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A69038 The theatre of Catolique and Protestant religion diuided into twelue bookes. Wherein the zealous Catholike may plainelie see, the manifest truth, perspicuitie, euident foundations and demonstrations of the Catholique religion; together with the motiues and causes, why he should perseuer therin. ... Written by I.C. student in diuinitie. I. C., student in divinity.; Copinger, John, b. 1571 or 2, attributed name.; Colleton, John, 1548-1635, attributed name. 1620 (1620) STC 4284; ESTC S115632 314,600 666

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for a man as meate drinke or sleepe and said moreouer that if a married woman would not render the coniugall debpte of matrimonie Lib. ae vita coniug serm de matrimonio that the husband should not spare his maide The like filthie lust but farre more detestable was the occesion of Caluine his heresie For it is well knowē as may appeare by the iudiciall actes and recordes of Nouodiū Bolsecus in vita Calu. cap. 5. Iul. Brig pag. 59. that he was condemned of the filthie sinne of the flesh against nature had it not beene for the intreatie of the bishop there which obtayned that his punishmente should be turned vnto a hoate burninge iron on his backe he should haue bene altogether burnt Iohn Witcliffe for that he was depriued of his personnage in Oxforde for his vitious misdemenor began his heresie Arrius because Alexander was preferred to the Archbishopricke of Alexandria before him Nicep de pen. l. 5. c. gaue occasion of the Arrian heresie against the deitie of Christe Mōtanus for that he was denyed the primacy of Asia which he soughte verie earnestlie troubled the Church with newe heresies as Nicephorus wyttnesseth de penitentia l●b 5. cap. 15. Aerius alsoe for beinge denyed of a Bishopricke fell into Arianisme and afterwardes inuented himselfe a newe heresie which was that wee ought not pray for the dead 2. Henry the eighte as Iohn Foxe a greate puritan in England doth wyttnes Fox in historia pa. 512. edit 1 all the world knoweth to be true for his diuorce made from Queene Catherine his wyfe was by the Bishoppe of Rome excommunicated who beinge sore exasperated therby assembled a parlamente by which he brought to passe that he banished the Popes authoritie out of England made himselfe head of the Church thus far Iohn Foxes owne wordes Hollin in descrip Brita l. 1● cap. 7. For it is certainly knowen that from the conuersion of England by S. Augustine duringe soe many hundred yeares vnto Kinge Henry the 8. as all English historiographers and ministers themselues doe acknowledge the Catholicke or papisticall religion as it pleaseth them to tearme it did florish in England that the cheefe pointe thereof was that the Pope was iudge moderatour and cheefe Pastor aswell of the English Church as of all other Churches of the Christians in Ecclesiasticall matters which Catholicke faith the said Kinge Henry defended the space of xx yeares as longe as he liued with his lawfull married wife aswell against domesticall heretickes that were his subiects by all penall statutes and exquisit torments at alsoe against forraine hereticks by a most learned booke in the defense of the 7. Sacraments which booke I haue in myne owne custodie for which he was ennobled and honored by Pope Leo the tenth with the title of defēder of the Catholicke faith which was neuer giuen to any kinge in the worlde before which he receaued as Foxe saies with great ioy for when it came to the kinge beinge then at Greene wich he went to his chapel accompanied with manny nobles Ambassadors Cardinall Wolsey said Masse the Earle of Essex brought the basen of water the duke of Suffolke gaue the assay the duke of Norfolke held the towell the Heraldes with their company began their accustomed cryes prononcinge Fox anno 1528. fol. 441. Henricus Dei gratia Angliae Franciae defensor Fidei Dominus Hiberniae And amongest his other magnificent titles he lefte to this day this title to his posterity as is well knowen to the world Neyther only with bookes but alsoe with his victorious and inuincible armes did he defende the Catholike Romane faith and the dignitie thereof for the which he foughte againste sundrie princes and their confederates as againste Lodowicke the 12. kinge of France and Iames the 4. kinge of Scottes though married to his sister Who beinge vanquished and his great armie ouerthrowen by the Earle of Surrie in England and the said kinge himselfe being slaine in the battle for that he was excommunicated was not suffred to be buried in any Christian graue Also he sent his Armie by sea to ioyne with the Spaniardes againste the kinge of France to assaulte France in the frontiers of Spaine by the powerfull force of the English Iohn Albertus the kinge of Nauare was driuen altogether out of the kingdome beinge excomunicated by the Pope which Spaine doth possesse at this daye Did not the said kinge within fewe yeares after send an Armie into Italie against the Emperor Charles the first in the defence of Clement the 7. then Pope And notwithstanding he was his great frinde and his Nephewe for that Queene Cathrine was his Aunte yet through the filthie concupiscence by which he was besotted and blinded to marrye Anna Bul●ene and soe to be diuorced from his lawfull marryed wife he turned all thinges topsie turuie reiected the Popes authoritie which he before aswell by Gods lawes the holy scriptures as by the fathers and Councells of the Church defended and soe by a parlament of one Realme or kingdome he disanulled and abrogated that which was established by soe manny generall parleaments and generall Councells of all Christendome yea by Christe himselfe and by all such as trulye beleeued in him And for not yealding vnto his desire herein manny religious and constant Martyrs offred their liues and their bloode amoungest whome was the lighte of England that most sacred Martyr and learned diuine Iohn Fisher Bishopp of Rochester Sr. Thomas More Lord Chancelor of England of these sorte of people our Sauiour wished vs to beware Act. 20 the Apostle alsoe saith woulues shall enter after my departure and shall not spare the flocke Rom. 16. Therfore in another place he requested vs to marke and knowe what people they be that raise dissentions and scandalls in the Churche and doe teach otherwise then wee haue alreadye receaued and to fly from them Heb. 4. Iohn 4. He alsoe exhorted vs that wee should not be lead away with mutable and strange doctrine S. Iohn alsoe wished vs not to beleeue euerie spiritt but that wee should trye whether they be of God 3. But the doctrine of Luther cannot by any triall be founde true so that as Christ saith Iohn 7. my doctrine is not myne but my fathers which did send me soe Luther may say his doctrine is not his but his fathers the diuell that did send him Luth. lib. de Missa Ang. to G lenens Ger 10. 7. wittēb 1. Cor. 13. 1. Cor. 14. whom he boasted to haue suggested vnto him arguments to ouerthrowe priest-hoode and sacrifice that by that meanes he should ouerthrowe and confounde the true worshipp of the true God for God as the Apostle saith is the God of peace and charitie not of dissention For whosoeuer procures sectes and diuision betwixt brethren saith the prophett is a diuell When therfore by Luthers meanes wee see so manny sectes against Godds Churche wee must
time of the generall councell of Lateran and afterwardes confirmed by Honorius the 3. 1206. 10. The order of saint Celestine beganne by one Petrus Moromus who liued in the wildernes with great example of holines of life and multitude of miracles which was approued by saint Gregory the 10. in the generall counsell of Lions 1274. And it is called the order of Celestine for that the said Peter beng the author therof was made Pope afterwardes and called by the name of Celestine the 5. 11. The order of Obseruants beganne in the time of Fredericke the 2. Emperor who was a great enemie to the Pope and church and spoiled all the territories thereof they dedicated themselues to the seruice of the blessed Virgin and being in number 7. verie noble and welthy men went into th● wildernesse and there liued remoued from all the enticementes and inducementes of mischeife which was the occasion that others also forsooke the vanities of the world Many o● godly people in all ages and countries haue bene by a speciall fauor of God raised vp to knocke the hammers of pennance at our slumbring and lumpish hartes oppressed with dead sleepe and Lethargie to sounde the trumpet of Gods wrath in his church to awake rechles and forgettfull soules out of the slumbring dreames of fleshly concupiscence crying repeating to the carelesse children of Adam our sauiours heauie and dreadfull voice vnles yee repent you shall euerie one perish That preestes in the primatiue church euen from the Apostles time were religiouse and obserued religious order of life CHAPTER IV. 1. SEing that religion consisteth of the foresaid three vowes obedience chastity and pouerty and that the Apostles and their successors haue accomplished and performed them they were religious and obserued a religious life for when the preistes receaued holy orders they promised perpetuall chastity and if any of them had wiues by the example of the Apostles they willingly of their owne accorde refrained from the vse of wedlocke They obliged themselues also to cannonicall obedience as S●lpitius writeth of saint Martin whome saint Hillary sollicited that he should be made preiste by himselfe and whome for his great vertue he loued for that in receauing holy orders of him he would be obliged to stay with him and render to him obedience S. Gregory also declareth 4. Epi. 74 that it was the custome of Rome that no preist could deaparte from thence that receaued ther holy orders Cōcerning pouerty which is the third the preistes in old tyme imbraced the same in so much as when they were made priestes they made a resignation of all they had whether it was patrimony or anny other worldly substance which S. Hierome declared saying that this was the cause why the preistes were shauen that it should signifie a cuting off and forsaking of all temporall wealth Lib. de vita contēplatiua cap. 9. Prosper confirmeth the same saying it is expedient and meete for the acquiring of perfection to despise his proper goodes and to be contented with the goods of the church for the goods thereof are not proper but common and so he brought examples of saint Paulinus and S. Hillarius who when they were made preistes and Bishops they sould their patrimony and gaue the price thereof to the poore and were diligent administrators of the patrimony of the church Epist. ad clerum Hierosolimitanum distributing to each one proportionably according to his degree and necessity S. Clement writeth that the common life was requisite and to be followed of those that addicted and yeelded themselues wholy to the seruice of God and to the imitation of the Apostles the like obseruation of life saint Gregory the greate wished saint Augustine to institute amongst the cleargy of england The same is also confirmed by the decree of Eugenius the 2. and Vrban Pope in his epistle to all the cleargy 2. Of this grew the Canons regulars which life began in the Apostles days and afterwardes was renewed and restored by by saint Augustine as Possidonius writeth Possid in vita ● Aug. that he had a monasterie within the church in the which nothing was propre but all was common But after that saint Augustine was deade and Hippo of which he was Bishoppe being destroyed and ransacked by the Vandales Gelasius a holy man of that institution with some others came into Italy being made Pope the rest that were with him liued most regulary in a monestary that was founded by them nere to the church of Lateran which continued 800. yeares vntill afterwardes thinges that were common were made proper euery one hauing a portion assigned vnto him Of this order of Canon regulars was saint Patricke the Apostle of Ireland and also saint Dominicke before he instituted his order In the primatiue church all preistes obserued this religious community and especially such as dwelling in citties and great townes had any charge in them as wee may read in saint Augustine but such as were ordeined to be incumbentes in the country Aug. ser 1 resertur 12. q. 2. in respect of seuerall parish churches and seuerall distinct incumbencies were permitted to haue seuerall prouisions and distinct benefices and as the christians encreased so their pastors and preistes increased also the spirituall want of the christians the maiestie of God and the dignity of the church requiring and exacting many seruantes to serue the one and many pastors and preistes to serue the other in the multitude whereof it were very hard to preserue and continew the splendor and sincerity of the former feruor and charity of that heroicall age which had as it were the florishinge springe and the first fruictes of the holy Ghost and therefore the prime and the cheefest season of holines and religion Of whose blessed vigor of piety the lesse wee sauor by tract of tyme the more our owne proper loue increaseth and the loue of God decreaseth 3. But in all ages God sendeth some to reforme the auncient discipline and to reuiue the languished vigor therof not only in themselues but in others especially in this so generall a corruption not only of nature but also of manners of religion and lawes of ciuill honesty and religious pietie as Ignatius Loiola 1540. began his reformation of the clergy and by the institution of his order confirmed by Paule the 3. Pope renued the old discipline by reducing his order and institution therunto It is also a matter of no lesse consideration then the former The founder of the order of the Societie of Iesus that in one night he was borne in the house of Loyola nere the towne of Bergara in Ipulcha a prouince betwixt Biscaie and the kingdome of Nauarre and Luther was borne in Saxony in a towne nere Wittenberge called Ilesby 1483. Surius vpon S. Martins daye Both of them employed theire wittes at one time the one to bring all religion and ecclesiasticall order to vtter confusion and miserable
any other taught the same in any other countrie did euer conspire in treason or murther or deuised anny mischeefe against kinge potentate or countrie or that euer anny man lost his life landes or goodes for not receauinge either themselues or their doctrine or that euer any kinge was expelled out of his kingdome for not receauinge the catholique religion into his countrie or was forced to imbrace the same as the founders of protestancie haue done But it is wel knowen that Luther and Zuinglius were the first that euer preached the protestant religion as it is proued in the Apologie of the protestant Church of England and that they were the causes of all the mischeefe warres and troubles insurrection of subiectes against their princes ouerthrowinge and banishment of Princes by their owne subiects out of all their kingdomes and states 9. Lastlie it is knowen also that our first founders and apostles came in simplicitie of spiritt without troupes of horsemen or bandes of soldiors hauinge noe other standert but the crosse of Christ nor noe other poulder but the dust of their feete but the protestant founders came with wilde-fire g●n-poulder and cannot-shott with their cruell armies in all places to bringe all to confusion an desolation that would not imbrace their sect yea many holie martyres haue suffred death for not forsakinge their old religiō to accept these new deuised opinions of these sectaries wherof I haue thought good to sett downe the names wherby you may perceaue the constancie of Catholiques and the cruelties of protestants Ex fructibus eorum cognoscetis eos For yow shall knowe them by their fruicte I will first speake of Flanders then of France afterwardes of England and last of all of Irelande The name of those that suffred death by the Gewses of Flanders where the protestantes are soe called CHAPTER I. 1. THe Reuerend Father Nicholaus Picus guardian of a monasterie of S. Francis in Holland together with ten of his brethren Ierom Werdan viccar Will. Hadne Nicase Hez Theodorique Emden Anthony Hornarien Anthony Werden Godfrey Meruellan Frauncis Rod of Bruxells Peter Astun a lay brother Cornell Wican a lay man who after much torment and affliction were sent to the towne of Bill where they were beaten with clubbes hanged on the topp of the common stoare howse of the towne in the night time the 14. of August 1575. they cutt of their eares and their noses they ripped vp their bellies and pulled ou● all the fatt they could gett and sold the same in all places of the prouince They alsoe put to cruel death Leonard Veichle pastor of Barcomia Nicholas Poppell another pastor of that place Godfrey Dimens somtime rector of the vniuersitie of Parris but then Pastor Gorcomiensis Iohn Oster W●canus cannon regular of saint Augustines order and ouerseer of the Nunnes Adrian Becan of the order of Premonstrensis Iames Lacopins a monke of the same order Iohannes On s of the order of saint Dominique Andrewe Walter Pastor Hairn●tensis besides many other related by doctor Estius chauncelor of Douaie In this cittie of Brill were put to cruell death 180. religious persones at seuerall tymes And the Crucifix which stood in the church of Gorcomend for the consolation of the Christians they pulled downe and hanged the same vppon the gallowes they snatched also the Eucharist out of a Priests handes nailed it vnto a gibbet 2. When the Prince of Orenge tooke the cittie of Ruremunde in Gerderlande his soldiors rushinge into the monasterie of the Carthusians murthered three lay brethren vid. Albert Winda Iohn Sittart and Stewart Ru●emund And entringe into the church of that monasterie they found the Prior thereof called Ioachinus with the rest of the religious people prayinge vnto God all which they murthered in which cittie 29. priestes and religious persons were martired When the Gewes had gotte by deceit Adernard in Flaunders after spoilinge and robbinge all the churches and monasteries therof they apprehended all the priests and religious persons and brought them bound with the gentlemen of that cittie vnto the castle there amoungest whom master Peter licentiate of diuinitie and pastor of that cittie a worshippfull aged man was put to great tormentes and at the last beinge tied hande and foote was cast from the toppe of the tower headlonge into the riuer of Scaldis After him also they cast headlonge down into the riuer Paulus Couis pastor of that cittie Iohn Brackett Batcheler of diuinitie Iames Deckerie Iohn Opstall and Iohn Anuanne a noble man al priests They tooke also that vertuous man Iohn Machusius of saint Frauncis order somtimes Bishopp of Dauentrie who beinge sore wounded of them they left his poore carcasse like a dead carrion vpō the streetes other priests they tooke by the cittie of Ipris and buried them quicke in the earth with their face aboue the grounde which insteed of a marck they shott at with bulletts 3. When Delps a cittie of Holland was taken by the Prince of Aurenge who seemed to shewe great fauor vnto a most reuerend and learned man called Cornellius Musius confessor to the Nunnes of saint Agatha of that cittie yet was he with vnusuall and exquisitt torments put to the cruelest death that could be inuented the 10. of December 1575. The same crueltie they shewed vppon Egelbert of Burges a Franciscan friar in the cittie of Alcmaria for they did ripp his belly and cutt off his intralles with their kniues With noe lesse crueltie did they putt to death two Mouncks of the order of saint Hierome at Ganda a cittie in Holland their names were Iohn Rixtell and Adrian Textor whome the Generall of the Gewses caused to be stripe of their cloathes and with their swordes forced them to runn vppon thicke hedges of quicksett and to die thereon The like crueltie he executed vppon William Gandan a Franciscan Friar Iames Gandan Theodorick Gandan Cornelius Sconhewe and Iasper cannone regular Mr. Iohn Ierome natiue of Edome in Holland who beinge taken with other Catholiques by Hornan were brought vnto S●age in the north parte of that prouince where after many horrible and abhominable interrogatorious some of them died in that miserable captiuitie such as were left a liue were bound hand and feete vpon their backes with their naked bellies vpwardes and vppon euerie mans bellie was set a panne or caldron whelmed downwards full of dormise and frogges in great quantitie and vpon the said pannes or caldrons were put fiery coales which burning heate of the fire when those frogges felt and had noe other place to gett out they turned all vppon the poore peoples Bellies and did gnaw and teare there vntill they made hoales through their backes or at least some place to defend themselues from the rage of the fire 4. Vrsula Tales a religious Nunne of the Begginage after that her father an ould man and magistrate of that place with other catholiques were hanged by these rebells she also was brought vnto a gibbett and being asked
both a sacrifice and a Sacrament fol. 286 CHAP. III. Whether the Catholique Church commit offence in leaning to the litterall sense of Christs wordes in the blessed Sacrament of the Altar fol. 318 Lib. VI. CHAP. I. That there is a purgatory which is proued aswell by Scriptures and auncient Fathers as also euen by testimonies of Protestants themselues fol. 350 CHAP. II. Touching the Popes Authority in releasinge of soules out of purgatory fol. 359 CHAP. III. Whether it be against the lawe of God to forbid Priestes to marry and whether vowes and votaries are rather the inuentiōs of men then the ordinance of God fol. 363 CHAP. IV. Whether we ought to confesse our sinnes to priests and whether that priests cannot remitt or forgiue them fol. 372 CHAP. V. Whether fasting from one sorte of meate more then from another or for to vse any obseruation therein be superstitious according as protestants doe affirme fol. 377 Lib. VII CHAP. I. Whether the Protestant assertion be true which affirmeth that generall councells can erre fol. 386 CHAP. II. That the catholique church in those things shee doth propound to the christians to beleeue whether they be contained in the Scriptures or not cannot erre fol 395 CHAP. III. Whether Catholiques are to be charged with arrogancie for thinking that their church cannot faile fol. 396 CHAP. IV. That this Church which shall neuer be hid but remaine visible is manifest by the parable of Christ our Lord. fol. 402 CHAP. I. Li. VIII Whether that papistes doe amisse in hauinge their churches and monasteries soe sumptuous their alters and ornamentes so riche and ecclesiasticall possessions so great the poore wanting the same fol. 407 CHAP. II. Of the vnhappy endes and other punishments by which God doth chastice those that presume to robb Churches or otherwise to prophane and abuse sacred things fol. 416 CHAP. III. A prosecution of the last chapter fol. 426 CHAP. IV. Whether the kinge may take away church liuinges at his pleasure And whether as he is absolute kinge of the temporall goodes of his subiects he be so also of the Churche churche liuinges fol. 440 Lib. IX CHAP. I. That the protestant religion whose principall foundation and groundes are these articles aforesaid is nothing else then a denyinge of all Religion and piety and a renewinge of all heresies fol. 447 CHAP. II. That no iot or sillable of Christian religion ought to be counted a thinge indifferent or of smale moment and that whosoeuer doth not agree with the Catholique church in all pointes of beleefe cannot be saued fol. 459 CHAP. III. That the new Religion for that it takes away all religion is worse then that of the Turckes and Gentiles fol. 452 Lib. X. CHAP. I. An answer vnto Protestants barking against the religious institutions of holy Orders saying that religious vocations were not instituted by our Sauiour fol. 467 CHAP. II. That the Apostles and their followers in the primitiue church followed this estate of perfection fol. 473 CHAP. III. Of the increase of religious orders and how the same continued from time to time vntill our dayes fol. 476 CHAP. IV. That preestes in the primitiue churh euen from the Apostles time were religiouse and obserued religious order of life fol. 486 CHAP. V. Of the multitude of religious persons fol. 491 CHAP. VI. Of many great and eminent men who forsooke and contemned the world to become religious fol. 499 CHAP. VII Of Emperors Kinges and Princes who forsooke the world to become religious fol. 504 CHAP. VIII Of Empresses Queenes and Princes who likewise forsooke the world to become religious fol. 518 CHAP. IX How greatly religious people fructify vnto God and to his Church and that they are the best labourers which are therein fol. 525 Lib. XI CHAP. I. The name of those that suffred death by the Gewses of Flanders where the protestantes are soe called fol. 534 CHAP. II. Certaine cruell and bloody factes committed in Fraūce against the Catholikes by those that the vulgar sorte doe cal Hugonotes from the tyme that they stirred rebellion against the kinge Anno 1562 fol. 544. A Catalogue of those that suffered death as wel vnder king Henry as Queene Elizabeth and king Iames from the yeare of our Lord 1535. and 27. of king Henryes raigne vnto the yeere 1620. fol. 555 CHAP. III. A Compendiū of the martyrs and confessors of Ireland vnder Queene Elizabeth fol. 569 Lib. XII CHAP. I. Euery sect of heresies challinging vnto thēselues the trewe and Catholique church there is here set downe the true notes and markes by which the same may be discerned fol. 587 CHAP. II. That there are many excellencies and effectes which should allure euery one to follow and imbrace the Catholique religion And contrariwise many inconueniences and blasphemies which the new religion houldeth and teacheth The first excellencies fol. 609 CHAP. III. The 2. excellency is the pure and hollie doctrine which it professeth fol. 610 CHAP. IV. The 3. Excellencie is most diuine Sacraments which confer grace fol. 613. CHAP. V. The 4. Excellencie is to fauor the good and to punish the wicked fol. 616. CHAP. VI. The 5. Excellencie is the conuersion of all nations vnto Christe and driuing Idolatrie out of the world ibid. CHAP. VII The 6. Excellencie of the catholique Religion is that the same is proued and auerred by so many good witnesses as sacred and learned doctors blessed saincts martyrs and generall counsells fol. 617. APPROBATIO Hic Liber cui Titulus The Theater of Catholicke and Protestant Religion nihil continet quod fidei vel moribus aduersatur quin potius multa quae tam ad fidem Catholicam stabiliendam quam ad haereses huius temporis impugnandas optimè inseruiunt Matthaeus Kellisonus S. Theol. Doct. WHETHER THE RELIGION WHlCH Protestants professe be a new Religion or whether the Romish Religion be new and that of the Protestant be ancient and ould CHAPTER I. 1. IF Protestants were of sound iudgment or nott distracted of their wittes they would neuer suppose much lesse auerre so manifest an vntruth as that the religion of the church of Rome is a new religion or defend an absurditie so egregious as Protestant religion to be the more auncient Wherfore this first assertion being so euident and knowen an vntruth such as doe follow are the lesse to be beleeued 2. It is well knowen that before these 80. or 100. yeares all Christendome did imbrace the catholike Roman religion so that it was terra vnius labii Gen. 11. Act. 4. as it is written in Genesis a countrie of one language and one speeche and as we reade of the christians in the Actes of the Apostles that first beleeued in Christ that they were of one hart and of one accord and as one God was honored and worshipped of all soe one faith was embraced of all they obserued one order of administration of the Sacraments they vsed and kepte one obseruation of ceremonies all were called Christians
which blessed name none disdayned none were called Gospellers Lutherans Caluinists Zuinglians Protestantes or Puritans Anabaptistes Trinitarians or any other sect with innumerable others which the Protestant religion hath sett abroach and inuented men were simple and honest in their dealinges faithfull of their promisses charitable in their workes zealous in their beleefe obediente vnto their Prelates and Pastors This is soe euident a trueth as that all bookes recordes generall and prouinciall councells all parleamentes of kingdomes all vnctions and inuestinge of Emperours and Kinges all consecration of Bishoppes all holy orders of Priestes all churches monasteries and chappels in the worlde all the gates of townes and cyttyes all monuments and recordes both spirituall and temporall all vniuersities and doctours of Christendome both comon and ciuill lawes of all countries yea Protestantes themselues doe plainly witnesse 3. But that Protestant religion is new is a thing most certeine for there are men yet liuinge at this day more auncient then it and can remember when it first came into England and Irelande Wee can shewe you the first inuentours and authors therof The place the time and the occasion by which it crepte in and infected these miserable nor then countries Who haue opposed themselues against it What garboyles callamities came into those countryes that nourished the same What rebellion and insurrectiō of subiects against their princes for defending the same What were the motiues of such as inuented yt and occasions of others that imbraced it The successe of the one and the other and by whome and how the same was condemned I pray you what can be more euident signes and tokens of noueltie for noueltie in all common wealthes but especially in matters of religion as S. Nazianzenus saith is to be auoided yea the Emperour of the Turckes did aduise the Queene of Transiluania to beware of the noueltie of hereticall sectes and that shee should neuer suffer the same to creepe into her countrie It is well knowen also that the name of protestāt religion was neuer heard of before the yeare of our Lord 1529. in the towne of Spira in Germany where the Lutheranes beinge as it were combined against the Emperour Charles the 5. did vse a kinde of protestation wherupon afterwardes they were called Protestantes 4. If thou say that it lay lurkinge and hidden in the worlde I aske where or in what place of the world in what kingdomes and townes or who were the defenders therof Truly no writer or historiographer did or could euer make mētion of any such nor euer before that time any mention was made of them nor was it euer heard that any hereticall secte was so closelie hidden in the worlde but it might be knowen at least when Luther himselfe taught the same they should then haue manifested themselues and yet we can finde none such for such as followed Luther they were before Catholickes Ex nobis prodierunt saith Saint Iohn sed non erant ex nobis Ioan. 2. They went foorth frō vs but they were not of vs for if they had bin of vs they had remayned with vs it is cleare therfore they were not good Christians who forsakinge the narrowe way of saluation runne headlonge into the broade way of perdition and licentious doctrine of newe sectaries Whereas the religion of Christ is a religion moste auncient sacred immutable impregnable inuiolable alwaies the selfe same holdinge and continuinge his vigor and force vnto the worldes ende it is the soule and life of the Church For euen as by the soule fleash is vnited vnto the liuinge man soe by religion mākinde is ioyned vnto the church of Christe beinge his spirituall kingdome and all that euer were saued either before Iustinus mart orat ad Anto. Aug. l 10 confess ca. 43. or after Christe oughte to be called Christians as Iustinus martyr and other holy Doctors doe say for that they embraced Christian religion and as saint Augustine saith Ipse vnigenitus Dei silius homo propter nos factus est c. The only begotten Sonne of God became man for vs that he should become the head of his whole Church against which the gates of hell shall not preuaile Matt. 16. vnto whome Christe promised to remaine withall vnto the consumation of the worlde Matt. vlt. So that the religion by which this church is vpheld and Christe professed did and shall allwaies continue 5. It is well knowen that the name of hugonots began in France an 1562. as themselues of their assēblies made in the nighte at a gate in Tours in France called Hugon confesse to haue taken their denomination went out of the Catholique churche and did embrace the impiety of Caluine In Scotland they fell alsoe from the Catholique Church into Caluinisme anno Domini 1560. In Flanders the Geuses reuolted from the said church ouerwhelmed in the pit of soe manny heresies anno 1566. In England they chaunged religion anno 1535. and first fell vnto Lutheranisme afterwardes to Zuinglianisme afterwardes the bodye of the realme fell from Zuinglianisme to puritanisme the next degree vnto Anabaptisme and since what numbers are fallen to the familie of loue And what swarmes of Athistes are sprunge vpp in euerie shire as Whittguifte noteth against Cartwrith 6. Are not the first Authours of the protestancy also knowen as Luther Carolastadius Oecolampadius in Germanie Pharell in France Thomas Crammer in England Iohn knox and Paule Methen a baker in Scotland George Browne in Irlād In the Apologie of the church of England pag. 142 it is said that Luther and Zuinglius came first to the knowledge of the truth Luth. tom 7. f. 307. and preaching of the ghospell Luther said that God reuealed vnto him the knowledge of his Sōne that he at lenghte might euangelize it to others and that the Gospell was first preached by him D Kellyson reply to Surcliffe fol. 149. But we knowe that they cannot alleadge the author of our religion neither can they nominate vs from any particuler man nor can they chardge the Catholique church with any priuate opinion or faith that is not vniuersally allowed embraced of all Catholiques neither can they nominate the time that shee fayled of her faith Neither can they obiect that our church hath separated herselfe from the greater church or that such as did adhere to the Pope were in number lesse then any Church For it is written in S. Gregories Epistles to the Bishoppes of the Easte that Affrique Spaine France Italie and all the worlde did communicat with him This verie argument other Doctours did vse against other heretiques as Tertullian Tertull. lib. de praescrip Qui estis vos inquit c. What are yee saith he from whence and when came you where did you lie hidden all this while alsoe Optatus mileuita lib. 2. contra Parmenand Vestrae inquit Cathedrae originem ostendite c. Shew the beginninge of your Chaire you who challenge vnto your selues the churche
