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A14151 The practyse of prelates. Compyled by the faythfull and godly learned man, Wyllyam Tyndale Tyndale, William, d. 1536. 1548 (1548) STC 24466; ESTC S105209 56,056 134

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popes cleane contrary And the pōpe of hys consecratyon was after his old worldly fation How be it yet he is made a saynte for his worshyppyng of the holy seate of sainct peter not that seate of peter which is Christs gospell but an other lyed to be peters is in dede cathedra pestilencie a chayr of false doctrine And because he could no skyll of oure lordes gospell he sayde of matens with oure lady saye they If any mā vnderstād the laten let hym reade his lyfe compare it vnto the scriptur thē he shal se such holynes as were here to long to be rehersed And euery abbay euery cathedral church did shrine thē one God or other mingled the lyues of the very saintes wyth starke lyes to moue men to offre which thyng they call deuocion And though in all their doinges they oppresse the tēporalty their comē wealth be greuous vnto the rych and paynfull to y● poore yet they be so many so exercised in wyles so subtyl so knit sworne together that they cōpasse the tēporalty make thē beare thē whether they wil or wyll not as the euye doth the oke partly with iugglinge besyde that with wordly polycy For euery abbot wyl make him that may do most in the shyre or wyth the kynge the stuarde of hys landes geue hym a fee yerely and wyl lēd vnto some feast other that by such meanes they do what they wyll And lytle master parsō after the same maner if he come into an house the wife be snoutefaire he wil rote him self there by one craft or other ether by vsīg such pastime as the good man doth or in beinge benefycyall by one waye or other or he wyll lend hym and so bryng hym into hys daunger that he can not thruste hym oute when he wolde but must be cōpelled to beare him ād to let hym be homely whether he wyll or not ¶ An ensample of practyse out o● oure owne chronycles Take an ensāple of their practise out of our owne stories Kyng Herolde Kyng Herold exiled or banished Robert Archbisshope of Canterburye For what cause the Inglysh polychronicon specifieth not Robert of cāterbury But if the cause weare not sum what suspect I thynke they wolde not haue Passed it ouer with scylence Thys Robert gat hī immediately vnto kynge Wylliam the conqueroure then duke of Normandye And the pope Alexander sente duke Wylliam a baner to go and conquere Ingland and cleane remission vnto whosoeuer wold folow the baner and goo wyth kynge Wyllyam here marke how streight the pope folowed-Christs steppes ād his apostles Remission of sīnes to conquere englande they preached forgeuenes of synnes to all that repented throw Christes bloude shedyng the Pope preacheth forgeuenesse of synnes to all that will slea their bretheren bought with Chrystes bloud to subdue them vnto hys tyrānie What so euer oth●r cause duke wyliā had against kynge Herold thou maiest be sure that the pope wolde not haue medled yf Herold had not troubled hys kingdom ●●e neyther shuld duke willyam haue bene able to conquer the land at that tyme except the spyritualtie had wroughte on hys syde What bloud did that conquest cost England thorowe whych almoost all the lordes of the Inglysh bloude were slayne ● the Normandes became rulers and all the la●es were chaunged into Frenche But what careth the holy father for sheading of laye mens bloude It were b●tter that .x. hundred thousand laye knaues loste theyr liues then that holy church shuld louse one ynch of her honour or sainct Peters seate one iote of her ryght Ancelmus And Ancelmus that was bysshoppe in shorte time after neuer left striuinge with that myghtie prince kynge Wyllyam the second vntyll he had compelled hym maugre hys teth to delyuer vp the inuestiture or election of bysshops vnto sainct Peters vycare whych inuestiture was of old tyme the kynges duet●e And 〈…〉 when the sayde kyng Wyllyam 〈…〉 the tribut that pryestes gaue 〈…〉 to their bysshops for theyr whores 〈…〉 dyd not Raffe bisshop of Chich● 〈…〉 goddes seruice as they call it 〈…〉 the church dores with thornes thorow out al hys di●cese vntyll the kynge had yelded hym vpp● hys trybute agayne For when the holy father had forbidden pryestes theyr wyues the bysshop permitted thē whores of their owne for a yearely tribute do yet in all lādes saue in Ingland where they maye not haue any other saue mennes wyues onely And agayne for the election of Steuen langton archbysshop of Canterbury what miserye and wretchednesse was in the royalme a longe ceason Thē was the land interdited many yeares And when that holpe not then