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A67922 Actes and monuments of matters most speciall and memorable, happenyng in the Church. [vol. 1] with an vniuersall history of the same, wherein is set forth at large the whole race and course of the Church, from the primitiue age to these latter tymes of ours, with the bloudy times, horrible troubles, and great persecutions agaynst the true martyrs of Christ, sought and wrought as well by heathen emperours, as nowe lately practised by Romish prelates, especially in this realme of England and Scotland. Newly reuised and recognised, partly also augmented, and now the fourth time agayne published and recommended to the studious reader, by the author (through the helpe of Christ our Lord) Iohn Foxe, which desireth thee good reader to helpe him with thy prayer.; Actes and monuments Foxe, John, 1516-1587. 1583 (1583) STC 11225; ESTC S122167 3,006,471 816

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was how and when it should appeare they aunswered that his kingdome was no worldly nor terren thing but an heauenly and Aungelicall kingdome that it should appeare in the consummation end of the world what tyme he comming in glory should iudge the quicke and the dead and render to euery one according to his deseruinges Domitian the Emperour hearing this as the saying is did not condemne them but despising them as vile persons let them go also staid the persecution then mooued against the Christians They being thus discharged and dismissed afterward had the gouernmēt of Churches beyng taken for Martyrs and as of the Lords stock and so consumed in good peace till the tyme of Traianus Haec Egesip Euseb Lib. 3. cap. 20. By this story here recited may appeare what were the causes why the Emperours of the Romaine Monarchie did so persecute the Christians which causes were chiefly these feare and hatred 1. feare for that the Emperors and Senate of blinde ignoraunce not knowing the maner of Christes kingdome feared and misdoubted least the same would subuert their Emperie Like as the Pope thinkeeh now that this Gospel wil ouerthrow his kingdom of maiestie And therfore sought they all means possible how by death and all kindes of torments vtterly to extinguish the name and memorie of the christians And therupon semeth to spring the old law of the Romaine Senate Non debere dimitti Christianos qui semel ad tribunal venissent nisi propositum mutent i. That the Christians should not bee let goe which were once brought to the iudgement seate except they chaunged their purpose c. Euseb. Lib. 5. cap. 21.2 Hatred partly for that this world of his owne naturall condition hath euer hated and maliced the people of god from the first beginning of the world Partly agayne for that the Christians beyng of a contrary nature and Religion seruing only the true liuing God despised their false gods spake against their idolatrous worshippings and many tymes stopped the power of Sathan working in their Idoles And therfore Sathan the Prince of this world stirred vp the Romaine Princes blynd Idolaters to beare the more hatred and spite against them Upon these causes and such like rose vp these malicious slaunders false surmises infamous lies slanderous accusations of the Heathen idolaters against the Christian seruaunts of God which incited the Princes of this world the more to persecute them for what crimes so euer malice could inuent or rash suspicion could minister that was imputed to the Christians as that they were a people incestuous that in the night in their concourses puttyng out their candles they ranne together in all filthy maner that they killed their owne children that they vsed to eate mans flesh that they were seditious and rebellious that they would not sweare by the fortune prosperitie of Caesar that they would not adore the Image of Caesar in the market place that they were pernitious to the Emperie of Rome Briefly whatsoeuer mishappened to the Citie or Prouinces of Rome either famine pestilence earthquake warres wonders vnseasonablenes of weather or what other euils soeuer hapned it was imputed to the Christians as Iustinus recordeth Ouer and beside al these a great occasion that stirred vp the Emperours against the Christians came by one Publius Tarquinius the chiefe Prelate of the idolatrous sacrifices and Mamertinus the chiefe gouernour of the Citie in the tyme of Traianus who partly with money partly with sinister and pestilent counsa●●e partly with infamous accusations as witnesseth Nauclerus incensed the mynde of the Emperour so muche against Gods people Also among these other causes abouesaid crept in some piece of couetousnes withal as in all other things it doth in that the wicked promooters and accusers for sucre sake to haue the possessions of the christians were the more redy to accuse them to haue the spoyle of their goods Thus hast thou Christian reader first the causes declared of these persecutions 2. The cruell law of their condemnation 3. Now heare more what was the forme of inquisition which was as is witnessed in the second Apologie of Iustinus to this effect that they should sweare to declare the truth whether they were in very deed Christians or not and if they confessed then by the law the sentence of death proceeded Iust. Apol. 2. Neither yet were these tyrants and organes of Sathā thus contented with death onely to bereaue the life from the bodye The kindes of death were diuers and no lesse horrible then diuers Whatsoeuer the cruelnesse of mans inuention could deuise for the punishment of mans body was practised against the Christians as partly I haue mentioned before and more appeareth by the Epistle sent from the brethren of France hereafter following Craftie traynes outcries of enemies imprisonments stripes and scourgings drawings tearings stonings plates of iron layd to them burning hote deep dungeons racks strangling in prisons the teeth of wild beasts gridirons gibbets and gallowes tossing vpon the hornes of Buls Moreouer whē they were thus killed their bodies laid in heaps and dogs there left to keep them that no man might come to bury them neither would any prayer obtayne them to be interred and buried Ex Epistola fratrum Viennensium ac Lugdunensium c. And yet notwithstanding for all these continual persecutions and horrible punishments the church of the christians daily increased deepely rooted in the doctrine of the Apostles and of men Apostolicall and watered plenteously with the bloud of Saintes as saith Nicephorus Tib. 3. Whereof let vs heare the worthy testimony of Iustinus Martyr in his Dialogue with Tripheus And that none saith he can terrifie or remoue vs which beleue in Iesus by this it daily appeareth for when we are slaine crucified cast to wild beastes into the fire or geuen to other torments yet we goe not from our confession but contrary the more crueltie and slaughter is wrought against vs the mo they be that come to pietie and faith by the name of Iesus no otherwise then if a man cut the vine tree the better the branches grow For the vine tree planted by God and Christ our Sauiour is his people Haec Iust. ¶ To comprehend the names and number of all the Martyrs that suffered in all these ten persecutions which are innumerable as it is vnpossible so it is hard in such varietie and diuersitie of matter to keepe such a perfect order and course of yeares and times that either some be not left out or that euery one bee reduced into his right place especially seeing the Authors themselues whome in this present worke we follow doe diuersly disagree both in the tymes in the names and also in the kynd of Martyrdome of them that suffered As for example where the common reading and opinion of the Church and the Epistles Decretall doe take Anacletus to succeed after
that sayd golde and siluer I haue none ye serue and fight for vs according to your wages O most acceptable societie or fellowship promised vnto vs by the Prophet and of those fathers long ago reprooued Whilest that Christ called thee the Sinagogue of Sathan and lykened thee to the mighty whoore which committed fornicatiō with the kings of the earth the adulterous spouse of Christ and of a chaste person made a strompet Thou hast left thy first loue and hast cleaued vnto vs O our beloued Babilon O our citizens which from the transmigration of Ierusalem come hether we loue you for your desertes we reioyce ouer you which contemne the lawes of Simon Peter and imbrace the lawes of Symon Magus our friend and haue them at your fingers endes and exercise the same publiquely buying and selling spirituall thynges in the Churche of God and against the commaundement of God Ye geue benefices and honors by petition or els for money for fauor or els for filthy seruice And refusing to admit those that bee worthy to ecclesiastical dignities perferring those that are vnworthye you call vnto the inheritance of gods sanctuarie baudes lyers flatterers your nephues and your owne children to a childish boy ye geue many prebends the least whereof ye deny to bestow vpō a poore good man ye esteeme the person of a man and receyue giftes ye regarde money and haue no regarde of soules Ye haue made the house of God a denne of theeues Al abuse all extortiō is more exercised a hundreth fold in your iudgement seats then with any secular tyrant Ye make laws kepe not the same ye dispence with your dispensations as it pleaseth you you iustifye the wicked for rewardes and ye take away the iust mās desart frō him And briefly ye perpetrate or cōmit all kind of mischief euen as it is our wil ye should And ye take much paine for lucres sake in our seruice and especially to destroy the Christian fayth For now the lay people are almost in doubt what they may beleue because if ye preach any thing to them at sometimes although it be but seldome seene that negligently inough euen as we would haue it yet notwithstanding they beleue you not because they se manifestly that ye do cleane contrary to that ye say Wherupon the common people doing as ye do which haue the gouernemēt of them should be an example to them of wel doing ●ow many of them leaning to your rules do rūne hedlong into a whole sea of vices And so continually a very great multitude flocketh at the strong and wel fenced gates of our dungeon And doubtles ye send vs so many day by day of euery sort and kinde of people that we should not be able to entertaine them but that oure insatiable Chaos with her thoūsande rauening lawes is sufficient to deuoure an infinite number of soules And thus the souerayntie of our Empire by you hath bene reformed and our intollerable losse restored Wherefore most specially we cōmend you geue you most hartie thankes Exhorting al you that in any wyse ye perseuere and continue as hetherto ye haue done neither that you slack hēceforth your enterprice For why by your helps we purpose to bring the whole world again vnder our power dominion Ouer and besides this we cōmit vnto you no small authoritie to supply oure places in the betraying of your brethren and we mak and ordaine you our vicares the ministers of Antichrist our sonne now hard at hand for whō ye haue made a very trimme way and passage Furthermore we counsell you which occupy the highest roomes of all other that you worke subtilly and that ye faynedly procure peace betwene the princes of the world and that ye cherish and procure secret causes of discorde And like as craftely ye haue destroied and subuerted the Romain Empire so suffer ye no kingdome to be ouermuch enlarged or enriched by tranquilitie and peace Least perhaps in so great trāquilitie all desire of peace set aside they dyspose themselues to vew and consider your most wicked workes suppressing on euery side your estate and from your treasures take away such substance as we haue caused to be reserued and kept in your hands vntil the cōming of our welbeloued sonne Antichrist We would ye shuld do our cōmēdations to our entierly beloued daughters pride deceit wrath auarice bellichere and lechery to al other my daughters and especially to Lady Symony which hath made you men and enryched you and hath geuen you sucke wyth her own brests weaned you and therefore in no wise see that you cal her sin And be ye lofty and proud because that the most high dignitie of your estate doth require such magnificence And also be ye couetous for whatsoeuer ye get and gather into your fardell it is for Saint Peter for the peace of the church and for the defence of your patrimony and the Crucifixe and therefore yee may lawfully do it Ye may promote your Cardinals to the highest seat of dignities without any let in all the world in stopping the mouth of our aduersarye Iesus Christ and alledging againe that he preferred his kinsfolkes beinge but of poore and base degree vnto the Apostleship but do not you so but rather call as ye do those that liue in arrogancy in hawtines of mynde and filthy lechery vnto the state of welthy riches and pride and those rewardes promotions which the followers of Christ forsooke do ye distribute vnto your frinds Therefore as ye shall haue better vnderstanding prepare yee vyces cloked vnder the similitude of vertues Alleadge for your selues the gloses of the holy scripture and wrest them directly to serue for your purpose And if any man preach or teache otherwise then ye wil oppresse ye them violently with the sentence of excommunication by your cēsures heaped one vpon another by the consent of your brethren Let him bee condemned as an hereticke and let him be kept in most straight prison and there tormented till he die for a terryble example to all such as confesse Christ. And setting all fauour apart cast him out of your temple least peraduenture the ingraffed word may saue your soules which word I abhorre as I do the soules of other faithful mē And do your indeuor that ye may deserue to haue the place which we haue prepared for you vnder the most wicked foundatiō of our dwelling place Fare ye well with such felicitie as wee desire and intende finally to reward and recompence you with ¶ Geuen at the centure of the earth in that our darke place where all the rablement of Deuils were present specially for this purpose called vnto our most dolorous Consistory vnder the Charecter of our terrible seale for the confirmation of the premisses Ex Registro Herfōrdensi ad verbum Who was the true author
that since that time all persons from the hyest to the lowest both rich poore haue bene glad to send seek to Rome yea Kinges Emperors Queens Dukes haue bene glad to kisse the Bishops feete and to lead hys horse by the bridle So that the Maiesty of Rome in the old heathē Emperors days was neuer more terrible nor glorious nor neuer had more power to persecute ouercome gods Saintes thē these lambelyke Byshops of Rome haue had and haue exercised these 500. yeares in Christendome And therefore who els in all the world hath so much power to do the workes of the first beast before hys face as he or who but he alone which forceth both high and low rich and poore free and bond to receaue the seale and to become loyall to the Citie and sea of Rome so that whoseuer hath not the marke whereby to be knowne to holde of the Churche of Rome shall haue no place to buy and sell nor to occupy in all Christendome Now if any Papist whatsoeuer in answering to this my questiō can apply this propheticall mistery of these 2. beasts otherwise then thus I would hartely desire him to take so much paynes to satisfie this doubt at his good pleasure laysure In the meane season let this stand for a Corolarium that the bishop of Rome by this description must be that second beast prophesied to come in the latter time of the Church vnder a false pretensed lambe to restore agayn the old persecutions of Rome and to disturbe the whole Church of Christ as this day to truely is come to passe ¶ The fourth Question AS touching my fourth question although I could vrge you with an other like propheticall place of scripture no lesse euident agaynst the bishop of Rome taken out of the second Epistle of S. Paule to the The●la where mention is made of the sonne of perdition sitting in the Temple of God as god aduaūcing himselfe aboue al that is called god c. which place ye can by no reasonable euasiō auoyd yet notwithstanding to let this passe I turne my questiō to aske this of you whether the religion of Christ be mere spiritual or els corporall If ye affirme it to be corporall as was the old religiō of the Iewes cōsisting in outward rites sacrifices ceremonies of the law thē shew if ye can what any one outward actiō or obseruatiō is required in christian religiō by the scripture as necessary in a christen man for remissiō of sinnes saluation saue onely the two Sacramentall ceremonies of outward Baptisme of the Lordes Supper Howbeit neither these also as they are corporall that is to say neither the outward action of the one nor of the other cōferreth remissiō of sinnes nor saluation but onely are visible shewes of inuisible spirituall benefits And furthermore if our god whō we serue be spirituall how can his religiō seruice be corporall as we are taught by the mouth of our sauior saying God is a spirit and therfore they that worship him must worship in spirit verity c. Ioan. 4. Now if ye graunt as ye must needes this our christen religion to be spirituall not a corporall religiō thē shew if ye can any one poynt of all these thinges which ye striue for so much with vs to be spirituall but altogether corporall externe matters ceremoniall obseruations nothing cōducing to any spirituall purpose as your outward successiō of bishops garmentes vestures gestures co●lors choise of meates differēce of dayes times places hearing seing saying touching tasting numbring of beades gilding worshipping Images building monasteries rising at midnight silence in cloysters absteining from flesh white meat fasting in Lent keeping Imberdayes hearing masse diuine seruice seing adoring the body in forme of bread receiuing holy water holy bread creeping to the crosse carying palmes taking ashes bearing candles pilgrimage going sensing kneeling knocking aultars superaltars candlestickes pardons In orders crossing annoynting shauing forswering mariage In baptisme crossing salting spatling exorcising washing of handes At Easter ear● confession penaunce doing satisfaction And in receiuing with beardes new shauen to imagine a body where they see no body though he were there present to be sene yet the outward seing touching of him of it selfe without fayth conduceth no more thē it did to the Iewes At Rogatiō daies to cary banners to follow the crosse to walke about the fieldes After Pentecost to go about with Corpus Christi play At halowmas to watch in the church to say a dirige commendations to ring for all soules to pay tithes truely to geue to the high aultar And if a man will be a Priest to say Masse Mattens to serue the Saynt of that day and to lift well ouer his head c. In sicknes to be aneled to take his rites after his death to haue funerals obites sayd for him and to be rong for at his funerall moneth mind and yearemind c. Adde moreouer to these the outward sacrifi●● of the Masse with opus operatum sine bono motu vtentis c. All which thinges aboue recited as they conteine the whole summary effect of all the popes catholicke religion so are they all corporall exercises consisting in the externe operation of man Which if they can make a perfect right catholicke christian then it may be said that men may be made perfect christians by flesh and bloud without any inward working of faith or of the holy ghost For what is in all these but the flesh bloud of his strength is able to accōplish though no inward strength or motion of the holy Ghost did worke But now the order of our religion way of saluation consisteth not in such corporall or outward things as these but in other more higher more spirituall gifts which farre exceed the capacity of flesh bloud of the which giftes the chiefest onely meane cause that saueth man remitteth sinnes is his fayth in Christ. Which fayth I thus define for a man to beleue by the bloudshedding of Iesus the sonne of god his sinnes to be forgeuen Gods wrath to be pacified himselfe to be iustified perfectly from all accusations that can be layd vnto him c. And though the Papistes make a light matter of this to beleue in Christ and when they heare vs say that fayth onely iustifieth they obiect to vs again and make it a small matter to be saued if fayth onely iustifie vs. Yet notwithstanding this fayth if it be well examined is such a thing that flesh and bloud is not able to attayne therto vnles Gods holy spirite frō aboue do draw him Moreouer besides this fayth many other thinges are incident also to the doctrine of our saluation Albeit as no causes therof but either as Sacramentes and seales of fayth or as declarations thereof or els as fruites effects
worthye their vocation to laye downe their olde conuersation to gyue theyr members seruauntes of ryghteousnes to offer their bodyes vppe to God a liuelye Sacrifice c. The like example of whose teachyng if the Churches nowe reformed doe not folowe let their Sermons their Preachynges wrytinges exhortynges and lyues also beare recorde who although they can not say with Christ. Which of you can blame me of sinne yet they may say to the aduersaryes whosoeuer of you is wythout fault cast the fyrst stone of reproch agaynst vs. Wherefore Hosius Pighius wyth their fellowes doe them open wrong and slaunderously belye them in comparing them in this behalfe to Aetius Eunominus and other heretikes called Anomaei who taking the good sentences of S. Paule did abuse the same to filthy licence of the flesh and corruption of wicked life c. But to let these slaunders passe nowe what the errours be of the Church of Rome touching this part of doctryne remayneth to be declared Whose errour first standeth in this that they mysunderstanding the definition of good workes doe call good workes not such as properly are commaunded by the lawe of God but such as are agreable to the Popes law As buylding of Abbayes and churches gyuing to the high altar founding of trentales fynding of chauntries gylding of Images hearing of Masses going on pilgrimage fyghting for the holye crosse keeping of vowes entryng to orders fastyng of vigiles creepyng to the Crosse praying to Saintes c. All which are not onely reputed for good workes but so preferred also before all other workes that to these is gyuen pardon from the Pope double and triplefolde more then to any other good worke of charitie commaunded in the law of almightie God An other errour also may be noted in the Papists touching the efficient or formall cause of good workes For albeit they all confesse in their bookes that Gratia dei gratis data is the chiefe principall cause thereof and worketh in vs iustitiam primam as they call it yet the good workes after regeneration they refer to other subordinate causes vnder God as to fre wil or to habitum virtutis or ad integra naturalia nothing at all to faith when as faith onelye next vnder God is the roote and fountaine of all well dooyng as in the fruites of a good tree albeit the planter or the husbandman be the principall agent thereof and some cause also may be in the good ground yet the next and immediate cause is the roote that maketh the tree fruitefull In like maner the grace of God in a soft repentaunt mollified hart planteth the gift of fayth Fayth as a good roote can not lye dead or vnoccupied but springeth foorth and maketh both the tree fruitefull and also the tree thereof to be good which otherwise had no acceptatiō nor goodnes in them were it not for the goodnes of the roote from whence they spring So Paule although he had certeine workes in him such as they were before his conuersion yet had he no good workes before the grace of Christ had rooted fayth in him So Mary Magdelene the sinner and Zacheus the Publicane So all the nations of the Gentiles began to bryng foorth frute and especially good fruit when they began to bee ingrafted in Christ and to receaue the roote of hys fayth whose fruites before that were all damnable and vnsauery As touchyng the cause therefore of good workes there is no other in man but fayth whose office as it is to iustifie vs in heauen so the nature of it is here in earth to worke by loue as the roote worketh by the sappe For as a man seeth and feeleth by fayth the loue and grace of God toward him in Christ his sonne so begynneth he to loue agayne both God and man and to doe for his neyghbour as God hath done to him And hereof properly springeth the runyng fountaine of al good works and deedes of charitie Thirdly as they erre in the cause of good works so do they erre much more in the ende of the lawe and of good workes for where Saint Paule teacheth the lawe to be gyuen to thys vse and ende to conuict our transgressions to prooue vs sinners to shewe and condemne our infirmitye and to dryue vs to Christ they take and applye no other ende to the lawe but to make vs perfect to keepe vs from wrath and to make vs iust before God And likewise where Saint Paule prooueth al our good works to be vnperfect and vtterly secludeth them from the ende of Iustifying they contrariwise doe teache as though the ende of good workes were to merite remission of synnes to satisfye vnto God to deserue grace to redeeme soules from Purgatory and that by them the person of the regenerate man doth please God and is made iust before God For so they teach most wickedly and horribly saying That christ suffered for originall sinne or sinnes going before Baptisme but the actuall sinnes which followe after Baptisme must be done away by mens meryts And so they assigne to Christ the begynning of saluation or obteyning of the fyrst grace as they call it but the perfection or cōsūmation of grace they giue to works our own strēgth Neither can they in any case abide that we be iustified frely by the mercy of God through fayth onely apprehending the merites of Christ. Howbeit neyther doe all Papistes in this their erroue agree in one For some make distinction and say that we are iustified by Christ principaliter .i. principally minus principaliter .i. lesse principally by the dignitie of our owne deedes contrary to the eight principle before mentioned page 24. Other holde that we are made ryghteous before God not by works that go before fayth but by our vertues that follow after Some againe do thus expound the saying of Saint Paule We are iustified by faith that is say they by fayth preparing vs or setting vs in a good way to be iustified Other expoūde by it the figure Sinecdoche that is by faith conioyned together with other vertues Other thus by faith that is being formed with charytie c. Thus all these doe derogate from the benefite of Christ and attribute vnto works a great or the greatest part of our iustification directly against the true veine of Saint Paules doctryne and first institucion of the auncient Church of Rome and against all the principles of holy Scripture Furthermore as touching the sayde doctryne of the lawe and good workes they erre in misunderstanding the nature of the lawe and workes For where Saint Paule disputeth that the lawe is spirituall and requireth of vs perfect obedience of the whole power of man which wee beyng carnall are neuer able to accomplish they affirme otherwise that the lawe doth require but onely outward obedience of man and therewith is contented And this obedience they say man is not onely able