so other doctors doe speake to this effect 7. Caluine your cheefe prophet when he oppugneth our religiō he saith plainly Calu. l. 2. instit 2. parag 2. se toti ●ntiquitati repugnaturum That he opposeth himselfe against all antiquitie saith that he will admitt no auncient Father but S. Augustine And in another place he reprehendes S. Augustine himselfe for sainge that our willes doe cooperate with the grace of God For God made all thinges perfecte Lib. 2. c. 3. in cōplete order but innouatiō came by the diuell Wee read in the ghospell that after the good seede was sowen by God Matt. 13. the diue●l did sowe darnell cockle euen so after the trewe christian religion was sowen by the Apostolicall and catholicke Pastors in euery place of the worlde the enemy of mankinde by Martyn Luther an Augustine Frier did sowe and teach the darnell of absurde daungerous and damnable heresies anno 1517. beinge the first author of the protestant religion So wee knowe the author of the Arrian heresie to be one Arrius a Priest of Alexādria in Egypte anno 324. Of the Nestorian heresie to be Nestorius Archbishop of Constantinople who taught his heresie in Thrasia anno 431. as the other also haue taughte the one in Egypte first the other in Saxonie afterwardes Wee knowe the author of the catholicke religion to be Christe from whence wee are called christians in all ages before Luther first inuented the name of Papistes for that wee obey and embrace Christs vicar generall our holy Father the Pope the successor of S. Peter vnto whom Christ committed the regimente of his church feedinge of our soules and the charge of his flocke Matt. 16. This christian religion was first preached in Iurie the 15. Ioan. vlt. yeare of Tyberius Cesar as alsoe wee knowe that the same was oppugned and gainsaid first by the Scribes and Pharises afterwardes by the Gentyles and with all penall statutes of forcible lawes made by the Romaine Emperours other potentates of the worlde which were practised and put in execution for the space of 300. yeares to supplant and deface the same This christian religion was vpholden and defended by all the Popes and confirmed by all the generall approued councells that euer were But the protestant religion was disproued and condemned for heresie by Leo the tenth and by the generall Councell of Trent and by all Catholick vniuersities of the worlde as the Arrian heresie was contradicted and condemned by Syluester then Pope and by the generall Councell of Nice by S. Athanasius and Hillarius and other holye Doctors as the Nestorian heresie alsoe was reiected by Pope Celestinus and the Councell of Ephesus S. Cyrill others So that though wee haue shewed your authors or ofspringe the time place when it began and where it began yet the like you cannot once nominate of vs since Christe and his Apostles who are the only authors of our beleefe and religion 6. You affirme that the protestant religion was since Christe and his Apostles in the world but it was hidden I answere that seeinge the Church and religion of Christe ought to be a cittie placed vppon a mountaine or hill to be seene of euerie one as in many places the holye scripture doth proue it ought not to be hidden but manifest to the whole worlde otherwyse it shoulde not be the religion of Christ Matt. 5. Isa 2. Psal 71. Daniel 2. soe that I must cōclude with S. Hierom saying Bre●em tibi apertamque animi mei sententiam proseram in illa Ecclesia esse permanendum quae ab Apostolis fundata vsque ad diem hunc durat Dial. lucifer in fine I must be plaine and declare my mynde sincerely that wee must abide in that Church which was founded by the Apostles and continewed vnto this verie daye If you shall heare such as be christians to be nominated rather of some other head then of Christe Marcianistes Valentinians Montanistes know then they oughte not to be called the church of Christe but the synagoge of Antechriste euen so such as are nominated Gospellers Caluinistes and Lutherans c. which are the founders of your religion and the inuentors of strange newe and deuised opinions contrarie to the vniuersall catholicke church and to the auncient Doctours thereof ar rather as S. Hierom saith members of that synagoge then of the church of Christe and as they were most peruerse obstinate in their doctrine soe they were most shameles and licentious in their liues and as the tree beareth in his braunches the corrupte humours that they drawe from the roote as the vertue of the cause is knowen by the effecte and the nature of the springe doth shewe it selfe in the brooke and as the springe beinge vncleane the brooke cannot be cleere and the roote beinge withered the braunches can beare noe fruite so Luther Caluine beinge your roote and of-springe and beinge vncleane filthie leacherous and altogether wedded to carnalitie and licentiousnes beinge rebellious apostates noe doubte of such as shall followe or embrace them no better fruite can be expected of them hence Zuinglius himselfe did cōfesse Zuing. c. 2. Resp ad Luth. that as soone as he did embrace this ghospell of Luther he was attached with the raginge flames of fleshly concupiscence and sensualitie The occasion of Luthers fall and of other he●tikes from the Catholike Churche CHAPTER II. 1. WEE may applie S. Augustine his sentēce vnto this subiect Ang. serm de tempo 44. that there are two rootes plāted in two fieldes by two tillers or husbadmen the one Christ doth plant in the hartes of the good the other the deuill planteth in the hartes of the wicked And as this is Couetousnes which is the roote of euill 1. Tim. 6. Ephes 3. soe tho other is charitie beinge the roote and of-springe of all goodnes accordinge to the saying of the Apostle that wee should be planted and rooted in charitie for as no euill can springe from charitie so no goodnes can come from couetousnes soe that you may perceaue from which of these rootes Luthers cause proceeded and which of these husbandmen did plante the same For not obtayninge the promulgating of certaine indulgences whereby he hoped to gett money first he rayled against them who denied him the same then he was infected with a desire of vaine-glory thirdly with a desire of reuenge for that he had a repulse from the Pope called Leo the tenth afterwardes pricked forward with a most filthie appetite of fleashlye concupiscence beinge a professed frier fifteene yeares he came out of his monasterie and tooke with him a professed Nunne wherby he might satisfye his filthie luste withall so that he committed such sinne sacriledge by breakinge and violatinge his vowes that all the world were scandalized therat And so far did he defend his riotousnes and beastlie debauchednesse therin as to teach that a woman was as necessarie
came within his reache Besides the destruction and desolation he caused in many places of Germanie In Norriberge he burned a hundred villages Townes and Castles and shutt vp in them men and women with children and olde people which the firy flame consumed Surius An. 1553. viz. at Alterfum and Laufum Againe did not Christiernus kinge of Denmarke execute the like crueltie vpon those of Stocholum the cheefe Cittie of Suethlande after that he inuited all the nobilitie with the two Archbishopps viz. Sarcen and Stringeron and then murthered them euerie one and afterwards all the rest of the Cittizens notwithstandinge he had giuen his royall worde to the contrarie in the execution of which murther Surius An. 1517. he continued for many dayes That heresies are the cause of Reuolution of Countries and destruction of state CHAPTER IV. 1. SAincte Gregorie sayeth that the conseruation of the Common wealth doth depende of the peace of the Church and that for two reason for that the lawe of God commaundes vs that wee should obey our kinges and princes in thinges that are not contrarie to the said lawe of God soe that he that obeyes God he muste needes obey his lawfull Soueraigne because God almightie soe commaunded for that obedience wee owe to the kinge is parte of that wee owe to God But when men doth cast away this bridle by heresie or by anny other occasion of their vnbridled and incorrigible humors as they haue no feare of God soe bear they noe dutie to their Prince or Soueraigne Euseb de vit Const lib. 1. c. 11. Zozo lib. 1. cap. 16. Wherfore Constantius Clorus father to Constantyne the greate a most prudente and valiante Prince intendinge to assay and proue the loyaltie of some Christian souldiers he said vnto them that if they would renounce their faith and sacrifice to the Idolls Carol. Sig. lib. 2. de occiden imperio they should abide with him and possesse such honors and promotions as they had receaued of him otherwise such as would refuse soe to doe they should departe from him Some there were who for to gaine the Princes fauor did as he comaunded and renounced their religion others refused soe to doe But Constantius putt awaie such as did sacrifice to the Idolls and kepte with him such as refused soe to doe saying that they were his best subiectes for quoth he he that is a Traytor vnto God will alsoe be a Traytor vnto his Prince 2. Carol Sig. lib. 16. de occid imp Theodor. histor l. 5. cap. 36. The like alsoe did Theodoricke being an Arrian hereticke killing a Courtier of his owne whome he loued intirlie for that from a Catholicke he became an Arrian only to please the kinges humor sayinge that he could neuer keepe touch with man that was not faithfull vnto God Also the most valiant Martyr S. Hornusta said vnto the kinge of Persia who comaunded him to denye his religion and become an infidel that if he should denie Christe that was Lord and Redeemer of the worlde he shoulde more easilie denye him that was a mortall man Through want of faith therefore and good religion rebellions are stirred vpp against their Princes and Soueraignes as alsoe insurrections of subiectes spoyles and garboyles of Traitors combustion and confusion of Common wealthes and all other enormities and trespasses are committed And as Aristotele saith Cuius vsus est optimus eius abusus est pessimus the more excellent and eminent a thing is if it be well vsed soe the more mischeefe it ingenders and the more ruine it bringeth with it if it be abused For as nothinge in this world is comparable in goodnesse to the Christian Catholick faith so when the same is abused by sectes and diuisions nothinge did euer more trouble the Christian Comon wealth for that discordes in matters of faith doe procure and ingender discordes and differences in the hartes and mindes of them that professe the same from which discords and variances proceedes soe manny mischeefes and reuolutions of Countries and kingdomes and kingdomes deuided as our Sauior saith cannot longe endure Therfore Theodosius the yonger beinge at Constinople and seinge his Empire deuided into sectes by the heresie of Nestorius he wrote an Epistle to that most vertuous and holy man Symon Stylites which at that tyme did florish with most rare example of sanctitie Act. Conc. Ephes edi tom 5. Ces Baro. tomo 5. An. 43● by which epistle he requested him verie earnestly that hee should aske of God peace and vnion for the Church and added these wordes Because that its diuision doth soe afflict vs that it is the roote and fountayne of all our euills and calamities Wherefore whosoeuer will read the Chronicles of kingdomes and the ecclesiasticall histories of the sainctes he shall finde this to be true by the warres that the Catholicks had in the Easte with the Arrians and in Africke with the Donatists and the Gentiles and Iewes against the Christians in all places 3. And neither Iewe nor Gentile are soe infestuous and pernitious againste the Churche and Christian Comon wealth as hereticks and especially those of our vnhappie times and of all sects the Caluinistes which are flames of sedition and destruction of Church and Comon wealthe an infernall fire-brand that burnes wheresoeuer it takes place which consumes to ashes all states and Citties where it is nourished not vnlike the Cancker that eates and gnawes the body that feedes it thus much you shall knowe by readinge a booke called Incerdium Caluinisticum printed 1584. Hollensen hist Angl. Anno 1554. idem in histo Scot. Anno 1567. Also the histories of the troubles of France lib. 1. Anno 1565. The historie of Flanders Anno 1555. in the additions of Surius 1585. Stanislaus Rescius Ambassadors and Treasure for the kinge of Poland in Naples did write a booke 1596. De Atheismis Phallerismis Euangelicorum nostri temporis videl of Atheismes and Phallerismes I meane cruelties of the Euangelistes of our tyme neither onlie doe they destroie kingdomes but alsoe seeke to depriue Princes of theyr liues that oppose themselues againste their doctrine for some of them conspired to kill Queene Marie and one of them confessed the same at his death which was at Tiborn the 18. of May 1554. Norman Lesby Iames Meluine and other Caluinists in Scotland murthered the Cardinall of S. Andrewes in his owne howse and chamber the yeare 1546. Stowe 1554. and this by approbation of Iohn Knockes Buchanan and others of the Geneuian Consistorie Doctor Hancraft in his booke of dangerous positions Lib. 4. c. 14. in historia Ioh. Lesley ep Ros●e 4. Buchanan in his most wicked and vngodly declamation made at London against his dread soueraigne the last Queene of Scottes incensed both English and Scottes against her to depriue her of her life and of her kingdome whose wicked desires and desigmentes was putt in execution by the English in the moneth of Ianuarie 1587. which
as God almightie comanded Moyses when he would deliuer his people from the seruile yoke of Aegipte Exod. 4. to take into his handes a peece of wood that is to say his rodd by which he was to worke all those miracles that he wrought Exod. 7.8.9 so when our Sauiour was to deliuer mākind from the thraldome of the deuill he tooke this wood which is his crosse of which Moyses rodde was a figure by which our Sauiour hath redeemed vs and by which both he and his spouse the Church doe worke miracles of which the spouse in the Canticles saith Cant. 7. Ascendam in altum apprehendam fructum eius I will climbe vpp into the toppe thereof and I will take some of the fruicte The fruit of this noble crosse is the mortifications of our passions the bridlinge of our filthie concupiscense the crucifie●g● of our luxurious carcase the restraint of our vnsatiable appetites The fruitt thre●●of are all the vertues both morall and supernaturall The fruicte thereof is a chast bodie a contrite hart an instant prayer a feruent spiritt a sounde religion a quiett conscience a perfect life a pure intention and a contemplatiue mind the foundatiō of all these vertues is true humilitie which was neuer knowen in the worlde before the crosse was exalted in worlde which as the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 1. as vnto the Iewes ●ertes a scandall vnto the gentiles foolishnes so now adayes vnto the heretiques of this tyme is Idolatrie but glorie and saluation vnto the vertuous catholiques who doe learne daily by this signe of the holy crosse the principall misteries of our faith which are two 12. First the misterie of the vnitie and trinitie of God secondlie the incarnation and passion of our Sauiour Wee make the signe of the crosse in the name of the father and of the sonne and of the holy ghost and in this forme Puttinge the right hand vnder the foread when wee say in the name of the Father then vnder the breast when wee say and of the sonne lastly from the left shoulder vnto the right when wee say and of the holie ghoast And saying in the name and not in the names doth shew the vnitie of God and the diuine power and authoritie which is one onlie in all the three persons these woordes of the father of the sonne and of the holy Ghoast doe shewe vnto vs the trinitie of persons the signinge in forme of a crosse representeth vnto vs the passion and consequentlie the incarnation of the sonne of God the passinge from the left shoulder to the right signifieth that by that passion of our Sauiour wee were transferred from sinne vnto grace from transitorie thinges vnto eternall from death to life and wee that for our demeritts were to be placed with goates vpon the lefte hand he transferred vs with his sheepe vnto the right where wee may heare that blessed voice Matt. 15. Come yee blessed of my Father possesse the kingdome prepared for you c. 13. This signe also is made to shewe that wee are Christians to witt soldiors of Christ because this signe is as it were an ensigne or liuerie which distinguisheth the souldiors of Christ from all the enemies of the holie Church videl Gentiles Iewes Turckes and Heretiques besides this signe is made to call for Godes helpe in all our woorkes because with this signe the most holie Trinity is called to helpe by meanes of the passion of our Sauiour and therfore good Christians vse to make this signe when they arise from bed when they goe to sleepe and in the beginninge of all other thinges Finally this signe is made to arme vs against all temptations of the diuill because the diuill is afraide of this signe and flieth from it as malefactours doe when they see the signe of the Officers of iustice and many tymes by meanes of this signe of the holy crosse a man escapeth many dangers 14. S. Gregor Nazianzen Naz. in oratione priore quā scripsit aduers Iulianum writeth of Iulian the Apostate Ad crucem confugit ac ob timore●● signatur adiutorem facit quem persequebatur c. He flieth vnto the crosse he signes himselfe therwith he doth aske his helpe whome he persecuted the signe of the crosse did preuaile the diuills are ouercome Theodoretus most famous amoungest the Grecians saith also of him Theod. li. 3. hist eccle Apparentibus demonibus c. When the diuills did appeare vnto him he was compelled to signe his fore-head with the signe of the crosse and presentlie the diuills at the sight of the signe of Christs ensigne remembringe their ouerthrowe they presentlie vanished away And Zozomenus saith of him th●s Ex consuetudine pristina symbolo se Christ● clanculum obsignauit spectra illi subito euanuerunt Accordinge the old custome he did signe himselfe secrerlie with the badge of Christ and the ghoastes forthwith disappeared 15. Tertulian also wisheth euerie true soldiear of Christ Tert. de corona militis to defend and arme himselfe with the signe of the crosse Quamobrem ad omnem progressum c. Wherfore it was vsed that euerie one should make the signe of the crosse in his fore-head at his progresse and promotion at his goinge in and cominge forth in apparellinge himselfe in puttinge on his shoes in washinge himselfe at the table at the lightes at his goinge to bed at his rest in all his actions and conuersations Vnto which agreeth S. Chrisostome saying Neque sic regia corona ornatur caput Chrys in demonstr aduersus Gentiles quod Christus sit Deus to 3. vt Cruce subinde omnes ea se signant c. The crosse is a better ornament for the head of a Christian then the Diademe or crowne of a kinge when as all men do signe themselues therwith in their cheefest and principalest member which is the fore-head beinge the piller in which the same is engraued soe it is vsed in the Eucharist and in the holy Orders of priesthood likewise it shineth at Christs bodie at his misticall supper at home and abroade 〈◊〉 and in companie in your iourney at sea in the shipp in your apparell in your weapons and armes in the bodies of beastes ill at ease in the bodies of men possessed by the diuills so as all men ought to be greedie of this maruailous and pretious good of which they ought to be verie carfull thus fare S. Chrisostome of this noble crosse of which none that is a good Christian is ashamed but the Heretique is confounded therwith 16. The same also S. Augustine insinuated saying Aug. in Psal 141. Let him delude and tryumph ouer Christ crucified insultat ille Christo crucifixo c. I may behold the crosse of Christ in the fore-head of kinges that which he despiseth is a saluation to me none is so prowde as the diseased man that scornes his owne cure if he will not scorne it he should himselfe receaue
quod in eis non bene intelligitur etiam temerè audacter asseritur heresies and other peruerse opinions infectinge and intanglinge our soules euen to the deepe pitt of confusion doe springe of noe other roote then when good scriptures are ill vnderstoode and the badd vnderstandinge therof is bouldly and rashlie applied S. Ambrose doth likewise declare the same sayinge Ambr. 3. ad Titū S. Hil. in lib. ad Const Haeretici per verba legis legem impugnant by the wordes of the lawe it selfe the heretiques doe impugne the lawe S. Hillarius also saith Neminem haereticorum esse qui se non secundum sacras scripturas praedicare eas quae blasphemat mentiatur there is noe heretique that doth not alleadge falsy the scriptures for his blasphemies Also he saith de intelligētia heresis sit Lib. 20. de Trinit non de scriptura sensus non sermo fiat crimen heresie is of the vnderstāding not of the scripture the fault is in the sense and not in the word Hiero ad Lucif vnto which agreeth S. Hierom Neque sibi blandiantur c. Lett them not flatter themselues if they alleadge or affirme any thinge of the scriptures when euen the deuill hath alleadged the scriptures for his purpose The scriptures saith he doe not consiste in readinge of them but in vnderstandinge of them Origines also declareth the same Orig hom 9. in Exo saying Non rarò c. Somtimes the diuill doth wreast godes wordes from many for that there is nothinge soe holie but the enemie of mankinde doth abuse the same to the destruction of man Tertulian also saith de scripturis agebant De pref●cript her de sciptu●is suadebant c. They pleade the scriptures they persuade the scriptures they inculcate the scriptures vnto this they moue some at the first dashe they wearie the stronge they cōnfound the weake and men of indifferent iudgment they dismisse with scrupules Thus far Tertulian soe the Arian heresie the Macedonian the Nestorian Eutichian and all other old heresies would allowe nothinge but scripture and last of all these newe phantasticall heresies doe grounde all their turbulent spirittes and singuler maleperte and headie deuises vpon holie scriptures 2. For example Luther in his first booke against Z●uinglius saith that amoungest Zuingilans the Zuinglians themselues concerninge these 5. wordes there arose tenn seuerall sects of different religion I meane 270. sects of heresies in this time Lib de here fabulis hoc est enim corpus meum Stanislaus Rescius hath deuided the hereticall sects of this tyme into two hundred and 70. different heresies euerie one alleadginge scripture for his owne fancie Theodorus did reckon 76. heresies in his owne tyme. Aug. lib. de heres S. Augustine also did reckon 88. heresies vnto his owne tyme. And vnto Luther his tyme there were 290 sortes of heresies all which did alleadge scriptures Yea was there euer any heresie that did alleadge more scriptures for herselfe then that of the Arians did not the Iewes alleadge scriptures against Christ that he should not be holden for a Prophett saying Iohn 7. Scrutate scripturas vide quia a Galilea propheta non surgit search the scriptures saie they and behould that a prophett doth not arise from Galile and by scripture they did endeuour to proue that he was worthie of deathe Iohn 19. Wee haue a law say they and by our lawe he ought to die because he made himselfe the sonne of God Did not Iulian the apostate alleadge scripture as S. Cyrill saithe lib 10. in Iulianum for visitinge Martyrs Reliques alleadginge that place of S. Mathewe 23. that the Scribes Pharisies and Hipocritts are like to white monuments and they ought not to visitt them c. Also he alleadged many places of scripture as Math. 5. Ro. 12.1 Cor. 6. Math. 10. against the christians for repininge against him for takinge away their goodes but to beare all tyrannicall oppressions patientlie Did not Osiander a cheefe secretarie alleadge 20. different opinions touchinge the article of Iustification and at last he cited his owne opinion contrarie to them all 3. Of all these sectes it is saide Obscurum est insipiens cor eorum dicentes se esse patientes stulti facti sunt Their foolish hearte is darkned sayinge themselues to be wise but they be made fooles for heretiques can neuer haue the knowledge of the scriptures In male●olam animam non introibit sapientia Sap. cap. 1 nec habitabit corpore subdito peccatis true knowledge shall not enter into a wicked soule nor lodge in a bodie subiect to sinne Therfore the prophett saithe Discam in via immaculata I will learne in an vnspotted waie and when heretiques through pride and malice haue most maliciouslie opposed thēselues against the catholique church the piller and foundation of all trueth and haue sought by all wicked and malicious meanes to deface the same wee must not thinke they haue had any true knowledge or perfect wisdome for if once a foundation of a house or a rocke vpon which are builded manie chambers do fall all those chambers cannot stand vpp the catholique church is the firme rocke vpon which the faithe of euerie christian is builded if he once fall from the church he hath no faith nor any vnderstandinge of the scriptures and therfore S. Augustine saith he would not haue beleeued the ghospelll without the authoritie of the church which beinge inspired by the holie ghoast hath taught thinges which the scritures haue taught the contrarie as that wee should not obserue the old lawe nor obstaine from thinges suffocated or straungled and such like for the letter saith S. Paule killeth 1. Cor. 3. but the spiritt quickneth And as the letter in the old lawe not trulie vnderstoode nor referred to Christ did by occasion kill the carnall Iewe so the letter of the newe testament not truly taken nor expounded by the spiritte of Christe which only is in his church killeth the heretique who also being carnall and voide of spiritt gaineth nothinge by the scriptures but rather taketh hurte by the same Aug. to 10. de tēpore li. de Spiritu litt c 5. 6. 2. Pet. 3. 2. Tim. 3. as S. Augustine auoucheth for in the newe testament saith S. Peter are certaine thinges hard to be vnderstoode which the vnlearned and vnstable depraue as also they do the rest of the scriptures to their owne perdition of whom S. Paule himselfe saith alwaies learninge and neuer attayninge vnto the knowledge of the truth men corrupte in mind reprobate concerninge the faith but they shall prosper noe further for their folly shal be made manifest to all and as Iames and Mambres resisted Moyses soe they alsoe resiste the truethe 4. If Daniell after that God had reuealed vnto him thinges to come concerninge the militant church saith Ego audiui non intellexi I haue heard but I vnderstood not the Angell said vnto
be vsed but that and this he did to mantayne his opinion Also when his children kinge Edward and Elizabeth came to the Crowne and held contrarie opinions they caused contrarie translations to be published Fox ibid. Vulgar translations of scriptures profitts nothinge vnlesse wee knowe the true sense of them as for the true sense the protestantes giue vs no rule at all for the same For in England they cannott iudge of the controuersie of religion by the scriptures because they are boūd by their ●awes to beleue according to the will and decree of the parleament howse and of the kinge And in other protestant countries where the parleament or the wil of a prince is not of force there are so many sects and heresies as they cannot be reclaymed euerie one wreasting the scriptures to his owne priuate and fantasticall opinions for the Protestants doe not care for the vulgare translation vnles they may peruert the sense thereof according to their owne turbulent braines 8. Neither is there any people that doe reuerence and honor the scriptures more then those of the Catholick religion Which as S. Paule saith 2. Cor. 4. doth renounce the adulterating of the word of God wicked constructions deceitfull interpretations and sinister application thereof which is common to heretiques as Luther affirmeth that the roote of all heresies hath bene the scriptures yea he added that the scriptures ought to be called the booke of heretiques There is neither iott nor sillable in the scripture but the catholique church doth imbrace allowe the same as written and sett downe by the holie ghoast and although the priuate spiritt of some haue thought some bookes of the sacred scriptures not to be canonicall yet the whole catholique church hath receaued them hath taken awaie that doubte Touchinge the bookes of the old testament videlicet Iudith Tobyas the booke of wisdome Ecclesiastes the two first bookes of the Machabees and of Baruch as alsoe of the newe as the Apocalips the Epistle of S. Paul to the Hebreues the Epistle of S. Iames the 2. of S. Peter the 2. and 3. of S. Iohn and therfore the heretiques of this time doe not allowe those for that some in tymes paste haue doubted thereof Did not S. Tho doubt also of Christs resurrection and therfore ought he or wee doubt thereof still Christ hauing manifested his scarres and his woundes vnto him Euen soe though some learned men haue doubted of those bookes yet by the vniuersall consent of the church these bookes were made knowen to be Canonical scripture As concerninge the booke of Iudith the councell of Carthage vnder Aurelius Bishopp thereof Innocentius the first Ge●asius with 70. Bishoppes the councell of Florence vnder Eugenius the 4. haue pronounced it to be canonicall as also of the booke of Tobie Ecclesiastes and wisdome As for the two bookes of Machabes the Canons of the Apostles the author whereof is said to be S. Clemēt in the ende thereof the two bookes of the Machabees are inserted as Canonicall those two bookes are confirmed by Innocentius the first and by the councell of Carthage and confirmed by the 6. Generall councell in such like manner the said 2. bookes are cōfirmed both by the two generall councells of Florence Aug. li. 18 de ciuit Dei c. 16. con Gaud. epist lib. 2. cap. 23. and Trentt and as S. Augustine saith that the Churche and not the Iewes doth allowe the Machabees for canonicall and not onlie S. Augustine doth produce wittnesse out of them but also Ireneus Tertul. Cyprian Chrysost and others soe as to doubte of these bookes is rather the infidelitie of the Iewes then the faith of the Christians especially when the Church hath once decreede the same and soe are all the rest of the said bookes made Canonicall by the Church and by her determination which is of greater force to allowe or disalowe of them as also of the true interpretation of them then all the priuate spirittes in the world vnto whome all priuate mens iudgment ought to submit themselues Basill the greate and S. Gregorie Naz. being the cheefest diuines amoungest the Grecians and hauinge cast awaie all other bookes they recollected themselues to studie the holie scriptures the true meaninge and interpretation thereof as Ruffinus testifieth Ruff. lib 2. cap 9. in Eccl hist they gathered out of the authoritie and comentaries of their predecessors not of their owne priuate presumption or proper imagination Gal 2. Aug. lib. 28 in Faust c. 4. 9. Did not S. Paule beinge an Apostle before he preached the Ghospell goe vpp to Hierusalem that he might confer with S. Peter Lucc 22. Iames and Iohn and especiallie with Peter touching the preaching and expoundinge of the Ghospell for that our Sauiour did praie particulerlie for S. Peter that he should not faile in his faith vnto whome he promised the assistance of his holie spiritt If this soe great a doctor beinge illuminated by Christe and receauinge his ghospell frō him did neuerthelesse conferr the same with S. Peter the foundation of the ecclesiasticall Hierarchy the Pastor of Christs sheepe the captaine of his armie the sonne that shineth in this hemispher of christendome and heade of the misticall bodie of Christe which is his church how much ought others to doe the like which haue not so much securitie nor soe good a warrant to be fauored and inspired of God as he had Howe can wee thinke or beleeue that heretiques can vnderstand the scriptures who haue not the spiritt of God to instruct them in the knowledge thereof For as no member of the bodie hath the spiritt of the bodie vnlesse it be vnited and ioyned to the bodie soe noe member of the misticall bodie of Christ which is his church hath the spirite thereof that is separated frō the same Wherevpon S. Augustine saith nihil magis debet christianus formidare c. there is nothinge that a christian ought to feare more Aug trac ●7 in Iohn then to be separated from the bodie of Christe for if he be separated and disunited from the bodie of the church he is not a member thereof and if he be not a member of the same he is not quickned by her spiritt and whosoeuer hath not the spiritt of Christe as the Apostle saith he is not his it is the spiritt that quickneth the flesh auaileth nothinge Therfore you beinge not in the Church vnto whome the spiritt of God is promised to direct her in all trueth and to guide her from all errors and heresies wee ought not to beleue that you haue the knowledge of the scriptures or the true vnderstandinge or interpretation thereof for it cannot stande with any reason or rule that this spiritt of trueth can be in turbulent mindes or malicious heades as hetiquees be Esa 66. qui non requiescit nisi super humilem mansuetum trementem sermones suos neuer resteth but vpon the humble and meeke
