisshoppes of Englande and so at Windesour before kinge VVilliam and the Cleargy the cause was treated Also an other cause was mooued before
Frenche kynge prouing them to be as in deede they were no other but temporall neuerthelesse not standinge muche about the name nor taking them all away from their iurisdiction he onely said he would reforme them Neuerthels for certeine daies there was muche disputing to and fro whether they belonged to the kinge to reforme or no till the king by his foresaide procuratour gaue them the kinges determinat aunswere declaring vnto them howe that they ought not to be troubled bicause the kinges intention was to keepe those rightes and customes of the Churche and Prelates which were good and reasonable but by reason of their faults the iudgement whiche were good and reasonable apperteined not vnto thē to determine but to the king Bicause the Decree Nouit c. saieth that the kinge of Fraunce in matters de Facto hath not his superiour c. VVhereuppon hee concluded that the kinge woulde heare all the informations And those Customes of the whiche he shoulde be fully enfourmed that they were good and reasonable he woulde make onely to bee obserued In cōclusion the Prelates made such importune labour that the forsaide attourney aunswered them for the kinge that if the Prelates themselues would amende those thinges that were to be amended and corrected the king would abide till the feaste of the Natiuitie next to come within whiche terme he woulde innouate nothing but if within the saide terme the Prelates had not amended those thinges that were to be amended and corrected that then the kinge would put to suche remedy as should be acceptable to God and the people Whiche in conclusion the king was faine to do by a sharpe seuere Lawe whan he sawe howe the Prelates dallied him of with faire wordes and therefore he him selfe Composuit rem sacerdotum did set in order the matters of the Priestes In England at this time many abuses about Ecclesiasticall causes were reformed although the Pope his Clergie did earnestly mainteine them by king Edwarde the. 3. who wrote his letters to y ● Pope admonishing him to leue of his disordered doinges whan that woulde not serue he redressed them by act of parliament and as Nauclerus saith he commaunded that from thenceforth no body shoulde bring into the Realme any kinde of the Popes letters vnder the paine of drowning and expelled all persones out of his kingdom that weare by the Pope promoted to any benefice Next to Lewes was Charles the. 4. chosen Emperour who helde a councel at Mentze with y e Prelates Princes in the yere of the Lorde 1359. wherein he much reproued the Popes Legate for his disorders and commaunded the Archbishop of Mentze to reforme his Clergie and the disorders amongest them for otherwise he woulde see to it him selfe The Popes Legate seyng howe the Emperour tooke vpon him gate him to his shippe and saylled to Colayn as one that fledde awaye With whiche doynges the Emperour became very famouse for he was a man of great workes who dyd lyghten the kyngdome of Boheme bothe with the the settinge foorth of Religion and with the discipline of Lawes and good manners At this time wrote Nilus the Bishoppe of Thessalonica declaringe the onely cause of the diuision betwéene the Gréeke and the Latine Churche to be for that the Pope will not suffer frée and generall Councelles to be called by the Emperours accordinge to the auncient custome that his authoritie is not by the Lawe of God but by the positiue Lawes of Princes graunted onely because that than Rome was the greatest Citie in the worlde and hath no prerogatiue of Christ or Peter more than any other Bishoprike Kinge Richarde the. 2. called a Councell at VVestminster saith Polydore wherein it was thought good to the Kinge and the Princes for the weale of his realme of Englande if a parte of the Popes authoritie were bounded within the limites of the Occean sea he meaneth that it were driuen out of the Isle of Britaine wherfore it was decreed that hereafter it shoulde be lawfull to no man to trie any cause before the Bishop of Rome nor that any man be publikly pronounced wicked or enemy of Religion that is to wit as the common people terme it be excommunicate by his authoritie nor that if any man haue any suche commaundement from him they execute the same The penaltie ordeined to those that violate this lawe was that losinge all his goodes he shoulde be caste into perpetuall pryson The Churche of Rome at this time was maruailously torne in sunder with an horrible Schisme whiche continued about xl yéeres hauinge at ones thrée heades callinge them selues Popes euery one of them in moste despitefull wise calling the other Antichrist Schismatique Heretique tiraunt thiefe traytour the sonne of perditiō sower of Cockle the childe of Belial c. diuerse learned men of that time inueighed against them all thrée as Henricus de Hassia 10. Cerson Theodorych Nyem secretary before this to Pope Boniface who prooueth at lardge by good reasons by the woorde of God and by the Popes decrées that the refourmation of these horrible disorders in the Churche belonge to the Emperour and the secular Princes Sigismunde the noble Emperour vnderstandinge his duetie herein amongest other his notable actes called a Councell togeather at Constantia and brought againe to vnitie the Churche deuided in three partes whiche Councell saithe Nauclerus beganne by the Emperours commaundement and industry in the yeere 1414. To the whiche Councell came Pope Iohn before the Emperours comminge thinkinge to haue outfaced the Councell with his pretensed authoritie till the Emperour came who geuinge to all men in the Councell free libertie to speake their mindes a great companie of horrible vices were laide streight way to his chardge To the whiche when he was not hable to answeare he was deposed and the other twoo Popes also and an other chosen chiefly by the Emperours meanes called Martyn the. 5. After these thinges finished they entred into the communication of a reformation bothe of the Cleargie and the Layty to whiche purpose the Emperour had deuised a booke of Constitucions and also willed certaine learned Fathers there but specially the Bishoppe of Camera a Cardinall there presente to deuise what faultes they coulde finde and how they shoulde be redressed not sparinge any dégrée neither of the Prelates nor of the Princes them selues Whiche the Bishoppe did and compiled a litle booke or Libell entituled a Libell for reformation of the Churche gathered by Peter de Aliaco c. and offered to the Churche rulers gathered togeather in Constaunce Councell by the commaundement of the Emperour Sigismonde c. In this Libell of reformation after he hath touched the notable enormities in the Pope in the Courte of Rome in the Cardinalles in the Prelates in Religious personnes and in Priestes in exaction in Canons and Decretalles incollations of benefices in fastinges in the diuine seruice in Piaures in