not synners because they should sinne so neither doth infirmitie of falling diminish the grace of Christ but rather doth illustrate the same as it is written My strength is made perfect in infirmitie 2. Cor. 12. and againe Where sinne aboundeth there superaboundeth also grace In remission of synnes therefore these foure thinges must concurre together the cause that worketh which is the sacrifice of Christes body 2. the promise that offereth 3. fayth that apprehendeth 4. the repenting sinner that receaueth And although sinnes daily do grow which daily prouoke vs to craue remission yet as touching the cause that worketh remission of our daily sinnes the meanes which apprehendeth and applieth the sayd cause vnto vs they remayne alwaies one perpetuall besides which no other cause nor meanes is to be sought of man So that to them that be repenting sinners be in Christ Iesu there is no law to condemne them though they haue deserued condemnation but they are vnder a perpetual kingdome and a heauen full of grace and remission to couer their sins and not to impute their iniquities through the promise of God in Christ Iesu our Lord. And therefore wicked and impious is the doctrine of them fyrst which seeke any other cause of remission then onely the bloud of our Sauiour Secondly which assigne any other meanes to apply the bloudsheding of Christ vnto vs besides onely faith Thirdly and especially which so limite and restraine the eternall priuiledge of Christs passion as though it serued but only for sinnes done without and before faith and that the rest after Baptisme committed must be done away by confession pardons and satisfactory deedes And al this riseth because the true nature of the law of the Gospell is not knowen nor the difference rightly considered betwene the times of the one and of the other Neither againe doe they make any distinction betweene the malediction of the law and vse of the law And therfore whensoeuer they heare vs speake of the law meanyng the malediction of the law to be abolished therevpon they maliciously slaunder vs as though we speak against the good exercises of the lawe and giue liberty of fleshe to carnall men to liue as they list Whereof more shal be sayd by the Lordes grace as place and time shall hereafter require Of free will COncerning free will as it may peraduenture in some case be admitted that men without the grace may doe some outward functions of the law and keepe some outward obseruaunces or traditions so as touching thinges spirituall apperteining to saluation the strength of man being not regenerate by grace is so infirme and impotent that he can performe nothing neither in dooing well nor willing well Who after he be regenerated by grace may worke and doe wel but yet in such sort that still remaineth notwithstanding a great imperfection of flesh a perpetuall repugnaunce betwene the flesh and spirit And thus was the originall Church of the auncient Romanes first instructed From whome see now howe farre this latter Church of Rome hath degenerated which holdeth and affirmeth that men without grace may performe the obedience of the law prepare themselues to receaue grace by working so that those works may be meritorious and of congruitie obteine grace Which grace once obteined then men may say they perfectly performe the full obedience of the law and accomplish those spirituall actions and workes which God requireth and so those workes of cōdignitie deserue euerlasting life As for the infirmity which still remaineth in nature that they nothing regarde nor once speake of Of Inuocation and Adoration OUer and besides these vncatholike and almost vnchristian absurdities and defections from the Apostolicall faith aboue specified let vs consider the maner of theyr Inuocation not to God alone as they should but to dead men saying that saintes are to be called vpon tanquam mediatores intercessionis as Mediatours of intercession Christum vero tanquam mediatorem Salutis and Christ as the Mediator of Saluation And affirme moreouer that Christ was a Medyatour onely in time of his Passion Which is repugnaunt to the wordes of S. Paule writing to the old Romanes chap. 8. where he speaking of the intercession of Christ Which is saith he on the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for vs c. And if Christ be a Mediatour of saluation what needeth then any other intercession of the Saintes for other sutes for saluation being once had what can we require more or what lacketh he more to be obtained of the Saintes which is sure to be saued only by Christ And yet in their Catholicke deuotions why doe they teach vs thus to pray to the blessed virgine Salua omnes qui te glorificant i. Saue all them that glorifie thee c. if saluation onely belong to Christ vnles they study of purpose to seeme contrary to themselues Hetherto also perteineth the worshipping of reliques and the false adoration of Sacramentes that is the outward signes of the things signified cōtrary to the 7. principle before page 24. Adde to this also the prophanation of the Lordes Supper contrary to the vse for which it was ordeined in reseruing it after the Communion ministred in setting it to sale for money and falsely perswading both them selues and other that the Priest doth merite both to him selfe that saith and to him that heareth Ex opere operato sine bono motu vtentis c. That is Onely by the meere doing of the worke though the partie that vseth the same hath no good motion in him c. * Of Sacramentes Baptisme and the Lordes Supper AS touching Sacramentes their doctrine likewise is corrupt and erroneus 1. First they erre falsely in the number For where the institution of Christ ordeineth but two they contrary to the fourth principle aboue prefixed haue added to the prescription of the Lords worde fine other Sacraments 2. Secondly in the cause finall they erre For where the word hath ordeined those Sacraments to excite our faith and to giue vs admonitions of spiritual things they contrariwise doe teach that the Sacramentes doe not onely stirre vp faith but also that they auayle and are effectuall without faith Ex opere operato sine bono motu vtentis c. as is to be founde in Thom. Aquine Scotus Catharinus and other moe 3. Thirdly in the operation effect of the Sacramentes they faile where the contrary to the minde of the Scriptures doe say that they giue grace not onely do signifie but also conteine and exhibite that which they signifie to wytte grace and saluation 4. Fourthly they erre also in Application applying their Sacramentes both to the quicke and the dead to thē also that be absent to remission of sinnes and releasing of payne c. In the Sacrament of Baptisme they are to be reprooued not onely for adding to the simple wordes of Christs
intreaty nor waging them with money whiche were appointed for watchmen but they so narowly loked vnto the matter as though they should haue gotten great benefite and profite thereby Thus were the bodies of the martirs made a wonderyng stocke and laye sixe dayes in the open streetes at the length they burned them threwe their ashes into the riuer of Rods so that there might appeare no remnaunt of thē vpō the earth And this did they as though they had beene able to haue pulled god out of his seat to haue let the regeneration of the Saintes and taken from them the hope of the resurrection whereof they being perswaded sayd they bring in this newe and straunge Religion and set thus light by death and punishment Atque haec haec ex Epistola Viennensium c. Amongest other that suffered vnder Antoninus mention was made also of Iustinus who as it is said before exhibited two Apologies concerning the defence of christian doctrine the one to the Senate of Rome and the other to Antoninus Pius the Emperour cōcerning whose suffering and the causes therof is partly before declared this Iustine was borne in Neapoli in the countrey of Palestine whose father was Priscus Bachius as he himselfe doth testifie By whom in his youth he was set to schole to learne wherin processe of time he became a famous and worthy Philosopher o● whose excellency many learned notable men doe record For first he being altogither inflamed and rauished with desire of knowledge would in no wise be satisfied in his mind before he had gotten instructors singularly seene in all kinde of Philosophy wherevpon he writeth of him selfe in the beginning of his Dialogue Cum Tripone thus declaring that in the beginning he being desirous of that sect and societie applied himselfe to be the scholer to a certaine Stoicke remaining with him a time when he nothing profited in diuine knowledge wherof the Stoicke had no skill and affirmed the knowledge therof not to be necessary he forsoke him and went to another of the sect of the Perepatetick a sharp witted man as he thought with whom after he had beene a while he demaunded of him a stipend● for his teaching for the better confirmatiō of their familiaritie Whereupon Iustine accōpting him as no Philosopher left him departed And yet not satisfied in mind but desirous to heare of further learning in Philosophye adioyned himselfe to one that professed the Pithagorian ●ect a man of great fame and one who made no small accompt of himselfe Who after he had followed a time his maister demaunded of him whether he had any sight in Musicke Astronomy and Geometry wythout the sight of whiche science he saide he coulde not be apte to receiue the knowledge of vertue and felicitie vnles before he had vsed to apply his minde from sensible matters to the contemplation of things intellible And speaking much in the commen●ation of these sciences how profitable and necessary they were after that Iustine had declared him selfe not to bee sene therin the Philosopher gaue him ouer which greued Iustine not a little so much themore because he thought his master to haue some knowledge in those sciences After this Iustine considering with himselfe what time was requisite to the learning of these sciences and thinking not to di●●erte any longer thought best to resort to the secte of the Platonistes for the great fame that ran of them wherefore he chose vnto him a singuler learned man of that secte which lately was come to those parties so remaining with him seemed to profite not a litle in contemplation of supernall things inuisible formes insomuch that he thought shortly to aspire to such sharpnes of witte and wisedome that out of hand he might atchiue to the comprehension contēplation of god which is the end of Plato his Philosophie And in this maner he bestowed his youth but afterward he growing to a riper age howe by what meanes the said Iustine came to the knowledge profession of chritianitie it foloweth likewise in his saide first Apologie where he affirmeth of him selfe as witnesseth Eusebius in his fourth booke that when he did behold the christians in their torments and sufferinges to be so constaunt in theyr profession was therwith maru●ilously mooued after this maner reasoning with himselfe that it was impossible for that kinde of people to be subiect to any vice or carnalitie which vices of their owne nature are not able to sustayne any sharpe aduersitie much lesse the bytternesse of death The sight wherof helped him not a litle being of his own nature inclined to the searching of true knowledge vertue to begin thereby to loue and imbrace Christian Relygion for so he doth witnes of himselfe in the ende of the fyrst Apologie signifiyng there how it was his seking and indeuor to attaine to Christianitie Understanding how the Christians by malice of wicked persons were cōpelled to suffer wrong and tormentes and to be euill spoken of By sight whereof as he saith himselfe he became a Christian through this occasion for being thus afflicted in his minde as is aforesaid it came in his head for his more quietnes to go aside to some desert and solitary place void of concourse of people vnto a village or graūge neare to the seaside whither as he approched thinking there to be al alone there meeteth with him an old auntient father of a comly visage and gentle behauior who folowing him a litle of began to reason with him where after lōg disputation when the old man had declared vnto him that there was no knowledge of truth amongst the Philosophers which neither knewe God neither were aided by the holy Ghost further had reasoned with him of the immortality of the soule of the reward of the godly punishment of the wicked then Iustine being confirmed with his reasons and arguments yelded to him of his owne accorde and demaunded of him by what meanes he might attaine to that true knowledge of God Wherof he had spoken Who then counsailed him to read searche the Prophetes adioyning therewith prayer but what master quoth Iustine should I vse for the instruction therof who shal be able to helpe vs if these philosophers as you say lacke the truth are voide of the same To whom the old father aunswering there haue bene saide he many yeres before these philosophers other more aūtient then all these which beyng accompted for Philosophers were iust and beloued of God who spake by the spirite of God foreseing and prophesiyng these thinges which wee see now come to passe therfore they are called Prophets These only haue knowen the truth and reueled it to men neither fearing nor passyng for any who were seduced with no opinions of mans inuention but only spake taught those things which they themselues both heard and sawe being inspired with
after they suffred tormēts yet after reuolted But other being as strong as blessed valiant pillers of the Lord fortified with constancie agreing to their fayth were made faithfull Martyrs of the kingdome of God Of whom the first was Iulianus a man diseased with the gout and not able to go being caried of two men of whō the one quickly denied the other Cronion surnamed Eunus with the foresayd Iulianus the old man confessing the Lord with a perfect fayth were layd vpon Camels and there scourged at length cast into the fire with great constancie were so consumed As these aforesaid were going to their Martyrdome there was a certaine souldiour who in their defence tooke part agaynst them that rayled vpon them For the which cause the people crying out agaynst hym he also was apprehended and beyng constant in his professiō was forthwith beheaded Likewise one Macar a man borne in Lybia beyng admonished and exhorted of the Iudge to deny his fayth and not agreyng to his persuasions was burned alyue After these suffred Epimachus and one Alexander who beyng long deteined in prison and in bandes after innumerable paynes torments with razers scourges were also cast into the burning fire with foure other women with them which all there ended their Martyrdome Also Ammonarion an holy virgine whō the cruel iudge had long and bitterly tormented for that she promising the Iudge before that for no punishment she would yelde to his request and constantly performyng the same suffred likewise Martyrdome with two other women of whom there was an aged Matrone named Mercuria the other was called Dionysia beyng a mother of many fayre childrē whom yet notwithstanding she loued not aboue the Lord. These after they could nothe ouercome by no tormēts of the cruell iudge but he rather ashamed and confounded to be ouercome of sely women at length they beyng past feeling of all torments were slayne with the sword first Ammonarion like a valiant Captaine suffryng before them Heron Ater and Isidorus Egyptians and with them Dioscorus also a child of xv yeres were crowned with the same crowne of Martyrdom And first the iudge began with the child thinking him more easie to be wonne with wordes to entise him then with torments to constrain him but he persisted immouable geuing neither place to persuasions nor punishments The rest after he had greuously tormēted being constant in their profession he committed to the fire At Dioscorus the iudge greatly meruailing for his wise answers graue constancie dismissed him sparing as he said his age to a longer respite which Dioscorus is yet also with vs at this present wayting for a longer triall Nemesion beyng also an Egyptian first was accused for a companion of thieues but beyng purged thereof before the Centurion was then accused of Christianitie and for that cause being in bands was brought to the President who most vnrighteously tormenting and scourging hym double to al other thieues and felons at length among the thieues burned him to death making him a blessed martir There were standing before the tribunall seate certaine of the warriors or knights whose names were Ammon Zenon Ptolomeus Ingenuus and with them a certayne aged man called Theophilus who standing by at what tyme a certaine christian man was before the iudge examined and there seyng him for feare redy to incline and fall away did burst almost for sorow within themselues making signes to him with their hands and all iestures of their body to be constant This beyng noted of all the standers by they were redy to lay hold vpon them but they preuenting the matter preased vp of their owne accord before to the bench of the iudge professing themselues to be Christians In so much that both the President with the benchers were all astonied the christians which were iudged more emboldned to suffer and the Iudges therby terrified This done they departed away from the place glad and reioycing for the testimony that they had geuen of their fayth Many other besides were in other cities and tounes rent and torne asunder by the Heathen among whom one I wil speake off for cause worthy of memory Ischirion one that was in seruice with a certaine noble man was commaunded of his maister to make sacrifice who for not obeying was therefore rebuked After persisting in the same was greuously threatned with sharp and manacing wordes At last his maister when he coulde not preuaile against him taking a stake or pike in his handes ran him through into the body and slue him What should I speake of the multitude of them which wandering in desertes and mountaines were consumed with hunger thirst cold sicknes thieues or wilde beasts of whose blessed victorie they which be aliue are yet witnesses In the number of whom one I will speake off among diuers other named Cheremon Bishop of the Citie called Nilus an aged man he with his wife flying to the mountain of Arabia neuer returned again nor euer could be seene after And though they were sought for diligently by their brethren yet neither they nor their bodies were found Many other there were which flying to these moūtains of Arabia were taken of the barbarous Arabians of whom some with much mony could scarse be ransomed some were neuer heard off yet to this present day Thus much out of the Epistle of Dionysius alledged in Euseb. Lib. 6 cap. 41 42. c. Moreouer the foresaid Dionysius in an other place writyng to Germanus of his owne daungers and of other sustained in this persecution before this persecution of Decius thus inferreth as followeth I sayth he behold before the sight of God I lye not and he knoweth I lie not how that I hauing no regard of myne owne life and notwithout the motion of God did flye and auoyde the daunger of this persecution Yea and also before that this persecution of Decius did rage against vs Sabinus the same houre sent a Farmer to seeke me at what tyme I remaining at home waited iij. dayes for his comming But he searching narowly for me by all wayes fields flouds corners where he thought I might best haue hid my self or to haue passed by was stroken with such a blindnesse that he could not find myne house thinking with himself nothing lesse then that I would abide at home in such so dangerous persecution Thus these iij. days beyng past vpon the fourth day the Lord God so willing and commanding me to flie and also maruelously opening to me the way I with my children and many other brethren went out together And this not to come of my selfe but to be the worke of Gods prouidence the sequel of those things declared wherein afterward I was not vnprofitable peraduenture to some c. Againe in another place shortly after the foresayd Dionysius proceedyng in the narration of himselfe thus inferreth Then I comming to Hierusalem with them which were with me was
the house together men of one accord c. And so by the occasion hereof he writeth vnto them in the foresayd Epistle and moueth them to prayer and mutuall agreement For sayth he if it be promised in the Gospell to be graunted whatsoeuer any two consenting together shall aske what shall then the whole Churche do agreeing together or what if this vnanimitie were among the whole fraternitie which vnanimitie sayeth Cyprian if it had bene then among the brethren non venissent fraetribus haec mala si in vnum fraternitas fuisset animata that is these euiles had not happened to the brethren if the brethren had ioyned together in brotherly vnanimitie c. After the causes thus declared of this or other persecutions the sayd S. Cyprian moreouer in the forenamed Epistle worthy to be read of al men describeth likewise a certayne vision wherin was shewed vnto them by the Lord before the persecutiō came what should happen The vision was this There was a certayne aged father sitting at whose right hand set a young man very sad and pensiue as one with an indignation sorrowfull holding hys hand vpon hys brest hys countenaunce heauy and vnchearefull On the left hand sate an other person hauing in hys hand a net whiche he threatned to lay to catch the people that stode about And as he was marueiling that saw the sight thereof it was sayd vnto him The young man whō thou seest sit on the tight hand is sad and sory that hys preceptes be not obserued But he on the left hand daunceth and is merry for that occasion is geuen him to haue power of the aged Father geuen him to afflict men And this vision was seene long before this tempest of persecution happened Wherein is declared the same that before is sayd the sinnes of the people to be the cause why Sathan in this persecution and all other hath had and hath still such power with hys net of destruction to rage agaynst the bloud of Christen men and all because sayth Cyprian we forslacke our praying or be not so vigilant therein as wee shoulde wherefore the Lord because he loueth vs correcteth vs correcteth vs to amend vs amendeth vs to saue vs. c. Cyprian Furthermore the same Cyprian and in the same Epistle wrtting of his own reuelation or message sent to him thus sayth And to hys least seruaunt both sinfull and vnworthy meaning by himselfe God of his tender goodnes hath vouched safe to direct this word Tell him sayth he that hee be quiet and of good comfort for peace will come Albeit a litle stay there is for a while for that some remain yet to be proued and tryed c. And sheweth also in the same place of an other reuelation of his wherein he was admonished to be spare in hys feeding and sober in hys drinke least hys minde geuen to heauenly meditation might be caryed away with worldly allurements or oppressed with to much surfet of meates and drinkes should be lesse apt or able to prayer and spirituall exercise Finally in the latter end of the foresayd Epistle mention also followeth of other reuelations or shewinges wherein the Lord sayth Cyprian doth vouchsafe in many of hys seruantes to foreshew to come the restauring of hys Church the stable quiet of our health and safegard after rayne fayre weather after darcknes light after stormy tempest peaceable calme the fatherly helpe of his loue the wont old glory of hys diuine maiesty whereby both the blasphemy of the persecutors shall be repressed and the repentance of such as haue fallen be reformed and the strong and stable confidence of them that stand shall reioyce and glory Thus much hath S. Cyprian writing of these thinges to the Clergy Lib. 4. Epist. 4. As touching now the crymes and accusations in this persecution layd to the charge of the Christians thys was the principall first because they refused to doe worship to their Idols and to the Emperours then for that they professed the name of Christ. Besides all the calamities and euils that happened in the world as warres famine and pestilence were onely imputed to the Christians Agaynst all which quarreling accusations Cyprian doth eloquently defend the Christians in his booke Contra Demetrianum Like as Tertulian had done before writing Contra Scapulam page 55. And first touching the obiection for not worshipping Idoles he cleareth the Christians both in his booke Contra Demeir also De vanitate idol prouing those Idols to be no true Gods but Images of certayne dead kinges which neyther could saue themselues from death nor such as worship them The true God to be but one and that by the testimony of Sosthenes Plato and Trismegistus the which God the Christians doe truely worship And as concerning that the Christians were thought to be causes of publique calamities because they worshipped not the Gentiles Idoles he purgeth the Christians thereof prouing that if there be any defect in increase of thinges it is not to be ascribed to them but rather to the decrease of nature languishing now toward her age and latter end Agayne for that it hath bene so foresayd and prophecied that toward the end of the worlde should come warres famine and pestilence Moreouer if there be anye cause therof more proper then other it is most like to be imputed to their vaine Idolatry and to the contempt of the true God Also that such euils be increased by the wickednes of the people so that to speake in his owne words famem maiorem facia● rapacites quam siccitas i. famine cometh more by auarice of men then by drought of the aire but especially the cause therof to procede of the cruell shedding of the innocent bloud of the Christians c. Thus with many other mo probations doth Cyprian defend the Christians against the barbarous exclamatiōs of the heathē Gentiles Of which Cyprian forsomuch as he suffered in the time of his persecution I mynde Christ wylling to recapitulate here in ample discourse the ful summe first of his life and bringing vp then of his death Martyrdome as the worthines of that man deserueth to be remembred Of this Cyprian therfore otherwise named Statius thus writeth Nicephorus Nazianzenns Iacobus de Voragine Henricus de Erfordia Volateranus Hieronymus and other that he being an Aphrican and borne in Carthage first was an Idolater and Gentill altogether giuen to the study and practise of the Magicall Artes of whose parentage and education in letters from his youth no mention is made but that he was a worthy Rethorician in Aphrica Of whose conuersion and baptisme he himselfe in his first booke second Epistle writeth a florishing and eloquent Hystory Which his conuersion vnto the christian fayth as Hieronimus affirmeth in his commentary vpon Ionas was through the grace of God and the meanes of Cecilius a Priest whose name after he bare and through the occasion of
x. yeare of Constantinus It was not yet one yeare from the day in which Dioclesian Maximianus ioyning themselues together began their persecution when that they sawe the number of the Christians rather to encrease then to diminish notwithstanding all the cruelty that euer they coulde shew and now were out of all hope for the vtter rootyng out of them which thing was the cause of their first enterprise and had now euen their fill of bloud and lothed as it were the shedding thereof they ceased at the last of theyr owne accord to put any mo christians to death But yet of a great multitude they did thrust out their right eyes and maymed their left legs at the hamme with a searing iron condemning them to the mines of mettals not so much for the vse of their labour as for the desire of afflicting them And this was the clemencie and release of the crueltie of those Princes which sayd that it was not meete that the cities should be defiled with the bloud of citizens and to make the Emperours highnesse to bee destained with the name of cruelty but to shew his princely beneficence and liberalitie to all men Eusebius Lib. 8. cap 10. When Dioclesianus and Maximianus had raigned together Emperours twenty yeares and one Nicephorus saith xxij yeares at length Dioclesian put himselfe from his imperiall dignitie at Nicomedia and liued at Salona Maximinianus at Mediolanum and led both of thē a priuate life in the 309. yeare after Christ. This strange and meruailous alteration gaue occasion and so came to passe that within short space after there were in the Romaine commō welth many Emperours at one tyme. In the beginning of this persecution you heard how Dioclesian beyng made Emperour tooke to him Maximinian Also how these two gouerning as Emperours together chose other two Caesars vnder them to wit Galerius Maximinus Constantius the father of Constantine the 〈◊〉 Thus then Dioclesian raigning with Maximinian in the 19. yeare of his raigne began his furious persecution against the christians whose raigne after the same continued not long For so it pleased God to put such a snaffle in the tyrants mouth that within two yeares after he caused both him and Maximinian for what cause he knoweth to geue ouer his Imperial function and so to remayne not as emperours any more but as priuate persones So that t●ey beyng now displaced and dispossessed the Imperial dominion remayned with Constantius Galerius Maximinus which two deuided the whole Monarchie betwene them so that Maximinus should gouerne the East countreys Constantius the west partes But Constantius as a modest Prince onely contented with the Imperial title refused Italy and Aphrike contenting himselfe only with Fraunce Spaine and Britaine Wherefore Galerius Maximinus chose to hym his two sonnes Maximinus and Seuerus Likewise Constantius tooke Constantinus his sonne Caesar vnder him In the meane tyme while Maximinus with his two Caesars were in Asia the Romaine souldiours set vp for their emperour Maxentius the sonne of Maximinian who had before deposed himselfe Against whom Maximinus the Emperour of the East sent his sonne Seuerus which Seuerus was slayne in the same voyage of Maxentius In whose place then Maximinus tooke Licinius And these were the Emperours and Caesars which succeeding after Dioclesian and Maximinian prosecuted the rest of that persecution which Dioclesian and Maximinian before begun duryng neare the space of seuen or viij yeares which was to the yeare of our Lorde 318. Saue onely that Constantius with his sonne Constantinus was no great doer therin but rather a maintainer and a supporter of the Christians Which Constantius surnamed Chlorus for his palenesse was the sonne of Eutropius a mā of great nobilitie of the Romaine union as Loetus affirmeth He came of the lyne of Aeneas and Claudia the daughter of Claudius Augustus This man had not the desire of great and mightie dominion and therefore parted he the Empire with Galerius and would rule but in France Britaine and Spayne refusing the other kingdomes for the troublesome and difficult gouernment of the same Otherwise he was a Prince as Eutropius maketh description of him very excellent ciuill meeke gentle liberall and desirous to do good vnto those that had any priuate authoritie vnder him And as Cyrus once sayd that he ga●e treasure inough when he made his friendes rich euen so it is sayd that Constantius would often tymes say that it were better that his subiects had treasure thē he to haue it in his treasure house Also he was by nature suffised with a little In so much that he vsed to eate and drinke in earthen vessels which thing was counted in Agathotles the Sicilian a great commendation and if at any tyme cause required to garnish his table he would send for plate and other furniture to his frendes To these vertues he added yet a more worthy ornament that is deuotion loue and affection towards the word of God as Euseb. Lib. 8. cap. 13. affirmeth after which vertues ensued great peace and tranquillitie in all his Prouinces By which worde he being guided neither leuied any warres contrary to pietie and christian religion neither he aided anye other that did the same neither destroyed he the churches but commaunded that the christians should be preserued and defended and kept them safe from all contumelions iniuries And when that in the other iurisdictions of the Empire the congregatiōs were molested with persecution as Sozomenus declareth Lib. 1. cap. 6. he only gaue licence vnto the Christians to liue after their accustomed maner This wonderfull acte of his followyng besides other doth shew that he was a sincere worshipper of the christian religion Those which bare the chiefe offices among the Ethnikes draue out of the emperors count all the godly Christians wherupon this ensued that the Emperors themselues at the last were destitute of helpe when suche were driuen away which dwelling in their courtes and liuyng a godly lyfe poure● out their prayers vnto God for the prosperous estate and health both of the Empire Emperor Constantius therefore thinkyng at a certayne tyme to try what sincere and good Christians he had yet in hys courte called together all hys officers and seruaunts in the same fayning himselfe to chitse out such as would do sacrifice to deuils and that those only should dwell there keep their offices and that those which would refuse to doe the same should be thrust out banished the court At this appointment all the 〈◊〉 deuided thēselues into 〈◊〉 The Emperor marked which were the constantest godliest from the rest And when 〈◊〉 sayd that they would willingly do sacrifi●e other serue openly and boldly denied to do the same Then the Emperor 〈◊〉 rebuked those which were so redy to doe 〈◊〉 iudged them as false traitors vnto God accountyng their vnworthy to bee in his court which were such traitors to