Irelande rebelled agaynst kinge Iohn immedyatly Note and not wythout the secrete workinge of oure Prelates I dare well saye But fynally when neyther the interditing nether that secrete subtiltie holpe ▪ whē Ihon wold in no meanes consent the saint peters vicar shuld raygne alone ouer the spiritualtye ouer all that perteyned vnto thē and that they shulde synne do all mischefe vnpunisshed the pope sent remissyō of synnes to the kynge of Fraūce for to go and conquere hys land 〈◊〉 ▪ of synnes to cōquere Wherof king Ihō was so sore afrayd that he yelded vp his croune vnto the pope sware to hold the lād of hī ād that his successours shuld do so lykewise And agayn in Kyng Richardes dayes the second Thomas Arundell archbysshop of Cāterbury chaūcelare was exyled with the Earle of Darbye Thomas Arūdell The outwarde pretēce of the varyaunce betwene the Kynge ād his lordes was for the delyueraunce of the towne of Braste in Brytayne But our prelates had an other secret mystery a bruing They coulde not at they re owne luste slea the poore wretches which at that tyme were conuerted vnto repentaunce and to the true faith to put their trust in christs death bloudsheadyng for the remission of their sinnes by the preachinge of Iohan Wyclefe As sone as the archbysshop was out of the royaume Practyse the Irishmen began to rebell againste kynge Rychard as before against Kynge Ihon But not hardelye withoute the inuisyble inspyration of them that rule bothe in the courte and also in the consciences of al men They be one kingdom sworne together one to helpe an other scatered abroade in all royalmes And howe be it that they stryue amonge them selues who shal be greatest yet agaīst the temporall powr they be always at one though they dissēble it and fayne as thogh one helde againste the other to know theyr enemies secretes to betray them with all They cā inspyre priuelye into the brestes of the people what myschefe they lyst no mā shal know whēce it cōmeth Their letters go secretly frō one to an other thorow out all kyngdōs Saīct peters vicar shall haue worde in .xv. or .xvi. dayes frō the vttermost part of christendom The
bysshops of England at their nede cā wryte vnto the bysshops of Ireland scotland denmarke douchland fraunce and spayne promysīg them as good a turne an other tyme puttyng them in remembraunce that they be all one holy churche that the cause of the one is the cause of the other sayenge if our ●ugglyng breake out yours can not be longe hyd And the other shall serue their turne ād bring the game vnto their handes no man shall know how it cometh about As sone as king Richard was gone to Ireland to subdue these rebellyous the bysshope cam in agayn and preuented the kinge and toke vp his power against him and toke him prisoner and put him downe ād to death most cruelly and crouned the earle of darby kīg O mercyfull Christ what bloud hath that coronacion cost England But what care they Their causes muste be auenged He is not worthy to be kynge that wyll not auenge their quarels· For do not the kynges receaue their kyngdome of the beast and sweare to worshyp hym and maynteine hys throne And then when the erle of Darbye whych is kyng Henry the fourth was crouned the prelates toke hys swerde and hys sonnes Henry the fifth after hym as all the kinges swerdes syns and abused them to shed christē bloude at their pleasur And they coupled their cause vnto the kynges cause as now made it treasō to beleue in Christ as the scriptur teacheth to resyst the bisshopes as now and thruste thē in the kynges prysons as now so that it is no new inuēcion that they now do but euen an old practyse though they haue done their busy cure to hyde theyr science that their conueyaunce shuld not be espyed And in kyng henrye the .vj. dayes how raged they as fierce lions agaīst good duke Humfre of Gloceter the kynges vncle and protectour of the realme in the kings youth and childehod Duke Umfre because that for him they myght not slea whom they wold and make what cheuysaunce they lusted Wold not the bysshop of Wynchester haue fallen vppon him and oppressed hym openly with myght and power in the Citie of London had not the cityzens come to hys helpe But at the last they found the meanes to contryue a dryft to bryng their matters to passe and made a parlament farre from the cityzens of London where was slayne the good duke and only welth of the royalme and the myghty shylde that so longe before had kept it from sorow which shortly after his death sell theron by heapes But the cronicles can not tell wherfore he dyed nor by what meanes No meruell verely For he had nede of other eyes then such as the world seeth with all that shud spye out theyr priuye pathes