Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n bishop_n church_n people_n 1,422 5 4.6721 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A43120 Hay any worke for Cooper, or, A briefe pistle directed by way of an Hublication to the Reverend Byshops counselling them if they will needes bee barrelled up for feare of smelling in the nostrills of His Majesty and the state that they would use the advise of Reverend Martin for the providing of their Cooper because trhe Reverend T. C., by which mysticall letters is understood either the bouncing parson of east-meane or Tom Coakes his Chaplaine, to be an unskilfull and a beceitfull Tub-trimmer : wherein worthy Martin Qvits himselfe like a man I warrant you in the modest defence of his selfe and his learned pistles and maketh the Coopers hoopes to slye off and the Bishops Tubs to leake out of all cry / penned and compiled by Martin the metropolitan. Marprelate, Martin, pseud.; Penry, John, 1559-1593. 1642 (1642) Wing H1205; ESTC R13144 39,553 59

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the other I bethought me therefore of a way whereby men might be drawne to doe both perceiving the humours of men in these times especially of those that are in any place to be given to mirth I tooke that course I might lawfully doe it I For jesting is lawfull by circumstances even in the greatest matters The circumstances of time place and persons vrged me therevnto I never profaned the word in any jest Other mirth I vsed as a covert wherein I would bring the truth into light the Lord being the Author both of mirth and gravity Is it not lawfull in it selfe for the truth to vse either of these wayes when the circumstances doe make it lawfull My purpose was and is to doe good I know I have done no harme howsoever some may iudge Martin to mar all They are very weake ones that so think In that which I have written J know vudoubtedly that I have done the Lord and the state of this Kingdome great service Because I have in some sort discovered the greatest enemies thereof And by so much the most pestil●…nt enemies because they wound Gods religion and currupt the State with Atheism and loosenesse so call for Gods vengance vpon vs all even vnder the colour of Religion I affirme them to be the greatest enemies that now our state hath for if it were not for them the truth should have more free passage herein then now it hath All states thereby would be amended and so we should not be subject vnto Gods displeasure as now we are by reason of them Now let me deale with these are in authority I doe make it knowne vnto them that our Bishops are the greatest enemies which we have For they doe not onely goe about but they have long since fully perswaded our state that they may lawfully procure the Lord to take the Sword in hand against the state if this be true have J not said truly that they are the greatest enemies which our state hath The Papists worke no such effect for they are not trusted The Atheifts have not infected our whole state these have The attempts of our forraine enemies may be pernicious But they are men as wee are But that God which when our Bishops have and doe make our Prince and our governours to wadge war who is able to stand against him Well to the point many have put his Maiestie the Parliament and counsell in mind that the church officers now among vs are not such as the Lord alloweth off because they are not of his owne ordaining They have shewed that this fault is to be amended or the Lords hand to be looked for The Bishops on the other side have cried out vpon them that have thus dutifully moved the state They with a loud voyce gave out that the magistrate may lawfully maintaine that church government which best fitteth our estate as living in the time of peace What doe they else herein but say that the magistrate in time of peace may maime and defor●…e the body of Christ his church That Christ hath left the government of his own house vnperfect and left the same to the discretion of the Magistrate whereas Moses before whom in this point of government the Lord Crhist is justly preferred Hob. 3 6. made the government of the legall policy so perfect as hee left not any part thereof to the discretion of the Magistrate Can they deny church Officers to bee members of the church they are refused by the expresse text 1 Cor. 12. will they affirme Christ to have left behind him an vnperfect body of his Church wanting members at y● least wise having such members as were onely permanent at the Magistrates pleasure Why Moses the servant otherwise governed the house in his time And the sonne is commended in this point for Wisedome and faithfulnesse before him Heb. 3. 