diligence and deuotiō to induce all men to an vniforme life so that they which seemed to dissent from the Romaine custome by a straunge maner of liuing shoulde exhibite to the immortall Gods their due and proper worshipp but the wilfull and obstinate minde of diuers so much and so cōtinually resisted the same that by no lawfull meanes they might be reuoked from their purpose neither made afraid by any terror or punishment Because therefore it so came to passe that by this meanes many put themselues in perill and ieoperdy The maiestie of our soueraigne Lordes the Emperours according to their noble pietie considering that it was far from the meaning of their princely maiesties that suche thinges should be whereby so many men and muche people should be destroyd gaue me in charge that with diligence I shoulde write vnto you that if any of the Christians from henceforth fortune to be taken in the exercise of their religion that in no wise you molest the same neither for that cause you doe iudge any man worthy of punishment for that in all this time it hath euidentlye appeared that by no meanes they might be allured from such wilfulnesse It is therefore requisite that your wisdome write vnto the Questors Captaynes and Constables of euery City and village that they may know it not to be lawfull for them or any of them to do contrary to the prescript of this commaundement neither that they presume to attempt the same Euseb. lib. 9. cap. 1. The gouernours therefore of euery prouince supposing this to be the determinate pleasure and not fayned of the Emperour did first aduertise thereof the rusticall Pagan multitude After that they released and set at libertye all suche prisoners as were condempned to the mettall mines to perpetuall imprisonmēt for their fayth thinking therby where in deed they were deceiued that the doing thereof would well please the Emperor This therfore seemed to them as vnlooked for and as light to trauellers in a darcke night They gather themselues together in euery City they call their Synodes and counsels much maruell at the sodden chaunge and alteration The Infidels themselues extoll the onely and true God of the christians The Christians receiue agayne all their former libertie and such as fell away before in the tyme of persecution repent themselues and after penaunce done they returned agayne to the congregation Nowe the Christians reioyced in euery Citty praying God with hymnes and Psalmes Eusebius ibidem This was a maruailous sodaine alteration of the Church from a most vnhappy state into a better but scarce suffered Maximinus the Tyraunt the same vj. monethes vnuiolated to continue For whatsoeeuer seemed to make for the subuersion of the same peace yet scarcely hatched that did he onely meditate And first of all he tooke from the Christians all libertie and leaue for them to assemble and congregate in churchyardes vnder a certayne coulour After that he sent certayne Miscreants vnto the Athenians to sollicite them agaynst the Christians and to prouoke them to aske of him as a recompence and great reward that he would not suffer any Christian to inhabite in their countrey and amongest them was one Theotechnus a most wicked miscreant an inchaunter and a most deadly enemy agaynst the Christians He first made the way whereby the Christians were put out of credite and accused to the Emperour to which fraud also he erected a certayne Idoll of Iupiter to be worshipped of the inchaunters and coniurers and mingled the same worship with ceremonies full of deceiueable witchcra●t Lastly he caused the same Idoll to geue this sound out of hys mouth That is Iupiter commaundeth the christians to be banished out of the Citie and suburbes of the same as enemies vnto him And the same sentence did the rest of the gouernors of the prouinces publish against the Christians and thus at length persecution began to kindle against them Maximinus appoynted and instituted high priestes and bishops in euery citie to offer sacrifice vnto Idoles inueigled all those that were in great offices vnder him that they should not onely cease to pleasure them to do for them but also that they should with new deuised accusatiōs agaynst thē at their pleasure put as many to death as by any meanes they might They also did counterfet certaine practises of Pilate against our sauiour Christ full of blasphemie and sent the same into all the Empire of Maximinus by their letters commaunding that the same shoulde be published and set vp in euery citie and suburbes of the same and that they should be deliuered to the scholemaisters to cause their scholers to learne by roate the same After that one named Praefectus castrorum whome the Romaines do call captaine allured certaine light womē partly by feare and partly by punishment dwelling at Damascus in Phenicia and taken out of the court wherein they were accused that they shoulde openly say in wryting that they were once Christians and that they knewe what wicked lasciuious actes the Christians were wont to execute amongst themselues vpon the sondaies what other things they thought good to make more of their own head to the slander of the Christians The capitaine sheweth vnto the emperour theer words as though it had bene so in deede and the Emperour by and by commanded the same to be published throughout euery city Furthermore they did hange vp in the midst of euery Citie which was neuer done before the Emperours edicts against the Christians grauen in tables of brasse And the children in the scholes with great noise and clapping of handes did euery day resound the contumelious blasphemies of Pilate vnto Iesus what other things so euer were deuised of the magistrates after most despitefull maner Euseb. lib. 8 cap. 3.4.5.6.7 And this is the copie of the edict which Maximinus caused to be fastened to pillers fraught with all arrogant and insolent hate against God and Christ. The weake and imbecil rebellion of mans minde all obscuritie and blindnesse of ignorance set aparte which hetherto hath wrapped the mindes of impious and miserable men in the pernitious darkenesse of ignoraunce is now at the length able to discerne that the same is gouerned as also corroborated by the prouidence of the immortall gods the louers of vertue which thing how acceptable it is to vs howe pleasant and gratefull and howe much proofe the same hath declared of your wel disposed willing minds is incredible to be tolde Although this was not vnknown before with what diligence and deuotion yee serued the immortall Gods whose wonderfull and constant faith is not knowen by bare and naked wordes but by your worthy notable deeds Wherefore worthely is your Citie called the habitation and seate of the immortall Gods and by many examples it appeareth that the same flourisheth and prospereth by the presence of the celestiall Gods For beholde your Citie
words the Eunuch forthwith brasting out in teares laying away his courtly apparell which was sumptuous costly putting vpon him a blacke and mourning weede sitteth before the court gates weping and bewailing thus saying with himselfe wo is me wyth what hope wyth what face shall I looke hereafter for my God which haue denied my god whē as this Symeon my familiar acquantance thus passing by me so much disdaineth me that he refuseth with one gentle word to salute me These things being brought to the ●ares of the King as such tale cariers neuer lacke in Princes courtes procured against him no litle indignation wherupon Sapores the king sending for him first with gentle words courtly promises began to speake him faire asking him what cause he had so to mourne whether there was any thing in his house which was denied him or which he had not at his owne will and asking Whereunto Vsthazares aunswering againe saide That there was nothing in that earthly house which was to him lacking or wherūto his desire stod Yea would god said he O king any other grief or calamitie in al the world whatsoeuer it were had happened vnto me rather thē this for the which I do most iustly mourne and sorrow For this sorroweth me that I am this day aliue who should rather haue died long since that I see this sonne which against my hart and mynde for your pleasure dissēblingly I appeared to worship for which cause doublewise I am worthy of death First for that I haue denied Christ. Secondly because I did dissemble with you And incontinent vpon these wordes swearing by him that made both heauen earth affirmed most certainly that although he had plaied the foole before he would neuer be so mad againe as in steede of the creator and maker of all thinges to worship the creatures which he had made and created Sapores the king being astonied at the so sodaine alteration of this man and doubting with hym selfe whether to be angry with those inchaunters or with him whether to intreat him wyth gentlenes or wyth rygour at length in this moode commaunded the sayde Vsthazares his old auncient seruaunt and first Tutor brynger vp of his youth to be had away and to be beheaded as he was going to the place of execution he desired of the executioners a lyttle to staye whyle he myght sende a message vnto the king which was this sent in by certayne of the kings most trusty Eunuches desiring him that for all the old and faythfull seruyce he had done to his Father to him he would now requite him with thys one office agayne to cause to bee cryed openlye by a publike cryer in these wordes followyng that Vsthazares was beheaded not for any trechery or cryme committed against the king or the Realme but onelye for that hee was a Christyan and woulde not at the Kinges pleasure denye hys God And so accordyng to hys requeste it was performed and graunted For thys cause dyd Vsthazares so much desire the cause of hys death to be publyshed because that as his shrynking backe from Christ was a great occasion to manye Christians to doe the lyke so nowe the same hearing that Vsthazares dyed for no other cause but only for the religion of Christ shoulde learne lykewyse by hys example to bee feruente and constaunt in that which they professe And thus thys blessed Eunuch dyd consummate hys Martyrdome Of the which hys Martyrdome Symeon hearing being in pryson was very ioyfull and gaue god thanks Who in the nexte daye followyng being brought foorth before the Kyng and constantly refusyng to condescende to the Kynges request to worshyp visible creatures was lykewyse by the commaundement of the Kyng beheaded wyth a great number mo whithe the same daye also did suffer to the number as is sayd of an hundreth and more All whiche were put to death before Symeon he standing by and exhortyng them wyth comfortable wordes admonishing them to stande fyrme and stedfast in the Lord Preachyng and teachyng them concernyng death resurrection and true pietye and prooued by the Scryptures that to be true which he had sayde Declaryng moreouer that to be true lyfe in deede so to dye and that to be death in deede to deny or to betray God for feare of punishment And added further that there was no man alyue but needes once must dye For so much as to all men is appoynted necessarelye here to haue an ende But those thyngs which after this lyfe followe hereafter to bee eternall which neyther shall come to all men after one sorte But as the condition and trade of lyfe in dyuers men doth dyffer and is not in all men like so the tyme shall come when all men in a moment shall render and receaue accordyng to theyr dooynges in thys present lyfe immortall rewardes such as haue here done well of lyfe and glory such as haue done contrary of perpetual punishment As touching therefore our well doyng here is no doubte but of all other our holy actions and vertuous deedes there is no hyer or greater deede then if a man here loose his lyfe for hys Lord God Wyth these wordes of comfortable exhortation the holye Martyrs beyng prepared willyngly yeelded vp their liues to death After whom at last followed Symeon with two other Priestes or Mynisters of his Church Abedecalaas and Ananias which also wyth him were pertakers of the same Martyrdome At the sufferyng of those aboue mentioned it happened that Pusices one of the Kynges offycers and ouerseer of hys Artificers was there present who seeyng Ananias beyng an aged olde Father somwhat to shake and tremble at the syght of them that suffered O Father sayde he a lyttle moment shut thyne eies and be strong and shortly thou shalt see the sight of God Upon these words thus spoken Pusices immediately was apprehended brought to the King Who there confessing himselfe constantly to be a Chrystian and for that he was very bould and hardy before the king in the cause of Christs faith was extremely and most cruelly handled in the execution of his Martyrdome For in the vpper part of hys necke they made a hole to thrust in theyr hande and pluckt out hys tongue out of hys mouth and so he was put to death At the which time also the daughter of Pusices a godly virgine by the malicious accusation of the wicked was apprehended put to death The next yeare followyng vpon the same day when the Christians did celebrate the remembraunce of the Lords passion which wee call good Frydaye before Easter as wytnesseth the sayde Zozomenus Sapores the king directed out a cruell and sharpe Edict throughout al his land condemning to death all them whosoeuer confessed themselues to be Christians By reason whereof an innumeble multitude of Christians through the wicked procuring of the malignant Magitians suffered the same tyme
the Byshop of Winchester seauen myles compasse of land to builde there the Byshops sea the which was accomplished and finished Kenwalkus hys sonne Of this Berinus Malmesbery Polychronicon with dyuers other writers do report a thing straunge and myraculous which if it be a fable as no doubt it is I cannot but maruel that so many authors so constantly agre in reporting and affirming the same The matter is this this Berinus being sent as is said by Honorius to preach in Englād promiseth him to trauell to the vttermost borders therof and there to preach the Gospell where the name of Christ was neuer heard Thus he seting forward in his iourney passeth through Fraunce and so to the sea side where hee found a passage ready and the winde serued so faire that he was called vpon in such hast that he had no leysure to remember himselfe to take all things with him which hee had to cary At length as he was on the sea sailing and almost in the middle course of his passage remembred himselfe of a certaine relique left behinde him for hast which Honorius had giuen him at his comming out Malmesberiensis calleth it Corporalia Historia Iornalensis calleth it Pallulam super quam Corpus Christi consecraret which wee call a Corporas or such a like thing and what els enclosed with in it I can not tell Here Berinus in great sorow coulde not tell what to doe if he should haue spoken to the Heathen mariners to turne their course backe againe they woulde haue mocked him and it had bin in vaine Wherfore as the stories write he boldly steppeth into the Sea and walkeyng on fote back again taketh with him that which was left behind so returneth to his company againe hauing not one thred of his garments wette Of his miracle or whether I should cal it a fable rather let the reader iudge therof as he thinketh because it is not written in the Scripture we are not bound to beleeue it But if it were true it is then thought to be wrought of god not for any holines in the man or in the Corporas but a speciall gifte for the conuersion of the heathen for whose saluation God suffereth oft many wonders to be done This Berinus being receiued in the ship againe with a great admiration of the Maryners beyng therewyth conuerted and Baptysed was driuen at last by the weather to the coast of the Westsaxōs where Kynigilsus and his brother Quicelinus aboue mentioned did raigne Which two kinges the same time by the preaching of Berinus were conuerted and made Christen men with the people of the country being before rude and barbarous It happened the same time when the forsaid kings shoulde bee christened that Oswaldus mentioned a little before king of Northumberland was thē present and the same day maried Kynigilsus his daughter and also was godfather to the king Thus Oswald after he had reigned ix yeares in such holines and perfectnes of life as is aboue specified was slayne at length in the field called Maxfield by wicked Pēda king of the Mercians which Penda at length after all his tyranny was ouercome and slaine by Oswy brother to Oswald next king after Oswald of Northumberland notwithstanding he had thryse the people which Oswy had this Penda being a Panim had iii. sonnes Wolferus Weda and Egfridus To this seconde sonne Weda Oswy had before time maried his daughter by consent of Penda hys father The whiche Weda by helpe of Oswy was made Kyng of Southmercia the which Lordship is seuered from northmercia by the ryuer of Trent The same Weda moreouer at what time he maried the daughter of Oswy promised to him that he would become a christen man which thing he performed after the death of Penda his Father but afterward within iij. yeares of his reigne he was by reason of his wife slaine And after him the kingdome fell to Wolferus the other brother who beyng wedded to Ermenilda daughter of Ercomber kyng of Kente was shortlye after Christened so that he is accounted the first christened king of Mercia This Wolferus conquered Kenwalcus Kyng of Kent and gat the I le of Wight which after he gaue to Sigbert King of Theastangles vpon condition he would be Christened And thus the Eastangles which before had expulsed Mellitus there bishop as is declared recouered againe the Christian faith vnder Sigbert their King who by the meanes of the foresayd Wolferus was reduced and Baptised by Finanus the Byshop But to returne againe to Oswy from whom we haue a litle digressed of whom we shewed before how he succeded after Oswald in the prouince of Bernicia to whom also was ioyned Oswynus hys cosin ouer the Prouince of Deyra and therwith his felow Oswy raigned the space of vij yere this Oswyne was gentle liberal to his people and no ●●sse deuout towarde God who vpon a time had giuen to Aidanus the bishop aboue mentioned a Princely Horse with the trappers al that appertained therto because he should not so much trauel on foote but some tyme ease himselfe withall Thus Aidanus the Scottishe Byshop as he was riding vpon his kingly horse by the way meteth him a certaine poore man asking and crauing hys charitie Aidanus hauing nothing els to giue him lighted down and giueth to him his horse trapped and garnished as he was The King vnderstanding this not contented therwith as he was entring to dinner with the sayd Aidanus what ment you father Byshop sayd he to giue away my horse I gaue you vnto the begger Had not I other horses in my stable that might haue serued him well inough but you must giue awaye that which of purpose was pickt out for you among the chiefest To whome the Bishop made aunswere againe saying or rather rebuking the king what be these wordes O king saide he that you speake Why set you more price by an horse which is but the sole of an horse then you do by him which is the sonne of Mary yea which is the sonne of God He said but thys when the king forthwith vngirding his sword frō about him as he was then newly come in from hunting falleth downe at the feete of the Bishop desiring him to forgiue him that and he would neuer after speake word to him for any treasure he should afterward giue away of his The Bishop seing the king so mekely affected hee then takyng him vp chering him againe with words began shortly after to weepe to be very heauy his minister asking the cause therof Aidanus aunswered in his scottish language saying to him I weepe saith he for that this king cannot liue lōg This people is not worthy to haue such a Prince as he is to raigne among them And so as Aidanus sayd it came to passe For not long after Oswy the king of Bernicia disdaining at him when
Church Brethren seeke not to confound your selues and the church of God so much as in you is but turne to me you shal be safe For the Lord sayth I will not the death of a sinner but rather he should conuert and liue Stand with me manfully in the warre take your armour and your shield to defend me Take the sword of the word of the mighty God that we altogether may withstand more valiauntly the malignant enemies such as goe about to take away the soule of the church which is her liberty without which liberty she hath no power agaynst them that seeke to incroche to their inheritaunce the possession of Gods sanctuary If ye will heare and follow me know ye that the Lord will be with you and with vs all in the defence of the libertye of his church Otherwise if ye will not the Lord iudge betwixt me and you and require the confusion of his Church at your handes Which church whether the world will or no standeth firmely in the word of the Lord whereupon she is builded and euer shall till the houre come that she shall passe from this world to the Father For the Lord euer doth support her with his hand Wherefore to returne to the matter brethren remember well with your selues which thing ye ought not to forget what daunger I was brought vnto and the Church of God also while I was in England at my departing out of England and after my departure from thence also in what daunger it standeth at thys present day But especially at that time when as at Northampton Christ was iudged agayne in my person before the iudgement seat of the high president Who euer heard the Archb. of Canterbury being troubled for iniuries done to him and to his church and appealing to the Pope of Rome to be iudged condemned appealed and put to his sureties and that of his owne suffraganes Where is this law seene or the authority nay rather peruersity of this Canon heard of And why yet shame ye not at this your enormity Why are ye not confounded Or why doth not this confusion worke in you repentaunce and repentance driue you to due satisfaction before God and men For these and suche other iniuries done to God and to his church and to me for gods cause which with a good conscience I ought to suffer because that without daunger of soule I ought not to dissemble them I choose rather to absent my selfe for a season and to dwell quietly in the house of my Lord then in the tabernacle of sinners vntill the time that their iniquity be complete the hartes of the wicked and the congitations of the same shal be opened And these iniuries were the cause both of my appeale from the king and of my departure from thence which ye terme to be sodaine But if ye will speake the truth which ye know it ought no lesse then to be sodaine least being foreknowne it might haue bene preuented and stopped And as God turned the matter it happened for the best both for the honor of the king ard better safety of them which seeking my harme should haue brought slaunder to the king If such troubles followed vpon my departing as ye say let them be imputed to him which gaue cause the fault is in the worker not in the departer in him that pursueth not in him that auoydeth iniuries what would ye more I presented my selfe to the court declaring both the causes of my comming and of my appeale declaring also the wronges and iniuries done to me to my Church and yet could haue no aūswere neither was there any that layd any thing agaynst me before we came to the king Thus while we stood wayting in the court whether any would come agaynst me or not they sent to my officials charging them not to obey me in my temporalities nor to owe any seruice to me or to any of mine After my appellation made in the Court my Church was spoyled we and they about vs depriued of our goods out●awed both of the Clergy and of the layty men women and infantes the goods of the Church that is the patrimony of the crucifix confiscate and part of the mony turned to the kinges vse part to your owne cofers Brother Byshop of London if this be true that we here of you and that to the vse of your owne Churche ye conuert this money we charge you and require you forthwith by vertue of obedience that within fourtye dayes after the sight of these letters all delaye and excuse set a●ide ye restore agayne within the time aforesayd all suche gooddes and percelles as you haue taken away For it is vnmeete and contrarye to all lawe one Churche to be enriched with the spoil of an other church If ye stand vpon the authoritie that set you a worke you must vnderstand that in matters concerning the church goods he can geue no lawfull autoritie which committeth violent iniurie c. What authoritie and what scripture geueth this prerogatiue to Princēs vpon Church goodes which you would attribute to them What will they lay for them the remedie of appeale God forbid It were euill with the Church of God if when the sacrilegious extorcioner hath violently inuaded other mennes goodes especially the goods of the church he shoulde after defend him with the title of appeale c. Doe not brethren so confounde altogether the right of the Church and of the temporall regiment For these two are muche differēt one borowing his authority of the other Read the scriptures and ye shall finde what and how many kings haue perished for taking vpon them the priestly office Therefore let your discretion prouide least for this your doing Gods punishmēt light vpon you which if it come it will be hard for you very easely to escape Prouide also and see to your king whose fauour ye prefer before the wealth profit of the Church least if it happen which God forbid that he doth perish with all his house after the example of them which for the like crime were plagued And if yee cease not off from that ye begin with what conscience can I dissemble or forbeare but must nedes punish you let him dissemble with you who list hauing authoritie so to doe truely I will not there shal be no dissimulation found in me And where you write in your letters cōcerning my promotion that it was against the voice of the whole realme that the church did reclaime against it What should I say to you but that ye knowe right well the lie which the mouth doeth willingly speake killeth the soule but especially the wordes of a Priestes mouth ought euer to goe with verity As touching this matter I appeale to your own cōsciēce whether the forme of my election stoode not fully with the consent of them all to whome the election belonged hauing also the assent of the prince by his
