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A10046 The defence of truth against a booke falsely called The triumph of truth sent over from Arras A.D. 1609. By Humfrey Leech late minister Which booke in all particulars is answered, and the adioining motiues of his revolt confuted: by Daniell Price, of Exeter Colledge in Oxford, chaplaine in ordinary to the most high and mighty, the Prince of Wales. Price, Daniel, 1581-1631.; Leech, Humphrey, 1571-1629. Triumph of truth. 1610 (1610) STC 20292; ESTC S115193 202,996 384

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him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith to the churches yet whosoever heareth and receiveth false doctrine willinglie receiveth and heareth his owne damnatiō And for the Catholique Church you bragge of c Lactantius lib. 4. Institutio cap. vlt. Lactantius hath given warning of such boasts singuli haereticorum coetus suam esse Ecclesiam Catholicā putant The Celestial Oracle heauenly spirit true catholique Church I say and wil confirme it by al maner of arguments they never taught that point as you seek to mainetaine it concerning Evangelicall Counsels of Perfection Mr LEECH Or I may speake with our blessed Sauiour advising exhorting counselling yea out of the whole masse of mākind inviting nay inciting some to that angelical gift of virginall chastity qui potest capere capiat hee that can aspire to the top of angelicall integrity let him become a votary of virginall Chastity ANSVVER The strangest exposition of wordes that ever I read or heard Virginall chastity the word virginall is out of tune a weake wired chastity to ascend the top of angelicall integrity Paule did not only approue but appoint Ministers and yet asketh the question 2. Cor. 2.16 Quis idoneus ad haec And though Christ not only was a virgin but did allow of virgins yet hee may pronounce this speech Qui potest capere capiat without any such inference or cōsequence You deliver no gold without drosse no place of Scripture without some wrested and impertinent glosse But in your sermon you shall receiue more satisfaction Mr LEECH This is S. Paule his sapientia inter perfectos apostolicall wisdome for men of angelicall perfection These easilie disclose and discouer the worlds foolishnes impostures when they paragon them with heavens remuneration treasures These are the salt of the earth the light of the world stars fixed in the spheare of heauen the Church militant not wandring in their motion towards heauen the Church triumphant ANSVVER The auncient writers doe not so expounde those words Al shew that the Apostle doth therein distinguish betweene the beleevers vnbeleevers as may be seene by the connexiō but more especially a Chrysost in 1. Cor. 2.6 Chrysostome thus expoūdeth perfectos 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he calleth them perfect which did beleeue S. Hierome expoundeth so Theodoret so the whole currēt of expositors vnderstand a kinde of perfection in beliefe not in life Aquinas hath such a restriction that agreeth with the rest and all this sheweth that your speech is meere Pelagianisme wherin you magnifie the arme of flesh and the nature of mankinde and so seeme to approoue a perfit perfection which you do most vnperfectly It is S. b De peccat mer. remission 15. Augustines advise Cum dicitur cuiusque perfectio qua in redicatur videndū est When perfection saith he is named we must cōsider wherein it is named Perfectus est aliquis sapientiae auditor non perfectus Doctor a man may be a perfect hearer of righteousnes not a perfect doer or as some think a perfect knower why we knowe but in part 1. 1. Cor. 15. Cor. 15. Yes we knowe perfectly perfectione viae non perfectione patriae by the perfection of the way here not by the perfection of our Country hence say the Schooles Perfectione ordinis non finis saith d Iunius Iunius perfectione partium non graduum saith e Lomb. Lombard perfecti viatores non perfecti possessores saith f Aug. in Ps 38. Austin perfect travellers in righteousnes not perfect possessors and this so limited by that good Father as that hee alloweth it only pro consortio humanae societatis pro huius vitae capacitate pro statu viatoris pro huius vitae modulo only for a perfection sufficient to converse and hold society with mankind a perfection for the model capacity of this life for the state of passengers and wayfaring men and concludeth g Ad Bonif. lib. 3. Omnium in carne nostra imperfecta perfectio the perfection of all men while they are in the flesh is vnperfect Iohn Baptist had not a greater among the sonnes of womē but whosoever was least in the kingdome of God al the celestiall spirits is farre beyond him Inter natos mulierum non autem inter choros coelestium spirituum h Bern. serm 38. in Cantie saith S. Bernard among sonnes of women not amōg armies of Angels Not Iohn Baptist a Prophet nay more then a Prophet Who had for his cloathing haire for his habitation a desert for his meate wild