the Emperour as a wyse moderatour and Ruler would discourage none but myldely caulmed such as he saw ouer hasty with wilde wordes cooling their heate and commended such as reasoned deepely with grauitie When they had agreed of the chiefe pointes wherefore they were assembled the Emperour him self calleth forth Acesius a Byshop at Constantinople of the Nouatians Religion and examineth him openly touchyng these articles wherunto the whole counsaile had agreed and subscribed He wryteth his lettres to the Churche at Alexandria where the controuersy touchynge the diuinitie of Christ began declaring that he him selfe together with the Byshops in the counsayl had taken vpō him the searchinge foorth of the truthe and therefore assureth them that all thinges were diligently examined to auoyde all ambiguitie and doubtfulnes wherefore he exhorteth and willeth them al that no man make any doubt or delases but y e cherefully they retourne againe into the moste true waye He writeth an other to al Byshops people where so euer wherein he commaundeth that no wryting of Arius or monument conteining Arius doctrine be kepte openly or secretly but be burnt vnder payn of death After that all the matters were concluded and signed with their handes subscription the Emperour dissolueth the counsaile and licenseth euery one of them to retourne home to his own Byshoprike with this exhortation that they continue in vnitie of fayth that they preserue peace and concorde amongest them selues that from thence forth they abyde no more in contentions and last of al after he had made a long oration vnto them touchynge these matters he commaundeth them that they make prayer continually for hym his children and the whole Empyre Arius counterfeyting a false and feyned confession of beliefe like an hypocrite pretending to the Emperour that it was agreable vnto the faithe of the Nicen counsayl humbly beseching the Emperour That he would vnitie and restore him to the mother Churche and therefore hauinge friendes in the Emperours Courte as suche shall neuer want fautours about the best Princes was brought into his presence whom the Emperour him selfe examined diligently and perceyuing no disagrement as he thought from the agreement made in Nicene councell absolued restored him againe whereunto Athanasius who knew Arius throughly would not agrée and being accused therfore vnto the Emperour was charged by lettres from hym that he should receiue Arius with these threates that if he would not he would depose him from his Byshoprike and commy● him to an other place The Arians heaped vp many and horrible accusations and slaunders vpon Athanasius whereupon the Emperour dooth sommon a counsaill at Tyre and sendeth cōmaundement by his letters to Athanasius that without al excuse he shuld appeare there for otherwyse he should be brought whether he would or no. He writeth to the coūcell his letters wherein he declareth the causes why he called that councell He shewed what he would haue and they ought to doo and prescribeth vnto them the fourme and rule wherby they shall iudge and determine in that Synode Athanasius appeared appealed fled to the Emperour and declared the iniuries offered against him in that councell The Emperour tooke vpon him the hearing of the cause sent his letters to the whole Synode commaūding them without all excuse or delay to appeare before hym in his palayce and there to shewe how vprightly and sincerely they had iudged in their Synode as I haue shewed before Wherein obserue diligently that the Emperour taketh vpon him and no fault found therewith to examine and iudge of the doinges of the whole councell Thus farre of Constantine and his doynges in the execution of his ministerie and especially in perfourming that part whiche he calleth the best part that is his gouernement and rule in Ecclesiasticall matters wherein it is manifest that by the practise of the catholique Churche for his time approued commended by al the catholique priestes and Bishoppes in the Nicen counsaile the supreme gouernement authoritie and rule in all maner causes both Ecclesiastical and Temporall were claimed and exercised by the Emperour as to whom of right suche like power and authoritie belonged and apperteined Constantines sonnes claymed and tooke vpon them the same authoritie that their father had doon before thē and as Zozomen reporteth of them did not only vpholde mainteine the ordinances made by their father Constātine in Churche matters but did also make newe of their owne as occasiō serued the necessitie of y e time required Constantinus after the death of his father restored Athanasius whom his father had deposed to his Bishoprike againe writing honourable and louing letters to the churche of Alexandria for his restitution Constantius deposed Liberius the Bishop of Rome for that he would not consent to the condemnation of Athanasius in whose place Foelix was chosen whome also the Emperour deposed for the like cause restored againe Liberius vnto his Bishoprike who beinge moued with Themperous kindnes as some write or rather ouercome with ambition became an Arian This Emperour deposed diuerse Bishops appointing others in their places He called a Synode at Millayn as Socrates witnesseth saiyng The Emperour commaunded by his edict that there should be a Synode holden at Millayn There came to this coūsaile aboue 300. Bishopppes out of the West countreis After this he mynded to cal a general councel of al the East West Bishops to one place whiche coulde not conueniently be brought to passe by reason of the great distaunce of y e places therefore he commaunded the councell to be kept in two places at Ariminum in Italy at Nicomedia in Bythinia Valentinianus the Emperour after the death of Auxentius an Arian byshop of Millayn calleth a Synode of bishops at Millayn to consult about the ordering of a new bishop He prescribeth vnto them in a graue oration in what maner a man qualified ought to be who shuld take vpō him the office of a bishop They passe to the electiō the people were diuided til at the last they al crye with one consent to haue Ambrose whom although he did refuse the Emperour commaunded to be baptized to be consecrate byshop He called an other Synode in Illirico to appeace the dissentiōs in Asia Phrygia about certein necessary articles of the christian faith and did not onely confirme the true faith by his royal assent but made also many godly and sharpe Lawes as well for the maintenance of the truthe in doctrine as also touching many other causes or matters Ecclesiastical Theodosius was nothing inferiour to Cōstantine the great neither in zeale care or furtherāce of Christes Religion He bent his whole power and authoritie to the vtter ouerthrowe of superstition false Religion some what crept in againe in the times of Iulianus Valens the wicked Emperours And for the sure continuance of Religion refourmed he made many godly Lawes he defended the godly
shewe muche that the Princes had no small entermedlinge and authority in Synodes Church matters This Synode was summoned to be kepte in Rome by the commaundement of the moste honorable Kinge Theodoriche He declareth that many and gréeuous complaintes were brought vnto him againste Symachus Bishoppe of Rome Symachus commeth into the Synode to answeare for him selfe geueth thankes to the Kinge for callinge the Synode requireth that he may be restored to suche thinges as he had loste by the suggestion of his enemies and to his former state and then to come to the cause and to answeare the accusers The more parte in the Synode thought this his demaunde reasonable Decernere tamen aliquid Synodus sine regia notitia non praesumpsit Yeat the Synode praesumed not to decre● any thinge without the Kinges knowledge Neyther came it to passe as they wished for the Kinge commaunded Symachus the Bishoppe of Rome to answeare his aduersaries before he shoulde resume any thinge And so the kinge committed the whole debatinge and iudginge of the matter to the Synode whiche concludeth the sentence with these woordes VVherefore accordinge to the Kinges will or commaundement who hath committed this cause to vs wee refourme or restore vnto him to Symachus what right so euer he ought to haue within the Citie of Rome or without As it is and shalbe most manifestly prooued and testified by the oecumenicall or general councelles wherin the order of the ecclesiastical gouernment in Christs Church hath béene most faithfully declared and shewed from time to time as you your selfe affirme that suche like gouernement as the Quéenes Maiestie doth claime and take