6. Either then that commendation of the sonne before the servant is a false testimony or the sonne ordained a permanent government in his Church If permanent not to be changed What then doe they that hold it may be changed at the Magistrates pleasure but advise the Magistrate by his positive lawes to proclaime that it is his will that if there shall be a Church within his dominions he will maime and deforme the same hee will ordaine therein what members he thinketh good He will make it knowne that Christ vnder his government shall be made lesse faithfull then Moses was That he hath left the placing of members in his body vnto the Magistrate Oh cursed beasts that bring this guilt vpon our estate Repent Caitifes while you have time you shall not have it I feare when you will And looke you that are in authority vnto the equity of the controversie betweene our wicked Bishops and those vho would have the disorders of our Church amended Take heed you ●…e not carryed away with slanders Christs government is neither Mar-prince Mar-state Mar-law nor Mar-magistrate The living God whose cause is pleaded for will be reuenged of you if you give eare vnto this slander contrary to so many testimonies as are brought out of his word to prove the contrary He denounceth his wrath against all you that thinke it lawfull for you to maime or deform his church he accounteth his Church maimed when those Offices are therein placed which hee hath not appointed to bee members thereof he also testifieth that there be no members of this appointment in the Church but such as hee himselfe hath named in his word and those that he hath named man must not displace for so he should put the body out of joynt Now our Bishops holding the contrary and bearing you in hand that you may practize the contrary doe they not drive you to provoke the Lord to anger against your owne soules And are they not your enemies they hold the contrary J say for they say that his Maiestie may alter this government now established and thereby they shew either this government to be vnlawfull or that the magistrate may presume to place those members in Gods Church which the Lord never mentioned in his word And I 〈◊〉 you marke how the case standeth betweene these wretches those whom they call puritans 1 The puritans falsely so called shew it to be vnlaw full for the Magistrate to goe about to make any members for the body of Christ 2 They hold all officers of the Church to be members of the body Rom. 12 6. 1. Cor. 12. 8. 28. 3 And therfore they hold the altering or the abolishing of the offices of church government to be the altering 〈◊〉 abolishing of the members of the Church 4 The altering and abolishing of which members they hold to be vnlawfull because it must needes be a maime vnto the body 5 They hold Christ Iesus to have set downe as exact and as vnchangeable a Church government as eve●…Moses did Heb. 3. 6. These and such like are the points they hold let their cause
Hay any worke for Cooper OR A BRIEFE PISTLE DIRECTED BY WAY OF an Hublication to the Reverend Byshops counselling them if they will needes bee Barrelled up for feare of smelling in the nostrills of his Majesty and the state that they would use the advise of Reverend Martin for the providing of their Cooper because the Reverend T. C. by which mysticall Letters is understood either the bounsing Parson of Eastmeane or Tom Coakes his Chaplaine to be an unskilfull and a Beceitfull Tub-trimmer WHEREIN WORTHY MARTIN QVITS Himselfe like a Man I warrant you in the modest defence of his selfe and his learned Pistles and maketh the Coopers hoopes to flye off and the Bishops Tubs to leake out of all cry Penned and Compiled by MARTIN the METROPOLITAN Printed in Europe not farre from some of the Bounsing Priests A man of worship to the men of worship that is Marti●… Mar-prelate gentleman Primate and Metropolitane of all the Ma●…tins wheresoever To the Iohn of all the Sir Iohns and to the rest of the terrible Priests saith have among you once againe my clergie masters For O Brethren there is such a deale of love grown of late I perceive betweene you and me tha●… although I would be negligent in sending my Pistles unto you yet I see you cannot forget me I thought you to be very kind when you sent your Pursivaunts about the Country to seeke for me But now that you your selves have taken the paines to write this is out of all cry Why it passes to thinke what loving and carefull Brethren I have who although I cannot be gotten to tell them where I am because I love not the ayre of the Clinke or Gatehouse in this cold time of Winter and by reason of my businesse in Pistle-making will not withstanding make it known vnto the world that they have a moneths mind towards me now truly brethren I find you kind why ye doe not know what a pleasure you have done me My worships bookes were vnknowne to many before you allowed T. C. to admonish the people of England to take heed that if they loved you they would make much of their Prelates and the chiefe of the Clergie Now many seeke after my bookes more then ever they did Againe some knew not that our brother Iohn of Fulham was so good vnto the porter of his gate as to make the poore blind