Neuerthelesse the cronycles testifye that he was a vertuous man a godly and good to the comen welth Moreouer the Protectour of Purgatorie sayth in hys Dialoge quod I ād quod he and quod youre frende how that he was a noble man and a great clerke and so wyse that he coulde spye falce myracles and dysclose them and Iudge them from the true whych is an hatefull science vnto our spyrytualtye and moare abhorred them necromancie or wytchcrafte and a thynge wherfore a man by their lawe I dare well saye is worthy to dye and that secretly yf it be possible Now to be good to the comen welth and to se false miracles and thirdely to wit●stande that Fraunce then brought vnder the fete of the Inglyshmen shuld not be set vp agayn by whose power the pope holdeth doune the Emperour reygneth in his stead becauses why he myght dye though by what meanes be not knowen For to be good to the comen wealth is to be hurtefull to the spiritualtye thre causes seing the one is the others pray as the lambe is the wolues Secondaryly if a man be so cleare eyed that he can spye false myracles howe can iugglers gette theyr lyuinge and be in price where such a fellow is Thyrdlye to kepe doune the kīgdō of fraūce is to pul S Peters vicar out of his seate Now if the great baude y● whore of babylon were destroied then wold the bordel and stues of our prelates shortly perish Yf Abadon that destroyer king of the grassehoppers which deuoure all that is greane were destroyed then were the kingdom of our caterpyllers at an ende ¶ By what craft the pope kepeth the Emperour doune Marke an other practise of our most holy prelates When the empyre was translated vnto the germaynes though the emperour was fallen doune and had kyssed the Popes fete and was become his sworne seruaūt yet there was much strife and open warre oftimes betwene the popes and the emperours And the popes haue put doune many good Emperours by helpe of the Bisshopes which euery where secretly persuaded the lordes to forsake the emperou●s to take dispensaciōs of the pope for their othes And cōtrary wyse the emperours haue now and then deposed dyuerse popes at request of the Cardinalles other great prelates by whose helpe onely they were able to do it For els verely though al Kynges christened had sworne to depose one Pope out of his seat if they had not y● fauour of other prelates therto they might haply by the secret practise of them to be put out of their own seates in the meane tyme. The pope therfore to be sure of him self out of the feare daūger of the emperour were he neuer so mighty that the emperour shuld not se his dayly open pastimes made frendship and amytye with the Uenecian● on the one syde of him and let them com in to certayne cyties of the Emperours in Italy and with the French king on the other syde and late him also vp into certayne Cytyes and possessyons of the Emperoures and he himselfe in the middes And shotte out the Emperoure frō cōminge any more to Rome and euer sent him his coronacion home to hym No mā rebuk the pope And then he made a lawe that no man shuld rebuke the Pope for what so euer myschefe he dyd sayeng that the Pope was aboue al and iudge ouer all and none ouer him and therfore forbade in his law Distinctio .xl. Si Papa sayenge though the pope be proued negligent aboute him self ād also the soule helth of his brethern and slacke in his worke and speachlesse as concernynge anye good and drawe with him by his ensample inumerable people to hell to be punished with him with diuerse tormētes euerlastingly yet se that no mortal mā presume once to rebuke his fautes here For he shall iudge all men and no man him O antichryst Is he not ātichrist that wyll not haue his lyfe tryed by Gods worde ●enecians Yf the Uenecians catch any of our holy fathers townes or possessions whether by warre or that they haue bought it or that it be layde to morgage vnto them or that the olde Pope hath geuen it with the
holye church as any Thomas euer was seyng he was as able the newe Thomas Then the newe Thomas as glorious as the old toke the mater in hāde and persuaded the kinges grace And ●hen the kinges grace toke a dyspensatyon for hys othe made vppon the apoyntment of peace betwene him and the French king and promysed to helpe the holy seate where in Pope Peter neuer sate But the Emperour Maximilian myght in no wyse stand still lest the frenchmen shuld money hym get ayde of hym seynge the Almaynes refuse not money whēce soeuer it be profered then quod Thomas wolfse Maximli● Oh and lyke youre grace what an honoure shulde it be vnto youre grace if the emperour were youre sodyare So greate honoure neuer chaunced any kyng christened It shulde be spoken of while the world stode