vppon her in Ecclesiasticall causes was practised continually by the Emperours and approued praysed and highly commended by thousandes of the beste Bishoppes most godly Fathers that hath béene in Christes Church from time to time euen so shall I prooue by your owne booke of generall councelles mangled maymed and set foorth by papishe Donatistes them selues and other suche like Churche writers that this kinde and suche like gouernment as the Quéenes Maiestie doth vse in Churche causes was by continuall practise not in some one onely Churche or parte of Christendome whereof you craue proufe as though not possible to be shewed but in the notablest Kingdomes of al Christendome as Fraunce and Spaine put in vre whereby your wilfull and malicious ignorance shalbe made so plaine that it shalbe palpable to them whose eyes you haue so bleared that they cannot sée the trueth Clodoueus about this time the firste Christian kinge of Fraunce baptized by Remigius and taught the Christian faith perceyuinge that thorough the troublesome times of warres the Churche discipline had béene neglected and muche corruption crepte in doth for reformacion hereof call a nationall councell or Synode at Aurelia and commaundeth the Bishoppes to assemble there together to consult of suche necessary matters as were fitte and as he deliuered vnto them to consulte of The Bishoppes doo accordinge as the Kinge cōmaundeth they assemble they commende the kinges zeale and great care for the catholique faith and Religion they conclude accordinge to the Kinges minde and doth referre their decrées to the iudgement of the Kinge whome they confesse to haue the superioritie to be approoued by his assent Clodoueus also called a Synode named Concilium Cabiloneū and commaunded the Bishoppes to consider if any thing were amisse in the discipline of the Churche and to consulte for the reformation therof and this saith the Bishoppes he did of zeale to Religion and true faith Other fower Synodes were summoned afterwarde in the same Citie at sondry times by the commaundemēt of the king named Childebert moued of the loue care he had for the holy fayth and furtheraunce of Christian Religion to the same effect and purpose that the first was sommoned for This kyng Childebert caused a Synode of Bishoppes to assemble at Parys and commaunded them to take order for the reformation of that Churche and also to declare whom they thought to be a prouident Pastor to take the care ouer the Lordes flocke the Bishop Saphoracus beinge deposed for his iust demerites Theodobertus king of Fraunce calleth a Synode at Aruerna in Fraunce for the restoring and establyshing the Churche discipline Gunthranus the king calleth a Synode named Matisconens 2. to refourme the Eclesiasticall discipline and to confirme certeine orders and ceremonies in the Churche whiche he declareth plainely in the Edict that he setteth foorth for that purpose Wherein he declareth his vigilant and studious carefulnes to haue his people trained brought vp vnder the feare of God in true Religion and godly discipline for otherwise saith this Christian king I to whom God hath committed this charge shall not escape his vengeaunce He sheweth the Bishops that their office is to teach comfort exhort to reproue rebuke and correct by preaching the worde of God He commaūdeth the elders of the Churche and also others of authoritie in the common weale to iudge and punishe that thei asiste the Bishoppes and sharpely punishe by bodely punishement such as will not amende by the rebuke and correction of the worde and churche discipline And concludeth that he hath caused the Decrees in the councell touching discipline and certeine ceremonies to be defined the whiche be doth publishe and confirme by the authoritie of this edict After the death of Anastasius the Emperour Iustinus reigned alone a right catholique Prince who immediatly sent messengers vnto the Bishop of Rome who should both confirme the authoritie of the sea and also shoulde prouide peace for all Churches so muche as might be with whiche doinges of the Emperour Hormisda the Bishop of Rome being moued sent vnto the Emperour with consent of Theodoriche Legates Martinus P●●nitentiar●us telleth the cause of this legacy was to entreate the Emperour to restore those Bishoppes which the wicked Anastasius had deposed This godly Emperour Iustinus saieth Martyn did make a Lawe that the Churches of the Heretiques shuld be consecrated to the catholique Religion but this Decree was made in Iohn the next Popes daies The whiche edict when the kyng Theoderiche being an Arian saieth the same Martyn and kinge of Italy herde he sent Pope Iohn saith Sabellicus with others in embassage vnto the Emperour to purchase libertie for the Arians Iustinus receyued these Embassadours honourably saith Platina and the Emperour at the lengthe ouercome with the humble suite of the Pope whiche was sauced with teares graunted to him and his associates that the Arians shoulde bee restored and suffered to lyue after their orders In this history this is not vnworthy the noting that the Pope did not onely shewe his obedience and subiectiō to the godly Emperour but also that the secular Princes ordeyned Lawes Ecclesiastical with the which the Pope could not dispence For all this busynes arose about the decree whiche the Emperour had made in an Ecclesiasticall cause or matter If the Popes
this moste Christian king He affirmeth that he is ashamed of hym selfe and of his owne slacknes when he doth consider the trauaill of kinges in gathering of soules to the celestial agayn Yea what shall I sayeth this Byshop of Rome to the king answer at the dreadfull doome when your excellencie shall leade after your selfe flockes of faithfull ones whiche you haue brought into the true faith by carefull and continuall preaching c. Although I haue medled and done nothing at all with you doing this altogether without me yet am I partaker of the ioye therof with you Neither doth Gregory blame this kyng as one medlyng in Churche causes wherin he is not Ruler but he prayseth God for him that he maketh godly constitutions against the vnfaithfulnes of miscreantes for no worldly respect wilbe perswaded to se thē violated Next after Sabinianus an obscure Pope enemy and successour to this Gregory succeded Bonifacius 3. Who although he durst not in playne dealing denie or take from the Emperours the authoritie iurisdiction in the Popes election and other Churche matters yet he was the first that opened the gappe thereunto for as Sabell testifieth with whom agree all other writers for the moste parte This Bonifacius immediatly vpon the entraunce into his Papacy dealte with Phocas to winne that the Churche of Rome might be head of al other Churches the which he hardely obteined bicause the Grecians did chalenge that prerogatiue for Constantinople After he had obteyned this glorious ambicious title of the bloudy tyrant Phocas and that with no smal bribes like vnto one that hauing a beame in his owne eie went about to pul the mote out of his brothers he made a decree that euery one should be accursed that prepared to himselfe a way into the Papacy or any other Ecclesiastical dignitie with frendship or bribery Also that the Bishops in euery city should be chosen by the people and Clergy and that the election should be good so that the Prince of the City did approue the party by them chosen and the Pope adding his authoritie therto had ones saide volumus iubemus we will and commaunde But saith Sabell both these decrees are abolished Nowe began this matter to brue by litle and litle first he obteined to be the chiefe ouer all the Bishoppes then to couer vice with vertue and to hide his ambicion he condemned all ambicion in labouring Spirituall promocion and in the election of Bishoppes