subiect In the which Parliament time was prefixed for taking their iourney which shoulde be after the feast of S. Iohn Baptist the next yeare insuing Also they that were croysed were sworne to persist in their purpose and sentence of the popes great curse denoūced to all them that went from the same Parisiens fol. 211. Furthermore for the better speede in his iourny the king through al his realme caused it to be proclaimed that if any marchāt or other had bene iniured at any time by the kings exactours either by oppression or borowing of money let him bring foorth his bil shewing how or wherein and he should be recompensed At which time William Longspatha a worthy warriour with the Bishop of Worcester and certain other great men in the Realme of England mooued with the example of the Frenchmen prepared themselues likewise to the same iourney The next yere after thys ensuing which was 1248. the French king yet still remaining in hys purposed iourney Lady Blanche hys mother also the Byshop of Paris hys brother with the Lordes of his counsaile other nobles and his speciall frends aduertised him with great perswasions to alter hys minde touching that so aduenturous and so daungerous a iourney for that his vow sayd they was vnaduisedly made and in time of his sicknesse when hys minde was not perfectly stablished and what ieoperdies might happen at home it was vncertaine the king of England being on the one side the Emperor on the other side and the Pictauians in the middest so fugitiue and vnstable and as concerning his vow the pope shuld frendly dispense with him considering the necessitie of his realme and weakenesse of his body Besides all thys his mother vppon her blessing required him hys brethren of all loues desired him to stay at home and not in his person to aduēture other might be sent in his roume with no lesse furniture to atchieue that enterprise and to discharge him of his vow especially seeing at the making thereof his senses were feeble hys body weake and reason through sicknesse and very death almost decaied To whome the K. againe for so much sayde he as you say that for feeblenes of my senses I tooke this vow vpon me loe therfore as you here wil me I lay downe the crosse that I tooke and putting his hand to his shoulder tare of the badge of the crosse saying to the Byshop here syr I resigne to you the crosse wherew t I was signed At the sight wherof there was no smal reioysing to all that were there present To whome the king then both altering his countenance and hys speach thus spake My frendes sayde he whatsoeuer I was then in my sicknes now I thāke god I am of perfect sense and reason soūd and now I require my crosse again to be restored vnto me Saying moreouer that no bread shuld come in his head before he were recognised again with the same crosse as he was before At the hearing whereof al there present were astonied supposing that God had some great matter to worke and so mooued no moe questions vnto him Upon this drewe nie the feast of Iohn Baptist which was the time set for the setting foorth And nowe being in a readines the king in few dayes after was entring his iorney But yet one thing lacked For the King perceiuing the mortal variance betwene the pope and good Frederick the Emperour thought best first before his going to haue that matter appeased wherby his way both might be safer through the Emperours countries and also lesse ieoperdy at home after hys departure and therefore vpon the same tooke first his way to Lyons where the Pope was partly to take his leaue but most especially to make recōcilement betwene the Emperour and the Pope Where is to be noted by the way that as touching the good Emperour there was no lette nor staie Who rather sought all meanes how to compasse the popes fauor neuer could obteine it In so much that before he shuld be excommunicated in the Councel of Lyons he not onely answered sufficiently by Thadeus his atturney discharging himselfe against whatsoeuer crimes or obiections could be brought against him but so farre humbled himselfe to the Pope and the Councell that for all detriments damages losses or wrongs done of hys part what amendes soeuer the Pope could or would require he would recompence it to the vttermost This would not be taken Furthermore if the Pope hee sayde coulde not abide his tarying in his owne dominions and Empire he wold goe fight against the Saracens and Turkes neuer to returne into Europe againe offering there to recouer lands kingdomes whatsoeuer did at any time belong to Christendome so that the Pope onely would be contented that Henry his sonne which was then nephew to king Henry here in England should be Emperour after him Neither could this be admitted Then he offered for trueth of hys promise to put in the French king and the king of England to be his Suerties or els for triall of his cause to stand to their award and arbitrement Neither would that be graunted At least he desired that he might come himselfe and answere before the councell But the proude Pope in no case would abide that saying that he did not yet finde himselfe so ready and meete for Martyrdome to haue hym to come thether to the Councell for if he did he would depart himselfe c. Ex Math. Paris fol. 187. An. 1245. This obstinate rancor and deui●ish malice of pope Innocent and hys predecessour against that valiant Emperor and against the Grecians what disturbance and mischiefe it wrought to the whole Churche what strength it gaue to the Saraceus and Tartarians howe it empaired Christian concorde and weakened all Christen lands not only the host of the French king did finde shortly after but christendome euen to this day may and doth feele and rue Neither can in stories be founde any greater cause which first made the Turks so strong to get so much groūd oner christendom as they haue then the pestilēt working of this pope in deposing excommunicating this worthy Emperour For as there was neuer no Emperour of long time which more victoriously preuailed in bridling and keping vnder these enemies of Christ or would haue done more against them then the said Fred. if he might haue ben suffered so after the deposing excommunicating of him when the French king neither woulde abide at home as he was counselled neither was yet able wtout the help of other to withstand the force and multitude of the sayd Saracēs and Tartarians being now ioyned together neither yet could the Emperour be suffered by the pope to rescue the king it followed thereof that the good king being taken prisoner all his army destroied the Turkes thereupon got such a hand and such a courage against the Christians that euer since
so returned they frustrate of their intent The purpose of the Soldan was if he might haue gotten Damiata to send the French king hyer vp in the East countries to Calipha the chiefe Pope of Damascus to encrease the tytles of Mahomet and to be a spectacle or gasing stocke to all those quarters of the worlde The maner of which Calipha was neuer left to any Christen prisoner come out whosoeuer came once in his handes But for somuch as the Soldan missed hys purpose he thought by aduise of counsell to vse the kinges lyfe for hys owne aduauntage in recouering the city of Damiata as in the end it came to passe For although the king at the first was greatly vnwilling and had rather die then surrender Damiata againe to the Saracens yet the conclusion so fel out that the king was put to hys raunsome and the Citty of Damiata was also resigned which citty being twise won and twise lost by the Christians the Soldan or Saladine afterward caused vtterly to be rased downe to the ground The raunsome of the king vppon condition that the Soldan should see himselfe conducted to Achon which I take to be Cesaria came to 60000. markes The number of Frenchmen and others which miscaryed in that warre by water and by land came to 80000 persons tHaec Mat. Parisi fol. 237.238 And thus haue ye the briefe narration of this lamentable peregrination of Lewes the French kyng In whiche when the French men beyng once or twise well offered by the Soldan to haue all the kingdome of Ierusalem and much more in free possession they not contented with that which was reasonable and sufficient for greedines to haue all lost all hauing at length no more then ther naked bodies could couer lying dead vpō the ground al through the originall cause of the Pope and Ddo hys Legate By whole sinister meanes and pestilent pride not only the liues of so many Christians were then lost but also to the sayd Pope is to be imputed all the losse of other citties Christian regions bordering in the same quarters for a●muche as by the occasion hereof the hartes of the Saracens on y● one side were so encouraged the courage of the christias on the other side so much discomfited that in short space after both the dominion of Antioch and of Achon with all other possessions belonging to the Christians were lost to the great diminishing of Christes Church During the tyme of this good king lying at Achon●or Celaria almighty God sent such discorde betwene that Soldan of Halapia and the Soldā of Babilon for letting the king so escape that the sayd Soldan or Salidin of Babilon to winne the king vnto hys syde entred league with him whome both hys brethren and all his nobles almost at home had forsaken and remitted hys raunsome and also restored vnto hym such prisoners as were in the sayde battayle foūd to be aliue Thus the Lord worketh where man commonly forsaketh Math Paris fol. 261. An other cause moreouer why the ruine of this French army may worthely be impured to the Pope is this for that whē Lewes the French king perceauing what a necessary frend and helper Fredericke the Emperour might be to hym in these his affayres agaynst the Saracens and therfore was an earnest suter for him to the Pope to haue hym released yet neyther he nor the king of Englande by any meanes could obtayne it And although the Emperor himselfe offred to pope Innocent with all humble submission to make satisfaction in the Councell of Lyons promising also to expugne all the dominions of the Saracens and neuer to returne into Europe agayn and there to recouer whatsoeuer the Christians had lost so that the pope would onely graūt his sonne Henry to be Emperoure after him yet the proud pope woulde not be mollified but would needes proceede agaynst hym with both swordes that is first with the spirituall sword to accurse hym and then with the temporall sword to depose him frō his Emperial throne Through the occasion wherof not onely the French kinges power went to wracke but also such a fire of mischiefe was kindled agaynst all Christendome as yet to this day cannot be quenched For after this ouerthrowe of the French king and his army the Christians of Antioch and of other Christen regions theraboutes being vtterly discouraged gaue ouer there holdes and Citties Whereby the Saracens and after them the Turkes got such an hand ouer Christēdome as to this day we al haue great cause to rue and lament Besides this where diuers Christians were crossed to go ouer and helpe the Frenche king the pope for mony dispensed with them to tary still at home But as I sayd the greatest cause was that the Emperour whiche coulde haue done most was deposed by the Popes tyranny whereby all those Churches in Asia were left desolate As touching the whiche Emperour Fredericke because we haue diuers and sundry tymes made mētion of him before and for that his story is straunge hys actes wonderous and his conflictes tragicall whiche he sustayned agaynst iiii or v. Popes one after an other I thought not out of story in a whole narration to set forth the same for the reader to consider what is to be iudged of this Cathedrall Sea of Rome which had wrought such abhominable mischiefe in the world as in the sequele of the story following faythfully translated out of Latiue into English is to be seene The whole tragicall history of Fredericke 2. Emperor translated out of the Latine booke of Nich. Cisnerus FRedericke the second came out of the auncient house of the Beblines or Gibillines which Gibillines came of the most famous stocke of the Frenche king and Emperours He had Fredericke Barbarossa to hys Graundfather whose sonne Henricus the 6. was Emperoure after hym who of Constātia the daughter or as some write the neece of Roger the first king of Sicile begate this Fredericke the second This Constantia was 50. yeares of age before she was conceaued with him whom the Emperour Henry 6. to auoyde all doubt and surmise that of her conception childing might be thought and to the peril of the Empeir ensue caused hys regall tent to be pitched abroade in place where euery man might resort And when the tyme of his Queenes trauaile approched Constantia in presence of diuers Ladyes and Matrons and other Gentle women of the Empire a great number was brought a bed and deliuered of this Fredericke the vii day before the Calendes of January in the yeare of Christes incarnation 1193. who by inheritaunce was king of Naples Apuha Calabria and Sicilia Henricus his father shortly after he was borne obtayned of the princes electors that by their oth to hun geuen they would chuse his sonne Fredericke for their Emperor after his discease and so did and immediately called hym Cesar being yet but in his cradle This Henry when he
the same and came to Brundusium and frō thence without any disturbance went forthwith to the sea he fell into the same sickenes agayne by the which he was let of hys purpose which thing saith he he is able to proue by sufficiēt testimony Now the Pope also doth lay the loosing of Damieta and other thinges whiche prospered not well with him vniustly to hys charge when as he had made great prouision for the same iourney both of soldiors other necessary thinges But he that will vnderstande these things more playnely among other Epistles of Petrus de Vineis written in the name of Fridericke let hym read these especially which begin thus In admirationem iusticiam innocentiam Leuate oculos And truely euen as Fredericus the Emperour declareth in his letters concerning thys matter all the olde writers of Germany doe accord and agree in the same Math. Parisiensis also briefly collecteth the effect of an other letter which he wrote to the king of England complayning vnto him of the excommunication of the Pope agaynst him Whose wordes are these And amongst other Catholicke Princes sayth he He also wrote his letters vnto the king of England embulled with gold Declaring in the same that the Bishop of Rome so flamed with the fire of auarice and manifest concupiscence that not being contented with the goodes of the Churche which were innumerable but also that he shamed not to bring Princes Kinges and Emperours to be subiectes and contributors to hym and so to disherite them and put them from their kingly dignities And that the king of Englande himselfe had good experiment thereof whose father that is to say King Iohn they so long held excommunicate till they had brought both him and his dominions vnder seruitude and to pay vnto hym tribute Also that many haue experience of the same by the Earle of Tholouse and diuers other Princes which so long held theyr persons and landes in interdict till they might bring them into like seruitude I pretermit sayth he the Symonies and sondry fortes of exactions the lyke whereof was neuer yet heard which dayly are vsed amongest the ecclesiasticall persons besides their manifest vsury yet so cloked and coloured to the simple sort that therewithall they infect the whole world They be the sugred and embalmed Simonistes the insatiable horse leaches or bloudsuckers saying that the Churche of Rome is our mother and nurse where as it is in deede the most polyng Court in the vniuersall world the roote and right mother of all mischiefe-vsing and exercising no motherly doings or deeds but bringing forth the right exercises of a wicked stepdame makyng sufficient proofe thereof by her manifest fruites to all the worlde apparaunt Let the Barons of England consider whether this be true or not whom Pope Innocent by his bulles with one consent encouraged to ryse and rebell agaynst their soueraigne Lord and Prince king Iohn your father as an obstinate enemy to the Church of Rome But after that the king farre out of square remembring himselfe had crouched vnto him and obliged both himselfe and kingdome to the Church of Rome more liker a woman then a man and that the wise Barons whome the Pope had first mayntained and stirred up without all shame eyther of the world or feare of God had done the same sought howe he might with gaping mouth deuoure and consume the sweet fat from thē whom he had miserably to death betrayed and disherited as the maner of the Romayne Bishops is By whose greedy auarice it came to passe that England the Prince of prouinces was brought vnder miserable subiection and tribute Behold the maners and conditions of our Romaine Byshops behold the snares wherwith these prelates do seeke to intangle men withall to wype their noses of their money to make their children bondmen to disquiet such as seeke to liue in peace being clothed with sheepes clothing when in deede they be but rauening Wolues sending their Legates hither and thither to excommunicate and to suspend as hauing power to punish whom they list not sowing the seed that is the word of God to fructifie but that they may bribe and pole mens purses and reape that which they neuer did sow Thus commeth it to passe that they spoyle the holy Churches and houses of God which should be the refuge for the poore and the mansion houses of sainctes which our deuout and simple parentes to that purpose builded and ordeined to the refection of poore men and pilgrimes and to the sustentation of suche as were well disposed and religious But these degenerate varlets whome onely letters hath made both mad and malipert doe striue and gape to be both kinges and Emperours Doubtles the Primatiue Church was builded and layd in pouerty and simplicitie of life and then as a fruitfull mother begate she those her holy children whom the Catologe of Saintes nowe maketh mention of and verily no other foundation can be laid of any other Church then that which is layd by Iesus Christ. But this Church as it swimmeth and waloweth in all superstuitie of riches and doth build and rayse the frame in all superstuous wealth and glory So is it to be feared least the walles thereof in time fall to decay and when the walles be downe vtter ruine and subuersion follow after Agaynst vs he knoweth that is the searcher of all hearts how furiously these Catholiques rage and go to work Saiyng therefore excommunicating me that I will not take vpon me the iourney I haue promised beyond the seas whereas ineuitable and most vrgent causes and perils as well to the Churche of God as also to the Empire besides the annoyaunce of myne infirmitie and sicknes do deteine me at home and stay the same but specially the insolency of the rebellious Sicilians For why neither do● we thinke it safety to our Empire not expedient to the Christian state that we should now take our iourney into Asia leauing behinde vs at home such intestine and ciuill warres no more then for a good surgeon to lay healing plaister to a grieuous wounde newe striken with the sworde and made In conclusion also to this he addeth admonishing all the Princes of the world that they would beware and take heede by their auaricious iniquitie of lyke perill and daunger to themselues Because that as the prouerbe is It behoueth him to look about that seeth his neighbours house on fire Thus much out of Parisiens pag 69. But now that Fredericus the Emperor might in very deed stop that slaunders of the cruell Pope which did persist and goe forward still in his excommunication agaynst him And that he might declare in the whole world howe that the last yeare he torslowed not his iourny by his own voluntary will but by necessitie when he had deutied and prepared all thing meet for the warre and that he had gathered together and leuied a great army of mē
He departed from thence to Brundusium committing the gouernment of his kingdome to Renaldus the sonne of Duke Spoletus and to Anselmus a Baron of Instigensis and came by sea to Cyprus with his hoste From Cyprus the Emperour with his whole nauy sayled into Ioppa which City he fortified for that the passages by land were stopped and kept of the enemies And by sea might he not passe nor trauaile by meanes of the extreme weather and tempest whereby it came to passe that within short space they lacked vitayles and were sore afflicted with famine Thē fell they to prayer and made their humble supplicatiō to God with whose teares his wrath being appealed the great tempest and long cōtinued foule weather ceased whereby the seas now being calme they had both vitaile great plēty and all other necessary things for their need brought vnto them wherby immediately it came to passe that both the Emperour his army as also the inhabitauntes of Ioppa were greatly refreshed and animated and on the other side their enemies being disappoynted of theyr purpose were greatly discouraged In so much that the king of Egipt who with great power accōpanied with Scarapho his brother prince of Gaza and the Prince of Damascus their nephew with many other Dukes and nobles hauing incamped themselues within one dayes iourny of Ioppa thinking to haue besieged the same were contented vpon the comming of the Emperors Harolds vnto them to intreat of a peace Whereupon Embassadours were sent vnto them with the Emperours demaunds right profitable to the Christian common weale The Sarasens immediately consulting vpon the same graunted thereunto so that a peace for x. yeares was concluded was confirmed by solempne othe on the behalfe of both Princes according to their seueral vsages and maner the forme and condition of which peace briefly collected are these First that Fridericke the Emperour should be crowned and annoynted king of Ierusalem according to the maner of the kinges of Ierusalem before him Secondly that all the lands possessions which were situate betwixt Ierusalem and Prolomaida the greatest part of Palastina and Cities of Tyrus and Sydon which were in Syria and at other territories which Baldwinus the 4. at any time had and occupyed there shoulde be deliuered vnto him onely certayne castles reserued Thirdly that he might fortifie and builde what fortresses and castles he thought good citties and townes in all Syria and Palestina Fourthly that all the prisoners which were in the Saracens hands should be raunsomed freely and sent home and agayne that the Saracens might haue leaue without armour to come into the Temple where the Lords sepulcher is to pray and that they should holde and keepe still Chratum and the kinges mount Friderick now for that he thought the cōclusion of this peace to be so necessary as also profitable for at Christians and had also gotten as much thereby as if the warres had continued he should he sent his Legates with letters into the west to all Christen kinges princes and potentates as also to the bishop of Rome declaring vnto them the circumstance and successe of his iourny and warres as partly ye haue heard Requiring thē that they also woulde praise and geue God thankes for his good successe and profitable peace concluded And desireth the Pope that for as much as he had now accōplished his promise neither that there was any cause now wherefore he should be with hym displeased that he might be reconciled and obtaine his fauor In the meane season the Emperour with all hys army marcheth to Ierusalem where vppon Easter day in the yeare of our Lorde 1229. hee was with great triumphe comfort of al his nobles and also the Magistrates of that kingdome onely the Patriarche of Cyprus the kings Legate and Oliuer the maister or captayne of the Temple with his company excepted solemnly and with great applause crowned king After this he rerdifieth the Citty and Walles thereof which by the Saracens were beaten downe and battered After that he furnisheth it with munition he buildeth vy the Churches and temples that were ruinous he fortifieth Nazarethum and Ioppen with strong garrisons vita●e and all other thinges necessary Now see and behold I pray you whilest that Fredericke was thus occupyed in the kingdome of Ierusalem what practises the Pope had in Italy Not I warrant you any whit at all carefull in the affayres of the Christian commōwealth but studiyng and labouring what mischiefe and spite he might worke agaynst the Emperoure whom of a set purpose he had so occupied partly for hate and partly to enriche himselfe in Asia and Ierusalem so farre out of Italy ye may be sure First he caused the souldiours whiche the Emperour sent for out of Germany to the mayntenaunce of the holy warres to be stayde as they passed through Italy letting them of their iourney and tooke from them and spoyled them of all such prouision as they had And not onely this but he sent secretly also hys letters into Asia to those that were of his owne fac●ion that is to the Patriarche of Ierusalem and souldiors that kept the temple and the hospitall intising and inciting thē to rebell agaynst the Emperour whiche thing Blondus himselfe that Popish Parasite or historiographer dissu●uleth or hideth not But that he furthermore disswaded the princes of the Saracens that they should make no league nor take any truce with Fridericke neither deliuer vp vnto hym the Crowne and Kingdome of Ierusalem Whiche letters as they were manifest testimonyes of his trecherie and treason towardes him whom God had instituted and made his liege Lord and soueraigne and mightiest potentate vpon earth so was it hys will that he should come to the knowledge therof and that those letters shoulde fall into his handes And that he kept the same letters for the more credible testimony thereof in the same his last Epistle vnto the Christian Princes he proresteth The copy of which letter amongest his other Epistles you shall haue expressed Neither were the Popes letters written to that leauened secte and factious in vayne For the Patriarche and his Collegioners which tooke their name of the Temple did mightely repugne agaynst Fredericke They raysed a tumult in Ptolomaida agaynst him they accused him and his Legates openly of treason and did malipartly boldly wtstand the right worthy and good order he made amongest them But as God would by the helpe of the inhabitantes of Pisa and the Genowayes and the Dutch souldiours both their false accusations were refelled and also their seditious purpose tumult expressed And thys was the cause that when all other men reioyced and were glad of the Emperours coronation they as wicked confederatours were heauy therefore and obtrectours of hys worthy laud and fame The Pope when he had thus conspired agaynst Fredericke and had betrayed him to the publicke enemy of all Christen men the Turke he coulde