locusts for his title the praecursor for his preaching Repentance for his ministration Baptisme the vsher and harbinger of our Saviour had not he angelicall perfection If hee that so faithfully attended his Master had it not how should you that haue fled from your Master attaine vnto it I say not * Esay 14.12 ô Lucifer how didst thou fall but O Lucifer whether wouldst thou rise Is it obedient humility to be so proud Spirituall poverty to desire to be so pompous Angelicall chastity to be so luxuriant I acknowledge that there bee some that are salt of the earth lights of the world roses in the field lillies in the vallies terrae gemmula coeli stellulae yet far from Angelicall integrity They may climb a step but not to the top of Iacobs Ladder Mr LEECH These are our best pilots amongst men their godly cōversation ought to be our holy imitation These guid by their examples the barkes of our bodies wherein the eternall treasures of our soules are caried as in earthen vessells through the perilous rockes of the seas of this world that they may ariue safely at the designed hauen of heauē when they flit from the bed of this mortall body ANSVVER Pilots they may be and yet as the i Ovid. de Trist lib. 1. Poet of his Pilot spake Rector in incerto est nec quid fugiátue petátue Denotat ambiguis ars stupet ipsa malis So I of the best they haue their slidings falls faults trances appolexies If you haue read over S. Austin you may finde the distinction betweene peccatum crimen sinne in generall which no man is freed frō and hainous notorious scandalous sinne culpable in the eies of men crying in the eares of heauen In his k Enchir. ad Laurent Enchiridion ad Laurentium he affirmeth this the life of holy men may be found though not without falt yet without an offensiue fault and more whosoever teacheth is Hereticall Beware in defending your perfect Pilots you make not shipwrack of a good conscience the mast of your faith is shaken let not the anker of your hope be broken Mr LEECH These are beacons on a hill the hill of the Church whose liues as lightes and burning lamps forewarne and so forearme vs against all invasion of any spirituall enimies These are entia transcendentia men soaring aboue the ordinary pitch of men celestiall
retract It is not credible that you received as you saie incredible iniurie in the lawfull proceedings against you The Vniversitie censured you not imprisoned you The Colledge for a time discōmoned you not expelled you This small punishmēt no banishment your Cōplaint is the same with m In orat pro sexto Roscio Fimbria in Tully quod non totum tèlum in corpore recepisset you received great iniurie because you were not suffred to doe great iniury But be not deceiued God is not mocked enter into a serious and religious cogitation whether in this course that you are you need not feare the true description of malecontented Apostats I would you were not sutable to them as they be liuely deciphered both by S. n 2. Pet. 2. Peter and S. o Iude. 13. Iude to be presumptuous standing in their owne opinion wandring starres raging waues of the Sea foaming out their owne shame and speaking evill of them which are in authority which a man that maintaineth your third Counsaile of obedience should not doe The scornfull aspertion you cast vpon vs by the byname of Calvinists we neither reiect nor receiue Reverend learned holy Calvin was the greatest glory of the French Church that ever was since he was Hooker praef to his Church Politic. as a famous writer witnesseth And though our Religion seeke neither antiquitie nor authoritie from him nor we denomination or confirmation by him because as the Apostle speaketh we reioice not in men yet wee reverence him because as the same Apostle in the same verse concludeth o 1. Cor. 3.22.23 whether it be Paul or Apollos or Cephas al are ours we Christs and Christ Gods Mr LEECH Finally my brethren with my honest petition and necessarie counsaile I ioine my harty praiers and teares with them that it would please the author of all goodnes and the God of all truth to powre the abundant riches of his grace into your soules that your vnderstandings may be fully enlightned with his truth and that your wills may be made conformable therevnto in your profession of the holy Catholike faith For which as I now suffer the want of my natiue country so in defence thereof I shall be ready to yeeld vp my life when it shall please my gratious Lord to call mee vnto that honour whereof I am vnworthy Your devoted brother in Christ Humfrey Leech ANSVVER The Epistolary conclusion with a petition and coūsaile we should receiue more willingly if your petition were more honest and your counsell more Evangelicall Your prayers we returne tenfold into your bosome beseeching the Lord that it may please him to free your vnderstanding by truth ab p Albert. in Comp. Theol lib. 5. ignorantia veri to rectifie your will by good a concupiscentia mali and to purge your whole soule by grace ab impotentia