The glory honour shall hyde and darken the coste that it shall neuer be sene though it shulde coste halfe youre realme Dixit factum est it was euen so And thē a parliament and then paye and then vpon the Frenche dogges ▪ with cleane remission of all his sinnes that slew one of them Remision of synnes ▪ or if he be slayn for the pardons ▪ haue no strēgh to saue in thys life but in the lyfe to come only thē to heauen strayght wythout felynge of y● paynes of purgatorye Then cam oure kyne with all hys might by se and by lande and the Emperour wyth a strong army and the Spanyardes and the pope the Uenecyans all at once against king Lewes of fraunce As sone as the pope had that he desyred in Italy then peace immediatlye And frenchmen were chrysten men and pytie yea and great synne also were it to sheade their bloud and the frenchkinge was the most chrysten kyng agayne And thus was peace concluded and oure Inglyshmen or rather shepe came home against winter and lefte theyr fleces behynde them Wherfore no smal number of them whyle they sought them better raymente at home were hanged for theyr laboure ¶ Why the kinges syster was turned vnto fraunce WHen this peace was made oure holye Cardynalles and Bysshoppes as their olde Gyse is to calke and caste .xl ▪ L. yea an hundred yeare before what is lyke to chaunce vnto theyr kingdome considered how the Emperour y● now is was moost like to be chosen Emperour after hys graundfather Maximilian for Maximilian had already obteyned of dyuerie of the ELECTOURS that is shulde so be They cōsidered olso howe mightye he shuld be first Kyng of Spayn with all that perteyneth therto which was wont to be v. vi or .vij. kyngdōs then Duke of Burgoyne Earle of Flaūders of Hollande Zelande and Braband wyth all that parteine therto then Emperour ād hys brother Duke of Austrych and hys sister quene of Hungrye Wherfor thought our prelates if we take not hede betymes oure kyngdome is lyke to be troubled we to be brought vnder the fete For thys mā shal be so myghty that he shall with power take out of the french kynges handes out of the hādes of the Uenetians and frō the Pope also what soeuer parteyneth vnto the empyre ād what soeuer belongeth vnto hys other kyngdōs and dommions therto And then he wyll come to Rome and be crouned there and so shall he ouerlooke our holye father and see what he doth And then shall the olde heretykes ryse vp agayne say that the Pope is Antichryste and styrre vp agayne and bryng to lyght that we haue hyd brogh● a slepe with muche cost payne and bloudeshedyng more then thys hundred yere longe Considred also that hys aunte is quene of England and hys wyfe the king of Englāds sister consydred the old amitie betwene the house of burgom the old kinges of ēglōd so that they coulde neuer do ought ī fraūce with out theyr helpe last of all cōsidered that course of marchaūdise y● īglād hath ī those parties also the naturall hart that ēglishmē bear to frēchmē Wherfore if we shall vse oure old practyse and set the french king agaynst hym Then he shall lyghtelye obtayne the fauour of the king of Ingland by the meanes of hys Aunte and hys wyfe and ayde wyth men and money Wherfore we must take hede betimes and breake thys amytie Whych thinge we maye by thys oure olde craft ●easely bringe to passe Let vs take a dispensation breake thys maryage and turne the kinges sister vnto the French king Yf the frenche Kynge Practyse gette a male of her then we shall lyghtly make our kyngepro tectoure of fraunce and so shall Inglande and Fraunce be coupled together and as for the quene of Inglande we shall trymme her well ynough and occupye the kynge with straunge loue and kepe her that she shall beare no rule And as the godd●s had spoken so it came to passe Our fayre yong doughter was sent vnto the old pocky king of fraunce the yeare before our mortall ēnemye and a myscreaunt worse then a Turke and disobedient vnto oure holy Father and no more obedient yet then he was cōpelled to be against his wyll The cause of the iourney to Calyce IN shorte space thereafter Thomas wolfse now Cardinall and Legate a latere and greatlye desyrous to be Pope also thought it exceading expedient for his many secrete purposes to bring our Kyng and the Kyng of Fraunce that now is together both to make a perpetual peace and amitie betwene them and that whyle the two kynges and their lordes dalyed together the greate cardinalles and Bisshoppes of both parties mighte becraye them both and the Emperour and all Chrysten kinges therto Then he made a iourney of gentelmen arayed all together in sylk so much as th●ir very showes and lynynge of theyr boutes much more lyke their mothers then mē of warre yea I am sure y● many of