where the confirmation before was in the Emperours bicause the Emperour gaue him an Inche he toke an elle bicause he had giuen him a foote he would thrust in the whole body and tourne the right owner out For leuing out y e Emperour he putteth in the Princes of the Cities from whome he might as easely afterwardes take away as for a shew he gaue falsely that vnto them that was none of his to giue graunting vnto them the allowance of the electiō but to him selfe y e authoritie of ratifiyng or infringing the same choose them whether they would allowe it or no. And to shewe what authoritie he would reserue to him selfe borowing of the tyrant speaking in the singuler nōbre Sic volo sic iubeo So wil I so do I cōmaunde for the more magnificence in the plural nombre he princely lappeth vp all the matter with volumus iubemus we wil and cōmaūde Which wordes like the Lawe of the Medes Persians y t may not be reuoked if they once passe through the Popes holy lippes must nedes stand allowe or not allowe who so list with ful authoritie the matter is quite dashed But thākes be to God for al this the decree is abolished foloweth immediatly For shortly after Isacius y e Emperours Lieutenant in Italy did confirme ratifie the election of Seuerinus the first of that name for saith Platina The election of the Pope made by the Clergie and people in those daies was but a vaine thing onles the Emperour or his Lieutenant had confirmed the same ▪ Sisenandus the king of Spain calleth forth of al partes of his dominions the Bishops to a City in Spaine called Toletum The purpose and maner of the kynges doynges in that councell the Bishoppes them selues set forth first as they affirme They assemble together by the praeceptes and commaundement of the king to consult of certeine orders of discipline for the Churche to refourme the abuses that were crept in about the sacramentes and the maners of the Clergie The king with his nobles commeth into the councell house He exhorteth them to carefull diligence that thereby all errours and abuses may be wypt away cleare out of the Churches in Spayn They folowe the kinges direction and agree vpon many holsome rules When they haue concluded they beseche the king to continue his regiment to gouerne his people with iustice and godlines And when the king had geuen his assent to the rules of discipline which they had agreed vpon they subscribed the same with their owne handes The like Synode Chintillanus kyng of Spayne did conuocate at Toletum for certein ceremonies orders and discipline whiche was confirmed by his precept and decree in the first yere of his reigne And an other also by the same king and in the same place and for the like purpose was called and kept the second yere of his reigne Chindasuindus king of Spaine no lesse careful for Church matters and Religion than his predecessours appointeth his Bishoppes to assemble at Toletum in conuocation and there to consult for the stablishing of the faith Churche discipline whiche they did Reccessiunthus kinge of Spaine commaunded his Bishops to assemble at Toletum in the first yere of his reigne and there appointed a Synode wherein besides the Bishops and Abbottes there sate a great company of the noble men of Spayne The king him selfe came in amongst them he maketh a graue and very godly exhortation vnto the whole Synode he professed how carefull he is that his subiectes should be rightly instructed in the true faith and Religion He propoundeth the fourme of an Othe whiche the clergy and others of his subiectes were wonte to receiue for the assurance of the Kinges saulfty He exhorteth them to ordeine sufficiently for the maintenāce of godlines and iustice He mooueth his nobles that they will assist and further the good and godly ordinaunces of the Synode He promiseth that he will by his princely authoritie ratifie and maineteine what so euer they shal decree to the furtherance of true Godlinesse Religion The Synode maketh ordinaunces the clergie and nobilitie there assembled subscribeth them and the kinge confirmeth the same with his royal assent and authoritie He called twoo other Synodes in the same place for such like purpose in the seuenth eyght yéeres of his reigne Vitalianus beinge chosen Pope sente his messengers with Synodicall letters according to the Custome saith Gratian to fignifie vnto
coastes vnto a generall Councell in his letters of Sommons to Donus but committed to Agatho Bishoppe of Rome Donus beinge dead he admonisheth him of the contētion betwixt the sea of Rome and Constantinople he exhorteth him to laie aside all strife feruencie and malice and to agrée in the trueth with other addinge this reason For God loueth the trueth and as Chrysostome saithe He that wilbe the chiefest amongst all he must be mynister vnto all by whiche reason made by the Emperour it may séeme that the pride of those twoo seates striuinge for superioritie and supremacie was a great nourishment of the Schisme whiche was chiefly in outwarde shewe onely for doctrine He protesteth that he will shew him selfe indifferent without parcialitie to any parte or faction onely séeking as God hath appointed him to keepe the Faith that he had receiued wholy and without blotte He exhorteth and commaundeth the Bishoppe of Rome not to be an hinderaunce but to further this Councell with sendinge suche as are fitte for suche purpose The Bishoppe of Rome obeyeth the Emperours commaundement And the like letters the Emperour sendeth to George Bishoppe of Constantinople and others The Emperour sat in the councell him selfe as President and moderatour of all that action hauinge on his right hande a greate companie of his Nobles and of his Bishoppes on his lefte hande And whan the holy Ghospelles was broughte foorth and laide before them as the iudges whose sentence they ought to followe as it was also wonte to be doone in the forenamed Councelles The deputies for the Bishoppe of Rome standeth vp and speaketh vnto the Emperour in moste humble wise callinge him moste benigne Lorde affirminge the Apostolike seate of Rome to be subiect vnto him as the seruaunt vnto the Maister and beséechinge him that he will commaunde those that tooke parte with the Bishoppe of Constantinople whiche had in times paste brought in newe kindes of speache and erronious opinions to shewe from whence they receiued their newe deuised Heresies The Emperour commaundeth Macarius Archebishoppe of Antioche and his side to answeare for them selues And after diuerse requestes made by him to the Emperour and graunted by the Emperour vnto him the Emperour commaundeth the Synode to staie for that time In the next session after the selfe same order obserued as in the firste Paulus the Emperours Secretarie beganne to put the Councell in remembraunce of the former daies procéedinge The Emperour commaundeth the Actes of the Chalcedon Councell to bée brought foorth and redde At length whan a manifest place was alledged out of Leo the Pope the Emperour him selfe disputed with Macarius on the vnderstandinge thereof The Secretary hauinge offered the bookes of the fifte Councell the Emperour commaundeth the Notary to reade them The Notary beganne to reade and within a while the Popes Legates risinge vp cried out this Booke of the fifte Synode is falsified and there alledged a reason thereof wherewith the Emperour and the iudges beynge mooued beganne to looke more narrowly to the booke and espyinge at the laste that three quaternions was thruste into the beginninge the Emperour commaunded it shoulde not be redde Note here that the Popes Legates were but the plaintife parties in this Councell and not the Iudges thereof the whiche more plainely followeth eyther parties striuynge vppon a like corrupte place The Emperour commaunded the Synode and the Iudges whiche were