the order of the tradition which was then deliuered vnto them to whome they comitted the church to the which many nations of those barbarous people that haue beleeued in Christe doe consente without letter or inke hauinge saluation written in in their hartes and keepinge diligentlie the tradition of our elders and soe S. Hier. saith cont Heres 9. The creede of our faith and hope which beinge deliuered by tradition from the Apostles is not written in paper and Incke but in the tables of the hearte and this is in the church booke also wherby wherein shee keepeth faithfully all trueth in the hartes of those to whome the Aposles did preach And therfore S. Paule saith 2. Thes 2.15 Brethren stande hold the tradition which you haue learned whether it be by worde or by epistle not only the thinges written and sett downe in the hollye scriptures but all other truethes and pointes of religion vttered by worde of mouthe and deliuered and giuen by the Apostles to their schollers And so S. Basil saith thus I accompte it Apostolique tradition to continue firmlie euen in vnwritten traditions and to proue this he alleadgeth this place of saint Paule ●n the same booke cap. 17. and saith if wee once goe aboute to reiecte vnwritten customes as thinges of no importance wee shal ere wee beware endamadge the principall partes of our faith and bringe the preachinge of the ghospell to a naked name and so example of these necessarie traditiōs he named the signe of the Crosse prayinge towardes the easte the wordes spoken at the eleuation or shewinge of the holy Euchariste with diuers ceremonies vsed before and after baptisme with three immersions in the fonte the wordes of abrenunciation and exorcismes of the partie that is to be baptised and what scripture saith he taught these and such like None trulie all cominge by secret and silent traditions c. S. Hierome reckneth vpp diuers such like traditions Hieron in dialogo Lucife c. 4. epist com Luci 28. willinge men to attribuit to the Apostles such customes as the Church hath receaued by Christians of diuers Countrie 5. S. August ad Genn saith Let vs holde faste those thinges that are not written but are deliuered vnto vs which beinge generally obserued in all places of the worlde wee must thincke them to come from the Apostles or from the generall councells which oughte to be of greate authoritie in the churche of God and whosoeuer will dispute hereof ought to be counted of most insolent madnes S. Hier. ad Luc. wee must obserue the traditions of our Ancestors S. Paule comaunded vs to submitt our selues to our pastors and teachers S. Augustine saith wee learne by tradition that children in their infancie shoulde be baptized de gen ad liter 101. 23. Tradition caused him to beleeue that the baptized of heretiques should not be rebaptized by tradition onlie he and others condemned Heluidius the heretique for denyinge the perpetuall virginitie of our Ladie and without this noe Arrian noe Macedonian noe Pelagian noe Caluin will will yealde Wee must vse tradition saith Epiph for the scripture hath not all thinges and therfore the Apostles deliuered certaine thinges by tradition S. Iren. lib. 3. 14. saith that in all questions wee must haue recourse to the traditions of the Apostles teachinge vs withall that the waie to true apostolicall tradition and to bringe it to the fountaine is by the apostolicall succession of Bishoppes but especially of the apostolicall church of Rome declaring in the same place that there are manie barbarous people simple for learninge but for constancie in the faith moste wise which neuer had scriptures but learned onlie by tradition Tert. lib de corn reckoneth vpp a great number of christian obseruations or customes as S. Cyprian in mannie places doth whereof in fine he concludethe of such and such If thou require the rule of scriptures thou shalt finde none tradition shal be alleadged the author custome the confirmer and faith of the obseruer Orig. he mil. 5. proueth the same Dyonisius Areopag referreth the oblation and prayinge for the death in the lyturgie or Masse to an Apostolicall tradition Soe doth Tertull Aug. Chrys Damasc alleadge Also wee mighte add that the scriptures themselues euen all the bookes of the Byble be giuen vs by tradition else should wee not take them as they be indeede for the infallible worde of God noe more then the worcks of S. Ignat. S. Aug. S. Dion and the like 6. The true sense alsoe of the scriptures which Catholiques haue and heretiques haue not remayneth still in the Church by tradition the Creede is an Apostolicall tradition Ruff. in expo simb ad principium Hier. Epist. 61. cap. 9. Ambr. ser 38. Aug. de Simb ad Cath. lib. 3. cap. 1. Alsoe it is by tradition wee hould that the holie Ghost is God therfore Macedonius was condemned in the 2. Naz. lib. ● Theol. councell of Constantinople for an heretique for that he denyed the same because in the scripture this name is not giuen vnto him for in the scriptures manny thinges are said to be such by Metaphors which are not soe indeede as that God is a sleepe that he is angrie that he is sorrye although noe such thinge is in God as alsoe manny thinges that are such and yet are not mentioned in the scriptures God to be ingenitus with manny such attributes as Trinitie parson consubstantialitie hypostasis vnto hypostatica homousion and because the Arrians did not yelde vnto the same not findinge them in the scriptures they were in the councell of Nyce condemned for heretiques And althoughe the verie wordes be not in the scripture yet they be collected of the sence of the scriptures And soe S. Cyrill Cyrill l. 1. dialogorū de trinit of that place of scripture Ego sum qui sum I am the same that is doth gather that the sonne is consubstantiall with the father although the worde consubstantiall is not founde in the scriptures So the catholique Church in all ages out of the sense of the scripture doth gather that wee oughte to pray vnto Sainctes to pray for the deade that there is a Purgatorie althoughe the verie wordes themselues be not there And when S. Paule did speake of the holy Eucharist he broughte noe scriptures to proue it I haue receaued of our Lord saith he that I deliuered vnto you he alleadged nothinge but tradition which he had receaued from our Lorde that a woman ought not teache in the Churche that a womān ought to be couered that the man oughte to be bareheadded that the Bishoppe ought to be husband of one wife he alleadginge nothinge but the custome if any man would be captious or contentious he did oppose against thē the custome of the Churche saying wee haue noe such custome nor the Church of God and whosoeuer despiseth these thinges he doth not despise man but God And therfore wee are referred by the holie
respecte that kingdomes and nations are subiecte to conquestes and inuasion of strange nations which alwayes for the most parte bringe with them their languadge vtterly defacinge the languadge of the country conquered soe also in these countries there muste be alterations of trāslations of scriptures which cannot be done without great danger of the corruption thereof either in respect of the ignorance or malice of the trāslators especiallie if they be heretiques which neuer translated the scriptures trulie being carried away by their passsionat affection of their heresie And therfore S. Hierom founde great faulte Hier epist ad Paulinum that the scripture should be soe common and in contempte for saith he talkatiue ould women and doting ould men the cauelinge Sophiste all men doe presume to speake of scripture they rent the scriptures in peeces they teach it before they learne it When S. Basil heard the cheefe cooke of the Emperor in his presence to speake of scriptures he reprehended him sayinge Tuum est de pulmentis cogitare non dogmata diuina decoquere it is thy office to thincke vppon thy cooquerie not to play the Cooke in diuine misteries I am sure if these fathers were liuinge in this wicked age to see the Cobler the Tailor the Tapster speake and dispute of scriptures and alsoe to preach in the pulpitt they would sharplie reprehend them Whether we forbid the ignorante to pray in a languadge which they vnderstand CHAPTER V. 1. Cor 14. 1. THe heretiques obiect vnto vs the wordes of S. Paul saying he that speaketh with the tongue let him pray that he may interprete for if I pray with the tonge my spirite prayeth but my vnderstandinge is without fruite I answere that although it be not fruitfull for his vnderstandinge yet it is fruitefull for his deuotion for here is noe mention made of any other tonges but of such as men did speake in the primitiue churche by miracle as of spirituall collations and exhortations which the christians were wont to make to praise God and not of those lāguadges which were then common to all the world as Hebrewe greeke and latine in which the scriptures both olde and newe were written For it is a palpable and grosse deceit and cogginge of the heretiques to say that the vertue and efficacie or the Sacramentes and sacrifice oblations prayers and religion dependeth vppon the peoples vnderstandinge hearing or knowledge the principall operation and force therof and of the whole misterie of the Church consistinge especially in the verie vertue of the worcke and the publicke office of the priestes who are appointed by Christe to dispose the misteries to our saluation The infant innocente idiott and vnlearned takinge noe lesse fruite by baptisme and all other diuine offices then the learnedest clearcke yea more if they be more humble charitable deuoute and obedient and perhappes wee see more often the simple to be more deuoute and the learned more rechles and more colde for deuotion doth not consiste in the vnderstandinge vnles the will be well affected 2. S. Augustine said of the common people non intellgendi vluacitas sed credendi simplicitas tutissimum facit It is not quicknes of vnderstanding but simplicitie of beleefe that shall saue vs And in another place he saith Si propter solos eos Christus mortuus est sui certa intelligentia possunt quae ad fidem pertinent discernere penè frustra in Ecclesia laboranus If Christe had died onlie for such as can vnderstand well the misteries of our faith in vaine well should labour in godes church for God doth rather respect your simple beleefe then your deepe vnderstandinge the affection of the will concerning your faith then the hawtie knowledge of your loftie minde Charitas aedificat scientia inflat as the Apostle saith charitie doth fruictifie to edification when science serueth for the moste parte to ostentation soe as our Sauiour did speake vnto the common people in parables whose simplicitie and godly affection did proffitt more therby then the wordlie wisdome and proud knowledge of the arrogant and swellinge Scribes and Pharesies 3. Doe you thincke that the children of the Hebrewes did vnderstande when they cried in the Temple Osanna filio Dauid Or that our Sauiour was displeased therby for that they vnderstoode it not but the priests and scribes were much confounded therby saying Audis quid isti dicunt truly our Sauiour was not discontented at the prayses of those littles ones for then the prophesie was fulfilled ex ore infantium lactentium c. thou makest an instrument of the tender infante and suckinge babe to magnifie and praise thy name to the confusion and ouerthrowe of thine enemies seinge the ende of all the scriptures and of the lawe of God and man and of the science and knowledge thereof is true and perfecte charitie inflaminge and inkendlinge our hartes with the firie loue both of God and our neighbors flowinge and florishing abondantlie with all fruitfull exercises and worckes of mercie pietie and religion as the Apostle saith plenitudo legis est dilectio the fulnes of the lawe is charitie 4. The experience of the catholique flocke in agreeing and submittinge themselues to the seruice of the church in the vniuersall and common languadge thereof and of their great increase and charitie pietie deuotion religion therby as their shinning resplendent vertues of their godly conuersation and their externall worckes of mercie may wittnesse and confirme the same and the example of the contrarie practise in fewe yeares paste of these new euangelistes or pretended reformers as in disagreeing from the common vse and custome of the whole churche and reuoltinge from the obedience thereof auoucheth no lesse as also the smale or noe fruite at all that their vulgar and confused translations haue brought both vnto themselues and to their miserable and scabbed flocke which like giddy heades and itchinge braines were not contented nor setled therein but conceaued great loathsomnes thereof like the children of Israell who hauinge soe earnestlie sought vnto themselues a kinge yet when he did raigne ouer them nothinge was more toilsome vnto them Puritants cares nott for prayers soe as nothinge is more troublesom vnto your carnal appetites then any sett prayers or seruice in your vulgar translations which the puritantes doe protest to be collected out of the Popes portuis Masse Admonitio parleamenti and consequentlie verie distastfull vnto them Admonition parl pag. 45. and for this cause by the protestants of englande are censured as scismatickes Was euer their stinge more venemous or their bookes more exasperatinge or more vehement against the seruice of the church in the latine tounge then it i● this day against the booke of comon prayer set forth in the englishe tonge and set seruice in your owne churches I haue reade the slanderous and bitinge booke of Thomas Cartwrithe oppugninge the same against doctor White-guifte Bishopp of Canterburie for defending it
others to be nourished but I doe not soe for I nourishe you with the fleshe of my owne bodie and I putt my selfe before yow giuinge yow the same flesh and bloode by which I was made your brother And as you take away Christ altogether from the sacrament denyinge it contrarie to Christs plaine certaine and manifest trueth to be his bodie and blood so you diminishe and extenuate godes loue towardes vs and our affection loue reuerence and deuotion towardes him and take awaye both the substance matter forme order ceremonies valour estimation respect and reuerence from so great so dreadfull and so incomprehensible a Sacrament 2. But the church of Christe doth not take away any valour or forme from this Sacrament and shee beinge instructed by the wisdome of godes spirite and by the instruction of Christ and his Apostles accordinge to tyme and place for godes iust honour and greater reuerence of the Sacrament and the christians most profitt and fruicte Epist 118. ad ●anuarium therby disposeth not of the forme or substāce of the 〈◊〉 and obseruatiō in receauinge the same which himselfe said S. Augustine did not comaund that he might comitt that to the Apostles by whome he was to dispose the affaires of his church though both he and the Apostles at Emaus and the fathers in the primatiue church receiued vnder one kinde in giuinge the blood onlie to litle children Luc. 24.25 Act. 2.20.7 Lib. de lap n. 10. Tertul li. ad vxo nu 4. Euse hist. eccles lib. 6. cap 36. Basil ep ad Cass and in reseruinge most commonlie the bodie onelie as Tertulian doth reporte in houselinge the sicke therewith as Eusebius doth affirme This is knowen by the holie Ermittes that receaued and reserued the bodie and not the blood in the wildernes as S. Basil doth wittnesse You ought therfore to consider that there is noe liuinge fleshe without the blood and whosoeuer receaueth the bodie receaues the blood alsoe Yea Luther himselfe was of this faith after his reuolte from the Churche and for that the Christian people be nowe increased and manie receaues often and at once soe much wine cannot be consecrated without eminent danger of sheddinge as also when in manie countries vnder the North-pole they haue not wine at all it cannot be without great charges to giue euerie man wine asmuch as should serue for consecration and besides it would be offensiue to the poore if they themselues should be excluded from the chalice more then the rich And therfore the Church in regard of Christian charitie to take away all murmure and occasion of offence hath ordained that all should abstaine from the challice when aswell Christe is receaued vnder one kinde as vnder both kindes neither in the meane time is Christs institution violated The priests therfore to whom it was commaunded to doe that which Christ hath done in his last supper they doe both consecrate and offer receaue and take noe otherwise then Christ himselfe hath done who did consecrate and offer receaue and take and hath giuen vnto them also to be taken vnder both kindes and this when the priest saith Masse noe otherwise because he must expreslie represent the passion of Christe and the separation of his blood from his bodie in the same and soe vnto the priestes is said doe this in remembrance of me 3. And although he said Bibite ex hoe omnes Drinke you all of this yet it is manifest that in the house of Simon the Leaper there were many others where he consecrated this blessed hoaste yet onlie the twelue Apostles satte downe whome he instituted newe priestes for to consecrate this newe Sacrament And although the Sacrament of Christ pertaynes to all yet vnto the priestes onlie pertaines the chalice But the laye people and the Clergie also when they doe not execute their function or say Masse themselues are to receaue vnder one kind beinge therby noe lesse partakers of Christ his whole person and grace then if they receaued vnder bothe For our Sauiour receaued and consecrated two distincte matters of this sacrament vid. bread and wine and hath vsed two distincte formes therein therfore euerie one of those kindes hauing a distincte matter a distinct forme is a distincte Sacramtē especially they being cōsecrated in two distincte tymes vid. at supper and after supper therfore the consecration of the bodie and distributiō which for some tyme went before the Chalice was a perfect worke of God for the worckes of God are perfecte and not defectuous for after the consecration and distribution of each of these kindas he said Doe this in remembrance of me In which he declared an eeuident distinction of both these diuine actions for these wordes were not vttered after both the kindes but a parte after eche of them therfore these two actes are a part and separated when ech of them haue their proper determination For as the Ciuill Lawyers saie In cunctis actibus dispositionibus eos articulos quorum quilibet habet suam propriam determinationem clausulam conclu●entem pro separatis esse habendos In all actes of pleadinges of which euery article hath a distincte proper limitation by distincte clauses wee must consider of them not in generall but a parte by themselues 4. For Christ would by his distinct institution and distribution giue power to his churche to dispense or giue either the one kind or the other accordinge to her wisdome and discretion wherevpon Bern. ser in caena Domini S. Bernard saith when our Sauiour arose from the table he washed all the disciples feete afterwardes returning to the table he ordained the sacrifice of his bodie and blood the breade a parte and afterwardes deliueringe the blood a parte The same is also proued by Pope Iulius the first Iul. epist ad Episc Aegipt con Brac. a. 3. 1. Cor. 10. whose wordes were afterwardes related in the councell of Brach with sundrie other proofes which I could produce vnto this purpose 5. But you will vrge against the church the institution of Christ who did institute this Sacrament vnder both kindes I aunswere that Christs example doth not binde vs but in those thinges wherein he intended to bind vs for in many thinges which he did in that sacrament he did not binde vs as it is manifest otherwise wee should alwaies celebrate in the toppe of a house as he did and after supper and vpon thursdaie and amoungest noe more nor lesse thē twelue and they twelue Apostles and also a Iudas amoungest them and noe wooman should communicate for noe wooman was there wee ought alsoe to take the body before the bread by benediction should be consecrated as our Sauiour did at that supper vnto which the churche is not bounde And as in these thinges we are not bound to imitate Christ soe that the laitie should receaue vnder both kindes they are not bound to followe the example of Christ for as the lawyers saie
wee must not iudge by examples but by lawes As for the priestes representinge the person of Christe vnto whome the precepte is giuen Doe this c. they receaue Christ vnder both kindes and yet the greekes doe not vse the Chalice in lent and the latines vpon good fridaye doe receaue Christ vnder one kinde 6. I aunswere further that many thinges are instituted by Christ which doe not bind vs to accomplishe them as matrimonie holie orders vowes and votaries to say masse virginitie and euangelicall councells are instituted by Christe and yet wee are not obliged therunto for it is in euerie mans owne election to marrie to receaue holie orders to vowe to be a virgin it was also instituted of God that wyne should be vsed for drinke and yet wee are not comaunded to drinke it it was also appointed by God that the first fruictes of wyne should be offred vnto the priests for their drinke yet they were not comaunded to drinke it Trulie you should followe Christ and imitate him had yow bene obedient to his church accordinge to the example of himselfe who did submitt himselfe to his mother the Sinagoge and her preceptes For wee must vnderstand that such thinges as our Lord hath ordained by himselfe cannot be altered in his Church nor be dispensed withall as the morall preceptes and the articles of our faith which are immutable and such as pertaine to the substance of the sacraments but such as are positiue precepts as the rites of the sacraments not essentiallie pertaininge to the same which Christe himselfe hath not instituted by occasion of time and place and other circumstancies the churche beinge directed by the spiritt of God may alter them because herselfe hath instituted them as this obseruation of communicatinge either vnder one or both kindes and therfore it may be changed by the churche 7. The holy doctors haue diuided the church into three states of times as Nicolaus de Lussa Cardinall Salmeron tractatis 34. related by Alfonso Salmeron hath obserued The first state of the church was feruent for the Christians in that golden world were inflamed with an ardent loue and feruent charitie to shedd their blood for Christ and in this state Christe was deliuered vnto those faithfull christians vnder both kindes that drincking the blood of our Lorde they should most cheerfully shedd their blood for him as S. Cyprian teacheth in his Epistle to Cornelius S. Cypri epist. ad Cornel. and his Epistle to the Thybaritans Neither did he altogether wish it should be giuen to euerie one of the laytie but in time of persecution to shedd their blood for Christ In the second state the church was zealous though not soe feruente and soe Christ was giuen vnto the christians vnder one kinde that is to say of bread which was dipped in blood as may be gathered out of manny fathers and councells In the third state the church was colde and luke warme and so was Christ giuen vnto the laytie vnder one kinde without dipping it into the blood This the church hath done for good cause beinge taught herein by the holly ghoaste which euer followeth the churche whose authoritie is of the same force nowe as it was then 8. You vrge the wordes of Christ saying Matt. 26. Bibite ex hoc omnes drinke yee all of this I aunswere that these words were spoken and directed to the disciples that were present and vnto the priestes their successors when they shoulde celebrate vnto whome also was said doe this in remembrance of me and therfore that glorious Martyr said Roffensii quotiescunque c. whēsoeuer yee shall drinke thereof c. because that the precepte of drinckinge is not soe absolute as the precepte of eatinge his bodie vnto which noe condition is added therfore it is a precepte deliuered vnto them with condition as when they will drinke of the Chalice they shoulde doe it and offer it in remembrance of him for the wordes of the imparatiue moode doe not alwayes include in them an intente of bindinge as vnder paine of sinne for by them wee pray Miserere mei Deus haue mercy on vs. Patientiam habe in me haue patience with me Sell all that thow haste and giue it to the poore yett wee are not bounde to perfourme this precepte Euen soe in these wordes Drincke yee all of this c. wee are not bounde to perfourme it but such as are priestes when they cōsecrate and therfore the three Euangelists doe declare that our Lord did sit with the twelue Apostles and not with other disciples and therfore none excepte the Apostles and such as lawfullie doe succeede them haue power to blesse or to consecrate the Euchariste as Clemens Chrysostome Ambrose S. Bernarde doe affirme 9. Likewise when he gaue power to remitte sinne Iohn 20. only the Apostles were assembled for as it is not the charge of euerie one to preach to baptise or to feede so it is not the office of euerie one to forgiue sinnes or to consecrate the Euchariste which only belonges to lawful priests vnto whom by those wordes he gaue power to consecrate offer dispense the Eucharist For the laytie by those wordes doe this in remembrance of me haue no other authoritie then that from the priests they shoulde receaue godlie and deuoutlie the Euchariste after whatsoeuer forme● it should please the churche to giue them eyther vnder one kinde or two kindes Doe this whensoeuer yow shall drincke in my remembrance by which words it is not absolutly commaunded to drinke but whensoeuer yow drinke that it should be done in his remembrance as it was done in times paste In eatinge of the lambe it was simplie commaunded that euerie one should eate thereof but to drincke wine euerie one was not bounde it the supper of the lambe Otherwise the abstainer which did abstaine altogether frō wine should grieuouslie sinne and should not be so highlie commended of God for abstaininge from wine And in like manner the Nazarits should alsoe offend for abstaininge from wine as they did For although man can liue without wine yet he cannot liue without bread euen soe without the chalice a man may liue spiritually Hier. 35. but without the blessed bread he cannot liue spiritually and soe wee say alwayes in the Pater noster panem nostrum quotidianum giue vs this daye our daylie bread 10. Adrianus the 4. did dispense with those of Norwaye to consecrate vnder one kinde by reason of the scarcitie of wyne in that countrie for soe they should performe the obligation of receauing this blessed Sacramente This is also confirmed vnto vs by the three famous and generall councells and assemblies of the flower of all the best and learnedst men in the worlde Conc. Cōst sess 13. Basil ss 30 Trid. ss 21 videlicet the councell of Constance Basill and Trente with in the harte of Germanie where this article of receauinge vnder one kinde of the laitie was defined and
decreede and the sentence of Anathema was pronounced against all those that should hould the contrarie And whosoeuer will not obey these generall councells assembled together by the vertue of the holie ghoast whose asistance was promised vnto the church in such occasions doth iniurie not onlie to the church but also vnto that holy spirite of these kind of people is said vos durae ceruicis spiritui sancto resistitis you stiffnecked people yow resist the holy ghoaste None ought to prefer his priuat opinion before the generall definition of a generall councell Therfore the Emperor Marcianus after the definition and ordinaunces of the councell of Chalcedon said he is a wicked and sacrilegious person that would oppose his owne priuate opinion against the authoritie of the whole churche in such a generall assemblie and this is the cause that S. Aug. defended S. Cyprian from heresie for that it was not decreede by any generall councell that such as were baptized by heretiques should be rebaptized againe as the said S. Cyprian helde and because the Donatistes did persiste in this doctrine after the definition of the generall councell they were condemned of the churche for heretiques as S. Aug. doth testifie and therfore those dogmatistes of our time because they defende not onlie this doctrine but also many other peruerse and damnable opinions not onlie against the definition of these generall councells but also against godes ordinances ought to be reputed for heretiques 11. S. Thomas doth saie D. Thom. in 6. Iohn lect 7. that it was the custome of the churche for danger of sheddinge that the priest at the alter should receaue vnder both kindes the laytie vnder one kinde for this said he is not against Christs institution for whosoeuer receaues the bodie receaues the blood alsoe because that Christe is vnder both kindes aswell in respecte of his bodie as his bloode Exod. 16. Genes 14. For all sacrifices did appertaine vnto the priestes the Manna the paschall lambe was eaten of the people which were figures of this Sacramente and they were not comaunded to drincke after it And although you vrge that Melchisedec did offer bread and wyne in token of this Sacrament I aunswere that he was a prieste for so the scripture saith Erat enim sacerdos Dei altissimi for he was a priest of the highe God In our Lordes prayer wee aske our dailie bread without wyne Tertul. in orat Dom. Ambr. l. 5 de sacra Hier. c. 6. Matt. homil 9. Aug. l. 50. which petition many holy doctors doe interprete to be mente of the Eucharist and when our Lord had fedd soe many thowsands there is noe mention made either of water or of wine that feedinge beinge a figure or token of the holy bread of the alter by which the faithfull Christians are releeued For our Lord makes mention of the Chalice but thrice of the eatinge of the bread he makes mention fifteene tymes soe as wee may perceaue that the churche may vse both the kindes seuerallie Qui manducat hunc panem viuet in aeternum Theophil in eadem verba Aug. li. de consensu Euangeli c. 25. ser in seria 2. illius diei Beda lib Comment in Lucam Petr. Damianus Card lib. de diuinis officijs 12. Christ also goinge to Emaus sittinge at the table did feede only the twoe disciples with breade alone and being perceaued in the breakinge of the bread did vanish awaye by which fraction or breakinge many holy fathers did vnderstande the Euchariste wherby wee may gather that the Euchariste was giuen vnto the laytie vnder one kinde vppon easter daye that is to say to Cleophas and to Lucke as many saie And although they were the disciples of Christe yet they were not priestes For at his last supper he did not saie to others then to the twelue Apostles these wordes Doe this in remembrance of me and vnto those disciples that went to Emaus he gaue onlie the bread without wine so vanished awaye Epistola Ephesios 13. S. Ignatius made mention but of one kinde to be giuen to the laytie Eruditi à paracleto c. Yow beinge instructed of the holly ghoast remaininge in true obedience to the Bishops priests which breake the bread vnto yow with due respecte and perfect deuotiō which is the medicine of mortalitie the onelie preseruatiue of life against death by Iesus Christ The blessed Sainte did not speake any thinge of the Chalice when the Pope goeth in any pilgrimadge or iourney he carries with him the blessed Sacramente but vnder one kinde Hier. in Apolog. pro libris contra Iouinianū S. Hierom doth reporte that it was the custome of the faithfull at Rome to haue our Lordes body at home in their houses because they did not presume to goe to the church beinge letted by coniugall societie which saith he I doe not commend or discommend S. Ambrose also doth reporte Ambr in orat funebrii de obitu fratris sui Satyr that his brother carried with him this dreadfull hoaste to sea and hauing suffred shipwreacke did by vertue of this blessed Sacrament escape drowninge the blood he did not carry beinge not soe conueniente for carriadge The Christians did in tyme past vse to carrie with them the Sacrament vnder one kinde least in their greatest danger of death they should not be releued of their greatest liuely ●oode S. Ambrose in the houre of his death did receaue the blessed Sacramente of the Bishopp of Vercell vnder one kinde Paulinus in vita eius as Paulinus doth reporte The like is also reported of S. Patronilla S. Hierome S. Martyn S. Benedict S. Lucia S. Francis of whome the histories make mention that in the time of their death they did communicate vnder one kinde Amphilogius wrote that when S. Basill did celebrate in the church a Iewe went to gaze and to behoulde the christians as they receaued the blessed hoast In vita S. Basil he ioyning himselfe with them sawe an infante diuidinge the hoast in the handes of S. Basill and soe came to all the communicantes as also to the said Iewe which whē he receaued the blessed bread was forthwith tourned into fleash and beinge astonished at this miracle he himselfe with his wife and children were made Christians 14. Euagrius a greeke historiographer and Nichephorus doe deliuer vnto vs that it was the aunciente custome in the church of Constantinople to giue vnto children such as went to schoole the relickes and fragments of the blessed hoaste if any were left after the comunicantes but it were great absurditie to giue the relickes of the chalice vnto them their tender age and weake disposition being not capable thereof soe it should be a great indecencie so keepe the same being in a short time subiect to corruption With these children vpō a certaine daie went a boy the sonne of a glass-maker who beinge asked of his father what he did with the