theyr mothers wolde haue bene ashamed of so ny●● and wanton aray how beit they went not to make war but peace for euer and a daye longer But to speake of the Pompouse apparell of my lorde hym selfe and of hys chaplaynes it passeth the .xij. apostles I dare swere that if Peter and Paule had sene them sodenly ād at a blush they wold haue bene harder in beleue that they or any such shuld be theyr successours then Thomas ●●dimus was to beleue that Chryst was rysen agayne from death When all was concluded betwene the kyng of Fraunce and ours that Thomas wolf●e had deuised and when the prelates of both parties had cast theyr peny worthes agaynst all chaunces and deuysed remedyes for all mischeues· Then the ryght reuerend father in God Thomas cardinall ād Lega●● wolde go se the young Emperoure newlye chosen vnto the roume and haue a certayne secrete communicacion wyth some of his prelates also And gatte him to bridges in Flaunders Prelates where he was receaued with great solempnitie as belongeth vnto so mighty a pyllar of Christes church and was saluted at the
without office except it be that on some Holydaye in steade of ministringe the goodes of the church vnto the poore they syng a pistle or Gospell to begge more from the ●●ore And as his 〈…〉 the ●oodes of the church 〈◊〉 the poore euen so doo hys pryes●es preac●● Chrysts gospell vnto his flocke And the almesse that was geuen to the sustencacion of the poore which thou shalt reade in storie● that it was in some cities aboue xx.xxx.xl yea an hundred thousād pounde How the pope diuydeth the poore people and all the landes geuen for the same purpose they haue s●olen from them haue diuyded it amonge them selues And ther with did they at the beginning corrupt the greate men of the woorlde and clam vp to this heigth were they now be And for that haue they strouen among them selues this viij hundred yeares And to mainteyne that which they haue falsely gotten hath the pope sturred vp aswerde of warre in all christendom this .viij. hundred yeares hath taken peace cleane out of the worlde When the bisshoppes preastes and deacons were fallen and had receaued of the pope the kingdom that parteyned vnto the poore people and had robbed them and parted their patrymony among them selues then sprange the orders of monkes Whose professyon was to abstayne frō flesh all theyr liues to were vyle raymēt to eate but once in the daye ād that but butter chese egges frutes rootes and suche thynges that weare not costly ād myght euery where be founde And they wrote bokes ād wrought diuerse thynges to get their lyuinge wyth all When the laye men sawe that the preastes were fallen in to suche couetuousnes that the Monkes were so holy they thought these be mete men to minister our almesse vnto the pore people For theyr profession is so holy that they can not deceau● vs as the preastes do ād made the mōkes tutors and ministers vnto the pore ād gaue great Landes and rychesse in to theyr handes to deale it vnto the poore Whē the monkes sawe suche aboundaunce they fell after the ensample of the preastes and toke dispēsacyōs of the pope for their rules ād strait professiō whiche now is as wyde as their coules and deuided all amonge them ▪ and robbed the poore once moare And out of the abbayes toke he the most parte of his Bysshoprickes and cathedral churches and the moste parte of all the landes he hathe besydes that there Remayne yet so Many myghtye abbayes and nun ryes ther●● As sone as the monkes were fallen thē sprang these beggynge fryres out of Hell the last kind of kater pillars Beggyng● fryers in a more vile apparell and a more strate relygion that if ought of relefe were lefte amonge the laye men for the poore people these horseleches might sucke that also Which dranebees as sone as they had learned their crafte had bylt them goodly costly n●stes and their lymiters had diuided all contrees amonge them to begge in and had prepared lyuynges of a certayntie though which beggynge then they also toke dispēsacyons of the pope for to lyue as largely as lewdelye as the monkes And yet vnto the laye men whom they haue thus falselye robbed from whyche they haue deuyded them selues and made them a seuerall kyngdome amonge them selues The charge of the lay people they leaue the payenge of tolle custome and trybute for vnto all the Charges of the Royalmes they wyll not paye a myte and the finding of all the poore the fyndyng of scolars for the moste parte The fynding of these forsayde horseleches and carcepillers the beggynge fryers the reparyng of hye wayes and brydeges the buyldynge and recreacyons of they re abbayes and cathedrall churches chapel● coleges for which they send out theyr pardons dayly