thing if he refused to do that then the same were in great danger to be subiect to the Tartarians to the no litle peril of the whole Empire And said further that the cause wherfore he wyth more instance required the same was That so many christian men and countreis made such pitiful lamentation in this their great calamitie miserie that there was none able to helpe them which sayeth he is as great shame as may be to the whole Christian common state and Empire And also sayde that if the malice of this barbarous people were not suppressed that then he thought they wold make inuasion vpon the Empire and prouinces of the same The Emperor although he thought it very requisite that with all conuenient speede this mifchiefe should be remedied and preuēted yet notwithstanding his great enemie the Pope with hys confederates was the only let and hinderance therof For when he saw and perceiued that he himselfe could doe no good and onely laboured in vaine in seeking peace with the Pope he gaue commaundement to Boiemus and Boius to intreat and persuade wyth him And considering the imminent perill like to ensue by reason of such ciuile dissention to the whole state of Christendom that he would take vp and conclude a peace and mitigate some what his fierce and wrathful moode Wherfore when he saw furder that nether by that means of intreaty nor any other the Pope would desist from his stubburne and malicious froward purpose He writeth againe to the king of Hungarie the he was right sory and greatly lamented their miserable state that hee much desired to relieue the neede and necessity he and all the rest stood in But why that he coulde not redresse the same nor stande him then in any stead he blamed greatly the bishop of Rome who refusing all intreatie of peace could not wythout great perill to himselfe depart out of Italie least that when he shoulde come to the aide of hym by the Popes mischieuous imaginations he shuld be in perill of losing all at home Notwtstanding hee sent Conradus Celar king of Bohemia other princes more of Germany to resist and withstād the enemie as much as in them lay to do The great army and nomber of such soldiours as ware the crosse by the Popes assignement deferred their iourney against the Tartarians and had commaundement giuen them by that Albertus the Popes procurator to tary and abide at home till they should be called for in battaile to fight against the Emperour This was the louing zeale and affection of the Pope and hys adherentes to conclude in this time of calamitie towards the Christian state and common wealth That he had rather bend his force and reuenge his malice vpon the christian good Emperour then either he himself to withstande or suffer and permit by conclusion of any profitable peace that this most bloudy and cruell Tartarian should be let and restrained from so great hauock spoil slaughter of the Christen men And yet forsooth these mē wil seme to haue the greatest regard of al other to the Christian preseruation and thinke to haue the supremacie geuen therin what thing els is this then manifest mockerie and deceiuing of the people But notwithstanding euē in the midst of this spoile and hauocke of Polonia Bohemia and Hūgaria was it determined that at Libussa the princes confederate shuld be assembled about the deposing of the Emperour and creation of another But nowe notwtstanding the prouident foresight and wise pollicie of the Emperour as you heard before in restraining the passages both by the sea land who had speciall regard thereunto and gaue most straight charge that none should passe without priuie searche and examination as one hauing sufficient triall as well in hys owne person as by the example of his predecessours what great mischiefe dissention by their Legates euery way sent out they had procured both to the Imperial state and dignity and to the whole coūtrey of Germanie yet found they such meanes and wrought such pollicies that they had not only secrete passage and repassage with their letters and spials into all places of Christendome where they listed but also so laboured the matter and handled the same that the long continued league of amitie betwene the French king and the Emperour whose predecessors as also they themselues had many yeares reuerently obserued in Christian concord vnitie was by this seditious prelate arrogant vicar of sathan now either vtterly infringed or els in variable suspence as by their letters eche to other and heere vnder ensuing are to be red and seene which for the more probability of this history of Fredericke not being long or greatly tedious I thought mete here to intext and place The Epistle of the French King to Fredericke the Emperour touching the imprisoning of certaine Cardinals of Fraunce HEtherto noble Emperour hath the good opinion and great confidence many yeeres in mutuall loue established betwixt vs lasted and continued wel hoping that no such cause shuld rise betwixt vs to hatch either hatred or other occasion offensiue betwene your highnes empire our kingdō Especially seeing that al our predecessors Kings of France late of most worthy memory til these our daies haue ben so zelously affected to the most high and regall state of your Empire As that also we after whom God hath placed successiuely to raigne as king haue ben none otherwise minded nor affected towardes the same None otherwise also on their behalfe haue the auncient and renoumed Emperours of Rome our neighbours and your predecessours shewed themselues towards vs eche other esteming the Empire and kingdom of Fraunce as one and faithfully conseruing together the vnitie of peace and concord In somuch that there hath not chaunced betwene them these many yeares so much as one sparke of discorde and dissention But this notwithstanding we for our parte cannot but greatly maruell not without good cause are troubled and vexed That without desert or any offence you haue taken the Prelates of our realme vpon the sea making their repaire to the see Apostolicall to the which as well by their faith as their obedience they stande bounde and are obedient neither coulde they withstand the Pope his commandement these haue you imprisoned and so still deteine the same Whereat we do your maiestie to were we are not wel pleased neither yet take it in so good part as you peraduenture thinke we do For by their owne letters we vnderstande they had excogitate nothing preiudicial to your imperiall estate and celsitude although the Pope had prosecuted therein more then became him to doe Wherefore seeing that there is no cause why ye should detaine them it is meete and becommeth no lesse your magnificence but that you restore vnto vs and set at libertie the saide Prelates of our Realme wherein also you shall appease our grudge and kepe vs your friend which accompt
violent shedding of bloud in any churchyard wherby the interdict taketh place the Clergy causeth a certain impositiō to be leuied of the parishioners there for the salary towards the restoring therof Although some of the parishioners be of an exempt iurisdictiō yea although he which shed the bloud be able to pay the whole taxe which they leuyed and more to 55. Item certaine Chaplaines affirme to haue certayn Apostolicall priuileges by vertue wherof they may appoint what Iudges they will yea and oftentimes of their own house so be iudges in their owne cause which is playne against the law wherby often times it happeneth that after great proces expenses had made in any great cause of inquest more often about reality then otherwise when they haue notice by the Proctors and Aduocates that they shall haue the foyle therin they reuoke forthwith those named Iudges and so the kings subiectes are damaged and can haue no iustice nor redresse at their handes 56. Itē if any temporall man call a Clerke before a secular iudge in a case of inheritance the ecclesiastical iudge procureth a stopp to be made therein attributing to themselues the cognitiō therof and so by adiourning remouing the lay man is constrayned to make satisfaction 57. Item the clergy chalengeth the cognition of such causes as maried Clerkes being marchauntes and artificers do commence when by law it doth appertaine to the temralty especially about the trade of Marchaundise 58. Item they oftentimes make interdictions in many of the kings townes and holdes and cause the diuine seruice to cease agaynst the priuiledges graunted by many of the high Bishops of Rome to our soueraigne Lord and maister the King 59. Item to and for the maintaynance keeping of theyr temporalties they appoynt Baylifs other officers who if they do offēd may not condignly be punished according to law and iustice 60. Item the Ecclesiasticall Iudges haue promoters belonging vnto them who whē any man is excommunicated be it right or be it wrong they cause to be made that no man shall work or do anything for him that is excommunicate whereby the landes and vines are often times vnlooked to and vntilled to the no small preiudice of the king and his common people 61. Item the foresayd Promoters cause Citation to be made out by vertue wherof they call in one citatiō 20.30 40. persons to appeare for participating with such Interdicted persons taking of some 10. of other some 20. s. as much as they be able to make wherby the commō people are much oppressed 62. Item the Ecclesiasticall Iudges cause all the Aduocates of their courtes to be sworne that none shall retayne them of their Counsell agaynst any of them without their licence whereby oftentimes the poore man quite leeseth his right and the Kinges cause is delayed Because hys Solliciters cannot freely retayne counsell without speciall licence 63. Item they will make Inuentories of theyr gooddes which dye intestate or without making of will And will haue the possession of thēir goods as wel moueable as vnmoueable in theyr owne hands to distribute to the hetres or to whom they list 64. Item the execution also of Testamentes they take to their own hands taking inuentories of dead mens goods and keeping and disposing them to the heires after their pleasure And haue officials properly deputed for the execution therof 65. Item they will not geue credite sometimes to testamentes made before witnesse vnlesse they be first by theyr owne Officials approued After he had thus spoken the prelats required to haue time to answere therunto wherupon was appoynted for the same the Friday next ensuing On the which day the Bishop Eduen Archbishop or Senon elect in the name of the whole clergy answered for them all before the king holding his Parliament as that day at Uicenas and thus he there proposided For somuch as the Lord Peter Cugner of late propounding against the Church of Fraunce took to his Theame that is written in the 22. of Mathew Render vnto Cesar that which is Cesars and vnto God that which is Gods by which words he sayd two points were to be noted First the reuerence and subiection of the Prelates that they ought to haue to the king their soueraigne Secondly the deuision of the temporall iurisdictiō from the spirituall The which first part he proued out of the first Epistle of Peter in the second Chapter where it is written Submit your selues vnto euery creature for the Lordes sake whether it be vnto the king as vnto the superior or vnto gouernours as vnto them that are sent of him for the punishment of euill doers and for the praise of them that doe well The second poynt he proued by the wordes of our Sauiour Christ in the 22. Chap. of Luke where the Apostle sayth Lord behold here are 2. swords And he said vnto them it is enough signifying by the two swordes the two iurisdictions And in likewise out of the 17. of Math. where Christ would pay tribute for him and Peter Geuing hereby an example how that Ecclesiasticall persons were bound to pay and yeld to the temporall power the tēporalities which also is proued in the 11. quest prim cap Si tributum cap magnum And further because this is proued by mans law where it is sayd 2. great gifts are bestowed Priesthood and Empire The priesthood to rule ouer matters diuine the Empire to beare domination ouer humaine matters wherby he cōcluded that when these iurisdictions are distincted of God The one being geuen and limited to the church and the other to the temporalty That in no wise the Church ought to intermeddle or to haue any thing to do with the temporall iurisdiction For it is written in the 22. of the Prouerb You ought not to passe the old limits bounds which the forefathers haue set And well by the way be bringeth in this word olde auncient Because customes brought in to the contrary be of no force but rather are coūted abuses corruptions Neither can prescriptiō take place for that ius fisci is inprescriptible neither cā the king abrogate frō himselfe such law nor renoūce his right prouing the same by many chapters contained in the 10. Dift Wherefore seeing the king at what time he was crowned sware not onely not to alienate or infringe the lawes of his realme but also to call in such lawes as were alienated vsurped either by the Church or by any other the king was bound by his oath to reuoke the same abuses In especiall he did exhibite many articles in writing wherin as he sayd the Church did vsurpe vpon the iurisdictiō temporall To answere these premisses which conciling of the places vnder protestatiō whatsoeuer I say or shall say it is not to ground or make any finall iudgemēt or determinatiō herein but onely to informe the consciēce of our soueraigne Lord the king and
proceeded betwene the Earles sister and the foresayde Peter albeit sore against the Earles mind Gaueston thus restored and dignified was so surprised in pride and exaltation more then euer before that he disdained derided al other whose rule power more more encreased In somuch that he hauing the guiding of all the kings iewels treasure cōueied out of the kings iewell house at Westminster a table a paire of tressels of gold vnto certain marchants beyōd the sea with other iewels ●o to his behoofe to the great impouerishing both of the king Quene and of the land And ouer all that brought the king by meane of his wanton conditions to manifold vices as aduoutrie and suche other like Wherfore the Lords seing the mischief that daily increased by occasion of this vnhappie man tooke theyr coūsell together at Lyncolne and there concluded to voide him again out of England so that shortly after he was exiled againe and went into Flaunders for in Fraunce or hys owne country he durst not appeare for feare of Philip the French king to whō the Queene of England hys daughter had sent ouer great complaintes of the sayd Gaueston who had so impouerished her the whole Court that she had not wherewith to maintaine her state Uppon whych complaint the French king through al his dominiōs layd strait watch to apprehend the sayd Gaueston but he not vnwarned thereof secretly coasted into Flaunders from whēce it was not long but he was fet againe by the king as in further processe followeth so much was the kinges hart infatuated by this wicked person About this yeare or the next before came in first the crowched Friers And also began first the knightes of the order of S. Iohn Baptist otherwise called the knights of Rhodes for that they by manly knighthood put out the Turkes from the Isle of Rhodes In the history of king Edward this kinges father before precedent mention was made of Pope Clemēt the 5. who succeeded after Benedict also of putting down of the templaries which in this yeare hapned by the meanes of the French king who as he caused to be burned in the City of Paris this yeare 54. Tēplaries with the great maister of the same order so by his procurement the foresayd Pope Clement called a Councell at Uienna where the whole order and sect of Templaries being cōdemned was shortly after by the consent of all Christen kinges deposed all in one day After whome the Frenche king thought to make his sonne king of Ierusalem and to conuert to hym all the landes of the sayd Templaries But Clement the Pope would thereto not agree transferring all their lands to the order of hospitulers for the great summe of money geuen for the same The cause why these impious Templaries were put downe was so abhominable and filthy that for the reuerence of chaste eares it were better not told if it be true that some write An other matter worthy to be noted of like abhomination I thought here to inserte touching a certayne Noonery in Fraunce called Prouines within the which at the clensing and casting of a fishpond were found many bones of young children and the bodyes also of some infantes as yet whole vnconsumed vpon occasion whereof diuers of the Nunnes of the sayd Nunnery to the nūber of 27. were had to Paris and there imprisoned what became of them afterward I finde not in mine author Arpontacus Burdegalensis In the the same Counsell also was decreed by the sayd Clement that all religious orders exempted shold be subiect vnder the common lawes as other were But Cistercian Monkes with mony and great giftes redeemed their priuileges and exemption of the pope and so had them graūted Tho. Wals. These Cistercians sped better herein then did the Minorites of Franciscās in theyr suite Of the whiche Franciscans when certayne of them had offered vnto the sayd Pope Clement 40. thousand florences of gold beside other siluer that the Pope woulde dispence with them to haue landes and possessions agaynst their rule the Pope asked them where was that money They aunswered in the marchant mens hands So the space of three dayes being geuen thē to bring forth these marchants the P. absolued the marchaunts of their bond made to the Fryers and commaunded all that money to be imployed and reuerted to hys vse Declaring to the Fryers that he would not infringe or violate the rule of S. Frauncis lately canonised neither ought he to do it for any money And thus the beggerly riche Fryers lost both their money and theyr indulgence Ex eodem autore Concerning this pope Clement the 5. Sabellicus writeth that he excommunicated the Uenecians for ayding and preferring of Azoda vnto the estate of Ferrary and wrote his letters throughout all Europe condemning them as enemies of the Church and geuing their goods as a lawfull pray vnto all men which caused them to sustaine great harme But Frauncis Dandulus a Noble man of Uenice being Embassadour from the Uenecians to the sayd Clement for the obtayning of their absolution and safegard of their Citty and country and for the pacifying of the popes fury toward them was fayne so to humble himselfe before this proud tyrannicall Prelate that hee suffered a chaine of yron to be tyed about hys neck and so he lye down flat before his table and so to catch the bones fragmentes that fell from his table as it had bene a dog till the Popes fury was toward them asswaged So that after that he in reproche because he so humbled himselfe for the behalfe and helping of his country was of some called a dog But the Citty of Uenice shewed themselues not vnkinde agayn to Dandulus for hys gentle good will declared to his country For as he had abased himselfe before the vile and ignominious condition of a dog for his Countries sake so they extolled him with as muche glory agayne being returned home decking and adourning him after the best aray with the chiefe princely ornamentes of the Citty to make him amendes for his former reproch receaued Sabel Ennead 9. li. 7 Concerning the Constitutions of this pope Clement and of his decretals and Clementines and how Henricus the Emperour in his dayes was poysoned in receauing of the Sacrament ye haue heard before About this tyme Robert Winchelsey Archbishop of Canterbury whō thys kinges father had banished before was released and returned home from Rome Those thinges thus declared let vs proceede by the Lordes grace to the next yeare which is of the Lord. 1311. the fifth yeare after this kings raygne In the which yeare compting the yeare from Michelmasse to the same feast agayne as then the vsage of the Realme was Peter Gaueston who had wandred the countryes about could finde no safe resting place notwithstanding he was vtterly banished vpon forfeiting life and goodes out of the realm yet trusting vpon the kinges
in an other worke of free iustification by grace And extenuated merits saying that they are no causes efficient of our saluation but onely sine qua non that is to say that workes be no cause of our iustification but yet our iustificatiō goeth not without them For the which his doctrine most sound and Catholicke he was condemned by the Pope an 1324. by the Popes decree extrauagant cap. Licet intra doctrinam Concerning the which man and his doctrine I thought good thus much to commit to history to the entent men may see that they which charge this doctrine now taught in the Church with the note of noueltye or newnes how iguoraunt and vnskilfull they be in the historyes and order of times fore past In the same part of condemnation at the same tyme also was Ioannes de Gunduno an 1330. and contayned also in the foresayd Extrauagāt with Marsilius Patauinus Whiche Ioannes wrote much vpon Aristotle and Auerrois and are yet remayning And no doubt but he wrote also of diuinity but not vnlike that these workes haue bene abolished In the same number and cataloge commeth also Guillermus Ockam who was in the yeare of our Lord 1326. as is afore mentioned pag. 375. and wrote likewise in defence of Ludouicus the Emperour agaynst the Pope and also in defence of Michael Generall of Grayfriers whom the Pope had excommunicated cursed for an hereticke Diuers treatises were by the sayd Ockam set forth whereof some are extant and in print as his questions distinctions some are extinct and suppressed as Ascentius reporteth quoòd essent aliquando asperiora Some againe be published vnder no name of the author being of his doing as the dialogue betwene the souldiour and the clarke wherin it is to be coniected what bookes and workes this Ockam had collected agaynst the Pope Of this Ockā Iohn Sledane in his history inferreth mention to his great cōmendation whose wordes be these William Ockam in time of Ludouicus 4. Emperor did florish about the yere of our Lord 1326. Who among other thinges wrote of the authority of the Bishop of Rome In the which booke he handleth these 8. questions very copiously whether both the administrations of the Bishops office and of the Emperors may be in one man 2. Whether the Emperour taketh his power and authority onely of God or els of the Pope 3. Whether the Pope and Church of Rome haue power by Christ to set and place kinges and Emperors and to commit to them theyr iurisdiction to be exercised 4. Whether the Emperor being elected hath full authority vpon the sayd his election to administer his Empire 5. Whether other kinges besides the Emperor and King of Romaines in that they are consecrated of priestes receiue of thē any part of their power 6. Whether the sayd kings in any case be subiect to their cōsecrators 7. Whether if the sayd kings should admit any newe sacrifice or should take to themselues the Diadeine without any further consecration they shoulde thereby lose their kingly right and title 8. Whether the seuen princes electors geue as much to the election of the Emperour as succession rightfull geueth to other kings Upon these questions he disputeth and argueth with sundry arguments and sundry reasons on bothe sides at length decideth the matter on the parte of the ciuil magistrate and by occasion therof entreth into the mention of the Popes decrees Extrauagant declaring how litle force or regard is to be geuen therunto Trithemius maketh mention of one Gregorius Ariminensis a learned a famous and right godly man who not much differing from the age of this Ockam about the yeare of our Lorde 1350. Disputed in the same doctrine of grace and free will as we doe nowe and dissented therein from the Papistes and Sophisters counting them woorse then Pelagians Of the like iudgement and in the same time was also Andreas de Castro as apeareth super lit 1. Sentent dist 45. and Burdianus vppon the Ethiques of Aristotle which both maintained the grace of that gospel as is now in the church receiued aboue 200. yeres since And what should I speake of the Duke of Burgundy named Eudo who at the same time An. 1350. disswaded the French king not to receiue in hys land the new founde cōstitutions decretall Extrauagant within his realme whose sage counsail then geuen yet remaineth among the French kings records as witnesseth Charol Molinaeus Dante 's an Italian wryter a Florentine lyued in the time of Ludouicus themperour about the yere of our lord 1300. and tooke his parte with Marsilius Patauinus against three sortes of men which he sayd were enemyes to the truth That is the pope Secondly the order of religious men which count thēselues the children of the church whē they are that children of the deuil their father Thirdly the Doctors of decrees and decretals Certain of his wrytings be extant abroad wherein he prooueth the Pope not to be aboue the Emperour nor to baue any right or iurisdiction in the Empire He cōfuteth the Donation of Constantine to be a forged and a fained thing as which neither did stande with any lawe or right For the which he was taken of many for an hereticke He complaineth moreouer very much the preaching of Gods worde to be omitted and in stede thereof the vaine fables of monkes and friers to be preached and beleued of the people and so the flock of Christ to be fed not with the foode of the Gospell but wyth winde The Pope sayeth he of a pastor is made a wolfe to wast the church of Christ and to procure with his Clergie not the word of God to be preached but his own Decrees In his canticle of purgatory he declareth the Pope to be the whore of Babylon And to her ministers to some hee applieth 2. hornes to some 4. As to the Patriarches whō he noteth to be the tower of the sayd whore Babilonicall Ex libris Dante 's Italice Hereunto may be added the saying out of the booke of Iornandus unprinted with the foresaid Dante 's that forsomuch as Antichrist commeth not before the destruction of the Empire therefore such as go about to haue the Empire extinct are forrunners and messengers in so doing of Antichrist Therfore let the Romaines sayth he and their Byshops beware least their sinnes and wickednes so deseruing by the iust iudgement of God the priesthood be taken from them Furthermore let all the prelates and princes of Germany take hede c. And because our aduersaries which obiecte to vs the newnes of our doctrine shall see the course and fourme of this religion now receaued not to haue ben eyther such a newe thing nowe or a thing so straunge in times past I will adde to these aboue recited master Taulerus a preacher of Argentine in Germany An. 1350. Who contrary to the Popes proceedings taught openly against al mennes merites
places of the Canon law 25. q. 1. Quae ad per. petuam Those thinges which be generally ordeyned for publique vtilitye ought not to be altered by any chaunge c. Item the decrees of the sacrat Canons none ought to keepe more then the Bishop Apostolicall c. Ibidem Item to alter or to ordeine any thing agaynst the decrees of the fathers is not in the authoritye or power uo not of the Apostolicall sea Ibidem The fourth opinion was that the Friers by the licēce of the Pope and of the Bishops might lawfully heare cōfessions and the people might be of them confessed and absolued But yet notwithstanding it was reason cōueniēt honest and profitable that once in the yeare they should be confessed to theyr curats although being cōfessed before to the friers because for the administration of Sacraments especially at Easter Of which opinion was Gulielinus de monte Landuno Henricus de Gandauo also held not onely to be conuenient but also that they were bound so to doe The fift opinion was that albeit the Friers might at all times and at Easter also heare confessions as the Curates did yet it was better and more safe at the time of Easter to confesse to the curates thē to the Friers And of this opiniō was this our Armachanus of whom we presently now entreat ¶ And thus haue ye as in a briefe summe opened vnto you what was the matter of contention betweene the friers and the Church men What Popes made with the friers and what Popes made against thē Moreouer what learned mē disputed against them in Paris and other places and what were theyr opinions The matter of contention about the Friers stoode in foure pointes First preaching without licence of Curats Second in hearing cōfessions Thyrd in burying Fourth in begging and taking of the people ¶ Popes that mainteined the Friers were Honorius 3 were Gregorius 9 were Alexande 4 were Clemens 4 were Boniface 8 were Clemens 5 ¶ Popes that mainteiued Curates were Innocentius 9 were Innocentius 4 were Martinus 4 were Benedictus 11 ¶ The learned men that disputed agaynst the Friers were Guilielmus de S. Amore. All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Barnardus super capitulum Omnis vtriusque sexus All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Godfridus de Fontibus All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Henricus de Gandauo All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Guilielmus de Landuno All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Ioannes Monachus Cardini All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Ioannes de Poliaco All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant were Armachanus All these were cōdemned by the Popes or els caused to recant These considerations and circūstaunces hetherto premised for the more opening of this present cause of Armachanus susteined agaynst the idle beggerly sects of friers in whom the reader may well perceiue Antechrist plainly reigning and fighting against the Church Now remayneth that as I haue before declared the trauelles troubles of diuers godly learned mē in the Church striuing agaynst the sayd friers continually from the time of Guliel de Amore hetherto So now it remaineth that for so much as this our Armachanus labouring and in the same cause susteined the like conflict with the same Antechrist we likewise collect and open his reasons and arguments vttered in the consistorye and in the audience of the Pope himselfe wherwith he maynteyneth the true doctrine and cause of the Church agaynst the pestiferous canker creeping in by these friers after subtle wayes of hypocrisy to corrupt the sincere simplicity of Christes holy fayth perfect Testament The which reasons and argumentes of his with the whole processe of his doinges I thought good and expedient for the vtility of the Church more amply and largely to discourse and prosecute for that I note in the sects institutions and doctrine of these friers such subtle poyson to lurke more pernitious hurtfull to the religion of Christ and soules of Christians then all men peraduenture do consider Thus Armachanus ioyning with the clergy of England disputed and contended with the friers here of England an 1358. about a double matter Wherof the one was concerning confessiō and other exchetes which the friers encroched in parish Churches agaynst the Curates and publicke pastors of Churches The other was concerning wilfull beggery and pouerty which the Friers then tooke vpon them not vpon any necessity being otherwise strōg inough to worke for their liuing but onely vpon a wilfull and affected profession For the which cause the Friers appealed him vp to the court of Rome The occasion wherof thus did rise ¶ It befell that Armachanus vpon certayne busines comming vp to London found there certayne Doctours disputing and contending about the begging of Christ our Sauior Wherupon he being greatly vrged and requested oft times therūto at request made seuen or eight sermōs vnto the people at London wherein he vttered 9. conclusions Wherof the first and principal conclusion was touching the matter of the friers priuiledges in hearing confessions His conclusion was this First that if a doubt or question be moued for hearing cōfessiōs which of 2. places is rather to be chosē The parish church is to be preferred before the church of the friers Secondly being demaunded whether is to be taken to heare the confession of the parishioners the Parson or the Curate or the frier It is to be sayde rather the Parson or the Curate Thirdly that our Lord Iesus Christ in his humayne conuersatiō was alwayes poore but not that he loued pouerty or did couet to be poore Fourthly that our Lord Iesus Christ did neuer beg wilfully professing to be poore Fiftly that our Lord Iesus Christ did neuer teach wilfully to beg or to professe wilfull beggery The sixt conclusion was that Christ our Lord did cōtrary that men ought not wilfully or purposely wythout meere necessity to beg Seuēthly that there is neither wisedome nor holines for any man to take vpon him wilfull beggery perpetually to be obserued The eight that it is not agreing to the rule of the Obseruants or Friers Minorites to obserue wilful pouerty The last conclusion was touching the Bull of Pope Alexander the 4. whiche condemned the libell of the maisters of Paris that the same Bull touched none of these 7. last conclusions Upon these 9. conclusions premised Armachanus being appealed cited and brought vp to the presence of the Pope began to proue the same his foresaid conclusions or assertions vnder protestation made that his intētion was not to affirme any thing contrary to the christian fayth or to the Catholicke doctrine or that should be preiudicial or destructiue to the orders of the begging friers such as were