giuen also to others but Christ did not forbidd those to whome he comitted the gouernment of his church to denie it also to other some as it is said in the scripture Genes 9. that God hath giuen all cattle and beastes to the vse of man yet by that graunte or donation he hath not forbidden the superiors for disciplines sake to forbid their subiects in certaine tymes the vse of certaine meattes as God in his lawe by speciall commaundemente did forbidd the children of Israell all vncleane beastes and such that were strangled which neuerthelesse the church nowe doth teach and preach not that herein shee doth against Gods lawe or his precepte but that beinge taught by the holy ghoast shee doth interprete godes meaninge in the lawe For the positiue lawe of the church is nothing else then a certaine prescription of godes lawe and a certaine determination of that which is giuen in common God almightie commaunded vs in generall to praie to doe pennaunce to receaue the Eucharist but the church according to her wisdome and discretion respectinge rather the intente of the lawe-giuer then the lawe it selfe did prescribe both the tyme manner wherein and by which wee ought both to receaue the blessed Sacrament and to doe pennance and praie for the vulgar sorte yea and men of great learninge and science vnlesse they had bene endued with great charitie without these particuler determinations and comaundements of the Church would not keepe these generall comaundements Luther saith Luth. in lib. de formula missa lib. de Cōfessione parte 3. para 14. that the had noe other cause or any sufficient motiue to giue the Chalice to the laytie but that the church and the fathers did comaund the contrarie And in another place he dissuaded Christians from confession and from the Euchariste in time of easter because that the Pope commaunded it I will not obey his commaundemente saith he I will doe it saith he another tyme accordinge to myne owne pleasure but not accordinge to his precepte But Luther and all his malitious and turbulent followers ought to embrace the counsell that the Angell gaue to Agar the woman seruante Genes 16. Reuertere ad domum tuam humiliare suv● manu illius retourne to thy house and humble thie selfe vnder her power This was spoken litterallie of Agar that shee should obey Sara and returne to her house which is allegorically spoken of the church vnderstoode by Sara and of the congregation of heretiques meante by Agar as S. Augustine doth teach vs. Whether the Catholicke Church doth add to this Sacramente in makinge it both a sacrifice and a Sacramente CHAPTER II. Cypr. epist 66. Chrysost hom 11. Damasc serm de cana 1. I ' Answere that the Catholique church doth add nothinge nor inuente any sacrifice but that which Christe instituted for a Sacramente which is our spirituall foode and may be said to be our daylie bread as also the great sacrifice of the newe testamente and soe Christ is said to be offered for vs two manner of wayes videlicet bloodilie and vnbloodilie In the first manner he offered himselfe for vs in ara crucis vpon the alter of the crosse which oblation the paschall lābe without spott which was offered by the Iewes did signifie In the second Cyrill ad Hebr. 9. Hier. cap. 9. ad Titum he offred himselfe in his last supper and nowe his priests doe offer him vpon the alter for the quicke and for the dead that accordinge to S. Cyrill the oblation of Melchisedech who did offer bread and wyne should be accomplished and that he should remayne a true priest accordinge the order of Melchisedech and that his priest hoode which is according to his humanitie and not accordinge to his diuinitie might endure for euer Soe as the Eucharist amongest other Sacraments of the old testamente hath this priuiledge How the Eucharist is a sacrifice and a Sacramēt and prerogatiue that it is a Sacramente when it is receaued by the faithfull and a sacrifice in asmuch as it is dailie offred for our offences to the eternall father And although euerie sacrifice be a Sacrament because it is a sacred thinge religiously instituted to sanctifie our soules notwithstādinge euerie Sacrament is not a sacrifice because it is not offred vnto God vnto whome sacrifice is offred and a Sacramente is ordained for men Soe as the Eucharist is of greater value and vertue as it is a sacrifice then as it is a Sacramente as Ioannes Roffensis saith in his articles against Luther and vpon this place related by Alfonso Salmeron Salmer tracta 16. in Ioannē That the Eucharist is a sacrifice of the newe lawe it is proued most aboūdantlie both by scriptures fathers and by councells 2. The first is by Malachias the prophett who did prophesie of this sacrifice after this manner Mal. c. 1. Psal 112. Non est mihi voluntas in vobis c. I haue noe likinge of yow and I will not receaue a gifte from your hand ab ortu solis vsque ad occasum c. from the risinge of the sunne vnto the goinge downe thereof magnum est nomen meum in gentibus in omni loco sacrificatur offertur nomini meo oblatio mūda quia magnum est nomen meum in gentibus my name is great amoungest the gentiles and in all places they doe sacrifice and offer vnto my name a cleane oblation This said the Lorde of hoasts he said that his name should be great amoungest the gentiles of whome this oblation should be offred for before the ghospell of Christe was preached vnto them noe oblation of theirs was lawfull neither the oblatiō of the Iewes was cleane it selfe but accordinge to the faith and deuotion of him that did offer the same besides they could not offer but at Hierusalem onlie and consequentlie it was not in all places of the worlde as it is mente heere from the easte to the weaste Neither can it be meant of a spirituall sacrifice either of prayers faith mercie or a contrite harte which in scriptures are called sacrifice as the Augustane Apologie doth interprete for manie reasons because that all these be not one sacrifice but many sacrifices as also because they doe not scceede the old sacrifices for in the old testament there was vse of those kinde of sacrifices as with vs and moreouer because they were not properlie called sacrifices but metaphoricallie neither are they offered in all places because they be spirituall thinges which needes noe place And much lesse are they vnderstoode of the preachinge of the ghospell as Bucerus writinge to Latonius doth interprete because preachinge is not properly called a sacrifice neither succeedeth it the olde sacrifices Neither the conuersion of the gentiles by the preachinge of the ghospell is this sacrifice as Aecolampadius doth expounde vnto the Senate of Basil for this is called an improper sacrifice neither one sacrifice but many
the sicke person to send for the priests which should annoile him and praie for him those that S. Paule called Priests afterward he called Bishoppes but it is manifest that none can be a Bishopp without he were a Prieste a Bishopp beinge a degree aboue priest-hoode if therfore in the newe testament there be Priests selected from the people they ought to sacrifice and offer S. Hebr. 5. Paule saith euerie high priest taken from amonge men is appointed for men in those things that pertaine to God that he maie offer giftes and sacrifices for sinnes Therfore besides the bloodie sacrifice of Christe vpon the crosse there must be a sensible and a common sacrifice instituted of God and that soe noble as euerie one cannott offer the same Clemens lib. 1 cōst apost c. 1. 13 Clemens saith Post assumptionē Christi nos oblato secundum eius ordinationem sacrificio puro incruento constituimus Episcopos presbiteros diaconos numero septem wee after the assumption of Christe accordinge to his institution haue appointed Bishopps Priests Deacons in nomber seuen for this pure and vnbloodie sacrifice S. Hierom saith if it be commaunded to the laie people to abstaine from their wyues for prayer Heir resp ad Titum how shoulde wee thincke of the Bishoppe which is ordained to offer this vnspotted sacrifice aswell for his owne sinnes as for the people S. Cyrill of Hierusalem calleth the Masse a spirituall sacrifice by reason of the bodie of Christe which is spiritualized by the diuinitie and is spirituall in deede though not in substance yet in qualitie and manner of existence Cyrill ca. 4. myst Anacletus ep c. 2. Sother de consecr dist Anacletus commaundeth Bishoppes and priests not to sacrifice without wittnesse to assist them Sother Pope commaundeth two at leaste to be present because the Prieste saith Dominus vobiscum orate pro m● Euaristus willeth that the places wherin Masses should be said be consecrated and that alters should be sacred by chrisme Pius the first telleth how that Eutropia hauinge giuen her howse to the poore he celebrated Masse with the said poore Christians Clemens the first Ep. 3. forbiddeth to saie Masse but where the Bishopp will assigne S. Gregor l. 7. regist epist 63 ●oui 2. Isid lib. 1. de o●ijs cap. 15. Gregorie did write vnto the Bishopp of Syracusa and Isidorus that S. Peter did institute the order of the Masse and it seemeth saith O●igines to pertaine to him onlie to offer continuall sacrifice who deuoted himselfe to continuall chastitie orig lib. 1. contra celsu● And in the 8. booke of the constitutiōs of the Apostles as S. Clement dothe affirme Clement const 8. E●odius was made Bishoppe of Antioche by S. Peter and afterward Ignatius by S. Paule 14. This sacrifice as it hathe many names in holy scripture soe it is expressed of the old fathers with many significant tearmes Dauid called it the sacrifice of praise Psal 49. Psal 4. the sacrifice of iustice a waie to see the saluation of God of Daniell it is called Iuge sacrificium Mala●h 1. Luc. 1. Matt. 5. Iud lib. 4. cap. 34. 1. cap. 5. 1. Cor. 10. Heb. 10. Act. 2. Cle. Const Apost l. 8. cap. vlt. Dionys Areop cap. 3. de caelest Hier. the daylie and continuall sacrifice a pure oblation of Malachias the sacrifice of Iuda and Hierusalem the bloody lambe of S. Luke of S. Mathewe the oblation that should be offered at the altar of the Apostle it is tearmed our pasche the table of our Lorde of S. Luc the fraction or breakinge of the bread and also in a liturgie of S. Andrewe it is called a lambe sayinge I offer daylie a lambe vnto God which when it shal be eaten it shall remayne whole and sounde The councell of Nice calles it the lambe that takes awaie the sinnes of the worlde S. Clement calls it the pure and vnbloodie sacrifice S. Dionysius the oblation of the liuely hoaste S. Martialis a sacrifice and a cleane oblation Ireneus the newe oblation of the newe testament S. Cyprian a trew perfecte sacrifice S. Athasius an vnbloodie immolation Eusebius Cesar and S. Chrysostome a dreadfull terrible and euerlastinge sacrifice most honnorable others call it a singuler sacrifice excellinge all the sacrifices that euer were Others a true vnbloodie vnspotted perfect hoast our daylie sacrifice our Lorde his lambe S. Aug. the sacrifice of our price and redemption the sacrifice of our mediator S. Gregorie calls it the healthsome hoaste the hoast of oblation others call it the sacrifice of christians c. with many such pithetons and last of all S. Paule calles it Consummatio Sacramentorum the accomplishinge of the Sacramentes 15. Besides traditions of the Apostles decrees of all generall councells authoritie of all the fathers and holie doctors and the common and vniuersall practise both of the greeke and latine churche many irrefragable and approued reasons there are to confirme the infallible trueth of this blessed sacrifice For Christ is a Prieste for euer and by his death deserued to haue the order of euerlastinge priest-hoode and therfore an euerlastinge sacrifice for this sacrifice cannot be euerlastinge either for the oblation once offered vpon the crosse or for the oblation once offered at his last supper but it is eternall and euerlastinge by the sacrifice which daylie in all the worlde he offereth by his Priests and ministers euen vnto the daie of iudgmente And soe Oecumenus saith that Christe is a Prieste foreuer not for his passion but in respecte of this presente sacrifice Oecum ni Cathena Psal 109. by which that great Priest doth offer sacrifice Theophilast Eusebius Caesar in lib. de demonstratione Euangelica Haimo in epistola ad Heb. and many other fathers say that Christ is the high prieste or the great priest accordinge to S. Paule or the greatest bishoppe accordinge to all and not Metaphorically but properly therfore he oughte to haue inferior Priests vnder him that shoulde also offer otherwise he shoulde not be called the greateste for a supreame order or power hath a relation to an inferior The perfecte priest-hoode of Christe ought to take away the impefect priest-hoode of the old lawe and as he instituted a newe lawe so he ought also to institute a newe priest-hoode for euerie lawe oughte to haue his Priesthood which should interprete the law as it is said by Malachias aske the lawe of the Prieste Malac. 7. Deut. 9 the lippes of the Priests shall keepe wisdome and as it is said in Deut. if there be any harde or doubtfull question betwixte stocke and stocke c. goe your waies to the Priests and whatsoeuer they shall comaunde yow to doe doe it and as he tooke awaie the olde lawe so he tooke also the olde Priesthoode and as two lawes cannot consist soe two priest-hoodes cannot remaine Libr. 1. Mac. c 1 Radix peccati the of-springe of mischeefe Antiochus that he
might take awaie both lawe and Priesthoode from Ierusalem and from the children of Israell he tooke awaie both sacrifice and oblations from the temple Daniel 12 16. Daniell prophesied that when Antechriste shall come Ablatum fuerit iuge sacrificium that he shall take awaie the daylie sacrifice as by that meanes to take awaie both the lawe and memorie of Christe that instituted this sacrifice vpon this place S. Hypolitus that noble Martyr hath these wordes Ecclesiarum aedes sacrae tigurij instar erunt Ex lib. Hypoli qui extat Hiero. in Daniell citat pretiosum corpus Christi sanguis non extabit liturgia extingetur psalmorum decantatio cessabit scripturarum recitatio non audietur In the time of Antechriste saith he sacred howses of the church shal be like a cottage the pretious bodie and blood of Christe shall not stande the Masse shal be extinguished c. If this holie Martire had bene in these wicked daies and should see how these heretiques bringes churches and Monasteries to ruyne and oppose themselues against this blessed sacrifice he vndoubtely would saie they are the harbingers of Antechriste Eusebius saieth that Licinus the Tyrante and Competitor of Constantine the greate Euseb lib. 10. c. 3. in all his dominions did forbidd the christians to exercise this Sacramente and sacrifice Quid insandos loquar apostatos Licinium Iulianum c. what speake I of the wicked apostates Iulian Licinius saying that for noe other cause Christe was put to death by the Iewes but for that he broughte a newe sacrifice vnto the worlde for by these mens gouernment our sacrifice was taken awaie euen as wee may reade in the life of those Martires Iouentinus and Maximus with S. Chris the holie boord saith he is defiled the holie vessells polluted and taken away in which sacrifice was offered to the sonne of Marie Heresie and sacriledge were euer soe ioyned one to another that the heresie was firste detected by the sacriledge so Elias did crie out vppon the heretiques for their sacriledge 3. Reg. 19 Domine altaria tua destruxerunt Lord they haue cast downe thyne altars Basil ep 70. 71 Naz. ora de Arrianis Optat. lib 6. in Permenan In the heresie of the Arrians S. Basill and S. Nazian did deplore that the altars were destroied that this blessed sacrifice was polluted Optatus Milleuitanus in all his sixt booke speaks of this sacriledge exercised by the Donatists Quid tam nefarium quā altaria Dei in quibus vos aliquando obtulistis pangere radere remouere in quibus vita populi membra Christi portata sunt what is more wicked thē to breake surprise ouerthrowe and remoue the altares of God in which somtimes yow haue offered your selues on which the life of the people and the members of Christ are layed Leo 1. ep 75. S. Leo Pope spake in like manner of the Eutichian hereticks at Alexandria per crudelissimam c. they saith he cast foorth their most cruell hands and with al raginge madnes they extinguish the lighte of the celestiall Sacraments the oblation of the sacrifice is interrupted and the sanctification of the chrisme is intercepted and with their bloodie murtheringe hands they haue taken awaie all misteries Lib. 20. cap. 13. contra Faustum Finally S. Augustine doth reproue Faustus Manacheus for accusinge the christiās of Idolatry in sayinge that in honoringe this blessed sacrifice they honnor and reuerence therein Bachus and Ceres 17. Yf the Gentiles themselues were soe curious and soe respectiue in offeringe sacrifice vnto their false godes and their lawes and edictes were in nothinge soe seuere and soe extreame as vppon such as shoulde prophane the same and all the persecution that they inuented against the christians was because they did not offer sacrifice vnto their strange godes and as Suetonius relates Sueto in oct c. 35. the Emperor August Caesar did ordeine that all the Senate of Rome before they should sitt in their rancke should euerie one of them first offer incense before the altar of that God in whose church they were for they could not all meete together but in churches How much more ought we christians to be curious and religious in seruinge of the true liuinge God by our sacrifices and oblatiōs which are the cheefest actes by which wee honor reuerence him S. Aug. saies against Faust aleadginge that of the prophett Aug. cōt Faust lib. 20 c 21. Aug. ibi Sacrificium laudis glorificabit me c. The sacrifice of praise shall glorifie me and this is the way by which I shall shewe him my sauior this is the sacrifice of the flesh and blood of Christe which was promised before his cominge by similitude and liknesse of oblations which was perfourmed in the passion of Christe by the trueth it selfe which was celebrated in his memorie after his ascension and in that place he said Sicut autem non ideo contemnenda c. Aug. de ciuit lib. 4. cap 10. ante finē Euen as the virginitie of Nunnes ought not to be despised or detested because the vestales amoungest the Romanes were Virgines soe the sacrifice of the fathers ought not to be despised because the gentiles haue also their sacrifice quia diuinus honor est sacrificium Aug. ibid. for the diuine honnor must be acknowledged by a sacrifice this honor as S. Aug. saith is latria which is a dewe seruice to the diuinitie and vnto this due seruice pertaines the oblation of a sacrifice for to offer or to sacrifice vnto God is a morall precepte pertaininge to the lawe of nature which Christe in his ghospell hath not taken awaie but confirmed the same which is ingraffed in euerie reasonable creature vid. that sacrifice ought to be offered vnto God and that the best is to be offered vnto him soe Abell did offer vnto God of the best cattel he had Therfore in offeringe sacrifice vnto God wee err not Sacrificium significat actionem misticam aliquam rem externam applicatione ad Dei cultum oblatione sacrantem for to sacrifice doth signifie as S. Augustine saieth and S. Thomas a certaine misticall action Aug epist ●6 q 3. tomo 5. hollowinge and thinge externall that is applied and offered to the worshipp of God and this sacrifice is not offered to any other creature but to God Aug cont Faustum l. 20. c. 21. 18. And although saieth S. Augustine the christian people doe vse a religious solemnitie in remembringe the Martyres both to kindell in themselfes a desire to imitate them as also to be partakers of their merit●es and to be reliued by their praiers yet wee doe not offer sacrifice vnto anie Martyr but vnto the God of Martyres although wee establish alters for their remembrance For what Bishoppe or Priest at the sepulchers of these holie bodies beinge at the alte● doth saie these wordes Offerimus tibi Pe●re Paule aut Cipriane sed
quod offertur offertur Deo qui martires coronauit c. Wee offer vnto thee Peter or Paule or Cyprian but that which is offered is offered vnto God which crowned the Martyres thus farr S. Augustine Wherunto Innocentius agreeth saying that wee must honnor God with churches alters sacrifices priesthoode with vertuous and with the internall worshipp of latria and soe he saide that there are two kindes of seruices the one which is due to the creator the other which is due to the creature neither churches alters priesthoode are offered vnto Sainctes in the honnor of God but rather vnto God they are consecrated in the honor of the Saincts Leui 26.9 10 11.12 Psal 22.1 Escij 58. Gen. 14. Wherfore in all lawes and in all states of the worlde were offered vnto God of the fruictes of the earth and Melchisedec did offer bread and wyne Abraham did offer Isaacke in the lawe of Moyses also there was a sacrifice offered as the bread of proposition and fine flower sprinkled with oile and franckensence c. with manie other thinges Euen soe in the lawe of grace there must be a sacrifice which is the onlie sacrifice of the law both nowe and for euer as S. Cyprian saith Cypr. ser de bapt Nec sacerdos eius penituit Deum God was not not displeased at that priesthoode for the sacrifice which he offered vpō the crosse was soe acceptable to God and of that perpetuall vertue that it is of no lesse force and efficacie this daie then that day when the freshe blood and water issued out of his blessed side and the scarres yet lefte in his blessed bodie doth challenge and exacte the iust price of the redemption of mankinde soe that it is the selfe same hoast and oblation which is nowe offered by the Priestes in the lawe of grace and that which himselfe did offer vpon the crosse which was signified and represented by all the former sacrifices of the lawe of nature and of the lawe of Moises and much more represented and exposed to the viewe of the christians in the lawe of grace therfore S. Iohn calles him Agnus qui occisus est ab origine mundi the lambe that was killed from the beginninge of the worlde I meane in all the sacrifices that euer was by whome all sacrifice had and shall haue their value force and vertue soe as it doth comprehende both the bloodie and vnbloodie sacrifice for in both of them that lambe is offered which taketh awaie the sinnes of the worlde and that vnbloodie sacrifice which the church doth offer is of the same force with that which Christe himselfe did offer at his last supper And euen as the baptisme giuen by Christe is not of greater force then that which is administred by a simple prieste although ex opere operantis vid. by the meritts of him that giues the baptisme he may conferr greater fruicte to those that he himselfe doth baptise or for whome he offers this blessed sacrifice thē the baptisme or sacrifice don by a priest and as the malice of the Prieste cannot hinder the fruicte of the sacrifice ex opere operato in nature of the Sacramente soe the hollines of him cannot increase the grace thereof although he that administers it by speciall praiers may profitt him in some sorte for whome he offers the same And as S. Nazianzenus said lett there be two Ringes Naz. in oratione in sanct Ian. one of golde and the other of Iron and both of them engrauen with the Image of the kinge in sealinge of lettres or puttinge their impression to anie waxe both of them haue equall force and value for noe man by the impression or sealinge of them can discerne which was the goldē ringe or the iron ringe because it was but one charecter although the matter and substance were sundrie euen soe it is the same baptisme the same absolution and the same sacrifice that is offered of good priests and which is offred of badd although the church haue comaunded wicked and irreguler Priests to abstaine from the alter and from the Sacraments and also that the christians should refraine from them if they perceaue them intangled or detected with any enormous publick offence for it is the same word of God whether it proceede from the good or from the badd 19. As touchinge an ordinarie obiection that euerie sacrifice ought to be bloodie and to be slaine and soe consequentlie Christe beinge not slaine at the Masse cannot be a sacrifice I aunswere with S. Thomas that S. Paules meaninge was D. Tho. in Hebr. 9. that the sacrifice which the highe priest offered when he wente into Sancta Sanctorum which was but once a yeare was bloodie but the generall and vniuersall nature of a sacrifice requireth not it should be bloodie as the philosopher saith Non omne quod conuenit speciei conuenit etiam generi vid. although man be a liuinge reasonable creature yet it pertaines not to the nature of euerie liuinge creature to be a reasonable creature Was not the sacrifice of Abell Caine Melchisedec who offered bread and wine in token of this sacrifice without blood was not the goate of the Iewes without bloode yet it was a sacrifice and did carrie vppon his backe all the sinnes of the people of Israell Abraham also did sacrifice his sonne Isaacke yet he was reserued afterwardes aliue soe Christe as Rupertus saith Iterum immolatur tamen impassibilis permanet viuus is a sacrificed againe yet he is impassible and liuinge Luther himselfe saieth that the trewe sacrifice of the newe testamente be praiers almes-deeds fastinge and watchinge as S. Paule saieth I besech yow bretheren that yow offer your bodies as a liuely hoaste which is a sacrifice most pleasinge before God Therfore it is not necessarie that euerie sacrifice should be bloodie and trulie Christe doth offer himselfe nowe in heauen vnto his fathe● for vs as he did when he was in this life soe as Christe is said to be offered for vs two manner of waies vid. bloodily and vnbloodily And as Christe died but once nor neuer shall die againe soe he in that violēt painefull and bloodie sorte can neuer be offered againe neuerthelesse as Christe died and was offered after a sorte in all the sacrifices that euer were from the beginning of the world al of them being figures of that one oblation vpon the crosse soe is he much more offered in the Sacramēt of the alter of the newe testament more diuinely and truly expressinge his death his body crucified his bloode shedd though in hidden sacramētall misticall and vnbloodie manner as all the holy doctors doe saie which did call this incruentum sacrificium an vnbloodie sacrifice in respect of the carnall sacrifice of the Iewes Aug. de fide ad Petr. c. 19. which as S. Aug. saieth was the prefiguring of the fleash of Christ which he was to offer for sinnes Whether the Catholicke Church commit any
it it is found oute how such a footestoole of our Lord should be adored and worshipped and that wee doe not only not sinne in a●oringe and worshipping it but wee sinne in not adoringe and not worshippinge the sa●e Therfore when thow dost bowe downe and prostrate thie selfe vnto any such earth doe not behould it as earth but behould that holie one whose footestoole that is which thou doest adore and worshipp because for his sake thow dost adore worshipp it Aug. cont Iul. Pela lib. 1. Amb. de ijs qui misteriis initiantur cap. vlt. 12. S. Ambrose that blessed Bishopp of Millane of whome Sainct Augustine saith Veneror vt patrem in christo c. I reuerence him as a father for he through the ghospell in Christe Iesu begott me doth plainly confirme this truethe saying Ipse clamat Dominus Iesus Hoc est corpus meum c. Our Lord Iesus himselfe crieth This is my body before the benediction of those heauenly woordes another kinde of nature is named after consecration the bodie is signified or mentioned he himselfe called it his blood before consecration it is named an other thinge after consecration it is called blood And thow saidst therunto Amen that is to say it is trewe let thie inward minde confesse that which thie mouth speaketh and let thie affection thincke that which thy speech soundeth And in that chapter he saith But perchaunce yow will saie I see an other thinge with myne eyes how then doe yow tell me that I receaue the bodie of Christe this then remaineth yet by vs to be proued how many examples therfore doe wee vse to shewe that this is not that which nature formed but that which benediction consecrated And that the power of benediction is greater then the power of nature for so much as nature it selfe is changed Moises held in his hand a rodd he cast the same foorthe and it was made a serpent againe he tooke vpp the serpent by the taile and the same retourned to the nature of the rodde yow see then by the grace giuen to that prophett that nature both in the rodd and serpent was twice changed the riuers of Egipt rann with pure and cleane water blood sodainlie brake out from the springes and fountaines there was drinke to be hadd out of the riuers and at the prophetts prayers the blood of the riuers ceased the nature of the water retourned All the rest of the holie fathers and doctors that liued before these and such as came after doe confirme with one vniforme consent this sacred doctrine 13. S. Andrewe the apostle as Aloysius Lipomanes a moste graue and learned aucthor doth gather out of the approued aucthors when he was to be crucified said these wordes Ego omnipotenti Deo c. I doe daylie sacrifice to the omnipotent God the vnspotted lambe who beinge trulie sacrificed and his fleash also eaten of the people remaineth both sounde and aliue Ignat. ep ad Smyrnenses S. Ignatius which was disciple vnto S. Iohn the Euangeliste writing against the heretiques Symonianus and Menandrianus who as they denied the Incarnation of Christe soe they did alsoe denie the misterie of this blessed Sacrament Sic ait Eucharistias oblationes non admittunt quod non confiteantur Eucharistiam esse carnem saluatoris c. Soe they doe not admitt eucharistes and oblations because they doe not confesse the Euchariste to be the flesh of our Sauiour which flesh did suffer for our offences Theo dialog 3. which the Father accordinge to his benignitie hath raised vpp this place is cited by Theodoretus Tertull. lib. 2. ad vxorem in libro de Idolatria Tertulian also reprehending wicked priests exclaymeth against them sayinge Semel Iudei Christo manus intulerunt vos c. The Iewes did offer violence vnto Christe but so yow doe also violatt and handle his bodye moste irreuerentlie such irreuerent handes should be cutt of c. And how should he saie these wordes if he should thincke that in the Eucharist should be only the figure of Christs bodie So Orig. homil 13. in Exod. expoundinge the 25. of that booke homil 7. libr. numeri in caput Math. 26. Math. vbi sic legimus homil 7. Leuit. homil 9. in Leuit. concita in cap. 15. Matth. So Cyp. who suffred death Anno Domini 259. sermone de lapsis So Athanas who is citted of Theodoretus Theod. 2. Dialog Cyrillus Hieroso initio Cathechesis 4. mistagogice in tota ferè Cathechesi Greg. Nyss in lib. de vita Moysis So. S. Optatus Milleuitanus which did florish in sanctitie and learninge in one tyme with S. Ambrose Quid enim est tam sacrilegum what is more detestable then to destroie and defile the alter on which somtimes yow haue offred your selues in which the desires of the people and the members of Christe are carried and a little after what is the alter but the seat of the bodie and blood of Christe S. Naz. liuinge also in the same tyme Nazianz. oratione de Pascha absque confusione dubio c. without confusion and doubt we eare his bodie and drincke his bloode 14. S. Ephrem the familiar frinde of S. S. Hieron in Cathalogo scrip Basill of that authoritie that in the church after the scriptures his woorks were read as S. Hero doth wittnesse saith Quid scrutaris c. whie should yow search the inscrutable thinges of God if you curiously search them yow ought not to be accompted a faithfull christian but a curious companion be faithfull and innocent be pertaker of the vnspotted body of oure Lord and assured with a sounde faith that yow eate whole the lambe himselfe S Epiphanius which was a familier frinde of S. Athanasius doth compare the heretiques that denie Christs bodie to be in the Sacramente with Aesops dogge who hauinge a peece of flesh in his I●wes passinge ouer a riuer and behoulding the shadowe thereof in the water did let goe the trewe flesh striuinge by duckinge vnder the water to gett only the shadowe and soe he had neither the one nor the other soe the heretiques let ts goe the trewe flesh of Christe only for a figure and soe they haue neither benefitt by the one nor by the other Io. Diaco lib 2. vitae sanctit q. Sainct Gregorie as Ioannes Diaconus doth write did proue by a miracle that was don that the bread was turned into Christs fleshe Damascen which liued in the tyme of Leo the Imadge breaker in the yeare of our Lord God 740. saith Panis vinumique c. Bread wyne and water by the inuocation of the holy ghoste are supernaturally turned into the bodie and blood of Christe and they are not two but one and the selfe same thinge bread and wyne are not the figure of the bodie and blood of Christe God forbid but it is the selfe same bodie of our Lord deified Theophil in cap. Math. 26. Vnto this agreeth