by heapes and gather a thousand pounde for euery hundred that they bestow truely If the laye people haue warre or what soeuer charge it be they wyll not beare a myte If the warre be theirs as the one parte almost of all warre is to defende them they wyl with falshed make thē beare the greatest parte besydes that they must leaue their wyues and children go fight for them and loose their liues And likewise ī al their charges they haue a cast to poll the laye people The Scottes cast downe a castell of the bysshop of dirams on the scottysh bancke called Noram castell And he gat a pardon from Rome for the buyldynge of it agayne wherwith I dout not bu● he gat for euerye pennye that he bestowed thre Howe the spyritualtie bestowe theyr treasure And what do they with their store that they haue in so greate plenty every where so that the very beggyng fryers in short space to make a cardinal or a pope of their sect or to doo what feate it were for theyr proffytt wold not stycke to brynge aboue a Kyngs raūsō ▪ Uerely make goodly places and parkes of pleasure and gaye shrynes and paynte postes and purchese Pardons wherwyth they yet styll polle and plucke a waie that litle where wyth the pore which peryshe for neade and faulle in to greate in con●enyences myght be somwhat holpē ād releued And laye vppe in stoare to haue alwaye to paye for the defēdīg of their faith ●nd for to oppresse the truth ¶ How the pope made hym ● lawe and why AFter that the pope wythe tyrannye was clom vppe aboue hys brethren and had made all the Spyrytualtie hys subiectes and had made of them and hym a seuerall kyngdom among them selues and had seperated them from the laye in all thynges and had got pryuileges that what so euer they dyd no man shuld medle wyth them and after also he had receaued the kyngdoms of the earth of Sathan and was become hys vicare to dystrybut them and after that the Emperoure was fallen in lyke maner at hys fete and had worshypped hym as God to receaue hys empyre of him and all kings had done lyke wise to be anoynted of him and to be crouned of him and after that the worlde both greate and smale had submitted them selues to receaue the beastes bagge then because that christes doctryne was contrary vnto all such kingdomes and therfore had no law ther in howe to rule it he went and made him a seuerell lawe of hys owne makyng which passed in cruelty and tyranny the lawes of all hethen priestes And in his lawe he thrust in fayned gyftes of old emperours that were out of memory What subtilt● the pope vseth to stablysh hys kyngdome sayeng that the emperour Constantinus had geuen vp the empyre of Rome vnto S. Syluester which is proued a false lye for diuerse causes one that saīt siluester being so holy a man as he was wolde not haue receaued it contrarye to his masters cōmaūdemētes doctrine an other that the emperours raygned in Rome many yeares after and all bisshopes sued vnto the emperour and not to the pope which was but
is ynough that we so say of our owne head for we can not erre· Which reason is lyke as though yong monkes newly professed A similitude shuld com by the rules of their order ordinaunces of their olde founders and wolde go about to kepe them the old cankered mōkes shuld call them backe vnto the corrupt and false maner that now is vsed sayīg ye er Do only as we teach you for your profession is to obey your Elders According vnto the rules of our order and ordinaunces of our founder shal they saye We can teache you none other shall the old monkes say nor cā ly vnto you ye ought therfore to beleue vs and to do as we byd you The yong monkes shall answere we se that you ly cleane cōtrary vnto all that is writē in our rules and ordinaunces The old mōkes shal say ye can not vnderstande them except we expounde them vnto you nother yet know y● they be your rules excepte that ye beleue y● we can not lye vnto you For how can ye knowe that these be your rules and ordynaūces but as we your elders tell you so Now whē we tell you that these be your rules ād ordinaunces howe can ye be sure vndoutedlye that it is so excepte ye beleue vndoutedly that we can not lye Wherfore if ye wylbe sure that they be your rules ordenaunces then ye must first beleue that we can not lye Leue such imaginations disputations therfore and laye your rules and ordinaūces out of youre hādes and loke no more on thē for they make you erre And come and do as we tell you and captiuate youre wyttes and beleue that we can not lyr vnto you and that ye can not vnderstande your rules and ordynaunces Euen so yf thou saye it is contrary to the scrypture they āswere that thou vnderstandeste it not and that thou must captiue thy wytte ād beleue that though it seame