Oligarchia This may we playnely see and learne in the body of man to the which Plutarchus writing to Thracinius doth semblablye compare the common wealth In the which body if the sustināce receiued should all runne to one member so that that member should be to much exceedingly pampered and all the other parts to much pined that body could nor long continue So in the body of the wealth ecclesiastical if some who be the heads be so enormely ouergrown in riches and dignity that the weaker members of the body be scant able to beare them vp there is a great token of dissolution and ruine shortly Wherupon commeth well in place the saying of the Prophet Esay Euery head is sicke euery hart is full of sorrow of the which heads it is also spoken in the Prophet Amos. chap. 6. Wo be to the secure and proud wealthye in Sion and to such as thinke themselues so sure vpon the moūt of Samaria taking themselues as heads and rulers ouer other c. And moreouer in the sayd prophet Esay it followeth Frō the top of the head to the sole of the foot there is no whole part in all the body to witte In the inferiours because they are not able to liue for pouerty in the superiours because for theyr excessiue riches they are left from doing good And followeth in the same place But all are woundes and botches and strypes beholde here the daunger comming the woundes of discorde and deuision the botch or sore of rancor and enuy the swelling stripe of rebellion and mischiefe The 4. signe is the pride of Prelates Some there haue bene which fondly haue disputed of the pouerty of Christ and haue inueyed agaynst the Prelates because they liue not in pouertye of the saynts But this phantasy cōmeth of the ignoraunce of morrall Philosophy and diuinity and of the defect of naturall prudence for that in all nations and by common lawes priests haue had and ought to haue wherewith to sustayne themselues more honestly then the vulgare sort and Prelates more honestly then the subiectes But yet hereby is not permitted to them their great horses theyr troupes of horsemen their superfluous pompe of theyr wayting men and great famylyes whyche scarcely can bee maynteyned without pride neyther can be susteyned with safe iustice and many not without fighting and iniuries inconueniēt not much vnlike to that as Iustine the historician writeth of the Carthaginenses The family sayth he of so great Emperours was vntolerable to such a free Citty In semblable wise this great pride in the Church of God especially in these dayes doth moue not so few to due reuerence as many to indignation and yet mo to those thinges aforesayde which thinke no lesse but to doe sacrifice to God if they may robbe and spoile certayne fatte priests and parsons namely such as neither haue nobility of bloud and lesse learning to beare themselues vpon but are lyers seruile and fraudulent to whome the Lorde speaketh by his Prophet Amos fourth Heare you fatted kine of Samaria ye that doe poore men wrong and oppresse the needye the daye shall come vpon you c. The fift signe is the tyranny of the Prelates and Presidentes which as it is a violent thing so it cannot be long lasting For as Salomon sayth Sap. 16. For it was requisite that without any excuse destruction shoulde come vpon those whiche exercised tyranny The property of a tyraunt is to seeke the commodity not of his subiectes but onely his will and profite Such were the Pastours that fedde not the Lordes flocke but fed themselues of whom and to whom speaketh the Prophet Ezech. 34. Woe be vnto those Pastours of Israel that feede themselues Shoulde not the shepheardes feede the flockes With many other threatninges agaynst them in the sayd chapter Wo be vnto them which reioyce at the transgressions of such whom it lieth in theyr power to cōdemne neither do they seeke what he is able to pay to whom crieth Micheas the Prophet 3. chap. Ye hate the good and loue the euill ye pluck of mens skinnes and the flesh from the bones ye eat the flesh of my people and slay of their skin ye break their bones ye chop them in peeces as it were into a Caudron and as flesh into the pot c. And therefore the foresayd Ezechiel pronounceth Behold I will my selfe vpon the shepheardes and require my sheepe from theyr handes and make them cease from feeding my sheep yea the shepheards shall feed themselues no more for I will deliuer my sheep out of theyr mouthes so that they shall not deuour them any more The sixt signe is in promoting of the vnworthy and of neglecting them that be worthy This as Aristotle sayth is a greate cause many times of the dissolution of common weales And often times it so happeneth in the wars of princes that the contēpt and small regarding of the valiant and the exalting of others that be lesse worthy in gendereth diuers kindes kindlinges of sedition For by the reasō partly of the same partly of the other causes aboue recited We haue read not only in books but haue sene with our eies diuers florishing Cities welneare subuerted Wher as good men be not made of but are vexed with sorrow griefe by the euil the contentiō at length brasteth out vpon the prince as Haymo reciteth out of Origen This hath alwayes bene the per uers incredulitye of mans harde heart that not onely in hearing but also in seing yet will they not beleue that other haue perished vnlesse they also perish themselues The seuēth signe is the tribulation of outward policy commotions of the people which in a great part is now happened already And therefore forasmuch as Seneca sayth Men do complayne commonly that euils onely come so fast It is to be feared least also the ecclesiastical policy be afflicted not onely outwardly but also in it selfe And so be fulfilled in vs that in Ieremy is prophesied cap. 4. Murther is cryed vpon murther and the whole land shall perish and sodenly my tabernacles were destroyed and my tentes very quickly And Ezec. 7. Wherfore I will bring cruell tyraunts from among the heathen to take theyr houses in possession I will make the pompe of the proud to cease and their sāctuaryes shall be taken One mischiefe and sorow shall follow another and one rumor shall come after an other then shall they seek visions in vayne at theyr prophets the law shall be gone frō theyr Priests and wisedome from their Elders ● The eight signe is the refusing of correction neither will they heare theyr faultes tolde them so that it is hapned to the princes and rulers of the Church as it is written in the prophet Zach. ca. 7. They stopped their eares that they would not heare yea they made their hartes as an Adamant stone least they shoulde heare
declared as it hath bene in times past the which also is done by a maruelous dispensation that through one onely thing both Gods loue iustice should be fulfilled For a while the power of miracles being taken away the holy church appereth the more abiect and forsaken and the reward of good men doth cease which reuerēced the same for the hope of heauēly riches not for any present signes And that the minds of euill men agaynst the same might that sooner be knowne which neglect to folow the inuisible thinges which the church doth promise whiles they be led with visible signes Forsomuch then as the humility of the faithfull is as it were destitute of the multitude and appering of signes by the terrible working of Gods secret dispensation wherby mercy is geuē vnto the good and iust wrath heaped vpō the euill For so much then it is truely said that before this Liuiathan shall playnely and manifestly come pouerty shall go before his face for before that time the riches of miracles shal be taken away from the faythfull Then shall that auncient enemy shew himselfe agaynst them by open wonders That as he is extolled through signes wonders so shall he the more manly be vanquished of the faythfull without any signes or miracles Also in his 16. booke vpon this word which the blessed man Iob sayde who shall reprehend his way before him or who shall cast in his teeth what he hath done whilest he did speake of the body of all euill he sodenly connected his speach vnto the head of all the wicked for he did see that toward the end of the world Sathan should enter into man whom the scripture calleth Antechrist he shal be extolled with such pride he shall rule with such power he shal be exalted with such signes wonders vnder the pretence of holmes that his doing can not be cōtrolled of mē for somuch as his signes tokens are ioined with power terror with a certain shew of holynes Wherfore he saith who shall controll his wayes before him what man is he that dare once rebuke or check him whose looke or countenaunce is he afeard of But notwithstanding not onely Enoc Elias the which are brought as ample for his exprobation but also all the elect do argue reproue his way whiles that they do contemne and by the force and power of their minde resist his malice But for somuch as this thing is not done by their owne power or strength but by Gods helpe and grace therfore is it very well sayd who shall argue or reproue his waies before him who but onely God By whose help the elect are ayded and made able to resist And a little after vpon the same booke of Iob Gregory saith in so much as holy men do withstād his iniquity It is not they thēselues which do so rebuke his wayes but it is he thorowe whose helpe they are strengthened Also in his second booke he sayth now the holy Church doth not regarde but despise the signes and miracles of the heretikes if they do any for so much as the Church doth sufficiently vnderstand that it is no kind of holynes for why the prose of holines is not to make signes or wōders but to loue euery man as him selfe to thinke truely of the very true God to thinke better of thy neighbor then of thy selfe for trew vertue holynes cōsisteth in loue and not in shewing of miracles This the veretie declareth saying hereby shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye loue one an other but he saith not that hereby mē shal know that ye are my disciples because ye worke miracles but contrary wise if ye loue one an other declaring plainly therby that it is not miracles but the mere charitie loue of God which maketh vs the seruants of God Wherefore the chiefe testimony of being Gods disciple is to haue the gift of brotherly loue This thorow out doth S. Gregory write and often times in other places he speaketh verye much of miracles howe that they shall cease amongst the iust and abound amongst the wicked Also Chrisostome in his lv Homily sayth thus it is a common an indifferent woorke betwene the ministers of God the ministers of the deuil to cast out deuils but to confesse the trueth and to worke righteousnes is the onely worke of the saints and holy men therefore whomsoeuer thou doest see casting out of deuils if he haue not the confessiō of the trueth in his mouth neyther righteousnes in his hands he is not a man of God but if thou doest see a man openly confessing declaring the truthe and doing iustice although he do not cast out no deuils yet he is the man of God And it followeth let vs know that like as at the cōming of Christ before him the Prophets and with him thapostles wrought miracles thorow the holy ghost for such as the thing is which is sturred such sent sauor wil proceede frō the same He writeth also vpon the beginning of Mathew The whole world did maruel wōder at three things that Christ rose againe after his deth that flesh ascendeth into heauē that he did conuert the whole world by his xi apostles There is iiii causes which wrought the same That is to say the contempt of riches or money The dispising of pomp and glory The seperation of thēselues from all worldly occupation and busines and the pacient suffering of tormentes Thus much writeth Chisostome also saint Isydore in his first booke and xxv cha De summo bono writeth thus like as in the apostles the maruelous effect power of works was much more cōmendable then the vertue of their signes euen so now in the Church is it much more better to liue wel thē to worke any signes or miracles And the cause why that the church of God doth not at this present worke miracles as it did in the time of the Apostles is this That it was necessary at that time that the worlde should beleue miracles and nowe at this present euery faithful beleuer ought to shine with good workes for to this end were signes miracles then outwardly wrought that their sayth thereby might be inwardly strengthned and stablished for what soeuer faithfull man he be that seketh to worke miracles he seeketh vaine glory to be praysed of mē for it is written miracles are signes and tokens vnto the infidels misbeleuers and not vnto the faythfull Thus muche wryteth Isidore Item Saint Augustine in his Booke of cōfession sayth thus there is no greater miracle amongst mē thē to loue our enemies By these wordes of these holy men a man may easely gather that both in our dayes and in the time to come the disciples of Antichrist both do shall more florish and shewe thēselues by strannge signes miracles thē the disciples of Christ according to
wryteth thus When we were amongst you wee declared this vnto you that he that would not worke should not eate Wherefore the law of nature doth licence al such as haue the gouernance of kingdoms to correct the abuse of the temporalities which wold be the chief cause of the destruction of their kingdoms whether the tēporall Lords or any other had endowed the Church with those temporalities or not It is lawful for them in some case to take away the temporalities as it were by way of phisicke to withstand sinne notwithstanding any excommunication or other Ecclesiasticall censure For so much as they are not endowed but only with cōditiō therunto anexed Heereby it appeareth that the condition annexed to the endowing or enriching of any church is that God shuld be honoured the which condition if it once fail the contrary taking place the title of the gift is lost and consequently the Lord which gaue the almes ought to correct the offence Excommunication ought not to let the fulfilling of iustice Secondly according to the Canon lawe 16. quest 7. This sentence is noted where it is thus spoken as touching the children neuewes and the most honest of the kindred of him which hath builded or endowed any church That it is lawful for them to be thus circumspect that if they perceiue the priest doe defraude any part of that which is bestowed they should either gently admonish or warne him or els complaine on him to the bishop that he may be corrected But if the bishop him selfe attempt to do the like let them complaine of him to his Metropolitane and if the Metropolitane do the like let them not defer the time to report it in the eares of the king For so saith the canon Let them not deferre to report it in the eares of the king To what ende I pray you but that he shuld do correction neither is it to bee douted but that correction doeth more appertaine vnto he king in this poynt for their goods wherof he is chiefe Lord by a substraction proportional according to the fault or offence Item it is thus proued It is lawful for the seculer Lords by their power to do correction vpon the clergy by some kind of fearfull discipline appertaining to their seculer power Ergo by like reason it is lawful for them by their power to do such correction by all kind of fearful discipline pertaining vnto their seculer power For so much then as the taking of their temporalities is in kinde of fearful discipline pertaining vnto the seculer power It foloweth that it is lawfull for them therby to doe such correction And consequently it followeth that the truthe is thus to be prooued The consequent is euident and the antecedent is proued by Isidore 23 quest 5. Principes Where it is thus wrytten There shuld be no seculer powers within the church but onely for thys purpose that whatsoeuer thing the priests or ministers cannot bring to passe by preaching or teachings the seculer powers may command the same by the terror and feare of discipline For oftētimes the heauēly kingdom is profited and holpen by the earthly kingdom that they which are in the church and do any thing contrary vnto faith and discipline by the rigour of the princes may be troden downe And that the power of the rulers may lay that discipline vpon the neckes of the proude and stifnecked which the vtility and profit of the church can not exercise or vse Item all things that by power ought to worke or bring to any perfect ende by the reasonable measuring of the meane thereto it may lawfully vse by power the substraction or taking away of the excesse and the addition of the want of the meanes according as shall be conuenient or meete for the measure to be made For so much then as the seculer Lordes ought by their power to prouide for the necessary sustentation of the Christian clergie by the reasonable measuring of their temporalties whych they are bounden to bestow vpon the Christian cleargie it followeth that they may lawfully by their power vse the taking away or putting vnto of those temporallities according as shall be conuenient for the performance of that reasonable matter Item it is lawfull for the clergie by their power to take away the sacramentes of the Church from the laitie customably offending forsomuch as it doeth pertaine to the office of the Christian ministers by their power to minister the same vnto the lay people Wherefore for so much as it doeth pertaine vnto the office of the laitie according vnto their power to minister and geue temporallities to the clergie of Christ as the Apostle sayeth 1. Cor 9. It followeth that it is also lawfull for them by their power to take away the temporallities from the clergie when they do customably sinne and offend Item by like power may he which geueth a stipende or exhibition withdraw and take away the same from the vnworthy labourers as hee hath power to geue the same vnto the worthy labourers for so much then as temporallities of the clergie are the stipendes of the laitie it followeth that the lay people may by as good authority take away the same again from the clergy which will not worthely labour as they might by their power bestowe the same vpon those which would worthely labour according to the saying of the Gospel Mat. 21 The kingdome shal be taken away from you and geuen vnto a people which shall bring foorth the frutes thereof Item it is also lawfull for the secular Lordes by their power to chastice and punish the lay people when they do offend by taking away of their temporalties according to the exigēt of their offence forsomuch as the lay people are subiect vnder their dominion Wherefore the clergy being also subiect vnder the dominion of the seculer Lordes as appeareth Rom. 13. and many other places it is euident that it is lawfull by their power to punish the cleargie by taking away of their temporalities if their offence do so deserue Item the true and easie direction of the cleargie vnto the life of Christ and the Apostles and most profitable vnto the laity that the cleargie shuld not liue contrary vnto Christes institution semeth to be the taking away of their alms and those things which they had bestowed vppon them And it is thus proued that medicine is most apt to be laide vnto the sore whereby the infirmitie might soonest be holpen and were most agreeable vnto the pacient Such is the taking away of the temporallities Ergo this article is true The minor is thus proued for so much as by the aboūdance of temporallities the worme or serpent of pride is spronge vp where vppon vnsaciable desire and lust is inflamed and thereby proceedeth all kinde of gluttonie and lecherie It is euident in this poynt for so much as the Temporallities being once taken away euery one of those sinnes is either vtterly taken away or
touched In whome as some good vertues may be noted so also some vices may seeme to be mixed withall But especially this that he starting out of the steps of hys progenitors ceased to take part with them whiche tooke part with the gospell Wherupon it so fell not by the blind wheele of fortune but by the secret hand of him which directeth all estates that as he first began to forsake that mayntayning of the Gospell of God so the Lord began to forsake him And where the protection of God beginneth to fayle there can lack no causes to be charged withall whom God once giueth ouer to mans punishmēt So that to me considering the whole life and trade of this prince among all other causes alledged in storyes agaynst him none seemeth so much to be wayed of vs or more hurtfull to hym then this forsaking of the Lord and his word Although to such as list more to be certified in other causes concurring withall many and sondry defectes in that king may appeare in storyes to the number of 33. articles alledged or forced rather agaynst him In whiche as I cannot deny but that he was worthy of much blame so to be displaced therefore from his regall seate and rightfull state of the crowne it may be thought perhaps the causes not to be so rare so material in a prince which either could or els would haue serued had not he geuen ouer before to serue the Lord and hys word chusing rather to serue the humour of the Pope and bloudy Prelates thē to further the Lords proceedings in preaching of hys word And thē as I sayd how can enemies lack wher God standeth not to friend or what cause can be so little whiche is not able inough to cast downe where the Lords arme is shortned to sustayne Wherefore it is a poynt of principall wisedome in a Prince not to forget that as he standeth alwayes in neede of God hys helping hand so alwayes he haue the discipline and feare of him before hys eyes according to the counsayle of the godly King Dauid Psal. 2. And thus much touching the time and race of this K. Richard with the tragical story of his deposing The order and maner whereof purposely I pretermit onely contented briefly to lay together a fewe speciall thinges done before his fall suche as may be sufficient in a briefe somme both to satisfie the Reader inquisitiue of suche storyes and also to forwarne other Princes to beware the lyke daungers In suche as wryte the life and Actes of this Prince thus I read of him reported that he was much inclined to the fauouring and aduancing of certayne persons about him ruled all by theyr counsell whiche were thē greatly abhorred and hated in the realme The names of whome were Rob. Ueer Erle of Oxford whō the king had made Duke of Ireland Alexander Neuile Archbishop of York Michiel Delapoole Earle of Suffolke Robert Trisiliam Lord chiefe Iustice Nicholas Brembre with other These men being hated and disdayned of diuers of the nobles and of the commons the king also by fauouring them was lesse fauoured hymselfe In so much that the Duke of Gloucester named Thomas Woodstock the kings Uncle with the Erle of Warwicke and Earle of Darby stoode vp in armes against those counsaylors and abusers as they named them of the king In so much that the king for feare was constrayned agaynst hys minde to remoue out of his court Alexander Neuile Archb. of Yorke Iohn Foorde Byshop of Duresme Fryer Thomas Rushoke Bishop of Chichester the kinges confessor with the Lord Haringworth Lord Burnell and Bemond Lord Ueer and diuers other And furthermore in the Parliament the same yeare following Robert Trisilian the Iustice was hanged and drawne Also Nicholas Brembre Knight Iames Salisbury also and Iames Barnese both Knights Ioh. Bewchampe the kinges Steward and Iohn Blake Esquire in like maner All these by the counsayle of the Lordes beyng cast in the parliament agaynst the kyngs mind did suffer which was in the 11 of his raign he being yet vnder gouernours but consequently after the same the king clayming his own liberty being come to the age of 20. began to take more vpon him And this was one thinge that stirred vp the kinges stomacke agaynst the Nobles Ex Chron. Alban 2. An other thing that styred hym vp as much against the Londiners was this for that he would haue borowed of them a M. pound and they denied him to their double triple disauantage as after ensued vpon it Ibidem An other occasion besides this betwene the king and the Londoners happened thus by reason of one of the Byshop of Salisburies seruauntes named Roman and a Bakers man who then carying a basket of horsebread in Fletstreet the foresayd Roman tooke a horselose out of the basket The Baker asking why he did so the Byshops lusty yeomcu turned backe agayne and brake his head whereupon the neighbors came out and would haue arested this Roman but he escaped away vnto the Byshops house Then the Constable would haue had him out but the Bishops men shut fast the gates that they shoulde not approche Thus much people gathered together threatning to brust open the gates and fire the house vnlesse they had the foresayd party to them brought out Wherby much adoe there was till at length the Mayor and Sheriffes came and quieted the rage of the commons sent euery man home to his house charging thē to keepe peace Here as yet was no great harme done but if the bishoppe for his part had beene quyet and had not styrred the coles of debate which were well slaked already all had bene ended without further perturbation But th● stomacke of the Byshop not yet digested although hys m●n had done the wrong hauing no great cause so to do whose name was Iohn Waltam being then Treasourer of England went to Thomas Arundell archbish the same time of Yorke and Lord Chauncellour of England to complayne of the Londoners Where is to be noted or rather reueled by the way a priuy mistery which although be not in this story touched of the writers yet it touched the hartes of the bishops not a little For the Londoners at that time were notoriously knowne to be fauourers of wickliffes side as partly before this is to be seene and in the story of S. Albones more playnly doth appeare where the author of the sayd history writing vpon the 15. yeare of King Richardes raygne reporteth in these wordes of the Londoners that they were Male creduli in deum traditiones auitas Lollardorum sustentatores religiosorū detractores de cimarū detētores cōmunis vulgi depauperatores c. that is not right beleuers in God nor in the traditions of their forefathers susteyters of the Lollardes deprauers of religious men withholders of tythes and impouerishers of the common people c. Thus the Londoners being noted and