Lay men to peruse the Synodicall bookes and to determine the matter whiche they did George the Archebishop of Constantinople most humbly beséecheth the Emperour that he will cause the letters whiche Agatho the Pope and his Synodo sent vnto the Emperour to be redde ones againe the Emperour graunteth his request In the nexte session the order and fourme obserued as in the firste the Emperour commaunded firste of all Pope Agatho his letters to be redde in the whiche letters is manifestly confessed by the Pope him selfe so well the Emperours supreme gouernment in Ecclesiasticall causes as the Popes obedience and subiection vnto him in the same For in the beginninge he declareth what pleasure and comforte he conceyued of this that the Emperour sought so carefully that the sincere Faith of Christe shoulde preuayle in all Churches that he vsed suche mildenes and clemencie therein followynge the example of Christe in admonishynge him and his to geue an accompte of their Faith which they preached that beinge emboldened with these comfortable letters of the Emperour he perfourmed his ready obedience in accomplishinge the Emperours praeceptes effectually That he made inquisicion for satisfiynge of his obedience to the Emperour for apt men to be sente to the councell the whiche thing saith the Pope to the Emperour the studious obedience of our seruice woulde haue perfourmed soner had it not been letted by the great circuite of the Prouince longe distances of place He protesteth that he sendeth his Legates accordinge to y t Emperours commaundement not of any sinister meaninge but for the obedience sake to the Emperour whiche saith he we owe of dutie He maketh a confession of his faith concerning the controuersie adding the testimonies of many auncient fathers And he dooth proteste that he with his Synode of the Westerne Bishoppes beleueth that God reserued the Emperour to this tyme for this purpose That he the Emperour occupiynge the place and zeale of our Lorde Iesu Christe him selfe here in earth shoulde giue iust iudgement or sentence on the behalfe of the Euangelicall and Apostolicall truthe In the next session the Emperour sitteth as Presidēt and Moderatour accompanied with many of his nobles sitting about him On his right hande sate Georgius the Archebishop of Constantinople called newe Rome and those y e were with him on the other side vpon the Emperours lefte hande sate the Legates of the Archebishop Agatho of olde Rome these two as agent parties When they were thus set the Emperours Secretary brought foorth the Ghospelles putteth the Emperour in mynde what was done the session before and desireth his maiestie to cause Macarius his party to bryng out likewise their testimonies as the Legates from Agatho of olde Rome had done for their party The Emperour cōmaundeth Macarius obeith and desireth that his bookes may be redde the Emperour commaundeth they should so be After the shewing of the allegations on bothe sides the Legates of olde Rome desier the Emperour that they may know if the aduersaries agree on the tenour of their two forsayde suggestions The aduersaries beseche the Emperour that they might haue the copies of them the Emperour cōmaundeth that without delay their request should be fulfilled The bookes were brought foorth and sealed with the seales of the Iudges either of the parties This againe proueth that the Popes Legates were none of the Iudges but one of the parties And so in the eight nynth and tenth action the same order of doyng is obserued in like sort as before in suche wise that no one in the Synode
part of recompence the title of most Christian king and further to augmēt his beneuolence towardes Charles desired him to sende for his Bishops into Fraunce to celebrate a Synode at Rome wherein were gathered together of Bishops Abbottes and other Prelates about 154. In whiche councell also Carolus him selfe was present as saith Martinus Gratianus maketh report hereof out of the Churche history on this wise Charles after he had vanquished Desiderius came to Rome and appointed a Synode to be holden there with Adrian the Pope Adrian with the whole Synode deliuered vnto Charles the right and power to elect the Pope and to dispose the Apostolique sea They graunted also vnto him the dignitie of the aunciēt bloud of Rome wherby he was made a Patrician so capable of y e emperial dignitie Furthermore he decreed that the Archbisshops and Bishops in euery prouince should receiue their inuestiture of him so that none should be consecrate onlesse he were cōmended and inuestured Bishop of the Kinge VVhoso euer woulde doo contrary to this decree shoulde be accursed and except he repented his goodes also shoulde be confiscate Platina addeth Charles and the Pope the Romaines and the Frenche sweare the one to the other to keepe a perpetuall amitie and that those should be enemies to them both that anoyed the one Not longe after Charles perceiuing the Churches to be muche molested and drawne into partes with the Heresie of Foelix calleth a councell of all the Bishoppes vnder his dominions in Italy Fraunce and Germany to consulte and conclude a truthe and to bring the Churches to an vnitie therein as he him selfe affirmeth in his Epistle written to Elepandus Bishop of Tolet and the other Bishoppes of Spaine VVee haue commaunded saith Charles a Synodall councell to be had of deuout Fathers from all the Churches thoroughout our signiouryes to the ende that with one accorde it might be decreed what is to be beleeued touching the opiniō wee know that you haue brought in with newe assertions suche as the holy Catholique Churche in olde time neuer herde of Sabellicus also maketh mention of this Synode whiche was conuocated to Frankeforth ad Caroli aedictum at the commaundement of Charles Carolus Magnus calleth by his commaundement the Bishoppes of Fraunce to a Synode at Arelatum appointeth the Archebishops of Arelatum and Narbon to be chiefe there They declare to the Synode assembled that Carolus Magnus of feruent zeale and loue towardes Christe doth vigilantly care to establishe good orders in Goddes Churche and therefore exhorte them in his name that they diligently instructe the people with godly doctrine and examples of life When this Synode had consulted and agreed of suche matters as they thought fit for that time They decree that their dooinges should be presented vnto Carolus Magnus beseching him that where any defectes are in their decrees that he supply the same by his wisedome Yf any thinge be otherwise than well that he will amende it by his iudgement And that which is well that he wil ratifie ayde and assist by his authoritie By his cōmaundement also was an other Synode celebrated at Cabellinum whereunto he called many Bishops Abbottes who as they confesse in the Preface did consult collect many matters thought fit and necessary for that time the whiche they agreed neuertheles to present vnto Charles to be examined by his iudgemēt to be allowed confirmed amended or disallowed As this councell referreth al y e Ecclesiastical matters to y e iudgement correctiō disallowinge or confirminge of the Prince so amongst other matters this is to be noted that it prohibiteth the couetousnes and cauteles wherewith the Cleargy enriched them selues persuadinge the simple people to geue their landes and goodes to the Churche for their soules health The Fathers in this Synode complaine that the auncient Churche order of excommunicacion dooing penaunce reconciliation is quite out of vse Therfore they agrée to craue y e Princes order after what sort he y t doth cōmitte a publique offence may be punished by publique penance This councell also enueigheth against condēpneth gaddinge on pilgremage in Churche Mynisters Laye men great men beggers all whiche abuses saith the