honest soule to be a dum Minister Many did not know either that Amen is as much as by my faith and so that our Saviour Christ ever sware by his faith or that bowling and eating of the Sabboth are of the same nature that Bishops may as lawfully make blind guydes as David might cate of the Shew bread or that father Thomas Tub-trimmer of Winchester good old student is a master of Ar●…s of 45. yeares standing Many I say were ignorant of these things and many other pretty toyes vntill you wrote this pretty booke besides whatsoever you overpasse in my writings and did not gainsay that I hope will be iudged to be true and so Iohn a Bridges his treason out of the 448 page of his booke you grant to be true Your selves you deny not to be petty Popes the Bishop of fir Davids in Wales you deny not to have two wives with an hundred other things which you doe not gain say so that the reader may judge that I am true of my word and vse not to lye like Bishops and thi●… hath greatly commended my worships good dealing But in your confutation of my book you have shewed reverend Martin to be truepeny indeed for you have confirmed rather then confuted him So that brethren the pleasure which you have done vnto me is out of all scotche and notche And should not I againe be as ready to pleasure you Nay then I should be as vngratefull towards my good brethren as Iohn of Ca●…t is to Thomas Cartwright The which Iohn although hee hath beene greatly favoured by the said Thomas in that Thomas hath now these many yeares let him alone and said nothing vnto him for not answering his bookes yet is not ashamed to make a secret comparison betweene himselfe and Thomas Cartwright As who say Iohn of Lambehith were as learned as Thomas Cartwright What say you old deane Iohn a Bridges have not you shewed your selfe thankefull vnto his Majestie in overthrowing his supremacie in the 448 page of your book I will lay on load on your skincoat for this geare anon And I will have my penyworths of all of your brethren ere I have done with you for thi●… paines which your T. C. hath taken with me This is the Puritans craft in procuring me to be confuted I know I le be even with them to a crafty whoresons brethren Bishop did you thinke because the puritans T. C. did set Iohn of Cant. at a non-plus and gave him the overthrow that therefor●… your T. C. alias Thomas Cooper Bishop of Winchester or Thomas Cooke his Chaplaine could set me at a nonplus simple fellowes me thinkes he should not J gesse your T C. to b●…Thomas Cooper but I do●… not peremptorily affirme it because the modest old student of 52 yeares standing set●…eth Winchester after Lincolne and Rochester in the cont●…ts of his booke which blasphemy would not have beene toller●…ted by them that saw and allowed the booke vnlesse Mistresse Coopers husband had beene the author of it Secondly hecuase this T. C the author of this booke is a Bishop and therefore Thomas Cooper he is a Bishop because hee reckon●…th himselfe charged ●…mongst others with those crimes whereof none are accused but Bishops alone pag. 101. lin. 26. Ha olde Martin yet I see ●…hou hast it in thee thou wilt enter into the bowels of the cause in hand I perceive Nay if you will commend me I will give you more reasons yet Th●… stile and the phra●…e is very like her husbands that was sometimes wont to write vnto Doctor Day of Welles You see I can doe it indeed Againe none would be so groshead as to gather because my reverence telleth Deane Iohn that hee shall have twenty fists about his ●…ares more then his owne whereby J meant indeed that many would write against him by reason of his bomination learning which otherwise never meant to take pen in hand that J threatned him with blowes and to deale by stafford law whereas that was farre from my meaning could by no meanes be gathered out of my words but onely by him that pronon●…ced Enlogeni for E●…login in th●… pulpit and by him whom a Papist made to beleeve that the Greek word Eulogein that is to give thankes signifie●…h to make a crosse in the forhead py hy hy hy I cannot but laugh py hy hy hy I cannot but laugh to thinke that an old soaking student in this learned ag●… is not ashamed to be so impud●… as to pre●…me to deale with a Papist when he hath no grue in his pocket But