boni that your will maie be subiect to his will your life to his seruice not his service to your will and so you may be reduced to the true Apostolique Catholique faith that as you complaine you suffer the want though the wanton want of your natiue Country so you may not endure the want of heavenly Ierusalem your spirituall Country that when you are to appeare at the fatall and finall iudgement among the great and smale when the muffling of conscience shall bee discovered the worme of conscience be not your portiō And that in your pilgrimage here you may rather wash your garments in the blood of the Lambe then in your owne blood so by the teares of a sinner blood of a Sauiour prayers of his Saints on earth you may bee brought againe to this militant Church in the better world receiue a permanent state in his triumphant Church Yours if you be Christs DANIELL PRICE THE PREFACE VNTO the whole discourse Mr LEECH VVHen first I set footing into this present businesse my purpose was not no not in my most secret thoughts to enter into any point of cōtroversie or to giue occasion of offence or dislike vnto any only my resolution was plainely positiuely as the course of my studies had ever bent and carried me to glaunce at a maine point of doctrine it comming but obiter in my way directly warranted nay lineally deduced from the vniforme consent of all ancient times bequeathed vnto vs by the perpetuall tradition and practise of the Church ANSVVER YOu tooke wrong footing in this busines both in secret and in open sight of God men and Angels wherein let me remember you how manie aimes you gaue to this question how desirouslie you entred into it how not onlie in Academicall but Parochiall sermons you taught it how you frequentlie seasoned your inkepot with the Colloquintida of contradiction sometimes openlie somtimes secretlie continuallie full of opposition Wherin as you were not often happie in the choice so not in the successe one beeing the cause of your pastorall remooue in * A most Faire large and ancient towne famous for building and cloathing but more especially for civill government care of Religion detestation of Popery what soeuer is praise worthy Shrewsbury the other the cause of your Academicall censure in Oxford And whereas you saie you meant to giue but a glaunce the purport of your whole sermon of distinguishing great and small a matter of great consequence prosecuted to small purpose sheweth how you did wire-draw a distinction vpon one part of your Text and prosecute especiallie that one point so farre as the howre and your paper could afford and indeed your glaunce so glanced vpon the whole Auditory that some departed others were perplexed all offended therewith Religion so wronged and the Vniversity disgraced by the publike cōtesting of a superstitious supercilious doctrine the consequences whereof are pernicious and dangerous and the question it selfe the verie ground of Monkish life as the Rhemists confesse Annot. Rhē in Nov. Test wherein men flying some occasions of evill they flie all occasions of doing good and prooue drie figge trees withered vines empty sepulchres broken cesternes And whereas you affirme that the position was directlie warranted nay lineallie deduced from the vniforme consent of all ancient times I thinke I may speake of it as a Cael. Rhod. antiq lectionum Rhodogine did of old Images Perierūt cum antiquitate you haue nothing to proue your position to be old but because it is rotten But we deny it as it shall appeare to haue any part of reverend antiquity to countenance it And whereas you affirme your maine point of doctrin to be bequeathed I enquire if bequeathed by what Testament surely neither by the old nor new by what Legacie Neither by the Fathers nor Generall Councels but by tradition you say wherein I may say to you as our b Mark 7.9 Saviour said to the Pharises Well do yee reiect the Cōmanmandements of God that you may obserue your owne traditions And yet for anie Apostolicall tradition to confirme
these two most worthy pillers of the Church were as the flowers of Roses in the spring of the yeere as Lilyes by the fountaines of waters as branches of Frankincense in the time of Sommer as faire Oliues that bee fruitful or Cypres trees that grow to the Clowdes as i Ecclesiast Ecclesiasticus speaketh of others Cyprian for eloquence Austin for dexterity of wit wisedome learning Cyprian was as k Naz. Orat. in Cyprianū Nazianzene reporteth him the great name of Carthage of all the world whose name was famous in all Churches both Heretique and Christian whose name and workes Nazianzene professeth he reverenced more then he did all others and for his eloquence surpassed all other men so farre as other men doe bruit beasts Saint l Epist ad Paulinum de instit monat Ierome calleth him sweet professing that the Lord dwelt in him and m De doct Christ c. 40. Austin calleth him a most sweet Doctor and most blessed Martyr and concludeth of him Tanti meriti tanti pectoris tanti oris tantae virtutis Episcopus And concerning blessed Austin n Epist ad Aug. 31. 