Synode after what sorte thei may be amēded the Princes minde must be knowē The same Charles calleth an other councell at Moguntia In y ● beginning of their preface to the councel they salute Charles the moste Christian Emperour the authour of true Religion and mainteinour of Gods holy Church c. Shewyng vnto him y t they his most hūble seruauntes are come thyther according to his commaūdement that they geue God thankes Quia sanctae Ecclesia suae piū ac deuotum in seruitio suo concessit habere rectorē Bicause he hath geuen vnto his holy Churche a gouernour godly and deuoute in his seruice who in his times openinge the fountaine of godly wisedome doth cōtinually feede Christes sheepe with holy foode and instructeth thē with diuine knowledge farre passinge thorough his holy wisedome in moste deuout endeuour the other kinges of the earth c. And after they haue appointed in what order they deuide y e states in the councell the Bishops secular Priestes by them selues y e Abbottes religious by them selues the Lay nobilitie Iustices by them selues assigninge due honour to euery persone it followeth in their petition to y e Prince They desire his assistaunce ayde and cōfirmation of suche Articles as they haue agreed vppon so that he iudge them woorthy beseching him to cause that to be amended which is founde woorthy of amendement In like sorte did the Synode congregated at Rhemes by Charles more priscorū Imperatorū as the auncient Emperours were wonte to doo diuers other which he in his time called I would haue you to note besides y e authoritie of this noble Prince Charles y e great in these Church matters which was none other but the selfe same y e other Princes frō Constantine the great had vsed that the holy councell of Moguntia doth acknowledge confesse in plaine speach him to be the ruler of the Church in these Ecclesiasticall causes further that in all these councelles next to the confession of their faith to God without makinge any mention of the Pope they pray commaunde praier to be made for the Prince Pope Leo. 3. as the French Chronicles Nauclerus witnesseth sente foorth with after he was made Pope Peters keyes the Banner of the Citie and many other giftes vnto Charles requiring him y t he wold cause y e people of Rome to become subiect vnto the Pope that by Othe Charles mindinge to gratifie and pleasure Pope Leo there was a cause wherfore sente an Abbot on this busines assured the people of Rome to the Pope by othe This Leo his streight dealinges with the Romaynes was so hatefull vnto them was brought shortly into muche daungier of his life but farre more of his
them according to Goddes will and your holy aduise in suche sorte ▪ that neither I be founde reproueable in Goddes sight neither you nor the people incurre Goddes wrathfull indignation for these thinges howe this may be searched founde out and brought to perfection that I committee to be entreated by you and so to be declared vnto me The lesser matters also whiche in generall touche all but in especiall some and neede reformation I will that yee make enquirie of them and make relation vnto me thereof as for example if the rulers in the countreys neglect or sell Iustice if they be takers or oppressours of the Churches widowes orphanes or of the poore Yf they come to the sermons Yf they doo reuerence and obey duely their Priestes Yf they presume to take in hande any new opinions or argumentes that may hurt the people c. The Bishoppes after they had consulted vpon these matters doo make relation vnto the Emperour what they had done shewynge him that they had founde some of the Bishoppes and chiefe Mynisters faulty and humbly pray the Emperour on their behalfe that he will of his goodnes graunt these some space to amende their faultes They complaine to the Emperour of Bishops Priestes for lacke of preachinge and that noble men gentle men come not vnto those few sermons that bée And so then recyte many other enormities as about tythes incest and suche like especially in religious persones who for the most parte are cleane out of order And to bringe these to their former order and state resteth say they in your disposicion ▪ Thus doth this Kinge take vppon him and thus doo the Bishoppes yéelde vnto him the gouernment aswell of Ecclesiasticall as Temporall causes and thinges On this wise did Lodouicus alwaies exercise him selfe in so muche that for his carefull gouernment in Churche matters he was surnamed Pius the godly as his father before him was called Magnus the great Pope Leo. 4. writeth his humble letters vnto Lotharius on the behalfe of one Colonus who was chosen to be Bishop of Reatina but he might not consecrate him without the Emperours licence first obteined thereunto and therfore praieth the Emperour of his fauour towardes Colonus Vt vestra licentia accepta ibidem Deo adiuuante eum consecrare valeamus Episcopum That hauinge your licence wee may haue authoritie by Goddes helpe to consecrate him Bishoppe there Vppon this woorde Licence The Glossar noteth the consente of the Prince to be required after the election be made Nexte to Leo sauinge the woman Pope Iohan was Benedictus 3. chosen who was ratified and confirmed by the Emperours authoritie who sente his Embassadours to Rome for that purpose This Pope is commended for his greate godlines But he was ouer godly to liue longe in that sea neuerthelesse he was not so godly as the moste of his successours were al together vngodly as your owne writers make reporte And to note this chaunge the better Nauclerus telleth of diuerse wonders howe the Deuill appeared in an vgly shape and hurled stones at men as they went by set men togeather by the eares bewraied théeues and priestes of their lemmans and such like Howe it rained bloudde thrée daies and thrée nightes How great Grassehoppers with sixe wynges and sixe féete and twoo téethe harder then any stone couered the grounde and destroied the fruites not altogeather vnlike those Grassehoppers that S. Iohn noteth in his Reuelation to come from the bottomlesse pitte after the starre was fallen After this folowed a great pestilence Whiche woonders if they be true be not vnwoorthy the notinge consideringe the chaunge that folowed For hitherto still from time to time although some Popes did priuily attempte the contrarye yet the Emperours alwaies kepte the confirmation of the Pope the inuesturinge of Bishoppes and the orderinge of many other Ecclesiasticall matters tyll the next Pope beganne openly to repine at the matter and his successour after him to Curse and some of those that folowed fell from chidinge and cursinge to plaine fightinge for the same In the whiche combate though with muche adooe at length they wroonge them selues from vnder the Emperours obedience Yet alwaies euen hitherto Princes haue had no litle interest in Ecclesiasticall causes as hereafter shall appéere After Benedictus was Nicolas chosen whom the Emperour him selfe beynge present did confirme as witnesseth Nauclerus At the same time was the Emperour Lodouicus 2. at Rome who confirmed the Popes election The same also saith Martyn to the whiche Volateran addeth of the Emperour the Pope De communi consilio ambo cuncta gerebāt All thinges were doone by common counsaile or consent of bothe the Emperour and the Pope And least it might be thought he meaneth not as wel Ecclesiastical as Temporal matters Sabellicus maketh the matter more plaine affirming that the Emperour and the Pope had secrete conference together many daies and had consultation both touching the matters perteining to Christian Religion and also of the state of Italy And a litle after talking of the Pope The Pope decreed by the consent of Lodouicus that from thence foorth no Prince no not the Emperour him selfe should be present in the councell with the Cleargie