saith that the Christians would not haue praied for the dead if they had not bene instructed by the preceptes of Christ and his Apostles The said Vrbanus which was the cheefe instrument with Luther to sowe Lutheranisme in Sueth-land and in the Dukedome of Lumburge à parte operum in formula cautè loquendi when the Apostle reproued the Thessalonians for howlinge and cryinge after the manner of Gētiles for their dead he tooke not awaye the care or memorie for the dead De locis communibus c. 19. but confirmed the same The same Vrbanus affirmeth that Luther was of this opinion sayinge that it belongeth to Christian pietie that wee should commend vnto Christe by deuout prayers our Christian bretheren as it hath bene the custome of the church allwayes withall the doctors and holie fathers thereof The same Vrbanus further affirmeth in the place aboue cited that wee ought not to depart from the practise and beleefe of the fathers here in vnlesse wee will contradict the word of God 3. This Protestant citeth many fathers also to confirme his doctrine as S. Nazianzenus in the funerall oration vnto Cesarius his brother concerninge his mother and Gregorie Nissenus Chrysost homil 69. S. Ambrose of the death of Theodosius Emperor the councell of Affricke cap. 8. S. Aug. confess lib. 19. which praid for his mother and in the booke de ciuitate Dei cap. 9. in libro de cura pro mortuis agenda cap. 4. vid. in the booke which he did write for the care wee should haue for the dead in lib. de haeresibus haeresis 53. in lib. de cura pro mortuis habenda cap. 1. he writes that a certaine heretique did giue out that wee ought not to praie for the dead Idem locis communibus cap. 18 de purgator Idem prima parte Damascenus in sermone de ijs which departed this life in faith saith that the Apostles and disciples of our sauiour admonished vs that in the dreadfull and liuinge Sacrament wee should haue a speciall remembrance of the faithfull departed this life and saith that this is the receaued and generall decree of the catholique church and the obseruation and old custome of all christians for the which are cited the bookes of the Machabees Dionysius Areopagita cap. vltimo ecclesiasticae hierarchiae S. Nazian z S. Chrisostome S. Gregorie Nissen S. Athana and S. Basill The said Vrbanus also verie earnestlie proued that the Apostles of Christ taught the same out of Tertulian S. Athanasius and S. Ambrose He declared also that Asia and Muscouia doe praie for the dead 4. It is also manifest that the Greekes doe praie for the dead by the confession of the Greekes sent to the Lutherans of Germanie by Hieremie Patriarch of Constantinople Purgatory anno Domini 1579. Did not Christ praie his father for Lazarus that was dead Did not the widdowe of Naim praie vnto Christ for her child that was dead although shee prayed for restoringe him vnto life yet much more for remission of his sinnes doth not S. Iohn say Io. 1. cap vlt. There is a sinne vnto deathe there is another sinne also not vnto death of these as Oecumenus saith vppon that place they which die in deadlie sinne for them I say lest noe man praie S. Augustine sayes Aug. lib. de cura pro mortuis agēda that the soule departes from our bodies in one of these three degrees The first degree is of those that departe perfect and good The second of those that are imperfect and impenitent the third of those that are in a meane betwixt both neither altogether good nor altogether badd For the first wee neede not to praye of whome it is said Cum dederit dil●ctis suis somnum ecce haereditas Domini c. when it shall please God to giue the elect reste and quiettnes behold they possesse their inheritance c. I meane such as are hollie in deede either holye by their deathe as Martyres or such as otherwise in their liues shewe both to God and man extraordinarye holines and compleatt perfection of them there are fewe in respect of those Qui ducunt in bonis dies suos in puncto ad infernum descendunt that made themselues slaues vnto the apparent but false shewe of worldlie and transitorie goodes and in a moment they doe goe downe into euerlastinge damnation For the ioy of an Hypocritt is measured by an instant for which people wee may not praie for our sauiour said they receaued their rewarde in this miserable life with the richman But for the other in the third rancke wee praie as S. Dionis Areopag saies Diuinus sacerdos pro mortuis orans c. Dyonisius Areop c. 7. eccles hierar the diuine priest prayinge for the dead he praied for such as liued holie yet they hauing contracted some blemish by reason of their humaine infirmitie are detained in purgatorie and as S. Augustine sayes Aug. Euc. ca. 110. tom 3. our suffrages proffitts them that are in a meane betwixt good and badd of which kinde of people S. Paule saith saluus tamen fiet sed tamen per ignem he shal be saued 1. Cor. 3.15 Cypr. Ep. 52. but yet through fire Accordinge to which S. Cyprian saith Aliud est missum non exire inde c. It is not all one beinge sent to prison neuer to depart thence vntill the last fardinge be praied and to receaue presentlie the reward of faith and vertue it is not all one to be purged and clensed by the torments of a longe fire and to haue all his sinnes whatsoeuer already refined purged by sufferāce And because wee doe not knowe certainlie the state of euerie one that departs this life S. Augustine saith Aug. lib. de curapro mortuis habenda Pro mortuis siue altaris siue orationum sacrificijs solemniter supplicamus quamuis non pro quibus fiunt omnibus prosint For the dead wee make our supplications aswell by the sacrifice of the alter as by our prayers althoughe euerie one receaues not proffitt thereby but such as when they liued merited the same but because wee doe not discerne what they be for whome wee ought to offer the same none such as are regenerated may be omitted vnto whome this benefit may or ought to be due for it is better it should be superfluous vnto them that receaues noe proffitt or harme therby then it should be wanting vnto thē which may reape benefit by it Cyrill Cathe mist 5. 1. S Ia. coli liturgia 5. But let vs further see what other holie fathers say S. Cyrill saith let vs pray for all that departed amoungest vs. S. Iames saith Dominum oremus lett vs make our prayers to our Lord that our parents and brethren which departed before vs Clemens Romanus lib. 6. cōst apost cap. 30 may rest in peace Also S. Clement of Rome saith that the Deacon at Masse did praie for the
are christians who hauing the keies of the kingdome of heauen doe in some sorte iudge vs before the day of iudgment Vict. 2. pers Vand. recounteth how whē the priests were banished by the Arriās the catholique people cried out moste lamentably to whome doe yow leaue vs miserable whiles you goe to your crownes who shall baptise these little ones with the fountaines of euerlastinge water who shall giue vs the guift of pennaunce and free vs from the baundes of sinne by the indulgence of reconsiliation because to yow it is said Whatsoeuer yow shall loose vpon earth shall be loosed in heauen Our Sauiour gaue to his Apostles consequentlie to S. Peter power to remitte sinnes whose sinnes yow forgiue c. and seinge the Pope is the lawfull successor of S. Peter it followeth that he succeded to him in his authoritie And although the heretiques doe aunswere that this power was giuen them by baptisme and preachinge yet it sufficeth not because this pouer was giuen them in distinct places from the place alleadged to witt in the last place of S. Mathewe and S. Marcke his ghospell and although by baptisme preachinge the Prieste in some sorte remitteth sinnes yet he cannot remitt the sinnes comitted after baptisme which cannot be reiterated and neither by baptisme or preachinge can he be said to retaine sinnes Whether fastinge from one sorte of meate more then from another or for to vse any obseruation therin be superstitious accordinge as protestants doe affirme CHAPTER V. AErius the heretique Aug lib. de heres cap. 33. Epiph. heres as S. Augustine and S. Epipha say defended this doctrine against the catholique churche as Luther and his followers doe now a daies for that say they they would not submitt themselues to any thinge that the churche comaunded Matt. 15. Mar. 7. They alleadge scriptures for themselues as the wordes of our Sauiour not that which entreth into the mouth defileth a man c. Aso they alleadge for themselues for breakinge of fasts the 14 chapter of S. Paule also S. Paule to Timothy In the last tymes men shall departe from the faith attendinge to spiritts of error and doctrine of deuills speakinge lies in hipocrisie forbiddinge to marrie and abstaine from meates which God created c. Aug. lib. de morib Ecc. Cath. cap. 33. To all which I aunswere with S. Augustine that catholiques doe not abstaine from certaine meates for that they esteeme any meat vncleane either by creation or by iudaicall obseruation but they abstaine for chastisinge of their concupiscence It is sinne only which properly defileth man and meates of themselues or of their owne nature doe not defile but by accident they make a man to sinne as the disobedience of Gods comaundements or of our superiors who forbidd some meates for certaine times and causes is a sinne as the apple which our first parents did eate though of it selfe it did not defile them yet beinge eaten against the precepte it did defile for neither flesh nor fish of it selfe doth defile Genes 3. Chrys homil 12. in 1. Timoth. but the breach of the churches precept is it which defileth And as for S. Paule he speaketh as S. Chrsostome said of the Manichees Eucratites and Marcionistes Epiph. here 45 26.6● Hier. contra Iouin cap. Aug heres 25. and S. Ambrose addeth vppon this place the Patritians also S. Epiphanius S. Hierom S. Augustine and generally all antiquitie affirme the same both of them and also of the heretiques called Apostolici Ebiointes and the like whose heresie about marriadge was that to vse the act of matrimonie was of Sathan 2. Touching the prohibition of meates or vse of certaine creatures made to be eaten there were many opinions the first was of Philosophers Pithagoras Empedocles Apollinaris Porphirius and others who condemned the vse of meates as of beastes for that they thought that al beastes had reasonable soules and that they passed from bodie to bodie The second was of heretiques which condemned the vse of these meates for that they said they were c●eated of the diuill and not of God as Marcion Tatian and Manichees against whome S. Paule his meaninge is to be const●ued in the said place of Timothy 1. Tim. 4. as it is declared in the Canons of the Apostles and in the councells of Ancira Gangrensis Epiph. heres 42.47 the f●rst of Toledo and Braga as also by Epipha The third opinion touchinge prohibition of meates was of certaine christians in the beginninge of the churche and after the publishinge of the ghospell who thought that christians were bound to abstaine from such meates as were prohibited by the old lawe of which opinion S. Paule speakes in the 14. chapter to the Romaines which he disproues aswell there as in the Actes of the Apostles Act. 10.15 Soe that by these places of scripture misaplied they goe about to abolish all fastinge which our Sauiour and all holie people as many as euer were in this world did obserue Matt. 4. and begon and finished their heroicall workes withall for our Sauiour fasted 40. dayes S. Iohn did abstaine from all delicate meates and drinckes Mat 3.11 Mar. 1. Num 6. Iere. 35.14 Iona 3. Mat. 9.14 the Recabites and Nazaretts are comended in holy scripture for their fastinge also the Niniuites for their fastinge were pardoned S. Iohns disciples fasted and Christ said to his disciples that they should obserue the same after his departure from them 3. Now the difference of the fast of the churche of God Aug. li. 5. contra Faustum cap. 5. Theod. in Epito diuinorum decretorū c. de abst and of heretiques Saint Augustine declareth and Theodoretus also S. Bernard supra Cant. ser 66. Epipha in lib. de compend doctrinae catholicae for he saith that in the church there was great difference of fastinge accordinge either to the vowe or mortification of euerie one some fasted frō all kinde of fleash some fasted from eggs and all white meates some from any thing that should be fodd and from all kinde of fruictes for before the flood noe wine was droncken noe fleash was eaten And all the poore people either in the old lawe or in the lawe of grace did obserue this faste Moises and Elias fasted 40. dayes ether of them Samuell was comaunded he should drincke noe wine All the priestes that were imploied in the misteries of the church were forbidden to drinke any wine or any thinge else that should distemper them Iudith Hester Daniell and the Machabees by their fastinge haue atcheeued and perfourmed those worthie exploites which are registred in holie scriptures Againe wee are bid by Ioell to turne to God by fastinge Ioel. 1. Psal 68. Dauid said that he couered his soule with fastinge The iustification of a christian in this life as S. Augustine saith is fastinge Aug. in Psal 4.2 prayers and almesdeedes and therfore the catholique church as she ordained certaine times of
prayers soe shee ordained certaine dayes and certaine tymes of fastinge not without significant misteries correspondent to euerie time 4. Also she hath made a prohibition of certaine meates to tame the wantones and exorbitāt luste of our fleashly inclinations disposinge and impellinge the spiritt to yeld vnto her consent aswell by the suggestion of Sathan as her owne delectation and so to make our poore soule which otherwise ought to be the harbenger to intertaine the inspiration of the holy ghost to receaue the suggestion of the diuil her filthy delectation she I say hath prohibited certaine meates therby to deliuer the spiritt from the stinge of the filthie motions of concupiscence and sensualitie and to humble the same vnto the lawe of God and rule of reason Aug. cont Faust Manich. Psal 34. S. Augustine saith the church doth with great reason abstaine from certaine meates certaine tymes as Dauid cum mihi molesti essent c. when those carnall motions did vexe me I did weare haire cloathe and did humble my soule with fastinge S. Paule when he was attatched with these carnall motions he praied vnto God three tymes 2. Cor. 6. Gal. 5. he chastised his bodie and yet he was the elected vessell of God And in another place he said let vs exhibit ourselues as the ministers of God in watchinges fastinges and chasticements for such saith he as are the members of Christ they crucifie the flesh with the vices and concupiscence thereof Matt. 9. Luc 5. Act. 13. our Sauiour also said that notwithstanding the Apostles should be replenished with the holie ghoaste yet they should fast He said also that certaine diuills are so terrible to offend Matt. 7. and soe dreadfull to tempte vs that they cannot be ouercome but by fastinge and praier and therfore the Angell said vnto Tobias Daniel 9 that praier with fastinge is good and Daniell by fastinge did prophesie soe many things to come of the militant churche 5. He is a bad patiēt that doth not abstaine from certaine meates certaine times accordinge to the rule and prescripte order of his corporall phisition concerninge his bodilie disease and is not he a bad christian that doth not obey the comaundemēt of the church his ghostlie phisition touchinge the spirituall sicknesse of the soule and yet such is the protestant who is soe fleashlie giuen that he would not abstaine his carnall appetites from fleash vpon good friday A certaine Irishman beinge sent ouer by the Lord deputie of Ireland to a great noble man in England with grehounds the said noble man hauinge asked of him what meate those grehounds were wont to eate and the man hauing told him certaine distinctions of meate the noble man said that by that obseruarion of diett they were papists doggs the Irishman said they were as good protestants doggs as any were in all Ingland for said he they will not refraine from any flesh vppon good fridaie Amb. lib. de Helici iciun Cyp. de iciun tentat Hier. li. 1. Wherein these heretiques imitate Aerius who would not haue the christians to obserue any time of fastinge as S. Epiphanus said and therfore by him and others condemned for an heretique as also Iouinian for that occasion was condemned for an heretique by S. Hierome 6. But wee ought not to transgresse the the bondes and decrees of our auncestors and elders therfore wee ought not to followe Luther who said he would not faste because as he said the Pope biddeth the same But it is the discipline and custome of the vniuersall church to fast the lent Hieron Epip de consecrat dub 5. Can. 68.19 Mogunt cap. 35. Tollet 8. cap. 9. the aduents the eues of the Apostles and fridaies and Saterdaies and this from the begining So the Canons of the Apostles doe teach and holie councells as Gangrense Mogunt and the councell of Tollet which excommunicated all such as would despise the ecclesiasticall constitutions touchinge fasting or that without ineuitable necessitie should eate flesh in lent time the prophett confirminge the same Ioel. 2. solemnize and institute a faste wherin the christians ought to obey beleue the church according to the saying of S. Athanasius who hath thies wordes If anny will come and say vnto yow S. Athan. lib ad Virgines post initiū doe not fast often least yow should be more feble and weake doe not beleeue them nor harcken vnto them for the enemie of mankinde doth make an instrument of them to whisper and suggest thies thinges remēber that which is written when the 3. children Daniell and other were brought in captiuity by Nabuchodonosor kinge of Babilon it was comaunded that they should eate of the meate that was prepared for the kinges bord and that they should drincke of his wyne Daniell and the other 3. boies would not be polluted or defiled with the kinges table but they said vnto the euenuche who had charge of them giue vnto vs of the rootes of the earth vnto whome the euenuch said I feare the king which ordained and appointed meate for yow least that your countenāce should appeare and seeme more leane and pale then that of the other boies which are fedd at the kings boord and soe should punish me vnto whome they did saie trie your seruants tenn dayes and giue vnto vs of the rootes of the earth and he gaue vnto them pulse to eate and water to drinke and brought them before the kinge and they seemed more beautifull then the other boyes which were nourished by that kings royall meate Doe yow see what fastinge doth it heales diseases and drieth distillations of the bodie it chaseth awaie diuills expelleth wicked thoughts makes the mind clearer it purifies the hart it sanctifies the bodie it bringes a man into the throne of God and least that yow should thincke that this is rashlie spoken you haue testimonies of this in the ghospell pronounced by our Sauiour when the disciples did aske how vncleane spiritts should be cast forth our Lord did answere this kind is not cast forth but by praiers and fasting therfore fasting is the food of Angells and whosoeuer vseth the same he is thought to be of an angelicall order thus farr S. Athanasius Whether the Protestant assertion be true which affirmeth that generall councells can erre CHAPTER I. 1. WHen anie controuersie either of state or the publike weale doth rise in any comōwelth the princes with all the state thereof assemble together and whatsoeuer is ennacted and decreede by them the rest of the subiectes must obserue and obey the same Soe in any controuersie of religion when the cheefe pastors and prelates of the church who haue more power and authoritie of God then all the princes of other common wealthes beinge assisted by his blessed spiritt whatsoeuer they haue decreede for the good of the churche and the weale publike of Christendome their subiectes if they be of Christe his flocke ought to submitt
Ierusalem but the vniuersall church cannot erre therfore the generall councells cannot erre For Atha S. Epipha Euseb S. August doe call the generall councells the congregation of the whole world and the consent of the vniuersall churche All such places of scripture as doe proue that the Pope cannot err in the definition of faith proues also that the generall or nationall councell assembled by his authority cannot erre Also such places of scripture as proues and teaches that wee ought to reuerence Bishopps as Pastors to heare them as maisters followe them as captaines he that heareth yow heareth me c. obey your rulers be subiect vnto them and imbrace their doctrine with many such places all which doe argue that they cannot deceaue vs or if they doe wee may attribut the blame to our Sauiour that bids vs to obey them and imbrace their doctrine Atha epi. Epist. Epiph heres 77 Aug. 162. Nemo ca. de summa trinit fide catho Gela ep ad Episc Sardinia 5. This same is proued by the fathers that the difinition of a generall councell is the last iudgment of the church from which there is noe appellation as Athana and Epiphanius and others with S. Augustine doe affirme and soe Leo the Pope requested the Emperor Martianus saying that the definition of the generall councell should neuer be brought in question which the said Martianus established by lawe The same also Gelasius the Pope decreed in the councell of Ephesus circa finem and in the councell of Calchedon Act 5. Canone vlt. Moreouer the fathers and all councells doe teach that they are excomunicated and ought to be countted heretiques that doe not rest themselues vpon generall councells and therfore all generall councells doe pronoūce Anathema I meane the sore censure of excommunication against such as doe contradict the finall decree of generall councells as Athanasius doth wittnesse of the coūcell of Nice Athan in epist ad Episcopos Afri●ae S. Gr●gor Nazianz. in epistola priori ad Clidoniū Leo epist ad Anat●lium and soe it is in all other councells Grego Nazianz. doth write when the Apolinaristes denied that they were not heretiques and that they were receaued in a catholique councell said let them shewe this and wee wil be contented S. Leo writinge to the emperor or Leon said they ought not to be accounted catholique that doe resiste the councell of Calcedon And soe he writes the like to Anatolius and S. Basil writes that they ought to be suspected of heresie Basil ep 78. that doe cal in question the determination of the councell of Nice S. Augustine did excuse S. Cyprian of heresie Aug. li. 1. de bap ca. 18. because noe generall councell defined any thinge to the contrary towchinge the baptisme of heretiques Also S. Gregorie pronounced excommmunicatiō against all that would not receaue the decree of generall councells Greg. li. 1. epist 24. Constantine the great in his epistle to the churches Apud Euseb l. 3. de vit Const Atha ep ad Episc Africanos Cyrill l. 1. de trinit Leo epist 53. ad Anatoliū 54 ad Martianū ep 37. ad Leonē Au● Gre. lib. 1. ep 14 Nice epist ad Michaelē Ambros epist 32. called the decree of the councell of Nice celestiall preceptes Athanasius also said that the decree of the church was the diuine precept which should remaine for euer S. Cyrill calles it the diuine iuste and holie oracle S. Leo saith that the Canons thereof were ordained by the holie ghoast and that the councell of Calcedon was assembled by the holy spiritt S. Gregorie also saith that he reuerenceth the first 4. generall councells as the 4. Euangelistes Nicholaus the first also saith that the decrees of generall councells are inspired by the holy ghoast S. Ambrose doth affirme that wee should rather die than wee should departe from the definitions of generall councells I will saith he followe the decree of the councell of Nice from the which neither death not sword shall separat me S. Hillarie suffred banishment for the faith of the councell of Nice Hilar. in fine lib de Synod Victor in libris trib de per●ec Vandalic Hier. lib. cont Luciferanos Victor Africanus describeth many worthy martires which suffred for the decree and definition of the faith sett downe and explicated in the councell of Nice S. Hierom also speakinge of Athanasius and S. Hillarie and other holy confessors saie How could they doe any thinge against the councell of Nice for the which they suffred banishment 6. This is proued by reason for first if the generall coūcells should err ther should be noe certaine or setled iudgment in the church by which controuersie should be determined and descided and by which the vnitie and concord of the church should be preserued for which generall councells were ordained Secondly if there were not an infallible iudgment of these generall councells then the Arians had not bene condemned for heretiques for sayinge the councell of Nice did erre nor Macedonius for an heretique for sayinge the councell of Chalcedon did err nor Nestorius for an heretick for sayinge the councell of Ephesus did err nor Eutiches for sayinge the councell of Chalcedon did erre Thirdly wee should haue noe certaintie of many bookes of the holie scriptures as of S. Paule to the Hebrewes the 2. epistle of S. Peter the third of S. Iohn S. Iames his epistle S. Iude and the Apocalipes they beinge called in question vntill the trueth of them was made knowen by generall councells That the catolique church in those thing shee doth propound to the christians to beleeue whether they be contained in the Scriptures or not cannot erre CHAPTER II. THis is proued by scripture Ad Tim. 3 Ephes 5. Apoca 21 Psal 79. Isa 2. Matt. 13. 1. Cor 12. Ephe. 1. for that the church of Christe is the firmament and piller of truethe the spouse of Christe the holly cittie a fruitfull vineyarde a highe mountaine a direct way the only do●e the kingdome of heauen the bodie of Christe and multitude vnto whome the holie ghoaste is promised is gouerned of Christe beinge her head and of the holy ghoast beinge her soule as it is sett downe by S. Paule saying Ephe. 4. He gaue him as a head aboue euerie church which is his bodie And in another place he said one head and one spirite and he said as the husbād is the head of the wife soe also Christ is the head of his church for if the church had bene impeached of error that imputation should be saide on Christe and the holie ghoaste therfore Christ did instruct her by his said holie spirite sayinge the spirite of trueth shall teach yow all trueth Ioh. 16. Againe wee are bounde vnder paine of excommunication to beleue the church in all things as may appeare by S. Math. If he will not heare the church Matt. 18. let him be vnto you as an ethnick and a
publican Further more wee say that the church is holie both in her profession and in the assertion of her faith therfore christian profession ought to containe nothinge but that which is trewe and holie touching faith Lastlie the fathers in all their doubtes and controuersies towching faith and religion did submitt themselues to the arbitrement of the church which they would not doe if they thought the church did err for S. Augustine saith Aug. epi. 118. l. 1. contra Crescentiū cap. 33. it is an insolent madnesse to dispute against any thinge that the vniuersall church decreede And in another place he saith Wee haue the trueth of holy scriptures when wee doe that which pleaseth the vniuersall churche And our Sauiour saith Luc. 10. Matt. 23. whosoeuer heareth yow heareth me c. whatsoeuer they comaund yow doe it c. Whether Catoliques are to be charged with arrogancie for thinkinge that their church cannot faile CHAPTER III. 1. WEe ought not to be cōuinced of arrogancie to affirme that Christe did not lie when he said that the gates of hell should not preuaile against his churche Matt. 16. Heauen and earth shall passe Matt. 24. Matt. 28. Ioh. 14. but his wordes shall not passe what woorde but that which is vniuersally preached by the catholique churche when he saith behold I am with yow to the worldes ende Ephes 5. The spiritt of trueth faileth not for euer Christ praieth that the faith of Peter should neuer faile 1. Tim. 1. she is his spouse and the kingdome of heauen wherfore should shee then faile beinge the piller of truethe shee cannot faile shee beinge his wife his doue his kingdome his portion his vineyarde his inheritance his dwellinge howse for the which he suffred his passion he died and shed his pretious blood shee cannot faile Contra Gent. 2. This was a cheefe argument by which S. Chrisostome did proue against the Gentiles that Christ was God by reason of his power in settinge foorth his church by poore and simple people and the continuance thereof in full force and authoritie notwithstandinge all the power and plotts of Sathan and all the might and strenght of earthlie potentates with the imploimēt of all their malice and strange pollices which were combined and conioined together for her direction If S. Chrisostome did proue the diuinitie of Christe by the continuance of his church 400. yeares how much more a minori ad maius should we proue the diuinitie and power of Christe not against gentiles as S. Chrisostome did but against worst infidels as caluinistes and other heretiques who with greate malice and more cunninge deuises seeke to ouerthrowe the church of God then all the enemies thereof as Iewes Goathes Hunnes Gaules Vandals Sarasins Longobards Bolgares Turcks and all other infidels and yet she is preserued now these 1620. yeares and shall allwaies continewe in full force authoritie to the worldes ende Psal 87. 3. The continewance of godes church is sett downe by the prophett Disposui testamentum electis meis what testament saith S. Aug. in enarrat ibid. but the newe testament I haue sworne vnto my seruant Dauid what is this that God bindeth with an oath that the seede of Abraham shall continewe for euer euer Ad Gal. 3 And soe saint Paule saith If yow be of Christ yow are the seed of Abraham inheritors of that promise this is the church saith saint Augustine not that fleash of Christ taken of the blessed Virgin but all wee that beleue in Christe And in another psalme he saith I will dwell in thy tabernacle wherfore S. Augustine saith that his church shall not be for a time but shall continewe for euer vnto the ende of the worlde And in the 14. our Lord hath bene mindfull of his testament and of the word that he comaunded to a thowsand generations Psal 14. and giuen to Abraham that which he did also sweare vnto Isaac and apointed for a lawe Matt. 24. He said his word should neuer passe away what word but that which did not only continewe duringe the Apostles time but that word and sacrifice which shall continewe to the worldes end Matt. 28. S. Leo prius epi. 3● ad Pulcher. Aug. Leo 2. epist ad Constan our Sauiour plainlie declaringe the same I wil be with yow vnto the worldes ende as S. Leo the first and Leo the second writes Also when S. Paule Ephes 4. makes mention of soe manny dignities of ecclesiasticall order in Christ his churche as Apostles Prophetts Euangelists Pastors and Doctors he saith that they should continewe to the worldes end as the Prophett saith August Deus fundauit eam in eternum God founded the same for euer Psal 47. I meane his church as S. Augustine expoundeth and this is proued by the 91. chapter of Isay Luc 4. which chapter is vnderstoode of the churche of the newe testament as our Sauiour taughte 4. The same is also proued by the psalme 88. His throne shal be like the sunne in my presence Psal 88. and like a perfect Moone for euer and I will put his seate and his throne as the day of heauen Daniel 2. Daniell also doth manifest the same saying In the dayes of these kingdomes God shall raise vpp the kingdome of heauen which shall neuer be dispersed and his kingdome shall not be giuen to another nation And accordinge to saint Luke of his kingdome there shal be noe end Moreouer that psalme doth say if her children will offend and shall not keepe my lawes and comaundements c. yet I will visitt in a rodd their iniquitie and their sinnes in scourges I will not for all that put away my mercie from the same which place saint Cyprian aswell in this psalme as also in the 2. of Daniell doth expound to be mēt of the afflictions and tribulations of the churche In Cant. serm 79. S. Bernard also in illud tenui eum nec dimittam I held him and I will not let him goe c. neither then nor after the christian stocke shall not faile neither faith from the worlde neither charitie from the churche Lett all the raginge fire all the tēpestuous waues insult freate against her they shall not caste her downe because she is builded vpon a firme rocke and the rocke is Christe which neither by the pratinge of Philosophers or the cauillation of heretiques or by the sworde of persecutors can or shal be seperated Illir Glos in Math. cap. 2. 5. Illiricus a protestant writer saith that the trewe church in the middest of all persecutions destructions of citties comon wealthes and people is preserued miraculously by godes speciall protection and assistance This is also proued by Oecolāpadius vppon Isay cap. 2. by Melancthone in locis communibus cap. de ecclesia editione 1561. by Brentius vppon S. Luc cap. 17. homil 19. Luth. tomo 4. in Isa cap. 9. by Bullenger in Apocali Canc. 72.