37. Paulinus calleth him the salt of the earth a Candle worthy to be set on the candlestick of the Church his mouth like a Conduit pipe of living water a veine of that eternall fountaine o Eras epist praef 1. tom Augustini Erasmus testifieth of him his name being Aurelius Augustinus that the world hath nothing magis aureum vel augustius that there never was a golden name more worthily giuen to any then to him And if I shall reckon Titles giuen to him that is called the perfection of the Fathers the Hammer of Heretiques the Treasure Megasine liuing librarie of learning and infinite his other Titles it would be tedious Nay Iesuits and all kind of Papists afford him such Encomtasticks that never had any Father of the Church so many Looke c Possevin in appar sacr p. 151. 152. Possevin in his Aparatu sacro where he giueth him the greatest and worthiest Titles that ever any Doctor of the Church had and testifieth that by the consecration of the d Synod Florent Florentine Synod he was called Illustrissimus Latinorū Doctorum You see how grosse your comparison is Concerning the approbation of a general Councell there is no such thing directly named in any of the Concilia Toletana being 13 in number The only Councell of all which that mentioneth Gregory is the last of which e Caranza in Epitome Cōciliorum Caranza in the Epitome of Councells giueth this note Nihil habet hoc concilium singulari annotatione dignum Mr LEECH Concilium Tolctan Did it then become M. Doctor Hutton to detract frō the due worth of so great and learned a Saint since I may yet adde this to perfect his praise whatsoever hee was vnto others doubtlesse vnto vs he was an Apostle to speake in the phrase of the Apostle to whom our English nation standeth perpetually obliged for her conversion from Paganisme vnto the Christian faith Beda Eccles hist Angl. lib. 2. cap. 1. ANSVVER Gregory was not our Apostle All histories be against you Britaine had true religion planted here before your Gregory or his Monke Austin were extant It is recorded by your f Baron Ann. 35. num 5. Chronologicall Cardinall that Ioseph of Arimathaea was here g Theod. de curand grec affect lib. 9. Theodoret saith S. Paul h Bar. anno 597. n. 20. Baronius thinketh S Peter i Nic. l. 2. c 40. Nicephorus saith that Simon Zelotes and k Tertul. advers Iudaeos Tertullian l Orig. in Hom. 4. in Esec Origen and other of the most worthy of the Fathers doe affirme that the Gospell was planted here in the time of the Primitiue Church And that you shall not reply that religion was extinguished and afterwards lightned by Gregory I say religion was not extinct at the comming of that proud petty Monke Austin whom hee sent Witnesse m Lib. 1. c. 8. 17. 21. Bede whom you vntruly cite who writeth that before Austins comming the Britaines were troubled with Arrianisme and Pelagianisme but that three French Bishops delivered them And the forger of the three cōversions n Three con par 1. c 9. n. 1 testifieth more that from king Lucius time vntill the comming of Austin which was foure hundred yeeres and more they did not alter their faith but it remained among them when he entred Therefore Gregory converted not our land per se nor per aliū And Austin as impetuous or imperious as he was was but Gregories Curat For Gregory at that time as o Ordo Rom. praef Cassander observeth did change the Lyturgies and service bookes vsed in our westerne parts for which cause it is likely Austin came ouer So that Gregory and Austin converted bookes not soules and therefore were Translators Correctors no Apostolicall Doctors or founders of our Church Mr LEECH But to passe over the praise of this bright shining star in the firmamēt of the Church my reioynder was that this doctrine must first be proved to be erroneous scandalous before any such imputation ought vpō any absolute necessity to be imposed and fastened vpon it since scādall doth arise from errour errour is an approbatiō of that which is false in iudgement and vnderstanding ANSVVER The answer of the Philosopher in p Diog. Laert. in vit Phil. Laertius to one that immoderatly praised him was fit for you Me hic aut ludit aut odit this fellow would procure me to be scorned or hated Your vnmeasurable LASHON of cōmēding Gregory it deserveth no other speech We esteem Gregory to be the best Pope from the yeere about 600 wherein he lived to this present He never held the q Reg. Epist lib. 9. ep 9. supremacy r Lib. 7. ep 69. l. 7. ep 30. merits and other points of Popery and he never taught this Doctrine as you do therefore the error scandal must remaine with you not with him Mr LEECH And as for defending of S. Gregory my opinion then was and now is that the very name it selfe and Authority of this worthy Father ought and would rather amongst all learned and iudicious divines be my iust defence ful dischardge then that his credit should bee so farre called in question as now after a 1000. yeares continuance in the Catholique Church of Christ being generally reputed Orthodox so long to stande in neede of mine or any other mans defence whatsoever ANSVVER The worthines of Gregory is not denyed But that his very name should be sufficient to prescribe against all opposers and to patronize your conceipt it is much doubted Concerning Gregory I thinke of the reading of him as S. ſ Hier. in ep ad Romanum Ierome doth of reading the other Fathers Meum propositum est antiquos legere probare singula retinere quae