onles it were when the principall pointes of faith were treated of Hitherto in all these Ecclesiasticall causes the Emperour hath the doinge as well or more than the Pope But this last decree that by the allowāce of the Emperour the Pope made exempteth Temporall Princes from Ecclesiasticall matters in their councelles though in the most principall matters Ecclesiastical cōcerning faith it leueth to them their interestes Martinus the second gat into the Papacie malis artibus by naughty meanes saith Platina and as is noted in the margent it was in this Popes time that first of all the creation of the Popes was made without the Emperours authoritie But this Pope died so shortely as he came in naughtily After whom Adriā the third like vnto his predecessour the second of that name who by cūning sleight practised to defraude the Emperour of his authoritie espying oportunitie by reason that Charles the Emperour as Sabellicus saith was farre of busied in the warres doth promote this matter to be decreed by the Senate and the people and this he did immediatly after he was made Bishop and persuadeth them that they doo not hereafter wayte for the Emperours approbation and confirmatiō in appointing their Bishop but that they shoulde kepe to them selues their own fredome The whiche thinge also Nicolaus the firste with others attempted but coulde not bringe it to passe as Platina reporteth Who also wryteth that the Romaines had conceiued an hope of great libertie in the hauty courage of this Pope beinge a Romaine borne But to their great griefe he within a while was taken from them The next Pope Stephen had an obscure tyme sauing that Charles therein called a councell at Collen and after him Arnulphus the Emperour other twoo the one
auncient estate Suche was the carefull trauell of the Godly Princes in gouerning not onely in Temporall but also in Ecclesiasticall thinges and causes Benedictus the ninth solde the Papacy to Gregory the sixt Syluester the thirde thrust in amongest them by frendship and bribery To this case was the Papacy brought nowe saith Platina that onely he that was most mighty in ambition and bribery obteined this dignitie there was no roume for good men Henricus the third surnamed Pius came to Rome to thrust out these three monsters saith Sabellicus and to bring this to passe in better order he calleth a Synode wherein he deposeth these three monstrous beastes and dooth create Clement the second The whiche doon he sweareth the Romaines that they shall neuer after be present at the election of any Pope onles they be compelled thereunto by the Emperour But after the Emperours departure from the citie Stephan perceiuing the people to grudge somwhat at Clementes election despatched him out of the the way with a medicine for a Pope Venenum illi miscuit he poisoned him saith Sabellicus and immediatly after his death entruded himself into the Papacy without consent either of the Emperour people or priest and called himself Damasus 2. But with in a while he died also In y e meane time the Romaines sent to the Emperour besechinge him to appointe them some good man to be their Bisshop who made Bauno Pope and was named Leo 9. After this Leo whom Hildebrand ridde out of the waye saith Benno Cardinalis was Victor the seconde made Pope by the Emperours authoritie or priuilege Shortly after this Godly Emperour died beinge greatly praised surnamed Pius Henricus for his dealinge in the reformation of Churche matters This Emperour had called two councels the one at Constance wherin he was him self present after y e another at Moguntia wherin both the Emperour the Pope sat in Synod This Pope saith Nauclerus came into Germany about the church matters and ordered al thinges therin saith Abbas Vspurg by the aduise and counsaile of the Emperour and other seculer Princes and the Bisshoppes And as this Emperour had yeat this interest in the councelles and in the creatiō of the Pope him self so had he the placing and displacing allowing disallowing in other spiritual promotions as at large appeareth in Nauclerus Stephen 9. was chosen Pope after that Victor had dronken of Hildebrandes cuppe But this Stephen liued not long for saith Benno If any other than Hildebrand were chosen Pope Gerardus Brazutus Hildebrandes familiar friend would soone dispatche him out of the way with poyson Alexander 2. was chosen without the Emperours authoritie or knowledge with whose election the whole Clergy of Lombardy was muche offended refused to owe vnto him any obedience beseching the Emperour that he would geue them licence to choose one of their owne persuading him that there ought none to be electe without the consent of the king of Italy After they had licence they chose Cadolus the Bishop of Parma whom all the Clergy of Lombardy obeied as their lawful Pope The Cardinals saith Benno knowing well Hildebrandes ambition did winne with muche sute the Emperours fauour and aide to their newe elected Pope Cadolus the which did so deepely perce the harte of Hildebrande that he became a deadly enemy to the Emperour for euer after contrary to the faithfull dutie that he had sworne vnto him Hard holde there was betwixt these two Popes so wel with strokes as with woordes they bothe gathered great armies and with their armies came into the fielde in their owne persones and fought twoo cruell and bloudy battailes and so ruled the Schismaticall Churche with Paules swoorde Peters keyes beinge fast locked from them bothe in Christes Churche til the Emperour sent Otto the Archebishop of Collein geuing him full authoritie as he should see cause to set in order the Churche matters Whan Otto came to Rome with this large commission he did sharpely reproue Alexander at the firste Bicause he had taken vpon him the Papacy without the Emperours commaundement and contrary to that order whiche the Lawe it self and the longe custome also hath praescribed Whose wordes Nauclerus telleth thus How commeth this to passe saith he my brother Alexander that contrary to the maner of olde time hitherto obserued and against the law praescribed to the Romain Bisshops many yeres agoo thou hast taken vpon thee the Romaine Papacy without the commaundement of the king and my Lorde Henry and so beginning from Charles the great he nameth many Princes by whose authoritie the Popes were either chosen cōfirmed or had their electiō ratified whan he was going forward in his oration Hildebrand Tharchdeacō taketh y e tale out of his mouth saiyng in great heat O Archbishop Otto the Emperours and kinges had neuer any right at al or rule in the electiō of the Romain Bishops Tharchbishop gaue place to Maister Archedeacon by and by For Hildebrand knewe well inough saith Sabellicus that Otto woulde relent easely and agree with him In suche sorte also haue other godly Princes been beguyled trustinge ouermuche popish Prelates with their embassages Within a while after whan the Emperour heard of these doinges he sent streight to Pope Alexander to gather together the Prelates promising that he him selfe would come to the coūcel to set an order in the Churche matters that all thinges might be doon in his owne presence who vsed Alexander very gently friendly wherwith the Pope afterwardes was so moued and saw how he him self had been abused by Hildebrands instigations against so gentle a Prince y t he was greatly sory that he had attēpted to be Pope without his assent Whereupon saith Benno whan Alexander vnderstoode that he was elected and enstalled by fraude and craft of Hildebrande and other the Emperours enemies in his sermone to the people he plainly declared that he would not sit in the Apostolike sea without the licence and fauour of the Emperour and further said openly in the pulpit that he would sende foorthwith his letters vnto the Emperour for this purpose so greatly he repented him of his vsurpation without the Emperours authoritie Hildebrande who had long awayted and practised to be Pope impacient of any longer tariaunce immediadly after the death of Alexander gatte to be made Pope was called Gregory the seuenth of whose election Abbas Vrspurgens faith next to Alexander succeded Hildebrande vnder whom the Romain cōmon weale and the whole Church was endaūgered and brought in a great peril with new errours and sehismes such as haue not been heard of who climbed vp to this high dignitie with out the consent of the Prince and therfore there be that affirme him to haue vsurped the Papacy by tyranny and not Canonically instituted for whiche cause also many did refuse him to be Pope In this election Hildebrande made poste haste for feare he had come shorte of his purpose In