For the fall and destruction of the church cannot be denied without the deniall of all the articles of our faithe and fondation of christian religion the trinitie of God the incarnation of Christ his preachinge his death his passion his eternall kingdome and priesthoode and all other misteries of catholique religion For what ende was his cominge to take fleash by his incarnation but to ioyne vnto himselfe in an indissoluble knott of mariadge his churche from which he would neuer be diuorced or seperated To what end was his preaching but to erect and establish the same his passion was to sanctifie it and to leaue her an euerlastinge remedie to blott out her sinnes and offences And I pray yow who is an euerlastinge king that hath not an euerlasting people Osee 2. Ephes 5. Ioh. 17. obeying him and obseruinge his lawes how can he be an euerlastinge priest whose priesthoode and sacrifice for soe manny yeares was applied to none and availed for none To what purpose was the holie ghoast sent but to remaine with his churche for euer and to instruct her in all trueth wherfore to affirme that this church hath failed is to affirme that Christs prophetts and Apostles are all liers and all that is written both in the old and newe testament to be fabulous That this Church which shall neuer be hid but remaine visible is manifest by the parable of Christe our Lord. CHAPTER IV. 1. THe church of God is called a Barne in which there is corne and chaffe a nett in which there is good and badd fishes a field in which there is cockle and wheate a banquett at which there are good and badd a flocke in which there are sheepe and goates all which doth signifie a visible church but the inuisible church hath but only the good accordinge to the opinion of the protestants which is contrarie aswell to the said parables as to our Sauiours owne wordes saying He will make cleane his barne Matt. 13. the wheate he will gather into his garner but he will burne the chaffe with an inexstinguible fire which shall not be vntill the day of iudgmēt Matt. 3. Our Sauiour saith suffer both of them I meane the wheate and the cockle to grow vntill the haruest which will not be vntill the day of iudgment For a kingdome must be meant of people that are knowen in the kingdome but the churche as before is alleadged is the kingdome of God therfore the dwellers thereof must be knowen S. Augustine doth proue the same lardglie against the Donatistes Aug. in Psal 101. concio 2. who said the church perished O wicked and impudent voice that the church should perish this they say because they be not in her c. Our Sauiour did referr vs to the church when he said Dic ecclesiae tell the church now which way should wee tell the church thereof without the churche be to be seene and therfore our Sauiour tooke away all doubt and said it is a cittie placed vppon a hill which shall giue light to the world 2. This is proued by reason for none can be saued vnlesse he enter into the church of which the arcke of Noe was a figure as all perished that did not enter into the arcke soe they perish also that enter not into the church but none can enter into the church which he knoweth not therfore all must perish because they cannot see this churche The profession of a christian ought to be visible not hidden therfore the church in which this profession is made ought to be soe for it is said Roman 10. Matt. 10. whosoeuer shall denie me before men I will denie him before my father who is in heauen 3. The comparison brought for the forsakinge the sinagoge of the Iewes is not a like for shee was but a figure and a shadow of the holie catholique church the oracles of the holie prophetts all the mornefull cries of the blessed Patriarches all the sacrifices of the Leuitts all the oblations of the Iewes signified or represented nothinge else then the cominge of the Messias at whose cominge all the other rites and oblations of the sinagoge should haue an end as it was prophesied Genes 94. Quando venerit qui mittendus est cessabit vnctio vestra vid. when the Messias shall come your vnction your sacrifice shall cease which also was prophesied and foretould by the Patriarch Iacob when he was dyinge who hauinge all his childrē about him said these wordes Non auferetur sceptrum de Iuda nec dux de faemore eius donec veniat qui mittendus est ipse erit expectatio gentium vid. the scepter shall not be taken from the tribe of Iuda nor a captaine from her loines vntill he come which is to be sent and he shal be the expectation of nations Soe as after the cominge of Christe aswell the seate royall of the kingdome as also the legall obseruations of the Iewes withall their sacrifices and oblations were accomplished in the death of Christe when he said consumatum est it is accomplished and soe instituted a newe lawe and founded his church which was the seate of Dauid that was giuen vnto him of whome it was said he shall raigne in the howse of Iacob for euer Luc. 1. Damas ●4 57. Esa 6.5 Os●● 2. and of his kingdome there shal be noe ende and that all the world should imbrace the God of Abrahā as it is said by the prophett Esay The Princes of people shal be gathered together with the God of Abraham soe as wee see not only the Christiās but also Turcks and Mores to imbrace the God of Abraham as the trewe God of whome it is said also I haue giuen yow a light vnto the nations that yow may be my saftie vnto the vtter most parte of the world 4. Wherfore he hath instituted a newe sacrifice by which his honnor should be vphoulden and by which his name should be glorified which accordinge to the prophesie of Malachias Malac. 1. should be the trewe oblation that should be offred vnto him for euer and in all places of the world this was not meant of the sacrifice of the old lawe for that could not be offred but at Ierusalem as the holie scriptures wittnesse and therfore it is meant of the blessed sacrifice of the Masse which shal be offred for euer in the churche of God for the which Christ hath instituted and ordained priestes which shall offer sacrifice vnto the eternall father accordinge to the institution of Christe and prophesie of Malachias and therfore S. Augustine lib. de vnit ecclesiae cap. 12.13 de ciuit lib. 20. cap. 8. Psal 85. ad illud tu solus Deus magnus Psal 70. affirmeth thē to denie Christ and to robb him of his glorie and inheritance bought with his blood which teach that his church may faile or perish and S. Ierom refuteth the same wicked heresie in the Luciferans Dialog ad
Lucif c. 6. prouinge against them that they make God subiect to the diuill a poore miserable Christ that imagine that the church may either perish or be driuen to any corner of the worlde 4. And although the Sacraments ceremonies Matt. 11. and the legall obseruations of the Iewes did faile because it is said the lawe and the prophetts were vnto Iohn yet notwithstandinge the church of Christ did not faile which was collected and composed of both the nations I meane Iewes and Gentiles as S. Paule doth wittnesse in many places that the first fruictes of the holie ghoaste and the first christians were the Apostles which were Iewes therfore the churche of the Iewes did not faile so as that none of them did remaine therin as the said Apostle proues Rom. 11. Hath God saith he reiected his people God forbid for I am an Israelite and of the seede of Abraham and of the tribe Beniamine for God did not cast of his people The glosse vpon this place faith that the Iewes are not infidels altogether and soe God did repell thē in parte but not in whole because he hath not reiected me and others that are predestinated thus farr the glosse For he reiected the howse of Saule but not of Dauid vnto whome in reward of the ardent desire and feruent deuotion that he had to builde a temple for godes glorie he promised that he would build for Dauid an euerlasting kingdome and a perpetuall howse from whome he should neuer take away his mercie for which he made the 88. psalme wherin he confirmed this promise Whether that papistes doe amisse in hauinge their churches and monasteries soe sumptuous their alters and ornamentes soe riche and ecclesiasticall possessions soe great the poore wanting the same CHAPTER I. 1. WHatsoeuer is giuen to Christs church is giuen in his honor that suffred for the said church beinge his spouse his portion c. for as our Sauiour saith Beatius est dare quam accipere It is better to giue then to take and noe maruaile that christians should giue vnto God some parte of his owne as the prophett saith what shall I giue vnto him that giues vnto me all thinges I pray you tell me whether it be a greater offence to robb and ouerthrowe the kinges howse and to spoile his subiects of their goodes depriue them of their liues and to comitt all other outragious facts vpō them then to build the same maintaine and enriche the same to bestowe lardgl●e vpon his seruaunts to defend and protect them c Tell me I praie you whether Salomon that built the temple of Ierusalem soe sumptuously and which by the riches thereof was most famous through out the world was more offensiue vnto God for soe doing then Nabuchodonosor kinge of Babilon and Antiochus Epiphanes which were not contented to ransacke and spoile that worthie temple cast downe the pillers take away the golden alter and candlesticks and all other sacred vessells or religious ornamentes but also defiled the same and prohibited any oblatiō or sacrifice to be offered therin For this cause these two tirants doe represent the diuill and Salomon is a figure of Christe And if Salomon was soe comended in holie scriptures for buildinge the said Temple for the sinagoge how much more christiā princes for buildinge churches for Iesus Christe 2. I praie you tell me also whether Constantine the great merited more before God the world for buildinge soe many churches vppon his owne charges and for augmentinge and enrichinge the patrimony of Christe then kinge Henrie the 8. that did cast and pull downe soe many churches monasteries and chapples and did disolue soe manny Religious howses robbed them of all their sacred ornaments and by soe doinge spoyled God of his patrimonie Yow saie that whatsoeuer kinge Henrie the 8. did was donn for the reliefe of the poore and the ease of his subiects to be freed from subsidies and impositions as was related in that verie parleamēt wherin monasteries churches were surprised and religion prophaned And therfore it was added in the said parleament that the truly poore of the kingdome perished and that Abbey Lubbers for soe they called religious persons did possesse their liuinges To this effect there was a supplicatiō exhibited to the kinge against Bishoppes Abottes Priores Deacons Archdeacons suffragans priestes in forme following c. What tyrāt euer oppressed the people like this cruel vēgeable generation Before these came there were but fewe theues yea thefte was at that tyme soe rare that Caesar was not compelled to make penaltie of death vpon felonie as your grace may wel perceaue in his institutes ther was also at that time but fewe poore people and yet they did not begge but there was giuē them enoughe vnasked Wherfore if your grace will build a sure hospitall that neuer shall faile to reliue vs all your poore beads men take from them al these thinges set these sturdy boubies abroad in the world to get thē wiues of their owne to get their liuinge with their labour in the swette of their browes accordinge to Gene. 1. Tie all idle theues to the cartes to be whipped naked about euerie markett towne that they by their importunat begginge take not away the allmesse that the good christian people do giue then shall aswell the number of our foresaid mounsterous sorte as of the baudes hoores theeues and idle people decrease then shal these great yearly exactions cease then shall all your people encrease in wealthe c. these are sett downe in Iohn Fox his Chronicles Iudas in like manner when the deuout wooman Marie Magdalē anointed Christs feete with a moste pretious ointment did saie vt quid perditio haec what destruction is this had it not bene better said he that this had bene sold and giuen vnto the poore our Sauiour aunswered let her alone and added moreouer that in what place so euer of the world his gospell should be read her deuotion should be comended And as Iudas herin did not care for the poore as the scripture reporteth but hopinge it should retourne to himselfe soe parleament protestants did not care for the poore but all their drifte was to haue the liuinges and treasures of the churches themselues as itt fell out 3. I praie you tell me whether the poore were better and more reliued or the subiects more eased of subsidies and impositiōs before the suppression of the church or after Doctor Sanders writes that England was neuer troubled with greater impositiōs subsidies then it was in the later daies of kinge Henry the 8. nor any kinge in england had lesse treasure in his cofers then he at his deathe And as for the poore people it is manifest that they haue lesse releefe now then euer they had I am sure there are not 300. persons reliued by all the churche liuinges of England and Ireland beinge in those mens handes which haue as little charitie towardes God and
pittie towardes the poore as they haue remorse of conscience to keepe them or morall honestie to bestowe them And as for other ecclesiasticall dignities and spirituall benefices out of which the greatest liuely hoode should be deducted they saie Non sufficit nobis vobis wee haue not inoughe our selues much lesse will wee imparte any thinge vnto others hauinge such a diluge of chitts and childrē with which the countries of this ghospell doe aboūd that S. Paule should not bragge nor glorie more for begettinge children per euangelium by the gospell of Christe then they by their voluptuous gospell And soe eche of them maie saie Genui vos per euangelium I haue begotten yow by the gospel but I would to God they had gotten them spiritually as S. Paule did and not carnallie as they doe whose voluptuous gospell is Crescere multiplicare ex sanguinibus aut ex voluntate carnis sed non ex Deo nati sunt By filthie concupiscence accordinge to the will of the fleash but are not borne of God whose vnhappy and wofull of springe did robb Christ of his patrimony and did not onlie destroie the ecclesiasticall state of his church but also haue almost brought to ruine the ciuill and temporall state hauing made their inundation with which all England and Irelād are so ouerwhelmed into their neighbours possessions and territories that the boundes and banckes of these countries are not able to resiste their violent irruptions neither yet a meane contment is not able to conteine the confused and disordered multitude of their issue soe as if England either by conquest or some other course doe not appoint their habitation and dwellinge place in some other countrie as Virginia or Guiana or elce where the kingdome of great Brittanie and poore Ireland shall feele the smarte and especially the nobilitie and cheefest into whome they prie daylie seekinge by all dishonest courses to intrude into their landes and liuinges as they haue donn alreadie by suppressinge them in all those countries where this gospel tooke footing for I dare say and boldely affirme that these gospellers haue putt downe and surprised as many howses of noble men and gentlemen as monasteries and churches but it is the iust iudgment of God that these potentats and great people should feele their greatest smarte by whom they were sollicited defended and protected in this their newe gospell And that for two causes vid. libertie to liue dissolutelie without controllment of their spirituall pastors and couetousnes with greedie desire to possesse and enioye the churche liuinges which sorte of people for that they contemne all spirituall power or iurisdiction which the church ought to haue ouer them as the spiritt ouer the fleash did easilie yeald to any heretique impugninge and resistinge this spirituall power and takinge away all ecclesiasticall discipline and spirituall correction and soe they gaue them full scope to all abhominable riotousnes and wanton dissolution 4. But to retourne to my purpose that God is not displeased nor good Christians offended for buildinge churches and monasteries or other religious howses for his seruice nor the poore hindered of their releefe for anny charitable oblations or donations that the deuout christians doe bestow on the church but rather God much pleased therby and the poore releeued First 2 Reg. 7. Genes Dauid for hauinge a desire to build a temple for Godes honor was rewarded with and euerlastinge howse and a perpetuall kingdome Iacob but only for consecrating a stone to godes glorie it was said vnto him I will cause thee to encrease and multiplie The englishmen vppon their first cominge to Irelande vnder kinge henrie the 2. dedicated to the seruice of God the first land they tooke which was in the countie of Wexford and made two famous monasteries as Donbrody and Tentarom of the order of S. Bernard and haue endued thē with great and ample possessions as also many churches in that countie and in euery place where they came which was noe smale cause they had such good successe in their enterprise Henry the 5. before he tooke the warres of Fraunce in hand builded two famous monasteries by Richmounde one of the order of Carthusians and the other of Sion Nunes of the order of S. Bride eche monasterie standes one againste the other and the riuer of Themes betwixt them which he dedicated to the seruice of God whom they praised with celestiall alleluias as diuine praises which were neuer omitted either by day or by night soe that when th one would make an end the other would beginn the bells giuinge them notice therof Therfore God did prosper him soe well in those warres that he brought almost all France to his subiection and his sonne kinge Henry the 6. was crowned kinge of Fraunce at Paris beinge but xi yeares of age Yea I could recken more then a thowsand examples of the like subiecte 5. And for the releefe of the poore as the pretious ointment that Marie Magdalen bought for our Sauiours feete was not a hinderance for the poore soe whatsoeuer is giuen to further his seruice doth rather further then hinder them Is there anie countrie in Europe more charitable to the poore and more liberall to godes seruants and all other ecclesiasticall persons then Spaine and yet noe countrie more sumptuous and costlie in their churches and more deuoute and lesse sparing of any thinge they haue for the settinge foorth of godes glorie for adorninge churches and monasteries with all ornaments and implements pertaininge therunto Is there anie country in the world that can shewe such hospitales in all citties townes villadges and hamletts for the cure of the sicke and for the releefe of pilgrimes and strangers such colledges for poore virgins that be depriued of parents and frindes where they be kept and brought vpp in all honest and godly education befittinge gentle women vntill they be married vppon the cost and chardges of the colledge in euerie cittie or great towne in Spaine such confraternities being erected for all workes of mercie by which meanes all sortes of distressed persōs are reliued soe many hospitalities for cast children for whome they haue nurses to giue them sucke vpon the hospitalles charges which also giues releefe vnto them vntill they be able to helpe themselues Soe manny colledges for orphanes soe manny vniuersities for schollers as noe countrie can shewe soe manny hauinge 24. vniuersities and so manny howses of mercie that I dare saye that the howse of mercy of Lisborne doth more workes of charitie and sustaines more poore people and marryes more virgins for godes sake then all the protestante countries in Europe 6. To conclude England and Ireland cannot denie but there was better prouision for the poore before the church was destroyed then after and that the most parte of all colleges and hospitalles were builded by church men themselues Did not the faithfull bringe all their goodes vnto the Apostles Act. c. 5. to be disposed accordinge to their
charitie S. Paule likewise did receaue the offringes of the faithfull I require saith he the fruite of your deuotion for whatsoeuer is bestowed vppon the church the poore are againe releeued therby And as S. Hierom saith Quod clericorum est totum illud pauperum est Of the vnhappie endes and other punishments by which God doth chastice those that presume to robb Churches or otherwise to prophane and abuse sacred things CHAPTER II. Ioseph an ●iq lib. 15. cap. 8. 12. IOsephus doth register the modest behauiour of Gn. Pompey towardes the church of Hierusalem and also the couetousnes of Marcus Crassus by which he robbed the same who was punished by God he beinge slaine and all his great armye ouerthrowen by the Parthians and that most miserably And although thorough necessitie kinge Herod did open the sepulcher of kinge Dauid thinking therby to haue great treasures the said Ioseph saith that he was attached with great calamities for his presumption Daniel c. 1 In the holie scriptures wee read that Nabuchodonosor kinge of the Assirians did robb the temple of God and afterwardes was transformed into a beaste and his sonne Balthazar for prophaninge the holie vessels that his Father brought from the temple of Hierusalem was slaine by his enemies Daniel 5. and the kingdome taken and possessed by them Kinge Antiochus was eaten by wormes for doinge the like The treasure and goulden vessels brought by Titus out of Hierusalē and by Gensericus kinge of the Vandalles brought oute of Rome vnto Affrique amoungest other spoyles and beinge tost to and fro through the handes of manny kinges aswell Romaines as Vandalls none that euer possessed them escaped an ominus end neyther the wrathe of God surceased vntill the kingdome of the Vandalls beinge vtterly destroyed by Belisarius who tooke in a most bloody battle the last kinge of them called Gibnier by the comaundement of the Emperor Iustinian they were sent backe againe to Hierusalem hauinge giuen a sore blowe to all such as polluted their handes withall Act. 5. 2. In the actes of the Apostles wee read the miserable death of Ananias and Saphira not for robbinge the goodes which others had giuen to the churche but for keepinge with themselues parte of that which once they offered vnto God wherfore said S. Peter vnto them did Sathan tempt yow to lie against the holie ghoaste and to deceaue vs of parte of the land you sould was it not in your powre not to sell it for herin you haue not deceaued men but God and soe both man and wife fell downe dead at his feete To giue vs to vnderstand what accompt wee must giue vnto God of anny thinge that is once consecrated vnto him And therfore Alaricus kinge of the Goathes when he tooke Rome comaunded vnder great penalties that none of his soldiors should robbe any church neither touch any thinge that was in them sayinge that his quarell was against man and not against God neither against his Saincts Also A certaine gentleman of the Goathes tooke a virgine that was consecrated vnto God in the church of S. Peter and vsinge great force and violence to gett of her the golden vessells and churche stuffe that was consecrated to Gods seruice she said that those were the goodes of the Apostle S. Peter and as for her parte shee was not able to defend them The said Goath beinge astonished at the virgins resolute behauiour did forbeare to lay violent handes either vpon the virgine or vpon those consecrated vessells for the said kinge comaunded Paulus Orosius as Paulus Orosius writeth that his souldiors should carrie vppon their owne backs those holie vessels with all other thinges pertayninge to the church and as manny Christians as should followe them should not be touched 3. The ecclesiasticall histories are full of the like examples yea the verie gentiles did containe themselues from spoilinge religious people or robbinge churches not so much for any deuotion but for verie feare of the wrath of God whose greeuous punishmentes was by them experienced vppon others for attemptinge the like sacrilege Iulian the vncle of Iulian Emperor the Apostate did committ a wicked robberye vpon the church of Antioch and did mingle the holly vessels with the plate of his Nephewes was therfore chastised by God publikely for the same for his entralles putrified his body was tormented with such horrible vlcers and filthie botches out of which there came vglie wormes which gnawed and consumed his carcasse by which he was exhausted and eaten and soe ended most miserablie Faelix Iulians threasurer and companion in the robberie aforesaid died vomittinge all his blood out of his mouthe Mauricius Cartularius did persuade Isacius who was the Exarcke of Italie for the Emperor Heraclius that he should robbe the church of Rome which he did not longe after the said Mauricius was emprisoned by the said Exarcke where he died most miserably the said Isacius died vppon the suddaine within a little after as Carolus Sigonius doth write Lib. 2. de regno Ital Zozo to 3 baptist Aegnat in vita Leonit Blond lib. 1. deca 2. Nicephor hist li 18. cap. 4.2 Nice in chronico ducis Bauari● Leo the 4. Emperor of Constantinople tooke away a Crowne of gould verie riche which the Emperor Mauritius did offer vnto the church of Sainte Sophia in which crowne there was amoungst other pretious stones a carbuncle of inestimable valoure and puttinge the same vpon his head presentlie there grewe vpon him an in apostume of which he died which was called the carbuncle 4. S. Gregorie Turonensis writeth in his historie that certeine soldiors who did robbe the church of S. Vincent of the cittie of Agence were soe chastised of God that one of them had his hand burned into the other the diuill did enter by which he was torne in peeces cryinge vnto the Sainct the other did kill himselfe by his owne proper handes Trithemius doth declare that it was reuealed vnto him that Dagobert king of Fraunce for vsurpinge the goodes of the church was accused before the throne of God and that Charles Martell a captaine of great vallor father of kinge Pepine and vncle vnto Charles the great Paul Aemil. l. 2 was also condemned for the same and that S. Eucherius Bishopp of Orleans did comaund that his sepulcher should be opened and that nothinge was found in it but a most vgly serpent of strange bignes Zurita tomo annal cap. 39. Peter the 4. king of Aragon died within 4. dayes after he had abused the picture of holie Tecla Vrraca the Queene of Spaine had her belly burste and so came to a badd end for robbinge of churches Astialpus kinge of the Longobardes and Fredericke the Emperor came likewise to a bad end De regib Hispaniae in Hono. for robbinge of churches Francis Ta●afa writeth that when Gundericus tooke Siuill and intended also to spoile the churches thereof Ambr. de Onorales p.
the takinge of them into his handes he determined with himselfe not to make any more vse of them God would not haue thinges dedicated to his honor to be transferred to any prophane vse vppon anny pretence whatsoeuer And for that Nicephorus Phocas Emperor made a lawe by which he reuoked and called backe all lawes that were made in fauor of churchmē for that they had such ample patrimonie and that the poore as he alleadged was not releeued nor the soldiors had wherwith to eate Lib. 1. in in Constit 69. orient The Emperor Basilius did repeale that statute by another lawe by these wordes Vnderstandinge that the lawe of Nicephorus made after that he vsurped the empire against the church and church liuinges was the only cause and ofspringe of all our mischeefe and present callamities for that lawe was not only don in preiudice of the church but also it was plainly against the honnor of God and seinge wee finde by experience to our great greefe that nothing succeeded well with vs neither did wee want continuall callamities after the makinge thereof therfore wee comaunde that it shall cease and be of noe force nor anny other lawe against the church 6. In like manner Alexis Comnenus Emperor of Constaninople besides that he made streight lawes against those that vsu●ped anny thinge consecrated vnto God to declare his greater deuotion he in the golden bull added these wordes If euer hereafter ô Lord God anny shal be soe maliparte or soe presumptuous as to take anny thinge that is alreadie consecrated to God or hereafter shal be dedicated to his holie church let such an one neuer enioye the cleere lighte of thy vision neither the light of the sonne that giues lighte in the morninge neither thy aide or protexion but euermore let him be dispised and forsaken of thee The same malediction in substance the Queene Theodolenda did giue vnto all those that would vsurpe the goodes and landes which shee did giue and bestow vppon the church of S. Iohn Baptiste in the cittie of Moucia Lib. 4. c. 7. de gest Longobardorum as Paulus Diaconus doth write The like malediction other Princes haue cast foorth vppon those that would frustrate their godly endeuours for that they feared that one time or another the greedy desire and couetuousnes of wicked people would breake all bondes of godes lawes and religion 7. Allas how manny maledictions were cast vppon the protestants for comittinge sacriledge and for robbinge of churches as that of Corronell Randale and 500. English soldiors withall their munition and victualls which were blowen vpp into the ayre by their owne pouder by an extraordinarie accident of a Woulfe who rann with a firie taile into the church of Derrie in Vulster which by the said Randall was polluted all which in a moment did perishe with a shipp that was at ●anker by the said church Anno Domini 1565. Also of one Sentleger beinge master of the mint that was at Rosse in Ireland in the monasterie of S. Francis in kinge Edwardes dayes who for that the workmen told him that they were beaten by S. Francis euerie night went himselfe of meere presumption vnto the said monasterie to lodge the verie first night he went thither he was soe assaulted that he rann madd and rann headlounge that verie nighte into the riuer and drowned himselfe and his carcase was found dead vppon the sand that morninge In the warres of Garret Earle of Desmond the English garrisō that was at Yonghull a port towne in the prouince of Mounster in their sally foorth vppon the enemies went to a certaine monasterie called Melanie which is scituated in an Iland and in the riuer of that towne called the broade water one captaine Peers beinge the leader of that garrison caused a fire to be made and one of his companie called Bluett an Irishman and natiue of Yonghull making fire of the image of that Sainct called Melanye vppon the suddaine fell madd and died within 3. dayes after And the said captaine for that he comaunded him soe to doe was depriued of the vse of his limmes and falling into a dead palsie was neuer founde vntil he died and his companie were all killed by the said Earle his Sensciall this happened 1580. 8. Alsoe one Poet an Englishman breakinge downe a monasterie of S. Dominiques in the North part of Yonghull fell dead downe from the toppe of the church all his limmes beinge broken Anno Domini 1587. Also three souldiors of that towne which did cast downe and burne the holye roode of that monasterie died within one seanight after they hade done it An. 1580 The firste fell madd and died within 3. dayes after The second was eaten with life and died within 5. daies And the third was kild by the said Earles Sensciall within 7. daies after all which manny of that towne now ●iuinge can wittnesse An. 1608 The Lord Crowmell that cast downe the steeple of S. Patriques Church in Vlster dyed within one seanight after some said he fell madd and died therof Also an English carpenter that went vp vpon the vesterie of S. Patriques church of Dublin fell downe his bones were brokē and died frantique within 2. dayes after An English captaine that pulled downe the holie roode of Cahir An. 1609 rann madd and cast himselfe from the toppe of the castle of the said Cahir headlonge into the riuer and drowned himselfe 9. Garrett Earle of Desmounde after beinge proclaimed traitour accompanied with his brother Sr. Iohn of Desmound and 800. more in their company for their first exploite inuaded the towne of Yonghull which they spoyled ransacked burnt and destroyed the howses tooke away all the poore inhabitants goodes stript them most cruelly of all their cloathes and left them both man and wooman naked not permittinge them to hide or couer their secreat pertes which nature it selfe would faine couer rauishinge married woomen with manny other wicked actes which they perpetrated not sparinge church or sanctuarie nor any thinge whatsoeuer that was sacred which they polluted defiled and brought euery thinge to vtter confusion and desolation makinge hauocke aswell of sacred vestimentes and chalices as of any other chattle Certaine Spaniardes which were with them at that wicked exploite perceauinge by the furniture and ornamentes of the churches that the townes men were all catholiques and containinge their handes from spoiling were reproued by some of that wicked companie for that they tooke not parte of the spoile as others did but they aunswered that they ought not to robbe or spoile better christians then themselues And one of the said Spaniardes cut his cloake as S. Martine did in fiue partes and distributed the same vppon fiue children which were stript of their cloathes and lefte naked by some of the kearnes But very fewe or none of them escaped a miserable end For the Earle himselfe was beheaded by a poore souldior beinge ●ound in a woode with a verie smale
are lawfull for the kinge to doe vnto whome the said Antigonus made aunswere Vnto tirannicall and barbarous Princes such thinges are lawfull but vnto vs nothinge is lawfull but that which is honeste 3. This is the difference betwixt the good kinge and the tyrant for the one is subiect to the lawes of God and nature the other is subiect to noe lawe but to his will and his passion hauinge noe respect to lawe conscience faith or iustice The one doth respect cheefly the good of the weale publique the other his owne priuate comoditie the one doth enriche his subiects by all the best meanes he can the other doth impouerish them with all extorsion and imposition The one doth reuenge the iniurie don vnto God the comon wealth and pardones his owne proper iniurie the Tyrant doth the contrarie and doth reuenge his owne quarell and forgiue the iniurie done vnto God The one endeuours to preserue loue and amitie amoungest his subiects the other doth sowe dissentions and factions amoungest them to destroy them and by their destruction to enriche himselfe with the confiscation of their goodes The one makes great accompt of the loue of his subiects the other euer groundes himselfe in the hatred of his subiectes The one doth search the best and the most vertuous to bestowe offices and promotions on them the other doth bestowe them vppon the wickeddest people he can gett The one is a pastour to feede his subiectes the other i● a woulfe to destroy them 4. But to come to my purpose that it is not lawfull for kinges to doe what it pleaseth them the verie heathens haue obserued the conrrarie Zonarus tomo 2. in Traiano Traian the Emperor when he gaue the sword to the Pretor of Rome said these wordes If I shall comaund anny thinge that is lawfull or iuste vse this sword for me if otherwise I shall bid or comaund anny thinge against iustice vse it against me The kinges of Aegipt did cause their magistrates to sweate not to obey them but in thinges lawfull the same did Phillipp the beautifull kinge of France and Antigonus the 3. who comaunded his presidentes and magistrates that they should not execute his comaundement though it were signed with his owne hande vnles it were iust lawfull It is an ould prouerbe Melius est imperium in quo nihil licet quam imperium in quo mihi liceat It is better to be vnder his gouernment where the lawe giues noe scope then vnder his where all thinges are lawfull without any restrainte 5. And for their spiritual comaunde S. Gregorie Nazian doth admonishe thē you saith he that are sheepe aske not to feede your pastors Orat. 17. ad Ciues timore percusso● neither intermidle in things that pertaines not vnto your charge doe not iudge your iudges nor prescribe lawes to your law giuers if yow will haue me to be plaine with yow for the lawe of Christe hath made you my subiectes and referred you to my tribunall and that yow are sheepe of my flocke Chrysost de verbis Isa Homil. 40 And therfore S. Chisostome willed kinges to containe themselues within their limittes for the boundes of priest-hoode is distinguished from the boundes limittes of kinges for that of priest-hoode is more then that of kinges for the kinges power exceedes not temporall thinges but the power of priest-hoode came from heauen the kinge hath the charge of our bodyes but the priest hath to deale with our soules L●ciferius Bishop of Caler saith these wordes What power haue you speakinge of Pr●nces of Bishopps which if you shall not obey by the sentence of God alreadie giuen you shal be condemned S. Iohn Damascen saith that Princes haue nothinge to doe in Church matters for that their office is not to gouerne ecclesiasticall state and therfore S. Paule saith Nescitis quod Angelos iudicabimus multo magis secularia Doe you not know that wee shall iudge Angells much more seculer thinges 6. The inconuenience of this is declared by two examples of a politicke courtier and a religious christian Ecebolus Sophist was maister to Iulian the Apostate and much esteemed of him this polititian in the gouernment of Constantius did frame himselfe a christian to conforme himselfe to the Emperors humour when the said Constantius became an Arian heretique the said Sophiste tourned his coat also Againe when Iulian the Apostate was Emperor denied his faith became an infidle the said Ecebolus became also an infidle afterwards when Iulian died and Iouinian also that a most deuout and godly Catholique succeeded Iulian Ecebolus like the Cameleon did conforme himselfe to the newe Emperor cast him selfe at the Church doore crauing pardon of the Christians Lib. 3. c. 11 as Socrates saith A liuely representation of the polititians of this time of whome Iouinian the Emperor said Socrat. li. 3.21 that they worshipp not God but the Prince 7. The other example is of Cesarius who as his brother S. Gregorie Nazianzen saith beinge honoured with great offices and promotions of the said Iulian and for that he would not forgoe his religion beinge a Catholique he was disfauoured of the said Iulian and forsakinge the worlde and the fauor of the Emperor did set little by all wordly promotion and credit of the Emperor in respect of the Catholique religion This example of Cesarius doth represent vnto vs a fine Catholique and the other of Ecebolus a fine Polititian of these our dayes Wherefore if wee endeuour to followe the Princes Religion as often the kinge doth change the same soe often wee must alsoe change ours and soe wee make of the Prince a God and forsake the liuinge God That the protestant religion whose principall foundation and groundes are these articles aforesaid is nothinge else then a denyinge of all Religion and pietie and a renewinge of all heresies CHAPTER I. 1. CAluine in his institutions saith Inst li. 4.14.7.15 that S. Augustine of all antiquitie is the best faithfullest wittnes Aug. to 6. ab haeresibus 82. but he enrolled your Patrons amoungest old heretiques as Iouinian Vigilantius Aerius Aquarios Armenians Nouatians Pepusians Pheudapostles Euuomians Pelagians and Donati●tes Iouinian the Moncke saith that fastinge or abstinence are of noe worthe He destroied also the virginitie of the blessed Virgin affirming that shee lost her virginitie when shee was deliuered of Iesus and said that continencie in Virgins and religious people was noe better then matrimonie and soe certaine Virgins beinge at Rome vpon this heresie did marrie by which saith S. Augustine was comitted a prodigious thinge and was extinguished so represently that it did not gett footinge amoungest other priestes 2. S. Ierom exclaimed against Vigilantius vsinge these wordes It is a sacrilege to heare what the filthie fellowe calls vs ashmoungers and idolaters for that wee reuerence dead meanes bones which he ment by the reliques of the holie Sainctes And the said S. Ierom writes that he denyed