Wherfore sir by the bidding of Christ by the example of his most holy liuing also by the witnessing of his holy Apostles and Prophets we are bounde vnder full great payn to exercise vs after our cunning and power as euery Priest is likewise charged of God to fulfil duely the office of priesthood We presume not here of ourselues for to be estemed neither in our owne reputatiō nor in none other mās faythful disciples special folowers of Christ. But sir as I sayde to you before we deeme this by authority chiefly of Gods word that it is the chief duety of euery priest to busy thē faythfully to make the law of God knowne to his people so to commune the cōmaūdement of God charitably how that we may best where whē and to whom that euer we may is our very duety And for the will busines that we owe of due debt to do iustly our office through the styrring and speciall helpe as we trust of God hoping stedfastly in his mercy we desire to be the fayth full disciples of Christ and we pray this gracious Lord or his holy name that he make vs able to please him with deuout prayers charitably Priestly works that we may obtaine of him to folow him thankefully ¶ And the Archbishop sayd to me L●ud losell whereto makest thou such vayne reasons to me Asu●●h not Saynt Paule how shoulde Priestes preache except they be sent But I sent thee neuer to preache For thy venemous doctrine is so knowne throughout England that no Bishop will admitte thee to preache by witnessing of theyr letters Why thē lewd Idiot willest thou presume to preach since thou art not sent nor licensed of thy soueraigne to preache Sayth not S. Paul that subiects ough to obey theyr soueraignes and not onely good vertuous but also tiraunts that are vicious ☞ And I sayd to the Archbishop Sir as touching your le●ter of licence or other Bishops which ye say we shoulde haue to witnes that we were able to be sent for to preache We know wel that neither you sir nor any other bishop of this land wil graūt to vs any such letters of licence but if we should oblige vs to you and to other bishops by vnlefull othes for to passe not the bondes and termes which ye sir or other bishops will limit to vs. And since in this matter your termes be some to large some to strait we dare not oblige vs thus to bee bounden to you for to keepe the termes which you will limit to vs as you do to Friers such other Preachers And therefore though we haue not your letter sir nor letters of any other bishops writrē with inke vpon parchmēt we dare not therfore leaue the office of preaching to which preaching all Priests after their cunning and power are boūd by diuers testimonies of Gods law and great Doctors without any mention making of Bishops letters For as mikle as we haue taken vpon vs the office of Priesthood though we are vnworthy thereto we come and purpose to fulfill it with the helpe of God by authority of his own law and by witnesse of great doctors and Sayntes accordingly hereto trusting stedfastly in the mercy of God For that he commaūdeth vs to do the office of Priesthood he will be our sufficient letters and witnes if we by example of his holy liuing and teaching specially occupy vs faythfully to do our office iustly yea that people to whom we preach be they faythfull or vnfaythfull shall be our letters that is our witnesse bearers for the truth where it is sowne may not be vnwitnessed For all that are conuerted saued by learning of Gods word by working thereafter are witnes bearers that the trueth and sothfastnesse which they heard and did after is cause of theyr saluation And agayne all vnfaythfull men and women which heard the truth told out to them and would not do therafter also all they that might haue heard the truth would not hear it because that they would not do therafter All these shall beare witnes agaynst themselues the truth which they woulde not heare or els heard it despised to do therafter through theyr vnfaythfulnes is shal be cause of theyr damnation Therfore sir since this aforesayd witnessing of God and of diuers Sayntes and Doctors of al the people good euill suffiseth to al true preachers we thinke that we doe not the office of Priesthood if that we leaue our preaching because that we haue not or may not haue duely Bishops letters to witnesse that we are sent of them to preach This sentence approueth Saint Paul where he speaketh of himselfe of faithfull Apostles and disciples saying thus We need no letters of commendatiō as some preachers do which preach for couetousnesse of temporall goods and for mens praysing And where ye say Syr that Paule biddeth subiectes obey theyr soueraignes that is soth and may not be denied But there is two maner of soueraignes vertuous soueraignes and vicious tyrauntes Therfore to these last soueraignes neither mē nor womē that be subiect owe to obey in two maners To vertuous soueraignes charitable subiectes owe to obey wilfully and gladly in hearing of their good counsel in cōsenting to their charitable biddinges and in working after their fruitfull workes This sentence Paul approueth where he sayth to subiectes Be ye mindefull of your soueraignes that speake to you the word of God follow you the fayth of thē whose cōuersation you know to be vertuous For as Paul sayth after these soueraignes to whom subiectes owe to obey in following of the maners worke besely in holy studying how they may withstand and destroy vices first in thēselues and after in all their subiectes and how they may best plāt in them vertues Also these soueraignes make deuout and feruēt prayers for to purchase grace of God that they and their subiects may ouer all thing dread to offend hym and to loue for to please him Also these soueraignste whō Paul biddeth vs obey as it is said before liue so vertuously that all they that will liue well may take of them good example to know to keep the cōmaundements of God But in this foresayd wise subiectes ought not to obey nor to be obedient to tyrantes while they are vitious tyrants since their will their counsell their biddinges and theyr workes are so vicious that they ought to be hated lefte And though such tyrantes be maisterfull and cruel in boas●ing and manasing in oppressions diuers punishinges S. Peter biddeth the seruauntes of such tyrauntes to obey meekely such tyrantes sufferinges paciently their malitious cruelnes But Peter counselleth not any seruaunt or subiect to obey to any Lord or Prince or soueraign in any thing that is not pleasing to God ¶ And the Archbishop sayd vnto me If a soueraigne byd his subiect do that thing that is
hold with them while he held with them And therefore Malueren said to me I vnderstand and thou wilt take thee to a Priest and shriue thee cleane forsake all such opinions take the penance of my Lord here for the holding teaching of them within short time thou shalt be greatly comforted in this doing ☞ And I sayd to the Clerkes that thus busily counselled me to folow these foresayd men Sirs if these mē of whom ye counsell me to take example had forsakē benefices of tēporall profite of worldly worship so that chey had absēted them and eschewed from al occasions of couetousnes of fleshly lustes and had taken upon them simple liuing wilfull pouerty they had herein geuen good example to me and to many other to haue folowed thē But now since all these foure men haue slaunderously and shamefully done the contrary consenting to receiue and to haue and to hold tēporall benefices liuing now more worldly more fleshly then they did before conforming them to the maners of this world I forsake them herein and in all their foresayd slaunderous doing For I purpose with the helpe of God into remissio of my sinnes and of my ●oule cursed liuing to hate and to flee priuily and apertly to follow these men teaching and counselling whome so euer that I may for to flee eschew the way that they haue chosen to go in which will lead them to the worst end if in conuenient time they repent them not verely forsaking and reuoking opēly the flaunder that they haue put and euery day yet put to Christes Church For certayne so open blasphemy and slaunder as they haue spoken and done in their reuoking forsaking of the truth ought not nor may not priuily be amēded duely Wherfore sirs I pray you that you busy not for to moue me to follow these mē in reuoking and forsaking the trueth and sothfastnes as they haue done and yet doe wherein by open euidence they stirre God to great wroth and not onely agaynst themselues but also agaynst all thē that fauor them or consent to them herein or that communeth with them except it be for their amendement For where as these mē first were pursued of enemies now they haue obliged them by othe for to slaūder and pursue Christ in his members Wherfore as I trust stedfastly in the goodnes of God the worldly couetousnes and the lusty liuing and the sliding from the truth of these runnagates shall be to me and to many other men and women an example an euidence to stand more stifly by the truth of Christ. For certayne right many men and women doe marke and abhorre the foulnes and cowardnes of these foresayd vntrue men how that they are ouercome stopped wyth benefices and withdrawen from the truth of Gods word forsaking vtterly to suffer therfore bodely persecution For by this vnfaythfull doing and apostasye of them specially that are great lettered men and haue knowledged openly the truth and now either for pleasure or displeasure of tyrauntes haue taken hire and temporall wages to forsake the truth and to hold agaynst it slaundering and pursuing them that couet to followe Christ in the way of righteousnes many men and womē therefore are now moued But many mo thorow the grace of God shall be moued hereby for to learne the truth of God and to doe thereafter and to stand boldly thereby ¶ Then the Archbishop sayd to his clerkes Busye you no lenger about him for he and other such as he is are cōsedered together that they will not sweare to be obedient to submit them to prelates of holy church For now since I stoode here his fellow also sent me word that he will not sweare and that this fellow counselled hym that he should not sweare to me And losell in that thing that in thee is thou hast busied thee to lose this young man but blessed be God thou shalt not haue thy purpose of him For he hath forsaken all thy learning submitting him to be buxum obedient to the ordinaunce of holy church and weepeth full bitterly and curseth thee full hartily for the venemous teaching which thou hast shewed to him counselling hym to do thereafter And for thy false counselling of many other him thou hast great cause to be right sory For long time thou hast busied thee to peruert whomsoeuer thou mightest Therfore as many deathes thou art worthye of as thou hast geuen euill counselles And therefore by Iesu thou shalt go thether where Nicoll Harford Thom. Puruay were harbered And I vndertake or this day viij dayes thou shalt be right glad for to doe what thing that euer I did thee to do And Losell I shal assay if I can make thee there as sorowfull as it was tolde me thou wast glad of my last goyng out of England By S. Thomas I shall turne thy ioy into sorow ☞ And I sayd Syr there can no body proue lawfully that I ioyed euer of the maner of your going out of this land But Syr to say the soth I was ioyfull when ye were gone for the bishop of London in whole prison ye left me found in me no cause for to hold me lenger in his prisō but at the request of my frēdes he deliuered me to them asking of me no maner of submitting ¶ Then the archbishop sayd to me Wherefore that I yede out of England is vnknowne to thee But be this thinge well knowne to thee that God as I wote well hath called me agayn and brought me into this land for to destroy thee and the false sect that thou art of as by God I shall pursue you so narowly that I shall not leaue a slip of you in this land ☞ And I sayd to the archbishop Syr the holy Prophette Ieremy sayd to the false Prophet Anany When the word that is the prophecy of a Prophet is knowne or fulfilled then it shal be knowne that the Lorde sent the Prophet in trueth ¶ And the Archbishop as if he had not bene pleased with my saying turned him awayward hether and thether and sayd By GOD I shall set vpon thy shinnes a payre of pearles that thou shalt be glad to chaunge thy voyce These and many moe wonderous and conuicious wordes were spoken to me manassing me and al other of the same sect for to be punished and destroyed vnto the vttermost And the Archbishop called then to him a Clerke and rowned with him and that Clerk went forth and soone he brought in the Constable of Saltwoode Castle and the Archbishop rowned a good while with him And then the Constable went forth and then came in diuers seculars they scorned me on euery side manassed me greatly And some counselled the Archbishop to burne me by and by some other counselled him to drowne me in the Sea for it is neare hand there And a Clerke standing beside me there kneeled
passion Sonday which was an exceding stormy day and so tēpestuous that many did wonder at the portent thereof not long after the same a parliament began to be called to be holden after the feast of Easter at Westminster An. 1413. At whych time Thomas Arundel the Archbishop of Canterburie collected in Paules church at London an vniuersal Synode of all the bishops and clergie of England In that Synode among other weighty matters and ponderous was determined that the day of S. George and also of S. Dunstane should be double feast called Duplex Festum in holy kitching in holy Church I would say And because the order and maner of those Pope holy feastes either yet is not sufficiently knowen to some rude and grosse capacities or may peraduenture growe out of vse and to be straunge vnknowen to our posteritie hereafter Therfore to geue a litle memorandum therof by the way for eruditiō of times hereafter to come touching this misticall science of the Popes deepe and secreate diuinitie here is to be noted that the feastes of the Popes holy mother Catholique churche be deuided in sondry members Like as a plentifull roote in a fruitfull fielde riseth vp and burgeneth into manifold armes and the armes againe do multiply into diuers and sondry brāches out of the which moreouer although no frute do come yet both leaues and flowers doe bud and blossome in most copious wise right beautifull to beholde Euen so thys Festum conteinyng a large matter of great variety of dayes and feasts groweth to it selfe and multiplieth being thus deuided first into Festum duplex and into Festum simplex that is into feast double and to feast simple Againe thys Festum duplex brauncheth foure folde wise to wit into Festum principale duplex into Maius duplex into Minus duplex and infernis duplex that is in principal double in greater double in lesser double and inferior or lower double Unto these seneual sorts of feasts what daies were peculiarly assigned it were to long to recite For this present purpose it shall suffice to vnderstand that as vnto the principall double feast onely belonged 8. daies in the yere so the Maius duplex festum had geuen vnto him by thys conuocation the day of S. George and of S. Dunstane as is afore remembred albeit by constitution it was so decreed yet by custome it was not so vsed Item to be noted that these two feastes to witte Principale duplex and Maius duplex did differ and were knowen from all other by foure notes by seruice in the kitching and by seruice in the Church which was both double by ringing in the steple which was with double peale by copes in the quier and by thurifyeng or censing the aultares For in these two principall and greater double feasts the vii viii and ix lesson must be read wyth silken copes Also at the said feasts in the time of the lessons the altars in the church must be thurified that is smoked with incēse c. And likewise the Minus duplex and Inferius duplex had also their peculiar seruice to them belonging Secondly the Simplex festum whych is the seconde arme springing of this diuision is thus diuided Eyther hauing a triple inuitorie or a double or els a single inuitorie Of the which moreouer some haue 3. lessons some haue 9. c. And thus much by occasion for Popish feasts not that I doe so much deride them as I lament that so much and manifest idolatry in them is committed to the great dishonor of our Lord our God whych is onely to be honoured ¶ The trouble and persecution of the Lord Cobham BUt to lette this by matter passe againe to returne to the foresayde vniuersal Synode assembled by Thomas Arundel at S. Paules churche in London as is before remembred the chiefe and principall cause of the assembling thereof as recordeth the Chronicle of S. Albones was to represse the growing and spreading of the Gospell and especially to withstand the noble worthy Lorde Cobham Who was then noted to be a principall fauourer receiuer and maintainer of them whome the Byshop misnamed to be Lollards especially in the diocesses of London Rochester and Hereforde setting them vp to preache whome the byshops had not licensed and sending thē about to preach which was against the constitution prouinciall before remembred pag. 5 24. holding also and teaching opinions of the sacraments of images of pilgrimage of the keyes and church of Rome contrary and repugnant to the receiued determination of the Romish church c. In the meane time as these were in talke amōgst them concerning the good Lord Cobham resorted vnto them the 12. Inquisitors of heresies whom they had appoynted at Oxford the yeare afore to searche out heretickes wyth all Wickleffes bookes who brought 200. and 46. conclusions which they had collected as heresies out of the sayd bookes The names of the sayd Inquisitors were these 1. Iohn Witnam a maister in the now Colledge 2. Iohn Langedon Monke of Christ church in Cant. 3. William Vfford regent of the Carmelites 4. Thomas Claxton regent of the Dominickes 5. Robert Gilbert 6. Richard Earthisdale 7. Iohn Lucke 8. Richard Snedisham 9. Richard Flemming 10. Thomas Rotborne 11. Robert Ronbery 12. Richard Grafdale These things thus done the Articles being brought in further they proceded in their communication concluding among themselues that it was not possible for them to make whole Christes coat wtout seame meaning therby their patched Popish synagoge vnlesse certaine great men were brought out of the way which seemed to be the chiefe maintainers of the sayde Disciples of Wickleffe Among whō thys noble knight sir Iohn Didcastle the Lord Cobham was complained of by the generall proctors to be the chiefe principall Him they accused first for a mighty maintainer of suspected preachers in the dioces of London Rochester and Hereford contrary to the mindes of their ordinaries Not only they affirmed him to haue sēt thether the saide preachers but also to haue assisted them there by force of armes notwithstanding their Synodall constitution made afore to the contrary Last of al they accused him that he was farre otherwise in beliefe of the sacrament of the altar of penaunce of pilgrimage of image worshipping and of the Ecclesiastical power then the holy Church of Rome had taught many yeares before In the ende it was concluded among them that wtout any further delay processe shoulde be awarded out against him as against a most pernitious hereticke Some of that felowship which were of more crafty experience then the other thought it not best to haue that matter so rashly handled but by some preparation made therunto before Considering the sayde Lorde Cobham was a man of great birth and in fauour at that time with the K. their counsaile was to know first the kings minde to saue all things vpright This counsaile was well
For in that that euery one that worketh more meritoriously to the profite of the Church he hath so much the more greater authoritie from God 25. There is not so muche as one sparke of appearaunce that there ought to be one head ruling and gouerning the church in spirituall causes which should alwayes be conuersaunt in the church millita●● For Christ without anye such monstrous heds by his ●●ue disciples sparsed through the whole world could better a great deale rule his church 26. The Apostles and faythfull priests of God haue right worthily in al thinges necessary to saluation gouerned the church before the popes office tooke place and so might they doe agayne by like possibilitie vntill Christ came to iudgement if the popes office should fayle Let euery one that is suspected in the foresayd articles or els otherwise found with assertion of them Be examined in maner and forme as followeth IN primis whether he knew Iohn Wicleffe of Englande Iohn Hus of Bohemia and Hierome of Prage or anye of them and how he came by the knowledge of them whither that during the liues of them or any of them they had eyther bene conuersant with them or found any frendship at their handes 2. Item whether he knowing them or any of them to be excommunicate did willingly participate with them esteming affirming the same their participaciō to be no sin 3. Item whither that after their deathes he euer prayed for them or any of them openly or priuily doing any work of mercy for them affirming them to be either saintes or els to be saued 4. Item whether he thought them or anye of them to be Saintes or whether that euer he spake such wordes and whether euer he did exhibite any worshippe vnto them as vnto saintes 5. Item whether he beleue hold and affirme that euery generall councell as also the Councell of Constance doth represent the vniuersall Church 6. Item whether he doth beleue that that which the holy Councell of Constance representing the vniuersall church hath and doth alow in the fauour of the fayth and saluatiō of soules is to be approued and allowed of all the faythfull Christians and that whatsoeuer the same Councell hath condemned and doth condemne to be contrary both to the fayth and to all good men is to beleued holden and affirmed for condemned or not 7. Item whether he beleueth that the condemnations of Iohn Hus Iohn Wickleffe and Hierome of Prage made as well vpon their persons as their bookes and doctrine by the holy generall Councelll of Constance be rightly iustly made and of euery good Catholicke man are so to be holden and affirmed or not 8. Item whether he beleue hold and affirme that Iohn Wickleffe of England Iohn Hus of Bohemia and Hierome of Prage were heretickes or not and for heretickes to be nominated preached yea or not and whether theyr bookes and doctrines were and be peruerse or not for the which together with their pertinacie they wre condemned by the holye sacred Councell of Constaunce for heretiques 9. Itē whether he haue in his custody any treatises smal workes Epistles or other writinges in what language or tongue soeuer set forth and translated by any of these heretickes Iohn Wickleffe Iohn Hus and Hierome or any other of their false Disciples and followers that he may deliuer them to the ordinaries of that place or his commissary or to the inquisitours vpon hys othe And if he say that he hath no such writing about him but that they are in some other place that then you sweare him to bring the same before his Ordinary or other aforenamed within a certayne time to him prefixed 10. Item whether he knoweth any that hath the treatises works Epistles or anye other writinges of the aforesayd Iohn Wickleffe Iohn Hus and Hierome in whatsouer tong they are made or translated and that he detect manifest the same for the purgation of their fayth and execution of iustice 11. Item especially let the learned be examined whether he beleueth that the sentence of the holy Councell of Constance vpon the 45. articles of Iohn Wickleffe and the 30. Articles of Iohn Hus be not Catholicke which sayth that some of them are notorious hereticall some erroneous other some blasphemous some slaunderous some rash and seditious some offensiue to godly eares 12. Item whether he beleeueth and affirmeth that in no case it is lawfull for a man to sweare 13. Item whether he beleueth that at the commaundement of a iudge or any other it is lawfull to take an oth to tell the truth in anye conuenient cause although it be but purging of an infamy or not 14. Item whether he beleueth that periury wittingly cōmitted vppon what cause soeuer whether it be for y● safegard of hys owne life or of any other mans lyfe yea although it be in the cause and defence of the fayth be a sinne or not 14. Item whether a man contemning purposedly the rites of the Churche and the ceremonies of exorcisme of Cathechisme and the consecration of the water of Baptisme be deadly sinne or not 16 Item whether he beleue that after the consecration of the priest in the sacrament of the aultar vnder the figure of bread and wyne be no materiall bread and wyne but in al poyntes the same very Christ which was crucified vppon the Crosse and sitteth vpon the right hand of the father 17. Item whether he beleeue that after the consecration made by the priest vnder the onely forme of bread and besides the forme of wyne be the very flesh of Christ and hys bloud hys soule and hys deitie and so whole Christ as he is and in likewise vnder the forme of wine without the forme of bread bee the very fleshe of Christ and hys very bloud his soule and deitie and so whole Christ the same body absolutely vnder euery one of those kinds singularly 18. Item whether he doth beleue that the custome of houseling of the lay people vnder the forme of bread only obserued of the vniuersall Church and allowed by the onely Councell of Constance be to be vsed and not without the authoritie of the Churche at mens pleasures to be altered and that they that obstinately affirme the contrary to this are to be punished as heretickes or not 19. Item whether he beleue that those whiche contemne the receiuing of the sacramentes of confirmation or extreme vnction or els the solemnisation of matrimony cōmit deadly sinne or not 20. Item whether he beleeue that a Christian man ouer and besides the contrition of hart being licensed of a conuenient priest is bound to confesse himselfe only to a priest and not to any lay man be he neuer so deuout or good vpon the necessitie of saluation 21. Item whether he beleue that in the cases before put a priest may absolue a sinner confessing himself and being contrite from all sinnes and enioyne him penaunce for the same
hys part for here are many byshops proctors whō he doth not recken because they are not of his opinion Neither is the dignities of the fathers to be respected in the Councell as he sayth but onely reason nor anyethyng more to be looked for then the truth neyther will I for my part preferre a lye of any byshop be he neuer so rich before a veritie or truth of a poore priest Neither ought a byshop to disdayne if he be rude or vnlearned that the multitude doth not follow hym or that the voyce of a poore learned and eloquent priest should be preferred before his For wisedome dwelleth oftner vnder a bare and ragged cloke then in rich ornamentes and apparell Wherfore I pray you my Lord byshops do not so much contēne your inferiours for the first which dyed for Christ the which also opened vnto all other the way of Martyrdome was no byshop but onely a Leuite As for that whiche Ludouicus and Panormitane do allege touchyng the voyces of Bishops I know not where they haue it Wherfore I desire them that they would tell me where they haue foūd it But if we repeat the examples of old councels we shall finde that the inferiours were alwayes present with the Bishops And albeit that Ludouicus do forbid vs the examples of the apostles I stay my self most vpon their doings For what is more comely for vs to followe then the doctrine customes of the primitiue Church It is sayd therfore in the 15. chapter of the Acts of the Apostles it seemed good vnto the holy ghost and to vs. The whiche word to vs is referred vnto them which are before named the Apostles and the Elders Neither this word it semed good signifieth in this place consultation but decision and determination whereby it appeareth that other beside that byshops had determining voyces In an other place also of the sayd Actes when as the apostles shoulde intreate vppon anye wayghty matter they durst not determine by themselues but the xii called together the multitude Here Ludouicus sayth that it doeth not appeare y● the Apostles called other of necessitie but I say vnto hym how knowest thou that they did not call thē of necessitie But for so much as both partes are vncertayne nothing doth prohibite vs to follow the Apostles For seeing that all thinges were written for our learning it appeareth that the Apostles wold geue vs exāple that in wayghty matters we shold admit our inferiours And therfore in all Councels which were celebrate holden afterwards we find that Priestes were also present as in the Councell of Nice whiche of all other was most famous Athanasius being then but onely a priest withstood the Arrians and infringed their argumentes Albeit there were also other priestes And albeit mention be made of 322. byshops yet is not denyed but that the inferiours were there whome I thinke to be omitted for this cause for that they were almost innumerable for as you know well enough the denomination for the most part is taken of the most worthy In the Synode of Calcedon which was counted one of the foure principall Synodes it is sayd that there were present 600. priestes the which name is common both vnto byshops and Priestes In other Councels the name both of Bishops and Priestes is omitted mention made onely of Fathers which hath the same signification the thys worde Elders had in the actes of the Apostles Wee haue also a testimony of the ecclesiasticall history how that ther was a Councell gathered of Rome of lx Byshops and as many Priestes Deacons agaynst the Nouations which called themselues Cathari Also when Paule the Byshop of Antioche in the tyme of Galiene the Emperoure preached that Christ was a man of common nature the Councell assembled agaynst hym in Antioche wherunto there came Byshops out of Cesaria Capadotia out of Pontus Asia and from Ierusalem and many other Byshops Priestes and Deacons and it is said that for that cause the Councel was often holden And at the last in the same place vnder Aurelius the Emperour Paule was condemned of al Christian Churches which were vnder heauē neyther was there any mā which did more confound the sayd Paul then Malchiona Priest of Antioche which taught Rhetorike in Antioche But to make no long digression from the matter we haue most euident testimonies for the defence of the inferiours For the chiefe and principall amongst all the Diuines S. Austen vpō the wordes of Mathew where as Christ saith vnto Peter I wil geue thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauē sayth that by those words the iudiciall power was geuen not only vnto Peter but also to the other Apostles and to the whole Churche the byshops and Priestes If then Priestes haue a iudiciall power in the churche what shold iet that they haue not also a determining voyce in the coūcels The famous Doctour S. Hierome doth also agree with S. Austen whose wordes are these vpon the Epistle of Paule vnto Titus Before that difference was made in Religion by the instigation of the deuill or that it was spoken amongest the people I holde of Paule I of Apollo I of Cephas the Churches were gouerned by the common consent and Councell of the Priestes for a priest is the very same that a byshop is Wherefore all Byshops ought to vnderstand that they are of greater power then Priestes rather by custome then by the dispensation of the truth of God and that they ought to rule the church together And this we do also gather out of Paule vnto Titus which maketh so much concordaunce betweene bishops and priests that oftentimes he calleth priestes Byshops whereby it doth euidently appeare that priestes are not to be excluded from the conuentions of byshops and determinations of matters And albeit as S. Hierom writeth that byshops onely by custome are preferred before Priestes it may be that a contrary custome may take away that custome For if priestes ought to rule the church together with the byshops it is euident that it also pertayneth vnto them to decide and determine the doubtfull matters of the Church Wherfore the testimony of S. Paule is euident for as he writing vnto the Ephesians sayth If Christe instituted hys Apostles Prophetes Pastours and Teachers to the worke of the ministery for the edifying of hys Church vntill such tyme as we should meete hym for this purpose that there should be no doubt in the diuersitie of doctrine who doubteth then but that the gouernaunce of the Church is committed vnto others together with the Apostles Let these our champions now hold their peace and seeme to be no wiser then they ought to be The memoriall of the coūcell of Constance is yet fresh in memory wheras diuers of vs were present and I my selfe also whiche was neither Cardinall nor byshop but onely a Doctour where I dyd see without any maner of doubt of difficultie the inferiors