hardned hart In that presumptuous speech that will was the law to punish you without an offence yet shall not be the sanctuary to defend that Reverende Governour that censured you you are much offensiue to truth It was your ignorāce that betrayed you the offence cōdēned you the law did cēsure you Now you are far of you vēt your gall like vnto Gall his reproach against Abimelek when he supposed him far enough from him Who is Abimelek and who is Shechem that wee should serue him Your threats be blasts he needs no sanctuary that hath so many in the eares and hearts of the most honoured and best affected of this lande And though you presume to Cōvent him yet at this time a farre meaner man shall discharge him You desire leaue to deale as a scholler it is wel you wil aske leaue that you neglect not all duty to your Master but I assure you it is generally beleeved that if any thing in your whole book be truely your own it appeareth in the validity of these argumēts framed so sophistically as if you had only learn'd logike by that rude prescriptiō Discere si cupias Logicam discas Titlemannum Ille Sophistarum crimina pandere vult Mr Wright complaines that none of our Protestants answer breefly and punctually you shall not need to complaine so In two wordes I answere your three arguments Negatur minor For ever you affirme as a Principle the thinges to be proued which manner of argumentation 2. Prior. c. 16. 8. Topic. 13. 1. soph 5. 2. Soph. 12. Aristotle reckons for a fallacy in many places and tearmes it by this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a begging to haue that graunted which in the beginning was the maine controversie So Archimedes would moue the whole earth if he could obtaine a seperat standing from the earth which might not be And this is the dealing of all your Champions first they take this as graunted that the Church of Rome is the Catholike Church and then conclude that wee are the Heretiques which is the especiall point to bee proued In your first syllogisme your presumption rather thē assumption is faulty But the doctrine of Evangelicall Counsailes is founded vpon Scripture according to the conformable opinion of the ancient Church Was there any hope that this might passe vncontroled being the maine controversie of all But it is proued saie you by the ensuing testimonies of the Fathers but it is disproued say I both by that which hath beene said in this Tract as also in particular answer to every Father by D. Benefield that except you be more then perversly obstinate you will vndertake no more such challenges The minor in both your other syllog●smes assume that D. King D. Aglion by c. obstinately oppugn a point of Catholique faith and are heretiques and therefore must recant c. And your poore proofes bee their proceedings against you in this particular Alas doe you boast of reading Fathers Schoolemen Children Schooleboyes would be asham'd of such arguments which I easily returne againe in this manner Whatsoeuer doctrin is not foūded vpō scripture c. aut the doctrin of Euāgelical Coūsels is not foūded c Therefore the doctrine of Evangelicall Counsells is not a point of Catholike faith The syllogisme is good in the first figure by the rules of Logicke though the Minor be negatiue because the Maior is convertible The Minor is proued before in the right interpreting of the testimonies of the Scriptures Fathers which you manifestly wrested and perverted Whosoever doth obstinately maintaine any point of doctrine contrary to Catholique faith is c. But Mr Leech doth obstinately maintaine a point of doctrine contrary to Catholike faith Therefore Mr Leech is an heretique The Maior is graunted by all men of iudgement and it is taught by the same rule of Austin The Minor is proued by his owne proceedings in this particular Every hereticke as in your owne words c. But Mr Leech is an heretike c. Therefore Mr Leech c. The Maior is cleere of it selfe The Minor is proued already and your foure evidences that follow are evidently turned vpon your selfe Thus Baals Priests launce themselues and Saul falleth on his owne sword And in full satisfaction that it may appeare to all men that we suppresse not the truch we reiected not the Fathers for though by the rule of Vincentius and the graunt of Bellarmin all learned Papists wee are only to receiue the vniforme consent of the Fathers yet in this you haue neither all nor the most nor any places pregnant