so muche that Nauclerus saith before the exequies of Alexander were finished the Cleargy and people that came to the buriall cried out that S. Peter had chosen Maister Archedeacon Hildebrande to be Pope whereuppon the Cardinalles went a side and elected Hildebrande But Benno who was a Cardinall at Rome the same time saith that the selfe same eueninge and hower when Alexander died Hildebrande was enstalled by his souldiours without the assent of either Priest or people fearing least delay woulde bréede perill to whose election not one of the Cardinales did subscribe in so muche that Hildebrande saide to an Abbot that came short to the election brother Abbot yée haue taried ouer longe to whome the Abbot answeared and thou Hildebrande hast made ouer muche hast in that thou hast vsurped the Apostolique sea against the Canons thy Maister the Pope beinge not yet buried By whiche poste haste importune clamours and violent election it is easie to sée how Platina and those that followe him doo no lesse lie than flatter in praysinge this Pope and settinge foorthe so comely a fourme of his election Nauclerus protesteth and promiseth in the tellinge of this Popes life to kéepe an indifferencie and fidelitie in the report of the Chroniclers firste reporteth the state of y e Churche vnder this Pope woorde for woorde as I haue rehersed out of Abbas Vrspurg and to declare his further vprightnes in the mater he telleth what he foūde writen in a fine stile amongest the Saxon histories that the Bishoppes of Fraunce moued the Prince not to suffer this election whiche was made without his consent for if he did it might woorke to him muche and greuous daungier the Prince perceiuinge this suggestion to be true sent immediatly his Embassadours to Rome to demaunde the cause wherefore they presumed without the Kinges licence against the custome of their auncestours to ordeine a Pope and further to commaunde the new● electe Pope to forsake that dignitie vnlaufully come by onlesse they woulde make a reasonable satisfaction These Embassadours were honorably receiued and when they had declared their message the Pope himselfe maketh them this answere He taketh God to witnesse that he neuer coueted this high dignitie but that he was chosen and thrust violently thereunto by the Romaines who woulde not suffer him in any wise to refuse it notwithstandinge they coulde by no meanes perswade him to take the Papacie vpon him and to be consecrate Pope till he were surely certified that bothe the kinge and also the Princes of Germanie had geuen their assente When the kinge was certified of this answeare he was contente and willingly gaue commaūdement that he shoulde be ordered Pope He also reciteth out of Blondus and other writers That the Kinge gaue his Consente vnto the Popes election sending the Bisshoppe of Verselles the Chauncellour of Italy to confirme the election by his authoritie as the maner had beene the whiche thinge also Platina saith he seemeth to affirme Afterwardes the Emperour called a Councel which he helde as Sabellicus saith at Woormes whereat were all the Bishoppes of Fraunce and Germany excepte the Saxōs The churchmen of Rome sent their epistles with gréeuous cōplaints against Hildebrand vnto this coūcel In quibus Hildebrandum ambitus periurij accersunt eundemque plaeraque auarè superbeque facere conqueruntur hocque reiecto alium pastorem postulant wherein they accuse Hildebrande of ambition and periury complaininge that he dooth manye thinges proudly and couetously and therefore desire that he may bee deposed and another pastour appoincted them The Fathers in this Councell make a Decrée for to depose Hildebrande recitinge therein many his greeuous and horrible crymes that moued them therto And not onely the Bysshops of Germany and Fraunce but also the Bissoppes of Italy assembled togeather at Ticinum a citie in Lombardy nowe called Pauia did subscribe this Decree This Synode beynge thus finished the Emperour saith Auentinus wrote two letters the one to Hildebrand the other to the people and priests of Rome wherein he commaundeth Hildebrande according to the Decree of y e Councell to retourne to his pryuate life and estate and the Romaines to forsake Hildebrande and to choose to them selues a Pastor accordinge to the manner of their auncestours Who so listeth to reade these epistles and the seditious traiterous and tragicall feates and practises of the Pope against the Emperour bothe before and especially after this Decree he may sée them in Orthwinus Gratius in Nauclerus Auentinus Sabellicus and Platina Henry the. 5. came into Italy to ende the controuersy and discorde that was betwixte him and the Pope for this iurisdiction and to make suche composition as might bringe quietnesse bothe to the Churche and the Empyre But Paschalis the Pope did not muche lyke of his comminge as the Italian wryters witnesse The Emperour sendeth to the Pope the Pope againe to him certaine couenauntes were agreed vpon and confirmed by othe and assured by pledges on bothe the parties But the Pope coulde not or woulde not keepe promise with the Emperour for that his Bishoppes did withstande and in no wise would stande to the agreement whereupon folowed great tumult and a bluddy fraye The Emperour seynge they for their partes would not stande to the couenauntes whiche were confyrmed so strongly by othe and hostages as mighte be woulde not in like wyse be bounde to his Shortly after Easter following there was a freendly peace concluded betwixt the Emperour and the Pope who crowned Henry 5. Emperour deliuering vnto him with his holy hande suche priuileges as his auncestours were wont to enioie and confirmed the same to him neuer to be taken from him vnder the paine of the great Cursse After this the Emperour tooke an Othe of al the inhabitauntes in euery Citie thorough Italy for their faithfull obedience to him and the faithfull keepinge of this his prerogatiue and priuilege in Ecclesiasticall thinges or causes The next Emperour to Henry was Lotharius who so laboured with the Pope to retaine the inuesturing of Ecclesiasticall persones and besides that he so trauailed in other Ecclesiasticall causes so well as Tēporall that saith Vrspurgens Huius laus est à vindicata religione legibus The praise of this Prince is in that he refourmed Religion and the Lawes Nexte to whome was Conradus Emperour to whome the Romaynes wrote supplicacions to come and chalendge his right in these matters to reduce the forme of y e Empyre to the old state which it was in in Constantine and Iustinians daies to deliuer them from the tiranny of the Pope To whome also the Pope wrote humble supplications to take his cause into his protection against the Magistrates of Rome whiche tooke vppon them to reduce the Pope to the olde order and state of the auncient Bisshoppes of Rome Nexte to whome followed the godly and zelous Emperour Frederike the firste who séeinge the horrible vices of the Romishe