the councell whether it be lawfull to appeale to Christ or no. The popishe church derideth Christ. Hus accused for trusting that Wickliffes soule is saued Sedition laid to his charge Hus accused for mouing certaine tumultes against the clergie and deuision in the vniuersitie of Prage A story of popes The cause why Swinco other of the Clergie did flie out of Prage This doctor Naso was counsailer to king Wenceslus A declaration how the Germaines departed frō the vniuersitie of Prage The penaltie of money was 100. siluer shocke The slaūder of the vnshamefast Sycophant Palletz speaketh against Iohn Hus. Hus cōmitted to custodie Ierome of Prage The Cardinall of Cambray Iohn de Clum The aemperours oratiō to I. Hus. The answer of I. Hus vn to the Emperour 1. Articles laide to I. Hus. The answer of Iohn Hus concerning his booke of the church S. Paule was neuer any member of the deuill Two maner of separatiōs from the church The members of the church neuer fall finally away The predestinate is alwaies a member of the vniuersal church although not in present iustice To be in the church and a member of the church Predestination Both good and bad in the Church The Church is taken sometime for the congregation of the elect faithful so is the article taken in the Creede Peter neuer was head of the whole vniuersal Church The Church builded vpon Peter how The vicare of Christ how he is to be taken E●●●ard ad Eu ●en●●m lib. 4. Prelates making merchandise of holy orders The Pope taketh his originall 〈◊〉 the Emperours 96. dis● The pope is not the head of any particuler church The popes power vaine Distinction of merite and of office Holynes cómeth not by sitting but by folowing The Cardinalles do count it heresie that they should be compelled to be followers of the Apostles 18. I. Hus condeneth the crueltie of the prelates in seeking the death of heretickes The betraying and condemning of innocents And how coulde this bishop of Cambray vnderstand the bookes of I. Hus being written in Bohemiā speach which he vnderstoode not 19. The church militant standeth in three partes 1. Ministers 2. Nobles 3. Commōs 20. Three kinds of obediēce 1. Spirituall 2. Secular 3. Ecclesiasticall True obedience ruled by Gods cōmaūdemēt Deut. 24. 21. Appealing vnto Christ. Appealing to Christ forbiddē by the Cardinal of Cambray The appeale of Iohn Hus from pope Iohn 23. vnto Christ. The ferlicht cōplaint prayer of christ against wicked iudges After the example of Christ he maketh his prayer to God A godly prayer of Iohn Hus. Chrisostome Andrew of Prage Robert bishop of Lincolne appealed from mē to christ Iohn Hus complaineth of Michaell de Causis his great enemie The procurator of I. Hus laid in prison at Rome The pope proued to do against his owne canon lawe 22. A knot found in a rushe The tree that is good bringeth forth good fruit 2. Cor. 10. 1. Cor. vlt. Deu. 23. Cardinall of Cambray obiecteth Iohn Hus aunswereth Forbidding to preach whether it ought to be obeyed Act. 5. Preaching almose geuing be not workes indifferent but duties commaundementes To forbid a minister to preach And to forbid a rich man to geue almose is both one How the popes cursinges are blessinges The Cardinall of Florence with his Notarie 8. Causes why excommunication ought tobe feared 24. A minister ●re admitted is more ●●unde to preach then to doe any other work ●●in rey the popes pro●intiō not●●thstaning Censures of the Popes Churche multiplyeth the Popes ●●ctousnes Christ in●●dited ●ne but ●rayed for all 1. Pet. 2. Rom. 12. 1. Articles drawen out of the trea tise written against Steuen Palletz The Emperours iudgement of I. Hus. The Cardinall of Cambray The Cardinal of Cambray Articles drawen out of his treatise written against Stanislaus de Znoyma 4. 1. Article Paule how he was both a blasphemer also a member of Christ. 2. Article Predestination 3. Article Who so committeth deadly sinne sw●●●eth from the faith Tit. cap. 1. 4. Article The wordes of Christ for binding and losing vnles they be well vnderstanded minister to much feare or presumption 5. Article Binding loosing chiefly and principally belong to Christ. To true absolution 4. thinges are required 6. Article Ex Gregorio Priestes more geuen to their owne lucre and belly then to the seruice of Christ. 7. Article The Popes power ●oing vngodly is not to be feared 8. Article The Pope doing contrarye to Christ is not the vicare of christ but Antichrist 9. Article I. Hus neede not proue this article the pope will proue it himselfe 10. Article Top reach against the popes commandement 11. Article How farre prelates are to be obeied Isydorus Concilia pr●cept● 12. Article The clergie and laitie may iudge of the works of their prelates Iudgement double Secret in the co●●● of cōscience Open in the ●●urt of authoritie 13. Article To God● warde all wicked ministers be suspended 14 Article The laye people supplanted by the Clergy 15. Article The dishonest●e of such as gathered fal●● accusatiōs against Iohn Hus. 16. Article 17. Article 18. Article 19. Article Articles 19. drawen out by the Parisians against I. Hus. Iohn Gerson Chauncelor of Paris 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. The wordes of the Cardinall of Cambray vnto I. Hus ●er his accusation A double inconuenience for I. Hus to fall in I. Hus aunwereth The Cardinal of Cambray appointeth I. Hus certaine conditions wherby he may be deliuered The answer of I. Hus. The Emperour exhorteth Iohn Hus to recant The Emperour rehearseth the Cardinall of Cābrayes wordes The force of false witnes The Emperour to Iohn Hus. An olde bishop of Pole Obiection of a priest better sed then taught Palletz against Iohn Hus. A new heape of slaunders I. Hus waxeth faint and weary An other quarel against I. Hus touching these three men beheaded at Prage Vide supra pag. 590. I. Hus belied Ex puris affirmatiuis non con sistet argum in 2 figuta Another quarel picked by Englishe men against Iohn Hus The testimonial of Oxford for Wikliff brought to Prage A peece of the stone of Wickliffes sepulchre brought for a relique to Prage The othe of Palletz The othe of Michael de Causis Iohn Hus witnesseth the Lord. I. de Clum doth cōfort Iohn Hus. The Emperours oratiō to the president of the councell That which god plateth man shall neuer roote vp Hierome of Prage mentioned and promoted by the Emperour 4. Bishops sent to Iohn Hus. The pitifull and louing oration of I. de Clum vnto I. Hus. 〈◊〉 marne●as constance of Iohn Hus. That is no 〈◊〉 mode●● that are regardeth to obey 〈◊〉 then manifest ve●●● Iohn Hus answereth The sermon where the ●●tence The theame His theame confirmed by Aristotle They cannot abide the laitie to rule in any case All the popishe religion lieth in landes lordships and liberties Note here the
into Hungary The crueltie of the turke vpon hys wiues brother Belgradum besieged of the turke Ioānes Huniades Vaiuoda Fiue victories of Ioan. Huniades against the turke gotten in one day The great Baslaor duke of the turkes ouerthrowen by Huniades The victory of Huniades against Carambeis the great captaine of the turkes The great turk brought to a great distresse Amurathes seketh truce of the Christians The conditions betweene Ladislaus kyng of Polonie and Amurathes Truce betwene the Christians the turkes for x. yeares Amurathes returneth into Asia The Popes dispensation and absolution abused The popes rashe counsayle pernicious to Christendome Nothyng prospereth that is taken in hand by the popes setting on The pope breaketh truce made betwene the Christians and the turke The pope moued Ladislaus to breake truce The false dealing of the Italian Nauie The battell of Varna betwene Ladislaus king of Polonie and Amurathes The popish prelats were the cause of losing the field A iust punishment vpon the popish prelates for their vniust dealing Iulianus the Cardinall slaine in the warre and spoyled Huniades escapeth The worthy commendation of Iohn Huniades Amurathes taketh his viage against the G. ecians * Peloponesus Sycione Patris with all the partes of Thessaha Achaia brought vnder the turke The memorable actes of Scanderbeius against Amurathes * This Epyrus is a countrey in Grecia bordering neare to the partes of Macedonia Vij captaines of the turkes ouercome by Castrio●us Scanderbeius Amurathes renounced his dominion made himselfe a turkish monke Two Christian warriers in Europe stirred vp of God to vanquish the turks This Iohn Huniades is reported of 20. battels with the turke to lose but two Epyrus Macedonia defended by Scanderbeius Amurathes ouercome by Scāderbeius Ianizari among the turkes A lamentable slauery of Christian mens children vnder the turke Mahumetes the 9. turke after Ottomannus The tyranny of Mahumets in murthering hys brethren Halibassa a traitour to his maister Horrible paricide of the abhominable turke Gods prouidece can fetch out of the deuils mouth whom he list to saue Note here gods punishment vpon the betraer of innocent bloud Mahumete first setteth vpon Ath●● The fury of Mahumete the turke agaynst the Citie and schoole of Athens Athens destroyed The siege taking of Constantinople Vid. supra pag. 708. Ex Ioanne Ramo lib. 2. rerum Turcicarum Vid. supra pag. 67. Ex Ramo An image of the Crucifix in Constantinople What ossences be giuen to the infidels by Images in Christian Churches Vienna admonished The cruell murther by the turkes in the citie of Constantinople A lamentable destruction of the Citie of Constantinople The bloudie cruelty of the turk against the Christian captiues The citie of Pera yeldeth it selfe for feare to the turke The citie of Pera spoyled Dronken Mahumete false of promise The mercifull prouidence of God in sauing his people Constantinople made the imperial seat of the turke The siege of Belgradum in Hungary Ioan. Huniades 40000. turkes slain at the siege of Belgradum Ex Hier. Zieglero in lib. de illustrab virts Germa c● 98. The noble act of a Bohemian in defence of his countrey The towne of Belgradium valiauntly defended from the turke 200. thousand turkes at the siege of Belgradum The decease of Ioannes Huniades The turkes war against Vsumcassanos The turke agayn returneth against the Christians Synope Paphlagonia Trapezuntus gotten of the turkes Dauid Emperour of Trapezuntus with hys two sonnes and vncle cruelly killed of the turke Corinthus Mitylene Lesbos Lemnus subdued of the turke The falshood ●● the wretched turke agaynst the Prince of Mysia The crueltie of the turke against the kyng of Mysia The siege of Chalcis in Euboia The cruell tyrāny of the turke against the City of Chalcis Ex Ioanne Ramo de rebus Turcicis The noble stratageme of women in defending that Citie Peloponesus Achaia Messenia Laconia Argolica Archadia Christen prouinces in Grecia subdued of the turke Capha taken of the turke The counsayle of Scanderbeius how to fight against the turke A notable example of singular courage in a Captaine The commendation of Scanderbeius agaynst the turkes Mathias the sonne of Huniades Stiria Carinthia taken of the turke Rhodes besieged Lencadia Cephalenia Zacinthus Fauelona taken of the turke The pope flyeth for feare of the turke Hydruntum taken These two Empires were Constantinople and Trapezunce Of these Ianizarites read before pag. 636. Baiazetes slayeth his brothers mother and his two nephewes Readbefore pag 734. False treasō worthely recompensed Lithostomus Moncastrum Christian fortes subdued o the turke The turke ouerthrowen at Tarsus Dyrachium taken of the turke The turke against the Venetians The Christians caryed away captiues Peloponesus agayne inuaded by the turke Methone taken of the turkes and miserably destroyed Coron Pilus Crisseū yelded to the turkes Ch●●●● 〈◊〉 L●●● 〈…〉 Ilan● 〈…〉 red of 〈◊〉 by the 〈◊〉 Truce 〈◊〉 the V●●●● the 〈◊〉 Warre 〈◊〉 Sophus 〈◊〉 iazetes Caragius the turkes captayne taken prisoner slaine of Sophus Halibassa the turkes captayne slaine Rest geuen to the Christians by the discor● of the turkes Zelymus made Emperour against his fathers will What these Ianizarites mere read pag. 736. The counsaile of Baiazetes to his sonne Zelymus The displeasure of Baiazetes against his sonne Zelymus The dissembling wordes of Zelymus to his father Zelymus the sonne poysoneth his father Zelymus the 11. after Ottomannus The crueltie of Zelymus against his father and his bretheren The crueltie of Zelymus against his cousins Ex Christ. Richerio Zelymus the turke warreth against his brother The crueltie of Zelymus against his brother The two sonnes of Acomates flie away from the tyrannie of Zelymus the turke The prouidēce of God in stirring vp occasions for his people Warre betweene Zelymus and Sophus the Persiā king Warre betweene Zelymus and Aladulus an other turke Preparatiō of warre betweene Zelymus c the Christians The turke called away from the Christians A turkishe vowe Campson the Sultane or ruler of the Egiptians Mamalucy Caierbeius ●alse to his maister Campson slaine Tomoūbeius made Sultane of Egipt Tomoūbeius executed A worthy destruction of the Mamaluci forsaking their faith and religion Note againe the prouidence of God The death of Zelymus The beastly crueltie of Zelymus against his kinred The cruelty of Zelymus against his sonne Solyman A note of Gods prouidence for the reformation of religyon Solymānus the 12 after Ottomānus Read in the pag. 738. Belgradum againe besieged of the turke Read before pag 743. Discorde amongest Christian princes what mischiefe it bringeth The pope so busie against Luther that he neglecteth the ruine of Christē dome True compassiō lacking in the Pope The city of Belgrade wonne of the turke Rhodes besieged Christian princes negligent in helping their felowes Rhodes wonne of the turke Christen warres against the turke neuer speede well vnder the guiding of Popishe prelates Christians were the speciall gunners to the turke The rathe archbishop slaine king Ludouicke perished in war
heard Peter preache Christ receaued straightway the holy Ghost Peter himselfe confessed and for his confession hadde the keyes of heauen Math. 16. Zacheus receaued the person of Christ into his house and withal receaued saluation both to him and his whole houshold Luc. 19 What a sinner was Mary which had no lesse in her then vij deuils yet because she set her hart and affectiō vpon that person many sinnes were forgiuen her Luc. 7. The right hand theefe how farre was he from all works of the law yet by faith entred he iustified into Paradise the same day with christ Luc. 23. In like maner although the poore Publicane came to the Church with lesse holines after the law yet went he home to his house more iustified then the Pharisie with all his workes and all by reason of fayth Luc. 18 The parable of the prodigal sonne which was lost yet reuiued agayne Also of the lost groat and of the lost sheepe which went astray and was found againe what do these declare but that which is lost by the lawe to be recouered by faith and grace And how oft doe we reade in the Gospels Thy faith hath saued thee c. Iesus seing their beliefe c. He that beleueth in me I will raise him vp in the last day c. Beleue also in me c. He that beleeueth in me hath euerlasting life c. Without me ye can do nothing c. He that is in me c. He that looueth me c. He that heareth me c. He that abideth in me c. He that receaueth me c. Onles ye eate my flesh and drinke my bloud c. That they may receaue remission of sinnes by their faith in me c. Act. 26. To him al the Prophets giue witnes to haue remission of sinnes whosoeuer beleeueth in his name c. Act. 10. He that beleeueth is baptised Mat. vlt. He that beleueth in me shall do the works that I do greater then these c. And likewise in the writings of S. Paule how often doe we heare the name of Christ almost in euery thirde or fourth line where hee still repeateth In Christo Iesu per Christum Iesum Per Iesum Christum Dominum nostrum c. Qui credunt in ipso c. Omnes qui credunt in eo c. Credentes illo in eum credentes illi in nomen eius in nomine Domini nostri Iesu Christi c. Beleue saith S Paule to the Iaylor in the Lorde Iesus and thou shalt be saued and thy whole house c. Actes 16. Thus then thou seest as the passion of Christ is onely the efficient or personall cause immediate of our saluation so is faith onely the instrumentall or meane cause that maketh the merits of Christ to vs auaileable For as the Passion of Christ serueth to none but such as do beleue so neither doth faith as it is onely a bare qualitie or action in mans minde it self iustifie vnles it be directed to the body of Christ crucified as to his obiect of whom it receueth all his vertue And therfore these ij must alwayes ioyntly concurre together faith and Christ Iesus crucified As for example when the children of Israel were byd of Moses to looke vp to the brasen Serpent neither could the Serpent haue helped them except they had looked vp nor yet their looking vpward haue profited them vnles they had directed their eyes vpon the said Serpent as the only obiect set vp to the same purpose for them to behold So our faith in like case directed to the bodye of Iesus our Sauiour is onely the meanes wherby Christes merits are applied vnto vs and we now iustified before God according to the doctrine of S. Paule who in expresse wordes defining to vs what this faith is and how it iustifieth sayth If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and beleeue with thy hart that God raised him from death thou shalt be saued c. Rom 10. Besides this what action or qualitie soeuer is in man either hope charitie or any other kinde of faith and beleeuing be it neuer so true except it apprehend this obiect which is the body of Christ the sonne of God it serueth not to iustification And that is the cause why we adde this particle Onely to faith and say that faith Onely in Christ iustifieth vs to exclude all other actions qualyties giftes or works of man from that cause of iustifying for so much as there is no other knowledge nor gift giuen of God to man be it neuer so excellent that can stand before the iudgement of God to iustification or wherevnto any promise of saluation is annexed but onely this faith lookyng vp to the brasen Serpent that is to the body of Christ Iesus for vs crucified As for example when the Turke sayth that he beleeueth in one liuyng God that made heauen earth his beliefe therin is true yet it iustifieth him not because it lacketh the right obiect which is Christ. So when the Iewe saith that he beleeueth in one God maker of heauen and earth and beleeueth also the same God to be omnipotent merciful iust and true of promise and that he hath elected the seede of Abraham true it is that he beleeueth and yet all this serueth him not because Christ the sonne of God is not ioyned to all And though the said Iew should be neuer so deuout in his prayers or charitable in almose or precise in keeping the law beleeued neuer so stedfastly that he is elect to be saued yet he is neuer the neerer to saluation for all this so long as his faith is not grounded vpon y● head cornerstone which is the person and body of Christ Iesus the true Sauiour After like sort it may be sayd of the Papist when he saith that he is Baptised and beleeueth in the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost three persons and one God and also confesseth Iesus Christ to be the sonne of God which died for our sinnes and rose againe for our righteousnes c. his beleife therin is true indede would saue him if he did stay his saluation in this faith and vpon Christ his Sauiour Onely according to the promise and grace of God and go no farther But that he doth not for neither doth he admit Christ onely to be his perfect Sauiour without the helpe of the patrons heades aduocates and mediatours nor yet permitteth his faith in Christ Onely to be the meanes of his iustification but setteth vp other by meanes as hope charitie sacrifice of the Masse confession penaunce satisfaction merites and pardons supposing thereby to worke his iustification before God contrary to the word of promise to the Gospell of grace to the doctrine of S. Paule whereof we shall see more the Lord willing hereafter And thus much of the
true causes of our iustification after the doctrine of S. Paule Concerning which causes this distinctiō furthermore by the way is to be added that as touching the originall causes of our saluation which be diuers and sondry some are externall without vs some are internall and within vs. Of the external causes which are without vs the first and principal is the mercy grace of god Of this foloweth predestination and election Thē cōmeth vocation The last and next cause to vs is the deth and bloudshed of christ wherby we are redemed al these be external causes because they are without vs. Of internall causes that be in man through the gift of God there is but one no mo in scripture apointed that is out faith in Christ which is the gift of God in vs. Beside this there is no gift of God giuen to man vertue work merite nor any thing els that is any part or cause of saluation but only this gyft of fayth to beleeue in Christ Iesu. And this is the cause why we hold that faith onely iustifieth meanyng that amongst all the workes deedes actions labours and operations whatsoeuer man doth or can doe there is nothing in that man that worketh saluation but onely his fayth gyuen to hym of God to beleeue in Christ his sonne following therein the trade of S. Paules teaching who in precise wordes so ascribeth iustification to fayth that he excludeth all other actions of man works of the law And therefore in the same Epystle to the Romanes S. Paule resoning of the glory of iustifiyng asketh this question how this glory is excluded whether by the law of works and concludeth no ascribing onely the glory thereof to the law of faith And consequently vppon the same he inferreth Colligimus enim iustificari hominem per fidem sine operibus legis We hold that a man is iustified by faith without the deedes of the law And how then can that he accounted for any part of our iustification which S. Paule vtterly debarreth and excludeth in that behalfe of which like exclusiues and negatiues the whole course of S. Paules doctrine is full where he still concludeth Sine operibus absque operibus legis non exoperibus Dei donum est non ex operibus ne quis sed secundū misericordiā glorietur Ephe 2. Non ex operibus iustitiae quae fecimus nos sed secundū propositsi suum grati●m c. Titi. 3. Non secundum opera nostra c. Timot 1. That is to say It is the gift of God not of works that no mā should glory c. Not of the workes of righteousnes which we haue done but of his own mercy c. Not after our workes but after his owne purpose grace which is giuen to vs c. Agayne Gal 2. Non iustificatur homo ex operibus c. That is A man is not iustified by works c. Item Ei qui non operatur credenti autē in eū qui iustificat impium fides imputatur ad iustitiam c. Rom. 4. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him which iustifieth the wicked his faith is imputed to righteousnes c. By these exclusiues and negatiues in Sainct Paules doctrine what doth he els meane but vtterly to seclude all kinde of mans merits and works of the law from the office dignitie of iustifying And although he expresseth not the word Onely yet vpon his exclusiues and negatiues this exceptiue must needes be inferred For in all Logike the cōnsequent is necessary and formall as one man is suffered to come into the house and no person els is suffered but one Ergo one man only is suffered to enter into the housé And thus much concerning faith in Christ prooued to be the onely meane or instrumentall or conditionall cause of our saluation and no other besides the same alone by the doctrine of S. Paule taught to the ancient Romanes 5. The fift branch which I note in S. Paules doctrine is this that after he hath thus established vs in certeinty of our saluation through faith in Christ then after that he exhorteth vs vehemently and with all instaunce of good workes shewing the true vse and ende of good workes which is first to shewe our obedience and dutifull seruice as we may vnto God who hath done so great thinges for vs. Secondly to relieue our neighbours with our charitie and kindes as God hath bene kinde to vs his enimies Thirdly to stirre vp other by our example to praise God to embrace the same Religion to do the like For requisite it is that as God hath bene so merciful to vs and gratious in eternal giftes we should be merciful likewise to other in temporall cōmodities And seeing it hath pleased him of his fatherly goodnes of our partes so litle deserued to call vs to so high a vocation to giue the bloud of his sonne for vs to forgiue vs al our sinnes to deliuer vs from this present wicked worlde to make vs Citizens of heauen yea his children more then seruaunts little then can we doe and well may we thinke those benefites ill bestowed if we forgiue not our neigbours and shewe some thing againe worthy that holy calling wherewith he hath called vs in mortifying our worldly lustes here studying after heauenly things and finally if we being prouoked with such loue kindnes reder not againe some loue for loue some kindnes for kindnes seeking how to walke in the steps which he hath prepared for vs to walke in seruing him so much as we may in holines righteousnes all the daies of our life And though our obedience shall alwaies be imperfect doe the best we can yet reason would that some obedience we should shew as louing children to such a louing father And this is the cause why S. Paule is so vehement vrgent to call vpon good workes not that workes should iustifie but that we being iustified so mercifully tenderly through his grace should not abuse his grace in vayne but endeuour our selues to our vttermost to render our seruice againe to him in such conuersation of life as may most make to his glorye and profite of our neighbour And though the words of our sauiour seme in some places to attribute to our obedience and charitie here in earth great rewards in heauen that is of his owne free grace goodnes so to impute small matters for great deserts and not for vs to claime any meede thereby or thanke at hys hande as by any worthines of our dooings no more then the seruaunt when he commeth from the plough and seruing the cattell in the field serueth first his master at home and waiteth vpon his table the master is not bound saith Christ to thanke his seruaunt therefore and bid him sit downe So you saith he when you haue done that is cōmanmanded you say ye