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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A36729 Reflections on the Council of Trent in three discourses / by H.C. de Luzancy. De Luzancy, H. C. (Hippolyte du Chastelet), d. 1713. 1679 (1679) Wing D2419; ESTC R27310 76,793 222

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the truth that being necessary to make truth reach the Pope spake after the same rate Nevertheless The sacred holy and oecumenical Council met at Trent in the name of the Holy Ghost to be rul'd there by the word of God the writings of the Fathers and the Apostolical Tradition thinks not fit to take away the Annats The Holy Ghost just goes so far as to correct small abuses frivolous nothings but reaches not to Heresies and Crimes Salva semper Apostolicae sedis autoritate There is not in so vast a number of Bishops one single Nathan or Elijah or if it be too much to seek Prophets among them there is not a single Ambrose or Basil none of all these Vicars of Christ who durst say with his Master Our friend sleepeth but I go that I may awake him out of sleep Joh. 11. 11. XVIII And indeed it would have bin a kind of Murder to have cut off Annats Rome would have bin no more a triumphant City all its Palaces would have bin either pull'd down or interrupted in the building and especially that of Pius the Fourth rais'd during the Council of which the Arch-Bishop of Brague told him That the stones would have serv'd better to build an Hospital To banish Painters Musicians Poets from St. Peters See to make a Pope in our daies live like S. Leo or S. Gregory to rule a Cardinal-nephew according to the Council of Carthage and the examples of S. Charles to require the same severity of life from an eminentissimo Cardinale as we saw in Cardinal Baronius and some years ago in Cardinal Bona Such demands I say would have brought a blemish upon the Council never to be obliterated and instead of procuring its confirmation fir'd upon them all the Vatican thunders How could a Cardinal undergo the hardship of riding without a retinue of 200 Coaches and an infinite number of staffieries In the Apostles time the most common Motto was The world is crucified to me and I to the world Gal. 6. 14. Priests then had no other liveries then the blood of Martyrs no other retinue then a vast number of poor no other Palaces then Prisons but in our Age you cannot walk in the streets of Rome without hearing People cry out The equipage of his Eminence the Mules of his Eminence the staffieries of his Eminence the perfumes of his Eminence the Music of his Eminence the Abbies and Bishopricks of his Eminence c. that is of a Deacon in the Diocess of Rome of a Parson in the City or Suburbs of a man maintain'd by the alms of the Church dead to the World and its vanities perswaded that there is a life to come and that the shortest way to enjoy its happiness is to renounce all the pleasures and honors of the present XIX The Fathers therefore at Trent were not cruel to the Pope nor Pius the Fourth ungrateful to them He confess'd in a full Conclave They had us'd him more gently then he would have done himself and that Council which otherwise had pass'd for a Conventicle became so sacred that this Pope never spake afterwards without an honorable mention of it in all his discourses But this Popes own confession is too puissant a proof against him 't is the testimony of his own Conscience Those Physitians flatter'd so much their Patient that he was asham'd of it and instead of applying powerful Remedies to his inveterate Distempers they took no notice of them 'T is wrongfully therefore they accuse the Popes self-love or the blindness incident to those who separate themselves from unity to constitute a particular order as speaks St. Gregory and St. Austin Pius the Fourth was convinc'd of the need he stood in of being reform'd But the Fathers put a bar to his desires huc usque venies without them he would have gone further XX. Nay least the small Reformation they made of some few things should last too long they found out an expedient from which experience shew'd the success of the whole was expected and this was the liberty left to the Pope of dispensing with all the Ordinances of the Council That only favor deserv'd all Pope Pius's acknowledgments he and his successors made so good use of it that it will not be amiss to give some examples thereof It had bin observ'd for many Ages how much the exemtions of Friars were injurious to Episcopacy and scandalous to the Church wherefore the Council cuts them off but Pius the Fourth using his power of dispensing re-establishes them with greater autority then before so that there has bin scarce any Bishop since zealous of his duty and the honor of his Divine Character whom a pitiful Friar whether more fraught with boldness or ignorance I shall not determine arm'd cap apied with his privileges durst not impudently oppose Some abuses concerning Dispensations Expeditions for Benefices and other pretended favors of the Apostolical See were remov'd the Pope uses his right of dispensation and scarce had the Trent Fathers got home from reforming them before Pius the Fourth had again brought up all those Impieties XXI The Council had handled the matter of Indulgenc●s with as great dexterity as moderation and in its Decree not one of the following Propositions which the Friars have since b●nd●ed about with so violent heat is to be ●een 1. That Indulgences are authoriz'd by the Scripture 2. That they are granted and receiv'd for the dead 3. That they are a super-abundance of the merits of the Saints 4. That they are any thing else but a relaxation of Canonical Penance accorded only to those who pray who demand who work petenti operanti roganti 5. That the Pope has greater power to grant them then any particular Bishop No man had reason to complain of so wise and moderate a Decree but the Pope uses his right of dispensing too many People being interessed in keeping Indulgencies The Vatican magnificence the softness of the Cardinals and the Friars idleness ow'd their maintenance to that solid and clear Revenue You see therefore Bulls both for the living and the dead dispers'd into all parts of the World every Church hath its priviledg'd Altars and a thousand Books are made public most of them dedicated to the Pope and approv'd by the Inquisition wherein they are call'd Heretics and Atheists who oppose the Opinions which the Council hath left undetermin'd The stile of these Bulls is as extraordinary as their matter the Popes grant two four six or seven thousand years of true pardon and indeed the word true looks very pleasantly in that place he remits not only the pain due to sin but the sin also into the bargain somtimes to make the most on 't he divides it and pardons but a third part somtimes one half somtimes all just as his Holiness is in humor And that we may not tire our selves with too much pains in getting so precious and rare a favor as the pardon of our sins a