manny godes Instit de monarchia Dei lib. 3. cap. 1. yet they affirme Iupiter to be the father of all the reste and saie that they did worshipp but one God and the reste of the godes as the ministers of one God as Iustinus martyr said and Plato saith Plato de repub dialogo 2. in fine Deus qui bonus est malorum causa nonest God which is good is not the cause of euills and in another place he saith God is not vniust but most iust But the new religion doth say in the chapter aboue recited that God is the cause of all mischeefe and wickednes by which wicked assertion they make him a deuill 2. All philosophers did referre all the inferior motions to a certaine supreame motiue by the consideration whereof they found a certaine supreame mouer and a certaine euerlastinge cause which is the center of begininge and principle of all thinges vnto whome all thinges are subordinated The Turcks saie that God is immutable mercifull pittifull one onlie who giues euerie man according to his worckes reward to the good and tormentes to the badde and soe they call God la Ila Mahomet resulā God God aboue and Mahomet his prophet But the new religion doth say he giues noe reward to the good nor tormentes to the badd soe that he hath any iott of faith with him and the more wicked a man is Lutherus the neerer he is to Gods fauour The Turcks doe beleue that it is possible to keepe godes lawes but the newe religion doth say it is impossible and that heauen is giuen to those that haue any faith without anny respect to works or mans endeuour The Turcks also affirme that Christe ascended vnto heauen in his fleashe and sitteth in the presence of God The Turckes Alcoran saies that Iesus Christe was the sonne of the Virgin Marie was inspired by God that he was the worde the spiritte the wisdome and the minde of God the father and that he was the Messias and the Prince that was promised vnto the Iewes Thene l. 6. cap. 4. Alcoran Azoar 2.20 Azoar 31. Also they say that the spiritt of God did enter into Marie and that Iesus was begotten of her shee beinge a moste pure Virgine That God did indue her soule with greater grace and vertue then the soule of anny that was and that of all men and women shee was the best the purest and the godliest and that of all the children of Adam none was vnspotted and vndefiled by Sathan but Marie and her child Azoar 3.76 The new religion beleeues of her noe such matter and compares her with their owne mothers and some of them calle her a saffron bagg 3. Vnder the dominion of the Turcks the christians are permitted without anny restraint to exercise all the rites and exercises of christian religion not soe vnder princes of the new religion who are greater persecutors of the catholique christian religion then anny Turcks Iewes Gentiles or pagans that euer were In Constantinople there are many monasteries standing and replenished with religious people in Grecia and other of the Turcks Dominions are at this day many degrees orders and ecclesiasticall dignities of the church and christian pastors as Patriarches Metropilitans Archbishoppes Bishopps and Priests vnto all which it is lawfull to consecrate to say Masse and Mouncks Deacons and Subdeacons doe minister at the Alter There are all also other officers which they call Agnests which doe read vppon sondayes the epistles There are also Archimancritae that is to say the Fathers of Moncks These Patriarches are chosen by Metropolitans Archbishopps and Bishopps and are confirmed by the cheefe Bassa the kinges ●iccar the next vnto these are the Metropolitans the cheefest of them is the Metropolitan of Thessalonica which hath vnder him 10. Bishopps the Metropolitan of Athens hath vnder him 6. Bishopps In that cittie of Athens were seene in a publique profession together 250. priests there is a Metropolitan of Mitelin but he hath no Bishopps vnder him The Metropolitan of Chalcedon hath vnder him 60. priests There is a Metropolitan of Nyce but he hath noe Bishoppe The Metropolitan of Ephesus hath hnder him 50. churches The Metropolitan of Philipen hath 150. Antioch 40. Churches Smyrnensis 150. and Corinth with other Metropolitans 6. 4. All doe agree with the Catholique religion in euerie pointe exceptinge 3. or 4. errors of the Greeks This is knowen by the censure that Ieremie the Patriarche hath giuen of the protestant religion which was sent by him thē into Germanie who sought an vnion betwixt them and the Greeke church seeinge they forsooke the Latine church or rather God and the Latine haue forsaken them but the said Patriarche did abhor and refuse an vnion with them and said there was asmuch difference betwixt them as betwixt heauen and hell You may read more of this matter in Michell ab Iselt Anno 1580. Surius hist. ibid. Also the Patriarch of Philadelpha called Gabriell did write vnto Martinus Crusius a Lutheran of this matter requestinge him neuer to trouble him touchinge either vnion or confirmation of his doctrine 5. To cōclud this matter if Turkes Iewes and Gentiles thincke more reuerently of God the Father D. Tho. 2.2 q. 10. art 6. Tit. 4. of Christ Iesus his sonne and of his blessed mother yea and do shew more fauor to christians then those of the new religion doe I must thincke and conceaue a better opinion of Turckes then of these new vpstarts for S. Thomas saith that heresie is a greater sinne thē paganisme and Iudaisme for althoughe infidels denye more articles of faith then heretiques yet because heretiques do persecute the church with greater malice then the other and the greater malice argueth the greater sinne therfore heretiques are the greater sinners For as saint Paule saith an hereticall man is damned by his owne proper iudgment therfore I leaue the conclusion to the consideration of the reader An answer vnto Protestants barkinge against the religious institutions of holy Orders saying that religious vocations were not instituted by our Sauiour CHAPTER I. 1. IF humane nature had continued in that blessed perfection of originall integrity in which it was created there would not be required that grace excepted which in the beginning was infused and superadded vnto it so many other graces and helpes preueniēt subsequent exciting her slacknes and brackwardnes and expelling her corrupt inclination and propension to sensuality to corruptible base and vile creatures Wherfore the creator and protector of man whose nature is goodnes whose proper worke is mercy as S. Leo saith doth neuer cease or desiste from giuinge of all helpes and meanes to repaire and redresse this humane imbecillitie by proposing and intimating all such sufficient motiues to worke our saluation withall conuincing our negligence and vnprouident carelesnes if wee will imbrace and put the same in due execution so as for curing and healing the contagious maladies and restles diseases
contracted and engendred by originall and capitall sinne he instituted the Sacramente of Baptisme and also for cleansinge and purginge vs from actuall and personall comitted after Baptisme he hath ordained and deuised other Sacramentes either to be supported by them that wee should not fall or to be raised vp againe and releiued if wee were fallen 2. Amongst all conuenient meanes ordeined either for reforming our said vicious inclination or increasing our perfectiō none are so certaine or so secure as the religious state the assured sanctuary and common support of all Christians and specially of such as are plunged and perplexed with the continuall fluxe and reflux of humane frailtie and Adams agony For besides so many euident testimonies of Gods particular fauour and spirituall consolation that he doth bestowe on it to take away the occasion of sinne who euer liued more vertuously or more religiously then those that were retired sequestred from the daungerous occasions thereof the alluring inducementes of the vanities of this world Elongaui fugiens mansi in solitudine I fled retiring my selfe and remained alone vid. from such as by their importunate and alluring conuersation of filthy concupiscence sought to bringe me to confusion 3. It is said in the person of a religious man exempted and freed from all seculer designementes Audiuimus eum in Euphrata I haue heard him at the pleasant riuer of Euphrata that springeth out of paradise I haue founde him in the fertile feildes amids the woods Not in the pallace of King Pharao but in the wildernes the Angells appeared vnto Moises wherefore in the desert he receaued the deuine lawes with many other spirituall consolations S. Iohn Baptist least his blessed conuersation should be defiled and prophaned with the idle and loose cōmunication of his kinsmen fled into the wildernes When God through speciall fauour appeared vnto Abraham and would recapitulate certaine great and hidden misteries vnto him he said these wordes Departe from your natiue country and your carnall freindes and goe a farr off It is said vnto the spouse of Christe Obliuiscere populum tuum domum patris tui Gen. 12. Take no care of thine owne kindred and remember not thy fathers house The Apostle after he became the seruant of Christe Non acquieuit carni sanguini did bid adieu to flesh and bloud Elias and Mary Magdalen in the wildernes were dreadfull vnto the deuills gratefull vnto the Angells acceptable vnto God and famous to the world 4. Did not Elias resemble the state of a religious person who was without wife without children without family allwaies liuinge chaste and continente being in that pouerty as he is described with hairy skinnes and as it were begging his bread of a poore widdow 4. Reg. 1. somtimes receiuing it from a crowe 3. King 17 3. Reg. 19 Did not Elizeus giuing ouer his landes and chattells forsaking parentes house and home giue good example of a religious state followe that perfection and accomplishe that votary life Wherefore S. Hierom calls them monckes of the ould testament Hier. ep 4 Epist 15. in which number he reckoneth himselfe saying Our prince Elias or leader Elizeus our captaines the children of the prophets also in the said ould law were the Nazarites Num. 6. dedicated to the seruice of God so as saint Basill calleth the religious people of the ould testament Nazarites Nazianz. oratione in laudem Basilij which by solemne vowe consecrated themselues wholy to this religious profession they refrained from wine and from any thinge that might distemper their mindes that so wee likewise should not only abstaine from sinne but also from all the prouocations and inducementes of the same neither from man or by man did it come but from the sonne of God VValdēs de sacrament tit 9 cap. 33. Clito. l. 3. cap. 9. Greg. 2. di●l cap. 8 in which are all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge as all holy fathers doe witnes and especially Thomas Waldensis against Iohn Wickliffe Clitoueus against Luther and other heretiques of his time S. Gregory against Florineus which most sharpely persecuted S. Benedict and his holy order 5. What more euident proofe or conuincing reasons can we haue then our sauiours owne wordes for the religious state consisteth of three vowes I meane perpetuall chastity voluntarie pouertie and constant and perfect obediēce which Christ ordayned against the three maladies of our soule which is concupiscēce of the eye concupiscence of the flesh and pride of life Matt. 29. touchinge the first he saith there are Eunuches which haue gelded themselues from the beginning from the kingdome of heauen meaning therby that such people by their solemne vowe of religious chastitie and of inuincible and vowed continencie did cutt away all liberty and occasion of wedlocke and vnchaste desires of fleshly allurementes Of pouerty he said in plaine tearmes Luc. 14. vnlesse one will renounce all that he possesseth he cannot be my disciple Luc. 10. In another place he forbiddeth the Apostles to carry either goulde or siluer scrippe or purse Luc. 9. Of obedience he saith He that listeth to come to follow after me let him deny himselfe take vp his crosse and follow me By this abnegation and deniall of himselfe the holy doctors haue euer vnderstood the vow of obedience as may appeare plainly by the counsell of Zenon Conc. zen. decre all which three vowes our Sauiour counselled which are called euangelicall councells and so they are recorded by the Euangelistes Matt. 19. Mar. 10. Luc. 18. as may appeare by the younge man that sought our Sauiours counsell for the purchasing of life euerlasting who neuerthelesse from his childehood kept the commaundementes yet he counselled him if he would be perfecte to goe and sell all that he had to giue the same to the poore and to follow him and he should haue greate treasure in heauen For by selling all his goods Matt. 19. he should make himselfe incapable to demaunde them againe by following of him doth plainly signifie other euangelicall counsailes especially that of obedience which counsell being vnaduisedly reiected of the young man was embraced of the Apostles for S. Peter in the name of them all saith wee forsooke all thinges by which wordes saint Hierome prooued against Iouinian Iere. lib. 1. in Iouin S. Tho. 2 ● opus 88. ar 4. ad 3. Aug. 17. de ciuit 4. that the Apostles being after admitted to the Apostolique dignitie were continente and chaste without exercising coniugall society so saint Thomas and sainct Augustine saie that the Apostles obliged themselues by vowe to follow this estate of perfection when by forsakinge all thinges they followed Christe That the Apostles and their followers in the primatiue church followed this estate of perfection CHAPTER II. 1. WEe reade in the actes Act. 5. Act. 2. v. 44. that all thinges amongst the Christiās were comon whatsoeuer lāds houses chattels or
desolation the other to restore the same to the auntient perfection thereof the one of a religious man became an Apostate of a continent became lecherous of a saint became a diuell the other of a seculer became religious of a souldier became a saint of a man became an Angell And as at one time and in one night S Augustine was borne in Africke and Pelagius the heretique was borne in Englande and as Pelagius intended to ouerthrow the church with his peruerse heresie and S. Augustine laboured to restore the same by his founde doctrine so the blessed Ignatius with his religious blessed family labored to destroy the darnell and cockell of heresy which Luther Caluin and all their most wicked and blasphemous sectaries haue sowen in the feild of our Lord which is the Catholique Church 4. Others after him were made instrumentes to reforme the slacknes and desolation of the clergy as Phillip Nereias and other godly people at Rome and els where in our owne dayes and haue also cast their beames into other kingdomes especially Italy Fraunce and Spaine Seing that God can neuer be glorified in this world but by his church nor his church can neuer be manteyned but by sacrifice and sacramentes nor sacraments can be offered or done but by pristes for the which they are ordeyned and instituted cheifly and principally And whosoeuer goeth about to take away preisthood taketh away both sacrifice sacraments religion church and consequently robs God of his honour spoiles him of his glory and depriues Christians of theire knowledge loue of him 5. This preist-hoode is deuided into two orders the one speculatiue and the other practicall and as Christe was interteyned by two deuout sisters Mary Martha so he is also continually serued in his church by two religious orders which Mary represented I meane the speculatiue and the order of the cleargy which Martha signified Ambros epist 25. This saint Ambrose declareth saying Who can be ignorant that in the church of God there are two excellencies the one is the office of the Clergy the other the institution of Monkes the one to be exercised and practised amongst men the other to be trained vp and accustomed to abstinence patience the one to be represented on the theater the other to be hidden in a corner the one to be a spectacle to the world the other to be kept in secret And therefore that worthy champion of our Lord saith spectaculum facti sumus Deo angelis hominibus Wee are become a spectacle to God to Angells and to men the one fighteth against the confusion of the world the other against the allurementes of the flesh the one more profitable for his neighbor the other more perfect for himselfe both of them denie themselues that they may serue Christe perfectly because to men of perfection it is said whosoeuer will come after me let him deny himselfe and follow me the one doth strugle with the world the other wrestleth with the deuill the one ouercometh the baites of the world the other flies from them vnto whome the world is crucified and he vnto the world the one hath greater tentation and greater victory the other lesse daunger and greater secury thus farre saint Ambrose by which you may perceiue the state of those that liue in Cloisters and Monasteries and Monkes Friers and such as liue abroade in the world in continuall feare and manifest daungers in which many are fallen and many others are vpholden Of the multitude of religious persons CHAPTER V. 1. NOthing is soe ircksome vnto our corrupt nature and carnall disposition altogether corrupted with the too much alluring humors of sensuality intoxicated with the blinde affection thereof as to caste the yoake thereof away from vs by taking vp Christes crosse by denyinge our selues to follow Christe whereof in so doing wee may apply to our selues that verse of the prophett Deripuisti Domine vincula mea tibi sacrificabo hostiam laudis O Lord thou hast broken my fetters I will sacrifice vnto thee a sacrifice of praise Which euer was obserued in all ages of the gospell by vtterly renouncinge the world with all the pompes thereof which was put in execution by the perfection of religious vocation 2. How many thousandes or rather millions by the examples of saint Paule the Hermitt and saint Antony haue caste off this yoake abandoned or rather abiured the world retired themselues to the desertes there with greater liberty of spirite better security for their saluation and les daunger of tentation to serue God all the dayes of their liues Athan. in vita eius Of the said saint Antony it is written by a moste holy sainte that in the mountaine there were monasteries as if they were tabenacles full of deuine quires of such as songe psalmes and praied which seemed to inhabite a certaine infinite region seperated from all conuersation amongst whome saith he there was peace and concord there none hated another either by word or frowninge wherefore that of the scripture may be verified thereof Num. 23. quam bon● domus tuae Iacob how good are the house of Iacob the tabernacle of Israell they are like woodes that doe shaddowe like a paradise vpon riuers like tabernacles which are pitched of our Lord and like Cedars of Libannus about the waters 3. Hieron in vita Hillarion The like testimony saint Hierom giueth of saint Hilarion who about that time founded many monasteries in Palestine wherein also Macharius the disciple of saint Anthony and Ca●iton founded many monasteries in one of which as ●odorus recordeth were a thousand Monkes It is said also that one Apollonius had 5000. Monkes vnder his gouernment In the mountaine of Mitria which is 40. miles from Alexandria were 5000. monkes in 50. monasteries which were all gouerned and directed by one Superiour Syria and Aegipt did also a●ound with such swarmes of holy monkes that the wicked Emperour Iulian the Apostate and Valens compelled them by force and violence to goe as souldiers to the warres but quickly afterwardes God punished both the one and the other for their labour saint Hierome wrote the life of those Monkes 4. Palladius Bishop of Cappadocia went in pilgrimage barefooted being accompanied with 7. to visite the Monkes of Aegipt they came vnto a certaine citty by Thebes called Oxirnicum in which they found such religion and sanctity as they by word could not expresse in which there was no heretique nor gentile and wee saw more monasteries and religious houses there said he then prophane houses so that euery streete and corner thereof were replenished with deuine praises and celestiall Alleluias the whole citty being as it were but one only church inhabited and possessed of the seruantes of God the Bishopp of that citty tould them there were 20. thousand Virgins and 10. thousand Monkes wee are not able saith he to expresse with what entire affection honour and feruour of charity they enterteined vs. He saw also
whether shee would forgoe her faith and religion and marrie with a soldior shee most constantlie denied and was cast into the riuer and there was drowned This religious Nunne had a sister that was married and because shee lamented the death of her father and kinsmen her head was brocken by one of the soldiors and that so sorelie that the braines came foorth Other farr more detestable wickednesses were comitted by these tyrannicall reprobates in other prouinces of Flanders Holland Zeland Brabant Gelderland and Frisland which you may read in the histories of Flaunders but this I ought not to omitt that they were soe tormented with such an insatiable thirst to shedd innocent blood that in their detestable conuenticle at the towne of saint Trudan in a vaulte vnder the grounde they purposed and decreed to make a massacre of ecclesiasticall persons in all places of the 17. Prouinces in one night which God preuented afterwardes vnto whome all honnor and glorie Mense Iulij 1566. for his prouident mercie shewed therin 5. And although the hugonottes of France sought diuers times to practise their tragicall plottes in that countrie as in the times of Frauncis the first in whose raigne they nayled a libell at the court gate of Parris of their damnable doctrine printed in the yeare 1534. which being brought vnto his maiestie and perusinge part of the conten●es thereof he said Did I knowe my right ha●de to be infected with that venemous doctrine I would presentlie cut it off from my bodie Henrie the second and Frauncis the second yet they could neuer performe their desigmentes vntill the beginninge of Charles the 9. his raigne who being but a childe of 12. yeares of age and soe abusinge his minoritie they watched their time and oportunitie in the yeare of our Lord 1562. when euerie one that was wickedly disposed and irreligiouslie addicted and as it were forsaken of God began openly to shewe himselfe vpon the theater wheron this wofull tragedie was plaied For first they crowned their captaine generall Prince of Condie kinge of Fraunce and called him by the name of Lodouicke the 13. and the first Christian kinge of Fraunce The cheefest rage of all their malice was practized vpon those thinges which were most sacred and holy as vpon the blessed Euchariste by treadinge the same vnder their feete and castinge it vnto their dogges and vsed that sacred and dreadfull hoast together with the holy chrisme to cleanse their tayles withall and called Christ vnder the veile of bread Iohn le Blanch White Iohn The like outrage they extended vppon Churches Monasteries Alters Chapples Oratories Images Reliques and Sepulchers which they spoiled ransacked destroied burned Vpon Priests Mounckes and religious persons which they put to the vildest and cruelest death that they could imagine vppon sacred virgins and consecrated Nunnes which they rauished and defloured vppon challices and sanctified vessells and hallowed ornaments which they prophaned and defiled 6. Of 12. that shewed themselues the ringleaders vpon this bloodie theater there were 9. of them Apostate Mounckes which Christ vomitted out of his sacred mouth the captaine and leader of them all was Beza who sould his benefice for 700. crownes and then cast forth his venime amongest the licentious courtiers whome he perswaded with his doctrine vid. that it was noe offence before God to cōmit sacriledge to spoile churches to cogge deceaue lye sweare and forsweare whose doctrine herein being the religion of these newe sectaries was most plausible and pleasinge to all miscreantes and malefactors who aboundantlie resorted vnto him from all partes of Fraunce and by which he determined to robb and spoile all the churches and monafteries of that kingdome in one night in the moneth of Ianuarie and appointed people for that purpose in all places of the kingdom which was first put in execution in the Prouince of Aquitaine had not the Duke of Gays come the sooner to Parris they had not only surprised the churches monasteries there but also the cittie court kinge Thus frustrated of their expectation they fled vnto Orlians where before they were lett in by the Cittizens Vide Sur. they did solemnlie swere that they came thither by the comaundement of the kinge to keepe that cittie and that they would offer violence to none either in his person conscience or goodes and that euerie one should haue the benefitt of the edict diuulged the last of Ianuarie wherein it was decreede that the hugonotts should not spoile churches or monasteries but they noe sooner entred the cittie but they spoiled the churches and monasteries burned Images cast downe alters yea cast downe the verie walls of the churches and shewed more execrable wickednes towards all sacred thinges then the verie Turckes for they in takinge any cittie or towne from the Christians doe only vse to cast downe the Images and Alters and not destroy the churches also 7. All the holy Reliques which those hugonotts could gett they burned them they burned the reliques of S. Damianus religiouslie reserued in that place as they also did S. Hillaries reliques at Poytiers S. Ireneus at Lyons S. Iustus and S. Bonauentur and the reliques of S. Martyn At towers they burned the image of Christ in another place they trayled the same through the dirte They spared the image of the diuill burned the Corpes of S. Frauncis the second which was buried in the Chapple of the holly crosse as they did burne the bones of Lodouick the 11. The churches which they broake not downe they turned into stables and storehowses Moreouer Beza comaunded all the Priests to be murthered of whome receauing monny for their redēption yet violated the faith and promise which he had formerly sworne and broake the oath and peace which he had before vowed most religiouslie to obserue Soe as it is manifest there were cruelly put to death fiue thousand priests of whom some were flayed aliue others were rackte till they were dead Aboue six hundreth monasteries razed to the verie earth manny others were burned they burned alsoe the holie auncient Bybles which were kept in Fraunce for rare monuments many citties were exhausted with continuall siege their citizens were murthered all the countrie was spoiled and ruinated soe as these ciuill warres of the hugonotts soe often renewed did more consume and oppresse France with greater miseries and calamities then all former warres it euer had abroade For there was no trueth respected or oath performed if any garrison did yeld themselues vnto thē vpon hope of their oathes which they neuer accomplished to saue their liues as in steede of many examples that of Petraforte alone will serue neuerthelesse contrarie to the lawes of armes to the number of two hunderth were cast downe head longe from the toppe of a mightie high Rocke all which perished with that headlong and violent fall Such crueltie as this more then Turkish they exercised vppon euerie other place where they did carrie anny sway but
his holy life Anno 1581. 7. Patricke Ohealy of the order of saint Frauncis Bishopp of Maio coming out of Spaine into Ireland no sooner landed then by the sherif and officers of that place which was at Dingell in the weast part of all Irland but he was apprehended together with a religious man of that order nobly descended call Con Ornorcke and were sent to the Contesse of Desmōd who either to currie fauour which the state of the kingdome or for feare to be ill thought of if he had dismissed them or to be impeached of any imputation or suspitiō of any conspiracy with Sr. Iames fitz Morrice then on foote reddy at that time to passe out of Gallicia in Spaine into Ireland with a supply of Spaniardes did remitt them ouer to Limerick to be presented before Mr. Iames Gould then the Queens Attourney in the Prouince as about that time also shee yelded her eldest sonne to Sr. William Drury Lord Iustice of Ireland as an hostage that he should rest himselfe secure without feare of the Earles Ioialtie fidelitie to her maiesty for yelding her sonn and heire apparent of Desmond as a pleadg and the holy Bishopp as a prisoner but as shee was carfull to continew the Earldome in her Ioynes so the other was as warrie to preserue his owne reputation and creditt in his new promotion of Lord iustice who was no les suspected to fauor the catholique religion for he was in harte and will of that profession then the other was to further rebellion Sed quis vnquam tetigit Christum Domini innocens fuit both the iustice and the contesse were frustrated of their hope deceacea●ed of their expectation Maledictus qui conf●dit in homine and thincking to possesse the fauor of the world they respected nott the fauor and iustice of God whose wisdome surpasseth the prouidence of man timidae inepta prouidentiae nostrae 8. The Earle therfore of Desmond within one month after the good Bishopp suffred was proclaimed traitor and most part of the Geraldines with their followers in a serious conflict betwixt themselues and the English of whome Sr. Nicholas Malby was Cheeftaine were ouerthrowen and putt to flight at the Abbay of Bertiff in Irish called Eanighbegg within 7. miles of L●mericke weastward and that most noble ancient howse which was the only strenght and Bulwarcke for the Crowne of England it dangerous seasons of that kingdome heertofore is nowe altogether extinguished And the Lord Iustice continewed no longer in his new dignitie then one month after the Bishopps execution which was the space of time that he challenged the Lorde Iustice to answer before the dreadfull throne of God for their innocent blood I meane of him and his followe and for their vniust iudgment which was that they should be executed by Marshall law wherfore they were deliuered to a band of soldiors their handes being tide behind their backs and their feete with roppes vppon garrans of whome they were cruelly entertained al the way vntil they came to Kilmalocke a towne distant 12. miles from Limericke where they were hanged vppon trees the foolish cruell soldiors a whole senight after their death for they were not permitted all that time to be buried made butts of their carcases to shutt and leuill att them with their bullets calllng them by the name of papists traitors idolators Immediatly after their execution the said L. iustice sickned in the campe and ended his life at Waterfoord crieng out vpon those blessed martirs whome he had putt to death but one moneth before 9. Derby Ohurley Archbishopp of Cashall doctor of both lawes and professor of that facultie in the vniuersitie of Rheames in Fraunce vnder Cardinall Guise Archbishopp of the same was taken in Ireland and cast into a darck Dungeon in the Castle of Dublin and being sore vexed with this vgly prison and pensiue restrainct was more vexed and tormented by an vsuall and exquis●●t torment of bootes full of boylling oile and talloe into which he was cōpelled to putt his legges already wearied with heauie bolts and to stād by a great fire with which his flesh was consumed vnto the bare bones all which he endured with great patience and constancy And afterwardes when by that torment he could not be won●e nor by feare and alluring promisses of vncertaine and deceitfull promotion could nott be inueigled to relent or to faint in the profession of the catholique religion or to embrace the protestant negatiue religion was vpon fridaie morning in the dawning strāgled with a wyth in the moneth of May 1584. and so suffred a blessed martirdome and enioieth a blessed crowne 10. Redmond Ma-Goran primat of Ardmagh was slaine in Conaght by Sr. Richard Bingham Anno 1598. Redmond Ogulloglior Bishopp of Derry being almost 100. yeers of age and 50. yeers a Bishopp was with 3. prie●ts about midnight slaine in his owne howse neere Derry by the garrison of Log hefoile thorough the craft and drift of one Sr. Neyle Garrath Odonel who afterwards falling into disgrace with the English was impeached and arraigned for taking part with Odohirtyes conspiracy and was comitted together with his sonne prisoner in the owner of london anno 1600. Morihirtagh Obrien Bishopp of Emly being apprehended was cast into the castle of Dublin where through penurie and straightnesse of his restraint he died in the yeare 1586. 11. Peers Power Bishoppe of Fearnes being taken and apprehended was cast into the castle of Dublin who either through the frailtie of the flesh or through the extremity of his restraint or els through the deceitfull promisses of temporall promotions yelded to the supremacy of the Queene in the spirituall iurisdiction of the church which being once granted he destroied all articles of our catholique beleefe and therfore he was sett at libertie But being afterwardes sore amased and strocken with an inward sorrow for being so weake and so inconstant in a point so highly importing the increase and honor of christian religion and consequently our saluation retourned like another Marcellinus vnto the place where he fell and where he gaue so vild a scandall deplored his fall and greeuously lamented his errors and so he was hardlier dealt with all then euer before but after long imprisonment and much affliction through godes prouidence he made an escape and fled into Spaine the common support and sanctuary of al distressed catholiques where he died with great probation of a blessed and constant catholique Bishopp 12. Richard Creogh natiue of the cittie of Limericke in the prouince of Munster in Ireland descended of welthie and honest parents of an auncient familie in that cittie who notwithstanding he imploied the prime of his youthfull dayes in the trade of marchandice yet he profitted more in the spirituall exercise of deuotion and pietie then he did in the acquiring of riches and wordly designementes And after some worldly losse went beyond the seas where he gaue himselfe to the studdy of vertue