neuer so cōtrary yet it is not contrarye no if they determe that christ is not risen agayn though the scripture testyfy y● he is rysen againe yet say they they be not cōtrary if they be wisely vnderstande Thou must beleue say they y● there is some other meaning in the scripture y● no mā vnderstādeth it but y● we say whether wtout scripture or agaīst it that must thou beleue that it is true And thus because that the scripture wolde not agre with them they thrust it out of the way fyrst shut vp the kingdome of heauen which is Christs gospel with false●●● posicyons and with such sophistry with false principles of naturall wisdom And the abottes toke the scripture frō their mōkes lest some shuld ever barke against the abottes lyuyng the abottes kepe y● mōkes in ignoraunce the bisshopes the priestes and set vp suche longe seruyce and syngyng to werye them wyth all that they shulde haue no leasure to rede in the scripture but with their lippes and made them good chere to fyll their bellyes ād to stop theyr mouthes And the bysshops in lyke maner to occupy their priests with all that they shulde not study the scripture for barkyng agaynste them sett vp longe Seruyse wonderovse intricate so that in xij y●ares thou coudest scace learne to turne a ryght vnto it Long matēses long Euen●onges longe Masses long Dyryges with vauntage yet to mitigate the tediousnes quia leuis est labor cum lucro for lucre say they maketh the laboure lyght euer noselyng them in Ceremonies and in their oune cōstitucyons decrees ordinaūces and lawes of holy church And the promises and testament which the sacrament of Christes body and bloud did preach daylye vnto the people that they put out of knowlege ād say now that it is a sacryfyce for the soules of purgatorye that they myght the better sell their masse And in the vniuersytes they haue ordened that no man shall loke on the scriyture vntyl he be noseled in heathē learning .viij. or nyne yere and armed with false principles the cast of the vniuersities ▪ with which he is clene shit out of the vnderstonding of the scripture And at his fyrst cōmīg vnto the vniuersitie he is sworne that he shall not defame the vniuersytie what soeuer he seeth And when he taketh fyrste degre he is sworne that he shal hold none opinion cōdemned by the church but what such opiniōs be that he shall not know And they when they be admitted to studye diuinitie because the scripture is locked vp with such false exposicions and wyth false prīciples of naturall philosofye that they can not enter in they go aboute the out syde and dspute all their lyues aboute wordes and vayne opinyons pertaynynge as muche vnto the healyng of a mannes hele as helth of his soule Prouiso Prouided yet alway lest god geue his syngular grace vnto any parson that none may preach except he be admitted of the bisshopes Thē cā Thomas de aquino he made the pope a god with his sophystry Saint thomas de Aquino the pope made him a saynct for his labour and called him doctour sanctus for whose holynes no man may deny what soeuer he sayth saue ī certayne places where amōg so many lyes he sayd now ād then true And in like maner who so euer defendeth his tradicions decrees and priuileges him he made a sainct also for hys labour were hys lyuyng neuer so cōtrary vnto the scripture Saintes as Thomas of Canterbury with many other like whose life was like Thomas cardinalles but not Christs neyther is Thomas cardinalles life any thing saue coūtrefaytynge of sainct Thomas of canterbury Thomas becket was first sene in marchaūdise temporall Thomas of caunterbury and then to learn spirituall marchaundyse he gatt him to Theobald Archbisshop of Canterburye which sent him diuerse tymes to Rome about busines of holy church And when Theobald had spied his actiuitie he shore hī deacō lest he shuld go backe made him Archdeacon of Canterbury vpon that presented him to the kinge And the king made him his chaūcelare in which office he passed the pompe pryde of Thomas cardinall as farre as the ones shrine passeth the others tombe in glory ryches And after that he was a mā of warre captayn ouer .v. or .vi. thousād men in full harnesse as bright as saīct George ād his speare in his hande ād encoūtred who soeuer cā against hī ouerthrew the iolyest rutter that was in al the hoste of Fraūce And out of the feld hote frō bloud sheading was he made bisshop of Caunterburye and did put of hys helme and put on his mytre put of his harnesse and on with his robes and layde downe his speare and toke his crosse yet his hādes were colde so cam wyth a lustye corrage of a man of warre to fyght an other whyle against hi● prince for the pope Where hys princes causes were with the law of God the