for your doctrine as is manifest by the answere to them and the interpretation of the Fathers To your fourfold evidence In praef com lib. Mosis I might returne First the authority of Cardinall Caietan thus God hath not tied the exposition of the Scripture vnto the sense of the Fathers Andrad defens fidei Trid. lib. 2. Secondly the iudgemēt of Andradius that they spake not Oracles when they expounded the Scriptures that the oversights of the translation which they followed must needes cause thē to miste sometimes the right meaning of the holy Ghost Turrecrem In c. sancta Romana d. 15 nu 4. Possev Bibl. select l. 12. c. 23. Thirdly what Turrecremata hath deliuered herein thus At this day there be many things found in the Fathers deseruing no credit Fourthly what Possevine cōcludeth somethings in the Fathers wherein vnwittingly they dissented from the Church are iudged and condemned I could vrge for your foure fortie of your own that doe disclaime the authoritie of Fathers your grād Iurie is answered so fully by D. Benefield that as no man can say more so I hope it will make you say much lesse I denied not these 4 authorities you here bring but I deny that they bee applied to the present for in all the course of your testimonies we denied no Fathers but interpreted all And now Mr LEECH let me tell you your vndeceiueable Iudge doth see you and wee both must receiue our censure at another barre Once one church held vs in an honourable function one Vniversitie in a loving Communion one Towne the flowrishing and happy and chiefe Towne of our Shire in a kinde participation of all good offices But you are departed Now you are gone you haue broken all these leagues nay more broken your covenant with God in the Ministry of his Church Shame the Devil forsake your stepmother satisfie the world saue your soule We shal wish you but not misse you weep for you but not want you Vnderstād not amisse good reader for nothing is so contrary to the will consent as error Had these offers beene proposed these propositions had never beene refused First hee only proposed out of a Popish peevish writer these extracted or rather extorted authorities and would never condiscend to answer the point as a scholler in disputation Secondly it was disproved by a publike lecture it was maintained against him by the Reverend Doctors his Iudges that neither Scriptures nor Orthodoxe fathers were for him Thirdly it was manifest that to preach Perfection in this life especially Angelicall integrity was at the least Pelagianisme heresie cōdemned by the Fathers and Ancient Church Fourthly that this doctrine being the grounde of workes of supererogation merit c. was plainely against the position of our Church as Doctor Benefield in private conference offered to proue The scandals therefore be full of iniquity which you impose on the Reader if hee beleeue your advertisement I wish you may finde more acceptance before God in the day of retribution then your words are like to finde with any True harted Christiās Seeing error conceived them humor produced them FINIS CHristian Reader this booke was long since promised my attendance was the cause of the stay but at length it is finished I had rather with Cato craue pardon for my fault in doing this then keepe my selfe cleere from committing this fault for I haue herein satisfied the importunity which imposed it on me and the necessity of the cause which drew me to it In the Triumph that is proued true which Tully spake of Athenagoras Of his offence hee spake nothing but complained of his punishment There was small cause of the Authors flying lesse of his reviling His reproachfull tearmes defiling and besmearing those many and worthy Divines I could haue returned in the same language hardly can any that shall answer him avoid it without calumny or so pay him his owne without note of infamy But in these labours nothing is to be more praied for then a sanctified spirit and therefore I haue as much as possibly I might avoided any thing that may seem contumelious or malitious It resteth that I find Christian and brotherly interpretation in this labor by those that shall pervse it My hast may betray the manner of my writing not the matter And it may be I shall find some such readers Hier Prooem in l. 2 cōmet in Oseā as S. Hierom did Alij saith he quasi parva contemnunt quicquid dixerimus contractare despiciunt alij magis aliorum silentium quàm nostrum studium probant quidam in eo se disertos arbitrantur doctos si alieno operi detrahant If such Readers meete with my booke I feare not If my book meet with such I care not The better sort I hope to find leaue attentiue and will pray for all meanes of their instruction in this world and salvation in the better world Errata Read Children p. 40. l. 16. metonymiam p. 113. l. 30. some acknowledge some denie p. 126. l. 10. Aetnam p. 131 l. 9. quo seniores eo saniores 193. l. 5. Ambigne p. 195. l. 15. quod 227. l. 4. editions p. 336. l. 19. Norris l 24.