so was Eneas Penny parish priest of Killagh slaine at the alter in the parish church therof Donoshew Ma Recdy priest was hanged at Colrahan Cahall Ma-Goran Rony O Donillan Peter O Quillan patricke O Kenna a Franciscan Freer Georg Power viccar generall of the diocesse of Ossory Andrew Strich of Limericke Brien O Murihirtagh viccar generall of the diocesse of Clonefart Donoghow Omulony priest of Thomond Iohn Kelly of Louth Sr Patrick of the Anally Iohn Pillin P. of the order of saint Frauncis Rory Ma-Henlea Tirrelagh Ma-Inisky a lay man of the order of S. Francis al these were catholique died in the Castle of Dublin through hard vsadg and restrainct Walter Fernan priest died in th●t castle through too much tortur of the racke Iohn Walsh a vertuous priest died through famine and cold in the Castle of Weastchester Two Welsh gentlemen the one called Richard Waghan that other Richard Downs died through hard vsadg in in the Castle of Dublin 11. Morris Vstace of Castle Martin in the diocesse of Kildare esquier master of Arte and a Nouice of the societie of Iesus being sent for by his father into Brugis in Flanders came into Ireland not without his superiours direction to satisfie his Fathers will who was apprehended hanged quartered who being so well descended and religious withall was much feared he wold work much amongest the people In the meane time the L. viscont of Balinglas and L. Barron of Bilquillin was in open hostilitie which agrauated the ielousie and suspition that he was accessary therunto 12. For the like suspition these that followe were hanged drawen and quartered Ma. Nicholas Nugent esquier cheef Iustice of the Common pleas Ma. Dauid Sutten esquier together with his bother Mr. Iohn Sutton Gentleman Mr. Thomas Vstace Gentleman together with his sonne and heire who said the letanies together with his father going vpp the ladder Maister William Ougan of Ruth-Coffy esquier Maister Robert Scurlock gentleman maister Clench of the Scrine gentleman maister Netherfild gentleman maister Robert fitz Gerrad Bacheller of diuinitie all these suffred for suspition of Baltinglas his warres 1581. 12. Mathew Lamport priest a very godly and a deuout man for that vppon a certaine night he entertained father Richford priest of the societie of Iesus was hanged drawen and quartered Robert Miller Edward Cheeuers Iohn O Lahy for bringing ouer the said Richfoord with the L. of Baltinglas was hanged drawen and quartered Anno 1581. Peter Miller after hauing stustied in Spaine for that he could nott haue his health came into his countrie which is the county of Wexfoord being examined touching points of religion and nott finding him conformable to the protestancie many suspitions being laid to his charge was hanged drawen and quartered Anno 1588. Christopher Roche natiue of Wexfoord for that he could not enioy his health in Flanders where he was a student passing by Bristoe to come for Ireland was there apprehended and was putt to the oath of the supremacy which when he refused he was carried vp to Lōdon where he was sore whipt about the streetes and was putt into a most filthy prison in gyues fetters and died there through extreamitie Anno 1590. 14. Iames Dudall of Drodart marchant comming out of France was by contrarie windes driuen to the South coast of Englād vnto whom the oath of the Queens supremacy was tendred and for that he refused the same he was sent to Exceter Gayle and there was hnaged drawen and quartered anno 1600. Patricke Hea of Wexfoord and honest man and zealous Catholique being accusedsed vnto the Lord Gray then deputie of the kingdome that he did not only releeue Bishoppes and priests in his house but allso transported them ouer into Spaine and France was committed to the castle of Dublin where through hard restraint he fell sore sicke and by entreaty of his frinds was remitted to his house where the died of the sicknesse he tooke in the prison 15. 20. Laymen old blind and impotent retired themselues vnto their parish church of Mohono dedicated to S. Nicholas in the diocesse of Limericke for a sanctuary wherin they liued many dayes vntil such time as the English Army passing by that way and finding them there they sett fire in the church and burned them all anno Domini 1581. these poore old people amoungest whome ther weare some old women who could nott long haue liued although they had beene lett alone for they were some of the age of 100 of 80. yeers very sicke and euen already languished for want of foode which they could nott gett by reason the countrie was altogether spoiled and left wast by the soldiors and the people of the countrie fled into the montaines yet nedes these people must add sorrowe vppon sorrowe and crueltie vpon crueltie to shew their rancore and the fruict of their ghospell All these fornamed personnes except the good and most vertuous Bishopp of Duanna with his chappleine Brien of Carrulan and Iohn O Onan and Donoghowe Ma-Reddy and Iohn Luneus priest who suffered vnder kinge Iames all the rest suffred vnder Queene Elizabeth Euerie sect of heresies Challenging vnto themselues the trewe and Catholique Church there is here set downe the true notes and marcks by which the same may be discerned CHAPTER I. 1. WEe must knowe that the catholique church is as it were the sonne of the worlde which doth cast foorthe her lightes and shininge beames by certaine notes by which shee may be discerned and knowen from the false religion of Pagans Iewes and heretiques The first note is Aug. lib. contra epistolam fundamenti cap. 4. the name Catholique which as saint Augustine saith if a pagan would aske of an heretique where the catholique church is he will not dare to shewe vnto him his owne familie S. Cirill also saith Cyrill Cathechesi 18. Si iueris in aliquam vrbem c. Yf you goe into anny cittie you will not aske where is the church or howse of God for then euerie heretique will say he hath the howse and church of God but yow will aske where is the catholique church for that is the proper name of this holly church the mother of all faithfull christians which if yow aske after not heretique will shewe vnto yow his owne churche 2. The 2. note is Antiquitie for that the true religion is more auncient then the false and the catholique Romaine church was before anny hereticall secte for that all heretiques departed from the same as S. Iohn saith Ex nobis prodierunt c. they went foorth from vs as is sett downe in the chapter of the first booke Daniel 9.3 Note Act. 2. Timoth. 3. Cypr. l. 4. Epist 2. 3. The 3. note ie perpetuitie or duration which neuer was nor euer shal be interrupted Regnum quod in aeternum non dissipabitur a kingdome which shall neuer be ouerthrowen nor euer be dissolued because it is of God Of heretiques it is said they shall not
For although the written law lightneth our vnderstanding with many instructions and fownd doctrine directing our vnderstanding to follow and embrace vertue and to discerne the good from the euill yet it disposeth nor prepareth not our hartes with the loue of the one nor our affection with the hatred of the other it giueth light to the vnderstanding but it healeth not the infirmitie and disease of our appetites The lawe teatcheth the way to heauen but giueth no force to our weake soules to trauaile thither which saint Iohn auerreth The law was giuen by Moyses but grace and trueth was giuen by Christ which is conferred by the sacramentes and which are instrumentes to conuay the same vnto vs. 2. As there are many maladies disseases and necessities so there ar also many sacramentes which are as it were conduits that do deriue manny remedies and receipts to ech of them And as the Humane body is first borne and so encreaseth is fedd and receaueth diuers alterations Ephe. 5. Mar. 16. in Clemen ex summa trinitate fidei Cath. ca. 1 Ezech. 36 Clemens epist 4. Vrba ep ad omnes fideles Melch ad epis Hisp Ioh. 6. 1. Cor. 11. Iohn 2. so there are many such varietie of alterations of the soule which is borne and regenerated by water and the holy ghoast which is baptisme and the grace and vertues which are giuen in baptisme are againe confirmed by the Sacrament of confirmation which maketh the soule stoute and constant in the profession of his faith which faith and grace hath neeede to be nourished and augmented which is don by the holie Sacrament of the Eucharist which is the body of Christ which is the foode of our languished soule which through many infirmities and diseases incident therunto hath great need of a spirituall phisition to heale the same by contrition confession and satisfaction And for that after long and prolix sicknesse and disseases there are many dregges of the old sicknesse stil left Ia. 5. cont Flore for the healing and curing wherof the Sacrament of extreame vnction is ordained as also that a christian in his cheefest agony of his spirituall extremit●e should be releued and refreshed 3. The other 2. Sacramentes are inioyned for the 2. states of people Matt. 19. Ephes 5. the one for such as be married the other for such as be ecclesiasticall and seruing in godes church But the new religion hath no Sacrament althoughe for some shew of litle deuotion they do not reiect the Sacramentes of Baptisme and Eucharist yett they handle them without any deuotion or reuerence at all as for Baptisme some or most of them doe holde that it is not necessarie to our saluation for they thincke that the childe is saued by the faith of his parents As for the Eucharist with they call the Lords supper they make no more accompt of it then of anny common bread whose effect is nothinge els ten to remember Christ his death which may be don aswell by the one as by the other The 4. Excellencie is to fauor the good and to punish the wicked CHAPTER V. 1. WHen the end of euery lawe is to take away vice and wickednesse and the occasions therof and to make mē sober honest and vertuous it is meete that the good should haue many priuiledges fauors and rewards and the wicked should be punished Deut. 28. Ezech. 5. 6. as we may read in Deutrono wher god almightie threatneth death and destruction against the transgressors of his lawes and comandementes The like also we may read in Ezech. But the new religion taketh away both merits and rewards from the iust and paine and punishmentes from the wicked saying the more wicked you are the neerer you are to Gods fauor and grace as Luther affirmeth The 5. Excellencie is the conuersion of all nations vnto Christe and driuing Idolatrie out of the world CHAPTER VI. THe more that princes persecuted christian religion the more the same encreased as Pliny the 2. being a Pagan withnesseth For when he saw such a multitude of christians to be put to death he wrott to the emperor Traian aduertizing him that there were thowsands of christians executed by exquisitt tormentes for no kind of offence but for being Christians and the more they were tormented and afflicted the more they encreased and florished and the more the reuerence of the Idols decreased But the new religion neuer conuerted the gentles from Idolatrie to Christian religion whose only imployment and drift is to corrupt and confound the faithfull and neuer to reforme themselues charging the church with Idolatrie as old heretiques haue done Athanasius witnessing the same The 6. Excellencie of the Catholique Religion is that the same is proued and auerred by so many good witnesses as sacred and learned doctors blessed saincts martyrs and generall counsells CAPTER VII 1. ARistotle saith that a man is beleeued for three causes and ought to be presupposed that he telles the trueth 1. If he be wise 2. If he be vertuous 3. If he be oure frind For wee thincke that a wise man should not be deceaued a good man should not lie a frind should not deceaue his frind Such therfore as did beare witnesse of our catholique religion were wisemen eminent and exquisitt in all sciences and faculties most holy and religious in their liues as Dionisius Areopagita disciple to S. Paule saint Ignatius Policarpus Origines saint Basill the great and his brother saint Gregorie Nissenus saint Iohn Chrisostom Theodoretus saint Nazianzenus saint Gregorie saint Aug. saint Hierom saint Ambrosse saint Hillarius saint Cyprian Lactantius Firmianus S. Vincentius Lirinensis Arnobius saint Bernard saint Bonauenture Scotus Alexander de Halles with diuers others for they had no cause but to tell the trueth being honest vertuous free from all inordinat affection that should otherwise restraine thē to declare the trueth therof being people that were altogether addicted to the seruice of God and most zealous of his glory and honor which they preferred before all worldly designements and promotions 2. Vnto these are annexed for confirmation of the trueth all generall counsells of the world which were 20. with the aprobation of Christs viccar generall in earth together with all the blessed martyrs that euer were in all the persecutions and tempestuous stormes and agonies of the church which she suffred vnder 14. Kinge and Emperors according to S. Aug. accompt lib. 18. de ciuitate Dei The first was of Nero who was so infestuous to the Christians that he caused Rome to be sett on fire in diuers places and laid the imputation of that infamie vppon them wherby the Romanes should insult vppon them and should destroy and massacre them euerie one the Tirant himselfe commanding the same The 2. was of Domitian who caused S. Iohn the Euangelist to be cast into a Tunn of hoat burn●nge oyle which caused also by his edict published that all the bookes of Christians should be burned
The 3. was of Traian in whose time 3. holly Bishoppes suffred vid. Saint Clement the disciple of saint Peter saint Ignatius disciple to saint Iohn the Euangelist and saint Polycarpe The 4. was of Antoninus Verus The 5. of Seuerus The 6. of Maximinus The 7. of Decius who did put saint Laurence to death The 8. of Valerian The 9. of Aurelian The 10. was the crwelest of Dioclesian of Maximinus These persecutions were before Constantius the great who was a Christian 3. Vnto these saint August added the persecution of Iulian the Apostata which was most pernitious for he depriued the Christians of offices and places in the common wealth as also of all their goodes and studies of learning Another was of Valens all these were Romane Emperors Another was of Sapor king of Persia who caused his people to adore the sunne wherin 16000. thousand suffred amoungest whome were many Bishoppes priests and many holly virgins dedicated to Christ Before all these saint August sets downe the first persecutiō of all which was of Iudea vnder Herod wherin the Apostle Saint Iames the greater suffred Wee doe nott speake here of the persecutions of the Vandals in Affricke or of other heretiques or infidels but only of the Romane Emperors whose persecution was nott only in one kingdome or prouince but in all places especially at Rome at Alexandria where S. Cathrin suffred at Antioch Nicomedia Cesarea of Capadocia Cesarea of Palestin in Ponto in Helesponto in Africa in Aegipt at Saragosa at Parris where saint Denys of Areopagita with his followers were putt to death at Syracusa where S. Lucia at Catanea where saint Agatha in Bithinia in Achaia at Smirna at Thebes and in all other places subiect to the Romans 4. Were all these persecuting princes lawfull heads of Christes church or some of them If some all should be for the one ought to haue asmuch authoritie in that head-shipp as the other if that stile or dignitie should rightly belong to the Emperiall scepter or should be annexed to the Royall authoritie as a power or iurisdiction comprised and comprehended within the maiestie of a regall dignitie as some protestants do hold Yf this be trew all these blessed martyrs wherof some of them were the blessed Apostles as saint Peter and saint Paule who suffred vnder Nero were damned is arrogant and dissobedient subiects for not conforming themselues to their princes wills and humors in causes ecclesiasticall and consequently none that was put to death by them was a holy martyr but an obstinat and wilfull subiect which is most foolish and absurd If yow say that a king to be head of the church ought to be a Christian as some other English protestants do say I aske of them who was head of the church the space of the first 300 yeers after Christ when all kings were infidels and persecutors thereof as I haue declared For either the church all that while was without a head or els some other that was not a king must be a iudge and haue this authoritie and supreame iurisdiction of the king therin and such ought to haue no les iurisdiction ouer the Christians in causes of their consciences and ecclesiasticall matters now then at that time 5. Nowe the Christians are no les nor no better then they were in that golden age of the primitiue church Epiph. heresi Optat. lib. 2. contra Parmen S. Aug. Epist ad generosum quae est 105. Hiero. Prosper in continuatione chronici Eusebij and consequentlie the same ecclesiasticall iurisdiction ought to continew still in the church of Christ which he builded setled and founded vppon saint Peter and his successors as vppon a firme Rocke whose foundation shall neuer faile against whome the gats of hell with all the plottes and pollicies of Sathan and the cunninge deuises and attempts of Matche-villian protestantes shall not preuaile And so in vaine they striue to build the same vppon any other fundation then that which was alreddy laid downe by Christ himselfe being the Corner and head stone of this foundation vppon saint Peter the Apostles and prophetts and their successors for euer I meane the Bishopps and priests vnto whome he committed the authoritie and regiment ouer his flocke to feed and defend them from the woulues to saue them from the violent excursions of infidels and heretiques vnto whome it is sad in the Actes or the Apostles Attendite vobis vniuerso greg● in quo c. Loocke well to your selues Act. 20. Matt. 10. Matt. vlt. Mar. vlt. Iohn 20. Iohn 21. and to the vniuersall flocke in which the holy ghost placed you Bishoppes and pastoures to gouerne and rule the church of God And as this church is the mysticall body of Christ and a spirituall Common wealth so it should be gouerned and managed by spirituall parsons and pastours that should haue spirituall orders and consequentlie ought to haue spirituall authoritie and iurisdiction ouer her rebellious and obstinat children to chastice their rebellions disobedience to correct their offences and to extend the rodd of discipline vppon them when they will nott obey her otherwise it should be a poore distressed common wealth when none hath power or iurisdiction therin to chastice the transgressor of her lawes and so all her subiects may with libertie and impunitie keepe or breake them 6. But no article or inunction of the protestant religion is of greater force amongest the protestants specially of England then that the king is supreame head of the church and that euery one whether he be a catholique or protestant must not only encur the imputation of high treason but also the pennalties and disgrace of traitoures that wil● not sweare solemly and publickly that he thinckes in his conscience this to be trew which is nothing els then to enthrall and enforce a catholique perhapps some pro●estants to a damnable and wilfull preiury against his owne conscience that knoweth or at least thincketh the contrary Was not this new fundation and grownd of the English protestant church newly coyned the 26. yeer of king Henry 8. when the oath of supremacy was inuented by the instigation of his fatall and filthy passion of lust and concupiscence and by the industry and suggestion of certaine cogging mates as Thomas Cromwell and Robert Barnes an apostat frier the one beheaded the other I meane the frier burned rather of malice then of any conscience or honesty without which there can be no good religion not warranted by scripture but deuised in the court not by the best but by the worst quorum Deus venter est quorum finis interitus gloria in confusione c. not perswaded by reason but violentlie constrained not ordained for the edification of the church but for the destruction and confusion of innocēt christiās not resolued of by the schooles and learned diuines but first determined by the king and enforced in the parleament against the definition of all former parleaments
not only of England but of all the world against the decree of all the generall counsells therof against all sacred doctors against common sense and honestie against all lawes both ciuill and cannon not only against catholiques but against protestants in all other countries yea against the puritans of England against these constant confessors and blessed martyrs aboue recited which acknowledged no such supremacy in spirituall or ecclesiasticall matters to any king or prince whatsoeuer that did putt them to death whose blessed blood was patiently shed for the defence of Catholique religion and lastly against the practise of all former ages and antiquitie For from Donaldus the first Christian king of the Scots according to saint Victor Anno 197. there were 84. Christian kinges from Ethelbert being made Christian according to saint Aug. an 600. vnto Edward the confessor 1006. there were 80. kings Christian in Englād after the cōquest ther were 20. vnto king Henry the 8. so as none were euer called head of the church before king Henry after him Edward Elizabeth and king Iames. What shall I say of other holy and valiant martyrs that suffered in these later persecutions raysed vpp by Luther and Caluins heresie and by the Princes that embraced the same How many thousandes suffred confiscation of their goodes and landes effusion of their blood confusion of the world desolation and destruction of their wiues children woe and wreake and dissolution of all things such a masse of miserie and callamitie wherin their miserable and forlorne life was plunged withall as no man can rehearse without greefe nor none can see without teares How many thousand did rot● in vgly prisons die in banishments suffred patiently the crewelest tormentes and yrc●somest death that could be imagined rather then they would preferr the vaine fauor of man before the fauor of God antiquitie before noueltie to forgoe their auncient Catholique religion to become of the new to forgoe the firme Rocke of Christs church to build their faith vpon them that haue neither grownd or foundation of any supernaturall or theologicall faith at al no certitude in their doctrine no deuotion in their religion no honestie in the profession therof no vertue in their liues no pietie in their schooles or synagoges no charitie in their woorckes no mortification in their members or passions and consequentlie no conscience in their doings THE CONCLVSION 1. I Haue gentle reader exposed to thy vew the Theater of catholique and protestant religion where thou maist plainly behould and see the of-spring beginning growndes foundation practise mischeefe and inconuenience of the one and the excellency of the other Liu. 13. Math. 13. by which thou maist perceaue that the catholique religion ought to be compared to the wise husbandman which did sow the good side in his grownd or farme the protestant to resemble the enimie which sowed the badd cockle and darnell the one ought to be called positiue the other negatiue the one ecclesia malignantium the other militantium the one plantation of religion and deuotion the other supplantation or rooting vp of the same 2. The first subiect of corruptible and materiall things which the philosophers doe call Materia prima which neuer holdeth her selfe setled or contented in any certaine course of any forme or composition but is eue● more mutable and changeable by a certaine naturall reuolution from one forme and fashion to another for that shee being disgusted with the one euer more seeketh another is not so vncertaine and vnconstant as protestancy which by a certaine fatall reuolution and babilonicall confusion groweth from one errour to another from one mischeefe to another from one sect to another as appeareth by so many sectes forged and coined by this new religion within these 80. yeers which are 240. in number all in differrence and variance amongest themseluees not in ceremonies or things indifferent but in the cheefest articles and substance of their religion as many of themselues do auerre the one detesting condemning and pronouncing their cursed sentence of Anathema against the other as you may read aboue in the ●● booke cap. 1. The same may be confirmed by a certaine Prince of Germany who being demaunded of what religion his bordering neighbours were he answered he could describe of what religion they were the last yeere but this yeere he could not well tell their religion in respect of the mutabilitie and in constancy therof see the preface and cap 1. lib 2. 3. But the catholique religion is alwaies one and the selfe same alwaise retaineth and holdeth the same continwance and vigour of trueth not in diuersitie of sectes but in simplicitie and vnitie of beleefe and profession without duplicitie or disparitie or contradiction of doctrine or without absurditie or dishonestie in her maners and customes because she hath the holy ghoast to assist and direct her in all trueth and to protect and to defend her from all errors misbeleefe and infidelitie For not only this new religion is changeable and variable in profession and doctrine but also in condition custome and behauiour for alteration in faith and religion procureth also a great alteration and inconstancy in mindes and affections in life and maners as wee may knowe by such nations who when they were catholiques were mercifull chast sober liberall temperat children were obedient to their parentes and people faithfull of their promisse But when they were turned protestantes as they selues do affirme they became most crwell bloody insolent lecherous riotuous couetuous barbarous luxurious and intemperat 4. For when protestancy laboreth to stoope and intercept all the channells and fountaines of Gods grace the enfluence of Christs passion all the inspiration of the holy ghoast from the soules of christians by which they should be inwardly and formally iustified to whome ought to be applied that which was spoken of the Iewes that they resisted the holy ghoast when it an ●ulleth all the excellencies vertues operations effectes of the blessed Sacramentes all the applications of the merites of Christes passion the vallour and vertue of his blood which the eternall and euerlasting father would haue to be religiously and deuoutly applied by religious meanes and our owne proper endeuours to our owne sanctificatiō when it destroieth reiecteth all the woorkes and merites of the iust as proceeding and hauing their force worth and valloure from that blessed passion and death of Christ and all the blessed rewardes correspondent and proportionable vnto those merites by vertue of the foresaid passion and blood which they deny to be of that force to abolish and blot out our sinnes wickednesse and punishmentes due vnto the same and so reiecting the force and vertue of Christs passion and transferring and building the same vppon another fundation which they call imputatiue iustice of Christ saying that Christ imputeth not vnto vs our offences and as it were couers them by that iustice by which he is iust himselfe nott by which he maketh vs iust when vppon a kind of an arrogant faith and presumptuous predestination without any relation or referrence to his owne endeuoures so as he beleue that Christ suffred for him or that he is predestinated to be saued he must be such When I say protestancy is blinded and nusled in this peruerse doctrine it being the only and cheefe article of their beleefe which is against scripture good life comon reason sense the definition of the catholique church honestie of a christian and the pietie of a catholique yea against operation of grace or instinct of nature it must run headlong vnto all desperat blasphemies and damnable mischeefe their vnbrideled concupiscence and crwell dispositions impelling them therunto For when the transgression of no lawe or the attempt and consummation of no acte though neuer so exorbitant or so abhominable is punished nor the good woorkes or merites or any execution or exercise of vertue or mortification of any their passions is not regarded for that as they say the merites of Christ his passion doe abrogat them nay such worckes or mortifications are iniurious to the same and doe as they say derogat from them Wee must thincke them to be no otherwise then they are taxe● with the imputation of all those cruell and vnchristian like Epithethes by their owne gospellers and when their religion is nothinge els then a path way to all dissolute libertie and licentiousnesse their liues and maners must be such for the corruption of the one engendreth the dissolution of the other 5. Finallie this is the cause that wee see many lawes decrees and dishonest plottes daylie deuised with their rigorous and cruell executions nott against transgressors of godes lawes the lawe of nature but against honest and vertuous people so as the reputation of an honest conscionable and well disposed person cannot be without the imputation of a dangerous traitour whose life goodes and landes must waite and lye open as a pray and bootie for euerie miscreant who as he exceedeth others in villanie and wickednesse must excell them also in promotion and authoritie cuius maledictione os plenum est amaritudine dolo sub lingua eius labor dolor Psal 9. whose tonge is full of malediction bitternesse and deceit Idem so as the decay and downefall of the good must be the raising vpp and aduancement of the badde Exurge Domine non confortetur homo Psal 9. iudicentur gentes in conspectu tuo Constitue Domine legislatorem super eos vt sciant gentes quoniam homines sunt Arise Lord let not man be strengthned let the Gentiles be iudged in thy sight Appoint Lord a law-giuer ouer them that the Gentiles may know that they be men FINIS
was ouerthrowen by the water of baptisme the same was restored By a dreame Ioseph was made a slaue and abused by a dreame he was sett free and aduaunced to the highest dignitie of Egipt By a woman the whole stock of Adam fell by a wooman the same was raised vpp againe By meat the whole world suffred death as it is written In quacunque die comederis ex ea c. Whatsoeuer houre you shall eat thereof you shall die the death by meate the same obteined life himselfe pronouncinge the same qui manducat hunc panem viuet in aeternum whosoeuer shal eate this bread which he plainly affirmeth to be his fleshe shall liue for euer which fleshe is the only remedie vnto Virgins against the frailtie and raginge concupiscence of fleshly desires although matrimony after the fall of Adam was secondarily ordained against the furious passions therof beinge a secondarie effecte of the same yet in the lawe of grace when a sacred Virgin brought foorth a Virgin withoute the carnall operation of voluptuous sensualitie this virginall immaculate and vnspotted fleash brings foorth soe many millions of Virgins which haue bene and shal be in his church vnto the worldes ende and because you tast not of this fleash makinge it but a bare figure yow cannot liue either chaste or continent much lesse Virgins for it is a cheefe paradox in your doctrine that noe man can liue chaste 17. Lastly this is proued by the infallible trueth of Christs promise Iohn 6. who performed whatsoeuer he promised but he promised plainlie and euidentlie to giue his trewe flesh truely therfore he did performe the same The maior is knowen vnlesse yow will charge Christe with a lie The minor is proued in the 6. chapter of S. Iohn The bread that I shall giue is my fleshe for the life of the world and soe he performed it when he said Hoc est corpus meum And in that place he saith Caro mea verè est cibus sanguis meus verè est potus and also he saith vnto the Iewes vnlesse yow eate of the fleash of the sonn of man yow shall not haue life in yow And when he said trulie he did exclude figuratiuely for the one taketh awaie the force of the other But here perhaps an heretique will obiect that if wee adore the Euchariste for beinge the bodie of Christe the people adoringe the same beinge not consecrated by the iniquitie of the prieste should comitt idolatrie Wherto I aunswere that as Laban causinge Lia to lie with Iacob insteede of Rachell was not any imputation to the saide Iacob he beinge ignorant thereof for that he thoughte her to be his proper wyfe soe it should not be idolatrie for the people ignorantly adoringe Christe in an hoaste not consecrated euen as it is not an offence before God if one should reuerence a false brother for a supposed or pretended vertue though otherwise he were a dissembler for he doth not honnor the impietie of hypocrisie of the said dissembler but the religion and sanctitie that is thought to be in him Or as if a blinde man should saie vnto S. Peter Iesu the sonne of Dauid haue mercie vpon me thincking him to be Christ should not comitt Idolatrie Euen soe the Church should not be deceiued or be conuinced of Idolatrie if a wicked priest would not consecrate through his malicious intent for the catholique faith holdeth it for an assured beleefe that Christe is not in anny hoaste but in that which is rightlie consecrated nor euerie one lawfully regenerated or with God reconsiled that is not lawfully baptised and orderlie and rightlie reconsiled That there is a purgatorie which is proued aswell by Scriptures and auncient Fathers as also euen by the testimonies of Protestant thēselues CHAPTER I. 1. THis is proued by reason for if you grant that God is merciful and iust as indeed he is yow must alsoe proue purgatorie For if a man doe liue most wickedlie all his life without any remorse of conscience or any other pennaunce and at his death doth aske for mercy I thinck yow will not saye he shal be condemned vnto the euerlastinge paines of hell because he sought for godes mercie nor yet shall he enioye presentlie euerlastinge blisse for that God is iust in punishinge the sinnes of wicked people for as S. Gregorie sayes as the shadowe doth followe the bodie soe pennaltie and paines doth followe sinne but he shall not haue euerlastinge paines therfore he must be lyable to a temporall which was not inflicted vppon him in this life tyme therfore in some other place which is purgatorie 2. Although God doth remitt sinne quantum ad reatum culpae which is the guilt of sinne yet he doth not remitt temporall paines as may appeare by Dauid who although his sinnes were remitted vnto him yet he suffred temporall punishment as likewise Ezechias the Niniuites and others who notwithstandinge their sinnes were forgiuen them yet they suffred temporall paines and pennalties in this life as the Israelits whose pennance was that they should not enter into the lande of promise S. August tract c. 24. in Iohn saith productior est p●ena quam culpa and therfore the church imposed pennaunce after the absolution as wee may see in Conc. Nyce cap. 12. Laodic c. 1. Dionys Areop de eccl Hier. ca. 5. Tertull. lib. de poena qua nihil prodest de poenitentia d. 3. Hieron epist ad Ocea Amb. lib. 5. ca. 10. Orig. homil 15. in Leuit. August epist 54. Bulleng decad 4. serm 10. Bullenger a great protestant doth acknowledge the old doctors of the Church to haue prayed for the dead I knowe saith he that the great Doctors of the Churche S. Augustine as also S. Chrysostome Aug. ser 32. de verbis Apostoli and other great and em●nent doctors haue written of this matter I knowe saith he that the fathers doe say that to pray for the dead is an apostolique tradition alsoe that S. Aug. did say that to offer sacrifice for the dead was obserued in the vniuersall Church And Aerius was condemed for reprouinge prayers for the dead thus farre Bullenger This Aerius for beinge refused of a Bishopricke as S. Augustine said Aug to 6. de haeresibus ad quod vult Deum haeres 53. Musc cap. de orat pag. 515. Zuing. to 1. Epicheresis caminusae Caluinist li. 3. ca. 2. tomo 5. Conr. in Tobiā c. 4 Vrba in Baruch 3. Brent in apol conf VVittēb cap. 5. de bapt 1. parte fell to Arianisme and reproued prayers for the dead Musculus also another Protestant doth testifie the same Zuinglius said that the Apostles did vse the same Caluine saith that this was vsed in the church aboue 1300. yeares a goe Also Conradus Pellicanus the cheefe protestant at Tigur did alleadge that Tobias did allowe the auncient custome to sacrifice for the dead Vrbanus Regius another great protestant saith that Baruch the prophett did praye for the dead Brentius