They were honest fellowes though I think Deane Iohns eares be longer For why good sweet Iohn may not your worship doe this as well as William of Lancolne might pray that our soules should be with the soules of professed traiterous Papists The good B. of Winchester did not protest that at Sir M. Overies which was layd to his charge but hee spake some things that way Well brother Winchester you confesse the most part we will beleeve the rest for your sake without witnesse The B. of Winchester never said that it was an her esie to hold that the preaching of the Word was the onely ordinary meanes to salvation but inasmuch as P●…nri held that the effect of salvation could not bee wrought by the word read he said that was not farre from heresie why Brother Cooper what is this else but open confession For Iohn Penri as appeareth in his writings holdeth the word read to be no ordinary meanes of salvation at all This I know you will account an heresie otherwise your case is damnable that cause the people to content themselves with reading and hold that they may ordin●…rily be saved thereby Yea but T. of Winchester disputed a M of Art 45 yeares ●…goe in Divinity Here is an old Lad once I hope that disputation was very cholerickly performed And he did once as pretty a thing as that came to For once preaching a●…Canter he was disposed to note out T. C. I meane simple T. C. in his Sermon his part he plaid after this sort He noted 4 great Hidraes of the Gospell in his sermon 1 Carnall Security 2 Heathenish Gentility 3 obstinat Papistry 4. Saith he when I looke in his forehead ●… find T. C. written therein which I cannot otherwise interpret then thanklesse Curiosity thanklesse for the benefits already received and more curious then needs in vaine and needlesse questions the old student did not know himselfe to be T. C. when hee thus spake and this is the thanklesse curiosity that hath answered Martin yea he saw Martins picture drawne when he was a young man I perceive then he was not so blind as the old Porter of Paddington whom Iohn of London bedeaconed and beministred Lucian of Winchester was himselfe the Painter Mydas of Cant. the Iudge the one of the 2 women called Ignorance was the goodwife of Bath Dr. Culpable Warden of New Colledge the other called jealous suspition was the Fox Iohn of Exceter then Camwinkadeward alias Dr. Prime Calumniator this Winken and his Lord of Winchester drew innocency to wit Martin Marprelat Gent by the heire of the head then followed Dolus ●…aus insidiae to wit Dr. Perne ●… Renold and Dr. Cosins the Treader was cankered Mallis his Eyes was fiery his face thinne wrink●…led pin'd away with melancholy and this was Dr. Copcot then followed dolefull Repentance that is Deane Iohn repenting that ever hee had written in the Bishops behalfe because his grace is not as good as his word T. C. cōsider this picture untill we meete againe Now my businesse calls me away I am going towards Banbery for I heare say there hath bin old adoe for Bakers daughters would have Knights whither they would or no I will learne the truth thereof and so I will post to shohill and visiting some parts of Stratford Warwick and Northampton shires I may well make a journey backe againe to Norfolk and Suffolke J have a Regester at Bury and by that time my visitors will come out of Cornwall Devon and Hamshire and now farewell good profane T. C. I cannot now meddle with a long period which thou hast in the 33. 34. page of thy Booke it is but 38 lines thou art longer winded then Deane Iohn is I see though he hath longer periods then that I set downe whereas thou dost complaine that the Livings of our Bishops are so small that some of their Children are like to goe a begging there is present Remedy for that for to what end else is Iohn of Cant unmarried but to provide for the Bishops Children who shall bee poorely left though indeed I never said in my life that there was any great familiarity betweene Mistresse Toye and Iohn Whitgift and I le befie em I le befie em that will say so of me and wherefore is Rich. of Peterborough unmarryed but to provide for other mens Children O now I remember me he hath also a charge to provide for for his Hostes and cosen of Sibson the Peticote which he bestowed upon her within this sixe months was not the best in England the Token was not unmeere for her state farewell farewell farewell old Martin keepe thee out of their hands for all that for thou art a short fellow thou wilt one day overthrow them Amen and then thou swearest by thy Faith quoth Iohn of London Martin the Metropolitan to Iohn the Metropolitan saith Nemo considat nimium secundis Martin to his troubled Sonne saith Nemo desperet Meliora Lapsus Anglia Martinis Disce favere tuis Faults Escaped Title line 10 Read Chapleine hath shewed himselfe in his late admonition to the people of England to b. c. Epist. page 3 read Eulegein for Euldgeni beare with the rest of the Faults FINIS ●… may hereby ceiveth 〈◊〉 is a Bishop The Apostles chose men in stead of Iames being beheaded as they did in stead of Iudas Act. 1. which they would have done if the Apo stolicall calling had beene permanent This T. Cooper gain●…aieth pag. 2. of his Epistle Cooper saith his page se●…●…nd Epistle T. C. 38 Deane Iohn 〈◊〉 1 pag●… 40 line 7 Qui pergit quod vult dicere quae non vult audiet T. C. page 40. page 41. page 46. page 44. Where 〈◊〉 it may appeare ●…e swore not to his friend page 46. page 47. page 47. page 48 49. 2 Esdras 14. 21. 37 c. page 50. page 51 52 53 54. page 55 56 page 57 58 page 62. page 58. page 59. pag. 6. 61 62 page 63 page 63 64 page 14 65 66 c. page 71. page 7●… 75.